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We are so lucky to have Dress For Success as part of our community, and this week they are our feature story. Dress For Success is celebrating 15 years of being a nonprofit and making a positive impact on this city. This organization aims to provide women who are entering the workforce with interview-appropriate attire. They help these women make a great first impression and help build their self-confidence. I think there is no better gift than that of self-confidence. Education seems to be a theme this week, as we have a special section devoted to the National Merit Scholarship semifinalists. I’d like to congratulate each student listed and commend them for their excellent academic work. Without a stellar education, these semifinalists wouldn’t have been given such an honor. This is a highly competitive scholarship to earn and I am proud of each student, school and district that is in the running. Good luck to all of you! In Tastes this week, we traveled to the newest chicken joint in town; Joella’s Hot Chicken. I’m sure you have already heard about this new place that serves Nashville-style chicken and, we decided to see if it was all it was cracked up to be. This place knows how to cook and season a bird! Take my word for it, you don’t want to miss the delicious food, tasty craft sodas and impeccable service. As you’re heading around town, make sure to have the proper fall footwear! We take a look at the season’s hottest boots available around town. We’re showing off everything from booties to tall riding boots to open-toed boots. When it comes to autumn shoes, we have you covered. In Sports, it was a heartbreaking week for the Cardinals as they lost to Houston, but at least the Wildcats managed to represent Kentucky football with a superb victory against South Carolina. We get the roundup on all things football from Cards insider Mike Rutherford as well as our own Wildcats expert Steve Kaufman. Elsewhere, John Asher gives us the lowdown on the upcoming September Downs After Dark at Churchill Downs. Lastly, we hear how Male upset local high school powerhouse Trinity for the fourth time in five years, and our high school reporter Randy Whetstone Jr. finds out what makes Assumption’s volleyball team so special. Not only were sports busy this week but so were events around town. Field & Fork was a hit benefiting The Parklands of Floyds Fork. Friends gathered to celebrate a great cause and had a delightful time doing so. Meanwhile, Raise The Barre definitely did just that…. it raised the bar for this fabulous evening and completely sold out! This local event helped bolster dancer’s salaries, and we had a great time dancing the night away to support them. Check out this event’s four-page spread – and others! – in this week’s galleries. Enjoy.
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From The Publisher...
INDEX
Sports Catnip �������������������������������������������������������������������22 Card Chronicle ���������������������������������������������������� 24 Horse Sense ���������������������������������������������������������26 Taylor’s 10 �������������������������������������������������������������27 High School Sports ����������������������������������������������28 Pure Tap 5K Race Results ������������������������������������30
Society Raise the Barre ����������������������������������������������������34 Christmas in September ��������������������������������������38 Blessings in a Backpack ������������������������������������� 40 Sassy Fox 10th Anniversary ���������������������������������41 UofL School of Music Gala ��������������������������������� 42 Posh Grand Opening �������������������������������������������43 Walk to End Alzheimer’s ������������������������������������� 44 UofL Tailgating �����������������������������������������������������46 Field & Fork ����������������������������������������������������������47 Fleur de Lis Regatta ���������������������������������������������48 USA Cares Gala ����������������������������������������������������49 Kentucky vs. Louisiana-Lafayette ������������������������50
Life Spotlight: Power of 1 Breakfast ���������������������������56 Out & About ���������������������������������������������������������57 Mixing It Up ����������������������������������������������������������58 Tastes �������������������������������������������������������������������62 Film �����������������������������������������������������������������������64 Arts & Entertainment ��������������������������������������������65
P H O T O 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
Features Dressing for a Bright New Future
We talk to some of the women behind Dress for Success and learn why they’re involved ������ 8
National Merit Scholar Semifinalists
Check out the list of students on their way to becoming National Merit Scholars �������� 69
The Man Behind The Magic of Manual
duPont Manual principal Jerry Mayes chats with us about his incredible school ������������70
Essentials Masthead �������������������������������7 Business ������������������������������ 16 Obituaries ���������������������������� 18
Dear Abby ��������������������������� 53 Event Calendar �������������������66 Classifieds ��������������������������� 77
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Puzzles �������������������������������� 78 Pets of the Week ����������������� 78
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On October 8, Dress for Success Louisville will celebrate their 15th anniversary at the Galt House Hotel with their Dining Out In Style event. The occasion pays tribute to the thousands of women that Dress for Success Louisville has helped re-enter the workforce by providing them interview attire as well as career and life guidance. The Voice-Tribune caught up with some of the key people behind its success – clients as well as volunteers – who have helped change the working landscape of Louisville one suit at a time. F O R M O R E I N F O R T M AT I O N A B O U T D R E S S F O R S U C C E S S LO U I S V I L L E O R TO P U R C H A S E T I C K E T S F O R T H E E V E N T, V I S I T L O U I S V I L L E . D R E S S F O R S U C C E S S . O R G / E V E N T S O R C A L L 5 0 2 . 5 8 4 . 8 0 5 0 .
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When it comes to Dress for Success Louisville, Pat Peet is a veteran. In the same way that Louisville chapter co-founder Shannon White discovered Dress for Success through a segment on “60 Minutes,” so did Peet, who was so energized by the cause that she got her check book out. “There was a show on ‘60 Minutes’ where they were interviewing a lady who started [Dress for Success],” explains Peet, who for years worked at General Electric. “[The founder] was an attorney, and she perceived the need for women to be dressed appropriately for interviews,” recalls Peet. She remembers watching and learning how the simple act of giving a suit was able to transform someone’s life. S E P T E M B E R 1 7 , 2 0 1 5 • W W W . V O I C E -T R I B U N E . C O M
“Downstairs is our area where we are able to keep so many clothes. You can see our corporate partners have sent us clothes in every size, one or two of every size,” explains Peet, as she points to racks of suits and pants as far as the eye can see. “At one point in time, Tiffany’s ordered Italian wool suits for all of their staff. I don’t know what happened, but apparently they did not pass muster. They got sent to us, so we dressed our ladies in Italian wool suits. I think every single lady we dressed in those got their job after the interview!” “They looked like they should be running the place,” Peet adds with a laugh. She’s also always sure to keep in mind that while some sizes may prove to be a challenge, it’s only a temporary roadblock that’s lifted once one of the organization’s many loyal donors drops something off. “Sometimes it’s hard to outfit some of our ladies who might be 4X or 5X, but there are ladies in Louisville who go shopping and go to every sale and bring us brand new suits in large sizes.” As well as helping to suit every lady that walks through their door, Peet also makes her own regular contribution in the form of shoes. “I also go to Zappos and look at their sale wall where you can get some amazing deals,” she adds. “So that’s kind of my donation every once in a while because I know how hard it is to get certain sizes, and I know they need to be replaced.” But Peet looks back on the days when Dress for Success Louisville was still in its humble early stages and compares it to today’s great success – a time when clients come in and receive not only a suit but also five days worth of work clothes that they can mix and match. “At that time, it was just an interview suit; it wasn’t five days of clothes because we just didn’t have this huge inventory. We had a little room, and hopefully we had enough to make a suit.” How times have changed.
Pat PEET
“The women were so touched by their new look – and you could see they walked taller – and it made a difference to them. When I saw this, I wrote a check. Shannon White and Marcia Fackler started the Louisville chapter of Dress for Success. As soon as I heard they had started it, I called and said, ‘Let me volunteer. Teach me how to do it.’” And so, Peet has been a regular at Dress for Success since 2000, working in the store from its humble roots in a basement with only a few outfits to choose from, to the current location with a basement that stretches far and wide, sometimes with identical outfits in numerous fits – able to cater to ladies of all shapes and sizes.
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Shannon WHITE
Shannon White recalls the exact moment she knew she wanted to open up the very first Dress for Success in Louisville. It all started in front of the television set. Back in 1999, the mother of 1 -year-old twin boys, for whom she had left the corporate world to raise, White found her new calling. “I was watching ‘60 Minutes’ and saw Dress for Success being featured,” recalls White. “I literally jumped up off the couch and said
‘I have to get involved in this.’” But a call to the headquarters in New York soon revealed to White how much work she had ahead of her. “I called the office and told them I had a closet full of clothes that I wanted to donate, so I asked to be connected with the Dress for Success in Louisville.” The answer from the other end revealed that there was no branch in Louisville or Kentucky
HEADSHOTS COURTESY OF DRESS FOR SUCCESS LOUISVILLE
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as a whole. The choice seemed simple – either drive two hours to donate her clothes in Cincinnati or start a new chapter. “I sent in all the paperwork and a $200 personal check, and I started Dress for Success,” recalls White. While today White has taken a backseat from the running of Dress for Success – now simply volunteering her time – the appeal of the organization’s message and ethos is no less potent. “I loved the idea that something so simple as a suit could have such an important impact in a woman’s life,” explains White. “By giving them suits, you’re not only giving them clothes but you’re giving them the confidence, and it’s really that confidence that’s so impactful. “We have women who come in and look down on their feet and have no confidence and as soon as they put on a power suit or clothes that fit and make them feel awesome, their entire demeanor changes.” In fact, there is still one client that stands out from the early days of Dress for Success who helped White realize what an impact the organization was having with such seemingly simple gestures. “A woman came in, and she was a size 3X,” recalls White. “She was staring at the floor and was in a t-shirt that was too big, an old presidential campaign one. She had on a baggy pair of shorts and kept looking at the floor even though we were really excited to see her and were really welcoming. She simply said ‘I’m a piece of garbage. You’re not going to have anything that fits me, and I know you’re not going to be able to help me.’” White continues: “Sure enough, when we gave her a black suit in her size and tried it on, she started sobbing, and then all of us were crying. It was just a complete transformation.” It’s moments like this that lead White to urge as many people as possible to volunteer for Dress for Success. “I still tell people that it’s the best volunteering opportunity in the city,” concludes White. “Because it’s so instantly rewarding. When you are dressing women with Dress for Success, you quickly realize that, while it’s great dressing women, you really actually see how much the women give to you. They are filling a void within you that you never knew needed filling.”
F e at u r e
For Alexis Mack, a board member of Dress for Success Louisville, the journey to be part of the organization was a personal struggle but ultimately a triumph. A lifelong Louisvillian, Mack one day reached a crossroads at which she realized that she needed to get on the road to recovery and get sober. Then part of a homeownership program, her caseworker suggested she visit Dress for Success to get some interview-appropriate clothes. Transformation complete, Mack soon found it was hard to leave Dress for Success. Feeling indebted, she began to volunteer and soon made her way to a position where they invited her to be part of the board. “The first time that I worked on the board, they paired us up with the women who were already on the board who would act as mentors,” recalls Mack. “One
Alexis MACK
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of those women, Marcia Fackler, to this day is my best friend. I went to the board meeting the following year ... and did not feel like I belonged because of the caliber of women already on the board. And every time I think about this, I want to cry.
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“[Marcia Fackler] told me to go back to the next meeting,” explains a tearful Mack. “She said ‘I want you to stay because you have a lot to offer. You have a lot of things to offer.’ So I went and I stayed, and I have had so many opportunities since through Dress for Success because I stayed.” Mack talks of getting a life coach, of meeting countless people who talk highly of her and of how she is now juggling two jobs – including one at a credit union – to help put her children through college. “A lot of times, if you want something, you have to get something, and you get back whatever you put into it. I have 15 years of being sober this December.” “I had to relearn everything when I got sober, including how to be a mother. Marcia and some of the other women at Dress for Success who were there for me, they lifted me up and also knocked me upside my head when I was going wrong.” Today Mack has a daughter who is a senior in college. She’s going to Italy for school. She has two more children in high school as well as two grown, one working at General Electric and another at Ford. “You know, these are tears of joy because of where I am today and how far I have come. I want to be an example for my children – that you just don’t give up.” In the end, though, Mack just wants people to volunteer for Dress for Success in the same way that her whole family does – a way to stay humble but also give to an organization that itself has given so much. “Everybody has a gift,” concludes Mack. “Whether it’s sorting clothes or talking to women. Volunteering takes on so many things. My advice is that everybody has something to give and offer, but they may not realize it until they actually just do it.”
HEADSHOTS COURTESY OF DRESS FOR SUCCESS LOUISVILLE
Monica LUN
and eat with them and mentor them and really love on them.” While in prison, Lun encountered Residents Encounter Christ, an organization made up of volunteers who go into prisons and spend time with prisoners, giving up their time to try to listen, advise and give compassion. “That is what saved my life in jail,” expresses Lun. “These people came in; they give up
S T O R E 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
a weekend of their life and they bring food, white socks, paper, pencils – they treat you like a queen for a whole weekend. They listen to you, they cry with you, they hug you and tell you how important you are. That program is what saved me in jail and made me realize I needed to change. I didn’t want my son to be alone and be angry like I was. “When I first came to Dress for Success, they had us do a dream board – we could put down whatever we wanted. I wanted to help children and women to not go down the same path that I did, get into mentoring programs and get this felony behind me.” Dress for Success helped me with my resume and got me to meet people. I met the mayor and his wife and had dinner with people who have given me good recommendations. Lun continues: “I want you to know that my dream board came true. Right now Dress for Success is helping me to apply for grants to open up my own building for kids in Floyd County.”
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In the early months of 2011, Monica Lun was staring down the barrel of a potential 20-year prison sentence. Trying to support a $900 per day heroin and meth habit, she had taken to committing burglaries. Her husband was already in jail, and her habit was a result of a lifetime of abuse; molested as a child, she found refuge in drugs, which in turn led her to a lifestyle where she was raped at the age of 16. With her 3-month-old son facing the prospect of being without any parents, Lun knew she needed to change her ways, even though her fate rested in the judge’s hands. “I was looking at a 20-year sentence in prison,” recalls Lun. “And when I was in jail, I got into so much trouble in my first few months that I spent my first six months on lockdown in segregation. I was just one angry person.” But rather than locking her away, the judge offered Lun a chance at freedom in exchange for her giving her time to the community. After the anger of prison subsided, Lun discovered that she gravitated toward helping others. “[The judge] wanted me to give back to the community. When I was in jail, I had started helping fellow girls get their GED and mentoring them and tutoring them. The judge saw that and wanted me to continue.” Instead of prison sentencing, the judge sentenced Lun to a forensic diversion, which included a year of daily reporting to her probation officer as well as house arrest. But soon, Lun’s probation officer recommended that she visit Dress for Success, and from there she got work in a halfway home, a first step on her way to guiding and mentoring women who were walking the path that Lun herself had walked. “It was at Dress for Success that I learned to love myself from the inside out. The beauty comes from the inside, and they taught me to turn my negatives into positives,” recalls Lun. “Today I am not only one of the ambassadors for Dress for Success – I get to speak about them as well – but I also work with Youth For Christ. We pull kids off the street and pray with them
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PAT P E E T E ( L E F T ) A N D CLAUDETTE COLLINS (RIGHT).
Claudette COLLINS DRESS FOR SUCCESS B O U T I Q U E C O O R D I N AT O R We try to make sure that our women look good in what they have on. We want to make sure you feel good in how you look when you a r e g o i n g i n f o r a j o b i n t e r v i e w . Yo u r o u t f i t needs to speak for itself before you even say anything. The outfit is empowering and says a lot about you and who you are. I tell our clients that once they speak, it’s an enhancement because they’re appearance is speaking volumes. S E P T E M B E R 1 7 , 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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CLAUDETTE ON APRIL: April is an entrepreneur, so she is starting her own business. She wants to make kids clothes, so a lot of times when we suit ladies, we try to do it according to the job market they are going into. Because April is going to be presenting herself in the public eye a lot, we wanted to make her colorful and fun. It’s simple. She is wearing pearls, which are very elegant and work with many outfits, and with the jacket, you could change the jacket color and give the outfit a whole different look with that two tone dress.”
CLAUDETTE ON WILMA: We ensure we always have things in navy and black and then teach women that they can accessorize with those colors. The key is to have patience and to make sure that someone has exactly the right fit because we want you to feel comfortable and confident.”
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Business
business briefs COMMONWEALTH BANK & TRUST SET TO ACQUIRE BUILDING IN NORTON COMMONS Commonwealth Bank & Trust Company has entered into a letter of intent to acquire the Clay and Cotton building at 10716 Meeting Street in Norton Commons. “Our institution has been eyeing a Norton Commons location for some time now,” said Ann C. Wells, chairman and CEO of Commonwealth Bank & Trust. “This area is a large hub for residential, retail and corporate activity, and we will offer a full-service branch. We view this as an exceptional growth opportunity, and CBandT hopes to open the new branch in early 2016.”
to submit your business brief email circ@voice-tribune.com
the photo is taken with an extended exposure. Volunteers will be divided into teams, placed around the racetrack interior, and then run through several test photos prior to taking the Big Shot right after sunset. Participants will receive a high-resolution file from the event. No prior knowledge required. Gates open at 7:30 p.m., and volunteers should arrive no later than 8:30 p.m. Gates will close at 8:50 p.m. Photos will be taken after sunset at approximately 9 p.m. The event will take place rain or shine. Volunteers should enter the track at Gate 10, use the Gate 10 parking lot and enter on Longfield Avenue. Parking will be free.
The 2,700-square-foot building is currently owned by Margaret Taylor and houses the East End location of the popular home goods store. Taylor will continue to operate Clay and Cotton’s Highlands location and is looking at new space in Norton Commons.
Volunteers should bring a hand-held flashlight or lights. No laser pointers allowed. Using one may result in removal from the event. Participants will be assigned lighting teams situated in the infield and grandstands. Lighting instructions will be provided upon entrance. Dark clothing is preferred.
“Commonwealth Bank & Trust fits perfectly with Norton Commons’ profile as a unique destination for independent local businesses,” said Marilyn Osborn Patterson, general counsel and marketing director for Norton Commons. “Our neighborhood is now home to close to 3,500 residents and 58 businesses, including a growing number of professional services firms. CBandT will be another tremendous addition.”
Since 1987, the projects has taken volunteer-lit photos of landmarks including The Alamo in San Antonio; the U.S.S. Intrepid in New York City; Pile Gate in Dubrovnik, Croatia; The Royal Palace in Stockholm, Sweden; the Smithsonian National Museum of the American Indian in Washington DC.; and AT&T Stadium (formerly Cowboys Stadium) in Dallas. Nikon is the sponsor of the event and will loan high-end equipment to capture the Big Shot photograph of Churchill Downs.
Norton Commons is a vibrant new urbanist development with homes, businesses and civic and green spaces assembled in an integrated fashion, resulting in a complete community. Norton Commons sits on almost 600 acres in northeast Jefferson & Oldham Counties and is currently about 40 percent complete. The CBandT location at Norton Commons will have three staff members and a walk-up ATM. LOUISVILLE INVITED TO LIGHT UP CHURCHILL DOWNS SATURDAY OCTOBER 3 AS PART OF “BIG SHOT” PHOTOGRAPHY PROJECT Rochester Institute of Technology (RIT) Big Shot project is set to photograph Churchill Downs as it is illuminated by thousands of local volunteers’ flashlights or other handheld lights on October 3. RIT’s Big Shot has been taking spectacular nighttime images of locals lighting iconic landmarks since 1987. Churchill downs will be the 31st landmark to be photographed as part of the project. To take the photo at Churchill Downs, local volunteers will use their own light source, usually a flashlight or camera flash unit, and shine it on a particular area of the racetrack while
HOSPARUS INPATIENT CARE CENTER CELEBRATES 20TH ANNIVERSARY, RECEIVES $13,000 GRANT The Hosparus Inpatient Care Center (HICC) has a lot to celebrate in September. This month marks 20 years of service for the HICC, a 25-bed unit established in 1995 at Norton Healthcare Pavilion, 315 E. Broadway. On September 9, the HICC was awarded a $13,000 grant from the Honorable Order of the Kentucky Colonels Good Works program for the purchase of beds and reclining chairs to better serve patients. The HICC provides short-term, inpatient hospice care to address pain control and other symptoms associated with terminal illnesses that cannot be managed in other settings. The HICC team includes volunteers, registered nurses, bereavement counselors, certified nursing assistants, chaplains, a medical director, social workers and support staff who provide compassionate end-of-life medical care. Primary care physicians may follow their patients throughout their stay at the HICC and are invited to collaborate with the hospice medical director about their care. The HICC served 1,241 patients in 2014 and 1,083 patients in 2013.
“There are many times when patients experience symptoms that can’t be managed at home during their final days,” said Doug Hedges, HICC clinical director. “The center is the best place to manage these symptoms and provide emotional and spiritual support for the patient and their family members.” In addition to 24-hour medical care and symptom management, the HICC offers unique services, including music and pet therapy. A harpist plays at the center once a week. Each room has a CD player/radio available with access to an extensive music library. Hosparus partners with Wonderful Animals Giving Support of Kentucky Inc. (WAGS), a volunteer-sponsored pet visit program that allows patients to interact with highly trained service animals. As part of a recent capital campaign, the center underwent major renovations in 2012 to expand the facility from 15 to 25 rooms and create a warm, homelike environment for patients and families. This included updates to the infrastructure, the installation of hardwood flooring, warm paint colors and soft lighting. Two family rooms were added for children to play and for families to have a space of their own. The effort was funded by generous gifts of $2 million from estates, corporations, organizations and individuals. Many gifts were given in memory of loved ones served by the center. “We have had the great honor to provide compassionate care for thousands of patients and families at the Hosparus Inpatient Care Center since it opened in 1995,” said President and CEO Phil Marshall. “With the generous support of our donors, we look forward to many more years of helping patients whose symptoms can’t be managed in any other setting.” BENZ ELECTED CHAIRMAN OF UOFL BOARD OF TRUSTEES Larry Benz was elected chairman of the University of Louisville Board of Trustees during the body’s September 3 meeting on the Belknap Campus. Benz, who is president and CEO of Confluent Health, a family of physical therapy and related businesses, was among a slate of officers unanimously approved to serve in 2015-16. He succeeds Robert Hughes, a family physician and managing partner of Primary Care Medical Center in Murray, Ky. Brucie Moore, who is Union County (Ky.) Attorney, was the choice for vice chair. Steve Campbell is treasurer, and Doug Hall is secretary. Three new members also were welcomed to the board. They are: Larry Hayes, former secretary of the Kentucky Cabinet for Economic Development; Paul Diaz, executive vice chairman of Kindred Healthcare Inc.’s board of directors; and Student Government Association President Victoria Allen.
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Obits
obituaries Nancy Colleen Branham Nancy Colleen Branham, 88, of Mt. Washington, KY, returned to her Heavenly Father on Saturday, September 12, 2015. She was the former Colleen Hardesty, a homemaker, artist, musician, and a member of Bethany Baptist Church. Colleen is survived by her husband, Raymond Gene Branham; one daughter, Paula Feather (Tim); four sons, Michael (Carla), Robin (Diann), David (Sue) and Tracy Branham; her twin sister, Pauline Crenshaw; 11 grandchildren and nine great-grandchildren. Funeral services were 11 a.m. Wednesday, September 16 at McFarland-Troutman-Proffitt Funeral Home with burial to follow in Highland Memory Gardens. Visitation was noon to 8 p.m. Tuesday, September 15 and after 9 a.m. Wednesday.
William Barner “Cuz” Cousins William Barner “Cuz” Cousins, 76, of Pendleton, KY, passed away Thursday, September 10, 2015 at Norton Brownsboro Hospital. He was born July 20, 1939 in Louisville to the late, Henry Sterling and Margaret Bryant Cousins. He was a member of A.P.B.A., and builder, owner, and driver of H-69 River Rat. He retired after 40 years as a crane operator, in special construction with L. G. E. He is survived by his loving wife of 53 years, Betty Wendeln Cousins; his children, Lisa Cousins, Theresa C. Raymer (Dwight), and David C. Cousins (Tammy); his seven grandchildren; Ashley, Samantha, Katie, Ryan, Morgan, Sydney, and Elliot, and his two great-grandchildren, Izzy and Connor. Funeral services were held at noon on Monday, September 14 in
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the chapel of Arch L. Heady-Cralle Funeral Home, 2428 Frankfort Ave., Louisville, with burial to follow at Cave Hill Cemetery. Visitation was 2-8 p.m. Sunday, September 13. Expressions of sympathy may be made to The Lung Institue at Baylor College of Medicine, % Office of Philanthropy and Alumni Relations MSC # 800, P.O. Box 4976, Houston, TX, 77210.
Evelyn Joan Davis-Lancaster Evelyn Joan Davis-Lancaster, 60, peacefully departed this life on Friday, September 4, 2015. She was born on March 16, 1955 to William “Bill” Davis and Evelyn K. Harris in Louisville, KY, where she was also raised. She was a devoted member of the Jehovah’s Witnesses faith and she is survived by her mother Evelyn, her husband, Michael, her siblings and a host of daughters, sons, grandchildren, a great-granddaughter and a son-in-law. Funeral services will be held Saturday, October 3, 2015 at 11 a.m. at the Shawnee Congregation of Jehovah’s Witnesses,1630 W. Muhammad Ali Blvd, Louisville, KY, 40203.
Landon “Jack” Hovious Landon “Jack” Hovious, was born October 2, 1936 in Mannsville, KY and passed away September 12, 2015. Jack served his country as an Air Force Supply Clerk from 1953 until 1957, Army National Guard cannoneer 1957-58, and served in the US Navy from February 10, 1958 until October 16, 1976, retiring as a Master Chief with the Navy. He was a veteran of both the Korean and Vietnam wars. He was also a retired NJROTC Instructor teaching at Iroquois
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High School for 20 years and also coached seven sports while at Iroquois. During Jack’s career in the military, he was awarded the following medals: Navy/Marine Corps Commendation Medal with untitled device, Navy/Marine Corps Achievement Medal, Combat Action Ribbon, Navy Unit Commendation, Meritorious Unit Commendation, Good Conduct Medal Navy/Marine Corps 3 star, National Defense Service Medal 1 star, Armed Force Expeditionary Medal 1 star, Vietnam Service Medal 2 star Fleet Marine Force combat, Republic of Vietnam Gallantry Cross Unite Citation, Republic of Vietnam Civil Actions Unit Citation, Republic of Vietnam Campaign Medal and the United Nations Service Medal Korea. He was an avid golfer, volunteered at Baptist Health, was a “snowbird” for five months out of the year in St. Augustine, FL, had a scoring record at Norfolk gym for basketball, was third all Europe racquetball champion for services, and coached the championship Mediterranean sports conference basketball team in Rota, Spain. Jack brought joy and laughter to everyone he met and appreciated life more than anyone. He was a great storyteller too, and he made a huge difference in so many of his students’ lives. Survivors include his wife Denny Hovious, his son Mike Hovious, his daughter Michelle O’Donnell (John), stepson Devin Wirth (Mara), granddaughter Jessica O’Donnell, grandson John O’Donnell, Jr. (Courtney), grandson Kendrick Wirth, two sistersin-law Marty Duenow Henneka (Steve) and Debby Duenow, his loving dogs Hector, Max and Sadie and many loving nieces, nephews and friends. Visitation was from 4-8 p.m. Tuesday September 15, 2015 at Ratterman and Sons, 3800 Bard-
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stown Road. A Memorial Mass was at 11 a.m. Wednesday, September 16 at St. Frances of Rome Catholic Church, 2119 Payne Street, followed by burial with Military Honors at New Albany National Cemetery. In lieu of flowers, donations may be directed to the , the Semper Fi Fund or to the Arrow Fund.
Ruth Carolyna Jackson Ruth Carolyna Jackson, 86, passed away Tuesday, September 8, 2015. She was a member of Green Street Baptist Church. Mrs. Jackson was preceded in death by her daughter, Gail M. Jackson. She is survived by her children, Frederick E. Jackson, Valarie K. Jackson, Stephanie L. Slemmons (Herb), Portia D. Jackson, Audrey K. Jackson, Enid T. Jackson-Poole (Shelton); 13 grandchildren; 19 great-grandchildren; two great-great-grandchildren and a host of nieces, nephews, cousins, extended family and friends. Visitation: 5-8 p.m. Sunday, September 13 at her church, 519 E. Gray Street. Funeral: 11 a.m. Monday, September 14 at the church, with burial in Green Meadows Cemetery. Arrangements entrusted to A. D. Porter & Sons, 1300 W. Chestnut Street.
Connor John McGee Connor John McGee, 28, passed away on Thursday, September 10, 2015. He was born August 17, 1987 in Louisville, the son of Timothy and Valerie McGee. He graduated from Trinity High School in 2006 and attended Murray State University and Indiana Universi-
Connor was very passionate, kind, thoughtful and caring. His sense of humor was one of his most endearing qualities. He had the ability to make anyone smile or laugh in any situation. There was truly never a dull moment with Connor. Everyone who met him was immediately warmed by his kind heart. He brightened the lives of everyone he met. He sensed if you were unhappy and would do anything to cheer you up. Connor never met a stranger. He greeted everyone he saw and treated them like a friend. Connor was one-of-a-kind. His creativity was one of his greatest strengths, fueling his passion for the arts - photography, music and writing. He also loved sports, especially soccer, U of L basketball and football. One of his favorite things to do was watch his younger brother, Casey, play football. Connor loved and was very loyal to his family and friends. He is survived by his parents, Timothy and Valerie McGee, his brother, Casey, his grandmothers, Carol Ann Wommer and Joan McGee, many aunts, uncles, cousins and a host of friends who loved him dearly including the love of his life, Brittany Cecil, and his dog, June. Visitation was held Sunday, September 13, 2015 from 1-8 p.m. and Monday, September 14, 2015 from 10-11:30 a.m. at Highland Funeral Home (3331 Taylorsville Road). A prayer service was held 3 p.m. Sunday. A service celebrating his life was held Monday at noon at Our Lady of Lourdes (508 Breckenridge Lane). Expressions of sympathy may be made to the Kentucky Humane Society.
Michael Irvin McVey Michael Irvin McVey, 58, entered into rest on Saturday, September 12, 2015. He is preceded in death by his
mother, Ruth McVey. Michael was a retired volunteer with the West Point Fire Dept., a member of River of Life Full Gospel Church and a chemical operator with Lubrizol. He is survived by his wife, Terry McVey; sons, Christopher, Darren (Ronelle), Dustin (Kyla) McVey; father, Charles Irvin McVey; sisters, Brenda Baird, Jeanette Parker, Carolyn Jeffries. and grandchildren, Peyton, Addison, Aiden, Bethany, Darren, Owen, Lucy and Jordan. His funeral service was on Tuesday, September 15 at 1 p.m. at W.G. Hardy Funeral Home, with cremation to follow. Visitation was Monday, September 14 from 1 - 8 p.m. and on Tuesday after 10 a.m. at the funeral home.
Marie Antoinette O’Bryan Marie Antoinette O’Bryan, 96, passed away peacefully on Saturday, September 12, 2015 at her home with her family by her side. She was a member of Most Blessed Sacrament Catholic Church. Preceding her in death were her parents, Salvatore and Immaculata Robertaccio; her beloved husband, Patrick J. O’Bryan; her brothers, John and Nick; and a sister, Mary. She is survived by her loving children, Patricia McDermott (Matt), Barbara O’Bryan, Kathleen Poole (Rob Belcher), David O’Bryan (Becky), Linda Osborn (Ben), Sharon O’Bryan (Bob Forbes) and Gerald O’Bryan (Anania). She loved spending time with her family, enjoyed reading, and relaxing with her cats. She will be greatly missed by her children, her five grandchildren; and four great-grandchildren. Her funeral Mass was 10 a.m. Tuesday, September 15 at her church, Most Blessed Sacrament Catholic Church, 3509 Taylor Blvd. Visitation was Monday, September 14, 2015, (today) from 2-8 p.m. at Joseph E. Ratterman &
Son, 7336 Southside Drive, with burial in Calvary Cemetery. Any memorial gifts in the form of contributions may be made to Hosparus of Louisville.
Carmen Elaine Prince Carmen Elaine Prince, 93, entered into eternal rest on September 10, 2015. Carmen retired from GE after 30 years, volunteered at the American Red Cross and the Kentucky Humane Society and enjoyed playing golf and bowling. She was preceded in death by her parents; three brothers; one sister; and one niece. Left to cherish her memory are her seven nieces; and three nephews. A Celebration of Life service was held Monday, September 14 at 2 p.m. at Evergreen Dignity Chapel. Visitation was Monday from 10:30 a.m. - 2 p.m. at the funeral home. Burial will be at Evergreen Cemetery. Memorial contributions in memory of Carmen can be made to Hosparus of Louisville or to the Kentucky Humane Society. Please visit www.evergreen-louisville.com to share your memories of Carmen with the family.
Maureen Seng Maureen Seng, 65, passed away Friday, September 11, 2015 at her home in Elizabeth. She was born on February 13, 1950 in Louisville, the daughter of William Patrick and Norma Jean Reddington McCarthy. She had done administrative work for the Center for Accessable Living in Louisville, she worked with the youth ministry in New Albany and she received the John Bosco Award for working with the youth at the New Albany Deanery. She is preceded in death by her parents and her brother, Brian McCarthy.
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She is survived by her husband
Mike Seng of Elizabeth; son, David Seng (Amanda) of Borden, IN; two daughters, Lori Briscoe (Matt) of Zionsville, IN and Tricia Willis (Brandon) of Floyds Knobs, IN; three brothers, Dan McCarthy (Terrie) of Crestwood, KY, Tim McCarthy (Mary Lee) of Lawrenceburg, KY and Sean McCarthy (Valerie) of Pembroke Pines, FL; and six grandsons. Funeral services were held at 11 a.m. Monday, September 14, 2015 at St. Mary’s Catholic Church in Lanesville, IN. Burial was private. Visitation was held from 2-8 p.m. Sunday, September 13, 2015 and from 9-10 a.m. Monday at Gehlbach & Royse Funeral Home in Georgetown, IN. The family suggests memorial gifts be made to the Cystic Fibrosis at 1941 Bishop Lane #108 Louisville, KY40218 or through the funeral home.
Ramona A. Stallings Ramona A. Stallings, 79 of Shepherdsville was born July 15, 1936 to the late Harry and Ada Patterson Ash and returned to her Heavenly Father September 11, 2015. Mrs. Stallings was retired bookkeeper and a member of Mount Elmira Baptist Church. Among those who preceded her in death include her husband, Gene Stallings and her parents. She leaves to cherish her memory her daughters, Rita Jo Anderson (Roger Sr.) and Sharon Kurdi Montague (Ron); grandchildren, Angela Myers, Brian Smith (Heather) and Matthew Smith; great grandchildren, Ashley, Dalton, Matthew Jr., Lillian Mae, Jaden, Jaxon and Jace; her canine companion, Lady Bug. Funeral service was held 2 p.m. Wednesday, September 16 in the chapel of Schoppenhorst Underwood and Brooks (Preston Highway at Brooks Road and use John Harper entrance) with interment in Hebron Cemetery. Friends paid their respects from 1-8 p.m. Tuesday, September 15 at Schoppenhorst.
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ty Southeast. He was employed by Bravo Italian Restaurant.
22 Catnip | 25 Card Chronicle | 27 Taylor’s 10 | 28 Game of the Week
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UK’s Long-Awaited SEC Win on the Road
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Sports
Kentucky’s Stanley "Boom" Williams ran for 107 yards versus South Carolina.
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The Kentucky Ghost Busters
n the end, it’s the end that counts. And in the end, Saturday, in the tumult of Williams-Brice Stadium, filled with the ghosts of so many UK road games, the Cats showed the will to win and exorcise those evil spirits.
touchdown just to show his disdain for UK’s defense.
Stripping the ball from South Carolina’s ultra-shifty Pharoh Cooper on that two-point conversion attempt in the fourth quarter was obviously huge, a four-point Catnip swing that provided the winning margin. But so was the stop of STEVE Cooper on third and goal at the KAUFMAN end of the third quarter, coming right after USC’s beefy Brandon Credit a Kentucky defensive effort that held South Carolina to three Wilds was stuffed on second and goal the play before. third-quarter field goals. It was a much different Patrick Towles The Gamecocks had first downs deep in Kentucky territory on three straight posses- in the second half, but let’s not put it all on sions, at the 11, the 13 and the six. And each the quarterback. For some reason, Shannon time, the Cats limited South Carolina to a Dawson seemed to go into a shell. The first field goal. So a 24-7 halftime lead that could four UK possessions in the second half were easily have become a 28-24 deficit by the end all three-and-out, a total of 12 plays from of the quarter instead remained a 24-16 lead. scrimmage producing a net of nine yards. Noteworthy that Spurrier elected to kick each time. In the past, he’d have gone for the S E P T E M B E R 1 7 , 2 0 1 5 • W W W . V O I C E -T R I B U N E . C O M
Until that final possession, following Chris Westry’s interception with 4:30 to go. Then
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suddenly the whole first-half offense reappeared. Boom boomed, the line surged, Towles threw and the quarterback also scampered for a very important first down. Carolina never got the ball back. What we saw throughout the SEC last weekend were some very good teams scrambling just to come away with wins. Auburn had to go into overtime to beat Jacksonville State. Missouri was only a touchdown better than Arkansas State. Florida just barely held on against East Carolina. It took Alabama a little while to put away Middle Tennessee. Not everybody held on. Arkansas lost to Toledo, Tennessee to Oklahoma. In the context of all that, we learned something Saturday. Kentucky, doing what it had to do – dominating in the first half, holding firm in the second half, on the road against a Steve Spurrier team, can only be a cause for optimism going into a home game against Florida. Another ghost to be destroyed. VT
PHOTO BY VICTORIA GRAFF | CONTRIBUTING PHOTOGRAPHER
Sports The UK vs NC alumni charity game allowed Coach John Calipari to donate over $1.1 million to local organizations and charities like the Louisville Zoo, The North Carolina Children’s Hospital and St. Jude’s Research Hospital.
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bjectively, who can question John Calipari’s Hall of Fame selection? He’s won 78 percent of his college games, six Final Fours and a national title.
Cal’s No Crook absconded with university funds or mistreated his players.
Catnip
Why, then, the outrage? Because coaches don’t abandon Memphis for other, bigger, better-paying programs. Or at least not since Gene Bartow left Memphis in 1974 for Illinois.
One quote was telling. “We knew it would ruin the program for years to come,” a Memphis fan said. “How do you follow John Calipari?” With a mob and pitchforks, apparently. VT Coach John Calipari was presented with a photo signed by his players after being inducted into the Basketball Hall of Fame.
STEVE Or have NCAA appearances The problem is being objecvacated. At least not since Dana tive about Cal. So what should KAUFMAN Kirk in 1986, who was also arresthave been his triumphant weeked on tax-evasion and mail-fraud charges. end instead became spiteful and bilious. Or leave the job under awkward circumFirst, University of Memphis president stances. Not since Larry Finch, forced out David Rudd announced a tribute for the in 1997 for not recruiting better or winning coach, who had led the team back to prominence during his 10 years there, only to enough, a local hero forced to sign his “resigchange his mind as the Memphis fandom nation” on an empty concession stand counter under the stands after the final game of reacted with indignation. the season. “To see your level of upset and distress has To recruit better and win more, the athletdeeply troubled me,” Rudd said, announcing his change of mind. “Although I was surprised ic department turned to John Calipari. And by the depth and intensity of conviction, pas- he did – both. sion and distress, it was my responsibility to A local sports columnist used Calipari’s big understand and weigh this in advance.” weekend as an opportunity to dredge up all Not sure how I feel about a university pres- that Mississippi mud. ident giving in to community pressure. It seems a little wishy-washy to me. This was not, after all, about a hero discovered to have
Using that time-honored journalist’s gambit, “Hey, I’m not saying it, I’m just telling you what they said,” he quoted some of the outraged.
PHOTO BY VICTORIA GRAFF | CONTRIBUTING PHOTOGRAPHER
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In Louisville’s 34-31 loss against Houston last Saturday, Kyle Bolin became the third quarterback to take a snap in only the first two games of the season.
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P H O T O 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
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or the first time since 2011, the Louisville football team will not carry a winning record into the month of October. As disappointing as that is, the season is far from over, and there are improvements outside of MIKE the standard “block better” and “tackle better” that can RUTHERFORD @cardchronicle be easily made. Five in particular stand out to your humble narrator. opposing 1. NO MORE LOSING THE BATTLE OF THE SIDELINES Bobby Petrino admitted after last Saturday’s loss to Houston that the preceding week of practice had not been a good one for Louisville and that the team had seemed flat once game time rolled around. It showed. While the Cougar sideline was consistently bouncing around and looking precisely how you’d expect the sideline of a team fully invested in winning to look, the Cardinal sideline seemed about as focused and excited as a 12-year-old at the opera. That can’t happen. There are certain things in sports that you can’t control – the bounce of a ball, an opposing player’s superior skill, an official’s call – which makes handling the things you can control all the more important. No one can raise or lower the intensity of the Louisville sideline other than the Cardinal players themselves. If they are truly dedicated to making this season a special one, then the fan base should be able to tell simply by looking at the UofL sideline in every game going forward. P H O T O 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
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How to Get the Season Back on Track
2. A QUARTERBACK (OR MULTIPLE QUARTERBACKS) NEEDS (OR NEED) TO STEP UP We’re all tired of the quarterback debate, but there’s no downplaying the importance of the conversation since you can’t overstate the importance of the position.
Through the first two games of the season, Louisville’s quarterbacks have given the ball to the defense six times and allowed 17 points off of those turnovers. Both of those numbers are tied for the most by a Power 5 conference program. Heading into the Clemson game, Louisville’s quarterbacks also rank last in the ACC in passer rating, touchdowns, completion percentage and yards per attempt. Improvement has to come at the position, and it can’t be just a flash in the pan thing. Whoever finally gets assigned to the role of “the guy” needs to hold on to it. 3. THE FRONT SEVEN NEEDS TO START PLAYING LIKE THE UNIT OF FUTURE PROS WE THOUGHT IT WAS This kind of falls in line with the “tackle better” philosophy, but whatever, it’s important. Louisville’s defensive front seven was supposed to be its ultimate strength in 2015, a unit headlined by veterans Keith Kelsey, Sheldon Rankins, DeAngelo Brown and James Burgess, as well as former Big 12 Defensive Player of the Year Devonte Fields. While the group has had its moments, it also needs to shoulder the lion’s share of the blame for having just two sacks and ranking 104th in
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the country against the run heading into the Clemson game. So, yeah, tackle better. 4. START DEFERRING ON WON COIN TOSSES This is just a personal thing that I know isn’t going to happen but that I’m throwing out there anyway. Louisville has won its last eight games in which it has kicked off to begin the game. Conversely, it’s just 2-5 in its last seven games when receiving the opening kickoff. Just sayin’. It’s worth a shot. 5. LOUISVILLE FANS NEED TO BRING SOME OF THEIR “BIG GAME” ENERGY TO THE “LITTLE GAMES” Cardinal football fans do the big game just as well as anybody. They will bring 35,000 to Atlanta for a season-opener against Auburn, and they will pack the house for a Thursday night game against burgeoning ACC rival Clemson. The next step in the evolution of the fan base is bringing that same energy to games where you might have to force yourself to get up a little bit. Louisville’s crowd of 50,019 for the Houston game was the second-lowest for a home opener since Papa John’s Cardinal Stadium expanded in 2010. The only opener with a lower turnout was the 2011 game against Murray State. The “fans should do this” discussion is every bit as played out as the quarterback one, but just like the players, you have to control what you can control. VT
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September Stirs Thoughts of Spring
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erhaps the beautiful Kentucky Derby and Triple Crown run by American Pharoah has provided an emotional boost, but the early September days have been notable for a stirring of emotions and a heightened anticipation of events not far down the road in the Spring of 2016.
Horse Sense JOHN ASHER
Although the issue was never personally in doubt, American Pharoah’s Triple Crown proved that the dream of that rare and difficult sweep is not only possible, but achievable. In the case of this wonderful horse and others that will surely follow, many fans have discovered, or rediscovered, that the achievement is worth the wait. While the experiences surrounding the Longines Kentucky Oaks (Grade I) and the Kentucky Derby Presented by Yum! Brands (GI) remain the most special events in ours sport, I’ve pondered over the past few days how special September has become. One reason for the latter is the relatively recent development that the official start of the respective “Roads” to the Kentucky Derby and Oaks, now entering their fourth year, begin during the month. The points systems that will determine the fields that will run on Friday, May 6 for the Oaks and Saturday, May 7 for Kentucky Derby award their first points in September.
The process fittingly begins where those respective journeys will end: beneath the venerable Twin Spires with the $200,000 Pocahontas Stakes (GII) for 2-yearold fillies – the first stop on the “Road to the Kentucky Oaks” – and the $150,000 Iroquois Presented by U.S. Bank (GIII) for 2-yearolds, the opening opportunity for Kentucky Derby points.
The early leader in points on the “Road to the Kentucky Derby” is Cocked and Loaded, who earned redemption after back-to-back losses with a 9-1 win the 34th running of the mile and a sixteenth Iroquois. The Illinois-based Cocked and Loaded won for trainer Larry Rivelli and jockey Emmanuel Esquivel, who earned his first stakes victory at Churchill Downs just over 24 hours after his first career win over the track. The victory guaranteed the colt a spot in field for the upcoming Sentient Jet Breeders’ Cup Juvenile (GI) on Oct. 31 at Keeneland. The Iroquois is a “Breeders’ Cup Win and You’re In” event for the Juvenile. Whether Cocked and Loaded will evolve into a major contender next spring’s 142nd running of the Kentucky Derby will be revealed in the months to come. But he’s the top dog in the Derby hunt after last Saturday’s race at Churchill Downs. I’ll admit to being a little nervous that runner-up Rated R Superstar could emerge as star of his crop. The name is not one I’d prefer to see among the previous 141 winners of the Derby that wind their way through the
Cocked and Loaded is the early leader in "Road to the Kentucky Derby" points after a comfortable win in the Iroquois Presented by U.S. Bank.
Churchill Downs’ grandstand the clubhouse. But I am enchanted by the potential of third-place finisher Unbridled Outlaw, a Dale Romans-trained colt out of the nextto-last crop by top sire Unbridled’s Song who endured terrible traffic troubles during his third career start to finish a fast-closing third. “That’s the most tenacity I’ve ever seen out of one of my horses,” said Romans of his hard-luck colt. “He had all the right in the world to pull himself up and run last and he didn’t do it.” That’s enough for me to put Unbridled Outlaw on Derby 142 watch list. Dothraki Queen made trainer Ken McPeek and every “Game of Thrones” fan who happened to be watching happy with her narrow win in the Pocahontas. The unbeaten daughter of Pure Prize now leads the “Road to the Kentucky Oaks” standings and earned a guaranteed run in the $2 million Breeders’ Cup Juvenile Fillies. The fun of watching those possible Derby and Oaks hopes perform on Saturday was followed Monday by a trip to Keeneland for the opening day of its September Yearling Sale. The sale always provides a wonderful opportunity share time with friends in the industry and to witness some of horse racing’s most powerful people in action. But in a sport and industry built on hopes and dreams, it is always a marvelous thing to see yearlings pass through the sales ring. Their pedigrees are stuffed with accomplished names, each youngster is impeccably turned out for his or her time in the auction ring, and one can easily imagine many individuals in the September Sale catalogue wearing roses or lilies across their withers a couple of springs down the road. Prices were up for the 150 horses that passed through the sales ring on the sale’s opening day. Hopes were soaring, too.
Dothraki Queen is perfect after two starts and leads the "Road to the Kentucky Oaks" standings after her win in the Pocohontas.
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And to think it’s only September. VT
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P H OTO S 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
Jawon Pass is the highly rated quarterback from Carver High School in Columbus, Georgia, who committed to UofL this summer. He can officially sign with the Cards in February. Khane Pass, his older brother, is a freshman safety for the Cards. Jawon is 6-foot-5 and listed at 220 pounds. His Carver H.S. team played Creekside High School from Fairburn, Georgia, on the Friday night before UofL’s season opener against Auburn in Atlanta. A hundred or so UofL fans were in the stands to cheer on Pass. He picked the Cards over Alabama and Auburn. Did you notice all the UofL fans?
I would probably say Cam Newton. I look up to Cam Newton.
I saw them all, and I appreciate them coming out to show me support.
Is Teddy Bridgewater on that list?
What does that mean to you, that there were hundreds of UofL fans? It means a lot. It just shows their loyalty. I love Card Nation.
Taylor’s 10 KENT TAYLOR WAVE3 Sports
I see a little Teddy in me. I’m just ready to do great things at Louisville. What is the best part of your game right now?
What would you tell UofL fans – what are they going to get in Jawon Pass?
My ability to run the ball and pass at a high level. I can do both.
They’re going to get a hard worker, a good leader. A guy that isn’t ever going to give up, a humble player.
What are you working on most?
Who would you say you’ve modeled your play as a quarterback after?
Small mechanics. I’m working on small mechanics more
than anything. What excites you about playing for Bobby Petrino? He’s an offensive genius. I can come in under him and get prepared for the next level and do great things. Do you anticipate playing next year? It’s up to the coach. I’ll come in, stay humble, work hard and, however it plays out, that’s what’s meant to be. Did you used to work at Auburn games? I actually worked in the concession stand. VT
Cervantes Wins National Fastpitch Crown
U
niversity of Kentucky softball great Brittany Cervantes made the most of her fourth year in professional softball, earning several national honors while leading the Chicago Bandits to the 2015 National Pro Fastpitch Cowles Cup Championship on Monday. Cervantes ended the regular season with a team-best .358 average, adding 26 runs scored, six doubles, nine homers and 23 RBI while leading the league in slugging percentage at .670 and on-base percentage at .507. Her impressive season at the plate led her to Louisville Slugger Offensive Player of the Year and All-NPF Team honors at the 2015 NPF Awards Banquet. Cervantes was also the Bandits’ Offensive Player of the Year. COURTESY PHOTOS
The native of Chatsworth, California, kept her hot bat alive in postseason play, going 5-for-10 at the plate with a double and one RBI, drawing four walks. The Bandits played the USSSA Pride in the championship series with Cervantes going 4-for-7 in the two games played with the Bandits claiming the national championship with wins in each of the first two games of the three-game series. Cervantes had a decorated career at Kentucky, playing catcher and third base during her tenure. An All-Southeastern Conference First Team selection in 2012, Cervantes earned three SEC weekly honors during her time at UK and ranks first all-time in RBI and home runs. She also ranks top10 all-time in games played, doubles, walks, runs scored and slugging percentage.
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The slugger hit 13 home runs in her final season with Kentucky and 15 during her junior season – both of which figures still rank as the third and second-most homers ever hit in a season by a UK player. A two-year member of the SEC Academic Honor Roll, Cervantes graduated from UK with a bachelor’s degree in broadcast journalism in May 2012. For more information on the Kentucky softball team, visit UKathletics.com or follow @UKSoftball on Twitter and Instagram, or Kentucky Softball on Facebook.
DISTINCTLY BEAUTIFUL CALL US 502-968-2009 To see more samples of our work visit highlandroofing.com
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Jawon Pass Is Coming to the Cards
Sports
Male’s Devin Gentry escaped a tackle attempt by Trinity’s Trey Patterson.
UofL commit Keion Wakefield was able to get a grip on the ball after juggling the reception and chalk up another Bulldogs touchdown.
Bulldogs Tear Apart Shamrocks M
ale High School dominated Trinity High School last Friday night with a resounding 42-13 victory to secure their fourth win in the last five meetings against the No. 1 ranked team in the state.
Bulldogs quarterback Hayden Shelton threw for three touchdowns while Devin Gentry rushed for a further three. Shelton threw 12-23 for 266 yards while Gentry added 88 rushing yards for Male, as they also stopped Trinity thanks to a tight defense, holding the Shamrocks to 35 yards in the second half. S E P T E M B E R 1 7 , 2 0 1 5 • W W W . V O I C E -T R I B U N E . C O M
Shamrocks’ Jailen Reed took a handoff from Jacob Woosley.
Bulldogs QB Hayden Shelton readied himself for a snap.
Male extended their season’s tally to 4-0, while Trinity saw their first defeat of the season, dropping to 3-1 after Head Coach Bob Beatty suffered the third heaviest defeat in his tenure as Trinity head coach. LOOKING AHEAD No. 9 DeSales Colts (3-0) out of Class 2A will travel to the home field of Class 5A Fern Creek Tigers (2-1) September 18 at 7 p.m. Fern Creek comes into this one with a strong run game behind dual threats at the running back position, Delquan Wimberly and Jamison White. The Colts, led by quarterback and UofL commit Austin Johnson, will look to stay undefeated on the season. VT
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P H OTO S 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 Allie Gregory, Shelby Olsen and Lee Ann Cunningham.
I
Nineteen Is the Magic Number
you want to come in the gym f you walk into an thinking about the people who Assumption volleyball came before us, and we don’t want practice, it will not take to let anyone down. So since we you long to know what the are seniors, we are stepping up our team’s goal is for this season. game to make sure that everyone is following us and working hard too One of the premier powerHigh School so we can keep that legacy going.” houses in volleyball in KenSports Report A wise sage once said that a tucky has won 18 state chamthreefold cord is hard to break. For pionships total. On the left RANDY this team, it’s the trio of captains side of their practice jerseys WHETSTONE JR. – Lee Ann Cunningham, Allie is the number 19, which acts Gregory and Shelby Olsen – that is as a constant reminder to the players the unassailable triumvirate leading Assumpthat they are always working toward tion to winning its 19th state championship. taking the next championship. Cunningham, who is a defensive specialist “We started that I don’t know how many years ago,” says Head Coach Ron Kordes of displaying the number. “It is just a daily reminder of what their goal is. Our goal has always been the possibility to try to win a state championship. That is always our number one goal. So it is a daily reminder. Although they don’t see it on themselves, they see it on another shirt. This is what we are working for.”
headed to Rice University says, “Since we are seniors this year, we all stepped up in a leadership role. We all play club together, so it is just a matter of working well with the underclassmen that we haven’t played with. It is also coming together on the court, playing effectively and having a good and aggressive mentality. We are trying to leave a mark so that when the underclassmen are in our position next year, they have a standard to live up to.”
Allie Gregory, senior defensive specialist who is headed to the University of Florida, says that by following in the footsteps of great players who preceded her, she and the other players are always striving to leave a legacy.
The Rockets have created a climate in the practice setting that keeps the girls motivated, focused and driven in their efforts. Shelby Olsen, a setter who is headed to Northern Kentucky University, remarks that she and her team are working hard every single day to achieve their goal:
“It definitely makes you work harder so
“There is a very high expectation every-
PHOTO BY RANDY WHETSTONE JR. | CONTRIBUTING PHOTOGRAPHER
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day. If you don’t work your hardest, you shouldn’t expect to play. Everybody comes in to put 100 percent every day. The whole atmosphere is to compete. Even if you come in after school tired, you are still expected to compete just like you would if you were ready for a game day.” At the head of any prominent team is a visionary coach who is able to deposit the intangibles within their players that they will be able to carry along not just in volleyball but all throughout life. Coach Kordes preaches this message: “You have to be willing to work for what you want. Nobody is going to give you anything. It requires you coming in here on a daily basis and learning how to focus on getting better in what you do, regardless of what you’re doing in life. I tell them they have to learn how to compete because it is a competitive world out there. Somebody is going to want the scholarship you got, somebody is going to want the boyfriend you got, and somebody is going to want the promotion you are in line for. So to learn how to get through this world and this life, I try to put a tough coating on them.” Hence, the back of the practice jerseys reads, ‘Never Give Up, Never Give In.’ The mentality of the Assumption volleyball program is to always work hard for what you want. And with the girls living and breathing that idea at every practice every day and the coach constantly working to instill that attitude in them, 19 seems closer than ever. 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 7 , 2 0 1 5
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Louisville Pure Tap 5K Race Results For a full list of race results visit lsc5k.com/2015-results
Bib Place Time First Name Last Name 645 1 16:37.6 Patrick Hynes 165 2 16:51.0 David Grieshaber 771 3 17:04.4 Brandon Page 131 4 17:35.3 Ali Faraji-Tajrishi 483 5 17:36.0 Alex Beruscha 949 6 17:37.8 Sean Mendes 790 7 17:47.5 Jared Randall 4 8 17:51.9 Andy Fentor 567 9 18:08.6 Michael Farkas 359 10 18:57.6 Stephen Salois 523 11 18:58.1 Katie Casto Hynes 738 12 18:59.3 Robert Metz 622 13 19:26.4 Daniel Hart 697 14 19:38.5 Brian Kute 982 15 19:45.0 Kenneth Maier 905 16 19:52.1 David Wittmer 550 17 20:02.1 John Dixon 974 18 20:03.3 Jason Haynes 719 19 20:09.3 Jonathan Marcum 230 20 21:14.7 Edward Kinny 981 21 21:00.6 Nicholas Lietz 970 22 20:58.5 Evan Torline 189 23 21:09.3 Thomas Hines 163 24 21:13.6 Jonathan Gregory 736 25 21:48.5 Sean McMullen 56 26 21:29.0 Jenniffer Burton 919 27 21:42.1 Billy Wages 154 28 21:41.5 Glen Girdler 229 29 21:37.6 Adam King 588 30 21:48.3 Vivienne Giessmann 990 31 21:47.1 Darren Esterle 29 32 21:42.5 Robert Ball 463 33 21:43.0 Jaime Alegnani 452 34 22:05.3 Kurt Zamora 147 35 21:57.0 Matt Galyon 378 36 22:06.2 Lee Slinker 234 37 21:53.1 Donald Knieriem 77 38 22:12.4 Edward Cloud 335 39 22:00.9 Adam Porter 144 40 21:54.9 Matthew Friend 402 41 22:15.5 Ryan Thompson 954 42 21:59.5 Myrdin Son 23 43 22:04.0 Robert Armstrong 266 44 22:30.7 Michael Lynch 318 45 22:16.4 Samantha Owen 912 46 22:07.5 Kelly Flowers 306 47 22:30.3 Darin Muhs 865 48 23:22.3 Manivannan Vangalur 30 49 22:33.0 Christine Balz 371 50 23:09.3 Mathew Shalenko 809 51 22:39.0 Victor Sandifer 457 52 22:54.1 Jason Abbott 585 53 22:38.8 Jessie Gatterdam 812 54 22:44.8 Robert Sarver 32 55 22:43.8 Michael Beal 221 56 23:11.7 Simon Kay 321 57 23:02.7 Gwen Packer 242 58 23:01.9 Dan Kummer 327 59 23:26.0 John Pfingston 756 60 23:13.5 Jeffrey Nalley 918 61 23:11.8 Jason Crowder 218 62 23:14.3 Alan Junkins 928 63 24:11.3 Monica Munery 222 64 23:13.7 Robert Kebbell 714 65 23:43.8 Todd Magner 562 66 23:33.6 Lance Edwards 992 67 23:26.1 Barry Zalph 956 68 24:04.9 Justin Mudd 243 69 23:37.6 Julie Laemmle 308 70 23:28.9 Jeff Nall 17 71 23:55.1 Chris Adwell 291 72 24:02.4 Chris Miles 856 73 23:57.9 Ethan Underwood 286 74 24:19.1 Brian McLean 859 75 23:59.3 Tonya Underwood 49 76 23:51.3 Doug Bostock 419 77 24:35.3 Chuck Waltrip 621 78 23:55.1 Becca Hart 365 79 23:59.0 Caroline Schulz 769 80 24:03.4 Dale Padgett 277 81 24:03.5 Todd Mayden 1010 82 24:10.7 Keith Krawiec 887 83 24:34.4 Tanner Webster 470 84 24:49.8 Garret Anderson 631 85 24:40.3 Nicholas Hill 540 86 24:17.3 Laryssa Cybriwsky 93 87 24:31.4 Mark Dallara 888 88 24:43.8 Titus Webster 387 89 24:25.2 Mark Spina 713 90 24:42.2 Evin Magner 314 91 25:10.8 Mary Orr
Gender M M M M M M M M M M F M M M M M M M M M M M M M M F M M M F M M F M M M M M M M M F M M F M M M F M M M F M M M F M M M M M F M M M M M F M M M M M F M M F F M M M M M M F M M M M F
Age City State Class Event Class Pos. 33 Louisville KY Overall 5K 1 24 Louisville KY M 20-24 5K 1 25 Louisville KY M 25-29 5K 1 23 Louisville KY M 20-24 5K 2 24 Louisville KY M 20-24 5K 3 23 M 20-24 5K 4 36 Louisville KY M 35-39 5K 1 30 M 30-34 5K 1 36 Louisville KY M 35-39 5K 2 29 Crestwood KY M 25-29 5K 2 33 Louisville KY Overall 5K 1 50 Louisville KY M 50-54 5K 1 31 New Albany IN M 30-34 5K 2 28 Louisville KY M 25-29 5K 3 55 M 55-59 5K 1 26 Louisville KY M 25-29 5K 4 26 Louisville KY M 25-29 5K 5 35 M 35-39 5K 3 38 Crestwood KY M 35-39 5K 4 26 Louisville KY M 25-29 5K 6 30 M 30-34 5K 3 24 Red Deer M 20-24 5K 5 52 Louisville KE M 50-54 5K 2 41 Louisville KY M 40-44 5K 1 25 Louisville KY M 25-29 5K 7 37 Louisville KY F 35-39 5K 1 41 M 40-44 5K 2 27 Jeffersonville IN M 25-29 5K 8 33 Louisville KY M 30-34 5K 4 21 Louisville KY F 20-24 5K 1 50 M 50-54 5K 3 38 Crestwood KY M 35-39 5K 5 31 Louisville KY F 30-34 5K 1 46 Crestwood KY M 45-49 5K 1 29 Louisville KY M 25-29 5K 9 39 Elizabethtown KY M 35-39 5K 6 64 Tell City IN M 60-64 5K 1 38 Louisville KY M 35-39 5K 7 22 Elizabethtown KY M 20-24 5K 6 35 Louisville KY M 35-39 5K 8 27 Clarksville IN M 25-29 5K 10 46 F 45-49 5K 1 44 Jeffersonville IN M 40-44 5K 3 38 Louisville KY M 35-39 5K 9 36 Louisville KY F 35-39 5K 2 59 Louisville KY M 55-59 5K 2 41 Louisville KY M 40-44 5K 4 39 Louisville KY M 35-39 5K 10 26 Louisville KY F 25-29 5K 1 36 Louisville KY M 35-39 5K 11 33 Louisville KY M 30-34 5K 5 44 Louisville KY M 40-44 5K 5 36 Louisville KY F 35-39 5K 3 30 Marysville IN M 30-34 5K 6 48 Louisville KY M 45-49 5K 2 31 Louisville KY M 30-34 5K 7 40 Louisville KY F 40-44 5K 1 40 Sellersburg IN M 40-44 5K 6 29 Louisville KY M 25-29 5K 11 36 Louisville KY M 35-39 5K 12 35 M 35-39 5K 13 53 Louisville KY M 50-54 5K 4 31 F 30-34 5K 2 47 Lagrange KY M 45-49 5K 3 53 New Salisbury IN M 50-54 5K 5 36 Louisville KY M 35-39 5K 14 58 M 55-59 5K 3 34 Louisville KY M 30-34 5K 8 26 Louisville KY F 25-29 5K 2 59 Louisville KY M 55-59 5K 4 48 Louisville KY M 45-49 5K 4 28 Jeffersonville IN M 25-29 5K 12 6 Louisville KY M 1- 9 5K 1 37 Louisville KY M 35-39 5K 15 38 Louisville KY F 35-39 5K 4 29 Georgetown IN M 25-29 5K 13 38 Louisville KY M 35-39 5K 16 29 New Albany IN F 25-29 5K 3 34 Shelbyville KY F 30-34 5K 3 47 Prospect KY M 45-49 5K 5 35 Louisville KY M 35-39 5K 17 59 M 55-59 5K 5 14 Greenville IN M 10-14 5K 1 13 Mt Washington KY M 10-14 5K 2 33 Georgetown IN M 30-34 5K 9 24 Eminence KY F 20-24 5K 2 44 Louisville KY M 40-44 5K 7 12 Greenville IN M 10-14 5K 3 52 Louisville KY M 50-54 5K 6 27 New Salisbury IN M 25-29 5K 14 24 Louisville KY F 20-24 5K 3
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Gen. Place 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 1 11 12 13 14 15 16 17 18 19 20 21 22 23 24 2 25 26 27 3 28 29 4 30 31 32 33 34 35 36 37 5 38 39 6 40 41 42 7 43 44 45 8 46 47 48 9 49 50 51 52 53 10 54 55 56 57 58 11 59 60 61 62 63 12 64 65 13 14 66 67 68 69 70 71 15 72 73 74 75 16
Total Pace Time Back Tot Div. Tot Gend. 5:20/M 00:00.0 835 346 5:24/M 00:13.4 835 346 5:28/M 00:26.8 835 346 5:38/M 00:55.7 835 346 5:38/M 00:58.4 835 346 5:39/M 01:00.2 835 346 5:42/M 01:09.3 835 346 5:43/M 01:13.8 835 346 5:49/M 01:31.0 835 346 6:04/M 02:19.2 835 346 6:04/M 00:00.0 835 489 6:04/M 02:20.3 835 346 6:13/M 02:46.5 835 346 6:17/M 02:58.1 835 346 6:19/M 03:04.9 835 346 6:21/M 03:12.4 835 346 6:24/M 03:20.8 835 346 6:25/M 03:24.4 835 346 6:26/M 03:27.8 835 346 6:33/M 03:49.3 835 346 6:41/M 04:15.2 835 346 6:43/M 04:18.5 835 346 6:47/M 04:31.8 835 346 6:47/M 04:32.1 835 346 6:51/M 04:45.2 835 346 6:52/M 02:30.1 835 489 6:54/M 04:54.7 835 346 6:54/M 04:55.4 835 346 6:55/M 04:58.8 835 346 6:55/M 02:40.0 835 489 6:56/M 05:00.4 835 346 6:56/M 05:01.2 835 346 6:56/M 02:42.8 835 489 6:59/M 05:09.7 835 346 6:59/M 05:09.9 835 346 7:00/M 05:13.6 835 346 7:00/M 05:13.7 835 346 7:00/M 05:13.8 835 346 7:01/M 05:16.3 835 346 7:01/M 05:17.3 835 346 7:02/M 05:18.7 835 346 7:02/M 02:59.6 835 489 7:03/M 05:21.7 835 346 7:04/M 05:25.6 835 346 7:05/M 03:09.7 835 489 7:05/M 05:29.9 835 346 7:07/M 05:35.7 835 346 7:09/M 05:41.4 835 346 7:13/M 03:33.1 835 489 7:13/M 05:54.2 835 346 7:14/M 05:55.9 835 346 7:14/M 05:56.7 835 346 7:14/M 03:37.4 835 489 7:15/M 05:59.5 835 346 7:17/M 06:06.1 835 346 7:17/M 06:07.3 835 346 7:21/M 03:58.3 835 489 7:21/M 06:19.5 835 346 7:22/M 06:20.5 835 346 7:22/M 06:22.9 835 346 7:23/M 06:24.0 835 346 7:23/M 06:25.9 835 346 7:24/M 04:09.8 835 489 7:25/M 06:30.1 835 346 7:27/M 06:37.0 835 346 7:30/M 06:46.5 835 346 7:31/M 06:48.5 835 346 7:31/M 06:49.8 835 346 7:31/M 04:31.5 835 489 7:31/M 06:51.3 835 346 7:34/M 06:58.6 835 346 7:35/M 07:01.5 835 346 7:36/M 07:05.4 835 346 7:36/M 07:06.5 835 346 7:36/M 04:47.3 835 489 7:37/M 07:08.7 835 346 7:38/M 07:11.5 835 346 7:38/M 04:52.9 835 489 7:38/M 04:53.8 835 489 7:40/M 07:17.1 835 346 7:40/M 07:18.9 835 346 7:42/M 07:24.4 835 346 7:43/M 07:25.5 835 346 7:43/M 07:29.0 835 346 7:44/M 07:31.9 835 346 7:44/M 05:12.8 835 489 7:45/M 07:33.5 835 346 7:45/M 07:33.7 835 346 7:45/M 07:33.7 835 346 7:45/M 07:34.7 835 346 7:46/M 05:17.2 835 489
Tot AG 1 21 38 21 21 21 59 49 59 38 1 26 49 38 20 38 38 59 59 38 49 21 26 43 38 61 43 38 49 40 26 59 90 33 38 59 13 59 21 59 38 43 43 59 61 20 43 59 84 59 49 43 61 49 33 49 50 43 38 59 59 26 90 33 26 59 20 49 84 20 33 38 12 59 61 38 59 84 90 33 59 20 14 14 49 40 43 14 26 38 40
Place 92 93 94 95 96 97 98 99 100 101 102 103 104 105 106 107 108 109 110 111 112 113 114 115 116 117 118 119 120 121 122 123 124 125 126 127 128 129 130 131 132 133 134 135 136 137 138 139 140 141 142 143 144 145 146 147 148 149 150 151 152 153 154 155 156 157 158 159 160 161 162 163 164 165 166 167 168 169 170 171 172 173 174 175 176 177 178 179 180 181 182 183 184 185 186 187 188 189 190
Time 24:35.1 24:30.2 24:44.4 24:54.7 24:28.1 24:55.0 24:41.2 25:09.9 24:34.3 24:34.8 24:49.3 25:14.6 25:35.1 24:55.8 24:45.7 25:41.6 25:22.5 25:25.9 25:30.8 24:46.6 24:52.4 24:56.4 25:04.6 25:27.1 25:52.8 24:57.0 25:10.1 25:43.6 25:15.1 25:14.9 25:01.1 25:24.4 25:24.6 25:30.8 26:26.3 25:43.9 25:28.8 25:17.6 25:09.4 26:01.9 25:28.3 25:32.6 25:13.9 25:31.1 25:16.0 25:40.6 25:40.6 25:30.4 26:02.2 25:22.2 25:27.6 25:24.5 25:45.2 25:23.6 25:43.8 25:44.1 25:48.6 26:20.5 25:31.5 25:59.1 25:46.9 26:14.1 26:14.1 26:27.7 25:45.1 26:09.2 25:53.5 25:58.6 26:11.0 26:22.0 26:08.0 25:55.8 26:25.4 26:11.9 26:12.0 26:56.2 26:26.1 26:30.1 26:30.4 26:37.7 26:45.9 26:15.6 26:06.7 27:10.9 26:56.4 27:31.7 26:50.5 26:16.0 26:21.2 26:41.1 26:18.7 26:41.1 26:56.3 26:41.9 27:00.0 27:00.4 26:56.7 27:01.5 26:48.3
First Name Mindi Marcus Kori Derek Ben Megan Matthew Ron Zach Janice Steve Elaina Rob Melissa Audrey Gary Katey Aaron Rick Amber Tessa Chris Susan Tom Brett James Jeff Brian Michael Kieran Evan Alyssa Lauren Eric Jacob Harrison Mark Carrie Nick Jason Kristen Aiden Thomas Michelle Patrick Jason Lindsey Jim Holly Meghan Andrea David Chad Aaron Robert David Stacy Nathan Richard Julie Heather Ray James Peter Carrie Mike Michael Andrew Jonathan Will Breanne James Chris John Judith Jordan Lorann Michael Robert Rebekah Wes Bryan Josh Robert Ryan Lauren David Rob Adam Daniel Joann Brian Tyler Geoff David Kathryn Matt Ken Vasu
Last Name King Hammond Andrews Szesny King Morgan Pryor Pratt Schadler Stover Martin Gardner South Merry Duke Wright Piazza Abell Fletcher Gahafer Allen Gatterdam Marcum Billht Lawson Wolff Kennedy Kennedy Villacarlos Heintz Jolgren Howie Lambdin Alvey McEwen Heick Lehr McIntre Clark Caranto Augspurger Obara Ramage Hills Heintz Adamchik Adamchik Garvey Davis Greeley Smith Keely Lynch Daniels Grieco Boegler Chaplin Brown Goranflo McCullough Rochet Hupfer Greenlee Bahr Pond Gaffigan Villacarlos Rochet Reed Ammerman Nugent Braden Dunn Reesor Steilberg McLaughlin Wheeler Robinson Krausen Mulloy Esarey Arnett Dunn Hammer Helton Curtis Sedlak Hornung Ashley Whitis Jolgren Knisely Webster Glaab Camp Mattingly Ammerman Bramer Kakarlapudi
Gender F M F M M F M M M F M F M F F M F M M F F M F M M M M M M M M F F M M M M F M M F M M F M M F M F F F M M F M M F M M F F M M M F M M M M F F M M M F M F M M F M M M M M F M M M M F M M M M F M M M
Age City State 41 Louisville KY 30 38 Louisville KY 30 Louisville KY 62 Louisville KY 27 Louisville KY 42 52 Shelbyville KY 30 39 Lagrange KY 45 Louisville KY 33 New Albany IN 55 Louisville KY 36 Louisville KY 21 Elizabethtown KY 39 Fairdale KY 30 Louisville KY 36 Louisville KY 48 Louisville KY 28 Shepherdsville KY 15 Louisville KY 32 Bloomfield NJ 37 Crestwood KY 33 36 Crestwood KY 57 35 Louisville KY 33 Louisville KY 37 Elizabethtown KY 11 Louisville KY 19 Louisville KY 14 Fisherville KY 15 Taylorsville KY 50 Here KY 22 Louisville KY 23 Louisville KY 42 35 Finchville KY 14 Pewee Valley KY 39 Louisville KY 39 Louisville KY 7 52 Prospect KY 27 Louisville KY 42 Louisville KY 42 Crestwood KY 11 Crestwood KY 64 46 Louisville KY 32 Louisville KY 40 Memphis IN 48 Louisville KY 41 Rineyville KY 30 Fairdale KY 58 Louisville KY 42 33 Louisville KY 31 New Albany IN 68 Louisville KY 35 Louisville KY 40 Crestwood KY 24 Louisville KY 24 Louisville KY 28 Louisville KY 30 Louisville KY 32 Louisville KY 37 Elizabethtown KY 43 Crestwood KY 33 Jeffersonville IN 23 Louisville KY 30 Louisville KY 30 Louisville KY 45 65 Louisville KY 54 Louisville KY 33 New Salisbury IN 29 Elizabethtown KY 47 Louisville KY 36 Louisville KY 29 Louisville KY 35 Louisville KY 49 Prospect KY 33 58 Louisville KY 36 Crestwood KY 22 Erlanger KY 58 Prospect KY 51 Louisville KY 40 Louisville KY 50 Brooks KY 54 Louisville KY 47 Rineyville KY 18 Greenville IN 33 Louisville KY 30 Louisville KY 23 Louisville KY 30 Louisville KY 46 Louisville KY 41 Louisville KY
Class F 40-44 M 30-34 F 35-39 M 30-34 M 60-64 F 25-29 M 40-44 M 50-54 M 30-34 F 35-39 M 45-49 F 30-34 M 55-59 F 35-39 F 20-24 M 35-39 F 30-34 M 35-39 M 45-49 F 25-29 F 15-19 M 30-34 F 35-39 M 30-34 M 35-39 M 55-59 M 35-39 M 30-34 M 35-39 M 10-14 M 15-19 F 10-14 F 15-19 M 50-54 M 20-24 M 20-24 M 40-44 F 35-39 M 10-14 M 35-39 F 35-39 M 1- 9 M 50-54 F 25-29 M 40-44 M 40-44 F 10-14 M 60-64 F 45-49 F 30-34 F 40-44 M 45-49 M 40-44 F 30-34 M 55-59 M 40-44 F 30-34 M 30-34 M 65-69 F 35-39 F 40-44 M 20-24 M 20-24 M 25-29 F 30-34 M 30-34 M 35-39 M 40-44 M 30-34 F 20-24 F 30-34 M 30-34 M 45-49 M 65-69 F 50-54 M 30-34 F 25-29 M 45-49 M 35-39 F 25-29 M 35-39 M 45-49 M 30-34 M 55-59 M 35-39 F 20-24 M 55-59 M 50-54 M 40-44 M 50-54 F 50-54 M 45-49 M 15-19 M 30-34 M 30-34 F 20-24 M 30-34 M 45-49 M 40-44
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Event 5K 5K 5K 5K 5K 5K 5K 5K 5K 5K 5K 5K 5K 5K 5K 5K 5K 5K 5K 5K 5K 5K 5K 5K 5K 5K 5K 5K 5K 5K 5K 5K 5K 5K 5K 5K 5K 5K 5K 5K 5K 5K 5K 5K 5K 5K 5K 5K 5K 5K 5K 5K 5K 5K 5K 5K 5K 5K 5K 5K 5K 5K 5K 5K 5K 5K 5K 5K 5K 5K 5K 5K 5K 5K 5K 5K 5K 5K 5K 5K 5K 5K 5K 5K 5K 5K 5K 5K 5K 5K 5K 5K 5K 5K 5K 5K 5K 5K 5K
Class Pos. 2 10 5 11 2 4 8 7 12 6 6 4 6 7 4 18 5 19 7 5 1 13 8 14 20 7 21 15 22 4 1 1 2 8 7 8 9 9 5 23 10 2 9 6 10 11 2 3 2 6 3 8 12 7 8 13 8 16 1 11 4 9 10 15 9 17 24 14 18 5 10 19 9 2 1 20 7 10 25 8 26 11 21 9 27 6 10 10 15 11 2 12 2 22 23 7 24 13 16
Gen. Place 17 76 18 77 78 19 79 80 81 20 82 21 83 22 23 84 24 85 86 25 26 87 27 88 89 90 91 92 93 94 95 28 29 96 97 98 99 30 100 101 31 102 103 32 104 105 33 106 34 35 36 107 108 37 109 110 38 111 112 39 40 113 114 115 41 116 117 118 119 42 43 120 121 122 44 123 45 124 125 46 126 127 128 129 130 47 131 132 133 134 48 135 136 137 138 49 139 140 141
Total Pace 7:47/M 7:48/M 7:49/M 7:50/M 7:50/M 7:51/M 7:52/M 7:52/M 7:52/M 7:52/M 7:53/M 7:53/M 7:53/M 7:54/M 7:54/M 7:54/M 7:56/M 7:56/M 7:56/M 7:56/M 7:57/M 7:57/M 7:57/M 7:58/M 7:58/M 8:00/M 8:00/M 8:00/M 8:01/M 8:01/M 8:01/M 8:01/M 8:01/M 8:02/M 8:02/M 8:03/M 8:03/M 8:03/M 8:04/M 8:04/M 8:04/M 8:04/M 8:05/M 8:06/M 8:06/M 8:07/M 8:07/M 8:08/M 8:08/M 8:08/M 8:08/M 8:08/M 8:08/M 8:08/M 8:08/M 8:09/M 8:10/M 8:10/M 8:10/M 8:10/M 8:10/M 8:11/M 8:11/M 8:11/M 8:12/M 8:13/M 8:13/M 8:13/M 8:13/M 8:17/M 8:17/M 8:18/M 8:20/M 8:20/M 8:20/M 8:21/M 8:21/M 8:21/M 8:21/M 8:22/M 8:22/M 8:22/M 8:22/M 8:23/M 8:23/M 8:23/M 8:24/M 8:24/M 8:25/M 8:25/M 8:26/M 8:26/M 8:27/M 8:28/M 8:28/M 8:28/M 8:28/M 8:29/M 8:29/M
Time Back 05:20.7 07:41.4 05:25.3 07:48.5 07:48.8 05:34.3 07:55.0 07:56.2 07:56.7 05:37.9 07:57.8 05:39.5 07:59.1 05:41.4 05:41.6 08:02.7 05:48.0 08:08.4 08:08.4 05:49.6 05:51.0 08:10.7 05:52.6 08:12.5 08:14.4 08:19.4 08:22.1 08:22.2 08:22.6 08:22.7 08:23.4 06:04.7 06:04.9 08:26.6 08:28.0 08:30.7 08:31.2 06:12.0 08:31.8 08:31.9 06:13.2 08:33.8 08:36.3 06:18.3 08:38.4 08:41.0 06:22.8 08:44.3 06:25.2 06:25.3 06:25.8 08:45.2 08:45.3 06:26.7 08:46.1 08:48.1 06:31.2 08:50.7 08:51.0 06:32.4 06:33.9 08:55.3 08:55.5 08:55.9 06:39.7 09:00.8 09:01.5 09:01.5 09:02.2 06:54.2 06:55.7 09:18.2 09:22.5 09:23.0 07:05.1 09:24.4 07:06.3 09:26.2 09:26.3 07:08.5 09:28.9 09:29.0 09:29.1 09:30.5 09:32.6 07:14.0 09:33.5 09:33.7 09:37.8 09:39.1 07:21.8 09:41.7 09:46.3 09:46.7 09:46.7 07:27.9 09:47.5 09:50.1 09:51.1
Tot Div. 835 835 835 835 835 835 835 835 835 835 835 835 835 835 835 835 835 835 835 835 835 835 835 835 835 835 835 835 835 835 835 835 835 835 835 835 835 835 835 835 835 835 835 835 835 835 835 835 835 835 835 835 835 835 835 835 835 835 835 835 835 835 835 835 835 835 835 835 835 835 835 835 835 835 835 835 835 835 835 835 835 835 835 835 835 835 835 835 835 835 835 835 835 835 835 835 835 835 835
Tot Gend. 489 346 489 346 346 489 346 346 346 489 346 489 346 489 489 346 489 346 346 489 489 346 489 346 346 346 346 346 346 346 346 489 489 346 346 346 346 489 346 346 489 346 346 489 346 346 489 346 489 489 489 346 346 489 346 346 489 346 346 489 489 346 346 346 489 346 346 346 346 489 489 346 346 346 489 346 489 346 346 489 346 346 346 346 346 489 346 346 346 346 489 346 346 346 346 489 346 346 346
Tot AG 50 49 61 49 13 84 43 26 49 61 33 90 20 61 40 59 90 59 33 84 14 49 61 49 59 20 59 49 59 14 4 12 14 26 21 21 43 61 14 59 61 12 26 84 43 43 12 13 43 90 50 33 43 90 20 43 90 49 12 61 50 21 21 38 90 49 59 43 49 40 90 49 33 12 36 49 84 33 59 84 59 33 49 20 59 40 20 26 43 26 36 33 4 49 49 40 49 33 43
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 7 , 2 0 1 5
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Bib 676 976 22 399 675 304 944 786 959 845 726 582 841 289 114 448 331 11 140 146 464 584 721 985 701 983 228 667 873 626 654 641 699 467 733 625 986 284 529 969 25 10 789 632 627 458 459 972 96 160 379 223 263 542 164 955 524 510 156 280 353 199 162 475 334 580 874 352 791 21 764 501 1006 793 389 285 430 796 241 750 129 471 1015 613 185 91 821 193 945 437 655 235 889 593 518 729 468 52 220
Since 1992, Yum! Brands and our franchise partners have donated over
1.3 million pounds of prepared food to countless shelters and community centers throughout Kentucky.
40 Blessings in a Backpack | 42 UofL School of Music Gala | 47 Field & Fork
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Raise the Barre
PAGE
34
S O C I E TY
Raise the Barre This Louisville Ballet’s annual fundraiser is a chance to raise money to subsidize the pay for the company’s dancers. Thsi year’s event was held on September 12 at the Louisville Ballet Studio. Guests mingled with the Ballet’s dancers and got a unique chance to get a behind the scenes look at what makes a modern dance company tick.
John Shumate and Abby Shue.
Brenna Tysinger and Dr. Alexander Digenis.
Event co-chair Douglas Riddle and Patti Pugh-Moore.
Amber Garvey, Stephanie Kertis and Tori Thompson.
Jennifer Tuvlin and Kate Latts.
S E P T E M B E R 1 7 , 2 0 1 5 • W W W . V O I C E -T R I B U N E . C O M
Howard and Susan Vogt, and Robyn and Donny Hubbard.
Laura and Robert Wagner.
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Jodi Daves and Jeff Wethington.
PHOTOS BY BILL WINE | CONTRIBUTING PHOTOGRAPHER
S O C I E TY
Adam Hougland, Justin O’Dell, Brandon Ragland and Pete Lay.
Martha and Larry Johnston.
Jessica Cobb and Gates McClinchie.
Drs. Shervin and Helen Dashti.
Cheri Collis White, Laura Melillo Barnum, Ron Wolz and Chelsey Clark.
PHOTOS BY BILL WINE | CONTRIBUTING PHOTOGRAPHER
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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 7 , 2 0 1 5
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Event co-chairs Suzanne Whayne and Douglas Riddle.
Natalie Nguyen, Taylor Cobb and Isabel Jadick.
Philip Velinov and Natalia Velinova.
Kateryna Sellers and Adam Hougland.
Claire Tidmore, Callie Wall and Erin Landston.
Vanesa Demornay, Karmen Delarough and Jade Jolie.
S E P T E M B E R 1 7 , 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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PHOTOS BY BILL WINE | CONTRIBUTING PHOTOGRAPHER
Mark Eliason, Laura Melillo Barnum and Jeffrey Howard.
Zachary Meicher-Duzzi, Shelby Shenkman and Justin Hogan.
Patricia Perleberg-Owen and Pat Ballard.
John and Leslie Smart, and Diane and David Thurmond.
Jordan Martin, Emily O’Dell and Leigh Anne Albrechta.
James Inge, Cate Gaglio-Inge and Laura Wilkins.
PHOTOS BY BILL WINE
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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 7 , 2 0 1 5
S O C I E TY
Christmas in September The eighth Annual fundraiser for Prodigal Ministries Inc. – an organization that helps men and women released from prison find jobs, housing and counseling – featured former commercial airline pilot Lyle Prouse. Prouse discussed his book “Final Approach,” which details his experience as the first commercial pilot to be arrested and sent to prison for flying under the influence. At the Seelbach Hilton on September 10, Prouse spoke of his journey to sobriety and having his pilot’s license restated.
Clothing was modeled by children from The Oxmoor Center Fashion Council.
Chairman of the board of directors Tony Ford with Karen Ford and Becca and Craig Collins.
Board member Robert Gregor and Ralinda Gregor.
Spirit of Prodigal Award Recipient 2015 Norb Hancock, Diane Hancock, Peter and Diana Zanetti and Karl and Judy Kuiper.
Executive Director Jennifer Partin, keynote speaker Lyle Prouse and board member Mary Ellen Stottmann.
Lisa Cofer La Rocca and emcee Rachel Platt.
Santa Claus and Maxwell Johnson.
Board member Jack Shea, Lisa Shea, Jan and Mark Ostbloom, Theresa and Kevin Beam, Michele Konermann and Troy Head.
S E P T E M B E R 1 7 , 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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PHOTOS BY BILL WINE | CONTRIBUTING PHOTOGRAPHER
GRAND OPENING CELEBRATION
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S O C I E TY
Blessings in a Backpack Kentucky Select Properties held its annual Blessings in a Backpack fundraiser at Wolf Creek Clubhouse on September 10. Sponsored by Caliber Home Loans, Horne Title and Vincenzo’s Restaurant, the event included drinks, hors d’oeuvres and a silent auction. Blessings in a Backpack provides elementary schoolchildren in need, a backpack of food to take home for each weekend during the school year. Event Chair Judy Gordon of Kentucky Select with principal Ryan McCoy, Regina Jackson-Willis and Amy Moore of Engelhard Elementary School.
Linda Applegate, Laura Heiskill and Catherine Davidson. Angie Shaffrey and Laura Lawson.
Becky Jennings, Nikki Grizzle and Kim Holsclaw.
Danielle Tarullo, Steve Guttermuth, Leslie Davis, Jenny Tarullo and J. Bailey.
Lou and Kathy Winkler, Sherry Edwards and Cary Thale.
S E P T E M B E R 1 7 , 2 0 1 5 • W W W . V O I C E -T R I B U N E . C O M
Ava and Brian Moore.
Marci Wilson-Bates, Jo Bishop and Russell Smith.
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PHOTOS BY TIM VALENTINO | CONTRIBUTING PHOTOGRAPHER
This upscale consignment store celebrated 10 years of business with a reception on September 10 that featured refreshments, chair massages and 10 percent off purchases. September purchases will enter guests to win a $25 gift certificate or a Sassy Fox t-shirt.
Jessica Moreland, Vanessa Pfeiffer, Gina Thomas and Lisa Hiatt.
Kathryn Beck-Abbott and Donna Long.
Whitney Durs and Leslie Donhoff.
P H OTO S B Y C R Y S TA L L U D W I C K | C O N T R I B U T I N G P H OTO G R A P H E R
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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 7 , 2 0 1 5
S O C I E TY
Sassy Fox 10th Anniversary
S O C I E TY
UofL School of Music Gala University of Louisville School of Music held its annual faculty gala at Comstock Concert Hall on September 11. The free event featured top faculty performing their favorite works. A reception was held at the University Club before the concert.
Mordean Taylor-Archer and Dwain Archer.
T.Y. and Mary Huang.
Michelle Essex, Linnsey Cabbage and Trish Fleege.
Harlan and Lynn Sands and Leslie and Paul Strohm.
Dr. Sy Slavin, Claire Drucker and Dr. Stan Collyer.
Malcolm Kelly, William Kelley Jr. and Mariana Barber.
S E P T E M B E R 1 7 , 2 0 1 5 • W W W . V O I C E -T R I B U N E . C O M
Dean and Professor of Music Dr. Christopher Doane, Peter McHugh and Zonita and Herbert Maguire.
42
PHOTOS BY BILL WINE | CONTRIBUTING PHOTOGRAPHER
Posh Grand Opening Held at the Chenoweth Plaza on September 11, the Posh Home Decor Grand Opening provided guests a first glimpse into the company’s furniture, home decor, art, rugs, lighting and gifts to decorate their homes. Guests also enjoyed breakfast and a mimosa. Posh Home Decor co-owners Brittany and Chris Bennett.
Billy and Kelly Lawson.
Natalie Ritter and Kathy Wilson.
John and Julie Shunnarah.
Cassie Clark, Daniel and Lauren Horn, Maggie Kapp and Emily Losik.
Ross Lister, Ashley Braden and Guy Sutcliffe.
PHOTOS BY TIM VALENTINO
Logan Lacefield and Pete Ostaseski.
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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 7 , 2 0 1 5
S O C I E TY
Walk to End Alzheimer’s The 1.5-mile stretch of the Walk to End Alzheimer’s kicked off at 10 a.m. at Waterfront Park on September 12. Funds raised went to support the care and research efforts of the Alzheimer’s Association. The organization is still accepting donations.
The Lancasters.
Dee Dee Bauer, Sarah and Savannah Zoeller, Karen Rodriguez and Pam Davis.
Sally Campbell and Cyndi Caudill.
Barry Esslinger, Eleanor Bingham and Larry Butterfield.
Nikita Readus, Renisha Hanserd and Alicia Dixon. Davis “Sole Mates.”
Co-emcees Karma Dickerson 11 of WHAS and Amy Nic of WAMZ with Congressman John Yarmuth and DeeAnna Esslinger.
S E P T E M B E R 1 7 , 2 0 1 5 • W W W . V O I C E -T R I B U N E . C O M
Louisville Male Dance Team.
44
Rod and Karen Rodriguez and Chris Klinglesmith.
PHOTOS BY TIM VALENTINO | CONTRIBUTING PHOTOGRAPHER
15 YEARS
HELP US CELEBRATE OUR OF SERVICE TO THE COMMUNITY!
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Join Us for "DINING OUT IN STYLE" Thursday, October 8th 6:00 p.m. - 9:30 p.m. The Galt House Hotel & Suites FOR TICKETS Contact Dress for Success Louisville at 502.584.8050 or go to the website: www.louisville.dressforsuccess.org MUSIC PROVIDED BY Desiree Thayer and Front Porch Prophets 5 RAFFLE PACKAGES That's Entertainment, Wine & Dine for Weeks, A "Suite” Deal, You’ve Got Purse-In-ality, Just "Fore" Golf WOMEN OF DISTINCTION Gladys Barclay, Carolle Jones Clay, MJ Diebold, Viki Diaz, Laura M. Douglas, Charlotte Ipsan, Barbara M. Montgomery, Pat Peet, Kathy S. Pleasant, Judge Paula Sherlock, Shannon White, Karen Williams MAJOR SPONSORS Visionworks, Doctors of Optometry, LG&E KU Energy, Macy’s, UPS, Norton’s Healthcare, PNC Bank, The Voice-Tribune IN-KIND SPONSORS Heyman Talent, J Michaels Spa and Salon, Galt House Hotel, Publisher’s Printing
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S O C I E TY
UofL Tailgating The UofL Alumni Association’s traveling tailgate visited Papa John’s Cardinal Stadium for the UofL vs. Houston game on September 12. Traveling via golf cart, the organization provided giveaways and photo opportunities with special guests.
Barry and Leslie Dunn and Tiffany and Bernie Perconti.
Chris, Walker and Erin Wiedmar.
Jerry and Madeline Abramson.
Michael Carver and Joey Wagner.
Chad and Jennifer Miller and Kim and Bill Schumann.
The Mivelaz family.
S E P T E M B E R 1 7 , 2 0 1 5 • W W W . V O I C E -T R I B U N E . C O M
Dale Gilpin, Dennis Jones and Kyle Norris.
Virginia and Mark Schulte.
Shannon Brown and Erin Davis.
46
PHOTOS BY BILL WINE | CONTRIBUTING PHOTOGRAPHER
Field & Fork, held at the Brown-Forman Silo Center on September 12, was a benefit for The Parklands of Floyds Fork, a donor-supported public park. The evening included a cocktail hour, live auction, a three-course dinner, music and more. Guests toured the area, danced and enjoyed the music of Whiskey Bent Valley in a casually elegant natural setting.
Clinton Glasscock, Jennifer Mulwatti, Mark Campisano, Lindsey Miller and the couple who donated this property, Randy and Charlotte Hockensmith.
Chris Maggard and Natasha Maze.
Annette and Doug Sweeney with Barry and Julie Denton.
Shane Spaulding, John Nation and Jennifer Bielstein.
Barbie Tafel and Judy Miller.
Sarah Doolittle and Event Co-Chairs Bill and Barbara Juckett.
Lilias Pettit-Scott, James Cochran, Elizabeth Kelterborn and Joe Franzen.
PHOTOS BY TIM VALENTINO | CONTRIBUTING PHOTOGRAPHER
The Whiskey Boys performed.
Teresa Flynn, Philippe Glaude, Evan Flynn and Ryan Waits.
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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 7 , 2 0 1 5
S O C I E TY
Field & Fork
S O C I E TY
Fleur de Lis Regatta Sailing for a Cure teamed up with Gilda’s Club Louisville this year for the annual fundraiser benefiting the Leukemia and Lymphoma Society. The event kicked off on the Great Lawn on September 12 and was followed by two days of sailing.
Bud and Laura Morgan.
Tod and Kevin Estes of Houndstooth.
Crew of the Phoenix Rising.
Team Annie.
Robin Sloan, Matt Sloan, Carter Bender, Allen Walls and John Meerman of British Invasion.
Crew of the Green Grabber.
Susan Salome, Dave Cherry, Cheyenne Allen and Gary Mellinger of Enchantress.
S E P T E M B E R 1 7 , 2 0 1 5 • W W W . V O I C E -T R I B U N E . C O M
Crew of the Sonrisa.
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P H OTO S B Y J A M E S E ATO N | C O N T R I B U T I N G P H OTO G R A P H E R
The USA Cares Gala took place on September 12 and raised money for active military, veterans and their families. The black-tie event’s theme, “Standing in Reflection,” reflected on permanent impact of 9/11. Held at the Marriott Downtown, the event also honored veterans from the Iraq war.
Allen Rose, U.S. Army Major General (Ret.) John Tindall, USA Cares Executive Director Hank Patton, USA Cares Chairman of the Board Bill Roby and U.S. Army Brigadier General (Ret.) James E. Shane.
Master Sergeant Phil Speck and Shawnda Speck with Becky Ketterer and Captain Josh Ketterer.
Joe, McKenna and Kim Dodson.
LeRoy Kim and Lindsey Boylan.
Bart and Julie Patton with Susan and Hank Patton.
Alison Hedges and Colonel Blaine Hedges.
U.S. Army Sergeant (Ret.) Bryan Anderson with Mya and Genevieve Ducros.
Teanna Allen and Sergeant First Class Rex Allen.
P H OTO S B Y J A M E S E ATO N | C O N T R I B U T I N G P H OTO G R A P H E R
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USMC Corporal David Luurtsema and U.S. Army Sergeant (Ret.) Bryan Anderson.
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 7 , 2 0 1 5
S O C I E TY
USA Cares Gala
S O C I E TY
Kentucky vs. Louisiana-Lafayette UK Wildcats enjoyed a 40 to 33 win against Louisiana-Lafayette on September 5 in its first football game sellout since 2010. Commonwealth Stadium has undergone a $126 million renovation.
The UK Marching 100 band formed an outline of the state of Kentucky.
Parachutists sailed down to a remodeled and “reinvented” Commonwealth Stadium.
Madison Higgins, Josie Salyers and Kati McKinney.
S E P T E M B E R 1 7 , 2 0 1 5 • W W W . V O I C E -T R I B U N E . C O M
Kent Taylor, Kimberly Nasief and Powell Taylor.
Andy and Olivia Mayer with Sue Anne and Kris Mueller.
Steve Branscum, Brian Cromer, Bob Leasure, Doug Stough, Kent Taylor and Powell Taylor.
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Off to The Far North
o leave Vancouver, Norb and Darlene Brazinski, Pat and Suzanne Moeller and Brad and I – along with our guide/minder Russ Dunlap from Platinum Travel – boarded the Rocky Mountaineer. This deluxe train would take us across British Columbia and the Canadian Rockies to the iconic Canadian resort Banff.
ers were such a success, and in 2013, they added yet another journey, Coastal Passage, which runs along the Pacific between Seattle and the Canadian Rockies via Vancouver.
ing. While the previous day had been more barren high-desert views, the second day was lush with green pines and birch trees with leaves turning yellow. Our train travel ended in Banff at dinnertime. We checked into the Rimrocks Resort Hotel a mile or so out of the main part of town.
Each trip offers Silver and Gold Leaf SerThe Rimrocks is nine stories Partyline vice. The more luxtall, with the street level lobby urious Gold Leaf being on the seventh floor. CARLA SUE Service operThis hotel goes up two stoBROECKER ates with douries from the lobby and way ble-decker cars down the side of the mounhaving an upstairs domed tain six stories. It is loveobservation level with the ly, and the rooms are quite nice. Each car is staffed by a team of hosts who are white table cloth dining trained to delicately orchestrate this world-class level below. While seeing The next morning, we took experience. They are young, attractive, personable and enjoying the spectacular a day-long tour along the Bow and multilingual. Each wears a lapel pin that is the scenery was the major objecValley Parkway to Johnston Cantive of our two-day tour, the culiflag of their native country. yon with a half-mile walk in the nary portion consisting of elaboThroughout the day, a guest services manager rate breakfast and lunch service was cer- Breakfast on the train. woods to see a beautiful waterfall. Then, we were off to the Fairmont Chateau at Lake and a train manager visit each coach to answer any tainly wonderful. Passengers don’t spend the night questions and to ensure guest happiness. on the train but rather in a hotel. Our stop was in Louise for a picnic lunch. The lake is everything In 1988, the Canadian Government began run- Kamloops where we were on our own to sample it’s reputed to be. The enormous hotel fronts on the edge of the lake with layered approaches to the ning a special Canadian Rockies by Daylight ser- the local cuisine. edge that are a riot of colorful flowers. The milky vice. After two successful operating seasons, in 1989 We got up early the next morning and reboard- blue water is made that way because it is fed by Victhe Government decided to provide the private sec- ed the train for another wonderful day of sightseetoria Glacier, which, over millions of tor with the unique opportunity to years, grinds the rock it travels over own and operate this train. into “flour.” Recognizing the importance of Next, we went to Yoho Nationthis historic and scenic route, The al Park, Emerald Lake and TakakGreat Canadian Railtour Company kaw Falls, a narrow vertical falls that Ltd. was formed by a group of Westmakes its way down the mountain in ern Canadians for the sole purpose three spectacular sections. of operating this tourist train. Our final day in this beautiful part In May of 1990, the Rocky Mounof the world was spent exploring the taineer pulled out of Vancouver on many places around Banff including its way to Banff and Calgary, AlberBow Falls and the Banff Gondola, ta. Since that time, they have successwhich takes riders on an eight-minfully operated two routes: First Pasute gondola ride to the top of Sulsage to the West (between Vancouver phur Mountain for 360-degree views and Lake Louise/Banff, Alberta via of Banff. Kamloops, BC) and Journey through the Clouds (between Vancouver and All good things do come to an Jasper, Alberta via Kamloops). end, and the next day we journeyed In 2006 the company added two new scenic routes because the oth-
Inside the dome level of the Rocky Mountaineer Train.
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to Calgary to catch our plane back to eighty-degree reality in Louisville. VT
COURTESY PHOTOS
Sapphires Pass as Diamonds in Case of Mistaken Identity DEAR ABBY: Last year, I gave my new (at that time) girlfriend, “Alyssa,” a pair of earrings for her birthday. They were in a box from a department store marked “fine jewelry.” She loved them and became emotional in expressing her gratitude. I thought it was because it was the first piece of jewelry I had ever bought for her. When she opened the box I explained that they were her birthstone – sapphires – but WHITE sapphires. In her excitement she must have missed that part.
•••
Dear Abby JEANNE PHILLIPS
The earrings are large – maybe one carat apiece. Yesterday I overheard my granddaughter ask Alyssa if they were real diamonds, and Alyssa told her yes! I kept my mouth shut when she said it, but now I understand why she was so excited when she first saw them. She cherishes the earrings and has told me numerous times she will never take them off. I want to make this right, but I’m afraid she’ll feel embarrassed because she must have told her girlfriends and family I gave her diamond earrings – which I didn’t. Abby, what do I do? – LOVING BOYFRIEND IN VIRGINIA DEAR BOYFRIEND: You should straighten this out with your girlfriend, but do it privately. After that, let her disclose the fact that her diamond earrings are really sapphires at her discretion – or not. ••• DEAR ABBY: My husband’s daughter and her husband are in their early 40s. When they invite us to visit them, there is never any preparation or advance planning. They provide no clean sheets or towels. If they order out, they expect us to pay. When they visit us, they leave beer cans in the bookcases, devour all snacks without asking, etc. Their house smells strongly of pet odors. If we opt to stay in a hotel, they are offended. Every occasion revolves around drinking alcohol, and lots of it. I’ll have one drink so they won’t say I am uptight and feel uncomfortable around me. My husband is intimidated by his strong-willed daughter and wishes this just would all go away. There have been many, many more incidents and overall generally narcissistic and rude behavior. My husband wants a relationship with his daughter. What to do? – JUST WANTS TO RELAX DEAR JUST WANTS: You either grin and bear it – and that includes laundering your own sheets and towels when you visit – or send your husband to visit his daughter alone.
DEAR ABBY: A very good friend of mine had a facelift. I’m out of the country, so I have only seen pictures of her. I don’t think it looks good at all. It looks fake and, in my opinion, has ruined her looks. What should I say when I see her or when she asks me directly what I think of it? I hate to lie, but I don’t want to hurt her feelings. – HONEST FRIEND
DEAR HONEST: Sometimes people can be “too” honest, so be diplomatic if you are asked directly. Tell her you always thought she was beautiful – inside and out – and thought she looked great before, but if she’s happy with the result, that’s what’s important. ••• DEAR ABBY: My wife has children and two grandchildren from a previous marriage. Her granddaughter, “Jasmine,” is 19. We were never close to her or her mother, but we tried to heal old wounds a few years ago. Once Jasmine turned 17, she started getting tattoos. She now has them all over her body – thighs, chest, stomach. She has a full sleeve on one arm and a half-sleeve on the other. She has piercings in her ear lobes and nipples. At this point, I don’t want her in my house and neither does my wife. I don’t want to be seen with her in public and because her mother allowed her to do this, I would rather cut all ties with them. My wife agrees. I don’t see us changing our minds. Your opinion, Abby? – GROUCHY TEXAN
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DEAR TEXAN: I am glad you asked because it appears you and your wife have forgotten that underneath those tattoos and piercings is a GRANDCHILD. I understand her body “art” may be off-putting, but I’m disappointed that nowhere in your letter did you express what kind of person Jasmine is. I’m sure that like most people, she has more to offer than what’s on the surface. She may be a sensitive, loving, caring, talented and intelligent individual who would love a relationship with you and her grandmother, and be deeply hurt by the sentiments you have expressed. That said, unless you can look deeper and get to know and love Jasmine for the person she is, it would be better for her to avoid such shallow individuals as the two of you. 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 www.DearAbby.com or P.O. Box 69440, Los Angeles, CA 90069.
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- FURNITURE - HOME DECOR - ART - RUGS -LIGHTING - GIFTS LOCATED IN CHENOWETH PLAZA 3626 BROWNSBORO ROAD 40207 HOURS: TUESDAY-SATURDAY 10-5 502.742.5380
MEET US @ MESH TO CELEBRATE
2015 FALL MAGAZINE LAUNCH PARTY
10.1.15 6:00-8:30 P.M.
SPONSORED BY WOODFORD RESERVE
EAT DRINK MESH 3608 BROWNSBORO RD. 502.632.4421 CRAFT CAREFULLY. DRINK RESPONSIBLY. WOODFORD RESERVE KENTUCKY STRAIGHT BOURBON WHISKEY, 45.2% ALC. BY VOL., THE WOODFORD RESERVE DISTILLERY, VERSAILLES, KY ©2015
57 Out & About | 60 Home | 66 Calendar
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Joella’s Hot Chicken: PAGE This Bird Is On Fire 62
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SPOTLIGHT
On September 16, Volunteers of America hosted its Power of 1 Breakfast to raise money for the individuals it serves. We sit down with Volunteers of America of MidStates Senior Director of Development Farrah Ferriell and with Judie Parks, who, along with her brother Dave, is one of the greatest supporters of the organization. What does Volunteers of America offer the Louisville community? FF: Volunteers of America Mid-States offers 39 diverse services that serve our community’s most vulnerable with efforts including services for veterans, addiction recovery residential treatment programs, homeless and housing services, development disabilities services and HIV prevention services. We provide comprehensive, professional and clinical services to the entire family, as we feel it is important that the whole family work together to eradicate the barriers that led to addiction or homelessness.
Power of 1 Breakfast
Why have you chosen to support this event and organization?
JP: Volunteers of America’s mission hits very close to home for me. It’s very easy to see someone on the street that looks polished and professional and jump to the conclusion that all is well in their world. My work at Volunteers of America has brought to light the distinct width that divides someone who “has” from someone who “has not.” The width is the size of one footprint over that fine line. This is our community, and it is our responsibility to ensure that its people are well taken care of, especially children. How else are you involved with Volunteers of America? JP: I have been involved with Volunteers of America since 2011 when my niece Kate and I volunteered at their program for homeless families. Today, I host a monthly Women’s Empowerment class, collect gifts at our Holiday Party for the children they serve, and serve as a member of both the board of directors and the Positive Change Society. My brother, a proud Marine veteran, has
just been introduced to this organization through my involvement, and he is passionate about issues that impact veterans. Dave has a strong compassion toward servicemen returning to civilian life and trying to get their feet back on the ground ... As a company, he and I made a challenge gift at the Power of 1 Breakfast that inspired guests to join the Positive Change Society, a multi-year giving society for donors ready to make a long-term investment in their mission. We will match the first year of their five-year-commitment! How can people get involved with Volunteers of America? FF: Individuals, groups and corporations can get involved with our mission by volunteering at one of our residential programs, on our board of directors or one of our committees, or by signing up to host a table at our 2016 Power of 1 Breakfast. The best way to begin learning about Volunteers of America is to attend a tour and see this mission firsthand. Contact Tandee Ogburn at TandeeO@ voamid.org or 502.636.4638 to get involved or learn more! You can also visit our website voamid. org for a list of volunteer opportunities. VT
A partnership with Berkshire Hathaway Home Services, Parks & Weisberg, REALTORS helps families go from homelessness to housing. Dave Parks (left) and his sister, Judie Parks (right), and their business, Berkshire Hathaway Home Services, Parks & Weisberg REALTORS, are among Volunteers of America’s top supporters. Because of their contribution, we can help kids like Marcus Stubbs (center) and his family. Marcus came to our homeless family program during his senior year of high school. After receiving the support he and his family needed, they secured affordable housing that they are still in today. Marcus, now a junior at Western Kentucky University is an example of success thanks to Berkshire Hathaway Home Services, Parks & Weisberg, REALTORS. Learn more about how you can help at www.voamid.org.
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The Voice-Tribune production crew broke out with six minutes and 23 seconds remaining.
F
We Broke Out!
or The Voice-Tribune staff, a rainy Wednesday afternoon usually means writing, editing or designing, among other journalistic activities. On the most recent one, however, it meant escaping Monaco’s Casino Royale.
ner. Just before we began, the television sputtered to life and gave us the exact premise we were to live out.
do at intellectual puzzles and riddles. Fortunately, we meshed incredibly well and all contributed evenly to solving the game.
Agent 007 went dark in Casino Royale and has not reported back to MI6 since. A crime organization called The Syndicate is hot on his Out & About trail, and it’s up to us to find him before The Syndicate arrives at REMY the casino. With that, the door was SISK locked, and we were on our own. I don’t want to give anything away so To find out what all the fuss has been about, as not to ruin it for future participants. Suffice we traveled to Breakout Louisville, located to say, we hunted for hidden playing cards, did in the Industrial Park off Bluegrass Parkway. some intense arithmetic, played casino games, You’ve probably seen photos from the attrac- used a black light and put together multiple tion on Facebook – a group of your friends alphanumeric codes to progress through the posing in front of the labyrinthine logo holding puzzle. We eventually cracked the code for the a sign that either says “So close!” or “We broke door with only six minutes and twenty-three out!” with their escape time. To see if we could seconds to spare. be among the latter group, we submitted ourThough stressful, it was an overwhelmingselves to the will of the Gamemaster. ly positive experience for all. Throughout the The premise is fairly simple. Participants game, we were challenged to work together, first select one of Breakout’s three games, and, though we work well as a team creating either The Kidnapping, Museum Heist or a publication, it was anybody’s guess how we’d Casino Royale. In a group of two to eight, they are locked in a room and have one hour to use anything and everything in the room to “break out.” Mostly everything in the room is there intentionally, and players must work as a team to use the items to complete the step-by-step process of finding the code to the door.
According to Teddy Hall, manager and marketing executive for Breakout Louisville, five is the ideal number for a Breakout game. Though they’ll let in as few as two and as many as eight, five or six is a good way to ensure you’ve got enough brains working without crowding the room. And you’ll need the brains! Museum Heist currently boasts only 41.5 percent breaking out; Casino Royale is at 50.7 percent, and Kidnapping at 51.1 percent.
The casino room was an impressive setup: craps, blackjack and roulette tables filled most of the space, while two slot machines occupied one wall and television hung in one corP 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
When Breakout Louisville opened in June of this year, it was an immediate success. The original concept actually started in Lexington before opening locations in Birmingham, Louisville and Cincinnati. The team hopes to open Breakouts in Dayton and Knoxville in the next few months with a location in Atlanta also on the way. The momentum is unstoppable; Breakout Louisville continues to fill all 41 available slots of the day on weekends, and a fourth scenario, Island Escape, is slated to open in mere weeks with two to three more scenarios opening by Christmas. Whether you’re looking for a team-building activity, an outlet for creative problem solving or just a fun thing to do on a rainy afternoon, Breakout Louisville is your answer. Maybe you’ll be like The VT team and break out. Or maybe you’ll be stuck holding the “So close!” sign. There’s only one way to find out. VT Breakout Louisville is located at 1805 Cargo Court. For more information or to book your game, call 502.822.4596 or visit breakoutlouisville.com.
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mixing
IT UP
With fall almost here, now is the time to prepare for the temperatures to plummet. But just because it’s chilly, doesn’t mean you dont have to look any less glamorous. We scoured some of the best stores in the city to find some great boots to strut your stuff in.
BROWN SUEDE BOOTIES FROM COLE HAAN.
TOMS MAJORCA PEEP T O E B O O T I E , TA R M A C O L I V E S U E D E Q U I LT. A V A I L A B L E AT A P R I C O T LANE BOUTIQUE, 1301 HERR LN, LOUISVILLE, KY 40222.
J O I E S U E D E B O OT I E . AVA I L A B L E AT R O D E S . 4 9 3 8 B R O W N S B O R O R D , LOUISVILLE, KY 40222
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LIFE V E R Y V O L AT I L E L O S A N G E L E S M I S H K A TA N B O OT I E S . AVA I L A B L E AT A P R I C O T L A N E BOUTIQUE, 1301 HERR LN, LOUISVILLE, KY 40222.
TA L L L E AT H E R R I D I N G STYLE RIDING BOOTS FROM KENNETH COLE.
fall fashion
11809 Shelbyville Rd 502.244.5580 sunnydaize.com
Publishes September 24th.
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A Haven in Prospect Inside and Out
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see our neighbors makes it pretty ake a brisk drive out wonderful.” to Prospect and to The fact that the area offered the neighborhood of the Stovalls miles and miles of Hunting Creek and you’ll trails and the chance to kayak to come across the home of the Ohio River is something that Sabine and Jeffrey Stovall. made the location of the French Homes Right at the back of the subdicottage-style, four-bedroom home all the better. Even if there was one vision with a creek at the botIGOR tom of the steep drop serving GURYASHKIN drawback. “We’re on a deer path, and they as a picturesque backyard, the home serves the ultimate purpose love it back here,” recalls Stovall. “When we – a perfect home for the married cou- first came to see the house, there were three deer just staring at us. We knew we belonged ple that combines their love of nature right there and then – it was super awesome. and the countryside with their need to Well, super awesome until I started planting be close to their busy corporate jobs in flowers and I realized that they eat everything!” downtown Louisville. “We’re animal-lovers and nature-lovers, and we were really drawn to the idea of having our own land,” explains Sabine Stovall, a wealth planner through KFG Enterprises. “But what makes that difficult is that we both work downtown, so we wanted to find something that was a mixture of the two. We don’t really love neighborhoods at all, but the fact that we could come here and not really S E P T E M B E R 1 7 , 2 0 1 5 • W W W . V O I C E -T R I B U N E . C O M
store and got all the stuff he had that were antiques.” For Stovall, the kitchen is an important area. She cooks daily, so the addition of brand new wooden floors was a must, as was the installation of granite counter tops. But while cooking is a passion, the food is often brought down into the basement, or what Stovall likes to describe as her husband’s “Man Cave.” Inside the man cave is what you’d expect, comfy couches, stone fireplace and a big television set where the couple enjoy watching movies and relaxing with their two pet bulldogs. On the wall is a framed picture of her husband’s national statistics from his base-
Inside, the couple’s home is an elegant mix of old and new. The old coming in the shape of tasteful antique furniture and the new coming from new paint and new selections with the help of an expert eye. Stovall’s choice was Velma Watkins, executive vice president of Burdorf Interiors “She helped with the initial pieces of furniture, and then, to help put it all together, I blew up Barry Wooley and destroyed his
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ball days at Furman University – on this ranking, he placed higher than Detroit Tigers’ starting all-star pitcher Justin Verlander. Today, her husband is an attorney with Fore, Miller and Schwartz and also acts as a city councilman for Prospect. In fact, Jeffery’s family, which stems from North Carolina, has left its mark on several other pieces throughout the home. An antique walnut cabinet sits majestically upstairs in the living room, while on the other side is another handmade piece courtesy of the Stovalls. “Jeff’s family make things from wood,” explains Stovall. “For example, we got this as a wedding gift,” pointing to an ornamental chess board. But personal history is not limited to furniture in the house. The paintings on the walls also tell a story, especially the prints depicting Greek life. Stovall is fond of them because they come from a vacation in Greece – with a funny story attached. According to Stovall, the print vendor in the small town of Delphi was drunk and spilled coffee all over the prints. “I had to have them!” she recalls with a laugh. Elsewhere, the home’s walls are peppered with images of trees and Paris, not a deliberate decision on Stovall’s part but rather a subconscious reflection of two more 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
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loves. But there is one painting that stands out. In the master bathroom, tucked away to the side of the his-and-her sinks, is a painting of the beach in North Carolina where they got married – sand dunes and horses roaming freely. “This painting was done by a friend of ours who attended our wedding. We rented a place on the beach, and there is this wild horse estate and a federal reserve for these horses and they came over every day while we were there.” Below the painting is a small champagne flute filled fresh flowers – another reminder of their marriage that has many more happy years ahead. A marriage that will be lived out inside a home that the Stovalls look forward to sharing with friends, family and guests for years to come VT
Opportunity Knocks...
www.bhhsparksweisberg.com 502-238-1921 A member of the franchise system of BHH Affiliates, LLC
BHHS Voice W W W.V O I C E -T R I BAd1.indd U N E . C O1M • S E P T E M B E R 11/7/15 7 , 2 0 10:01 1 5 AM
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This Bird Is On Fire
like friend chicken with the heat he intersection of cranked up. Way up. Frankfort Avenue and Downtown restaurant Manny Cannons Lane entails & Merle added some hot chickmany frustrating things for en offerings to their menu earlidrivers. Trains, red lights and er this year, and the success of that left turns abound. But now prompted the team to open a place Tastes there’s something there that that focused solely on the chicken. isn’t exasperating, but rath“We rolled out the menu at Manny REMY & Merle, and it was so well-acer the opposite – tantalizing. SISK cepted down there,” asserts Bruce Joella’s Hot Chicken, owned Rosenblatt, an operating partner in the comby the folks behind BoomBozz and pany. “Then we had this space available Manny & Merle, just recently opened when we moved Boombozz down the street and has quickly made this irksome to where 60 West used to be, and it was realintersection a destination rather than ly a no-brainer to bring Nashville-style chickan irritation. en here.” You walk into Joella’s and are immediately greeted by cute and clunky décor that harkens back to farmhouse cottage and general store days gone by. It’s charming without being kitschy, nostalgic but not cloying. The counter attendants retain that southern hospitality with welcoming smiles and amiable greetings. Sadly, there was little time for chit-chat as I was on a mission to check on this chicken and see what all the hype has been about since the eatery opened on September 3. Joella’s specializes in what’s called Nashville chicken, a dish created in Nashville that places hot and spicy fried chicken atop a single piece of bread and garnishes it with pickle chips. It’s 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 7 , 2 0 1 5
chili powder and Carolina Reaper, the hottest chili pepper in the world. Despite the warning signs on the menu for this level’s heat, Rosenblatt contends customers want more heat. “We’re looking to make it one step hotter because a lot of guests say they love the flavor but they’d love to see it hotter. They’ve got some fire palates!” In fact, because Joella’s is in the midst of only its second week, Rosenblatt claims the team is listening to customer feedback and still tinkering with the menu to make it the absolute best it can be.
The menu at Joella’s features entirely housemade products and is based on the principle of spice levels. Customers can order a quarter or half chicken, whole wings or jumbo tenders – all of which come from freerange all-natural Kentucky Proud chickens out of Lexington – with any of the five different levels of heat.
I don’t know how they’re going to make it much better because everything we ate was already absolutely delicious. We started with the classic quarter white meat chicken with Hot as our spice level. The chicken was finger-lickin’ good; the exterior had the perfect amount of heat and crunch while the inside was wonderfully succulent and rich. The pickle with which it was garnished made for a great palate cleanser as we moved on to the dish that was really to die for: the chicken and waffles.
Southern is no spice at all – just good ol’ classic fried chicken. Up one notch is Spiked Honey, a sweet and mild sauce served on the side. Then there’s Ella’s Fav, similar to traditional buffalo with lots of flavor and a little heat. Hot is next, and, as Rosenblatt describes, “Hot is not too hot. It’s got great flavors and a little zing of heat.” The hottest of the hot is Fire in da Hole, made with ghost
The dish was composed of four tenders paired against four wedges of a waffle topped with honey butter and served with maple syrup and the Spiked Honey sauce for dipping. Everything about it was exquisite: the cook on the chicken once again was unassailable, and the waffle had a magnificent sweet flavor and the perfect fluffy texture to complement the crunch of the chicken. It’s emerging
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The sides and desserts were also phenomenal. The sweet vinegar slaw was exceptionally fresh and light, and the kale crunch salad provided a delectable veggie option to go along with the chicken. The parmesan garlic fries were truly tremendous – shoestring fries bursting with savory flavor. The banana pudding was a genuine treat to end the meal, sweet and sugary and topped with bananas and vanilla wafers. As if the food wasn’t good enough, the drinks are also delightfully unique. Joella’s is the only restaurant in Kentucky to have a Boylan Soda fountain, a brand that dates back to 1891 featuring sodas that are made with real cane sugar. There’s also an impressive craft and local beer list that will be available as soon as Joella’s license is finalized. Without question, this bird is on fire. Thanks to excellent early reviews and lines out the door, plans are already in the works for a second location. “Nashville-style chicken has been around for 30 or 40 years, and it seems like just in the last year it’s gotten its movement,” Rosenblatt contends. “And if Manny & Merle and Joella’s are any indication, it’s here to stay.” VT Joella’s Hot Chicken is located at 3400 Frankfort Ave. It’s open 11 a.m. - 9 p.m. Sunday, Tuesday-Thursday and 11a.m. - 10 p.m. Friday and Saturday. For more information call 502.895.2235 or visit joellashotchicken.com.
HALF PRICE WINE THURSDAYS
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as the signature dish of Joella’s and for good reason: It’s one of the best chicken entrees in the city.
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“The Visit” Is a – Possible – Comeback 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.
hrough some critics and audiences, M. Night Shyamalan is seeing what I would call an unearned comeback through “The Visit,” which is his latest film after a long string of idiotic thrillers that had lost him a lot of respect. I’ve never seen a director’s career like his. His early films (mainly “The Sixth Sense” and “Unbreakable”) were so absolutely strong that I would have never anticipated such aimless fantasy (“Lady in the Water”) or such inept direction of human behavior (“The Happening”). For a director whose career has been a needless letdown, the choice to delve into found-footage filmmaking is an obviously terrible idea since that entire subgenre has been almost as disappointing as Shyamalan. This trendy and inexpensive approach to making a movie seems rather desperate on his part, but it also seems to be paying off for him at the moment.
The setup of a loving mother sending her own children to stay with their grandparents, from whom she ran away a decade ago, isn’t the typical first step toward making amends with one’s kin. 2. The behavior exhibited by the old couple very early in the film would be enough to send any child running to the next closest farm house, even if it could be legitimized as dementia. 3. The documentarian ambition of the older sister to continue filming every terror she encounters defies any relatable sense of self-preservation. With the suspension of disbelief ready to implode during most parts of the movie, there’s almost no involvement to be felt, but I will not deny the movie has a few big scares. A lot of situations, no matter how ridiculous, are well staged, and the actors all do great work.
“The Visit” is about a couple of kids (Ed Oxenbould and Olivia DeJonge) sent to meet their grandparents for the first time. Their mother (Kathryn Hahn) is eager to go on a cruise with her new boyfriend, and after reconnecting with her parents via social media, she has decided to send her children on a train to stay with them in rural Pennsylvania.
There’s a major argument among some critics that this movie is a very dark comedy. The movie rests on an arc of sincerity that makes it impossible for me to see it as such. I see the humor in the insanity of its campy scares tapping into buried repulsion some audience members may feel about the elderly, but I found it to be in bad taste.
The “found footage” perspective is provided by the older sister, who is an aspiring filmmaker bringing along cameras to document their visit. After meeting the old couple (Peter McRobbie and Deanna Dunagan) at the train station, the kids are taken out to a remote home where, despite a welcoming impression, they are provided a questionable curfew as well as boundary rules. When these rules are defied, the kids witness their grandparents displaying some very odd behavior, which is rationalized as senility.
I take no issues with horror movies that aim for smutty politically incorrect concepts, as long as they commit to an R-rating so the movie may wink at its adult audience. This movie, however, is PG-13, which essentially invites the whole family to join in on the “old people are nasty” scares, and I find that somewhat morally repugnant. Having the younger brother be a wannabe rapper as comic relief so that he can do bad raps about the creepy old folks, is maybe as cringe-worthy as the R-rated grossout moments that infiltrate the film’s conclu-
This movie has three obvious problems: 1. S E P T E M B E R 1 7 , 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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2 OUT OF 4 WHOLE STARS
sion. Shyamalan may have our temporary attention with this film’s weirdness, but this is not a return to form; it’s a product of weak storytelling with no concern for plausibility that continues his abandonment of rich aesthetics and deep passion for well-constructed suspense – which he practically mastered once upon a time. My only hope is that a little positive encouragement from this movie’s success may inspire him to make good movies again. VT
B. Deemer Gallery Fine art • Fine framing
Shotgun Goes Boo-Ya! Tracy Heightchew is a proud resident of Schnitzelburg, an oft-overlooked neighborhood that bumps up against its close-as-family neighbors, Germantown and St. Joseph. For outsiders (who like a cold one), think of the distinction this way: Germantown is where you’ll find The Nachbar; Schnitzelburg is home to Check’s Cafe, and St. Joseph is where Zanzabar and the New Vintage are. Heightchew, a beloved community leader, told me about this year’s ninth annual Shotgun Fest, that celebration of all things in that community there. The festival takes place this Saturday, September 19, between 3 p.m. and 9 p.m. Find all the fun – including shopping for records, art, glass, crafts, plants, beer and more – at Eiderdown.
Hello, Tracy. Could you please tell me all about this year’s Shotgun Fest?
street to Eiderdown, Nachbar’s sister restaurant. We have seen our popularity grow each year, and I can say I am most proud of the laiback and fun atmosphere of the day. It’s the unforced nature of the event that makes it a fan favorite.
Shotgun Fest is a neighborhood party put together for folks to wander off their porches and down to the show to enjoy some music, have Arts & How do you feel about all a brat and see their neighbors. It’s another year of great music, with Entertainment the changes and growth in the neighborhood recently? Louisville’s rudest, weirdest band – PETER Rude Weirdo – headlining an eclecIt’s exciting to see what new busiBERKOWITZ nesses tic lineup of Germantown-based and neighbors are coming bands. We’ll have food trucks and, to the neighborhood and the possibilities for of course, beer. We will be at Eiderdown for growth that will come with them. But with all the first time this year, so you’ll have a chance development comes anxiety that old ways of to sample their menu while perusing the art- doing things will be edged out by newcomers. work and wares for sale and enjoy a few songs That’s why it’s important to support popular with your neighbors. This year, the festival was neighborhood events like Schnitzelburg Walk made possible by a special fund from (the late and Shotgun Fest – so that the neighborhood Councilman) Jim King’s family made avail- spirit can be kept alive. able to the German-Paristown Neighborhood Association. Jim King was always an avid fan What else does the greater Germanof Shotgun Fest, so we are grateful for this sign town area need? of support from his family. We need more coffee choices. Really. Especially along Goss Ave. Indian food would be Did you start the festival? How has it incredible. Breakfast is seeping in, finally, but grown through the years? a greasy spoon diner would be heaven-sent. I started this fest in 2007 with my best friend, Tandee Ogburn, in conjunction with My buddy Larry lives in Clifton. Is it the German-Paristown Neighborhood Association. That was only a couple of years into the cool if he comes? changes that Germantown has undergone to Larry is more than welcome to attend, but becoming the hot development it is now. Since he may want to find a neighborhood couch to that first block party, we have had the festi- crash on! VT val at four different locations and, in the last Live music schedule for Saturday: few years, have partnered with the fine folks 3 p.m. – Brenda / 4 p.m. - American Freedom Machine / 5 p.m. at Nachbar. This year, we will have a change - Andy Matter and Ten Wet Dollars / 6 p.m. - Heat Machine / 7 of scenery and will move the fest down the p.m. – IAMIS / 8 p.m. - Rude Weirdo PHOTOS COURTESY OF TRACY HEIGHTCHEW
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“Chaco,” an Exhibit of recent works by
Anne Wehrley Björk September 12 - October 20
2650 Frankfort Avenue Open Mon-Fri 10:00-5:30 Sat 10:00-3:00
www.bdeemer.com
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event calendar
to submit your event, visit www.voice-tribune.com
THIS WEEK’S VOICE CHOICE “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 September 17 through September 27 in The Henry Clay Theatre. Tickets are $20 in advance or $22 at the door. MORE INFO pandoraprods.org
T H U R S DAY, S E P T E M B E R 1 7 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 judg-
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ing 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
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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 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
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-exseries
WEDNESDAY, SEPTEMBER 23 BRISTOL BAR & GRILLE MASTER SOMMELIER WINE TASTING Join Bristol Bar & Grille Master Sommelier
Scott Harper Wednesday, Sept. 23 at 7 p.m. at the Sheraton Louisville Riverside, 700 W. Riverside Dr., for an expert’s guide to wine tasting. Harper will guide guests through the flavor nuances of wines from Napa Valley, Italy and France highlighting how climate and region affect each type. Cost is $50 which includes a reception wine and four tasting wines. A portion of the proceeds will go toward funding a new home for an injured Marine through the United States Marine Corps Wounded Warrior Regiment and Sotherly Foundation, the philanthropic effort of the Sheraton’s parent company. MORE INFO sjones@sheratonlouisville.co
S AT U R DAY, S E P T E M B E R 2 6 “MASS: A THEATRE PIECE FOR SINGERS, PLAYERS AND DANCERS” The Louisville Orchestra opens its 2015-16 Brown-Forman Classics Series with two performances of Leonard Bernstein’s most ambitious work, “Mass: A Theatre Piece for Singers, Players and Dancers” on Saturday, September 26 at 8 p.m. and Sunday, September 27 at 3 p.m. at the Kentucky Center. Bernstein’s “Mass” was commissioned by Jacqueline Kennedy Onassis and made its world premiere at the opening of the John F. Kennedy Center for the Performing Arts in Washington, D.C. on September 8, 1971. Inspired by the Roman Catholic Liturgy, “Mass” provides a reflective and moving experience that recognizes the importance of faith in a hectic world. Bernstein’s touching masterpiece includes both traditional Latin and Hebrew passages as well as English texts by Bernstein and Broadway composer Stephen Schwartz. The large cast includes singers, actors, dancers, three choirs and marching and rock bands who, with the orchestra, will blend liturgical, rock, blues, Broadway and classical music to create one cohesive, profound performance. Single tickets range from $26 to $75. MORE INFO 502.584.7777 or kentuckycenter.org
T H U R S DAY, O C TO B E R 1 VOICE OF LOUISVILLE FALL MAGAZINE LAUNCH PARTY Please join us at Mesh on Brownsboro Road as we celebrate the launch of the fall edition of our glossy magazine The Voice of Louisville. Sponsored by Woodford Reserve, the party will feature a signature cocktail, light bites and giveaways. Admission is free and the event will last from 6 to 8:30 p.m. MORE INFO 502.897.8900
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W E D N E S DAY, O C TO B E R 7 TASTE OF LOUISVILLE The 42nd original taste in town, presented by Universal Linen Service, will take place at Louisville Executive Aviation at 2700 Gast Blvd. in Bowman Field. The event will celebrate a variety of food and beverage exhibitors from around the city as we seek to crown the best of the best in three categories – savory, sweet and swig. A panel of three judges for each category will determine the best dish of the night. Additionally, the public will vote for the People’s Choice using a brand new mobile app crafted exclusively for the Taste of Louisville this year. Other features of the event include the Old502 Wine Lounge and the Bulleit Bourbon Lounge where guests of the event can sit and sip on their favorite libations. Early bird tickets are on sale now at thetasteoflouisville.com for $40 until August 16. Tickets after that are $50, and $55 the day of the event. MORE INFO thetasteoflouisville.com
T H U R S DAY, O C TO B E R 8 GOLDEN DRAGON ACROBATS The award-winning Chinese acrobatic dance company, Golden Dragon Acrobats, will perform at the Brown Theatre, 315 West Broadway. The event is part of the Yum! Family Series. Golden Dragon Acrobats combine award-winning acrobatics, traditional dance and ancient and contemporary music in a show of breathtaking skill and spellbinding beauty. The company’s performances represent a Chinese tradition that began more than 25 centuries ago. The company is recognized throughout the United States and abroad as the premiere Chinese acrobatic touring company of today. Tickets start at $15. Discounted group rates are available for parties of 10 or more. MORE INFO 502.584.7777 or kentuckycenter.org
S AT U R DAY, O C TO B E R 1 7 COMMEDIENNE PAULA POUNDSTONE BRINGS LAUGHS TO THE KENTUCKY CENTER’S BOMHARD THEATER Thirty-two years ago, Paula Poundstone climbed on a Greyhound bus and traveleled across the country--stopping in at open mic nights at comedy clubs as she went. She went on to become one of the great humorists of our time. She is a regular panelist on NPR’s popular weekly news quiz show, Wait, Wait … Don’t Tell Me. She will bring her stand-up comedy to the Kentucky Center’s Bomhard Theater, Saturday, October 17 at 8 p.m. Tickets are $35. MORE INFO www.kentuckycenter.org/presents 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 7 , 2 0 1 5
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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
Now accepting applications for Fall 2016. Areas of study include Digital Media, General Fine Arts, Graphic Design, Interdisciplinary Sculpture and Painting & Drawing. Call 502-873-4374 or visit kycad.spalding.edu
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National Merit Scholars PAGE Semifinalists List 74
MERIT SCHOLARS
Principal Jerry Mayes with a group of students.
The Man Behind the Magic of Manual
T
he principal’s office at duPont Manual High School is a place of distinction. It’s no secret the school is among the nation’s best. In that office, Jerry Mayes effuses a palpable ambition. But in an apparent paradox, his most salient quality is humility.
“I take what we do seriously,” he says, “but I don’t take myself very seriously.”
Contributing Writer WES KERRICK
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When Mayes recounts his journey to the prestigious post, he makes scant mention of the attainments that landed him there. The principal himself seems mystified, being loath to own that his merits indeed commended him for the job.
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“What’re the chances of me, out of a nationwide search, becoming the principal of Manual High School? I just feel like for some reason I’m supposed to be here. I don’t know.” Growing up in Louisville, Mayes wasn’t into sports – which is ironic, considering that he’d go on to become a football coach. His mother, who’d been among the second co-ed class to graduate from Manual, gave him a compulsory introduction to the sport. PHOTO COURTESY OF ERIN WOGGON
When Mayes was in the seventh grade, his parents divorced. “This guy by the name of Milon Perpich became my surrogate father, basically, and all I wanted to do was spend time with him,” he remembers. “And in order to spend time with him, I had to learn how to play sports.” Mayes graduated from Butler Traditional High School then earned his bachelor’s and master’s degrees at Morehead and UofL, respectively.
2013, he became principal at duPont Manual High School. Without question, it’s a station of honor. U.S. News and World Report ranked Manual No. 205 in its most current list of America’s best high schools and the second best high school in Kentucky. Niche.com placed it at No. 112 nationally and best in the state. And on TheBestSchools.org, the school came in at No. 45 in the U.S.
I’m the smallest cog in this wheel. I really am. And that’s not some false humility. My biggest thing is to stay out of the way and let these guys [teachers] do their job.
He took his first teaching job at Paul Blazer High School in Ashland, Ky., where he worked for two years. Then, he moved to St. Xavier High School, where he taught and coached football for about four years.
After that, he accepted a coaching position at Morehead. A few years later, he was back in Louisville at Doss High School, and after that, he returned to St. Xavier as athletic director. “Then, I had the itch to get back into coaching,” he says. So he took a job as head football coach and advanced biology teacher at Manual. He subsequently became an assistant principal at Pleasure Ridge Park High School, where he spent 10 years. And in fall
“We have great schools all over Jefferson County,” Mayes says, “and each one of them serves a certain purpose. Ours just happens to be this unique set of kids who want to be in a very rigorous setting. I have the hardest working kids in town – no question.”
Last year, Manual’s students earned $63 million in scholarships. The school offers 30 advanced placement courses, meaning students can graduate with as much as two years of college credit. “We take ownership of every kid in this building,” Mayes says.
Manual boasts exceptionally gifted teachers who regularly meet to discuss their students’ development. “I’m the smallest cog in this wheel,” Mayes says. “I really am. And that’s not some false humility. My biggest thing is to stay out of the way and let these guys do their job.”
you come in here, understand this is a different cat.” As Mayes speaks, he taps the table repeatedly for emphasis. “… You have to accept carrying the torch for the hundreds of alumni that have gone before you.” Manual is also rich in socioeconomic diversity. Minorities make up more than a third of its student body. The environment feels a lot like home to Mayes, whose daughters – 23, 20, 17 and 10 – are all adopted. His wife, Marla Mayes, is a real estate agent with Breland Group Realtors. “My wife is phenomenal,” he says. “… She actually pushed me to go for this position and to do this.” The statement is illustrative of Mayes’ career, even his personal life – he’s an unassuming man with a record of responding with mastery to a good push. Mayes turns around the yellow notepad where he’s prepared his comments. Across the top he’s written: “May this be to your glory.” Mayes doesn’t typically grant interviews, but he’s welcomed this one in the spirit that perhaps his story will inspire someone. “I really lean on my faith,” he says. “… That’s my base. That’s where everything comes from.” It’s a faith that God makes everything happen for a reason, which is the only way Mayes feels comfortable accounting for his success. “Out of the blue, after a nationwide search, how do you explain that I end up being at one of the greatest places on earth?” VT
Manual has 49 semifinalists in the 2016 National Merit Scholarship Program
Manual has a rich tradition of success, and Mayes preaches it to the freshmen: “When
Congratulations to our National Merit Semifinalists!
Congratulates Our 24 National Merit Semi-finalists for 2015 WE TEACH: READING (K-Adult) TEST PREP (ACT, PSAT, SAT, HSPT, AP EXAMS, SAT II’s)
ACADEMIC SUBJECTS STUDY SKILLS
This represents 14% of the students from the Class of 2016.
SPEED READING DAY SCHOOL SUMMER SCHOOL HOME SCHOOL NCAA APPROVED COURSES
CONTACT US TODAY 502.426.8002 6500 Glenridge Park Place #1 Louisville, KY 40222
Call today to schedule your personal tour of our campus at 502.479.0378. 2427 GLENMARY AVENUE LOUISVILLE, KY 40204 502.479.0340 LOUCOL.COM
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“When we went to the Manual-Male football games, I really didn’t know what was going on,” he recalls. “But I knew every Thanksgiving, I had to go to this game or we weren’t eating Thanksgiving dinner.”
MERIT SCHOLARS
T
A Resource for Academic Success
est day is fast approaching. On October 14, high school students throughout Jefferson County will take the PSAT/NMSQT – the test that could make them 2017 National Merit semifinalists.
choices instead of five, and it will include a no-calculator section. It will also include 20 evidence-based questions that will require students to read literary selections and draw conclusions.
Contributing Writer
But there will be no guessing penalty, and Weigel expects a more generous grading curve than in past years.
WES To get ready, more than 100 of As an expert on preparation for KERRICK them are plugged in at Educationhigher learning, Weigel points out al Resources LLC, a tutoring center at 6500 that the National Merit scholarship is well Glennridge Park Place. worth every effort to perform well on the PSAT. The center’s study groups started in late “Once your name is on that list, you’re going August and will culminate on October 11 with to have offers from everyone because they want a practice PSAT at Trinity High School. pacesetters in their classes,” she says. “… This Among the National Merit semifinalists is the crème de la crème of tests.” named September 9 were 24 students who PSAT preparation is just one part of the cenreceived coaching at Educational Resources ter’s year-round array of services to help stubefore taking the PSAT last year. “That’s pretdents. Educational Resources prepares students ty good,” says Patty Weigel, who founded Edufor all the advanced placement exams and for cational Resources in 1976. “So I was pleased.” the Catholic schools’ high school placement This year’s PSAT will be a new test. It’s the test. It also focuses on helping students with the first time it’s changed since 2005. “That’s the subjects in which they’re lagging behind their reason there’s so much interest in it,” Weigel peers – usually reading or math. explains. “If a student’s taking calculus and they She expects the new test to be harder than the one students have encountered in the past. The test will be longer, it will offer four answer
want to make sure they get an A rather than a B, then they would come once a week for an hour… for as long as they want,” she describes.
The center has a staff of 25-30 tutors, which grows to about 40 each summer. Many of them are full-time teachers who also work at the center part-time. Some are retired teachers; others are graduate or doctoral students with some teaching experience. “What separates us from our competitors,” says Weigel, “is our attention to selecting the tutor that fits the student’s needs and their personality.” Since 1991, Educational Resources has also been sending its staff out to area schools to teach supplemental programs like study skills or speed-reading. One of those schools is Waggener High School, which notified Educational Resources last spring that every student the center’s staff had taught was enjoying higher test scores. “It’s very effective instruction,” Weigel asserts. Weigel holds a doctorate in education, as well as multiple certifications to teach students with learning and behavior disorders. After working for Fayette County schools as a teacher consultant, she returned to her native Louisville and started her own business. It isn’t too late to come to the center for last-minute PSAT prep on an individual basis. “We always make space for them,” Weigel says. Educational Resources will also hold a PSAT “crash course” on October 10 at Sacred Heart Academy. VT For more information, visit ertutor.com, call 502.426.8002 or email Weigel at ertutor@gmail.com.
Patty Weigel, founder of Educational Resources.
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PHOTOS BY WES KERRICK | CONTRIBUTING PHOTOGRAPHER
Alice Lloyd College 100 Purpose Road Pippa Passes, KY 41844 Info: 606.368.2101 Website: alc.edu
Frontier Nursing University* 170 Prosperous Place Lexington, KY 40509 Info: 859.253.3637 Website: frontier.edu
Asbury University 1 Macklem Drive Wilmore, KY 40390 Info: 859.858.3511 Website: asbury.edu
Georgetown College 400 East College St. Georgetown, KY 40324 Info: 502.863.8000 Website: georgetowncollege.edu
Beckfield College 16 Spiral Drive Florence, KY 41042 Info: 859.371.9393 Website: beckfield.edu
ITT Technical Institute-Louisville 9500 Ormsby Station Road Louisville, KY 40223 Info: 502.327.7424 Website: itt-tech.edu
Bellarmine University 2001 Newburg Road Louisville, KY 40205 Info: 502.272.8263 Website: bellarmine.edu
Kentucky Christian University 100 Academic Pkwy. Grayson, KY 41143 Info: 606.474.3000 Website: kcu.edu
Berea College 101 Chestnut St. Berea, KY 40404 Info: 859.985.3000 Website: berea.edu
Kentucky State University 400 East Main St. Frankfort, KY 40601 Info: 502.597.6000 Website: kysu.edu
Brescia University 717 Frederica St. Owensboro, KY 42301 Info: 270.685.3131 Website: brescia.edu
Kentucky Wesleyan College 3000 Frederica St. Owensboro, KY 42301 Info: 270.926.3111 Website: kwc.edu
Campbellsville University 1 University Drive Campbellsville, KY 42718 Info: 270.789.5000 Website: campbellsville.edu
Lindsey Wilson College 210 Lindsey Wilson St. Columbia, KY 42728 Info: 270.384.2126 Website: lindsey.edu
Centre College 600 W Walnut St. Danville, KY 40422 Info: 859.238.5200 Website: centre.edu
Mid-Continent University 99 E. Powell Road Mayfield, KY 42066 Info: 270.247.8521 Website: Midcontinent.edu
Eastern Kentucky University 521 Lancaster Ave. Richmond, KY 40475 Info: 859.622.1000 Website: eku.edu
Midway College 512 E. Stephens St. Midway, KY 40347 Info: 859.846.4421 Website: midway.edu
*GRADUATE LEVEL SCHOOL ONLY
Morehead State University 150 University Blvd. Morehead, KY 40351 Info: 606.783.2221 Website: moreheadstate.edu Murray State University 218 Wells Hall Murray, KY 42071 Info: 270.809.3011 Website: murraystate.edu National College - Lexington 2376 Sir Barton Way Lexington, KY 40509 Info: 859.253.0621 Website: national-college.edu Northern Kentucky University 100 Nunn Drive Highland Heights, KY 41099 Info: 859.572.5100 Website: nku.edu University of Pikeville 147 Sycamore St. Pikeville, KY 41501 Info: 606.218.5250 Website: pc.edu
Transylvania University 300 N. Broadway Lexington, KY 40508 Info: 859.233.8300 Website: transy.edu Union College 310 College St. Barbourville, KY 40906 Info: 606.546.4151 Website: unionky.edu
University of Louisville 2301 S. Third St. Louisville, KY 40292 Info: 502.852.5555 Website: louisville.edu
Spalding University 845 S. Third St. Louisville, KY 40203 Info: 502.585.7111 Website: spalding.edu Sullivan College of Technology and Design 3901 Atkinson Square Drive Louisville, KY 40218 Info: 502.456.6509 Website: sctd.edu
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Thomas More College 333 Thomas Moore Pkwy. Crestiview Hills, KY 41017 Info: 859.341.5800 Website: thomasmore.edu
University of Kentucky 410 Administration Drive Lexington, KY 40506 Info: 859.257.9000 Website: uky.edu
Saint Catharine College 2735 Bardstown Road Saint Catharine, KY 40061 Info: 859.336.5082 Website: sccky.edu
Sullivan University 3101 Bardstown Road Louisville, KY 40205 Info: 502.456.6504 Website: sullivan.edu
Southern Baptist Theological Seminary 2528 Lexington Road Louisville, KY 40280 Info: 800.626.5525 Website: sbts.edu
University of Phoenix Louisville Campus 10400 Linn Station Road, Suite 120 Louisville, KY 40223 Info: 502.423.0149 Website: phoenix.edu University of the Cumberlands 6191 College Station Drive Williamsburg, KY 40769 Info: 606.549.2200 Website: ucumberlands.edu Western Kentucky University 1906 College Heights Blvd. Bowling Green, KY 42101 Info: 210.745.0111 Website: wku.edu
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MERIT SCHOLARS
Kentucky Four-Year Colleges And Universities
MERIT SCHOLARS
N AT I O N A L M E R I T S C H O L A R SEMIFINALISTS Kentucky Country Day School
Sonia Gadre, Rimsha Nazeer, Chad Kamen, Eraaj Mahmood, Asa Hiken and Christian Cox
duPont Manual High School
Row 1: Amy Medley-Counselor, Alice Judy, Shivani Jindal, Brennan Tucker, Aisha Thapa, Zoe Cardwell-Copenhefer, Urooj Nasim, Joy Li, Nancy Ngo, Taylor Darnell, Kayla Soren, Weijing Huang, Camilia Araque and Marti Johnston-Counselor. Row 2: Michelle Leslie - Counselor, Yam Schaal, Sarah Schwartz, Susmita Chennareddy, Kathryn Kalbfleisch, Emma Badia, Xinlan Emily Hu, Sarah Duggan, Jennifer Ding, Amanda Tu, Sanjana Rane, Clare Doyle, Avani Kabra, Gerald Mayes - Principal and Dennis Robinson - Counselor. Row 3: Patrick Smalley, Ignacio Munoz, Shravan Ravishankar, Madan Subheeswar, Camden Penn, Chris Adams, Mitchell Malloy, Andrew Nguyen Vo, Thomas Barber, Michael Pearson, Sai Pidtala and Roberto Bolli. Row 4: Sumanth Chennareddy, Kevin Tien, Garrett McGrady, Alex Duncan, Luke Howe-Kerr, Noah Ramsey, Jacob Finke, Ryan Anglin, Jack Peterson, Jonah Largen and William Lamkin. Not Pictured: Jerry Zhang and Tristie Stucker.
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COURTESY PHOTOS
Top row: Lee Bradley, Nicholas Sullivan, John Steenrod, Alex Grove and Lucas Asher Bottom row: Aaron Lerner, Gillian O’Leary and Nicolas Maloney
Atherton High School John Kolb
Brown School Hannah Hemming
cONgratuLatiONS tO Our NatiONaL Merit SeMifiNaLiStS! Over the last five years,
11% of the Senior Class have been recognized as National Merit Semifinalists.
citizen, scholar, steward
Learn more about our exceptional academic program at www.kcd.org.
502.814.4375 / admissions@kcd.org / www.kcd.org KCD firmly supports the principle that the admission of students, the employment of staff, the operations of the program, and the governance of the school be open to all who are qualified, regardless of race, color, religion, sex, sexual orientation, national origin, ancestry, age, or disability.
COURTESY PHOTOS
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MERIT SCHOLARS
Louisville Collegiate School
MERIT SCHOLARS
Louisville Classical Academy
St. Francis High School
Sam Borden, Gilman Bagga, Rose Gilbert, Zoe Koss and Head of School Alexandra Thurstone
Emma Proietti
Trinity High School
Michael Hiestand, Jorge Rojas-Ortega, Phillip Sandman, Samuel McCalpin, Principal Dan Zoeller, Jeremy Borden, Braden Barnett, Elijah Donohue and Eric Sahli
Sacred Heart Academy
Candace Cox
St. Xavier High School
Front row: Marco Antonio Villa-Real Garcia, Noah Christopher Popham and Liam Patrick Crooks. Middle row: Thomas Weber Ostertag, James Robert Mikulec, Jackson Scott Keadle and James Patrick Grohmann Jr. Back row: Jackson Thomas Smith, Peary Walter Farrar and Tanner Michael Passafiume.
Sarah Loheide, Abigail Estes, Emily Easterling, Abigail Beck and Mary K. Wentzel
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Mercy Academy
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COURTESY PHOTOS
SERVICES
Distinctive Stonework! Add a BEAUTIFUL stone wall to your garden! Entrance columns, tuckpointing and more! 30 yrs. experience. Bob Rogers, 241-7340. www.distinctive-stonework.com
CLASSIFIEDS MAY BE PLACED BY CALLING 502.897.8900 OR EMAILING CIRC@VOICE-TRIBUNE.COM
REAL ESTATE
Ambridge 1009 in Windy Hills: 4 bed/3 bath cape offers a remake w/ fresh paint, flooring & lighting. Basement, 2 car garage. New Price! $259,900. Nancy Lage 502-262-4279
FOR SALE Buying Old Baseball Cards 1888-1975 Paying CASH!! Call Chris (502)727-2921 EMPLOYMENT Part-Time Retail Merchandiser needed to merchandise Hallmark products at various retail stores in the Louisville area. To apply, please visit: http://hallmark.candidatecare. com EOE Women/Minorities/ Disabled/Veteran.
Louisville’s
LGBTQ lifestyle
Drivers: High Paying Jobs for Flatbed OTR Driver! Our trucks feature FREE DIRECTV: HBO, Showtime & NFL Sunday Ticket. Call Today! 888-804-3051 Experienced Tax Preparers Local CPA firm located in east end of Louisville is seeking experienced tax preparers for full or part-time work during our busy season. Salary based on experience. To apply you may submit a resume by fax to 502-4253131 or email to ryager@ hjcocpas.com.
magazine
Subscribe online or call 502.897.8900 www.modernlouisville.com
735 EAST MAIN STREET, LOUISVILLE, KY 40202
Classified AD POLICIES AND RATES To ensure the best response to your classified ad, please take the time to make sure your ad is correct in the first issue it runs. We are only responsible for one incorrect week, and liability shall not exceed the portion of space occupied by the error. If for some reason your ad is incorrect, call the following day after publication. All ads are subject to proper classification and editing. We reserve the right to revise or reject any ad deemed objectionable or unacceptable and we will not be held liable for advertisement omitted by error. Ad position other than classification is not guaranteed. Deadline: Noon on Monday prior to publication Line Ads: $10.50 for the first 15 words, plus $.25 for each additional word. (4 or more weeks will be discounted $1 per week) Display Ads: $23 per column inch (non-profit rate: $18 per column inch)
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CLASSIFIEDS
classifieds
PUZZLES
pets of the week Two-year-old Kit Kat is a Domestic Shorthair mix who spent her formative year as an outdoor cat. Her former owner was able to convince her to give up her roaming ways and become an indoor cat. However, she was a little territorial and did not get along with the other cats in the home. Kit Kat would do well as a solo cat. She thinks she’s affectionate enough you won’t feel any need for another cat. She’s open to new human friends and loves having a family of her own. She’s spayed, micro-chipped and up-to-date on her vaccinations. Come meet her at the Kentucky Humane Society’s Main Campus, 241 Steedly Drive. Six-year-old Nina is a Rat Terrier mix who came to the Kentucky Humane Society because her owner passed away. Nina is a sweet cuddler who wants to be in your lap. She can be a bit mischievous but listens to you when you discourage an activity. Nina is a little selfish with her food and her toys, so she may do better as an only dog. She knows basic commands and appears to be potty-trained. She’s spayed, micro-chipped and up-to-date on her vaccinations. You can meet Nina at the Kentucky Humane Society’s Dixie Feeders Supply adoption center, 10948 Dixie Hwy. For more on Nina or any of our adoptable pets, please call 502.366.3355 or visit kyhumane.org.
For more on any of our adoptable pets, please call 502.366.3355 or visit kyhumane.org
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A real estate company is like a home. The great ones have a strong foundation. Our agents come with a network of experience and are backed by the most admired name in the business.
502-238-2432
Call Susan Ulrich at to have one of our expert agents market your home or if you are interested in a career in real estate.
Residential Services Commercial Services
Relocation Services Property Management
coming soon
Dave Parks 502.238.1905
10048 Harrods Creek Drive $750,000
4805 Morris Place $833,000
Judie Parks 502.238.1906
Judie Parks 502.238.1906 • Teresa Wampler 270.485.6280
4111 Oxnard Creek Drive $650,000
5410 River Creek Court $699,900
2506 Belknap Beach Road $635,000
Ann Elizabeth Delahanty 502.238.1869
Nancy Lage 502.238.1852
Pat Parks 502.238.1900
9205 Angel Trumpet Drive $775,000
5807 Laurel Lane $459,900
3535 Lime Kiln Lane $750,000
Ellen Shaikun 502.417.7625
Judie Parks 502.238.1906
Ellen Shaikun 502.417.7625
Indian Hills Stunner
Still locally owned for over 60 years.
www.BHHSParksWeisberg.com Parks & Weisberg, Realtors
®
©2014 BHH Affiliates, LLC. An independently owned and operated franchise of BHH affiliates, LLC. Berkshire HomeServices and the Berkshire Hathaway HomeServices symbol are registered service marks of HomeServices of American, Inc. Equal Housing Opportunity.
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