V O L . 2 9 , N O. 1 7 | O C TO B E R 8 , 2 0 1 5
you CAN’T stop him now $1.00
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TYLER BEAM IS BATTLING BRAIN CANCER FOR THE FOURTH TIME WHILE TRAINING FOR A HALF MARATHON.
Dennis Petrullo 14 | The Voice of Louisville Launch Party 36 | Over the 9 66
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There is nothing I love more than a feel good story. And this week we have just that for you. We sat down with Tyler Beam, who has had an incredibly long battle with cancer and has beaten it three times over. Tyler is one of the most inspiring, positive and hilarious people you will ever know. I am so lucky to share his story as he shows this city who is boss as he runs the Urban Bourbon Half Marathon during chemotherapy. You may wonder why he is doing that. He doesn’t do it for himself, no. He is doing it to raise awareness and funds for Gilda’s Club; he is doing it for the ones who can’t do it; he is doing it for his kids. Get the tissues, as this story is both funny and heartwarming.
grub that could pair well with the wine and beer that comes out of the same building. This is a great new addition to the downtown food scene, and I encourage everyone to check it out! In Sports, it was the big rivalry game on Friday, as Trinity and St.X faced off in a wet but loud Papa John’s Cardinals Stadium, where we captured all the action. Elsewhere, Steve Kaufman looks back at UK’s close win over EKU and discusses John Calipari’s relationship with the Harrison twins. Speaking of UK basketball, Kent Taylor caught up with the latest hoops recruit Jamal Murray, while our high school writer, Randy Whetstone, met Central Yellow Jackets coach Ty Scroggins to learn about the key to their success.
As for an organization making an impact on this city, The KFC Yum! Center talks about how it is doing its part in helping the environment. As one of the city’s biggest attractions, it’s always guaranteed to deliver fun, that much we know, but they are also going out of their way to use chemical-free products and post-consumer recycled materials. I love hearing about companies doing their part in keeping this planet green.
Around town, St. James Court Art Show had the streets packed with vendors and shoppers for its annual event. Although it was a very “Kentucky” weather weekend – freezing on Saturday and blistering hot on Sunday – it was a delight to see so many people come out to shop the vendors!
Just down the street from the KFC Yum! Center is a new gastropub, Over the 9, that we tried for this week’s Tastes. Not only are they offering fabulous cuisine but they are also bridging the gap between downtown Louisville and Portland. With Over the 9 being in the Old 502 Winery and Falls City Brewery building, they wanted the food to be upscale pub
My dear friends Kathy and Kent Oyler had a fabulous party with friends and family for their 30th anniversary of living on Duff Ln. There is no better way to celebrate your home than by spending time with those who helped to create the memories you shared inside it. Here is to many more years in their family home. Thank you to all who came out to celebrate our new fall magazine! The Voice of Louisville Launch Party was a huge success at Mesh this past week. Pick up your copy today if you haven’t seen it yet! Happy reading,
P H OTO B Y C L AY C O O K
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PUB NOTE
From The Publisher...
INDEX
Sports Catnip �������������������������������������������������������������������22 Taylor’s 10 ������������������������������������������������������������ 24 Card Chronicle �����������������������������������������������������26 Louisville City Football Club ��������������������������������28 Game of the Week �����������������������������������������������30 High School Sports ���������������������������������������������� 31 Great Pumpkin 10K Race Results ������������������������32
Society The Voice of Louisville Launch Party �������������������36 Charles Farnsley 1949 Founders Society Reception ��38 Women Who Inspire ��������������������������������������������39 Eye Care Institute Ladies Night �������������������������� 42 Salute to the Game Luncheon �����������������������������43 Nazareth Home Concert for Peace �������������������� 44 Louisville’s International Festival of Film ������������46 Fleur-de-lis Fling: Jungle Safari ��������������������������47 St. James Court Art Show ������������������������������������48 St. George’s Scholar Institute Fundraiser �����������49 Fourth Annual Pink Prom �������������������������������������50 Party in Dufflandia �����������������������������������������������52 Blackacre Barn Bash ��������������������������������������������53 Matt Bevin Fundraiser �����������������������������������������54 Partyline ���������������������������������������������������������������56
Life Spotlight: Urban Bourbon Half Marathon ���������� 60 Spotlight: Tribute to Troops ���������������������������������61 LookBook: Favorite Things Boutique ������������������62 Mixing It Up ����������������������������������������������������������64 Tastes �������������������������������������������������������������������66 Out & About ���������������������������������������������������������68 Home ��������������������������������������������������������������������70 Film �����������������������������������������������������������������������72 Arts & Entertainment ��������������������������������������������73
Features You Can’t Stop Him Now
We sit down with Tyler Beam, who is training for the Urban Bourbon Half Marathon and battling brain cancer for the fourth time. ��������������������������������������������������������������� 8
The KFC Yum! Center’s New and Green Era
Dennis Petrullo tells us about the Yum! Center’s efforts to go green ������������������������� 14
It’s Not Just Exercise at Bend and Zen
We chat with Meredith Conroy to learn more about Bend and Zen Hot Yoga ����������������������������� 16
Essentials Masthead �������������������������������7 Business �������������������������������17 Obituaries ���������������������������� 18
Dear Abby ��������������������������� 57 Event Calendar ������������������� 74 Classifieds ��������������������������� 76
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Puzzles �������������������������������� 78 Pets of the Week ����������������� 78
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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
PUBLISHER
TRACY A. BLUE EXECUTIVE ASSISTANT TO THE PUBLISHER
HOLLIS GARGALA
EDITORIAL LORI KOMMOR
JOANNA HITE SHELTON
STYLE EDITOR
IGOR GURYASHKIN STAFF WRITER
CHRIS HUMPHREYS
PRODUCTION DIRECTOR
CHIEF PHOTOGRAPHER & DESIGNER
MALISSA KOEBEL
REMY SISK
GRAPHIC DESIGNER
STAFF WRITER
HANNAH KRILL GRAPHIC DESIGNER
CONTRIBUTING WRITERS
JOHN ASHER • CARLA SUE BROECKER • BENNETT DUCKWORTH BEN GIERHART • STEVE KAUFMAN • WES KERRICK • MIKE RUTHERFORD KENT TAYLOR • RANDY WHETSTONE JR. CONTRIBUTING PHOTOGRAPHERS
JAMES EATON • JOHN H. HARRALSON • CRYSTAL LUDWICK TIM VALENTINO • BILL WINE
ADVERTISING BRIDGETTE BORRAGA
ADVERTISING OPERATIONS DIRECTOR
ACCOUNT EXECUTIVES
ASHLEY BECKHAM • SHARI BAUGHMAN • JULIE KOENIG KAREN PIERCE • JUDY ROYCE
CIRCULATION ROCKO JEROME
DISTRIBUTION SALES COORDINATOR
JOHN AURELIUS
CIRCULATION ADMINISTRATOR
CLARENCE KING
KATIE WENDT
NEWSPAPER DELIVERIES
RECEPTIONIST
BLUE EQUITY, LLC JONATHAN S. BLUE
CHAIRMAN & MANAGING DIRECTOR OF BLUE EQUITY
DAVID M. ROTH VICE CHAIRMAN
JUAN REFFREGER
EXECUTIVE VICE PRESIDENT
Deadlines: Display Ads – Noon Monday | Classified Ads – Noon Monday The Voice-Tribune (ISSN 1076-7398) is published weekly on Thursdays. Periodicals postage paid at Louisville, Ky., and additional mailing offices. Subscription rate: $39/year. Call 502.897.8900 to subscribe. POSTMASTER: Send address changes to: The Voice-Tribune | 735 East Main Street | Louisville, KY 40202.
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Thanks to all of our fans who participated this year, we’re planting thousands of white oak trees in Daniel Boone National Forest come April.
It’s time to
Give Back
to the state that brought us bourbon.
F e at u r e
you CAN’T stop him now
TYLER BEAM IS BATTLING BRAIN CANCER FOR THE FOURTH TIME WHILE TRAINING FOR A HALF MARATHON.
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F e at u r e 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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TYLER BEAM
is hilarious. Tyler Beam is charming. Tyler Beam has two beautiful kids. Tyler Beam is a senior communications analyst at Brown-Forman. Tyler Beam is running the Urban Bourbon Half Marathon on October 24.
TYLER BEAM IS BATTLING BRAIN CANCER FOR THE FOURTH TIME. by REMY SISK
He was first diagnosed at 21 and now, at 38, maintains an aura of positivity and optimism that most people unaffected by cancer would find difficult. Which is partially why he is such a truly inspiring human being. Beam was about to start his senior year at the University of Alabama in 1999 when he collapsed while running. The next thing he remembers is waking up in a hospital and a doctor saying, “We’ve found something on your brain.” Beam returned to his apartment alone and felt motionless. “The call to my parents and how upset they were going to be consumed me,” he recalls. He remained alone that day, striving to ready the words he would deliver to his family over the phone. “I spent the majority of the afternoon sitting in my living room chair staring at this black Uniden phone on the table that was staring right back at me,” he recounts. “I was literally paralyzed with fear because I knew once that call was made, it was the point of no return and my life was probably never going to be O C T O B E R 8 , 2 0 1 5 • W W W . V O I C E -T R I B U N E . C O M
the same. Later that night, we talked, and two weeks later, I was on the operating table prepped for brain surgery.” However ready he did or didn’t feel by that point, when he went under for the surgery – which was supposed to be a routine biopsy to determine the type of tumor – he actually underwent a 10-hour surgery that was the consequence of a massive hemorrhage. His life was in peril for several moments, but he made it out and officially began his cancer journey. He successfully defeated the disease that time. But then it returned in 2003. “I was just getting established in my career when my brain tumor started growing again, and, as a result, I moved from Atlanta back here to Louisville to
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be closer to my family while undergoing treatment,” he remembers. He then underwent a second brain surgery, 15 months of chemotherapy and 33 rounds of whole brain radiation. In an absurd turn of fate, in 2008, the cancer returned a third time, resulting in a third brain surgery and 13 more months of chemotherapy. Then, in September 2014, the original cancer returned yet a fourth time along with two new tumors. He did not require surgery; however, he did once again start chemo, which he will finish this coming January. By then, he will have had a total of three surgeries, 33 rounds of radiation and 40 months of chemo over the years. One would think that someone so challenged by this horrific disease would eventu-
F e at u r e
ally – understandably – let it negatively impact his or her psyche. But Beam somehow remains positive. He doesn’t ask the question “Why me?”; he’s more preoccupied with a different question. “The question I ask is, ‘Why are there so many people diagnosed with cancer who deserved a second chance and didn’t get one?” Beam puts forth. “A second chance at discovering peace and happiness – doing something they always wanted to do but ran out of time, or missed out on the opportunity to have children. Whatever a second chance would mean, anyone who has ever been diagnosed with cancer deserves that. Rarely has a day passed when I haven’t been thankful for the chance to live another day because too many people much more wor-
thy than me didn’t get one.” Although Beam is lucky enough to have gotten a second chance, over his cancer journey, he has met those who were not. “My girlfriend lost her older brother to cancer fives years ago and he was one of those people,” he relates. “I've learned a lot from her, and it's made me realize even more how fortunate I am to be alive." To help those who weren’t getting a second chance – and also help himself – Beam got involved in some of the earliest stages of the development of Gilda’s Club Louisville. Gilda’s is a national organization that provides resources to those affected by cancer by offering them the “clubhouse.” There, those of all ages
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touched by cancer will find a space to cope independently or as a group, to take cooking classes, to engage in social activities and so much more. When Beam returned to Louisville following the first return of his cancer in 2003, he came to discover there were so few support groups, and the ones that existed left much to be desired. There were others who felt the same way. To combat this and provide the resource of Gilda’s Club to those touched by cancer in Louisville, Susan Moremen, Sharon Ann Receveur and Lindy Street opened the clubhouse and asked Beam to be on their first board. To this day, Beam is passionate about what Gilda’s provides for the community. “It’s a place W W W . V O I C E -T R I B U N E . C O M • O C T O B E R 8 , 2 0 1 5
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that offers hope, answers, relationships, opportunity, love and inclusion,” he asserts. “Gilda’s Club celebrates life, and after you walk in, it feels like you’re at home with family. I like to say Gilda’s is a cancer treatment you’ll never get from an IV drip or a radiation beam.”
I ever thought possible, and I’d be lost without them,” he contends. “Brown-Forman is obviously home to the best bourbons in the world, so what better way to show my support for them than by running in a race that’s got bourbon in the name?”
Beam so believes in Gilda’s work that in 2008, while on chemotherapy, he decided to raise awareness and funds for the organization by running in the Papa John’s 10 Miler and the Kentucky Derby Festival miniMarathon. Beam considers himself a runner but only on a hobby level. “There’s a lot more things that are more fun to do than going out and running seven miles,” he laughs. “That’s time you can’t get back.” Nonetheless, he ran the two races for Gilda’s and was able to raise $25,000 for the organization.
Most importantly, though, he’s running to inspire people to do good and take action. “I’m running this race alive with cancer and filled with chemo, but, these are the things I must do to make good on my word,” he affirms. “I urge anyone reading this who has been touched by cancer to go out and do something today that makes you feel like you are killing cancer.”
FOR 16 YEARS, I'VE REFUSED TO LET CANCER STEAL MY FIGHT OR WILL, AND IF I CAN DO IT, THEN ANYONE CAN. YOU JUST HAVE TO BELIEVE.
And he’s about to do it again. On October 24, he will indeed run the Urban Bourbon Half Marathon for Gilda’s Club – but he’s also doing it for others. He’s running for those who have been lost to cancer, for his children, for his family and friends to show them how powerful their support is and finally for his company. “Brown-Forman has been more supportive and understanding about my health than O C T O B E R 8 , 2 0 1 5 • W W W . V O I C E -T R I B U N E . C O M
And for those currently battling cancer, Beam hopes his run provides some encouragement. “Even in the darkest moments, know that there are always ways to find happiness – even when you have trouble believing it exists,” he says. “Sometimes we have to be creative or look in places we’ve never thought about, but the key is you have to look or you will never find it. I guess if there’s any kind of message I want survivors to take from this run it’s that I’ve fought cancer for 16 years. I’ve learned that it can steal just about anything it wants from us, and, oftentimes, there is little we can do. For 16 years, I’ve refused to let cancer steal my fight or will, and if I can do it, than anyone can. You just have to believe.” Part of what keeps him going so strongly in this fight are his two beautiful children, Tyler, 9 and Ellie, 7. Beam remembers that when he got his diagnosis, all he knew was that he wanted to be a father before he died, and now he is one – twice-over! “The most important thing in my life are my two children, and there is no way to put into words how much I love them,” he exudes. “It’s an honor to be a dad, and with that comes the great responsibility of instilling core values in
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them that will remain inside them for the rest of their lives.” And that has all started with honesty; Beam has always been open with his children and fully communicative about his situation. But there wasn’t really an alternative, as he had cancer long before they were even born. “Fortunately or unfortunately, they don’t know me with hair and they don’t know me without cancer, so they’ve kind of grown up with my brain cancer and are comfortable using words like chemotherapy and brain cancer and radiation and surgery,” he explains. “It’s just such common vocabulary between us that sometimes when Tyler introduces me to one of his friends, he’ll say, ‘This is my dad. He has brain cancer and is on chemotherapy.’” As far as the grimmer aspects of his illness go, the family has not yet had that conversation, and Beam feels no need to rush into that. Whatever comes next will come, and he’s more interested in living in the moment and cherishing each day he spends with his children. “I could be gone in six months; I could be gone in six years,” he describes. “But until that day comes, I don’t want to waste any time.” With the struggles that have faced Beam over the years, it’s hard to imagine he doesn’t wonder what his life would be like without the cancer – but he doesn’t. “I don’t know if I would trade brain cancer,” he ponders. “And I can say that now because we’re sitting here talking, and I don’t have to be in a wheelchair and I haven’t lost my sight and I haven’t lost my mind completely – yet. I wouldn’t trade it. I don’t know if cancer has completely shaped who I am today, but it’s certainly helped. And I think if I strip that away, I don’t know who I’d be. But I’m here, and life’s pretty good.” You can support Beam in his run for Gilda’s Club in the Urban Bourbon Half Marathon by going to tinyurl.com/TylerBeam. Although he physically shouldn’t be able to do this run – he vomited during his most recent training run – he’s going to do it anyway because he is a fighter. “I don’t want to die, so I’m fighting for my life,” he confirms. “So when that bell rings – despite what kind of shape I’m in – I can either stand up to fight another round and live or stay seated and quit and it’s over. Those are my only two options. But really it’s not a tough decision because I’m a dad of two of the most incredible children in the world. There is no way I’m losing this fight.” VT
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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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
Profile
The KFC Yum! Center's
New and Green Era
D
tainment business, and [the KFC ennis Petrullo rememYum! Center] is the jewel of the bers how as a child, state. So it’s a privilege for me to be growing up in his here, and I love it.” native New York City, his dad So what makes a good venue? In sold hot dogs at the old Shea Petrullo’s mind it’s only one thing – Stadium – home of the New the acts that take to the stage. Profile York Mets. He recalls the “It’s all about content,” he sights, sounds, smells and genIGOR enthuses. “You can make as many eral excitement of game day. GURYASHKIN of these arenas as you want, but the one that is going to be successHe parlayed that thrill into his ful is the one that has content. And to get conteenage years by working at the icontent you have to be able to sell tickets. Fortuic Madison Square Garden, where he nately, in Louisville, this market has respondwould be in charge of food, particular- ed really well to the type of content we have ly in the backstage area. The Rolling been putting out. We had a week a while back Stones, Frank Sinatra – he saw them all in which we brought – in a single week – Keith backstage and then got the chance to Urban, Trans-Siberian Orchestra, Beyonce see some of the greatest shows on earth. and Justin Timberlake and two bas-
into two solutions: a disinfectant and a cleansing solution. Now, every single surface is cleaned using these safe and harmless yet effective products. “You could have a bath in it,” jokes Petrullo. But the effort does not simply extend to cleaning. The issue of waste is one that looms large, hence the KFC Yum! Center installed Smart Valves on all men’s urinals, drastically reducing the number of flushes and consequently wasting less water. Toilet paper at the venue is 40 percent post-consumer recycled, while the remainder is made from environmentally friendly materials. Elsewhere, the arena began replacing incandescent lamps with CFL or LED lamps wherever possible in 2012, and currently that number stands at 40 percent of all lighting in the arena.
ketball games.”
“I did a Doors show on New Year’s Eve,” recalls Petrullo. “It was a 7 p.m. and 10:30 p.m. show. Imagine, I am 16 years old and The Doors are playing, and I am backstage with credentials, watching it from the side of the stage.” Today, Petrullo is general manager of the KFC Yum! Center – home of the University of Louisville basketball team and music venue for some of the biggest entertainers in the world. Because he's a veteran of the industry, it would be easy to assume that the thrill of seeing the backstage activity of massive stars has become a bit monotonous for the New Yorker, but, in fact, every day is as exciting as the last. “I’ve always loved going to work,” explains Petrullo, who has been with the arena since 2009. “I’ve always loved this job and the atmosphere because one night it’s a basketball game, another night it’s a concert, the next week it’s 'Disney on Ice.' We’re in the enter-
He continues: “This building is the heart of entertainment in the state, and people want to be here. They don’t want to miss things because they don’t want to go to the office tomorrow and someone is going to say ‘Did you see Paul McCartney last night?' 'Did you see Taylor Swift?’ It becomes the highlight of everybody’s week.”
It’s all about content. You can make as many of these arenas as you want but the one that is going to be successful is the one that has content.
But engaging the community has to go beyond the entertainment. For Petrullo and his team, one way in which the KFC Yum! Center is trying to engage in the community is by taking measures that minimize the environmental impact the arena is having on Louisville. For any visitor, the most obvious aspect of the center that stands out is what immaculate condition it is in. It looks as pristine as the day it was built. In the past, the arena used chemical cleaning agents to keep it sparkling. But today, it’s nothing but water. The PathoSans chemical system, uses an electrical current to convert regular tap water
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As for all the concessions at the facility, 100 percent of all food waste gets composted, while the maintenance department has adopted a green policy in all aspects of their work. If an environmentally-friendly company or product can be found, they will always use it over a less friendly one. “I love what I do,” affirms Petrullo. “So if I am going to be part of a major thing in the Louisville community, I want to be engaged in the community. It all works hand in hand. If the city is doing well, we’re doing well, and because of that, we’re all doing all well.” VT
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It's Not Just Exercise at Bend and Zen
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roy describes. ot all business can say they opened by As hot yoga had always been her specialty, that became the central breaking a record. But foundation of Bend and Zen. Hot that’s just what Bend and Zen yoga is simply yoga practiced in a did when it opened on July room that is heated to anywhere from 25, 2015, in Westport Village. 95 to 105 degrees, Conroy says. And Business The hot yoga studio celebratwhile it will definitely make particiProfile pants sweat, it has a myriad of beneed its grand opening by breakfits not found in other forms of yoga. ing the Louisville record for REMY “The heat does several things,” she an indoor hot yoga class with SISK asserts. “It really amps up the physi68 participants. Two months cality and the intensity of the workout. So you later, the studio now features 36 classget all the beautiful benefits of strength, balance, es on their weekly schedule and has flexibility of yoga plus a kickass interval-training over 500 members. workout. It’s intense.” Meredith Conroy, co-owner of Bend and Zen, gradated with her masters in counseling psychology from UofL before moving into the corporate world for five years. During that time, she took an intensive five-week yoga training class in Brazil and soon quit her desk job to teach yoga fulltime, working with as many people as she could to continue learning and teaching. “I tried to work with as many diverse groups as possible just so I could be the best at what I love to do,” Conroy remembers. “I really became a student of being a teacher.” Then, 10 months ago, she came together with Mitch Collins to create the concept of Bend and Zen. “We thought that there was a need in the yoga community in Louisville to have a space that was as equally warm and welcoming from the people perspective as it is beautiful, aesthetically,” ConO C T O B E R 8 , 2 0 1 5 • W W W . V O I C E -T R I B U N E . C O M
And over the past two months, we’ve reduced that by 75 percent.” In addition to Bend and Zen’s sustainability, Conroy believes the quality of the seven instructors sets the studio apart from others. “The group that we’ve assembled – these ladies are from diverse disciplines and backgrounds, but they are at the top of their game,” she affirms. “They’re all so amazing and wonderful and warm.” And that’s what’s most important about Bend and Zen; Conroy and her partner are doing everything they can to create a place where everyone feels like part of the family. Water, towels and mats are all complimentary at Bend and Zen, and Conroy ensures the instructors make every effort to welcome all levels of participants. “That’s the teacher’s job – to meet people where they are and to make sure to tailor the class so that everybody gets their needs met,” she contends.
In creating a space for hot yoga, one of the most concerning things to Conroy and Phillips was the studio’s environmental impact. “Making sure that we’re a sustainable entity is really important to us in regards to how we engineered and designed the hot yoga room,” Conroy explains. “Other regional studios, just as an example, are looking to spend anywhere from $1,200 to $1,500 a month on utilities. That’s an indicator of your carbon footprint. So we really invested in this Meredith Conroy, co-owner space and tried to reduce of Bend and Zen. that as much as possible.
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Going forward, Conroy hopes to regionally expand. Her brand is catching fire with participants of all ages and genders, and she’s loving the response from the community. And, most importantly, she believes in what she’s doing. “What I love about the practice is that there is space created for people who want to take it into more of a meditative or spiritual component,” she describes. “There’s space for that; it’s not just exercise.” VT P H O T O S B Y R E M Y S I S K | T H E V O I C E -T R I B U N E
Business
business briefs 21C MUSEUM HOTEL LEXINGTON OPENS ONLINE BOOKINGS; LAUNCHES NEW HOTEL PACKAGES 21c Museum Hotel Lexington, the newest property from the award-winning hospitality company, is now accepting reservations for April 15, 2016 or later. Set to open in the first quarter of 2016, the hotel will offer five packages, available for booking through the website (21cMuseumHotels.com/Lexington) or by calling 859.899.6800. 21c Lexington, located in the historic Fayette National Bank Building in downtown Lexington, combines an 88-room boutique hotel, contemporary art museum and restaurant, Lockbox. To celebrate the opening of its newest property, 21c will offer dynamic hotel packages, crafted to ensure that guests get the most out of their stay. Introductory packages include the following. The Just Add Bourbon Package: bourbon flight for two at Lockbox, the restaurant located at 21c Lexington; breakfast for two at Lockbox; and whiskey stones from the 21c Museum Shop. The Game Day Package: two local craft beers and bar snack at Lockbox, ceramic blue penguin from 21c Museum Shop and free valet parking. The Brewgrass Package: Brewgrass Trail passport, 21c Favorites Brewery map and two local craft beers and bar snack at Lockbox. The Romantic Getaway Package: bottle of bubbly upon arrival, two bathrobes from 21c Museum Shop, rose petal turndown and $100 credit towards dinner for two at Lockbox. Guests can also reserve the Dine with Art room rate, which includes a $25 voucher (per room night) to experience 21c Lexington’s culinary creations at Lockbox. To view or book these packages, visit 21cMuseumHotels.com/Lexington. COMMUNITY FOUNDATION OF LOUISVILLE SHATTERS GIVE LOCAL LOUISVILLE RECORD The Community Foundation of Louisville announced that $2,971,457 was raised on October 1 during the second Give Local Louisville day, the biggest day of local giving in our community; a more than $1 million increase over the previous year. More than 360 nonprofits participated in the 24-hour online give day. “We are thrilled to have helped our local nonprofits raise $2,971,457 in just 24 hours,” said Susan Barry, president and CEO of the Community Foundation of Louisville. “It goes to show what is possible when individual citizen philanthropists come together. We turned gifts big and small into major impact in our community.” The highlight of the event was when Patti Swope of the Sam Swope Family Foundation announced that the Foundation would be donating $1,000 to each of the 362 nonprofits involved. “It’s such a great feeling to see all of these nonprofits come together and support one another, as well as others supporting them,” said Patti Swope representing the Sam Swope Family Foundation. “We are so excited to be able to donate to them all. We are committed to local giving in Louisville, now and in the future.”
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and 25 percent new American oak – which adds a lot to the character and a completely new dimension to the brandy – without overpowering the fruit. ” SURGEONS WITH JEWISH HOSPITAL/UNIVERSITY OF LOUISVILLE/UNIVERSITY OF LOUISVILLE PHYSICIANS PERFORM FIRST ISLET CELL AUTO-TRANSPLANTATION PROCEDURES IN KENTUCKY People with a debilitating and painful disease have a new treatment option available to them thanks to the collaborative efforts of Jewish Hospital, the University of Louisville and the University of Louisville Physicians. Jewish Hospital, a part of KentuckyOne Health, and faculty members from the UofL School of Medicine are providing total pancreatectomy with islet cell auto-transplantation for some patients with chronic pancreatitis. Since the start of the year, six patients have undergone the procedure, and all have functioning islet cells. The program is funded by an $800,000 grant from the Jewish Heritage Fund for Excellence. Chronic pancreatitis, inflammation of the pancreas, can only be cured with complete removal of the pancreas (total pancreatectomy). However, removing the entire pancreas creates diabetes that is extremely difficult to control, with alternating very high and dangerous, life-threatening low blood sugars. Therefore, only a portion of the pancreas typically is removed in an attempt to prevent post-operative diabetes. This treatment does not very effectively treat the episodes of pain that lead to recurrent hospital admissions for patients with chronic pancreatitis. The total pancreatectomy with auto-transplantation of islet cells from the pancreas is an alternative treatment being performed by a handful of facilities around the world, including Jewish Hospital. This procedure involves complete removal of the pancreas. The patient’s islet cells are isolated in a “cleanroom” facility at the Cardiovascular Innovation Institute (a partnership between UofL and the Jewish Heritage Fund for Excellence) and then re-implanted into the patient to prevent diabetes. “Chronic pancreatitis is a disabling disease that results in constant, unremitting pain” said Michael Hughes Jr. MD, transplant surgeon at Jewish Hospital, assistant professor of surgery at UofL and surgeon with University of Louisville Physicians. “Until now, we have been unable to safely perform these procedures. Islet cell auto-transplant immediately following total pancreatectomy allows us to do this.” ALZHEIMER’S ASSOCIATION OF GREATER KENTUCKY AND SOUTHERN INDIANARECEIVES GRANT TO HELP LOCAL SENIORS
COPPER & KINGS AMERICAN BRANDY CO. LAUNCHES BUTCHERTOWN AMERICAN BRANDY
As part of a $5,000 grant from the Home Instead Senior Care Foundation, the Alzheimer’s Association of Greater Kentucky and Southern Indiana will continue its Packets of Hope program. Included in the Packets of Hope is information that equips care providers to better support those with Alzheimer’s disease. The grant will provide 200 local health care providers with Packets of Hope to share with patients and their caregivers.
Louisville-based Copper & Kings American Brandy Co. is launching new Butchertown American Brandy. Named to honor the history of its home neighborhood, just east of downtown Louisville, the new offering from reserve casks is bottled at 124 proof.
“We are so excited the Home Instead Senior Care Foundation chose to fund the Packets of Hope for our local Alzheimer’s Chapter. So often the physician’s office is where the journey for these families begins. We believe that if they receive helpful information early enough in the process, it will benefit them throughout,” said Becky Beanblossom, owner of one of the local Home Instead Senior Care offices serving Greater Louisville.
“Boom, boom,” declares creative director Ron Jasin. “Imagine bottling the spirit of John Lee Hooker, all supple, sexy, full-bodied and rhythmic. Imagine bottling the spirit of the Modern Jazz Quartet – elevated, elegant, sophisticated, bluesy with a hint of improvisation. This is drop dead gorgeous brandy.”
The Alzheimer’s Association of Greater Kentucky and Southern Indiana is one of 12 organizations to be awarded grant funding from Home Instead Senior Care Foundation for the fall 2015 grant cycle.
“Badass brandy,” said distiller Alan Bishop. “It balances power and elegance, it delivers complexity with grace. Pure brandy expression in a velvet glove, and so well integrated. The swagger, the concentrated flavors – when you add iced water or a little good ice it literally starts to sing. The blend is 75 percent Kentucky bourbon barrels
“Our mission is very similar to the Alzheimer’s Association of Greater Kentucky and Southern Indiana as we both enhance the lives of aging adults and those who care for them,” said Roger H. Baumgart, executive director of the Foundation. “We are pleased to provide grant funding to the organization for making a positive difference in the safety, well-being and independence of seniors,” Baumgart said. A check will be presented by Home Instead Senior Care to the Alzheimer’s Association on October 15 at 8:30 a.m. at the Home Instead Senior Care office, 4610 Taylorsville Road, Louisville.
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YUM! BRANDS LAUNCHES NEW EMPLOY HUNGER PROGRAM WITH ADOPTING NICARAGUAN COMMUNITY Yum! Brands announced it has adopted a community in Jinotega, Nicaragua, as part of its new “Feed the World Ambassador Program.” The new employee fundraising program is part of Yum! Brands’ global World Hunger Relief effort that raises awareness, volunteerism and donations for the United Nations World Food Programme (WFP). Recently, Greg Creed, CEO of Yum! Brands, and a team of Yum! Ambassadors traveled to Nicaragua to meet with local leaders, teachers, parents and WFP to identify how they could help several communities and schools in the region. The team is now raising funds to help improve these communities in various ways, including building pre-school classrooms and bathrooms, upgrading their school cafeterias, storage and cooking abilities, providing essential classroom items and installing sustainable irrigation systems and school gardens. With over 795 million people around the world suffering from chronic hunger, this new ambassador program allows a team of Yum! employees to help fight global hunger by traveling to an adopted community in need and determining improvements that the company can support. They then work with WFP to determine improvement costs and launch their fundraising efforts.
WOODFORD RESERVE EMPLOYEES NAMED ICONS OF WHISKY AWARD WINNERS Two dedicated employees of Brown-Forman and Woodford Reserve – Todd Roe, Woodford Reserve Distillery manager, and Dee Ford, Woodford Reserve Visitor Attraction manager – were named winners of the 2016 Icons of Whisky America Awards for Distillery Manager of the Year and Visitor Attraction Manager of the Year, respectively, during the Kentucky Bourbon Festival on Saturday, September 19. The awards, presented by Whisky Magazine, are an annual celebration of the finest companies and individuals in the whisky industry. Producers, retailers, distributors and importers from the industry assisted the Whisky Magazine editorial panel to identify those individuals deserving of an Icon title. The editorial panel then had the task of making the final decision. “We are proud to celebrate these deserving individuals who are great contributors to the success of the Woodford Reserve brand and distillery visitor experience,” said Mark Bacon, Woodford Reserve brand director. “These merited titles are an excellent way to showcase and honor the people behind our award-winning bourbon.”
UOFL, UK WIN LARGE FEDERAL GRANT, JOIN NEW NATIONAL NETWORK The University of Louisville and University of Kentucky today announced receipt of a $3.76 million grant to create a national center of excellence in micro/nanotechnology. The highly competitive grant from the National Science Foundation (NSF) is one of just 16 awarded to universities across the country. More than 100 colleges and universities competed for the NSF grant. UofL and UK are joining a new national network which will make university facilities, tools and expertise in nanoscale science, engineering and technology available to outside users. Eight key nanotechnology and advanced manufacturing facilities at UofL and UK will become a collaborative center for academia, small businesses and industry to “make the next generation of smart products using the tiniest materials” according to Dr. Neville Pinto, UofL interim provost. “This will be a boon to Kentucky’s economic development future and support the ongoing work of UofL’s Institute for Product Realization in our new research park,” Pinto said. The five year grant will be used to enhance and upgrade advanced manufacturing equipment at UofL and UK research facilities, add staff to help train and support up to 500 additional external users, provide seed money for research projects in key advanced manufacturing areas and engage more minorities and women in nanoscale science, engineering and technology.
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obituaries Carrie Kuehnast Agren Carrie Kuehnast Agren, 45, of Windham, ME, passed away suddenly on September 12, 2015. She was born on July 16, 1970 in Louisville. Carrie was a graduate of Sacred Heart Academy and Bellarmine University. She worked at General Electric in Louisville for several years before moving to Maine where she worked for UNUM Insurance. Carrie had a limitless love for fitness and you could often find her starting her day at the gym. She is survived by her parents Neil and Tina Kuehnast, her sister Kathryn Virusky, and her nieces Taylor and Hadley Virusky along with her fiancé Randy Chenard and his sons, Gage and Chandler. Carrie was loved by so many people, especially her family, friends and co-workers. Her strength and spirit will grace our lives forever. There will be a celebration of Carrie’s life at the Bristol Restaurant on Hurstbourne Lane on Saturday, October 10, 2015 from 3-5 p.m. Family and friends are welcome to come and celebrate her life and the joy she brought to all of us. In lieu of flowers, donations can be made in her memory to Maine Lab Rescue, info@mainelabrescue.com or to St. Jude’s Children’s Hospital.
Kathleen (Blanton) Blanton Kathleen (Blanton) Blanton, 86, of Louisville, went to be with her Heavenly Father October 4, 2015. Kathleen was born November 4, 1928 in Edmonson County, Kentucky. She was a Baptist by faith and was a member of Bethlehem Baptist Church. Kathleen was an excellent role model and a loving mother, not only to her family but
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also to everyone she met. She is preceded in death by her parents, Dillard and Verna (Higgs) Blanton; her loving husband of 47 years, Eugene Blanton; sons-inlaw, Thomas Collins and Joseph L. Clark and grandsons, Dwight L. Fulkerson and Steven Barrett. Left to cherish her memory are her children, Verna Collins, Betty Clark, Gwen Bettle (Sam) Sandra Fulkerson (Kenneth) and Dwight Blanton (Geri); 14 grandchildren, 34 great-grandchildren and five great-great-grandchildren. A Celebration of Life Service will be held 10 a.m. Friday, October 9 at Evergreen Funeral Home with interment to follow in Evergreen Cemetery. Visitation will be at the funeral home from 3-8 p.m. Thursday, October 8. The family would like to request that memorial donations in Kathleen’s name be directed to Bethlehem Baptist Church for Holiday Baskets or to the clothes closet. Please leave condolences for the family at Evergreen-Louisville. com.
Jean A. Felkins Jean A. Felkins, 88 of Jeffersontown passed away Sunday October 4, 2015 at Baptist Health. Born in Grayson Co. she was the owner and secretary for Felkins Plaserting Co., a former member of St Edward Catholic Church and an avid volunteer at Hill Creek Nursing Home. She is survived by her husband of 60 years, William Felkins; her son Mark J. “Moby” Felkins; her sister Charleen Winigar; and several nieces and nephews. Her funeral service will be 10:30 a.m. Thursday, October 8 at Owen Funeral Home-Jeffersontown 9318 Taylorsville Road. Entombment will be in Resthaven Cemetery. Visitation was Wednesday, October 7 from 3-8 p.m. at the funeral home.
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Ronald William Helm Ronald William Helm, 68, of Louisville, died Sunday morning, October 4, 2015 at Baptist Health Louisville. He was loved deeply by all of his family. He was a Vietnam veteran, a hairdresser for Fantastic Sams, and a member of Pleasant Grove Baptist Church. He was preceded in death by his mother, Edith Helm Wagner; grandparents, James and Nellie Helm; nephew Kevin Wesley Turner and many aunts that he loved dearly.
Thursday, October 8 at Owen Funeral Home, 5317 Dixie Highway with burial in Evergreen Cemetery. Visitation was 2-8 p.m. Wednesday, October 7 at the funeral home. Donations can be made to the Juvenile Diabetes Research Foundation.
Rev. Roger Cranford Newell Rev. Roger Cranford Newell, Roger entered into eternal life on October 2, 2015, after a courageous battle with brain cancer.
He is survived by his sister, Diane Palmer; brother, Charles Lee Turner (Winnie); nieces, nephews and many cousins.
Roger was born and raised in Charlotte, North Carolina, to the late Johnnie Clarence Newell and Mary Jack Cranford Newell.
Funeral services will be Thursday, October 8 at 11 a.m., Pleasant Grove Baptist Church with burial in Pleasant Grove Cemetery. Visitation was Wednesday, October 7 from 4-8 p.m., Stoess Funeral Home, Crestwood.
Roger is survived by his wife of 43 years, Beverly Judd Newell, his children: Angela N. and William Gardiner, Karen L. Shirley and Kenneth E. Pierce, Pamela R. Newell, R. Andrew and Kimberly Newell, and Paul S. Newell and Rhonda Taylor Dunn; grandchildren: Sarah N. Gardiner, Liam J. Gardiner, Andrew C.B. Pierce, Jessica C.B. Pierce, Murray A. Newell, Caleb R. Newell and Anna Grace Newell, and by his brothers, Jackson C. Newell (Shirley, dec.), John L. Newell (Linda) and Douglas M. Newell (Lawana).
Memorial contributions may be made to Ronald Helm, c/o Stoess Funeral Home, P.O. Box 67, Crestwood, KY 40014.
Norma F. (Wise) McGraw Norma F. (Wise) McGraw, 82, passed away October 4,2015. She worked in various positions for the Jefferson County Public School System. She was preceded in death by her husband William C. McGraw, son Timothy W. McGraw, brother Delbert Sharp. Survived by her sons, Walter McGraw (Betsy), Alan McGraw (Karen) and Willie McGraw (Lydia); sister, Joyce Sharp Craig; and brothers, Wayne and Don Sharp; seven grandchildren; 17 great grandchildren; three great-great-grandchildren.
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Funeral service will be 11 a.m.
His funeral service will be at 11 a.m. Thursday, October 8, 2015 at St. Mark United Methodist Church, 4611 Lowe Road with burial to follow in Kentucky Veteran’s Cemetery Central. Visitation was from 2-8 p.m. Wednesday, October 7 at Highlands Funeral Home, 3331 Taylorsville Road. Expressions of sympathy may be made to FCA, Wesley Manor Senior Care, St. Mark UMC or Hosparus.
Edna M. Rhodes Edna M. Rhodes, 90, born November 7, 1924, passed away October 2, 2015. The matri-
Edna Florence Meiners was born in Louisville, Kentucky to Catherine Ferg and Raymond Meiners on November 7, 1924, though the real father figure in her life didn’t enter until her mother married Carl Newton when she was 6 years old. She has one brother, Joe Meiners (b. 1927), whom she always called Buddy. She was a graduate of Ursuline Academy and went on to study to at Ahrens Trade School. She worked as a comptometer, then later as a stenographer at the L & N Railroad Company. It was while working at L & N Railroad that she met the love of her life, Raymond Rhodes (b.1924- d.2003). After initially turning him down, they enjoyed a whirlwind romance and married on April 19th, 1947. Together they raised three children, Linda Rhodes Kopatz (b.1949 - d.2005), Stephen Rhodes (b. 1950), and Carl Rhodes (b. 1954). They went on to build a highly successful commercial printing business, Rhodes Inc., in Charlestown, IN. She was a very proud grandmother to Jennifer Naive (James), Kimberly Kopatz, Jonathan Rhodes, Christopher Rhodes (Jessica), Carla Rhodes, Josh Rhodes (Katie), Raymond Nick Rhodes, Rossie Renaker (Whitney), and Ryan Fisher (Sara). She was a glowing great-grandmother to Mackenzie, Jay, Brinly, Claire, Sarah, Elizabeth, Evan, and Noah. She was always thankful for the help from her daughter-in-law’s, Belinda Rhodes and Connie Rhodes. Visitation will be held at Ratterman Brothers Funeral Home East Louisville on Friday, October 9, 2015 from 2-8 p.m. Funeral services will be held at St. Margaret Mary on Saturday, October 10, 2015 at 10 a.m. She will be laid to rest at Resthaven Memorial Cemetery. Donations of sympathy can be made to St. Jude Children’s
Irvin B. “Red” Sample Sr. Irvin B. “Red” Sample Sr., 86, son of the late Beat and Sally Ann Madden Sample was born in Orell, Jefferson Co., Kentucky on September 12, 1929, and passed away on Monday October 5, 2015. He was preceded in death by his first wife Grace Mildred Mabry Sample. Irvin retired from the Naval Ordnance Station in Louisville and moved to Bowling Green in early 1978. Survivors include his wife, Mary Combs Sample; children, Irvin B. Sample, Jr. (Joanie), Robert Henry Sample (Dana), and Sheila Hawes Riley (Pat), 10 grandchildren and five great-grandchildren. Funeral services will be Thursday, October 8, 2015, at 11 am EDT at W.G. Hardy Funeral Home, 10907 Dixie Hwy. Visitation is Wednesday at W. G. Hardy Funeral Home, from 3-8 p.m. EDT and Thursday, 10 a.m. until time of services. Burial will be in Bethany Cemetery in Louisville.
ried the love of her life, raised two children and began what would become a lifelong commitment to serving those in need. Early on she focused on resettling refugees from Southeast Asia through Catholic Charities. Later, she organized support for impoverished families in southeastern Kentucky through the Cranks Creek Survival Center. She personally participated in and supported a wide variety of animal rescue organizations. Her tireless efforts during the founding and early years of The Healing Place were instrumental to its growth and development as a Louisville and national treasure.
Medal in December 2011at the Polish Embassy in Washington, DC. She would continue her cherished commitment to these children until her death. Cissee is survived by her husband of fifty-three years, Dr. Will Walker Ward Jr., her two children, Margaret Ward Bieda of Alexandria, VA (Tony), and Robert Quincy Ward of Louisville (Shelley), a sister, Clare Pfeiffer Rodes of Black Diamond, FL, and two grandchildren, Will Walker Ward III and Alex Johnson Ward of Louisville. A Mass of Christian Burial was celebrated on Saturday, October 3 at 10:00AM at Saint Agnes Church, 1920 Newburg Road, with private burial following at Cave Hill Cemetery.
Having suffered through a number of painful and debilitating illnesses in her later years, she found peace and solace through her work with village schools and orphanages in rural The family requests that no flowPoland. This would become the joy of her life. For her devotion and ers be sent. Memorial gifts may be commitment to improving the lives made to the Cathleen P. Ward Fund of these children the Polish Minis- for Village Schools and Orphanages ter of Education presented her with in Poland, CB&T, 4944 U.S. Hwy 42, A family-owned the National Education Committee Louisville, KY 40222.
In lieu of flowers, contributions may be made to the Irvin B. and Mary Sample Scholarship Fund, College Heights Foundation, 1906 College Heights Blvd., Bowling Green, KY 42101.
funeral home with deep roots in the community.
A family-owned funeral home with deep roots in the community.
Standing- Linda Owen, Jane Wagner, Bob Wagner, Bill Wagner, Seated- David Owen, Edith Owen, Jim Wagner
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Cathleen Pfeiffer Ward Cathleen Pfeiffer Ward, 80, of Louisville, KY, died at home on September 28 in the arms of God and her loving family. Cissee was born on December 12, 1934, to Cornelius John and Margaret Nord Pfeiffer. She attended Louisville Collegiate School, Sweetbriar College and graduated from Indiana University in 1956. Following graduation she lived and worked in New York City before returning to Louisville in 1960 where she spent the remainder of her life.
You see, unlike funeral
Standing- Linda Owen, Jane Wagner, Bob Wagner, Bill Wagner, Seated- David Owen, Edith Owen, Jim Wagner
homes owned by faraway corporations, we have a commitment to this We’ve been chosen by community. After all, 3331 Taylorsville Rd., Louisville 3331 Taylorsville Rd., have Louisville families who lived hereour roots are here. 502-451-4420 502-451-4420 for generations – folks who highlandsfuneralhome.com highlandsfuneralhome.com for our free haveCallcome to know and trust us over the years. brochure, Why
Family- funeral homes owned by faraway YouChoose see,Aunlike Owned Firm? corporations, we free have a commitment to this Call us for our brochure,After Why all, our roots are here. community. Choose A Family-
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arch of the Rhodes family passed away peacefully on the morning of October 2, 2015. She was an incredibly strong woman who lived an amazing life.
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22 Catnip | 24 Taylor’s 10 | 26 Card Chronicle | 28 Louisville City FC
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Sports
Kentucky sophomore WR Blake Bone caught seven receptions for 85 yards in UK’s 34-27 overtime victory against Eastern Kentucky.
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PHOTO BY VICTORIA GRAFF | CONTRIBUTING PHOTOGRAPHER
I
t was a game you circled on the schedule before the season. OCT. 3 – EASTERN KENTUCKY - AT HOME.
Nothing else got in the way with the game on the line. Or – so – we – thought.
To be honest, there’s something admirable in all this. The Wisconsin loss was devastating to the UK Catnip fan base. But think about what If the Cats were going to get makes Calipari’s players love him their six wins, this had to be one STEVE so. BBN spent two years ganging of them. If not, maybe six was out up on the twins. They were disKAUFMAN of reach. appointing, not nearly as good as advertised, didn’t seem to care, didn’t seem So the win was expected. The struggle to enjoy the whole thing. Fans didn’t hesiwas not. tate to light up the airwaves and social media A defense that had held South Carolina, after games. Florida and Missouri to an average of about And then, when Aaron electrified the 16 points per game gave up 27 to Eastern. NCAA tournament or when Andrew took UK trailed by 13 in the fourth quarter and over the last minute of the Notre Dame required an extra inning to seal victory. game, it was all forgotten. “Hey, we really What does it portend? I cannot tell you love ya, come give us a hug.” because a different UK unit seems to show They could be forgiven for giving us a finup every week. The Patrick Towles of the ger, instead. Missouri game was not in uniform Saturday But the players could always count on night, but neither was the Towles of the Florsteady love from their coach. The more he ida game. screamed at Towns or DeMarcus Cousins or I guess it’s worth remembering that FloriTerrence Jones, the more they professed their da barely beat East Carolina just three weeks loyalty to him. ago. Last weekend, they trounced Mississippi. And, as we all know, point guards were In two weeks, Alabama went from “What’s Cal’s real true passion. He never passed up a wrong with the Tide?” to “Not much!” You win ’em, and you move on! TWIN PIQUES I honestly don’t know how I feel about John Calipari’s astonishing statement last week that he kept the Harrisons in at the end of the Wisconsin game out of loyalty to them. He acknowledged that playing freshmen Tyler Ulis and Devin Booker instead might probably have been a smarter coaching move.
chance to laud Wall or Knight or Ulis (well, why not?), but he was also protective of Eric Bledsoe, Marcus Teague, even Ryan Harrow. The Harrisons were his special cause, however. For a while, I thought he might just be trying to protect his legacy. Unfairly or not, Calipari’s motives always seem to be in question. But wasn’t it possible he had an affection for them beyond just coach and meal-ticket? Besides, the Harrisons were his starters, so apparently the best backcourt he felt he had. But Cal wouldn’t even hide behind that tree. He said that he saw the brothers weren’t playing well. “I knew who was playing well and who was struggling. You think I wasn’t sitting there watching?” He chose the real possibility of losing the game – even after Andrew let the shot clock expire twice in a row – over the one of being disloyal to his players. And by the way, high school parents all over the country read that quote, too. And high school coaches. For whom would you want your son playing? So is it all yet another clever recruiting tool from the Calipari bag of tricks? Or maybe there’s no angle. Maybe Calipari just loves his kids. Which would be the best angle of all. VT
Kentucky Head Coach John Calipari talked to the Harrison twins during the Wisconsin game, which saw UK fall after 38 straight wins.
Cal has been flirting along the edges of that envelope repeatedly for the last few months, declaring that it wasn’t winning that motivated him but rather creating the best futures for his players. All of which was okay with Big Blue Nation because it had never demonstrably hurt the program. BBN would have loved to get John Wall back, but Brandon Knight was coming to Lexington. And a sophomore season by Julius Randle might have guaranteed a return to the NCAA finals, but would Randle really be any better than Karl-Anthony Towns? Besides, W’s might not be Cal’s number one overall objective, but they topped anything else in his immediate field of vision. PHOTO BY VICTORIA GRAFF | CONTRIBUTING PHOTOGRAPHER
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Wildcats Wobble but Don’t Fall Down
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Freshman Kentucky guards Isaiah Briscoe, Charles Matthews and Jamal Murray.
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Jamal Murray joined the UK recruiting class over the summer. After reclassifying into the senior class, he starred for Team Canada in the Pan American Games. Playing with NBA players, he was the leader in the fourth quarter and overtime, scoring all 22 of his points, as they beat the United States in the semifinals. Listed at 6-foot-4 and 207 pounds, he is expected to share time in the Cats backcourt with Tyler Ulis and Isaiah Briscoe.
How quickly did things happen and escalate this summer from going ahead and reclassifying then ending up here? I’ve been busy all over the place. You know whether it’s playing or not, it’s just been busy. It’s been a good transition and something I’ve got to get used to. So, I have no problems with it.
Is it a goal of yours to someday be the obvious answer that question?
Taylor’s 10 KENT TAYLOR WAVE3 Sports
Did your performance in the Pan Am Games prove something to you? I’d say that’s fair to say. You know, it wasn’t the first time that’s happened, and it definitely won’t be the last. So, I’m just looking forward to more opportunities like that. It all came down to getting the win. Our team really wanted to be beat the States in that sense. And we were on a mission to win gold, and, unfortunately, it didn’t happen that way. But, it was the first medal that Canada’s ever won and it’s still an accomplishment. Why is Canada starting to develop so many high-level basketball players? They’ve always had a lot of players. I just don’t think they’ve had the attention that they need. And, now, they’re starting to get that, and a lot of people are showing more attention to them. So, it’s nice to see the results of all the kids that are there. Who’s the best player to ever come out of Canada? That’s hard to decide. I mean, there’s a lot players. Number one draft picks, Anthony Bennett, Steve Nash, there’s a lot of guys.
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I mean, yeah. That’s a goal. I want to be the best player to ever play basketball. That’s the goal I’ve had since I was a little kid. Something we’ve been working toward. Now, I go to Kentucky and try to represent Kentucky and stick to my goals and not get distracted by anything. I’m on a mission right now.
How do the point guards complement each other? We’ll be fine. We’re just trying to get used to each other’s games and figure out each other’s weaknesses and strengths. We just need more time to play with each other. Are you a hockey fan? I can’t skate, so, no, I’m not really a hockey fan. How rare is that in Canada? I’ve been too focused on basketball. I have a lot of hockey friends. I mean everyone knows hockey, but it’s not my thing. You don’t have a favorite NHL team? I mean, no, I don’t. I have a lot of friends that skate. Even my basketball friends skate, but I can’t. I can’t even put them on. Can’t find them in my size. So you’ve tried it? I’ve tried it twice. No, it’s not easy. I was terrible. VT W W W . V O I C E -T R I B U N E . C O M • O C T O B E R 8 , 2 0 1 5
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Jamal Murray Arrives in the USA
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“I think that’s why Rick Pitino appeared so heartbroken when he addressed the media for the first time last Friday. It wasn’t an admission of guilt, as some have suggested, it was sadness over the knowledge that a period of time that meant as much to him as it did to diehard Cardinal basketball fans was now in some way contaminated.” – Mike Rutherford
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should expect to see Pitino donor members of the ning a red sweater vest at home modern media, the games in 20 years, or that he’s worse a story is or any less of a New Yorker than appears to be, the more he was in 2002 or 2010. I just likely it is that your phone mean that his actions now fall in line with the motto he created. I is going to blow up (figudon’t think “Louisville First” was ratively...most of the time). a saying Pitino truly believed “How bad is this?” and applied to him when he made it MIKE “What’s going on?” are a brand. I think it was just a pair RUTHERFORD always going to be more @cardchronicle of words he smashed together bountiful text messages to help with recruiting and pubthan “Great win!” or “Congratula- lic perception. That isn’t the case anymore. tions.” That’s just the way the world The best evidence of Pitino’s transformation can be seen just before the beginning works.
About 15 minutes after your humble narrator landed in Raleigh, North Carolina last Friday for the Louisville football team’s game against North Carolina State (great win), his phone blew up. That was the first sign that both the weekend and the week ahead were not going to go as planned. There’s no point in rehashing all the details of the allegations being made against the UofL basketball program, the subsequent denials or the wild conspiracy theories. If you live in this city and are reading this column, you’ve already had more than your fill of all that. For now, let’s focus on the one thing we know, which is that the damage has already been done to the Louisville basketball program. For the moment, that’s the worst thing about all this. Fairly or unfairly, Cardinal coaches, players and fans will have to hear about this for the entire season, and even if every word of that book winds up being proven false, the program will still be forced to wear the stain that comes with salacious accusations in the modern world. So much of what has made the past handful of seasons great has been the character and likability of the young men involved. To see that tainted in any way hurts, and I think that’s why Rick Pitino appeared so heartbroken when he addressed the media for the first time last Friday. It wasn’t an admission of guilt, as some have suggested, it was sadness over the knowledge that a period of time that meant as much to him as it did to die-hard Cardinal basketball fans was now in some way contaminated. At some point between 2011 and 2013 – the period that is at issue in all this ugliness – Pitino became a “Louisville person.” When I say that, I don’t mean that we
of any UofL game these days. Right before the tip, Pitino walks down the sidelines giving “knuckles” to each one of his players. As recently as four or five years ago, it was impossible to imagine Pitino sauntering down to the business class section of the bench for anything less than a verbal dress down or a better view of the action on the court. Things have changed, and the group of players he coached over the last five seasons or so deserve the lion’s share of the credit for that. From Gorgui Dieng’s unrivaled likability to Russ Smith’s personality to Peyton Siva’s leadership to Luke Hancock’s ability to overcome adversity and on and on. It was a transformative period for the man in charge of Cardinal hoops, and those guys were the catalyst to Pitino signing his current contract, which is supposed to keep him at UofL through the 2025-26 season. If you’ve watched a weekly UofL basketball press conference at any point in recent years, two things should have been evident to you each time: Rick Pitino is busting his behind to get everything he possibly can out of his team and he’s having a heck of a good time doing it. I think that’s sort of the stance most Louisvillians try to take with regards to all walks of life: work hard, love and respect the people around you – and make sure you’re enjoying it all. That mantra took a hit last week, and will be increasingly difficult to uphold as this story continues to unfold. Until the proverbial dust settles, the conspiracy theories will continue to circulate; the climate of fear and anger will persist; and the paranoid text messages will fly at unheard of rates. Even with the truth mostly still hidden from view, you can understand why one of the most famous Louisvillians of all is so downhearted by it all. VT
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Cards vs. Cards
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he second public Red-White intrasquad scrimmage for the University of Louisville men’s basketball team on October 17 will start at 4 p.m. in the KFC Yum! Center. UofL’s football team plays at Florida State at noon earlier that day. Tickets for the scrimmage, presented by Mark’s Feed Store, are on sale for $10 at the UofL Ticket Office, located near Gate 2 of Papa John’s Cardinal Stadium at 2800 South Floyd Street. The ticket office is open weekdays from 9 a.m. until 5 p.m. Cardinal fans may also purchase the tickets by visiting Ticketmaster online at Ticketmaster. com, calling 1.800.745.3000 or by visiting any Ticketmaster Ticket Center, including statewide Kroger locations. A crowd of 9,643 attended the Cardinals' first scrimmage last Saturday as the Red team prevailed in both halves.
Jackson Named ACC Rookie of the Week Second Week Running
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or the second straight week, University of Louisville freshman quarterback Lamar Jackson was tabbed the ACC Rookie of the Week, the league announced Monday. Making his second-straight start at quarterback, Jackson led the Cardinals to a 20-13 ACC road win over NC State last Saturday in Raleigh, North Carolina. The native of Pompano Beach, Florida, recorded his third 100yard rushing game of the season, totaling 121 yards and one touchdown, while throwing for 103 yards and one score. The Cardinals are off this week before traveling to Tallahassee, Fla., to take on Florida State on October 17. Kickoff is slated for noon. W W W . V O I C E -T R I B U N E . C O M • O C T O B E R 8 , 2 0 1 5
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The Damage Is Done
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Louisville City Football Club midfielders Magnus Rasmussen and Juan Guzman.
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the box, but his effort went just truly climactic playsizzling past the top corner. off match occurred Louisville City would force a in Louisville Saturpair of saves in the 79th minute day night between Louisville when Niall McCabe’s effort from City FC and the Charleston the top right of the box forced a Battery that saw the game diving save by Charleston’s Coodecided by an extra time per. The ensuing corner found JOEY Tarek Morad, but his header was period and two Matt Fondy CECIL claimed by another Cooper save. goals in the second period of Charleston would make some noise in the extra time in front of a record crowd second half when Dane Kelly got loose at of 8,517 for a USL game in Louisville. The first half saw a back and forth possession battle between the second and third seeded teams in the Eastern Conference playoff bracket respectively. The half was highlighted by line drive left-footed efforts from each team that came tantalizingly close to opening the scoring.
the top of the box in the 75th minute. His laser-like attempt soared just past the upper 90 corner of the net, which was the Battery’s best attempt of the half, and the second USL Eastern Conference semifinal of the day would head to overtime. The theme of missed chances continued into overtime as both teams exchanged close opportunities.
Louisville City’s Aodhan Quinn stepped up to a free kick in the fifth minute from just outside the box and forced Charleston’s keeper Odisnel Cooper to make a diving save. The ensuing corner would eventually bounce back out to Quinn, whose cross found the head of Sean Reynolds, but the defender’s attempt unfortunately went just wide.
Aodhan Quinn was the point man for Louisville City’s attack as he saw a curled free kick go just wide of the near post in the 95th minute. He also provided the closest scoring chance of the night to that point when his top of the box effort banged off the crossbar in the 104th minute, resulting in a series of groans throughout the stadium.
Charleston would answer with a close call of their own in the 26th minute when Dane Kelly got free in the box and his rocket effort was saved over the top by City’s Scott Goodwin.
Charleston’s Kelly would once again light some fear into the Louisville defense when he rounded the backline and had a one on one
breakaway with Goodwin, but his shot nearpost went wide. The second period of extra time would be the Matt Fondy show as the City captain put in two goals that swung the tide of the match once and for all in Louisville’s favor. The striker scored the game’s opening goal in the 106th minute when he slotted in an Aodhan Quinn corner kick past Cooper and sent the Louisville City supporters’ section directly behind the goal into a frenzy. Fondy was not done though, as he scored an opportunistic, hard-working goal in the 117th. Sub Nate Polak made a run down the center, and his pass into the box found Magnus Rasmussen, whose shot from the corner of the box was pushed wide by Cooper. Unfortunately for the Charleston keeper, Fondy was lurking in the box and pounced on the rebound, putting Louisville City up 2-0 in what would be the final scoreline. Charleston put together some near scoring chances as sub Forest Lasso sent two attempts over Scott Goodwin’s goal, but ultimately, they could not find an answer for Louisville City’s extra time efforts. Louisville City clinched a berth in the next round, 2-0. Louisville City will travel to Rochester to compete for the Eastern Conference title next weekend, a game you can catch on YouTube under the Rochester Rhino’s YouTube channel. VT
The two sides were deadlocked at 0-0 entering the break. The second half was punctuated by a flurry of Louisville City chances. City started the half on the front foot and kept the pressure up throughout the half, but a series of Louisville City shots would not be able to find the back of the net. The first chance came in the 66th minute when Aodhan Quinn made a run into the box, but his sliding attempt at a ball went just over the bar. A similar situation occurred in the 72nd minute when Kadeem Dacres found space at the top of PHOTO BY CHRIS HUMPHREY | LOUISVILLE CITY FC
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A Sense of Belonging
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Shamrocks Tame Tigers
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rinity got past bitter rivals St. Xavier last Friday night with a narrow 20-15 victory in front of an estimated 13,000 fans at a rainsoaked Papa John’s Cardinal Stadium. Trinity got off to a blistering start with running back Jailen Reed rushing for 144 yards and three touchdowns in the first half as the Shamrocks’ defense did their best to keep out a stubborn Tigers offense. Senior quarterback Jacob Woosley also contributed, making 21-25 passes for 158 yards. The win pushed Trinity’s record for the year to 6-1, while St. X fell back to 4-2.
Coaches Will Wolford and Bob Beatty shook hands following the rain-plagued game.
St. X QB Desmond Ridder scanned the field for a receiver.
Jacob Woosley put the ball in the hands of teammate Larry Harper III.
Friday’s mammoth match-up also saw the Shamrocks take a 40-37-2 all-time lead in the series that stretches back to 1956. LOOKING AHEAD DuPont Manual (6-0) will be at home versus St. X (4-2), October 9 at 7:30 p.m. Both teams sit atop the upper echelon in Class 6A. Derek Dorsey, UofL commit, leads a stingy Crimson defense that has given up the second fewest points all season in its class. St. X, on the other hand, will look to bounce back to its winning ways after losing 20-15 to its archrival Trinity last weekend at Papa John’s Cardinal Stadium. VT Trinity's Jailen Reed extended the Rocks' lead with another touchdown.
Jacob Woosley punted as the St. X defense closed in to block the kick.
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Aaron Duncan, Myron Norfleet and Kambrin Brown.
Yellowjackets Stinging the Competition
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entral High School football truly embodies its school mascot, the yellowjacket. They defend their nest by implementing core values with an effective coaching philosophy. When opposing teams stand as a threat to their nest, they have consistently stung the competition, leaving them in utter pain in recent years.
the process has taken care of itself.
High School Sports Report
RANDY WHETSTONE JR.
Head Coach Ty Scroggins is in his ninth season and has won five state championships out of six attempts in Class 3A. As a response to the program’s success, he simply says that sticking to the “process” has been the difference.
The Yellowjackets most recent history saw its victory over St. X earlier this season. It was the first victory Central has ever had over the Tigers. Scroggins says the win is not to be taken for granted. “It means more than the other schools. We have never beat St. X in the history of them playing each other. We were able to get out there and do something and be successful.”
To truly be successful, though, there must be players who lay it all out on the field week in and week out. Senior leaders, linebacker Aaron Duncan, quarterback Myron Norfleet and wide receiver Kambrin Brown, were the last ones to see a state championship ring back in 2012. Since then, they have been working to bring back the jewel.
“Since 2007, the process has not changed. We ask them to do the things that are expected here at Central High School. When July 15 roles around, we challenge the kids. We ask them if they want to be recognized as the one group who never won a state championship. We tell them if you want to be a champion, this is what we are going to do and this is what it is going to take. It’s about them wanting to win. If you come here, you will be coached hard and you’re going to do the things we ask you to do.”
Duncan says leadership is key. “If I don’t lead, then no one else is going to be able to lead. They have to have somebody to keep them in check, and I feel like I am that person. When I lead, I put them on my back.”
Coach says that by the team sticking to its process through coaching and through meetings,
At the helm is Myron Norfleet, who has grown over the years as quarterback and now
Duncan has done just that as he has led the defense in tackles this season. Coach thinks highly of his talent. “Aaron is probably – out of all the linebackers we’ve had – he is up there with some of the best. He hits hard and plays the game like it is supposed to be played.”
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presents a dual threat at the position in both his passing and running ability. Norfleet has had the chance to make history in football, and he hopes to do the same within his immediate family. He has received a scholarship offer from Kentucky Wesleyan to play. He said that he and his older brother have the opportunity to be the first college graduates in his immediate family. “I really want to play in college because this is what I love. This is how I better myself.” When asked what it would mean to him to be the first college grad with his brother, he said, “That would be great for us. It will have more of an impact with my little brother. I am really trying to do better things for my family instead of being out here and being another statistic.” Brown says that without the team unity and brotherhood, the program would not be as successful. Hanging out as teenagers and friends have kept them close. “We have a good brotherhood. We go out to places on the weekend and we get through things on the field.” Coach Scroggins says all three seniors have grown tremendously over the four years. “I have seen them all grow up over the last three years, and it is kind of fun seeing them grow up. As freshman, they rode the bandwagon, and did what they were supposed to do for us to get a ring. But now it is there turn to give back to the younger generation.” VT W W W . V O I C E -T R I B U N E . C O M • O C T O B E R 8 , 2 0 1 5
Sports The Great Pumpkin 10K overall female winner Katie Hynes and overall male winner Patrick Hynes.
Great Pumpkin 10K Race Results
For a full list of race results, visit GreatPumpkin10K.com # 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 11 12 13 14 15 16 17 18 19 20 21 22 23 24 25 26 27 28 29 30 31 32 33 34 35 36 37 38 39 40 41 42 43 44 45 46 47 48
Time 34:21.1 35:10.4 35:17.7 36:50.3 36:56.1 37:15.6 37:22.4 37:38.1 37:40.9 38:59.1 39:17.7 39:35.2 39:47.8 40:46.3 41:18.1 41:16.4 41:33.4 41:23.3 41:37.2 41:30.2 41:43.0 41:48.1 41:47.5 43:13.4 42:02.6 42:20.3 42:26.2 47:23.8 42:38.7 42:35.6 43:28.1 43:49.4 43:45.8 43:50.6 43:52.6 43:54.8 43:58.5 44:24.0 44:52.3 44:35.8 44:58.3 44:29.8 44:38.6 45:05.1 45:19.4 45:41.0 45:47.1 47:28.6
Name City/State Patrick Hynes Louisville, KY David Grieshaber Louisville, KY Brandon Page Louisville, KY Ali Faraji-Tajrishi Louisville, KY Michael Farkas Louisville, KY Todd Powell Taylorsville, KY Alex Dadds Louisville, KY Andy Fenton Louisville, KY Andy Meirose Louisville, KY James Tipton Louisville, KY Stephen Salois Crestwood, KY Katie Casto Hynes Louisville, KY Andrea Doogs Louisville, KY Robert Metz Louisville, KY Katherine McClain Louisville, KY Kris Krohn Prospect, KY Matt Keck La Grange, KY Daniel Hart New Albany, IN Joey Klein Louisville, KY Heather Lozon Floyds Knobs, IN Kyle Beaird Louisville, KY Reed Fendley Lagrange, KY Brent Hurst Louisville, KY Adam Raver Elizabethtown, KY Anthony Fossaluzza Louisville, KY John Campbell Vine Grove, KY Robert Trible Louisville, KY Edward Kinny Louisville, KY Thomas Hines Louisville, KE Robert Boston Louisville, KY Brad Wunderlich Louisville, KY Adam Naville Floyds Knobs, IN Stewart Scovil Louisville, KY Ted Heaverin Elizabethtown, KY Jonathan Gregory Louisville, KY Jacki Cassady Louisville, KY Scott Metzler Pekin, IL Darin Muhs Louisville, KY Matthew Friend Louisville, KY Matthew Ruben Louisville, KY Cindy MacKey Sellersburg, IN Adam King Louisville, KY Mark Spina Louisville, KY William O’Brien Pittsburgh, PA Robert Ball Crestwood, KY Donald Knieriem Tell City, IN Jim Reome , Dan Siepler Louisville, KY
# 49 50 51 52 53 54 55 56 57 58 59 60 61 62 63 64 65 66 67 68 69 70 71 72 73 74 75 76 77 78 79 80 81 82 83 84 85 86 87 88 89 90 91 92 93 94 95 96
Time 45:55.3 46:10.4 46:06.1 47:55.4 46:14.4 46:26.9 46:18.2 46:31.1 46:22.0 46:23.8 46:45.2 47:04.8 46:34.6 46:49.9 48:37.1 46:49.6 46:51.2 47:06.0 46:47.7 46:57.2 48:37.6 46:57.7 47:10.7 46:56.9 47:05.9 47:10.4 47:12.1 47:13.2 48:53.9 47:25.1 47:26.7 47:28.9 48:28.9 48:33.4 49:46.6 47:54.8 48:22.4 48:12.6 50:14.1 48:39.5 48:31.2 48:30.2 48:35.8 49:55.5 48:40.8 48:35.7 48:44.6 48:39.6
Name City/State Jenniffer Burton Louisville, KY Vivienne Giessmann Louisville, KY Greg McDonald Prospect, KY Aaron Daniels Fairdale, KY Billy Wages Louisville, KY Kurt Zamora Crestwood, KY Michelle Mangelsdorf Moline, IL David Richardson Louisville, KY Michael McDonald Maple City, MI Eric Rowan Fisherville, KY Ben Ciraulo Fort Knox, KY Michael Mattingly Louisville, KY Reggie Woodard Louisville, KY Michael Brown Bardstown, KY Ashley Nevin Greenville, IN Jason Abbott Louisville, KY Christine Balz Louisville, KY Simon Kay Louisville, KY Dalton Chapman Louisville, KY Robert Armstrong Jeffersonville, IN Edward Cloud Louisville, KY Alan Junkins Louisville, KY Bart Pfanenstiel Louisville, KY Marty Quirk Louisville, KY Abby Campbell Vine Grove, KY Lee Slinker Elizabethtown, KY Jackie Fitzpatrick Louisville, KY Jason Crowder Louisville, KY Brad Ennis Crestwood, KY Justin Mudd Louisville, KY Mathew Shalenko Louisville, KY Julie Laemmle Louisville, KY Matt Galyon Louisville, KY John Pfingston Louisville, KY Mitchel Denham Louisville, KY Ryan Thompson Clarksville, IN Todd Magner New Salisbury, IN Adam Porter Elizabethtown, KY John Walsh Louisville, KY Natalie Bass Louisville, KY Taylor Dadds Louisville, KY Mindi King Louisville, KY David Biddle Prospect, KY Dan Kummer Sellersburg, IN Jon Cooper Louisville, KY Jason Higgins Louisville, KY Michael Beal Louisville, KY Richard Goff Louisville, KY
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Time Name City/State 48:57.8 Brian Troncone Louisville, KY 48:47.9 Kori Andrews Louisville, KY 49:07.8 Janice Stover Lagrange, KY 50:18.1 Ricky Burnett Mt Washington, KY 49:14.6 Gary Stewart Louisville, KY 49:27.1 Ken Cates Shelbyville, KY 49:17.1 Joseph Ballard Bardstown, KY 49:23.6 Jeff Page Louisville, KY 49:25.6 John Cox Prospect, KY 51:01.9 Sanford Fleck Prospect, KY 49:36.0 Bill Jones Louisville, KY 50:52.2 Chris Miles Jeffersonville, IN 50:20.0 Jeff Nall Louisville, KY 49:57.9 Doug Bostock Georgetown, IN 49:56.3 B Klaus Taylorsville, KY 49:55.2 Morgan Frederick Louisville, KY 51:12.9 Elias Edenstrom Versailles, KY 50:03.1 Kyle Wadsworth Louisville, KY 50:41.3 Robert Kebbell Lagrange, KY 50:16.0 Bradford Gasior Louisville, KY 50:35.5 Jesse Eichhorn Sellersburg, IN 51:24.6 Melissa Hudson Versailles, KY 50:32.1 Fred Shafar Fisherville, KY 50:18.5 Keith Krawiec Louisville, KY 50:40.7 Rick Fletcher Louisville, KY 52:17.1 Libby Carl Cincinnati, OH 50:59.3 Gwen Packer Louisville, KY 51:37.3 Joshua Jolliff Columbus, IN 52:14.6 Stacy Kreis Louisville, KE 50:37.3 Joseph Stopher Louisville, KY 50:29.9 Caroline Schulz Shelbyville, KY 51:29.6 Nicole Brassell Louisville, KY 50:27.3 James Wolff Louisville, KY 50:41.8 Roman Roman Vila Louisivlle, KY 50:40.3 Chris Adwell Louisville, KY 50:32.6 Mark Dallara Louisville, KY 51:40.5 Brian McLean Louisville, KY 50:36.8 Becca Hart New Albany, IN 52:34.1 Glen Girdler Jeffersonville, IN 51:59.4 Mike O’Malley Louisville, KY 51:15.1 Tim Alvey Lagrange, KY 50:52.7 Kelley Frederick Louisville, KY 50:58.0 Audrey Duke Elizabethtown, KY 50:55.5 Peter Fisher Midway, KY 51:29.1 Shawn Gallagher Louisville, KY 51:04.8 Judith Steilberg Louisville, KY 52:56.0 Zachary Taylor Louisville, KY 51:39.5 Dave Brown Jeffersonville, IN
# Time 145 52:35.6 146 52:54.9 147 51:50.9 148 52:00.7 149 53:25.9 150 53:13.5 151 52:25.2 152 51:44.0 153 51:30.9 154 51:48.6 155 52:01.3 156 51:39.8 157 52:54.5 158 51:59.9 159 52:29.6 160 57:06.9 161 53:00.4 162 51:55.2 163 52:09.6 164 52:02.2 165 52:20.1 166 52:32.9 167 52:07.5 168 52:42.3 169 52:42.2 170 52:07.9 171 52:24.1 172 52:11.4 173 54:05.2 174 52:24.3 175 53:43.4 176 52:50.6 177 52:50.6 178 52:27.9 179 54:25.3 180 53:52.6 181 53:42.4 182 53:44.2 183 54:28.5 184 52:59.9 185 54:15.9 186 53:37.4 187 57:55.4 188 53:42.6 189 54:04.4 190 52:59.1 191 54:21.2 192 53:01.6
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Name City/State Mary Orr Louisville, KY Alexander Glaser Louisville, KY Melissa Merry Louisville, KY Jill Vander Woude Simpsonville, KY Brett Lawson Crestwood, KY Nellie Childers Louisville, KY Robert Volpert Louisville, KY Robbie Tindall Louisville, KY Matt Rohrs Louisville, KY Julia Wheeldon La Grange, KY Kathy Klopp Louisville, KY Dustin Rawlings Louisville, KY Jamie Brown Louisville, KY Chuck Waltrip Louisville, KY Aaron Abell Louisville, KY Amber Gahafer Shepherdsville, KY Matthew Wilkinson Louisville, KY David Boegler Louisville, KY Meghan Greeley Louisville, KY Richard Goranflo Louisville, KY Margaret Gregg Louisville, KY Megan Morgan Louisville, KY Alexandra Garris Louisville, KY Kelly Wilkinson Louisville, KY Susan Marcum Crestwood, KY David Keely Louisville, KY Scotty Sears La Grange, KY Michael Cook Louisville, KY Lauren Curtis Erlanger, KY Jeff Kimmel Louisville, KY Russ Owens Louisville, KY Kerri Tichenor Louisville, KY Allison Dearing Louisville, KY Sarah Conder Jeffersonville, IN Nadim Ziady Louisville, KY Dane Clark Louisville, KY Kaitlyn Kiser Louisville, KY Stacy Chaplin Louisville, KY Brooke Heitz Louisville, KY Cheryl Wolken Lousiville, KY James Hayes Fort Knox, KY Jane Moylan Louisville, KY Rebekah Mulloy Louisville, KY James Moylan Prospect, KY Jonah O’Neil Louisville, KY Kevin Fuqua Pewee Valley, KY Julia Clickner Pewee Valley, KY Chad Lynch Rineyville, KY
# 193 194 195 196 197 198 199 200 201 202 203 204 205 206 207 208 209 210 211 212 213 214 215 216 217 218 219 220 221 222 223 224 225 226 227 228 229 230 231 232 233 234 235 236 237 238 239 240
Time Name City/State 53:32.9 Lora Adkins Louisville, KY 53:32.0 Payton Stinson Simpsonville, KE 53:44.6 Derek Szesny Louisville, KY 53:09.8 Katey Piazza Louisville, KY 54:20.1 Carolyn Ranck Louisville, KY 53:16.5 Stephen Edling Louisville, KY 53:49.1 Michael Lynch Louisville, KY 53:14.7 Kristen Augspurger Louisville, KY 53:18.8 Todd McDonald Louisville, KY 53:26.3 Elaina Gardner New Albany, IN 55:00.7 Tricia Willis Floyds Knobs, IN 53:29.9 Agnes Sattich Louisville, KY 53:30.0 Shannon Albertsen Fisherville, KY 54:41.2 Tommy Carroll Louisville, KY 53:52.4 Rob South Louisville, KY 53:38.6 Karen Carter Louisville, KY 54:58.2 Tamara Mazzoccoli Louisville, KY 53:50.2 Natalie French Louisville, KY 54:47.8 Jack Wang Louisville, KY 55:25.4 Darrell Simmermaker Springfield, IL 54:36.2 Paula Garner Simpsonville, KY 54:10.8 Shelby Koppel Louisville, KY 54:31.7 Felicia Hager Louisville, KY 53:59.3 Bradley Wheeldon La Grange, KY 56:38.8 Dana Mattingly Louisville, KY 55:00.6 Kevin Clark Arlington Heights, IL 55:22.0 Carrie McIntre Finchville, KY 56:15.9 Heather Rochet Crestwood, KY 54:48.9 Allison Mitchell Prospect, KY 55:07.0 Georgia Hall Madison, IN 54:12.7 Sara Brown Fisherville, KY 55:19.2 Adam Schultz Louisville, KY 55:22.9 Jeff Hyzer Clackamas, OR 55:24.2 Megan Lane Louisville, KY 54:29.1 Shane Vandercook Shelbyville, KE 54:29.1 Mary Kate Fahy Pewee Valley, KY 56:40.3 Adam Arrington Louisville, KY 54:39.6 Laura Olinger Louisville, KY 54:25.1 John Reesor Louisville, KY 54:20.0 Shawn Shelton Louisville, KY 54:44.6 Nick Olinger Louisville, KY 56:08.8 Robert Evans Louisville, KY 55:17.6 Courtney Schadt Louisville, KY 55:17.0 Janine Malone Crestwood, KY 54:32.9 Michael Villacarlos Elizabethtown, KY 55:59.9 Chris Collier Simpsonville, KY 54:27.3 Breanne Nugent Louisville, KY 55:09.4 John Wright Radcliff, KY
# 241 242 243 244 245 246 247 248 249 250 251 252 253 254 255 256 257 258 259 260 261 262 263 264 265 266 267 268 269 270 271 272 273 274 275 276 277 278 279 280 281 282 283 284 285 286 287 288
Time Name City/State 54:45.6 Jeanette Hayes Louisville, KY 55:25.8 Lisa Trumbull Louiville, KY 54:42.8 Vasu Kakarlapudi Louisville, KY 54:36.6 Shamir Dasgupta Louisville, KY 54:58.7 Gina South Louisville, KY 54:50.1 Scot Walls Louisville, KY 55:34.2 Kelsey Hager Louisville, KY 55:34.7 Sarah Jessee Anchorage, KY 56:11.9 Balamurugan Chinnasamy Louisville, KY 54:52.4 George Tunstall Louisville, KY 56:42.8 Nicholas Padgett Louisville, KY 56:52.4 Suzanne Dodson Louisville, KY 56:25.3 James Braden Louisville, KY 56:27.9 Steve Hester Louisville, KY 55:36.9 Ron Pratt Shelbyville, KY 56:19.3 Mandy Schindler Greenville, IN 56:19.4 Joanna Schaefer Georgetown, IN 55:44.5 David Schmidt Louisville, KY 56:02.1 Amanda Heim Louisville, KY 55:21.7 Taylor Clifton Simpsonville, KY 56:07.6 James Greenlee Louisville, KY 55:48.0 Lorann Wheeler Elizabethtown, KY 56:11.3 Ray Hupfer Louisville, KY 57:08.5 Tova Levin Louisville, KY 56:18.3 Kamille Bauer Dubois, IN 55:26.9 Suzanne Cates Shelbyville, KY 55:44.7 Chelsea Crabtree Louisville, KY 55:21.1 Marsha Boggs Louisville, KY 55:33.1 Jeff Kennedy Louisville, KY 55:34.9 Christine Schmelter Louisville, KY 55:29.8 Brian Knisely Rineyville, KY 55:51.7 Charles Aquadro Louisville, KY 57:21.9 Jen Anderson Louisville, KY 56:14.7 Laura Campbell Louisville, KY 55:42.2 Elle Kaiser Louisville, KY 55:52.2 Ellie Kohler Louisville, KY 56:08.6 Kenley Oliva Prospect, KY 55:43.6 Todd Mayden Louisville, KY 56:01.2 Holly Clark Pewee Valley, KY 56:10.7 Daryl Booth Louisville, KY 55:59.5 Jennie Pryor Louisville, KY 56:53.1 Emily Erwin Benton, KY 57:21.0 Kara Reilly Louisville, KY 55:59.2 Pete Stavros Louisville, KY 56:23.2 Carrie Pond Louisville, KY 56:23.4 Marilu Adams Beaver Dam, KY 55:44.5 Douglas Egger Prospect, KY 57:06.8 Kelly McCarty Prospect, KY
PHOTO COURTESY OF MARVIN YOUNG
Time Name City/State 56:30.1 Lynda Deeley Louisville, KY 58:23.3 Misty Schulz Fairdale, KY 56:37.7 Maggie Whalen Louisville, KY 56:07.2 Scott Whitehouse Prospect, KY 57:26.4 Jesse Rogers Columbus, IN 56:38.0 Don Hart Taylorsville, KY 57:30.9 Sumata Bhimani Prospect, KY 57:32.9 Chris Gaddis Louisville, KY 57:24.9 Addyson Draper L, K 58:29.0 Ray Norris Deputy, IN 56:46.4 Tammy Green Louisville, KY 58:29.0 Tyson Skinner Scottsburg, IN 57:32.0 Jane Peng Louisville, KE 58:48.3 Melissa Groff Louisville, KY 57:29.5 Uala Gorman Lexington, KY 57:48.4 Paul Kiser Louisville, KY 57:30.4 Genna Fusner Crestwood, KY 58:25.8 Ryan McCain Charlestown, IN 56:36.7 Will Ammerman Louisville, KY 58:41.4 Andrew Rochet Crestwood, KY 57:32.5 Robert Krausen Louisville, KY 57:41.5 Craig Martin Louisville, KY 57:03.6 Terrance Sullivan Louisville, KY 57:23.0 Amy McClain Louisville, KY 57:05.6 Molly Sullivan Louisville, KY 56:53.8 Maureen Kelly Louisville, KY 57:24.8 Penny Mills Louisville, KY 58:06.5 Jennifer Owens Louisville, KY 58:24.5 Reed Woodson La Grange, KY 57:59.9 Magdalena Kucia Louisville, KY 56:55.0 Robert Hammer Louisville, KY 57:32.6 Teresa Marsden Elizabethtown, KY 57:08.7 Misty Kessler Louisville, KY 57:36.7 Sarah Hunt Louisville, KY 57:43.6 Mallory Walter Louisville, KY 57:52.8 Caitlin McGuire Lexington, KY 58:23.6 Katherine Mitchell Louisville, KY 57:54.4 Christine Rouser Louisville, KY 57:42.2 Allison Cuyjet Louisville, KY 59:15.3 Kevin Monaghan Louisville, KY 57:53.7 Maureen Oliva-Koppel Louisville, KY 57:39.2 Brandon White Louisville, KY 57:27.9 Rob Hornung Louisville, KY 57:53.7 Keith Larson Louisville, KY 57:50.5 Abby Taylor Henryville, IN 57:37.8 Michelle Spain Fisherville, KY 57:26.3 Christopher Reynolds Louisville, KY 57:51.0 David Martin Louisville, KY 58:46.3 Earl Winebrenner Louisville, KY 08:11.5 Brian Winslow Louisville, KY 08:11.3 Kimberly Heck Louisville, KY 58:02.2 Alex Engleman Georgetown, IN 57:47.4 Dattatraya Shetty Louisville, KY 57:54.1 Marcus Doyle Louisville, KY 58:50.4 John Murray Louisville, KY 59:47.1 Scott Seitz Louisville, KE 59:22.4 Taylor Amerman Louisville, KY 58:28.2 Ajoy Kodali Crestwood, KY 00:14.7 Brooke Younger Brooks, KY 00:14.9 Therese Montano Louisville, KE 59:54.7 Dana Pelkey Clarksville, IN 00:01.9 Craig Johnson Louisville, KY 59:36.4 Sarah Milliner Louisville, KY 58:40.4 Camilo Rolon Louisville, KY 58:49.1 Robin Whitsett New Albany, IN 58:54.7 Elizabeth Jessee Louisville, KY 58:10.9 Junelle Kigore Louisville, KY 58:49.3 Greg Chester Sellersburg, IN 58:45.7 Michael Martin Louisville, KY 59:15.8 Patrick Abell Mount Washington, KY 59:16.1 Andrea Abell Mount Washington, KY 58:38.8 Anthony Catalina Louisville, KY 59:01.6 Meredith Mathes Louisville, KY 59:35.6 Michael Robinson Louisville, KY 58:34.2 Joanne Ring Columbia, TN 58:40.6 Melissa McElroy Louisville, KY 00:27.9 Daniel Whitis Brooks, KY 58:23.1 Joe Duke Elizabethtown, KY 58:22.3 Christine Gambrell Louisville, KY 59:22.5 Kathleen Guest Louisville, KY 59:17.2 Kendra Dukes Crestwood, KY 58:27.8 Caitlin Anderson Louisville, KY 00:17.3 Sean Manion Louisville, KY 59:06.6 Paul Newsom Louisville, KY 58:40.7 Carol Whetzel Pewee Valley, KY 59:30.1 Julie Dunn Louisville, KY 59:30.2 Josh Dunn Louisville, KY 59:05.2 Jessica Murphy Louisville, KY 00:40.6 Geri Bright Louisville, KY 59:35.8 Tracey Mattingly Louisville, KE 59:51.3 Kannan Rajaraman Louisville, KY 58:31.2 John Russ Louisville, KY 59:10.2 Cari Rairick Crestwood, KY 59:22.3 Kirsten Beeman Elizabethtown, KY 00:44.9 Jackson Fischer Campbellsburg, KY 00:48.1 Christy Fischer Campbellsburg, KY 59:05.1 Janet Hollingsworth Floyds Knobs, IN 58:58.4 Brittany Bell Mt Washington, KY 59:53.1 Carrie Stephens Lagrange, KY 00:25.7 David Meckle Louisville, KY 59:20.9 George Sonnier Louisvillle, KY 00:41.8 Ryan Manion Mt. Washington, KY 00:42.2 Sheena Doerr Mount Washington, KY 00:45.8 Jennifer Spear Louisville, KY 00:01.6 Sarah Kelley Lagrange, KY 00:45.7 Ashton Sorrels Louisville, KY 58:58.3 Theresa Kellar Louisville, KY 00:39.1 Sarah Smith Jeffersonville, IN 01:00.1 Nicki Stivers Louisville, KY 00:30.2 Daniel Day Jeffersonville, IN 59:11.7 Babs Johnson Louisville, KE 59:35.4 Debbie Hart Taylorsville, KY 59:21.5 Kelsey Schuhmann Louisville, KY 59:34.1 Dan Orman Louisville, KY 59:36.7 Cristin Bagley Louisville, KY
# 404 405 406 407 408 409 410 411 412 413 414 415 416 417 418 419 420 421 422 423 424 425 426 427 428 429 430 431 432 433 434 435 436 437 438 439 440 441 442 443 444 445 446 447 448 449 450 451 452 453 454 455 456 457 458 459 460 461 462 463 464 465 466 467 468 469 470 471 472 473 474 475 476 477 478 479 480 481 482 483 484 485 486 487 488 489 490 491 492 493 494 495 496 497 498 499 500 501 502 503 504 505 506 507 508 509 510 511 512 513 514 515 516 517 518
Time Name City/State 59:36.5 Jim Bagley Louisville, KY 01:12.4 Jenny Monaghan Louisville, KY 59:37.2 Jennifer Heseman Louisville, KY 59:20.3 Margie Lyle Louisville, KY 59:43.1 Goble Nicole Madison, IN 59:43.4 Miranda McBride Madison, IN 59:27.2 Greg Charles Louisville, KY 00:53.8 Jessica Day Jeffersonville, IN 59:46.0 Tiffany Peabody Louisville, KY 59:33.7 Bill Hamilton Louisville, KY 00:41.7 Julie Adwell Louisville, KY 00:02.7 Stacy Westerman Louisville, KY 01:07.1 Sarah Beyer Louisville, KY 00:05.9 Cecilia Weihe Louisville, KY 59:57.0 Craig Flener Louisville, KY 59:54.9 Anthony Murphy Louisville, KY 00:46.9 Ali Weber Louisville, KY 00:18.8 Emily James Shelbyville, KY 01:01.3 Lindsey Slack Prospect, KY 00:36.1 David Buckley Louisville, KY 00:35.8 Stacy McKinnis Simpsonville, KY 01:46.0 Jason Fegett Louisville, KY 01:46.1 Christian Fegett Louisville, KY 00:13.0 Shaun McDaniel Jeffersonville, IN 00:41.2 Jessica Buckley Louisville, KY 00:34.5 Carolyn Benson Louisville, KY 00:26.5 Camille Crespo Soto Louisville, KY 00:40.3 Katelyn Hogan Lexington, KY 00:40.3 Rosalie Usher Louisville, KY 02:00.9 Megan Castagno Louisville, KY 00:26.9 Chieko Horras Brandenburg, KY 02:04.4 Kevin Hochman Louisville, KY 01:09.6 Jen Jones Louisville, KY 00:21.0 Corey Groseclose Carrollton, KY 00:42.6 Maurice Millett Louisville, KY 02:23.4 Andrew Rockin’ Carter Evansville, IN 02:23.8 Patti Lippert Evansville, IN 00:59.3 Doug Walter Louisville, KY 00:56.1 George Lemes Louisville, KY 02:03.4 Amanda Ferguson Louisville, KY 00:49.8 Dede Shafar Fisherville, KY 01:47.9 Kim Meredith Louisville, KY 00:41.4 John Hardesty Louisville, KY 00:37.3 Allen Hornung Louisville, KY 02:24.8 Carrie Hayes Louisville, KY 02:25.3 Brice Hayes Louisville, KY 01:50.7 Bhagwan Bhimani Prospect, KY 01:12.0 Kerry Clements Louisville, KY 01:53.7 Jeremy Parkerson Louisville, KY 00:58.0 Janca Millett Louisville, KY 02:44.1 Jeff Whorf Crestwood, KY 01:57.3 Erica Benton Louisville, KY 01:21.6 Joe Vicars Louisville, KY 01:16.9 Susan Fugate Louisville, KY 02:41.6 John Dickinson Louisville, KY 01:06.1 Jimmy Serochi Louisville, KY 01:06.2 Melissa Erixon Louisville, KY 01:20.1 Walter Findlay Louisville, KY 04:56.2 Aaron Becker Louisville, KY 01:20.2 Dustin Beck Louisville, KY 01:22.6 Martha Marie Louisville, KY 01:44.4 Craig MacInnes Louisville, KY 03:09.0 Gail Bauer Floyds Knobs, IN 01:39.2 Vince Bailey Louisville, KY 02:53.0 Amy Grammer Louisville, KY 02:36.9 Malwina Suszynska Louisville, KE 01:49.9 Blue Murphy Louisville, KY 02:45.0 Chrissy Singer Louisville, KY 01:49.2 Donna Helm Mount Sherman, KY 03:27.1 Whitney Weaver Louisville, KY 03:25.4 Katie Sutter New Albany, IN 02:47.3 Jacqueline Hagen Vine Grove, KY 01:51.7 Becca Richman Louisville, KY 01:51.8 Erin Aghamehdi Louisville, KY 03:01.7 Kendrick Ford Louisville, KY 03:01.7 Loren Moody Clarksville, IN 02:19.4 Eric Kiper Floyds Knobs, IN 02:16.2 Sarah Wunderlin Louisville, KY 03:19.0 Natalie Atherton Louisville, KY 03:17.2 Calvin Brooks Louisville, KY 03:22.3 Sara Ackerman Louisville, KY 04:14.5 Shanda Cool Louisville, KY 02:18.7 Jen Seib Louisville, KY 03:02.2 Emily Lamb Louisville, KY 02:02.5 Pamela Miller Louisville, KY 04:12.2 John Ledford Louisville, KY 02:39.9 Laura Johnson Charlestown, IN 02:29.0 Jennifer Guffey Louisville, KY 10:31.3 Camilo Martinez Prospect, KY 04:11.0 Michelle Larsen Crestwood, KY 03:11.5 Renee Devine Shepherdsville, KY 04:13.1 Amanda Lawson Crestwood, KY 03:18.2 Jamie Clevenger Louisville, KE 03:18.3 Anita Stump Lebanon Jct, KY 02:35.8 John Ackerman Louisville, KY 02:26.6 Kalyan Cherukuvada Louisville, KY 03:58.3 Susan Hayes Fort Knox, KY 02:48.8 Angela Altman Louisville, KY 02:49.0 John Altman Louisville, KY 03:42.4 Muruganantham Durairaj Louisville, KY 02:45.2 Heather Lowry Louisville, KY 02:46.2 Jill Davis Fairdale, KY 02:46.4 Martha Dixon Mt. Washington, KY 04:26.1 Megan Owens Madison, IN 04:00.4 Brian Ackerman Louisville, KY 03:43.1 Robert Schoen Louisville, KY 04:42.2 Jeremy Brown Louisville, KY 02:33.7 Angela Ice Bardstown, KY 02:50.5 Kamleh Shaban Louisville, KY 04:10.7 Emma Fitzgerald Louisville, KY 02:53.8 Kelly Wright Louisville, KY 03:39.0 Marcella Dobson Louisville, KY 04:00.9 Tami Sander Louisville, KY 03:37.8 Adam Embry Louisville, KY 02:57.8 Terry Mulliagn Goshen, KY
# 519 520 521 522 523 524 525 526 527 528 529 530 531 532 533 534 535 536 537 538 539 540 541 542 543 544 545 546 547 548 549 550 551 552 553 554 555 556 557 558 559 560 561 562 563 564 565 566 567 568 569 570 571 572 573 574 575 576 577 578 579 580 581 582 583 584 585 586 587 588 589 590 591 592 593 594 595 596 597 598 599 600 601 602 603 604 605 606 607 608 609 610 611 612 613 614 615 616 617 618 619 620 621 622 623 624 625 626 627 628 629 630 631 632 633
Time Name City/State # Time Name City/State # Salem, IN 749 05:55.2 Kristen Boone Louisville, KY 634 07:52.8 Brooke Agan Louisville, KE 750 05:03.5 Shea Coughlin Louisville, KY 635 07:13.9 Elizabeth Casey Louisville, KY 751 03:14.6 Teresa Wright Shelbyville, KY 636 06:50.3 Brian Huseman 03:20.5 Suzanne Bergmeister Louisville, KY 637 07:08.9 Marie White-Robinson Louisville, KY 752 Greenville, IN 753 03:16.8 Lisa Bailey Louisville, KY 638 08:10.1 Jenn Lewis Greenville, IN 754 04:26.6 Chloe Grammer Louisville, KY 639 08:10.3 Bonnie Cook Floyds Knobs, IN 755 03:57.6 Joseph Corbett Louisville, KY 640 06:58.1 Kris Gelthaus 641 08:37.1 Michele Henry Georgetown, IN 756 05:00.6 Andrew Durbin Louisville, KY Greenville, IN 757 03:04.2 Adrienne Gilkey Louisville, KY 642 08:01.1 Hollye Walker 643 07:52.5 Karri Ward Louisville, KY 03:42.7 Laurie Boyer Louisville, KY 758 Louisville, KY 759 03:47.1 Shadea Mitchell Louisville, KY 644 07:20.3 Catherine Fargen Louisville, KY 760 05:16.5 Kali Edwards Louisville, KY 645 07:21.5 Tammy Rhodes Clarksville, IN 761 05:08.9 Colligan Barber Louisville, KY 646 07:31.1 Patrick Faulkner Louisville, KY 762 04:25.3 Elizabeth Davis Shelbyville, KY 647 08:44.3 Melanie Ferguson Peewee Valley, KY 763 05:09.6 Jessi Dietrich Louisville, KY 648 08:19.3 Greg Long Lexington, KY 764 05:23.7 Patti Harmeling Louisville, KY 649 07:49.6 Tyrone Dickson Louisville, KY 765 05:09.9 Tim Curtis Lagrange, KY 650 08:40.1 Theresa Vail Georgetown, IN 766 04:38.4 Leigh Ann Gutermuth Louisville, KY 651 07:24.9 Grace Engleman Louisville, KY 767 04:49.7 Russell Weiandt Anderson, IN 652 06:57.3 Monica Tunstall Louisville, KY 768 05:10.1 Rhonda Curtis Lagrange, KY 653 09:24.9 Cassandra Rosbury Louisville, KY 769 03:39.2 Bethany Hedrick Louisville, KY 654 09:01.6 Elizabeth Back Louisville, KY 770 03:55.7 Megan Schanie Louisville, KY 655 08:17.7 Christie Lee Scott Louisville, KY 771 03:37.6 Margaret Kraus Louisville, KY 656 07:53.0 Holly Wallace 05:11.1 Justin Gardner Louisville, KY 657 08:21.6 Brian Brashear Mt. Washington, KY 772 Elizabethtown, KY 773 04:22.1 Ryan Cooper Louisvi, KE 658 09:05.4 Tabetha Troutt Memphis, IN 774 03:45.4 Karin Hand Louisville, KY 659 09:05.2 Andrea Smith Lexington, KY 775 05:12.8 Dana Gahafer Louisville, KY 660 15:33.7 Rosalind Essig Washington, IL 776 05:14.1 Samantha Hommrich Louisville, KY 661 09:24.1 Jaime Wentzel Louisville, KY 777 03:47.8 Allen Schuhmann Louisville, KY 662 07:26.5 Angela Corbett Louisville, KY 778 03:54.6 Shae Dobina Louisville, KY 663 07:53.9 Michael James Louisville, KY 779 03:55.6 Mike Beckwith Louisville, KY 664 07:54.4 Tracy James Louisville, KY 780 05:04.2 Heather Groves Mt. Washington, KY 665 08:43.7 Ruth Obal Winchester, KY 781 04:04.5 Terry Hardwick Shepherdsville, KY 666 09:34.7 Matt Lorenz Louisville, KY 782 04:30.1 Todd Benson Louisville, KY 667 08:48.8 Tricia Fike 04:42.1 Willis Blackwell Mt Washington, KY 668 07:52.3 Katie Vanvactor Shepherdsville, KY 783 04:37.9 Ryan Pfeifer Greenville, IN 669 09:21.2 Cassandra Novajovsky Louisville, KY 784 Louisville, KY 785 05:24.6 Elizabeth McGill Shelbyville, KY 670 09:21.8 James Damone Louisville, KY 786 04:58.2 Heather Phelps Taylorsville, KY 671 09:19.8 Howard Whitman Ctestwood, KY 787 05:34.0 Natalie Moran Louisville, KY 672 07:43.4 Deb Chenois Louisville, KY 788 04:21.9 Mike Isley Bedford, KY 673 08:25.0 Kayla Adams Louisville, KY 789 05:12.3 Mark Davis Louisville, KY 674 08:30.2 Audrey Dorris Elizabethtown, KY 790 06:00.6 Andrew Courtney Louisville, KY 675 08:11.4 Dina Wood Fort Knox, KY 791 04:39.0 Candiace Carter Louisville, KY 676 08:19.1 Portia Yongbanthorn Louisville, KY 792 04:39.1 Andy Carter Louisville, KY 677 07:52.1 Don Brown Bedford, KY 793 04:45.2 Mary Rademaker Jeffersonville, IN 678 08:14.3 Erin Rosenbaum Louisville, KY 794 04:11.6 Emily Neal Louisville, KY 679 10:01.0 Andrew Peak Louisville, KY 795 06:12.9 Miranda Groseclose Carrollton, KY 680 10:01.9 Megan Hardin-Riley Crestwood, KY 796 06:10.5 Megan Hall Louisville, KY 681 08:57.4 Audrey Frias Louisville, KY 797 05:01.2 Caleb Postema Prospect, KY 682 09:47.1 John Brockman Louisville, KY 798 06:21.2 Stephanie Sturgeon Louisville, KY 683 09:47.1 Katelyn Smith Louisville, KY 799 04:15.8 Gabrielle Townsend Versailles, KY 684 09:46.8 Malinda Brockman Louisville, KY 800 06:21.3 Jamie Evans Louisville, KY 685 10:22.4 Ashley Butler Louisville, KY 801 05:45.5 Tonia Vetter Floyds Knobs, IN 686 10:23.2 Jonathan Butler Lagrange, KY 802 06:13.8 Shell Irwin Louisville, KY 687 09:07.2 Dan Kloek 688 09:17.4 Ronnita Nance Louisville, KY 803 05:05.4 Brad Postema Prospect, KY 04:55.2 Darren Carman Brandenburg, KY 689 10:25.6 Sarah Courtney Louisville, KY 804 05:46.8 Sarah Lowe New Albany, IN 690 08:36.7 Tony McDaniel Shelbyville, KY 805 05:51.5 Vanessa Zebich Louisville, KY 691 08:26.3 Doug Hickerson Crestwood, KY 806 06:09.2 Rhonda Grigsby Bardstown, KY 692 08:35.3 Tami Stull New Albany, IN 807 06:06.8 Amy Banta Louisville, KY 693 08:38.0 Eric French Louisville, KY 808 05:41.8 Jessica Jacobs Louisville, KY 694 09:41.8 Autumn Drane Louisville, KY 809 06:53.5 Megan Crabb Louisville, KY 695 08:28.2 Mary Feldkamp Louisville, KY 810 06:45.0 William Davis Louisville, KY 696 08:42.4 Brigitte Fasciotto Crestwood, KY 811 06:57.8 Brian Wehneman Georgetown, IN 697 08:13.8 Deleen Holladay New Albany, IN 812 06:57.9 Dean Heckel Georgetown, IN 698 09:01.1 Jessica Benge Reynolds London, KY 813 05:15.4 Gary Luttrell Pekin, IN 699 08:43.3 Wes Keen Corydon, IN 814 11:51.7 Natalia Martinez Prospect, KY 700 08:46.8 Arielle Vanarsdall Louisville, KY 815 05:13.0 Andy Weeks Louisville, KY 701 09:01.0 Travis Condra Louisville, KY 816 05:07.6 Lekha Devara Louisville, KY 702 08:47.5 Sara Franks Louisville, KY 817 05:09.2 Lisa Coder Shepherdsville, KY 703 08:44.7 Shannon Gregory Shelbyville, KY 818 06:08.3 Genny Wenta Louisville, KY 704 09:30.9 John Sanders Louisville, KY 819 05:28.7 Vanda Bell Louisville, KY 705 08:45.4 Sarah Gregory Shelbyville, KY 820 05:32.3 Victoria Parrish Vine Grove, KY 706 08:40.0 Tania Sanchez Bonilla Louisville, KY 821 05:37.3 G.r. Smith Louisville, KY 707 10:30.8 Andrew Robertson Louisville, KY 822 06:36.1 Heather Beard Louisville, KY 708 09:06.1 Kimberly Weiter Louisville, KY 823 05:26.7 Hillary Forsee Jeffersonville, IN 709 08:48.1 Allison Stewart Louisville, KY 824 06:41.9 Sherman Dowell Louisville, KY 710 09:14.8 Karen Jaracz Louisville, KY 825 05:25.8 Teri Kiper Louisville, KY 711 10:08.1 Stephen Frank Louisville, KY 826 06:22.3 Lori Cecil New Albany, IN 712 10:08.5 Robert Wise Madison, IN 827 06:22.3 Charlene Lefebvre Jeffersonville, IN 713 10:50.6 Brittany Doss Sugar Grove, IL 828 06:43.7 Chloe Griffith Bedford, KY 714 09:49.5 Lloyd Thomas Coxs Creek, KY 829 06:44.0 Michelle Griffith Bedford, KY 715 10:10.9 Megan Bertucci Louisville, KY 830 07:27.4 Rebecca Jent New Albany, IN 716 10:10.3 Christine McFalls Lagrange, KY 831 07:28.4 Jennifer Laster Sellersburg, IN 717 09:24.4 Megan Wilson Louisville, KY 832 05:39.6 Lauren Wadsworth Louisville, KY 718 09:50.1 Kim Ray Shepherdsville, KY 833 05:54.0 Gretchen Boone Boston, KY 719 09:37.7 Glenn Johnstone Louisville, KY 834 07:26.6 Linda Brill Louisville, KY 720 09:35.3 David Criscola Elizabethtown, KY 835 06:56.7 Larry Stroud Louisville, KY 721 09:35.3 Kelli Atherton Elizabethtown, KY 836 09:42.9 Harper Becker Louisville, KY 722 10:08.0 Jeffrey Hale Mt Washington, KY 837 05:50.2 Rebecca Hammer Louisville, KY 723 11:16.2 Ashlee Lopez Louisville, KY 838 05:49.5 Laura Hammer Louisville, KY 724 11:17.6 Randy Jones Louisville, KY 839 06:13.0 Victoria Prescott Louisville, KY 725 11:37.1 Jeffrey Davis Louisville, KY 840 07:10.8 Rebecca Payton Louisville, KY 726 09:48.5 Brad Lindert Louisville, KY 841 07:01.8 Mike Drake Louisville, KY 727 10:04.4 Katie Diffenderfer Louisville, KY 842 07:58.1 Dean Carder Pendleton, KY 728 11:20.2 Lisa Washington Louisville, KY 843 07:58.2 Christopher Carder Pendleton, KY 729 10:48.2 Lisa Hester Louisville, KY 844 07:54.3 Kate Henninger Louisville, KY 730 11:11.4 Alicia Sickles Louisville, KY 845 06:32.7 Molly Prichard Scottsburg, IN 731 10:22.7 Megan Rhodes Louisville, KY 846 07:13.5 Kathryn Beavin Louisville, KY 732 10:53.4 Diana Britton Louisville, KY 847 07:13.6 Bethany Lega Louisville, KY 733 09:33.0 Brittanna Kesler Maynard Louisville, KY 848 06:45.4 Alexa Edwards Louisville, KY 734 10:52.1 Brooke O’Neil Louisville, KY 849 06:34.0 Tiffany Cravens Lexington, IN 735 09:53.8 Jay Hess Louisville, KY 850 06:34.3 Kelly Hargett Scottsburg, IN 736 11:11.2 Thomas Metcalf Fairdale, KY 851 08:15.4 Claire Greanias Louisville, KY 737 11:52.6 Lesia Cooper Louisville, KY 852 08:15.4 Ryan Greanias Louisville, KY 738 11:01.4 Megan Smith Louisville, KY 853 07:59.2 Mary Norton Louisville, KY 739 11:41.5 Lindsay Burns Louisville, KY 854 07:50.7 Justin McDonald Campbellsville, KY 740 11:42.0 Taylor Spears Louisville, KY 855 06:34.8 Shannon Wyatt Ft Knox, KY 741 12:20.7 Julia Davis Louisville, KY 856 07:17.8 Richard Dean Louisville, KY 742 10:41.9 Megan Blackwell Louisville, KY 857 06:35.5 Chelsea Abati Louisville, KY 743 11:12.0 Courtney Billington Louisville, KY 858 06:35.9 Connie Haxby Louisville, KY 744 11:39.3 Gretchen Allred Goshen, KY 859 07:35.0 Lynsie Rust Louisville, KY 745 11:26.5 Kristin Combest Louisville, KE 860 07:52.7 Katherine Vail Louisville, KY 746 10:16.5 Jennifer Shelton Louisville, KY 861 08:23.2 Douglas Spurr Louisville, KY 747 11:53.3 Melissa Velasco Louisville, KY 862 06:31.3 Alyssa Dunne Prospect, KY 748 12:10.2 Nicole Austin Louisville, KY 863
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Time 11:53.5 12:17.4 11:47.7 11:04.4 10:39.0 10:32.4 10:58.1 10:45.2 11:32.9 11:09.8 11:55.6 11:56.2 12:32.9 11:35.1 17:51.6 11:52.6 12:04.7 12:03.6 12:41.2 12:12.4 12:56.8 11:40.7 11:40.7 11:28.2 13:07.9 13:08.0 13:02.6 13:03.1 12:56.8 11:40.2 12:26.3 13:29.9 13:26.5 13:04.1 13:33.7 12:18.7 12:52.7 13:32.4 13:32.4 13:33.5 12:26.0 12:25.9 12:54.9 12:58.2 12:27.4 13:33.7 14:36.1 13:54.5 14:13.1 14:08.0 12:56.7 14:41.0 12:28.2 13:21.4 19:58.2 13:21.0 14:44.3 14:00.3 13:31.6 15:13.6 14:58.7 14:19.4 14:34.6 13:46.5 15:20.0 14:11.5 14:40.3 14:02.7 14:49.3 14:04.1 13:47.6 14:10.4 15:09.0 15:26.1 15:26.2 16:01.9 14:37.7 16:05.0 15:04.1 15:06.1 14:46.9 16:10.3 15:05.0 15:24.0 15:24.1 16:34.0 15:25.7 14:50.6 15:08.0 15:53.4 15:30.6 15:17.3 16:45.6 16:03.5 15:10.5 17:12.3 15:31.0 16:56.8 15:23.5 15:47.8 16:12.3 15:07.4 15:56.8 16:47.7 16:08.9 17:50.9 17:52.5 17:26.9 17:13.5 18:04.7 18:04.7 16:52.7 17:19.6 16:23.1 16:23.0
Name City/State # Tony Velasco Louisville, KY 864 Cristina Cortez Louisville, KY 865 Ellen Hauber Louisville, KY 866 Cheryl Carl Louisville, KY 867 Scott UnderwoodMount Washington, KY 868 Vickie Embry Prospect, KY 869 Larry Adams Pewee Valley, KY 870 Elizabeth Long Shelbyville, KY 871 Kim Davis Louisville, KY 872 Vanessa Bradley Big Clifty, KY 873 Don Edwards Floyds Knobs, IN 874 Kayleigh Burkhead Crestwood, KY 875 Rosemary Sousa Lexington, KY 876 Helen Hines Bedford, KY 877 Claudia Pridde Prospect, KY 878 Dylan Gordon Crestwood, KY 879 Diana Middleton Louisville, KY 880 Bridget Shive Elizabethtown, KY 881 Jennifer Woodson Lagrange, KY 882 Amanda Urbany Louisville, KY 883 Jacob Saylor Louisville, KY 884 Holly Demuesy Louisville, KY 885 Tatiana Llach-Rolon Louisville, KY 886 Ben Rogers Louisville, KY 887 Shannon Leblanc Louisville, KY 888 Keri Mathis Louisville, KY 889 Aaron Vanover Bowling Green, KY 890 Mary Jo Boles Louisville, KY 891 Erin White Louisville, KY 892 Rebecca Dever Louisville, KY 893 Todd Thurman Louisville, KY 894 Robyn Brandenburg Louisville, KY 895 Susan Dunn Louisville, KY 896 Ingrid Korgemagi Louisville, KY 897 Bethany Yager Houze Louisville, KY 898 Lindsey Hamm Cynthiana, KY 899 Phillip Williams Louisville, KY 900 Anna Vogt La Grange, KY 901 Sara Kramer Louisville, KY 902 Michael Houze Louisville, KY 903 Danette Powers Cecilia, KY 904 Kristi Knisely Rineyville, KY 905 Jessica Schulte Louisville, KY 906 Megan Sullivan Louisville, KY 907 Kathy Van Ryzin Louisville, KY 908 Sundar Shanmugam Louisville, KY 909 Jamie Edwards Floyds Knobs, IN 910 Lesley-Ann Pienaar Louisville, KY 911 Kaitlin Malone Corydon, IN 912 Eden Ransdell Depauw, IN 913 Andrea Breaux Louisville, KY 914 Nathan Winkle La Grange, KY 915 Kim Coplan Louisville, KY 916 Matthew Howard Louisville, KY 917 Megan Maier Louisville, KY 918 Frank Craycroft Louisville, KY 919 Carissa Edens Crestwood, KY 920 Ramlin Rajan Louisville, KY 921 Meagan Zumstein Greenville, IN 922 Jillian Chandler Louisville, KY 923 Joseph Rollinson Louisville, KY 924 Erica Hayes Mount Washington, KY 925 Russell Dukes Bloomington, IN 926 Ben Rademaker Jeffersonville, IN 927 Julia Rollinson Louisville, KY 928 Becky Holloman Louisville, KY 929 Kathleen Jones Louisville, KY 930 Serayah Fletcher Louisville, KY 931 Amy Patton Lexington, KY 932 Kristi Lynch Rineyville, KY 933 Mareike Yocum Mount Washington, KY 934 Angie Rucker Eilzabethtown, KY 935 Yvonne Edenstrom Versailles, KY 936 Amy Gose Louisville, KY 937 Alex Bell Mt Washington, KY 938 Brittany Baumgarten Louisville, KY 939 Rhonda Rhye Louisville, KY 940 Lindsay Hare Louisville, KY 941 Kasey Shirley Louisville, KY 942 Stephen Miranda Louisville, KY 943 Angela Zachman Louisville, KY 944 Alisa Vaughan Simpsonville, KY 945 Sandra Wolfe Tuscaloosa, AL 946 Beth Ann Keith Louisville, KY 947 Shannon Leonberger Louisville, KY 948 Sarah Snyder Louisville, KY 949 Lucia Peyton Louisville, KY 950 Lisa Coates Louisville, KY 951 Brittany Irvin Louisville, KY 952 Shelby Carwile Owensboro, KY 953 Bethanie Ripato Louisville, KY 954 Amanda Case Mt Washington, KY 955 Ben Waller Louisville, KY 956 Linda Isham Louisville, KY 957 Carla Huber Louisville, KY 958 Matt Jasnoff Louisville, KY 959 Heather Meyers Louisville, KY 960 Katy Raver Elizabethtown, KY 961 Lynn Cooper Louisville, KY 962 Melanie Flener Louisville, KY 963 Jessica Partin Elizabethtown, KY 964 Sandy Edwards Crestwood, KY 965 Shari Williams Louisville, KY 966 Leah Collier Louisville, KY 967 Chad Owen Louisville, KY 968 Barbara Koehler Louisville, KY 969 Gabrielle Read Louisville, KY 970 Sharon Hubbard Charlestown, IN 971 Wendy Cox New Albany, IN 972 Theodora Asafo-Adjei Lexington, KY 973 Eseosa Ighodaro Lexington, KY 974 Brad Mitchell Louisville, KY 975 Jeremy McGill Shelbyville, KY 976 Jordan Craft Louisville, KY 977 Grace Konemann Taylorsville, KY 978
Time Name City/State 16:23.2 Amber Saunders Louisville, KE 16:06.0 Cindy Fuqua Pewee Valley, KY 18:22.6 Karen Dailey Louisville, KY 16:55.8 Marie Ruf Louisville, KY 16:43.5 Katherine Brandner Erlanger, KY 17:41.2 Kara Fautz Louisville, KY 17:41.4 Megan Paul Louisville, KY 16:39.8 Brande Keen Corydon, IN 18:24.2 Sara Ulliman Louisville, KY 17:29.0 Angela Smith La Grange, KY 18:46.9 Sarah Lamantia Louisville, KY 16:53.9 Alex Tomlin Louisville, KY 18:17.4 Eric Edwards Covington, KY 18:15.1 Megalan Arockiasamy Louisville, KY 18:59.0 Ana Danies Louisville, KY 18:21.1 Sharon Clayton Louisville, KY 18:21.3 Debra Phillips Fisherville, KY 18:23.4 Amanda Workman Louisville, KY 17:49.8 Sara Marcum Shepherdsville, KY 17:43.2 Lisa Nissen Louisville, KY 18:49.9 Erica Matz Louisville, KY 18:50.6 Thyagarajan Kumar Louisville, KY 19:16.5 Blair Klayko Louisville, KY 18:18.8 Sarah Nowlin Scottsburg, IN 19:23.9 Jaclyn Johanboeke Charlestown, IN 19:27.1 Christine Stavros Louisville, KY 19:13.4 Kayla Slaughter Louisville, KY 19:13.7 Sinclair Bell Louisville, KE 19:14.2 Alena Colborn Louisville, KE 17:58.2 Casey Ross Lincoln, NE 18:06.4 Erin Williams Louisville, KY 19:43.0 Elizabeth Treat Jeffersonville, IN 18:40.4 Justin Vasher Louisville, KY 20:06.9 Lindsay Sauer Louisville, KY 20:06.9 Jen Heckel Georgetown, IN 17:55.8 Kim Dallara Louisville, KY 19:08.7 Angela Szalay Louisville, KY 19:36.8 Jay Wilson Louisville, KY 19:32.9 Nikki Adams Louisville, KY 19:38.7 Shanon Milligan Shepherdsville, KY 20:51.0 Margaret Budzar Louisville, KY 20:16.0 Katherine Semmes Prospect, KY 19:08.3 Tiffany Tackett Shepherdsville, KY 20:30.4 Julia Aguilar Charlestown, IN 19:39.5 Patricia Orkies Louisville, KY 19:33.7 Katherine Yared Louisville, KY 19:52.9 Melissa Jenkins Louisville, KY 19:20.7 Kristina Stopher Crestwood, KY 20:02.1 Rachel McCrorey Shepherdsville, KY 21:11.5 Lisa Waldrop Louisville, KY 20:30.7 Brianna Ellis Louisville, KY 20:31.1 Tessa Cooke Jeffersonville, IN 20:48.5 James Ray Sellersburg, IN 20:48.4 Margaret Ray Sellersburg, IN 21:46.0 Allison Mull Louisville, KY 21:41.5 Elizabeth Artman Louisville, KY 21:02.3 Hannah Kamer Lavergne, TN 21:46.8 Joseph Morris Louisville, KY 21:47.2 Brenda Robinson Louisville, KY 20:34.6 William Rubin Louisville, KY 20:07.7 Madeleine Cronin Louisville, KY 20:44.8 Joseph Malone Crestwood, KY 20:47.7 Ashley Keilman Louisville, KY 21:20.8 Christy Hulsewede Louisville, KY 22:15.0 Joni Wright Louisville, KY 22:22.8 Roy Schremp New Albany, IN 21:20.4 Lorilea Conyer Louisville, KY 20:07.7 Jim Cronin Louisville, KY 22:24.4 Kathy Scott Lagrange, KY 21:48.4 Molly Weiandt Anderson, IN 21:08.3 Roselin Avegalio Fort Knox, KY 22:58.2 Debbie Krampe Louisville, KY 22:06.4 Travis Zanone Louisville, KY 21:50.8 Taylor Ehret Louisville, KY 22:02.9 Danielle Murphy Louisville, KY 21:40.1 Nancy Deutsch Louisville, KY 22:37.5 Kim Munsterman Shelbyville, KY 21:49.7 Debbie Findlay Louisville, KY 22:48.6 Melanie Keefe Louisville, KE 22:49.3 Emily Lamb Louisville, KY 22:54.4 Christine Hayden Taylorsville, KY 22:54.5 Jessica Jenkins Louisville, KY 24:33.3 Gary Wright Fairdale, KY 23:22.6 Casey Willard Louisville, KY 23:49.7 Jennifer Hale Mount Washington, KY 23:19.6 Kristin Underwood Mount Washington, KY 24:53.8 Elizabeth Vish Prospect, KY 24:37.8 Laura Clemons Louisville, KY 25:22.9 Chad Luttrell Louisville, KY 24:49.3 Nikki Radin Louisville, KY 23:34.0 Deborah Devore Vine Grove, KY 25:39.0 Jessica Reader Louisville, KY 25:39.4 Dawn Lechner Louisville, KY 25:37.3 Angelika Hoelger Louisville, KY 24:10.3 Bill Van Meter Louisville, KY 24:46.5 Carol Westerman Louisville, KY 24:48.0 Bill Kish Louisville, KY 25:37.2 Barbara Fischer Louisville, KY 24:45.2 Andrea Cline Frankfort, KY 25:54.4 Tony Ford Louisville, KY 25:03.6 Beth Wilson Louisville, KY 25:20.6 Jeffrey Cline Frankfort, KY 25:20.6 Donna Morris Frankfort, KY 24:18.9 Eric Willis Louisville, KY 24:18.8 Tim Hopkins Louisville, KY 26:40.6 Carolyn Dennison Shepherdsville, KY 26:40.5 Kathy Carter Boston, KY 25:25.3 Stephanie Roby Louisville, KY 25:47.9 Andy Dages Louisville, KY 25:59.2 Mooli Bhimani Prospect, KY 24:55.2 Valli Gollamudi Louisville, KY 26:50.7 Sara Walsh Louisville, KY 26:14.1 Lakisha Zanone Louisville, KY 26:12.6 Phylecia Kellar Louisville, KY 26:47.6 Kelli Monks Louisville, KY
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SOCIETY
Don’t see yourself?
Visit our redesigned website at
voice-tribune.com
for extended photo galleries and purchase options.
St. James Court PAGE Art Show 48
S O C I E TY
The Voice of Louisville Launch Party The Voice-Tribune hosted the launch of the fall edition of The Voice of Louisville, the quarterly glossy magazine at Mesh on Brownsboro Road on October 1. Sponsored by Woodford Reserve, guests mingled among signature cocktails, light bites and giveaways. The new magazine is now available all over town. Carolee Galla, Katie Kern and Hood and Heather Harris.
Jamie Gray and Mary Wittenberg.
Barbara and Santa Walt Queen.
Cathy Gasssner, Chelsea Coury and Cat Platz.
Randy Whetstone Jr. and Crystal Burton.
Mayra Vega and Mario Rocha.
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Joe Leist and Rachelle Borel.
Tina Thomas and Glenn Gail.
Kim Mobley and Mandi Watt.
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PHOTOS BY BILL WINE | CONTRIBUTING PHOTOGRAPHER
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Daniel and Terri Cornelius with John Gray.
Tyleen Stoutt, Catherine Bishop, Ann Siebel, Anne Shaw and Lucie Stansbury.
Margaret Schneider, Nelda Miles and Colleen O’Hara.
Randy Blevins, Julie Tichenor and Matt Porter.
Ernest Sampson, Shari Baughman, Leigh Ellen Erickson, Kaitlyn Oates, Kelley Carson and Eric Voet.
PHOTOS BY BILL WINE | CONTRIBUTING PHOTOGRAPHER
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Sherry Bain was a door prize winner.
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Charles Farnsley 1949 Founders Society Reception Fund for the Arts hosted their Charles Farnsley 1949 Founders Society reception at the Louisville Ballet on September 29 with the help of Creative Capital and Perrone Wealth Management Group. Guests mingled and enjoyed drinks. Michelle Staggs, Andy Kropa, Steve Wilson, Laura Lee Brown and Aldy Miliken.
Fund for the Arts President and CEO Christen Boone, Executive Director of Creative Capital and Creative Capital Artists Ruby Lerner with photographer Andy Kropa.
Jim Welch Jr. and Tom Noland.
John Shumate and Claire Simms.
Shelley Perrone, Kay Matton, D. Dee Hill and Emily Perrone. Landyn Garmon, Meghan Mando, Kristie Wetterer and David and Becky Phillips.
Jim Allen, Ruby Lerner and Gill Holland.
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Ernie Williams and Mark Kristy.
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Cara Hicks and Alison Huff.
PHOTOS BY TIM VALENTINO | CONTRIBUTING PHOTOGRAPHER
The American Red Cross and Tiffany Circle Society of Women Leaders for the Kentucky Region hosted their Women Who Inspire event on September 29. This year’s honorees were Becky and Kelsey Petrino for their work in helping to change and improve lives in the Louisville community.
Karen LaClare Casi, event host and Metro Councilwoman Angela Leet, Jennifer Adrio ,Becky Petrino and Kelsey Petrino Scott.
Peg Diebold, Marita Willis and Mary Beth Clark.
Mary Rivers, Julia Kolp Carstanjen, Pam Klinner and Susie Ades Pomerance.
Jeannie Curtis and Madeline Abramson.
Debbie Meyer and Mary Rivers.
Jennifer Blair and Heather Mickley.
Lori Kay Scott, Jennifer Adrio, Jeannie Curtis and Peggy Heuser.
PHOTOS BY BILL WINE | CONTRIBUTING PHOTOGRAPHER
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Women Who Inspire
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Eye Care Institute Ladies Night Dr. John Meyer of The Eye Care Institute invited guests to attend the first annual “LASIK Ladies Night” at their Story Avenue location. The event showed appreciation for all of their LASIK patients. Guests were encouraged to bring a friend to enjoy appetizers, wine, barre fitness tips, makeup tutorials, mini massages, nail services, bourbon tastings, fall fashion and door prizes.
Alex Clark and Scott Johnson.
Sarah Zoeller, Cathy Hollander, Savannah Zoeller and Emily Hollander.
Anna Spalding and Katie Chauvin.
Heather Brunetti and Kalen Helfrich.
Sherry Chauvin, Alex Brunetti and Morgan Pearson.
Whitney Leech, Melissa Majors, Terri Bryant, Amy Hillerich, Angela Warfield, Jennifer Miller and Jaimelee Steurer.
Kiley Pettar, Darcie Olszewski and Cassie Fertig.
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Jamie Ruttinger, Dr. Woodruff and Jamie Shiver.
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Donna Meyer, Betty Rice and Izzy Wright.
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
Amy Sullivan, Jimmy Kirchdorfer and Cyndi Caldwell.
The Catholic Education Foundation held its Salute to the Game Luncheon on September 30 as a preview of the annual high school football game between Trinity High School and St. Xavier High School at the Galt House Hotel Grand Ballroom. Opposing coaches Bob Beatty and Will Wolford talked Xs and Os to whet fans’ appetites for the big game.
Lynn and Steve Arave.
Dawn and Robert Piercy with Cheryl DelVisco.
St. Xavier High School Athletic Director Alan Donhoff, Most Reverend Joseph E. Kurtz DD,Saint Xavier High School President and CEO Perry Sangalli and President of Catholic Education Foundation Richard Lechleiter.
Don Korfhage, John Lunderergan and Michael Johnson.
John King and Joey Porter.
Shamrocks Mom’s Club.
PHOTOS BY BILL WINE | CONTRIBUTING PHOTOGRAPHER
Trinity High School Athletic Director Rob Saxton and Dennis Lampley.
St. X Mom’s Club.
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Salute to the Game Luncheon
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Nazareth Home Concert for Peace Nazareth Home staged their Concert for Peace on October 1 at their Nazareth Home Chapel. The evening featured a performance by pianist Brian Becvar and vocalist Marlana Vanhoose.
Sister Mary Jo Gramig, Gabe and Tony Ratterman and Mike Lush.
Sarah Conklin, Sister Amina Bejos and Lexas Priddy.
Elizabeth Triplett and Ben Rogers.
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Lindsay Reynolds and Jack Winburn.
Marnie Hoffman and Molly White.
Brian BecVar and Maggie and Karen Spath.
Jo McGee, Jayne BecVar and Sister Amina Bejos.
Carol Turner, Sister Iggy and Virginia Turner.
Donna Taxes, Ann Burton, Carole Sheehan and Sue Peege.
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PHOTOS BY TIM VALENTINO | CONTRIBUTING PHOTOGRAPHER
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S O C I E TY
Louisville’s International Festival of Film The seventh annual Louisville International Festival of Film was held October 1-3 at the Louisville Science Center, the Galt House Hotel and the Louisville Free Public Library. The event featured dozens of works from around the globe courtesy of established as well as up-and-coming filmmakers.
Annie Appelhof with Meghan and Matt Hagedorn.
Joey Wagner, Major Dodge and Frankie Hilbert.
Michael Mason, Leanne Melissa Bishop, Milan Andrijasevic and Isidora Radonjic.
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Cast members of “Tremors”: Conrad Bachmann, Finn Carter, Robert Jayne, Michael Gross and Charlotte Stewart with Brian Cullinan, co-founder of Louisville’s International Festival of Film.
Aaron Yarmuth and Kelly Campbell.
Michelle and Dillon Nichols.
Vicente Guna, Ariel Givens and Randy and Kim Hobson.
Conrad Bachmann and Robert Jayne.
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District 6 Louisville Metro Councilman David James, Michael Gross and Michelle James.
Tatahda Lefebvre, Morgan Carter and Angela Martin.
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 Boy Scouts of America hosted their Jungle Safari Fling party at The Olmsted on October 2 courtesy of key sponsor Hilliard Lyons. It was a high energy celebration that raised funds for at-risk youth in the Lincoln Heritage Council's Scoutreach Program. Guests were encouraged to explore their wild side at this black tie optional event where animal print and safari chic were encouraged.
Jim and Connie Rogers, Brent and Sarah Housman and Julie and Rick Hobgood.
Terra Jackson and Ron Overstreet.
Amy and Niall Harty.
Marcia and Tom Carrico.
Sue Lambert and Mike McLaughlin.
Matt Stofleth, Laura Kapp, Lindsey Stinson and Austin Zehr.
Alex Hunnicutt, Casey Dixon and Mike Dennis.
PHOTOS BY BILL WINE | CONTRIBUTING PHOTOGRAPHER
Carrie and Byron Dewey.
Curt and Charlene Zoeller and Trisha and Larry Lambert.
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Fleur-de-lis Fling: Jungle Safari
S O C I E TY
St. James Court Art Show St. James Court, in the heart of Old Louisville, played host to one of the nation’s premier art shows last weekend. The show ran October 2-4 and featured hundreds of booths displaying countless works of art from far and wide, including some by local Louisville artists.
Heather O’Mara, Karl Renninger, Darlene Maschari, Tony Viscardi, Sheila and Ed Marcellino and Kathy and Jim Sumser.
Jim Sumser with Heather O’Mara and Karl Renninger.
Marybeth and Craig Layne.
Melissa Eskridge, Jayne Kincaid and Jennifer Fraley with Scout.
Herb Fink and St. James Court Association President Bill Holladay.
Samantha Richardson, Eric Werner and Vince Pompei.
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Alejandra Avile.
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PHOTOS BY TIM VALENTINO | CONTRIBUTING PHOTOGRAPHER
St. George’s Scholar Institute Fundraiser Angela Koshewa, Kay Shields Wilkinson and Jim Wilkinson.
The St. George’s Scholar Institute hosted its 51st anniversary breakfast fundraiser at the Brown Hotel’s Crystal Ballroom on September 30. The event raised money for the St. George’s Community Center, a place that seeks to further the educational development of youth in the community.
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Bishop Terry White and Amy Coultas.
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Bridget Dale and Carenza Townsend.
Donna Delph and Becky Norris.
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Bill Parker, Robert Williamson, Anne Vouga and Kevin Foster.
PHOTOS BY TIM VALENTINO
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Fourth Annual Pink Prom The fourth annual Pink Prom Presented by Dillard’s and Tafel Motors/Mercedes took place October 2 at The Gillespie. This year’s Pink Prom benefited Twisted Pink, an organization that raises funding for clinical and translational metastatic breast cancer research. Guests walked the pink carpet and danced the night away with music by DJ Ryan Coxx, DJ K-Dogg and more.
Frankie Hilbert, Jason Brown, Caroline Johnson, Joey Wagner and Michael Carver.
Bryan Gillespie and Krista Rigling.
Kirby Kernen and Lydia Clore.
Diane Courrington, Damien House, Valerie Terry and Lauren Santacroce.
Caitlin Thomas and Anthony Miller.
Abram Deng and Anissa Wood.
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Rudy Spencer, Hannah Nido, Coarissa Mobley, Megan Bishop and Dick Ostertag.
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Melissa Jones, Katie O’Donnell, Kyle Kark and Mark Hack.
Shelby Schulten and Erica and Hailey Heishman.
Mimi and Jerry Sims and Steve and Pip Clarke.
Greg Schoenbaechler and Jackie Condin.
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Party in Dufflandia Kathy and Kent Oyler celebrated their 30th year living on Duff Lane by hosting a party they dubbed “Party in Dufflandia” on October 3.
Renee and George Willett, John Hundley and Frank and Heather Jemley.
Allen and Michelle Hertzman with Brian Mills.
Event hosts Kathy and Kent Oyler.
Ghislain d’Humières and Vicki Diaz.
Paula Grisanti, Brad Broecker and Libby Parkinson.
Joanne O’Malley, Derek Small and Ceci Boden.
Angela and Danny Tafel and Babs Robinson.
Maryanne and Tommy Elliott, Rebecca Brown, John Y. Brown III and Steve Hanson.
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Woo Speed McNaughton and Colin McNaughton.
Brenda Balcombe, Davis and Jane Harcourt.
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PHOTOS BY BILL WINE | CONTRIBUTING PHOTOGRAPHER
The Blackacre State Nature Preserve and Historic Homestead held its Blackacre Bash on October 3. Guests were treated to bluegrass music, food trucks and beer. Featured musical guests were The Sugarbeats, Rebecca Minnick and Leigh Ann Yost.
Blackacre board members Cindy Weaver; Doug Weaver, treasurer; Joellen Johnson, secretary; A. Dale Josey, executive director; Steve Kerrick, chair; and Sharon Kerrick.
Volunteers Nick Morgan and Brandt Coleman.
Pamela Emerson with Debbie and Victor Emerson.
Chris Walls and Rebecca Minnick.
Rebecca Minnick.
Janie and Harvey Kinniard.
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Volunteer Cherry Kelly, Blackacre Executive Director A. Dale Josey and Program and Office Manager Roseanne Green.
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Blackacre Barn Bash
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Matt Bevin Fundraiser Supporters of Matt Bevin’s candidacy for governor held a fundraiser at the home of Larry Bisig.
Larry Bisig, Matt Bevin, Andrea Forshee and Judge Dana Horton.
Matt Bevin and his running mate Jenean Hampton.
Cameron Reid, Baylee Horn and Nicholas Sehlinger.
Mary Phil Bisig and John Treitz.
Matt Bevin and Yulia Morozova.
Joe Grove, Ed Kupper, Greg Metzger, Larry Bisig, Cameron Reid and Scott Reid.
Matt Bevin and Dan Santos.
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Mark and Janice Whitworth with Laura and State Representative Jerry Miller.
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P H OTO S B Y J O H N H A R R A L S O N | T H E V O I C E -T R I B U N E V E T E R A N P H OTO G R A P H E R
Dan Santos, Gary Brown and Greg Metzger. Candidate for Lt. Governor Jenean Hampton and Kevin and Alice Carnes.
Ben Metzger, Greg Metzger and Lincoln Bisig.
P H OTO S B Y J O H N H A R R A L S O N | T H E V O I C E -T R I B U N E V E T E R A N P H 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 • O C T O B E R 8 , 2 0 1 5
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Douglas Dreisbach, Joe Grove and Michael Swansburg.
S O C I E TY
Art and Film – Oh – and Dufflandia ART SHOW PREVIEW PARTY
named their home Dufflandia.
CASA (Court Appointed Special Advocates) of the River Region is a wonderful non-profit organization. Since 1985 they have trained community volunteers to be the “voice” for abused and neglected children. CASA receives no governmental support and depends “on the generosity of others” to supply the funds they need to keep operating.
As the head honcho of GLI, Kent knows lots and lots of diverse people. Kathy is quite a volunteer force around town and does networking to a fare-thewell too. So you can only imagine the mix of the crowd that gathered at their home last Saturday.
Partyline CARLA SUE BROECKER
Each year they have held a unique event – a St. James Court Art Show preview party. On the Thursday evening before the art show opens on Friday, a group of invited artists put on a special exhibit of their work, which is for sale. CASA receives a percentage of the sale price.
Among the guests were Paula and Frank Harshaw, Libby and Don Parkinson, Carol and Bill Lomicka, Brenda Balcombe, Paula and Mike Grisanti, Ceci and Dale Boden, Margaret and Dan Woodside, Babs and Lee Robinson, Ben Small and Michael Judd and at least another hundred! LIFF
Last Thursday, the Annual Louisville International FestiThis year, the event was val of Film (LIFF) welcomed held in the multi-level lobby filmmakers and film-lovers of the beautiful Louisville from 25 countries including Palace Theatre. Thirty-five Argentina and Australia to artists showed their jewelthree days of screenings, eduMark Eliason helps his daughter, ry, paintings, sculptures and Summer Eliason Thurman, jewelry artist cational workshops and open extraordinaire, at her booth at the CASA fabrics, and a buffet of all dialogue with savvy audiencSt. James Art Show Preview Party. sorts of food was served all es. More than 100 films were over the place along with full screened at the Galt House, bars of libations. LG&E KU, Louisville Science Center, Louisville Free Public Brown-Forman, Kosair Charities, The Adam Jalil Library and Slugger Museum. Maamry Memorial Fund, Lenihan Sotheby’s, The Festival debuted in 2009 through the work Keller Williams, Barbara LaMaster, Sam Swope Auto Group, Bill and Carol Lomicka and Munich of founder Conrad Bachmann, who starred in Welding were the sponsors. Amy Wagner chaired “Tremors.” Bachmann was able to get together key members of the “Tremors” cast for the festithe event committee. val’s opening night and the 25th reunion of the film, which was screened at the Science Center. DUFFLANDIA Bachmann created the LIFF as a way to showcase Kathy and Kent Oyler have lived on Duff Lane emerging filmmakers while also spotlighting Louisfor 30 years and decided to have a party to cele- ville, his hometown. “I hope to make Louisville the brate. Not that they haven’t had lots of wonderful ‘Cannes on the Ohio,’” Bachmann says. parties in years gone by. But, this was a special one – and what a whopper it was. For the evening, they
The festival has grown each year and now includes 3D films, animated features, documenta-
Conrad Bachmann, LIFF Founder; Finn Carter; Michael Gross; Charlotte Stewart; and Robert Jayne at the showing of “Tremors” on the opening night of the film festival.
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ry features and shorts, horror features and shorts as well as feature-length films Notable past features include “The Burning Plain” starring Louisville native Jennifer Lawrence. SOUND BEGINNINGS Heuser Hearing & Language Academy announced that it will hold its annual Sam Swope Sound Beginnings Breakfast on Tuesday, November 17 at 8 a.m. This annual popular event to raise funds for the area’s only preschool for hearing and communication-impaired students is pleased to have Louisville Orchestra Music Director Teddy Abrams as the honorary chairman of the event. The Academy has a close working relationship for its students with the orchestra and is pleased to have its dynamic new leader be a part of the breakfast presentation. VT For more information or to make reservations call 502.636.2084 or send a message to breakfast@thehearinginstitute.org.
Paula Harshaw and Lindy Street at the Oylers’ Dufflandia Party.
Maggie and Michael Faurest with Babs Robinson in the middle having a giggle.
Jan Corum, Carol Lomicka and Dan Schusterman at the St. James Art Show Preview Party.
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Gunnar Deatheridge and Lesley Rahner were two of the eight high-style designers that participated in Quatra4 to sell their wares and benefit Heuser Hearing & Language Academy at the Boat Club on September 26th.
COURTESY PHOTOS
•••
DEAR ABBY: I am a widow in my early 50s. While I was dating a prominent OB-GYN, I found out that he’s involved in criminal activity – operating a so-called “pill mill.” On our last date, he asked me to join an escort service he was starting.
DEAR ABBY: I wrote to you about my 97-year-old mother who was in failing health. My question was how to notify her out-of-state elderly friends with news of her passing when the time came. My I notified the medical board of the idea was to use her address book/ChristDear Abby state he’s practicing in and various govmas card list for addresses and then print ernment agencies. It amazes me that he a copy of her obituary with a short mesJEANNE is still practicing. He’s doing abortions, sage thanking those friends for their letwhich means he has access to vulnerable ters, cards and support during her life. PHILLIPS young women. Knowing this, I have lost You sent me back a note that positively trust in our medical establishment. Nothing seems to reinforced my idea. affect this man’s success and practice. My mother passed away earlier this year. I mailed I have given up and am moving far away. What the letters and received a response from almost every should I do? Have I done everything possible? This is single person. Each one thanked me for letting them obviously a very difficult situation for me. I am deeply know the sad news. With your encouragement, I was concerned about his patients. I’m getting therapy now able to handle this matter with respect and dignity. for my trust issues because of this experience. Is there Thank you so much. – GAYLE IN ARIZONA anything else I should be doing? – MS. X, SOMEDEAR GAYLE: You’re welcome. I occasionally WHERE IN THE USA hear from readers asking if people I have advised actuDEAR MS. X: Having notified the proper author- ally follow my advice. I’m pleased my encouragement ities about this man’s activities, you have done every- worked well for you. Thank you for letting us know. thing you can. The only thing left is for you to concen••• trate on healing yourself, and your therapist can help you with that. I wish you luck. DEAR ABBY: My boyfriend and I have been dat-
Nirenna Productions
S O C I E TY
Whistleblower Is Dismayed by Lack of Official Response ing for five years and have three wonderful children between us. Now, after a year of living together, we have begun to talk about marriage. We are happy, but we are introverted people and our main focus at this time is on raising our kids. This has left us with few friendships and only a couple of close family members. If we do decide to get married, I’m worried about how many people we would be able to invite or if there would even be enough people to be in the ceremony itself. Do you have any suggestions for this kind of situation? – SHY BRIDE IN KANSAS DEAR SHY BRIDE: Yes, I do. A wedding doesn’t have to be big and fancy to be beautiful and meaningful. That’s why I suggest you and your boyfriend be married quietly in a ceremony officiated by a justice of the peace or clergyperson of your choice. Ask your relatives and close friends to accompany you while you take your vows and have a small celebration afterward commensurate with your budget.
••• Dear Abby is written by Abigail Van Buren, also known as Jeanne Phillips, and was founded by her mother, Pauline Phillips. Contact Dear Abby at DearAbby.com or P.O. Box 69440, Los Angeles, CA 90069.
Barbecue
Thursday, October 15, 2015 4:00 P.M. - 6:30 P.M.
Open House Benefitting Senior Care Experts
Belmont Village Senior Living 4600 Bowling Blvd. Louisville, KY 40207
Please join us for delicious barbecue and cut a rug to live music by the Vinyl Kings. Enter our raffle for a chance to win great prizes and show your support for Senior Care Experts. $20 Raffle tickets for iPad Pro 16GB, donated by Belmont Village $10 Raffle tickets for 10 year-old Old Van Winkle Bourbon, donated by Preston Van Winkle 100% of raffle proceeds will go to Senior Care Experts. Donations are appreciated. RSVP to 502-721-7500.
belmontvillage.com PCL 100891 © 2015 Belmont Village, L.P.
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Home and BMW Raffle: PAGE Kosair Children’s Hospital 70
Life
SPOTLIGHT The Urban Bourbon Half Marathon will take place on October 24, taking runners through the streets of Louisville, including downtown and the Highlands neighborhoods. We caught up with president and CEO of the Louisville Sports Commission, Karl Schmitt Jr., to get the lowdown on this year’s event. The Urban Bourbon Half Marathon is fast approaching. Why has it been such a success in the past few years? This is the fifth year that we have owned and operated a half marathon and the second year that we have had the bourbon brand on it, which elicits some excitement. We have tried to create an experiential destination event. We have bourbon tastings the day before the event, and we have a VIP package where people can have a real bourbon experience as well. It’s actually a whole weekend event correct? Yes, it’s very much two parts. We have our half marathon, but we also have our Bourbon Bash on the Belvedere after the race. That’s where people can go and get a taste for bourbon and get a real experience. People last year reacted incredibly to it, and it was a great experience.
Urban Bourbon Half Marathon Louisville seems to be a place that attracts a lot of runners. We are going to attract around 3,000 runners, and we would love to get larger. We want to keep appealing to the local population who are training in the summer and in the fall and want to keep their fitness all year-round. But there are people all around the country who are runners for their own entertainment and healthy lifestyle. Many of them like to go to various destinations and have not only a great experience on the course but want to have fun off the course. There are destination events around the country, and the national public has responded extremely well to us. So what can people expect on race day? So you finish and cross the line, and there are people with bottle of water. Then, you go
to pick up your bananas and chocolate milk and that kind of stuff. But once you get through with that, people decide to go to the Bourbon Bash. There, we have bourbon tastings, Bearno’s Pizza, burgoo, Falls City beer and the Louisville Crashers. We are going to have people who can talk about all of the different bourbons that the racers are tasting. We really want to raise the knowledge aspect of the experience. And the racers all get a special medal that day, correct? This year is the second year that we have a medal that is truly unique. It’s shaped like a bottle of Evan Williams bourbon and is dipped signature black wax. It’s the only medal shaped like a libation and the only one with wax on it, which makes it really popular with half-marathon runners. For more information about the Urban Bourbon Half Marathon or to register for the race visit urbanbourbonhalf.com.
S A L AT- R I B I C H
ENGAGEMENT ANNOUNCEMENT
K
elly Marie Salat, daughter of Katherine and Robert Salat of Evansville, Indiana, will marry Timothy James Ribich, son of Marlene and Henry Ribich of Chicago, Illinois, on Saturday, September 17, 2016 at The Speed Art Museum in Louisville, Kentucky. The bride currently works as director of events for Marriott and is a University of Southern Indiana graduate. Meanwhile, the groom is director of services for Hilton and is a graduate of Moraine College. Following the couple’s nuptials next fall, they plan to settle down in Louisville, Kentucky.
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PHOTO BY BILL WINE | CONTRIBUTING PHOTOGRAPHER
Life
E
SPOTLIGHT
verybody knows that war can have horrible consequences and that those who return from it often bear enduring scars in their bodies and minds.
You’ll get an opportunity to help them this Saturday, October 10, at the third annual Tribute to Troops.
Contributing Writer WES KERRICK
Tribute to Troops Greenwell said his foundation has been working year-round to put together the event, and they’re expecting about 1,100 guests.
Troops brought in $122,000 for veterans; last year, it raised $154,000.
“If I can get you here and I can grab ahold of your heart and say, ‘Look, this is what we’re doing – you can see these people, and you can talk to a veteran and talk to their family and understand what they’re going through,’ you can’t wait to help. You can’t do enough.”
As some veterans struggle to transition from combat service to civilian employment, Patton’s organization helps them pay for necessities like food and utilities and helps rescue them from impending evictions or foreclosures.
Starting at 6 p.m., you’ll be welcomed beneath a vast tented area at Titan Marine, 1430 N. Highway 1793 in Prospect.
It’s all about bringing together civilians, active-duty military members and veterans, whether they just came home or they served back in World War II.
Then, at 7 p.m., about 130 soldiers and veterans from Ft. Knox will arrive via two Toby Tours buses. They’ll be escorted by the Oldham and Jefferson county sheriff ’s departments, the North Oldham Fire Department and as many as 100 motorcyclists with the Kentucky Patriot Guard Riders.
Guests will enjoy performances by local bands The Rumors, Famous on Friday and several singer-songwriters from Nashville, who will all be donating their time. Sysco Louisville and Tumbleweed will be pitching in to provide a dinner buffet.
“We’re kind of treating it like a wedding, and they’re the guests of honor,” said Michael Greenwell, chairman of the Warrior Empowerment Foundation, the group that’s putting on the event. The proceeds from ticket sales will go entirely to helping veterans. Half will go to Radcliff, Ky.-based USA Cares, which gives emergency financial support to post-9/11 service members, veterans and their family members. The charity has 14 chapters across the country, but the funds from the event will be earmarked for the Kentucky-Indiana area. The Warrior Empowerment Foundation will spend the other half helping local veterans who don’t qualify for USA Cares programs. COURTESY PHOTOS
And an auction will feature some exciting merchandise – like a 22-yearold bottle of Pappy Van Winkle and a Rolling Stones-autographed electric guitar. Vacation packages will include a trip to St. George Island in Florida, worth $14,000. There’ll be spa packages, a Big Green Egg cooker and lots of gift cards. With nearly 20,000 square feet of covered space, the event will go on regardless of the weather. Every facet of Tribute to Troops, from billboards to facilities, has been donated. And no one on the Warrior Empowerment Foundation board takes a salary. In the event’s first two years, that generosity produced impressive results. In 2013, Tribute to
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“We’re very fortunate to be involved,” said Hank Patton, executive director of USA Cares.
“In many cases, the wolf ’s at the door,” he said. That’s why USA Cares accepts applications for assistance 24/7 and responds within 48 hours. Once the veteran’s needs are verified, USA Cares makes payments to mortgage lenders, utility companies and other vendors. The organization also assists veterans dealing with injuries, whether obvious or in the more subtle forms of traumatic brain injury or post-traumatic stress. And it helps veterans find sustainable civilian careers. “I am absolutely honored and blessed to be able to help,” Patton said. “When I served as an officer in the United States Army, I had to take care of folks. That was my first mission. The opportunity to continue to help them … is a blessing beyond belief.” As Greenwell prepares the grounds for the event, he reflects on a life full of experiences and connections that seem to have all led to this. He hails from a line of service members. And his company, Titan Marine, is a Department of Defense contractor. Through that work, he’s made friends with many men and women in uniform and been a close witness to the challenges they face. “It was time to give back,” he said. “I’ve been in business for 32 years now, and I know God didn’t put me here to fix boats.” VT Tickets are $30 in advance or $35 the day of the event. For more information about the Warrior Empowerment Foundation or to purchase tickets, visit wefoundationky.org/events. For more information about USA Cares, visit usacares.org. W W W . V O I C E -T R I B U N E . C O M • O C T O B E R 8 , 2 0 1 5
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Favorite Things Boutique 617 Main St. • Shelbyville, Ky. 40065 • 502.647.2111 525 Washington St. • Shelbyville, Ky. 40065 • 502.633.4382 favoritethingsboutique
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NATIONAL COUNCIL JEWISH WOMEN, LOUISVILLE SECTION NATIONAL NATIONAL COUNCIL COUNCILOF OF OF JEWISH JEWISH WOMEN, LOUISVILLE SECTION SECTION NATIONAL COUNCIL OFWOMEN, JEWISH LOUISVILLE WOMEN, LOUISVILLE SECTION ANNOUNCES ANNOUNCES ANNOUNCES ANNOUNCES
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LIFE
The Grimanti Sandwich.
T
Over the Moon for Over the 9
here’s no question it was a risk to open Over the 9. Located in the same building as Old 502 Winery and Falls City Brewery, the restaurant sits on 10th Street between Main and Market, and, as Executive Chef Griffin Paulin puts it, the eatery is “sort of a welcome stop to Portland.”
are no tablecloths; we’re not resetting your silverware; we’re not standing in the corner watching your every move. But that’s cool; there’s a place for that. It’s just not what we’re trying to do.”
The restaurant was founded with the central concept operating around Tastes the wine and beer created in the building. “They really wanted to do REMY food that paired well with the wine SISK and beer,” Paulin says of Over the 9’s development. “Rather than tailor the wine and beer to the food, they wanted to do it the There is certainly a stigma to the Portland other way.” neighborhood that deters Louisvillians from headThe menu features what Paulin describes as ing west and exploring. However, a handful of pub grub, but upscale pub grub that highlights business and developers are looking to change either the wine or beer or both. “Every dish that, and Over the 9 is one of the first onboard. that comes out of the kitchen incorporates Falls “We really want to revitalize Portland as opposed City beer or Old 502 wine in some way,” he to completely change Portland, which wouldn’t says. “Whether it’s being braised in the red wine help anybody,” Paulin asserts. or we’re doing a reduction, there’s one of their Over the 9 is a raw yet upscale restaurant with products in every dish.” raw wooden tables and a beautiful concrete bar. Though Paulin resists calling the place a gastropub, that is indeed what it is – and an excellent one at that. “We just want people to be comfortable here,” he contends. “We’re not fussy. There W W W . V O I C E -T R I B U N E . C O M • O C T O B E R 8 , 2 0 1 5
For example, they offer nachos, but they’re lamb nachos with a thick and savory beer cheese blended with lamb and lamb chicharrones and topped with chimicurri and pico de gallo with fried wontons – in place of tortilla chips – piled
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atop a smear of smoked mustard on the side. And the beer that makes the cheese beer cheese? None other than one of Falls City’s brews. The nachos are absolutely incredible, as was the chef ’s bison burger, which was served on a brioche bun and topped with fig jam, lamb fat aioli, white cheddar and lettuce and tomato. The jam made the burger delightfully sweet, while the aioli added a tasty rich finish. The emerging signature item, however, is the Grimanti, a take on the Primanti Brothers’ sandwich of Pittsburgh. The sandwich piles housemade pastrami, Swiss cheese, lamb fat aioli, red cabbage slaw, arugula, roasted garlic, Serrano
The bison burger.
P H O T O S B Y H A N N A H K R I L L A N D M A L I S S A K O E B E L | T H E V O I C E -T R I B U N E
The bar program is also topnotch. In addition to the Old 502 wines and Falls City beers, the libations are creative and enticing. The Bourbon Barrel Sangria is a local take on a classic, mixing Old 502 Bourbon Barrel Red with Copper & Kings Aged Brandy, strawberries, cherries and blueberries. Meanwhile, the Through the Roots is perfectly refreshing. It blends vodka with muddled cucumber, purple heirloom carrots, mint and a syrup made from seaweed, cucumber and cayenne. It’s hard to imagine the menu getting much better, but that’s just what Paulin plans to do. In the next month or so, he’ll be rolling out a menu that keeps the aforementioned favorites but adds even more unusual yet delectable dishes. He looks forward to unveiling a ravioli dish with bison tongue and goat cheese, for example. He’s also been experimenting with curing meats, and if the spicy and savory capicola I was able to try is any indication, he can look forward to much success in that endeavor.
Bourbon Barrel Sangria with freshly-cured capicola.
MONDAY
Domestic Beers $1.75
TUESDAY
Well Drinks $3.00
WEDNESDAY Jim Beam $3.75
THURSDAY
Imports 75¢ OFF Jack Daniels $3.75
SUNDAY NFL TICKET
KITCHEN OPEN ‘TIL 3AM
1250 Bardstown Rd • 502.451.0659 www.thebackdoorlouisville.com
B. Deemer Gallery Fine art • Fine framing
Beyond the upcoming new menu, Paulin just hopes more people will give a place west of Ninth Street a chance. He admits it’s been hard getting people through the door since the July opening but that business has consistently been improving over the past two months. “Hopefully we just continue to get busier and people keep coming in to check out what we’re doing,” he expresses. “And hopefully, we can bring the neighborhood up with us.” Yes, Over the 9 was a risk. Is the city ready to open its mind to the more western blocks? I, for one, certainly hope so as Over the 9’s laid-back atmosphere and unbelievable food has proved it to be a risk that was worth taking. VT Over the 9 is located at 120 S. 10th Street, Louisville, KY 40202. For more information call 502. 252.6671 or visit www.gooverthe9.com.
30 YEARS IN THE ORIGINAL HIGHLANDS!
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peppers and house-shaved French fries on ciabatta bread. Tangy and savory, the sandwich is deliciously imaginative, bursting with flavor from the myriad of components that each add their own unique zing.
“Chaco,” an Exhibit of recent works by
Anne Wehrley Björk September 12 - October 20
The Through the Roots cocktail with the lamb nachos.
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2650 Frankfort Avenue Open Mon-Fri 10:00-5:30 Sat 10:00-3:00
www.bdeemer.com W W W . V O I C E -T R I B U N E . C O M • O C T O B E R 8 , 2 0 1 5
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The Great Outdoors On Your Doorstep
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acres. While falling short, the forometimes, it’s just est still stands at a mammoth great to get outside 6,500 acres and stretches nearly and leave it all behind. 10 miles from east to west with 35 Whether it’s pitching a tent miles of trails inside of it. in the wilderness, grabbing a We decided to get on the backpack to go explore some Out & About Memorial Trail – a reasonably wooded trails, or perhaps short, but nevertheless adventureven going fishing, there’s ous affair. Like many of Jefferson IGOR nothing quite like getting GURYASHKIN Memorial Forest’s trails, this one is found on inclined terrain with out into the great outdoors. paths carved into pine coated slopes. When Well, all of the aforementioned activyou get to the trail, you’re usually rewarded ities can be done at Louisville’s own with a view overlooking the hills that stretch Jefferson Memorial Forest – the beyond or faced with the vast expanse of the largest urban municipal forest in the creeks below. Either way, the views are stunUnited States and only 25 minutes ning. If you want to take a longer trail that from downtown Louisville. To get a traverses much of the forest’s width, then the Siltstone trail is your best bet. feel for the forest, we here at The But if slopes are not quite your thing, why Voice-Tribune decided to spend a not take a walk around the seven-acre Tom recent afternoon exploring the scenWallace lake? With the afternoon sun beatery that this park has to offer. ing down on the rippling water, it’s dazzling, The first thing you notice when you get close to the park and glance at your car’s GPS is how big it is. Back in 1946, when the plan was to create a forest and nature reserve to honor the soldiers who fell during the Second World War, the aim was 10,000 O C T O B E R 8 , 2 0 1 5 • W W W . V O I C E -T R I B U N E . C O M
turtle trying to make its way up one of the slopes. But elsewhere in the forest – which has been designated as an Audubon Wildlife Sanctuary – visitors can catch glimpses of bobcats, red foxes, horned owls and plen-
and, best of all, extremely peaceful as you watch fisherman try to nab a catch of the day, or walkers circling the trails along the lake with their dog. One of the best things about the forest is the fact that there is plenty of wildlife to be seen. On our visit, we stumbled across a
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ty of white tail deer. The fact that it’s a public park and a working nature reserve means that Jefferson Memorial is also a bustling location for school parties, educational programs, scout troops and team-building exercises. Go Ape!, the forest’s outdoor adventure facility that takes visitors into the tall trees on zip lines, Tarzan swings and rope ladders is an exciting option, but more sedate activities such as camping and fishing are permitted and encouraged with the right permit. In regards to upcoming activities, the forest will host a Stone Age Tools event on Saturday, October 10, which, for $15 per person, will teach visitors how to make and use Stone Age tools while offering the chance to preview private artifacts on loan from the William S. Webb Museum of Anthropology at the University of Kentucky. Regardless of what strikes your personal interest, get down to the Jefferson Memorial Forest today and enjoy the outdoors that is so much more accessible than you think. VT Jefferson Memorial Forest is located at 11311 Mitchell Hill Rd, Fairdale, KY 40118. For more information visit louisvilleky.gov/government/jefferson-memorial-forest
L A R G E S T
WITHIN 100 MILES
FALL SEASON OPEN NOW THROUGH OCTOBER 31 ST Saturday 11am - Dark Sunday Noon - 6pm Or by appointment Office 812.952.1629 Cell 502.807.5601 deerefarms.com
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A Home Built with Love and Generosity
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Commons measures 1,970 square ouisville prides itself feet, with an open plan ground floor on being one of the where the dining and living room most generous cities area meets seamlessly with the kitchin the nation, always ready en and living room area. And for to come together around a the past two years, the construction cause at any time of year and of the house has come down to The Homes Ramage Company, and this year is at the drop of a hat. Well, one no different as founder and president of the most exciting contests IGOR for a cause in recent years has GURYASHKIN David Ramage explains. “We have got a great team who been the raffling of a brand know how much Kosair Children’s Hospital new house to benefit Kosair Children’s does for our community, and we would like to Hospital. The drawing of this year’s be able to help them out as much as possible,” raffle, limited to 8,000 tickets, will take explains Ramage. Ramage collaborated with place on November 21 at the annual Leslie Cotter Dorazil, owner of Leslie Cotter Snow Ball gala in aid of the hospital, Interiors, who was taking part in her first Kosair with other prizes including a brand Children’s Hospital. new BMW 2 Series courtesy of Sam “I’ve worked with David for a number of Swope as well as $10,000 in cash. The years, but this is the first time that I have been most remarkable aspect is of course involved with the Kosair Children’s Hospital that members of the community come house,” explains Cotter Dorazil. “It’s been an incredible experience, and I think we all worked together to build the home, donating really well as a team. We created a really great their time, money and resources. transitional interior that complements the archi-
“There is a little bit of a coastal influence and I think that’s why we kept things very light,” explains Cotter Dorazil. “It’s bright and airy. But I think a house should also make you smile. Upstairs, there are some oversize prints of a cow, and they make me smile.”
Adds Ramage: “We start with a design schematic, but then we partner with C3 Studio out of Knoxville and they help us put the finishing touches on the design and add a lot of detail that helps the overall product. I think this year, it’s even more open than in year’s past. We also have a covered back porch where you can access
tecture that David and his team implemented.
The stunning three-bedroom and two-anda-half bathroom home on the edge of Norton O C T O B E R 8 , 2 0 1 5 • W W W . V O I C E -T R I B U N E . C O M
In terms of style, the design team gave the home a nautical theme.
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the entertaining space that’s covered, while there is also an open patio behind it, which makes the whole house conducive to entertaining.” One thing that’s for certain is that the house is a chance to keep on uniting the community for an unassailable cause – the health and well-being of the children in the Commonwealth – of which there is little doubt that Kosair Children’s Hospital plays a huge part. “I think the house is such a great symbol of how the community comes together to promote the work of the hospital,” explains Lynnie Meyer, system vice president of Women's and Children's Community Partnerships and chief development
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officer at Norton Healthcare. “Each year we pick a different clinical focus, and, this year, the proceeds from the raffle and the sale of the house will benefit our cardiac program. And so this gives us a chance to not only really showcase their work but also talk about the value and power of a full-service children’s hospital in the state and what it means to the Commonwealth. These extraordinary clinical activities don’t happen without philanthropy and help from the community.” VT Raffle tickets are still available at kosairchildrenshospital. com/Pages/purchase-home-bmw-raffle.aspx. An open home takes place at the property at 6501 St. Bernadette Ave. Prospect, KY every Saturday and Sunday from Noon to 6 p.m. W W W . V O I C E -T R I B U N E . C O M • O C T O B E R 8 , 2 0 1 5
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No One Expected These Festivals to Come from Underneath! Film BENNETT DUCKWORTH
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bennettduckworth.blogspot.com
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.
ast Thursday, it was my pleasure to visit the Louisville Science Center, where actor Conrad Bachmann, in collaboration with the J. Wagner Group, launched the seventh annual Louisville International Film Festival. “[It was] Something I wanted to do for my hometown,” says Bachmann. “We benefit several charities; we’re 501(C)(3). We benefit the Jefferson County School System [and] Heuser Hearing Institute. We have about 35 to 40 countries that have attended the festival.” The opening night was of some personal importance to Bachmann, who, 25 years ago, was part of a very special Universal Pictures B-movie that went on to become a cult hit. The film was the 1990 light-horror movie “Tremors,” wherein along with Kevin Bacon and Fred Ward, he had a role as a member of small remote desert town falling under – or should I say, over – attack from large underground killer worms that spring up from the dirt and devour people. Bachmann, in the role of the town’s doctor, is one of the film’s earliest victims. In honor of the anniversary, Bachmann assembled four other members of the cast to meet and greet fans of the film. Robert Jayne, who played Melvin, the town’s unsupervised prankster-kid was there, as was Charlotte Stewart, who played the friendly town mother. Finn Carter, who was RhonO C T O B E R 8 , 2 0 1 5 • W W W . V O I C E -T R I B U N E . C O M
da, the visiting geologist (and love interest to Kevin Bacon’s character) was all-smiles, and Michael Gross, who immediately followed playing the dad on “Family Ties” with his “Tremors” fan-favorite role of eccentric-survivalist, Burt, was the center of attention that night. Gross was also there to promote a film in the festival he made titled “Our Father.” “I’m a Chicagoan by birth, but I came to Actors Theatre of Louisville for three years right out of drama school,” says Gross. “So Louisville was where I had my first professional work as an actor, and I loved it here. I just took a tour of the theatre today; I maybe hadn’t been in the theatre for three decades, and it was a real joy. It was like coming home.” Gross reflected on what it meant to have landed the role. “After seven years on ‘Family Ties,’ the big question was, well, would I work in something else again, and what character would it be. So, thank God, ‘Tremors’ answered that question on two counts: Yes, I would work again, and it could be a vastly different sort of character,” he says. Gross was a scene-stealer in this film, playing that kind of action character whose over the top fixation with weapons is, depending on the audience, either laughed at or with. “He was so marvelously obsessive compulsive,” says Gross of his character, “and paranoid in the most comic sense of the word. I actually bought a certain amount of survivalist literature … Things like ‘Improvised Munitions’ … I thought, ‘Where do you put yourself in that mindset… of a man who trusts absolutely nothing?’” Veteran television and film actress Charlotte Stewart talked about her career surrounding a choice to venture out to Lone
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Pine, California to be in a movie about giant worms. “Well, I had been long-gone from ‘Little House on the Prairie,’ but I had just worked in the pilot for ‘Twin Peaks.’” In response to an immediate audience cheer, she then whispered, “We’re doing it again,” referring to the show’s upcoming resurrection for Showtime. Finn Carter took a lot of pride in having played a supporting-female who escaped the margins of uselessness, typical to many action movies of the time. Most of the film’s obstacles are overcome by her character’s solutions. She also insisted that the character who spent long days in the desert doing research didn’t have time to appear glamorous. Robert Jayne, who did a lot of sitcoms during the ’80s and ’90s, remembered the fun of being on a horror movie shoot. “Do everything with a full heart,” Jayne expresses to aspiring actors. He’s always regretted his unenthusiastic delivery of the line, “Way to go dudes” – which has become a highly sampled audio byte for novelty use to this day. I think we’re happy with the way he said it. “Tremors” has nostalgic value, but it reminds us of a time when gifted writers tried their hand in silly genres, providing more character than even the biggest movies often manage to accomplish today. Steward pushes this point. “What amazes me about every time I see this movie is how tight it was,” she says. “From the very first line, it goes and spirals and spirals and spirals to the very last line.” Considering the lack of financial or critical success during the theatrical release, its now-revered status is a testament to the schlock of yesteryear. Every actor who read the script saw the potential for a fun time. Last Thursday night, they were reminded again how right they were. VT
Breaking My St. James Curse
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time with my boyfriend and a friend. eaves are falling, the air is cooler and crispSince it was completely new to me, UnFair held the most surprises. While er, and the ubiquitous, positively microscopic when compared goodnaturedly derided aroma to the behemoth of St. James just a of pumpkin spice has begun block away, UnFair contained more to waft from homes and cofcharm and quirk per capita than I Arts & fee shops alike. It’s fall in thought possible. Pop culture referEntertainment ences made by local artists were the Louisville, Kentucky, and for most pervasive, but there was certainmany, that means one thing: BEN ly a panoply of different art styles to St. James Art Fair. The fair GIERHART be seen. I even found a reference to was founded in 1957, and, Frank Herbert’s “Dune” in a handlove it or hate it, it is an event that has some, hand-crafted, sandworm-featuring spice become deeply entrenched in Louis- rack. In a display of self-control that I did not know that I possessed, I did not buy it. It was quite ville’s identity. reasonably priced at $35, and I regret it.
“At first, it was to be an art exhibit only, although open to anyone wishing to enter an exhibit. The pictures were hung on a clothesline extending from tree to tree,” writes Marguerite Gifford regarding the fair’s humble origins in her 1966 history, “St. James Court in Retrospect.” The event has grown exponentially over the years and now spans an area of several square blocks, attracting artists from all over the country. This success, however, does have its drawbacks. Local artists, while still featured in the fair, have lost some opportunity as it has garnered more national attention, consequently diversifying the art on display but also undoubtedly raising prices of the pieces. One response to the issue is the Louisville UnFair. This St. James alternative was founded in 1997 by Paul Harshaw and Greg Edwards and sits prominently behind MagBar (because what self-respecting Louisvillian actually calls it Magnolia Bar & Grill?) as a way to feature only local artists with work for sale at affordable prices. When it first began, there was a sense of dueling art fairs, but things have since settled into a copacetic, nearly symbiotic relationship. Both fairs feed and sustain the other, giving the average Louisville art appreciator even more opportunity to add to his or her collection, no matter the taste.
After taking in UnFair, I moved on to St. James. I knew what I was getting into here, and it was just like coming home. I had done it. I’d broken my St. James curse! There was ambient pan flute music, savory food and all manners of incredible art to enjoy. After finding myself a deep-fried peanut butter and jelly sandwich, not even the intermittent drizzling could dampen my spirits. I found bonsai trees, hand-blown glass, art inspired by video games, portraits that paid homage to more classical styles of realism, art pieces crafted from old books, and modern fusions of art and science. When it was time to leave, I rode the free TARC Zerobus – the route of which had been extended to accommodate the fair – off into the sunset. It was an exciting few hours, and I wouldn’t give up either fair for anything in the world. It seems that Louisville has charms as plentiful and beautiful as the pieces in both art fairs, and I for one, cannot wait to see what the future brings. VT
Now that some of the local history is out of the way, I can speak of some of my own. Since moving to Louisville in 1999, my family and I made St. James an annual must. Perhaps a dozen of my relatives would come from out of town to go, and after we’d made our purchases, we’d return home for a well-deserved, piping hot bowl of my Uncle Carl’s homemade chili. It was like a prelude to Thanksgiving. I tell you this to illustrate how much this art show can mean to Louisville families and how satisfying it was for me – after a seven year curse of being unable to attend – to return to St. James and check out UnFair for the first time, this PHOTO BY TIM VALENTINO
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event calendar
to submit your event, visit www.voice-tribune.com
THIS WEEK’S VOICE CHOICE WIGS ON TAP
If you are over 21 and into having a good time for a great cause, you are invited to don a wig, round up your friends and join the annual “Wigs on Tap” party, a lighthearted event benefiting the men, women, teens and children who seek social and emotional cancer support at Gilda’s Club. Highlights include more than just blonde streaks at this party. You’ll be able to dance to the soulful music of the Zach Longoria Project, compete for prizes in the Best Wig Contest, enjoy cocktails and heavy appetizers, and network with philanthropists of all ages. The event takes place at 7 p.m. on Thursday, October 8 at Copper & Kings, and tickets are $40 and include two drink tickets and food. Designated driver tickets are $20. All proceeds benefit Gilda’s Club Louisville. MORE INFO wigsontap.org
T H U R S DAY, O C T O B E R 8
F R I DAY, O C T O B E R 9
“THE IMPORTANCE OF BEING EARNEST” PRESENTED BY WALDEN THEATRE/BLUE APPLE PLAYERS Walden Theatre/Blue Apple Players is pleased to open this 40th Anniversary Season with Oscar Wilde’s “The Importance of Being Earnest,” one of the best comedies in the English language. The production features a talented cast of Conservatory students working alongside staff member Neill Robertson in a show guaranteed to delight and entertain. A brilliant farce of the highest order by a writer at the peak of his ability, this uproarious “trivial comedy for serious people” features double lives, dalliances and discovered identity – all while savaging the social mores of the Victorian era and questioning the pursuit of love itself. The show will take place on the Nacy Siles Sexton Stage at Walden Theatre, 1123 Payne St. through October 17. MORE INFO 502.589.0084 or boxoffice@waldentheatre.org
YUM! BRANDS RED VS. BLUE HUNGER “DRIVE-THRU” Yum! Brands, Inc. is celebrating its 18th anniversary as a company, and it’s more apparent than ever before that they truly are feeding the world. As part of that vision, they want to be a company with a huge heart. That’s why, once again, they will host their End Hunger DriveThru to celebrate 18 years as a company with a very special challenge. On Friday, October 9 – commemorating the official founding on October 7, 1997 – this open to the public event will host a UofL vs. UK Canned Good Competition, the J-Town HS Marching Band, Trinity High School Cheer Team, St. X Cheer Team, CenterStage cast-members from “Oliver!,” Chris P. Chicken, music and much more fun at the Yum! Brands Campus! Popular Kentucky sports radio show host Matt Jones will be LIVE on Campus from 10 a.m. to noon, and Talk Radio 1080 “Afternoon Underdogs,” hosted by Cardinal FANatic, Tony Vanetti and Dave Jennings, will be live from 3 p.m. to 5:30 p.m. carrying on the can drive competition. All listeners/fans are welcome to come, listen, ask questions and bring cans! Cheer on your Cardinals or Wildcats, wear red or blue and bring a can or two! The event will take place at 1441 Gardiner Lane – White House front parking lot. MORE INFO 502.874.8200
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 O C T O B E R 8 , 2 0 1 5 • W W W . V O I C E -T R I B U N E . C O M
BLUEGRASS CENTER FOR AUTISM CASINO GAME NIGHT BCA, a local Louisville non-profit organization providing specialized education to children and young adults with autism, will be partnering with Kosair Charities to host a casino game night fundraiser. This “All in for Autism” evening will consist of casino games (including blackjack, roulette and a high-stakes poker table), hors d’oeuvres, cocktails, a silent auction and multiple raffles while taking place at the Louisville
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Water Tower. All proceeds will go to BCA and the children that directly benefit from their services. Tickets, which include valet parking, are $100 each and can be purchased online. MORE INFO all-in-for-autism.org/#winner
S AT U R DAY, O C T O B E R 1 0 HUMANA PRESENTS FEAST ON EQUALITY 5K FOR LGBT INITIATIVES AT UOFL The second annual Feast on Equality 5K presented by Humana will take place on October 10 at 9 a.m. at Hogan’s Fountain in Cherokee Park. Registration for the event is $25 and is open through October 3. Costumes are encouraged for this festive fall run, and participants at all levels of experience are welcome. HumanaVitality members are eligible for 250 Vitality Points and HumanaVitality members age 17 or younger will be awarded 50 Vitality Points. All proceeds from the 5K will go directly to the Feast on Equality fund in order to provide ongoing support for LGBT students at the University of Louisville. Many LGBT students lose family and financial support when they come out of the closet and are at a greater risk of dropping out of school. The LGBT Center works to strengthen and sustain an inclusive campus community at the University of Louisville, one that welcomes people of all sexual orientations, gender identities and gender expressions through support, educational resources and advocacy. MORE INFO feastonequality.com THE GREAT CHILI COOK-OFF The Chili Council is excited to keep the locally loved Phoenix Hill tradition alive and cooking showcasing the city-wide love of great chili! The 25-year-old competition has been an open casting call to all home cooks. This year, there will also be a Chef Competition category as well as the honorable Home Cook category! The
NIGHT SKY VIEWING PARTY AT NORTON COMMONS Under an October night sky at the Norton Commons lakefront amphitheater, the University of Louisville Rauch planetarium staff and the Louisville Astronomical Society will hold a tour of the universe and offer stargazing opportunities and tips. The event is completely open to the public and free of charge. Telescopes will be set up throughout the tiered steps of the amphitheater, providing an interactive educational event. Dr. Tom Tretter, director of the UofL Gheens Science Hall and Rauch Planetarium will be on hand for an exciting presentation about stargazing and a mach speed tour of the universe. The Saturday, October 10 free event begins at 7:30 p.m. and will end at 9 p.m. Visitors should pack their own blankets and lawn chairs. Food trucks will be available. The amphitheater is located at 10712 Meeting St. in Prospect. MORE INFO louisville.edu/planetarium
M O N DAY O C T O B E R 1 2 IF WATER 2015 The Fourth Annual IF Water event, presented by the Louisville Water Foundation, will be held Monday from 5:30 p.m. to 8:30 p.m. at the Louisville Water Tower Park and Museum, 3005 River Road. The evening will feature an intriguing presentation and thought-provoking conversation led by Dr. Wallace J. Nichols – scientist, marine biologist and author of The New York Times best seller “Blue Mind.” Special guest Bill Samuels from Maker’s Mark will also address the importance of Kentucky’s water sources as they relate to the history and making of our native spirit – bourbon. Tickets are $35 and include heavy hors d’oeuvres and a cash bar. MORE INFO ifwater.net
F R I DAY, O C T O B E R 1 6 BUCKHEAD MOUNTAIN GRILL GOES PINK MAMMOGRAPHY SCREENING A mobile mammography screening is set for Friday at Buckhead Mountain Grill on Bardstown Road. The screening is available to women
age 40 and older, with no cost to those without insurance (insurance will be filed through UofL Hospital). Screening on the mobile van is provided by James Graham Brown Cancer Center from 9 a.m. to 4 p.m. The event is cosponsored by Buckhead Mountain Grill and the Kentucky Cancer Program (KCP). Buckhead is holding a “Pink Out” throughout the day to raise breast cancer awareness. The restaurant will offer pink cocktails and discounted meals and coupons to women who are screened. Appointments for the screening can be made by calling the KCP. MORE INFO 502.852.6318 “THE ADDAMS FAMILY” PRESENTED BY ACTING AGAINST CANCER Acting Against Cancer presents the first show of their 2015-16 season: the new musical comedy “The Addams Family.” Just in time for Halloween, America’s spookiest family takes the stage in an uproarious musical based on the classic Charles Addams cartoons. Bring your whole family and join the Addams gang as usually morose Wednesday brings home a boyfriend to meet her father Gomez, mother Morticia, brother Pugsley, Uncle Fester, butler Lurch and zany Grandma. The night that ensues is one no one ever could have expected and will leave the audience in stitches. The show runs through October 25 in The MeX Theater of The Kentucky Center for the Performing Arts. Tickets are $19. Profits benefit the art therapy program of The Addison Jo Blair Cancer Care Center at Kosair Children’s Hospital. MORE INFO actingagainstcancer.com
S AT U R DAY, O C T O B E R 1 7 COLORFEST AT BERNHEIM FOREST There isn’t a better place to enjoy fall’s splendor than at Bernheim, and there are a ton of ways to do that in October, including ColorFest, Bernheim’s annual fall festival on Saturday, October 17 and Sunday, October 18. ColorFest is two days of affordable family fun surrounded by fall’s spectacular beauty. Visitors can test their skills at the pumpkin launch, navigate a hay maze, make mud pies and enjoy a hayride in the splendor of Bernheim’s colorful landscape. Other highlights include live music, hands-on nature activities, unique local foods and Kentucky arts and craft vendors. ColorFest is from 10 a.m. to 5 p.m. on both Saturday and Sunday. This year’s festivities will be located throughout the Visitor Center and Edible Garden. There is no cost to attend, but non-members are required to pay a $5 per car environmental fee at the gate, and there is a small fee to purchase pumpkins for the launch. MORE INFO bernheim.org
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COMMEDIENNE PAULA POUNDSTONE BRINGS LAUGHS TO THE KENTUCKY CENTER’S BOMHARD THEATER Thirty-two years ago, Paula Poundstone climbed on a Greyhound bus and traveled 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 on Saturday, October 17 at 8 p.m. Tickets are $35. MORE INFO kentuckycenter.org/presents SECOND ANNUAL FRIED CHICKEN THROWDOWN The Second Annual Fried Chicken Throwdown, sponsored by Peerless Distilling Company, will be held on Saturday from noon to 5 p.m. at the new ReSurfaced lot at 10th Street and the Ohio River in downtown Louisville. This sustainability-inspired culinary competition will award cash prizes of $500 to the Best Chicken, Best Side and Best Dessert, and the winners will be selected by ballot voting amongst the attendees. Admission to the event is free, and tastes will be sold for $3 for chicken and $2 for sides and desserts. All proceeds will benefit Slow Food Bluegrass’ Garden Grant Program. Participating restaurants will include Royals Hot Chicken, Wiltshire on Market, Joella’s Hot Chicken, Farm to Fork, Over the 9, Roux, Marketplace, Gilberto Gelato and others. The Fried Chicken Throwdown will be one of the exclusive events to take place at the new Resurfaced lot, which will be activated for three days only, October 15-17, 2015. The ReSurfaced movement is meant to illustrate the economic potential and benefit of incrementally activating currently unproductive spaces while creating a more vibrant downtown. MORE INFO slowfoodbluegrass.org
T U E S DAY, O C T O B E R 2 0 FRANCIS FORD COPPOLA WINE DINNER AT VARANESE Varanese Restaurant, located at 2106 Frankfort Av., will host the Francis Ford Coppola Wine Dinner with a reception at 6:30 p.m. and dinner at 7 p.m. The evening will feature guest speaker Dave Razzano, Ohio Valley regional manager for Francis Ford Coppola Winery, and a six-course dinner paired with various wines from the environmentally friendly vineyard. The cost is $65 per person, plus tax and gratuity. Reservations are required. MORE INFO 502.899.9904 or letsdine@ varanese.com W W W . V O I C E -T R I B U N E . C O M • O C T O B E R 8 , 2 0 1 5
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Chili Council is a team of local business owners who did not want to see this long standing event burn-out, so they are taking it up a notch to present The Great Chili Cook-Off at another locally loved spot, The Belvedere, where they can feed the masses and help feed those who go to bed hungry! The event will last from 11 a.m. to 6 p.m., and proceeds will benefit Dare to Care Food Bank. MORE INFO 502.744.7743
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CLASSIFIEDS MAY BE PLACED BY CALLING 502.897.8900 OR EMAILING CIRC@VOICE-TRIBUNE.COM
EMPLOYMENT
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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 502-425-3131 or email to ryager@hjcocpas. com.
Organic garden maintenance. Fall cleanup, winter prep, transplanting, mulching, all garden needs. The Constant Gardener 502-762-6116 clements.joey@yahoo. com
Pick-up/Delivery Drivers Part Time
Individual needed part-time to deliver & pick up customer vehicles.Candidate should be flexible, dependable and have a good driving record. Must be at least 21 years of age (DOT required). CDL required. If interested, please apply in person or submit your resume to:
Monroe Truck Equipment, Inc. 4001 Collins Lane Louisville, KY 40245 Fax: (502)426-0909 hrlouisville@monroetruck.com Applications available at www.monroetruck.com EOE/M/F/Vet/Disabled
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
The following will be sold at Tony’s Wrecker Service, 12203 Westport Rd. 426-4100 to recover towingstorage fees on Oct. 8th 2015 at 8 a.m. Titles not warranted. Seller reserves the right to bid, 87 Ford 1FTBR10T7HUA24640 Owner Lonnie Yeager
“I’m Alive... because of organ donation!” Say YES when you renew your license.
LEGAL 2000, Lincoln, Navigator VIN: 5LMFU28A9YLJ33060 MSGP @ 815 Lisbon Avenue, Louisville, KY 40222 is applying for title in satisfaction of Mechanics lein for work performed on Vehicle.
Megan,Transplant Recipient
VACATION RENTALS Gatlinburg. 1 bedroom villa. Mountain loft. October 30-September 6. Mountain View. $500/week. Call 502-553-2969.
www.trustforlife.org
Supported by
866-945-5433
REAL ESTATE Townhouse in Cardinal Harbor for rent approx. 2600 sq feet. 2-3 bedroom, river view, $1500 per month. Currently under renovation. 407-4081340.
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Classified AD POLICIES AND RATES
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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
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IN THE SUPERIOR COURT OF THE STATE OF WASHINGTON IN AND FOR THE COUNTY OF PIERCE JUVENILE DEPARTMENT THE STATE OF WASHINGTON TO:
1. CRYSTAL BURNETT, mother, of NEVAEH L. BURNETT; DOB: 8/7/09; Cause No. 15-7-01558-7; A Petition to Terminate Parental Rights was filed on 7/30/15. 2. CRYSTAL BURNETT, mother, of MYRA LEANN BURNETT; DOB: 12/6/07; Cause No. 15-7-01557-9; A Petition to Terminate Parental Rights was filed on 7/30/15. A Fact Finding hearing will be held on this matter on: October 21, 2015 at 8:30 a.m. at Pierce County Family and Juvenile Court, 5501 6th Avenue, Tacoma, WA 98406. YOU SHOULD BE PRESENT AT THIS HEARING. THE HEARING WILL DETERMINE IF YOUR PARENTAL RIGHTS TO YOUR CHILD ARE TERMINATED. IF YOU DO NOT APPEAR AT THE HEARING THE COURT MAY ENTER AN ORDER IN YOUR ABSENCE TERMINATING YOUR PARENTAL RIGHTS. To request a copy of the Notice, Summons, and Termination Petition, call
DSHS at 1-800-423-6246. To view information about your rights in this proceeding, go to www.atg.wa.gov/TRM.aspx.
DATED this 8th day of September, 2015, by MARGARET PIWONSKI, Deputy County Clerk _______________________.
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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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PUBLICATION FOR: JEFFERSON COUNTY, KENTUCKY
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PUBLISH --- September 23RD, 30TH, and October 7th, 2015 SUMMONS BY PUBLICATION
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PIERCE COUNTY JUVENILE COURT 5501 6TH Ave Tacoma WA 98406
Louisville’s
LGBTQ lifestyle magazine
Subscribe online or call 502.897.8900 www.modernlouisville.com
735 EAST MAIN STREET, LOUISVILLE, KY 40202
PUZZLES
pets of the week Looking for a goofy companion to keep you company? Look no further! Meet Tommy, a 10-year-old Beagle with a lot of pep in his step. Tommy came to the Kentucky Humane Society after being rescued from an overcrowded shelter that had no space for him. Tommy is a silly boy who loves people, treats and a good scratch. He does well with cats and calm dogs. He likes to stay right by your side when out for walks and will curl right up beside you. Do you have time to give this sweet boy a lesson in love and life? Tommy is neutered, micro-chipped and up-to-date on all vaccinations. Tommy is located at our Main Campus, 241 Steedly Drive. We’d like to introduce you to Woody, a 1-year-old Tabby who is just the friendliest cat we have met. He was rescued from a life on the road by a kind family that couldn’t keep him. According to the family, Woody is the friendliest cat on the planet. He loves people and other cats – even cat-friendly dogs! Woody likes toys that crackle, like bags and crumpled paper, and he could have hours of fun playing with you. Would you have room to give Woody a forever home? He’s neutered, micro-chipped and up-todate on his vaccinations. Come meet him today at our Hikes Point Feeders Supply adoption center, 3079 Breckenridge Lane.
For more on any of our adoptable pets, please call 502.366.3355 or visit kyhumane.org
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From where you are now to earning your degree. Tired of trying to build your future on today’s veggies? If you’re ready for something that has more lasting rewards — well, the smarter route is at UPS. With our Earn and Learn program, you’ll get help with your college expenses — a bonus of up to $25,000 for part-time employees. You’re focused on your future, and with the opportunities at UPS, we’ll get you moving in the right direction.
Hiring Part-Time Package Handlers in Louisville to work the Daytime Shift from 10:00 AM to 4:00 PM
$150 Bonuses Paid Weekly! + Up to $25,000 in Education Assistance. Text “BONUS” to 68398
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Text “Bonus” to 68398
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