January 1, 2015

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From The Publisher...

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he dawn of a new year is often the best time to make a change – take stock and see where and how one can improve. While I’m proud of The Voice-Tribune and all of our hardworking staff, I know what we do each week is serve you, our readers, and I know we couldn’t exist as a publication without your loyalty for the past 65 years. But I also know that we can do better. We always strive to improve with every issue because doing so ensures that we serve you as best we can. Each given week is a chance to repay your loyalty with insightful and engaging community news. When my husband and I acquired The Voice-Tribune over seven years ago, it had been our long-standing dream to immerse ourselves in the world of publishing. We knew there would be challenges along the way, and we wholeheartedly embraced them as opportunities to learn and progress. It is for this reason that we have some exciting news that you may have already noticed simply by picking up this week’s copy of The Voice-Tribune. We have changed formats. As you will see, we have transitioned our weekly publication from the traditional broadsheet newspaper format to a modern tabloid size. We have also upgraded the paper and print quality for a more vibrant feel and look – which in turn will make your smiling faces in our society pages pop that much more, each week. We are hopeful that these changes will translate to an improved and most satisfying experience for you – our readership. While some people assume that a smaller format means less content, it’s certainly not the case here. We promise to have the same number of articles and photos as ever before – only now you can carry us with even greater ease in your handbag, briefcase and on the go. Another key factor as to why we switched in size is the environment. As a business we strive to be socially and environmentally responsible, and we know many of our readers share this ethos. Knowing we could cut paper usage by 50 percent each year, while still putting out a publication that we are proud of and with the same number of great articles, made it an easy decision to make.

P H OTO B Y C L AY C O O K

We at The Voice-Tribune are proud of our growth and of our recently launched quarterly glossy and Derby Recap Issue, which has been so well received by readership. We love Louisville and our surrounding coverage area, and work very hard to be your vital source for the content that you desire at a time when readers have so many alternatives.

its traditions and values going forward into a bright, new and exciting 2015. New look, same Voice. Enjoy!

The Voice-Tribune may look different, but we hope you appreciate how much we respect

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JANUARY 1, 2015


INDEX

On The Cover

Changing Louisville With a new year upon us there is change in the air, as we here at The Voice-Tribune have decided to switch to a new format. In order to commemorate this and stick with the theme of change, we decided to take a look at some of the people and organizations who have made innovations in our fair city and will continue doing so in 2015. Louisville is an exciting, ever-evolving city, so we wanted to pay tribute to a mere handful of the hundreds of individuals who make Louisville such a great place to live. page 10

Sports

Society

Life

Cats Stay Purrrfect

UofL Holiday Reception

A December Surprise

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page 40

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Life

A Smokeable Feast page 60


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The Worst Sin

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Deducing the Cure

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CHANGING

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ISVILLE W R I T T E N B Y I G O R G U R YA S H K I N • P H OTO S B Y C H R I S H U M P H R E Y S

he new year is often a time of great evolution. In a city like Louisville, change seems to be the name of the game, year on year. Neighborhoods are revitalized, new businesses thrive, old enterprises innovate and communities come together. Louisville isn’t perfect, no place is, but there are a whole host of people and organizations in this city striving to make a difference. For the first cover story of the new-look Voice-Tribune, we’ve selected a handful of groups and individuals who have been creating positive change in Louisville for the past few years, and are working harder than ever to spur even greater progress in 2015. We’ve chosen to focus on food, community, technology and the arts. This is not a comprehensive list, merely a sampling of the thousands of Louisvillians who help catalyze change in this city, creating one of the most fun, vibrant and diverse towns in America.

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F E AT U R E

Amanda and Mac DeHart.

Food

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n many people’s eyes, the people who make the biggest change on any given culinary landscape are the chefs. So often, the ones who deliver the final product are the ones who get all the glory and the largest slice of the limelight. But chefs only get that credit because they’re able to put out a dish that utilizes the best ingredients, and suppliers play a key role in that process. When it comes to the food scene in Louisville, credit must go to Groganica Farms. Groganica Farms, the brainchild of husband and wife team Mac and Amanda DeHart, is the first commercially successful aquaponic farm in Louisville and the state of Kentucky. For those unaware of what this is – the process is simple. Without the use of soil, fresh and organic produce is grown in water, which is fertilized by living fish. Fish waste feeds the plants, while the plants clean the water, allowing the fish to thrive. Best of all, everything grown comes without any unnatural fertilizers, chemicals, fungicides or pesticides, and the process uses less water than traditional methods of growing produce. For those who may be skeptical, or think they may have never tried aquaponics, it’s hard to escape them when it comes to the best restaurants in the city. If you’ve ever eaten a salad at Bistro 1860, Brasserie Provence, Craft House, The English Grill at the Brown, Gary’s on Spring, Le Relais, Lilly’s Bistro, Marketplace at Theater Square, Mayan Cafe, Napa River Grill, Porcini, Proof on Main, Rivue at The Galt House, St. Charles Exchange, Volare, then you’ve eaten the produce of the DeHarts. “We just really think this is the best and most sustainable way to farm,” Mac DeHart says, explaining that currently demand is outripping supply, so that soon they will come close to tripling their greenhouse space from 6,000 square feet.

“We feel that in the future, farming practices that exist today are not going to be sustainable,” DeHart continues. “Anyone who has seen documentaries like “Food Inc.” will know that due to mono crop culture farming and the depletion of the soils, and drought problems we have to come up with new ways of farming and more sustainable ways of doing it.” Aside from a whole host of heirloom varieties, the DeHarts plan on growing more substantial produce in the future, like a greater variety of vegetables, ensuring that more edibles in Louisville’s restaurants will be responsibly and freshly produced. “We’ve been together for 15 years, and I remember I told Mac, if you don’t do this now, you will regret it,” Amanda DeHart explains. Nearly two years in, and Groganica is thriving. More and more restaurants in one of America’s culinary capitals will stock the DeHarts’ delicious and fresh produce. “We love the outdoors, we’ve always loved the outdoors and I’ve always wanted to be with farming,” explains Mac DeHart. “I’m 44 now, but at 42 years old, we both just said, “Let’s do this.” VT For more information visit www.groganica.com

Also In Food...

BULLEIT FRONTIER WHISKEY EXPERIENCE Yes, Louisville and Kentucky are the birthplace and capital of bourbon. Same old, same old, we know. But something new that’s helping to alter the drinking and educational landscape in the city is Diageo - and more specifically - Bulleit Bourbon. Why? Well, just like their peers at Heaven Hill distilleries, who opened the Evan Williams Bourbon Experience, Bulleit have opened a visitor’s center at the historic Stitzel-Weller distillery which they name – Bulleit Frontier Whiskey Experience. With a visitors center opened, $10 million promised to develop the distillery further, as well as a commitment from Diageo to construct a $115 million distilling facility for Bulleit in Shelby County, the future is looking even brighter for bourbon in Louisville and the surrounding area.

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F E AT U R E

Technology

DAVID DAFOE J A N U A R Y 1 , 2 0 1 5 • W W W . V O I C E -T R I B U N E . C O M

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f you’ve tried a new soft drink or alcoholic beverage in the past few years, chances are David Dafoe and his team had some hand in it. Dafoe knows flavor. And when it comes to creating tastes for some of the world’s largest beverage corporations, Dafoe’s companies, Flavorman and Distilled Spirits Epicenter have had their finger in many pies. “When we opened the Distilled Spirits Epicenter, we immediately hit the Kentucky Distillers Association, saying that we need an educational component, and if we always want to make something happen we need to push.”

But in the last year, with craft brewing and distilling on the rise, Dafoe and his team have shifted a lot of their focus to alcohol. Where once 80 percent of their business was focused on beverage development, now it firmly concerns alcohol. And in a city renowned for its distilling history, Dafoe has sought to bring the industry front and center on the map.

One key way in which this is likely to happen is through the development and introduction of a bourbon certification program that’s being spearheaded by Dafoe and his colleagues. The goal is to make sure that when tourists or locals want to enjoy alcohol in the city, they’re being served by individuals as knowledgeable as sommeliers are about wine.

“Kentucky is a little behind the curve when it comes to opening up new distilleries compared to states like Washington and Oregon, New York,” Dafoe explains. “They’re leading the pack when it comes to opening new distilleries but Kentucky is catching up.”

“If you’re going to become a city all about bourbon, then you need all the folks like bartenders and mixologists, to know what bourbon is all about,” Dafoe explains. “Often when you go into restaurants, and you know what you are talking about and start asking questions, you realize they (bartenders) sometimes make stuff up. We want a universal certification, starting in Kentucky, but with the goal of making it nationwide.”

One way in which Dafoe has become a game-changer in Louisville is by striving to bring an educational element into the distilling process. The company’s Moonshine University seeks to educate professionals and enthusiasts about the process, while the Distilled Spirits Epicenter helps companies develop new drinks that will soon hit the market. “We’ve spent time working with the governor, the city and the state legislature because we’ve always said that Kentucky should be the epicenter of distilled spirits because historically it always has been,” Dafoe continues. “We don’t want to see that move to other states because it belongs here.”

With the help of the Mayor’s office the goal is to make this a reality in 2015. For Dafoe though, he’s just happy knowing that whether it’s soft drinks or spirits, Louisville is as thirsty as ever – for knowledge and libations alike. VT For more information visit www.ds-epicenter.com

Also In Technology...

LVL1

While the term “hackerspace” might make you think of a dark room filled with individuals intent on destroying Seth Rogen’s latest movie, LVL1 in Louisville’s Butchertown neighborhood is in fact a friendly community of tinkerers, builders, inventors and engineers. If you have an idea you think might be too mad to realize, LVL1 should be the first port of call to connect with like-minded, creative and experimental people right on your door-step. With all the tools you could possibly wish for and a democratic and like-minded membership LVL1 is the best place to make your madcap ideas come true.

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F E AT U R E

Sharon Scott, Keith Waits, Valerie Sullivan Fuchs and Conner Waldman.

Arts

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or those tired of endless classic rock tracks, sports call-in shows or screaming talking-heads and politics, all interspersed with ads every 30 seconds, try tuning into ARTxFM, the Louisville station for locals and by locals. Begun as a non-profit in 2011 and continuously on-air since 2013, ARTxFM is run by director Sharon Scott with the sole goal of creating programming that’s firmly geared to focus on diversity – giving people the chance to explore new ground and topics not often heard anywhere else. It’s the difference between ARTxFM and every other station including NPR.

tion also receives listeners from up to 20 different countries each day. “We have an old time country show, so there might be a specific audience that tunes into that show, and that’s going to be very different from the audience that tunes into the hip-hop show. At the same time, we hope that it will kind of bring everyone together. Maybe people who normally listen to the hip-hop show are like, ‘This ARTxFM is really cool – it’s the voice of our community members.’ So instead of catering to the music tastes that people already have, we hope that we’ll open people up to new ideas.”

“I think the difference is that public radio offers a very valuable service, but most of the time, their programming is syndicated nationwide,” Scott explains, who has spent her entire life in radio, ever since she caught the bug working for her college radio station.

For now though, Scott and her collection of DJs are hoping that their radio mast will be completed in the coming year and increase their listenership further, which as of now is online only. Indeed, 2015 is shaping up to be a big year for ARTxFM and for radio in Louisville, a chance to make waves and broadcast the sound of change.

“So you’re not getting the local flavor and the local voices. There are some exceptions, and there are some great shows on the local NPR stations, but to have a station in the community that is giving a voice to community members, around the clock, like ours, is incredible.” The station funded mostly by members and donors – some from around the world – has 120 volunteer DJs hosting 80 shows, each with their own unique offering to the airwaves. From poetry and literary discussions, to obscure electronica, and live bands that make their way into the ARTxFM studio on Market Street, from time to time.

“We want to always keep the programming fresh,” concludes Scott. “And we want to always bring in new talent. I really encourage people to keep trying it out. There are going to be some shows they like, and some shows they don’t. And maybe some of the shows that at first they don’t really think they like, they might continue to give it a chance.” VT

“We hope to reach a very wide audience, but maybe in a more specific way,” Scott explains, who adds that the sta-

For more information visit www.artxfm.com

Also In Arts...

THE SPEED ART MUSEUM While the historic location for the Speed Art Museum near UofL’s campus may still be closed for major expansion until 2016, that doesn’t mean that the venerable artistic institution and it’s director, Ghislain d’Humières have not had an eventful year carving more paths for creativity and expression in the city.

also learning the importance of preservation in museums.

While the museum is in it’s second year of renovation, d’Humières and his ever growing cast of colleagues have been taking art where it belongs – into the community. The most notable example is the Art Detectives initiative – a unique experience that gives elementary, middle school and high school students the opportunity to act as museum professionals by handling, talking about and experiencing art work first hand. The goal is to break down cultural barriers while

“One more thing we’re doing this year is going to the West End School and teaching children – teaching them how to make photography. Some of the photos will be blown up and auctioned off to benefit the school. Through education, reaching out and using the Speed Ball as a tool, we want to reconnect with the community.”

“The first year of the Art Detectives was a huge success,” explains d’Humières. “We reached 2,800 hundred kids and for next year we have close to 5,000 already booked.”

For more information visit www.changingspeed.com

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F E AT U R E

Caroline King, Amy Clifford, Kristen Thomas and Katie Taliaferro.

Community

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arlier this year, teachers and friends Caroline King, Kristen Thomas, Amy Clifford and Katie Taliaferro won a national yearlong competition to create a school from the ground up. Create a dream school where students would receive the type of education and care rarely seen elsewhere. Since the announcement of their win, it was decided that their plan for a new-look school will instead be implemented at Atkinson Elementary in Louisville’s Portland neighborhood. While the plan now doesn’t include a newly built school, it’s still a chance for the teachers to enact some of their vision and make real changes in education during 2015, and for years to come.

“I think when this program originated, the whole point was to better the community,” Kristen Thomas explains. “So that is our goal, whether its through students, or parents, families all as one, and hopefully that will spread to the community. While JCPS has decided not to implement Reach Academy’s plan in full, they are very much supportive of teachers’ ideas, and are ready to embrace their input by creating a Reach Coordinator position that will oversee any changes within the new look school. For King, she’s most looking forward to developing and growing the after-school programs that were a cornerstone of their vision. In turn making the school a hub for the local community in the neighborhood. “I think I’m most excited about the after school aspect because we’re going to try to target students that need that intervention and to grow as learners,” King explains. “And they’ll be getting that extra meal after school because they

don’t get those services elsewhere. So that will be a positive push for them.” “If it’s successful – and hopefully it is – then they can implement it in other schools,” Clifford adds. Another positive from the plan that the team are working hard to bring to fruition is providing services to the school that lie outside of child education – areas such as health and adult learning. One is a partnership with the National Center for Families Learning. “I’m excited about the National Center for Family Learning,” Thomas adds. “That’s one of the things that all four of us agreed we would really like implemented in our schools, helping the community, including the adults. With Portland being an up and coming neighborhood, hopefully we can get some revitalization and get some parent successes out there.” For now though, the young teachers have been busy attending weekly meetings, since September, figuring out how to provide the best education possible for the students they’re so passionate about. In a few years the plan is to expand Atkinson Elementary through to middle school grades. For now, though, it’s a learning curve for students and teachers alike. VT

Also In Community...

LOUISVILLE YOUTH GROUP For anyone not in the know, the Louisville Youth Group has been making a lasting and significant change in the Louisville community for the past 24 years. A community group dedicated to providing support to LGBTQIA youths from ages 14-20 throughout Louisville and Southern Indiana, the goal has always been simple – to provide a safe and supportive environment for youths at a time when it may be hard to find that elsewhere, whether in school or at home.

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Headed up for the past year by executive director Elizabeth Stith, LYG focuses on boosting youth self esteem through mentoring programs and regular meetings that focus on college and career prep, safe sex practices, personal finance and overall positive personal development. LYG is a real strong and necessary pillar in a community as diverse as Louisville’s. For more information visit www.louisvilleyouthgroup. com

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OPINION

The Worst Sin

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he Ten Commandments is the most morally influential piece of legislation ever written. To give a good idea of how relevant each of the ten is, take the third commandment, one of the two most misunderstood commandments (the other is “Do not Murder,” which I explained previously). Is there such a thing as “the worst sin” – one sin that is worse than all others?

How do we know? From the third of the Ten Commandments. This is the only one of the ten that states that God will not forgive a person who violates the commandment. What does this commandment say? It is most commonly translated as, “Do not take the name of the Lord thy God in vain. For the Lord will not hold creators.com guiltless” – meaning “will not forgive” – whoever takes His name in vain.”

DENNIS PRAGER

In fact, there is. I am aware that some people differ. They maintain that we can’t declare any sin worse than any other. “To God, a sin is a sin,” is how it’s often expressed. In this view, a person who steals a stapler from the office is committing as grievous a sin in God’s eyes as a murderer. But most people intuitively, as well as biblically, understand that some sins are clearly worse than others. We are confident that God has at least as much common sense as we do. The God of Judaism and Christianity does not equate stealing an office item with murder. So, then, what is the worst sin? The worst sin is committing evil in God’s name.

is not the problem. The problem is the translation. The Hebrew original doesn’t say “Do not take;” it says “Do not carry.” The Hebrew literally reads, “Do not carry the name of the Lord thy God in vain.” This is reflected in one of the most widely used new translations of the Bible, the New International Version, or NIV, which uses the word “misuse” rather than the word “take:” “You shall not misuse the name of the Lord your God.” This is much closer to the original’s intent.

Because of this translation, most people understandably think that the commandment forbids saying God’s name for no good reason. So, something like, “God, did I have a rough day at work today!” violates the third commandment.

What does it mean to “carry” or to “misuse” God’s name? It means committing evil in God’s name.

But that interpretation presents a real problem. It would mean that whereas God could forgive the violation of any of the other commandments – dishonoring one’s parents, stealing, adultery or even committing murder – He would never forgive someone who said, “God, did I have a rough day at work today!”

When an irreligious person commits evil, it doesn’t bring God and religion into disrepute. But when a religious person commits evil in God’s name he destroys the greatest hope for goodness on earth – belief in a God who demands goodness, and who morally judges people.

Let’s be honest: That would render God and the Ten Commandments morally incomprehensible.

The Nazis and Communists were horrifically cruel mass murderers. But their evils only sullied their own names, not the name of God. But when religious people commit evil, especially in God’s name, they are not only committing evil, they are doing terrible damage to the name of God.

As it happens, however, the commandment

And that God will not forgive. Why not?

In our time, there are, unfortunately, many examples of this. The evils committed by Islamists who torture, bomb, cut throats and mass murder – all in the name of their God – do terrible damage to the name of God. It is not coincidental that what is called the New Atheism – the immense eruption of atheist activism – followed the 9/11 attack on America by Islamist terrorists. In fact, the most frequent argument against God and religion concerns evil committed in God’s name – whether it is done in the name of Allah today or was done in the past in the name of Christ. People who murder in the name of God not only kill their victims, they kill God, too. That’s why the greatest sin is religious evil. That’s what the third commandment is there to teach: Don’t carry God’s name in vain. If you do, God won’t forgive you. VT Dennis Prager’s latest book, “Still the Best Hope: Why the World Needs American Values to Triumph,” was published by HarperCollins. He is a nationally syndicated radio show host and creator of PragerUniversity.com.

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ometimes, you just don’t feel well – even though you aren’t sick. If you aren’t quite healthy but don’t have a disease, the medical system can leave you feeling like you’ve fallen through the cracks.

BUSINESS

Deducing The Cure

Through personalized medicine, Paige extends hope to patients who’ve gone from doctor to Business doctor withProfile out a diagnosis and yet don’t WES feel their best. But a doctor in La Grange, Ky., “Just because specializes in helping patients to go KERRICK medicine has from feeling OK to feeling fantastic bounced them and really thriving. around a few times doesn’t “What is health?” asks Dr. Carl Paige. “It’s not mean they don’t have anyjust the absence of disease; it’s optimal function.” thing that we can offer Board certified as both a pediatrician and them,” he says. internist, Paige has been practicing medicine for Ever the scientist and tin25 years. But in 2011, seeking a more proactive kerer – a medical Sherlock approach than the way he’d always done med- Holmes, as his wife puts it icine, Paige decided to get some extra training. – Paige loves a good chalDr. Carl Paige. So he completed a fellowship in anti-ag- lenge. “I like those patients ing, regenerative and functional medicine. He that come in with weird became board certified by the American Board things wrong with them that nobody’s been able of Anti-Aging/Regenerative Medicine. And in to put a pin on yet,” he says. 2013, he opened the Medical Transformation A key component of Paige’s new approach Center. is genomics, the study of chromosomes, genes He continues to operate his traditional prac- and their functions. He uses genomic testing to tice, Paige Primary Care Center. Both practices see how patients process certain nutrients on a are located in Suite 201 at Baptist Health’s medi- genetic level. With that knowledge he is able to cal plaza in La Grange, 1023 New Moody Lane. guide them to the nutrients that are most helpful for them. “Medicine is very good at dealing with criPersonalized medicine is particularly helpful for ses,” he says. “But it doesn’t do very well with the patients with autism spectrum disorder, because in-between-the-lines type patient – maybe somethe right nutrition helps them perform their best. one who just doesn’t feel well, or someone who maybe feels well but would like to perform at a “Today in traditional medicine, the computer has sort of become a barrier between the patient higher level.” The transformation center offers a broad range and the doctor,” Paige says. “We spend more time of services including obesity management, ath- clicking buttons as opposed to seeing the patient.”

an initial visit. That allows him to listen to them, find out what their needs are and develop a specific plan for them. “It’s more rewarding for me,” he says, “because you actually get to see the patient, talk to the patient, make eye contact with the patient.” Paige says many doctors are frustrated with the traditional approach. “The system now is really pigeonholing us,” he says. “Medicine now is sort of taking the art out of medicine. In an effort to make it a very specific science, it’s losing the ability to address the individual’s needs.” As science advances, Paige is confident more doctors will take the approach he’s taking. “In the major centers traditional medicine looks to for cutting-edge development, they’re already doing this, and Louisville really hasn’t got there yet,” he says. “I think that it’s headed in that direction.” Paige is also an assistant clinical professor of medicine at the University of Louisville. To further his credentials in personalized medicine, he is currently pursuing a fellowship in botanical medicine. Paige’s wife, Terri Paige, is director of business development and community outreach at the center. They have eight children. VT For more information, visit www.medicaltransformationcenter.com. Dr. Paige may be reached at 502.225.4480. Or, call Terri at 502.262.4936 or email her at terriap@medtrancen. com.

letic performance optimization and hormone replacement therapy.

But at the transformation center, Paige often spends 45 minutes to an hour with his patients on

business briefs

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United Nations Ambassador Samantha Power to visit UofL Samantha Power, U.S. ambassador to the United Nations, will speak at the University of Louisville Jan. 12. Her free, public talk will begin at 9 a.m. in Bigelow Hall, Miller Information Technology Center, on UofL’s Belknap Campus. For more information: www.louisville.edu/mcconnellcenter Cabbage Patch gets expanded programming Thanks to a grant from The Humana Foundation, Louisville is starting off the New Year with expanded programming for at-risk children and youth. The Cabbage Patch Settlement House, a 104-year-old non-profit organization that empowers children and

their families, is implementing plans for Saturday programming on site at the community center in Old Louisville. For more information: 502.753.4421 Louisville Film Society hires Interim Executive Director, Appoints new Chairman of the Board The Louisville Film Society (www.louisvillefilm.org) announced today that Soozie Eastman has joined the organization as Interim Executive Director to further develop their mission of supporting and educating local filmmakers and increasing programming of independent film through screening partnerships and the annual IF Film Festival. Filmmaker and LFS founding Board Member Stu

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Pollard is the new Chairman of the Board. For more information: 502.432.4434 Norton Suburban Hospital to officially be renamed Norton Women’s and Kosair Children’s Hospital Major construction at an east-end hospital is now complete, and the facility has a new name: Norton Women’s and Kosair Children’s Hospital. This is the official name of what was formerly Norton Suburban Hospital on the Norton Healthcare – St. Matthews campus. Over the past 24 months, the 373-bed hospital has been at the center of a $117.8 million construction project. For more information: 502.629.5272 W W W . V O I C E -T R I B U N E . C O M •

JANUARY 1, 2015


OBITUARIES

obituaries Martha Dant Biven, 89 Martha Dant Biven, 89, passed away Monday, Dec. 29, 2014. She was a retired school teacher from St. Matthias Catholic School. She was predeceased in death by her husband, Louis Frederick Biven; brothers, William, Carroll and Wallace Dant; sisters Dorothy Stuempel and Ann DiBenedetto. She is survived by her sons, Mark J. (Sandy) and Stephen A. (Marietta) Biven; brothers, Marion “Hank” Dant (Ann), Ray (Beverly) Dant and Joe Dant, sister; Estelle Ubben and grandchildren; Jayson, Matthew, Megan and Morgan. Her funeral Mass will be 10 a.m., Saturday, Jan. 3, 2015, at St. Lawrence Catholic Church, 1925 Lewiston Dr., with burial to follow in Calavary Cemetery. Visitation to be held Friday, Jan. 2 from 1-5 p.m. and 6-8 p.m. at Ratterman Grand Chapels, 4832 Cane Run Road.

Enoch Gray, 88 Enoch Gray, 88, of Fisherville, passed Dec. 28, 2014 at the Robley Rex V.A. Medical Center. He was a native of Manchester, KY. He was an U.S. Army Veteran of World War II. He was preceded in death by his loving wife, Elsie Gray; his parents; and five brothers. He is survived by daughters, Judy Chesser (Marshall) and Missy McAuley (Rick); sons, Elihu Gray (Mary), Bill Gray (Joyce) and Russ Gray; brothers, Buck, Roy Lee, Walter and Dan Gray; sisters, Lola Diamond, Mary Jane Gray, Lena Francis, Anna Lois Gabbard and Beatrice Collins; nine grandchildren, 16 great-grandchildren; and three great-great-grandchildren. His funeral was 1 p.m. Wednesday, Dec. 31 at Schmid Funeral Home in Mt. Washington with burial in Highland Memory Gar-

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

dens. Visitation was after 10 a.m. Wednesday prior to service time. Expressions of sympathy may be made to the Hosparus Inpatient Unit at the Robley Rex V.A. Medical Center. Online condolences may be made at www.schmidfh.com.

Georgia Lee Hardesty, 86 Georgia Lee Hardesty, 86, of Shepherdsville, passed away on Saturday, Dec. 27, 2014 at Baptist East Hospital. She was a Catholic by faith. A member of St. Aloysius Catholic Church and a member of I.U.E Local 761. She was preceded in death by husband, John H. Hardesty; her children, William E. Hardesty, James H. Hardesty and Joseph P. Hardesty. She is survived by her children, Gail Martin (Delbert) of West Point, Eddie Hardesty (Donna) of Louisville, Sandy Goble (Mark) of Sonoma, Sherry Carey (Eddie) of Shepherdsville, Glenda Lay (Joe) of Mt. Washington, Dana Burkhead (Donald) of Mt. Washington, Denise Hall of Mt. Washington, Terry Gardner (Gary) of Shepherdsville, Joseph Hardesty of Mt. Washington, Mark Hardesty of Shepherdsville and Karen Tompkins of Shepherdsville; her brother Eugene Whelon of Vine Grove; along with 38 grandchildren; 56 great- grandchildren; and four great-great-grandchildren. Funeral service was at 1 p.m. Wednesday, Dec. 31 at St. Aloysius Catholic Church in Shepherdsville. Visitation was Tuesday, Dec. 30 from 2-8 p.m. and after 9 a.m. on Wednesday at the funeral home.

Bettie J. Jones, 84 Bettie J. Jones, 84, passed away Monday Dec. 29, 2014 at Lincoln Hills of New Albany.

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

She was the former Bettie Watson, born in Corydon, IN. and retired as a Chief Operator from ICI Americas. She was a member of the Hour of Power Church in New Albany and was preceded in death by her husband: C.W. Jones and her parents: Woodrow and Wilma Watson. Survivors include three sons, Chuck Jones (Kathy), David Jones, and Phil Jones(Beth); five grandchildren,Richard, Susan, Jonathan, Jason and Brian Jones; six great-grandchildren, Noah, Mia, Layla, Hailey, Alayiah and Christopher Jones. A funeral service celebrating Bettie’s life will be held at 1 p.m. Saturday, Jan. 3, 2015 at the Oak Street Chapel of Seabrook Dieckmann & Naville(1846 E. Oak St.) with burial in South Central Cemetery in Corydon, IN. Visitation will be from 10 a.m. - 1 p.m. Saturday before the service.

Koch, Joseph Michael, Jr., 80 Koch, Joseph Michael, Jr., 80, peacefully passed away on Dec. 23, 2014. Joe was the son of Joseph Michael “Bud” Koch, Sr. and Mary Evelyn Downs Koch. He was a graduate of St. Elizabeth Catholic Elementary School, St. Xavier High School and the University of Kentucky. Joe will be remembered as a wonderful father, grandfather, husband and loyal friend. He maintained many of his grade school, high school, and college friendships throughout his lifetime. He was a lifelong UK fan, attending nearly every home football game for the past 60 years. He was a member of St. Francis of Rome Parish and Hurstbourne Country Club, where he golfed every Thursday afternoon for over 30 years. Football was his lifelong passion and he excelled at the sport from an early age at St. Elizabeth. He was a three-year start-

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er for St. X and was voted “Star of Stars” in the Kentucky-Indiana High School All-Star game following his senior year. He was elected to the St. X Hall of Honors in 1984. While attending St. X, Joe was also an assistant coach for the St. Elizabeth Elementary School team that played in the inaugural Toy Bowl in 1949. Joe went on to a storied football career at UK (1951-1954), where he met fellow UK student Sallie O’Bryan, whom he married the year after graduation. At UK he was a three-year starter as a guard and linebacker (at a playing weight of 205 pounds!). As a freshman, he was a member of Coach Paul “Bear” Bryant’s 1952 victorious Cotton Bowl team and, at that time, he was the youngest player ever to play in the Cotton Bowl. He was elected Co-Captain his senior year. Joe’s UK teams compiled winning records four years in a row, with a combined 27-133 record during his tenure. He always said one of his best memories was beating the Tennessee Volunteers his junior and senior years. He was honored to play for Coach Bryant for his first three years at UK and for Coach Blanton Collier in his senior year. He remained close to both coaches and many of his teammates long after his playing days. After graduating from UK, Joe served in the United States Air Force from 1954 to 1956, stationed in Salina, KS, where he flew multiple missions conducting in-flight refueling of B-52 and B-47 bombers. After his service he returned to Louisville to begin his business career in sales with American Air Filter. He left AAF for a position as Air Filtration Sales Manager at Commercial Filter Company in Lebanon, IN. In August 1966, Joe returned to his hometown of Louisville to found Koch Filter Corporation. From the early days in a two-room office on Shelby Street, the business evolved into one of the


Joe was preceded in death by his parents and his beloved first wife Sallie Ann O’Bryan Koch, to whom he was married from 1955 until her passing in 1994. He is survived by his loving wife Mary Ann Kempf Koch, his children Michael ( Joanna), Kathy Grisanti (Paul), David (Lynne) and John (Leigh Ann), grandchildren Peter, Matthew, Chris, Diana, Nick, Joseph, Ben, Katie, Jack, Amanda and Bobby, stepchildren Anne Marie, Linda, Theresa and step-grandchildren Erik, Ande, Kelcey, Taylor, Alex, William. He will be greatly missed by his many Nelson County relatives who knew him affectionately as “Buddy Joe” and by his many other friends and extended family. The family would like to thank Hosparus for the kind and gentle care they provided Joe in the final months of his life. Memorial gifts may be made online or mailed to Hosparus of Louisville, 3532 Ephraim McDowell Drive, Louisville, KY 40205 or to St. Xavier High School, 1609 Poplar Level Road Louisville, Kentucky 40217. Visitation was 1-7 p.m. on Sunday, Dec. 28th at Ratterman Brothers Funeral Home, 12900 Shelbyville Road, East Louisville, KY 40243. A Mass to celebrate Joe’s life was held at 10 a.m. Monday Dec. 29, 2014 at St. Leonard Catholic Church, 440 Zorn Avenue, followed by burial at Calvary Cemetery.

Gerald Newton, 68 Gerald Newton, 68, of Louisville, KY, passed away on Dec. 28, 2014. He retired from The Courier Journal after 38 years, was a member of Southeast Christian Church since 1999 and was a U.S. Army Veteran. Gerald is survived by his wife of 40 years, Susie (Knopp) New-

ton; sons; Gerald Lee (Leah) NewMemorials may be made to his ters, Madison and Camryn Morgan ton, Jr., and Joseph Sinclair (Virgin- church. To leave a special message and grandsons Connor and Turnia) Newton, granddaughter, Victo- for the family, visit www.Newcom- er Siddens. erkentuckiana.com. ria Newton. He is also survived by his two sisters, Rebecca Sims Lepanto (Dr. Visitation was 1-7 p.m. Wednesand Lucy Sims Williams day, Dec. 31, 2014 at Newcomer Robert Philip) (Dr. John), and brother-in-law, Dr. Funeral Home (235 Juneau Drive, Eugene Thomas Toole (Pamela) along with Louisville) and will also be on Frimany nieces, nephews, and cousins. day, Jan. 2, 2015 from 9 a.m. until Sims, the time of the service at 11 a.m. Bob will always be remembered Jr., 71 at Southeast Christian Church with for his radiant smile and the sparRobert Eugene entombment to follow at Resthaven kle in his crystal blue eyes. His Sims, Jr., 71 of Memorial Cemetery. strong faith was evident in the way Louisville, KY Memorial contributions may be passed away peacefully with fami- he viewed life and treated others. He loved the outdoors and always made to Bob Russell Ministries. ly by his side on Dec. 24, 2014 at sought the table or the room with a Episcopal Church Home in Louisview. He and his wife, Karen, emuville after a long battle with Alzheilated true love. He will be greatly Leland Kenneth mer’s disease. missed by family and friends. “Poppy” PendleBob was born on June 12, 1943 Funeral service was held on Monin Louisville, Ky., the son of the ton, 87 day, Dec. 29 at 11:00 at Christ late Robert Eugene Sims and Emily Leland Kenneth “Poppy” Pendle- Lukemeier Sims. He attended Bal- Church United Methodist, with ton, 87, of Louisville, passed away lard Grade School and graduated burial in Cave Hill Cemetery. Friday, Dec. 26, 2014. Memorials may be sent to Christ from Eastern High School, where He was a proud graduate of he played golf, baseball, and football Church United Methodist (ccum.net) Manual High School and a World on an undefeated team. He graduat- or Alzheimer’s Association (alz.org). War II Navy Veteran. While in the ed from Vanderbilt University with service, he played for the undefeat- a B.A. where he was a member of ed South Pacific Baseball Champi- Sigma Chi Fraternity. He graduated William Walter ons. He also volunteered and took from Vanderbilt Law School as DocUpton Jr., 65 park in the atomic bomb testing in tor of Jurisprudence and was ExecuWilliam Walter Upton Jr., 65, son the Bikini Atols. He was a dedicated tive Vice President of the Junior Bar member of Westport Road Baptist Association. He practiced law with of the late William Walter Upton Sr. Church. He was an honest, hard- his father, forming Sims & Sims Law and Dorothy Schick Upton passed working, self-employed, innovative Offices. He was a Special Assistant away on Christmas Eve at his home businessman for over 55 years. Ken- U.S. Attorney, Western District of in Louisville. neth was the best father, grandfa- Kentucky, Dec. 1983 - 1989. He was a United States Army Vetther and friend to many, who will be eran, member of the Sons of the Bob served our country as Lt. greatly missed. American Revolution and a retired Commander, United States Navy He was preceded in death by the Reserve and Judge Advocate Gen- Engineer for Bell South/AT&T with love of his life, Ineda; his parents, eral’s Corps Reserve from 1967 - 35 years of service. James Napoleon “Pole” and Mary 1979. He was preceded in death by his Georgia Pendleton; four sisters and parents, along with his sister, Judith Bob was a member of Christ five brothers; and son-in-law, Jeff Church United Methodist since it Upton Manteufel. McDonald. was founded, where he was a lifeSurvivors include his wife, Janet Kenneth is survived by loving long member of the choir. He served Hickey Upton; son, Timothy James children, Sarita, Chip and his wife the community on many boards Upton; sister, Janet Lynn Upton and Dawn, and Karina; three grandchil- including The Altenheim Home, many nieces and nephews. dren, Damen, Alyssa and Andrew; Young Life, and the Kentucky Funeral services were conducted brothers, Carl “Jack” Pendleton and United Methodist Higher Educain the chapel of Arch L. Heady & Boyd Douglas Pendleton; and a host tion Foundation, where he served as Son at Westport Village at 10 a.m. chairman. He was a former memof family and friends. on Monday, Dec. 29, 2014. Visitaber of The Pendennis Club and Big Funeral ceremony was 11 a.m. tion was 5-8 p.m. on Saturday, Dec. Spring Country Club. Tuesday, Dec. 30, 2014 at Westport 27 and 12-5 p.m. on Sunday, Dec. He is survived by his wife of 43 28. Burial with Military Honors Road Baptist Church, 9705 Westport Road, Louisville, KY, with buri- years and true love, Karen Toole was in Calvary Cemetery. Memorial al following in Floydsburg Cemetery. Sims; daughters Emilee Sims Mor- gifts may be made to the Kentucky Visitation was at the church from 4-8 gan (Jason), Allison Sims Siddens Chapter ALS Society. Please visit p.m. Monday, Dec. 29 and after 10 (Tyler) and Susan Sims Olson us at www.archlheadywestport.com (Chelsey) in addition to granddaugh- to leave a condolence for the family. a.m. Tuesday until time of service.

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OBITUARIES

largest privately-held air filter manufacturers in the world, with over 300 employees, four manufacturing plants, and sales in all 50 states and 42 foreign countries. He was President of the company until his retirement in 2010.


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Catnip

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Taylor’s 10

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Verbal Scrimmage

Sports

Photo by VICTORIA GRAFF | Contributing Photographer

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Card Chronicle

Cats Stay

Purrrfect

UofL’s Mangok Mathiang rises above UK’s Dakari Johnson.


SPORTS

A Bitter Yet Healthy Pill To Swallow

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s tempting as I know it is to do, I don’t like when people on either side of the UK/UofL rivalry try to downplay it after a loss. The fans who make it a point to say, “this game doesn’t even matter” or “let’s see what happens in March” are usually the same ones who are the most upset.

MIKE RUTHERFORD

the Cardinal teams of the past four seasons have been some of the best in recent memory. For whatever reason, everything seems to change for UofL when Kentucky is thrown into the equation. The coach talks differently, the players play differently, and the fans cheer differently. It’s not a good different either, as recent history has proven.

@cardchronicle

Of course the NCAA Tournament matters more than a non-conference game in December, but Louisville fans shouldn’t act like their team’s seventh loss in eight tries against Kentucky doesn’t leave them feeling dejected. Embracing the pain just makes it better when you’re on the other side. It’s just like when UK won the national title in 2012. The best thing to do was grin, bear it, and hope you were able to know the same euphoria a year from then. Everyone’s after the sport’s top prize, and when you diminish the accomplishment one year it makes you feel a little artificial when you attempt to fully embrace the moment when your team accomplishes the same thing. On a grander scale, the things we learned about this Louisville team on Saturday were mostly things we had thought were true about the Cardinals already. UofL is one of the best teams in the country, but they’re a notch below that elite top level reserved for Kentucky and Duke. Right now. The Cards’ defense is going to keep them in every game they play, but they don’t have the type of offense that’s going to allow them to win six straight against elite competition in March. Right now. Louisville’s guards have the talent to be the best backcourt duo in the country, but they don’t know when to take a semi-challenged look and when to keep the ball moving. Right now. Under a head coach whose teams tend to make as marked an improvement as any between December and March, this should all be viewed as exciting. And it would be, had the opponent doing the teaching on Saturday not been from Lexington. There’s no question at this point that Kentucky’s dominance over Louisville has become “a thing,” a pill which is especially bitter to swallow when you consider that J A N U A R Y 1 , 2 0 1 5 • W W W . V O I C E -T R I B U N E . C O M

Assuming Louisville and Kentucky don’t meet in the NCAA Tournament for a third time in four years, UofL’s graduating seniors will end their Cardinal careers with only one victory over their arch-rivals. One is also the number of victories that Connecticut’s star guard Shabazz Napier ended his college career with against Louisville. It didn’t make national headlines because Louisville-UConn isn’t under the type of microscope that the Battle for the Commonwealth is, and because Napier also just happened to head to the NBA with two national championships in his belt. That should be the goal for the Cardinal players who are taking Saturday’s loss the hardest.

Louisville basketball, there’s still an entire season of basketball ahead, and that season will feature one of the strongest and most exciting conference slates the program has ever seen. In a little over a week, the Cards head to the Dean Dome to take on North Carolina. A week after that, undefeated and second-ranked Duke heads to the Yum! Center in a game likely to get the ESPN College GameDay treatment. There was no title exchange inside the KFC Yum! Center last Saturday. No trophies were hoisted and no nets were cut down. The Louisville Cardinals are still the state of Kentucky’s most recent king of college basketball, and in a few months they’re going to have an opportunity to repeat the feat they achieved in 2013. It’s normal for every fan loyal to the color red to be upset about the loss, but not so much so that you lose sight of those facts. VT The Card’s Montrezl Harrell attempts to shoot over the long arms of the Cats.

Louisville played a team that appears to be one of college basketball’s best over the last couple of decades and took them down to the wire in one of the sport’s most pressure-filled environments. That’s an experience from which some huge positives can be extracted if everyone on the team reacts to it the right way. As unbearable as the days after the loss have been for everyone associated with

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


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ell, the epic struggle is in the books for another year. And epic it was! Exactly what I expected, too. I never for a moment thought this would be a one-sided blowout for either team.

Catnip STEVE KAUFMAN

Pretty? Not so much. Definitive? Only time will tell. But intense. Physical. Emotional. Like any game between two of the nation’s top four teams ought to be. And when you add in the fact that these two teams are rival programs on rival campuses with rival coaches – the word “dislike” has been thrown around, the word “hate” used more than once – it’s as big a win for the winner as it is a loss for the loser. The immediate post-game analysis was, predictably, that Kentucky just survived. It was, after all, the first UK win this season by less than 10 points. Would the game have been different if Terry Rozier and Chris Jones had hit some of their shots? Of course. But Rick Pitino’s Cardinal teams haven’t won in the past by guards dribbling to the three-point line and heaving ‘em up. The threes on Pitino teams are strategic, a result of the flow of the possession. They have been ever since his 1990 Knicks were changing the NBA game with platoons of long-range bombers. Even Russ Smith, nightly leader of the U of L box score’s FGA line, benefited from the uncanny inside-outside play engineered by Peyton Siva. It was noteworthy that Montrezl Harrell had nine shot attempts in the game, while the two guards lofted 33. His nine points and eight rebounds were a statistical low point for him this season. However, in a game previewed as the battle of the behemoths, the one who turned it all around was 5-foot-9 mighty mite Tyler Ulis. I do not want to get into the whole backcourt argument, because I still believe Andrew Harrison is one of the best point guards in the country. But Saturday, at any rate, Ulis gave UK what he has provided all season. (No, not his own blood – though that, too. And for the record, it was red.) He raced the ball upcourt against a weary UofL backcourt duo that played all but 11 minutes of the game. He penetrated and ran the baseline the way Siva and John Wall used to do. 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

And – this must be noted – he also took eight shots. Only Aaron Harrison (10) took more. He’s not afraid to take that shot, the sort of push shot with both toes on the floor that flourished in the 1950s. Even from behind the three-ball line. And he has that nifty pull-up-in-the-lane teardrop shot, too.

But this game was won on defense. For all coaches’ drawing up X’s for the other teams’ O’s, defense in the end is about energy and relentlessness. The steals and shot blocks grab our attention, but what we often miss is the defenders racing around the perimeter as the ball is rotated, fighting through screens, keeping their focus, moving their feet, out-energizing the guys with the ball, making them work the entire clock until they have to make an unwise pass or take a desperate shot. You have to have people with the right mindset, and somehow Calipari gets them. He had them in 2011, an overachieving team that fought into the Final Four. He had them in 2012, his championship team whose best asset was the smothering defense of Anthony Davis, Michael Kidd-Gilchrist and Terrence Jones. (I still don’t think Jones gets his due credit on that team.) And this year, he has the guys willing to put on their hard hats, go in and dig the ditches for marginal personal reward. There are no columns in the box score for defensive effort. Dakari Johnson, Marcus Lee, Willie Cauley-Stein, the twins and – especially – Devin Booker have bought into the system. Calipari could have been talking about any of them when he said, about Booker, “I never saw him play defense in high school. He didn’t have to. He just shot the ball.”

So will Bud Walton Arena at Arkansas and the Pete Maravich Center at LSU. Both schools had good pre-seasons. Vanderbilt and Tennessee are always tough road games for UK, no matter their records. Mostly, though, Calipari views the SEC schedule, even right through the tournament, as the chance to prepare these guys for the Big Dance. And that began Saturday, in the lions den of the KFC Yum! Center. The crowd in red noisily supported the gladiators. But the lions won. WINTER’S BEST RIVALRY, BAR NONE! I’m glad the UK-UofL contretemps are finally getting national recognition. North Carolina-Duke has that Tobacco Road charm, I suppose, and of course they do play each other in conference. But no two rivals have had the mutual success over the past five years of the Cats and Cardinals. Ready-for-TV Hallof-Fame coaches. Two national championships. Five Final Four appearances. And that annual Christmas-New Year’s face-off between two top-ranked teams. We don’t have an HBO documentary yet. But there is a book out called “Fightin’ Words” by Joe Cox and Ryan Clark that recounts the colorful history. It’s all there: Rupp and Hickman, Hall and Crum, Pitino’s Cats and Pitino’s Cards. Sky Walker and Never Nervous, Dr. Dunkenstein to Russdiculous, Monster Mash to Unibrow. It is the best of times for this I-64 rivalry – and maybe another April match-up in the works. VT

But forgetting Ulis and Booker for the moment, the highlight of the day, for me, was the constantly increasing level of play by the two big frosh, Karl-Anthony Towns and Trey Lyles. Yeah, they score sometimes. Lyles has a pretty jump shot from the elbow, Towns has nice moves underneath. Neither one is averaging in double figures. But they’re grabbing defensive rebounds the Calipari way – both hands, vice grips, UK ball. Aggressively, energetically, even viciously, outleaping and outfighting without fouling. And so, it’s on to the SEC. The 40-and0 talk will only ratchet up. Maybe it’ll happen. It’s a long haul with a lot of road games. Florida’s O-Dome will be noisy and rocking. It always is for Kentucky.

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UK’s Karl-Anthony Towns and the Cats had good reason to smile.

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

SPORTS

It Was a Blue, Blue Christmas


SPORTS

Offensively Challenged

The Cat’s Willie Cauley-Stein gets up close and personal with UofL’s Chris Jones.

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Karl-Anthony Towns added 10 ohn Calipari walked points and nine rebounds, while through the concrete Aaron Harrison added two crucial bowels of Louisville’s 3-point baskets. KFC Yum! Center, stepped Louisville head coach Rick Pitino behind the podium inside the served to illustrate that when conmedia center and flashed a Quid Pro Quo fronted with one of the best recruitbarely concealed grin of sating classes in history, his troops like every other before them were no isfaction. And why not? His IGOR team, the University of Ken- GURYASHKIN match for Calipari’s platoons. His team is a Final Four contender, no tucky — the biggest collecdoubt. But Louisville lost the battion of All-Americans ever tle on Saturday and come April, they may lose assembled under one banner just beat the war along with everyone else. their deadly intra-state rival Louis“They [Kentucky] are one of the best ville. Handily. teams, defensively, that I have seen in my last 40 years of coaching,” explained Pitino.

“I like my freshmen,” beamed Calipari. “There are other good freshmen in the country, but I would take mine.”

“We don’t have much of a bench right now…and I think that they [Kentucky] wore us down in the second half a little.”

For some, Saturday’s matchup between University of Kentucky (1) and University of Louisville (4) that ended 58-50 in Kentucky’s favor would be the biggest test for either team. Both are defensive powerhouses capable of shutting down even the slickest of offenses but a question remained. Who would break and leave the arena with their undefeated record intact?

“Coming into the game we knew we were good on defense but the question was whether we could score. We could not.”

For Louisville the game was a catalogue of offensive errors. One assist the entire game. A self-destructive 21 percent success rate shooting from the field in the first half that only saw fit to go up to 26 percent by game’s end. Three 3-point shots made on 14 attempts. Make no mistake, Louisville played badly on offense, matched Kentucky on defense for long stretches, but succumbed to the same fate as every other Wildcats’ opponent – lack of depth and physicality.

For Calipari the game may have been a stern test, but it was ultimately passed with flying colors by his star-studded roster. And despite claiming that the remaining games of the regular season will still pose a challenge, it’s obvious to anyone who witnessed Kentucky’s victory at the KFC Yum! Center that it’s safest not to bet against the Wildcats going undefeated for the remainder of the season. A win against Louisville ensures that Kentucky will likely not play a tougher opponent until the NCAA tournament because Lexington’s finest drove 90 miles to their rivals and showed few signs of ever being truly troubled against a team only 3 spots lower in the rankings. The hype is still utterly deserved.

Sure, Terry Rozier may be the only Louisville player who can walk away from the game with some form of pride having topscored with 15, pairing that with 8 rebounds, but his team mates will know they needed to do a lot better. For Kentucky, one of many highlights was the play of point-guard Tyler Ulis, who notched 14 points and through whom much of Kentucky’s offense was directed. Elsewhere UofL’s Terry Rozier battled for the ball. J A N U A R Y 1 , 2 0 1 5 • W W W . V O I C E -T R I B U N E . C O M

“I don’t want arrogance,” explained Calipari. “I want swagger. You earn swagger by working hard, playing well and trusting your teammates.” As for the rest of the season Calipari is planning on enjoying the ride. “I’m having a ball coaching this team. Every morning I wake up whistling and skipping. I have the greatest group of kids.” VT

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


#1 Kentucky improved to 13-0 with a 58-50 win over #4 Louisville on Saturday at the KFC Yum! Center. The Cats held the Cards to just 25.9 percent shooting from the field and outrebounded them 46-33. UK was led by freshman point guard Tyler Ulis, who scored 14 points. The four Cats freshmen combined to score 39 of UK’s 58 points. Another glaring statistic from the game: UofL had just one assist on 15 made field goals. Here is some post game reaction from both sides. The Cats now lead the all-time series 33-15.

all. So I guess it was just new to you guys, but it didn’t surprise me at all.

Have you ever had a team have just one assist, and is that a product of UK making it so hard to pass?

In your first college road Rick Pitigame, what was it like with no (UofL head about a minute to go when coach): Well Taylor’s 10 you knew that you had the I’ll tell you game under control in that the truth, we KENT kind of a hostile environmissed about TAYLOR ment? eight to 10 easy WAVE3 Sports shots, and that’s a credit to them, Karl-Anthony Towns (UK): We but also, we’re a little offensively chaljust knew that we had to keep playing. Loulenged. We’ve had this problem the whole isville is such a great team and we had to year. We’re working very hard at it. We’re make sure that we didn’t get too happy, we an excellent defensive team, although we had to keep fighting as if we were down by had 18 deflections in the first half, only 10. We did a great job of doing that – of exeseven in the second half, and they shot 47 cuting. We just played and fortunately for us, percent. Their size wore us down. We don’t the win came to us. have much of a bench, right now. Getting Shaqquan (Aaron) back will help us. But Is it fair to say the four freshmen they don’t have to worry about foul trouble, thrived in that environment? and they’ve got a bench, and they can wear Towns: We just did what we had to do. We you down with their size, and I think it wore just had to step up to the plate, with veterans down our defense in the second half. being in foul trouble, and we just did. Tyler [Ulis] had a great game. Devin [Booker] You never know how you will had an absolutely great game. Trey [Lyles] respond to a new environment, all had a great game, and I just tried to conof your freshmen, playing your first tribute as much as possible to the team. I’m true road game, were you surprised just glad we came up with the win. We never at all that it was Kentucky who made care about statistics and personal stats; we the plays that decided the game? care more about the team success. Devin Booker (UK): It was the preparaDo you take some confidence from tion before the game. this game, getting some playing time You know the first plaand holding your own? toon, when we practice, Shaqquan Aaron (Uof L): Of course, they’re up in us, showeverybody wants to play in big games, it’s ing us how Louisville is going to make you more excited to play, but going to play, they were fouling us and I just you’ve got to be calm and play your game feel like it made us better for this game. and not get overly-excited. Maybe you knew it already, but did Tyler Ulis show you something today, in that kind of environment? Booker: This is nothing new to me. We’ve been friends since 8th grade and we’ve been on a lot of camp teams, I’ve seen him do it

How can you put into words the frustration of trying to move the ball and get shots against their length? Terry Rozier (UofL): It created a lot of frustration. They were taking away the drib-

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ble hand off, down screens, they did a good job playing defense. We tried to prepare for it, knowing that’s what they do, but it was kind of tough with their length. It ends up being an eight point game; you didn’t shoot well as a team. Does it make you want another shot at them, thinking that you’re that close to the #1 team in the country? Rozier: Def initely, since the beginning of the game we knew that we were going to be in the game, and that we could beat them. We just came up short. We just didn’t hit shots. But live to fight another day; play the next game and go from there. When you see that you had just one assist as a team, does that jump off the stat sheet to you, is that shocking? Rozier: Yes that is. It’s crazy. I think they’re length bothered us. We couldn’t really dump the ball down low. Coach preached to get our mid-range shots going off the flat screen, and I mean I guess that’s what we looked for, but we couldn’t get assists. What positives can you take from playing UK to an eight point game? Wayne Blackshear (UofL): We don’t back down from any team. We’re going to play as hard as we can no matter who it is and we just couldn’t hit shots at the end, and that’s what hurt us. VT Kentucky head coach John Calipari now holds a 7-1 record against Louisville coach Rick Pitino since taking over the reigns at UK. Coach Cal also edges Pitino 12-9 during their college careers overall.

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SPORTS

Cards Lose to Missed Shots


SPORTS

Reasons to Cheer the Arrival of 2015

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y the time these thoughts are before your eyes it will be New Year’s Eve, so let’s begin by offering a fervent wish that 2015 will be a spectacular 12-month run, and a wonderful addition to your body of work on our planet.

Keeneland has wonderful tradition, a great team and one of the most picturesque settings in American racing.

For those who care about what happens in competition on raceHorse Sense tracks across the land, the year ahead offers incredible promise because of the large number of JOHN proven stars of 2014 being pointed ASHER toward campaigns in the New Year and, of course, the youngsters will officially become 3-year-olds on the first day And Happy Birthday to every Thoroughof that year. The latter are the candidates bred in existence, as New Year’s Day is the for the Kentucky Derby and the Longines date each turns one year older for purposes Kentucky Oaks that will be run at Churchill of competition. Downs on the first weekend in May. Participation in the horse industry brings It is encouraging that we head into the with it a ratio of disappointment-to-joy that New Year with an unsettled debate over is unbalanced toward the former. It has been which member of last year’s outstanding that way since day. But, as an adage goes, no crop of 3-year-olds will earn the honors of one with a 2-year-old in their barn ever con2014’s champion of that age group and, most templated suicide. Which brings us to 2015, likely, “Horse of the Year.” The top three a year that offers a feeling of optimism that in a talented group are Kentucky Derby might be a bit more robust than usual. and Preakness winner California Chrome, First off, let us celebrate the return of the once-beaten Pacific Classic winner and 2013 Breeders’ Cup Championships to Kentucky juvenile champion Shared Belief and Bayas the event makes its first stop at Keeneland ern, who traveled a controversial path to victory in $5 million Breeders’ Cup Classic in on Oct. 30-31. his final start of 2014. Bayenr’s Classic, where members of the current crop of 3-year-olds finished in the first six positions, remains a good measure of the quality of the stars of that age group. Shared Belief, who suffered his lone loss of the year when he was wiped out by Bayern at the start of the Classic, ended his season last Saturday with a victory in the seven-furlong Malibu at Santa Anita. California Chrome completed the year a bit earlier in a romp on grass in the Hollywood Derby, joining Secretariat as the only Derby winners to also score Grade I wins on turf. Another exciting prospect is the possible return of two-time Horse of the Year Wise Dan. Mort Fink’s star gelding will turn eight on New Year’s Day. Wise Dan was perfect in four starts, and the possible return of the champ will be one of the major stories to watch in 2015.

The unbeaten Dortmund counts a win at Churchill Downs and the Grade I Los Alamitos Derby among his three victories for 3-time Kentucky Derby winner Bob Baffert.

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Main Sequence, another talented turf star and Horse of the Year candidate after he made the Breeders’ Cup Turf his fourth consecutive Grade I grass win, also has a 2015 racing schedule in the works.

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Also training toward a return in 2015 is Kentucky Oaks and Breeders’ Cup Distaff winner Untapable, who will be named champion 3-year-old filly of 2014. She should improve on her stellar 2014 season. This writer, for one, would love to see Untapable get at least one more honest shot against the talented boys in her generation. She will, however, need a new jockey as regular rider Rosie Napravnik is retired and expecting a baby around Derby and Oaks time. Which brings us to the Derby and Oaks horses, about 120 days away from their respective goals. In racing, that stretch can be ample time to develop if your horse is doing well, or if you’re already off schedule because of illness or injury, no time at all.

The 79-year-old Hall of Fame trainer D. Wayne Lukas has a major Kentucky Oaks contender in Take Charge Brandi.

Since the conclusion of the Churchill Downs meet, a victory – albeit a narrow one – by unbeaten Dortmund in a fast running of the Los Alamitos Futurity places him in the upper ranks of soon-to-be 3-year-olds looking toward the Kentucky Derby. The D. Wayne Lukas trained Take Charge Brandi, the 61-1 upset winner of the Breeders’ Cup Juvenile Fillies, won the Grade I Starlet over the same track for her third straight Grade I win and likely sewed up the honor of champion 2-year-old filly of 2014. Here are my top 10’s in the Derby and Oaks divisions for those 3-year-olds that are about to celebrate birthdays: Kentucky Derby: 1. American Pharoah 2. Dortmund 3. Imperia 4. Eagle 5. Texas Red 6. Carpe Diem 7. Mawthooq 8. Competitive Edge 9. The Great War 10. El Kabier. Kentucky Oaks: 1. Top Decile 2. No Fault of Mine 3. Puca 4. Take Charge Brandi 5. West Coast Belle 5. Enchanting Lady 6. Feathered 7. By the Moon 8. Paige Wonder Gal 9. Peace and War 10. Condo Commando. A happy New Year to all! VT P H OTO S B Y R E E D PA L M E R | C H U R C H I L L D O W N S


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Bearcats Pound Bulldogs The Kentucky Country Day Bearcats defeated the Burgin Bulldogs on Friday, Dec. 26 56-10. Sydney Mathis led KCD with 23 points.

he Eastern Eagles have been on an impressive hot streak to start their season, rocketing all the way to No. 13 in the state of Kentucky. On their 7-0 campaign, Eastern won the Best In Hoops Classic at Oldham County, but have had close calls against Kentucky Country Day (66-61) and Henry Clay (74-72). The Fairdale Bulldogs will look to end that winning streak when the two teams clash. Eastern is averaging 57.7 points per game, and 30 rebounds per game. Aside from the stellar offense, the Bulldogs smothering defense will need to step up in order to hand Eastern its first loss of the season. Fairdale’s defense is averaging 5.3 steals per game, and Damon Moore is leading the team with 1.3 steals per game. Senior guard Rontez Johnson is averaging 14.1 points to lead Fairdale, and racking up a team-leading 7.4 rebounds per game. Four of Fairdale’s five losses on the season have come in the last five games, and the game against Eastern will be Fairdale’s first game back in town, after the Barnstorm Christmas Classic in Georgia. Fairdale will look to snap the recent slump and end Eastern’s winning streak Jan. 2 at 6 p.m.

Daria Eisenbrei hustled down court to beat the Burgin defense.

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Sydney Mathis led the Bearcats in transition offense.

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Hannah McCulligh kept a defender at arm’s length.

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SPORTS

Eagles Continue to Soar


SPORTS

Verbal Scrimmage featuring

MATT JONES Tune into Kentucky Sports Radio with Matt Jones on Talk 1080 from 10 a.m. to 12 p.m. Monday - Friday.

TONY VANETTI Tune into the Afternoon Underdogs with Tony Vanetti on Talk 790 from 3 to 5.30 p.m. Monday - Friday.

versus

Wildcats Are The Toughest Nut To Crack TONY VANETTI: Another dream game in the books, and Kentucky comes up with another win. Matt, your thoughts on an eight-point victory for the Cats? MATT JONES: Well the series has kind of become a nightmare for Rick. Kentucky was the better team this year, and so the result was not really a surprise. That was about the margin I expected. The storyline is that it’s now seven of eight for Calipari, and it’s not exactly clear when that ends. And for Pitino it seems like the series is miserable for him. He looked awful during the game in terms of not wanting to be there. And if it was up to him I don’t know that he’d still want to play it. VANETTI: It was awful timing, I agree with you there. For a year that you need a win against Cal, this is the team that you can’t compete with. Again, it was a hardfought game, it was a very physical game in the KFC Yum! Center. It was tight for most of the game. But as most people predicted, as we both predicted, in the last 10 minutes of the game, it was owned by the Cats. JONES: It’s striking to me to look at the two coaches during the game. I think they both want to win a lot. I don’t believe Cal when he acts like the game doesn’t mean as much. But it’s striking to me how different they both look during the game. Cal is laughing and energetic, and Rick looks like he’s at a wake. I think that can’t help but have an effect on the team. VANETTI: He hasn’t been like that the last couple of years, and it’s transferred to the team. The teams have played better. I don’t know why Rick sometimes coaches this game tight. He hasn’t had the best game J A N U A R Y 1 , 2 0 1 5 • W W W . V O I C E -T R I B U N E . C O M

plan in the last couple of years against Calipari. It has shown. Kentucky hasn’t had more talent or better talent every time out, but they come up with a victory. I’m not sure about that one. What did you think about Rick’s game plan this time around? JONES: I knew he was going to do that, and that’s what he had to do. I agree with you, in years past I haven’t understood the game plan. Especially last year, both times they played. This year though, he had no choice. Nobody in the country can run with Kentucky. I do think Pitino has undergone a shift in style. His teams have played slower in the last five years, than they have in the past. But, he didn’t have a choice but to do it this game. With that said, I was surprised at his substitution pat-

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terns. I don’t watch every Louisville game, but I was surprised they didn’t play Anas Mahmoud. I’m surprised they didn’t try Anton Gill at all. Chris Jones essentially played them out of the game at times, and they stayed with him. I know he and Pitino aren’t best buddies, but I just don’t understand staying down the same path that’s not working. VANETTI: Well, I think he was afraid Anas would get pushed around. JONES: The other guys got pushed around. VANETTI: No, there’s no question about that. I think the worst part for Louisville fans is not the 1-7 against Cal. Yes it hurts, but mostly at least for me, it wasn’t the vetP 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


SPORTS

SPORTS

UK’s Trey Lyles being guarded by Louisville’s Chris Jones.

erans that beat Louisville on Saturday. It was the darn freshmen again. The freshmen come up big against Louisville every year. That’s the biggest argument for Louisville fans “Oh, well the freshmen can’t beat the veterans.” Ulis came up big, Lyles was big. The freshmen come in and play against Louisville all of the time. JONES: That’s a good point. Cal over the years has had freshman that are just overwhelming talent. Wall, Cousins, Gilchrist, etc. But that’s not these freshmen. Tony don’t you think these freshmen for Kentucky you can all see playing for Louisville? Every one of them you could see being a Louisville player. They’re all kind of Pitino type players. They’re not amazing physical specimens like Cal has had. And for those guys to win, I think that has to be particularly stinging. Because all of these guys are Pitino guys. VANETTI: And in that environment. By the way, are you still in love with Jennifer Lawrence? I know you want to marry her. JONES: I think she’s kind of a fake fan. I saw that our friend Terry Meiners had to bring her UofL gear to wear to the game. If you’re a real Jennifer Lawrence. fan I don’t think you need to have someone bring you Louisville gear. There was a great scene where she was trying to follow along with the CARDS cheer. It was

like she was trying to understand what was happening. So I still love her as an actress. I can’t stand that she’s a UofL fan, but I don’t think she really is a fan. I think she was just there. VANETTI: She’s true to the Cardinals.

I agree with you. It was not a fun game to watch and it ended up with the Cats winning. So, I’ll say congratulations; the last two losses for Louisville have been the Cats. So, you move on to your SEC slate and Louisville moves on to the ACC.

JONES: Because every true Cardinal fan doesn’t have a Louisville shirt. They would need Terry Meiners to bring them a shirt. VANETTI: I will agree with you this, She did mess up on the CARDS cheer. It’s pretty simple. But okay, the environment was crazy. You’ve got to say, even though it’s lop-sided in Kentucky’s favor at this point in the rivalry, it’s still the nation’s best. JONES: Well it’s the nation’s most vitriolic rivalry. The fans are the most into it. But these games are not good games. They’re not fun to watch, really. Part of it is that the style that Rick employs in these games makes them hard to watch. They’re slow, they grind it out, they’re hacking and they’re grabbing. It’s just not a fun brand of basketball. But I will give Louisville fans this, I did think that environment was great. It was loud. I was there pre-game and it was exciting. Sometimes I think Louisville games feel like professional games and not college games. But I didn’t feel that on Saturday. I thought their fans really brought it. Unfortunately, the fans couldn’t get into the game very often because there just weren’t enough runs for Louisville, for the crowd to really get into. VANETTI: Even though they’re used to the Big East days where a lot of games looked like that, physical, grinders 52-50,

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UK’s Willie Cauley-Stein makes a basket over UofL center Mangok Mathiang.

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


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The Elvis Tribute Artist Spectacular "80th Birthday Edition" SUNDAY JAN. 18TH, W. L. LYONS BROWN THEATRE Appearing Shawn Klush, Cody Ray Slaughter & Ryan Pelton with Special Guests: D.J. Fontana, The Sweet Inspirations, Blackwood Quartet and The Fabulous Ambassadors Band. Tickets are available for purchase at the The Kentucky Center Box Office by phone: 800-775-7777. For more information visit www.elvisbirthdaytribute.com


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Christmas Party To End All Christmas Parties

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LYG 24th Birthday

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UK/UofL Watch Party

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Society

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UofL Holiday Reception

RĂŠVive Holiday Celebration

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FAT Friday Trolley Hop

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Stinson, Haner, Lewis and Stinson Holiday Party


SENG


SENG


SOCIETY

Annual Christmas Party To End All Christmas Parties Friends, new and old, gathered to strengthen and renew ties, as Saints and Skybar in St. Matthews hosted a traditional Christmas Party to End All Christmas Parties on Dec. 19. With drink specials on offer to celebrants who dressed up with holiday decorations many turned out with tinsel around the neck, a hanging ornament, strings of lights, holiday hats or sweaters, red and green outfits, and more. Saints and Skybar generously featured happy hour drink specials. A DJ downstairs and karaoke upstairs got the people dancing and into the holiday spirit.

Ali Navigar, Amamda Brookshire, Caroline Felice, Michael Wickliffe and Josh Duke.

Sue Sullivan and Mike Asher.

Michelle Carrara and Yvonne Lindsey.

Mark McCane, Liz Purcival and Cary Gant.

Michelle Young and Travis Langdon.

Denise Frye and Garry Steffey.

Amanda Brookshire, Larry Sinclair and Pat Southall.

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Taylor Colvin, Allison Morrison, Melissa Taylor, Susie Davis and Lee Mays.

Chuck Schwabe with McKenzie and Jim Nalley.

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Ali Nohelty, Deborah Allred and Bill Rockwood.

PHOTOS BY TIM VALENTINO | CONTRIBUTING PHOTORAPHER


LYG turned 24, and invited the public to help them celebrate at First Lutheran Church on Dec. 21. Youth-made ornaments and other goodies were up for sale, and guests had the opportunity to meet the fantastic Louisville Youth Group staff, mentors and board members. The Louisville Youth Group is a community resource dedicated to providing LGBTQIA Youth ages 14 - 20 of the Louisville, Southern Indiana, and surrounding areas a safe and supportive environment. Their mission is to shape youth into happy, healthy and responsible members and leaders in the community. LYG’s Youth Leadership Council. Jacob Rosenberger, Adam Murphy and Henry Brousseau.

Andrew Hudson and Chris Miller.

Dennis Cornell and Elizabeth Stith accept a ceremonial check presented to LYG by Wil Grant and Matt Nehtwick from Humana’s Pride NRG.

Daniel Galvin and Adam Hall.

Maria Murphy, Larry Schlewger, Chris Hartman and Adam Murphy.

PHOTOS BY TIM VALENTINO | CONTRIBUTING PHOTOGRAPHER

LYG President Dennis Cornell and Aaron Goldenshuh.

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W W W . V O I C E -T R I B U N E . C O M •

JANUARY 1, 2015

SOCIETY

Louisville Youth Group 24th Birthday Celebration


SOCIETY

UofL Holiday Reception University of Louisville’s president, Dr. James Ramsey and his wife Jane hosted a wonderful holiday reception for the Board of Trustees, The UofL Foundation Board, and the Board of Overseers Executive Committee on Dec. 21 at Amelia Place, the official home of the University of Louisville president.

Jim and Missy Allen, Salem George Sr. and Eva George and Joyce Hughes.

Dr. James and Jane Ramsey.

David and Kelli Dunn.

Warren Nash, Don Jones and Alec Nash.

Sabine Eid, Ben Hachten and Natalie Shields. Phoebe Wood, Angela Lewis-Klein, Marie Abrams and Robert Klein.

Pam and Rick Feldhoff.

Dr. James Ramsey, Jerry Ward and Bruce Henderson, Board of Trustees.

Joyce and Bob Hughes.

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PHOTOS BY TONY BENNETT | CONTRIBUTING PHOTOGRAPHER


Rick Burnett, Jerrye Huber, Owner Victor Saho, Becky Morrison and Chris and Claudia Deeley of Redefine Design.

Brent Botts, Angie Baruffi and Eric Fischesser.

The FAT Friday Trolley Hop offered those in need of getting out of the house the day after Christmas an opportunity to visit the unique businesses of Frankfort Avenue, many of which offered refreshments and special sales. Better yet, special activities included a wonderful wine and cheese sampling hosted by The Wine Rack; all Christmas items at 70 percent off and a special selection of furniture and home décor at 50 percent off at eyedia; a 50 percent off sale at At Home on The Avenue; $1 off all holiday seasonal drinks at Vint and at Heine Brothers; a traditional Irish music seisuin hosted by The Irish Rover; and more. The FAT Friday Trolley Hop, held year-round on the final Friday of every month, provides free parking and trolley transportation from TARC to participating shops, restaurants and galleries. The route runs along Frankfort, Mellwood and Story Avenues, from Cannons Lane to River Road. The trolley program relies on the support of member businesses to cover the cost of the free public trolley service.

Brett Howard, Mark Estell and Gerry Mattingly of Evolve Consignments.

Zuri Bryant and Latisha Holland at Margaret’s. Twylia Robbins, Tamicky Johnson, Jamaica Kitchens and Tony Miller.

Amy Satterfield, Tarek Hamada and Lucy Duane.

PHOTOS BY TIM VALENTINO | CONTRIBUTING PHOTOGRAPHER

Courtney Bishop and Devin Pence.

Theo Edwards-Butler and Mackenzie Harrison of Varanese.

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Rose Sanders and Helen Stewart at Wine Rack.

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FAT Friday Trolley Hop


SOCIETY

UK/UofL Watch Party Fans with allegiances to both red and blue gathered at the St. Matthews bars, including Saints, BBC, Tin Roof, Molly Malone’s and Drakes to root for the Cards and Cats.

Molly and Abby Gilligan, Megan Corley, Michael Gilligan, and Allison and Sarah Corley at Tin Roof. Heather Gore, Brittany Zirnheld, Shannon Walker and Kendra Barber at Drakes.

Stephanie White, Claude Sagaille and Natalie Buente at Saints.

Tim Ford and Lori O’Koon Ford at Molly’s.

Nicole Mertes and Rebeckah Grimes at Molly’s.

Chris Patterson, Dam Gina and Barry Austin at Drake’s.

Keith Clark, Cherieth Lineweaber, Lauren Pope and Catherine Wilson at Drake’s.

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Dana Moody, Kathy Wiederhold and Jewell Shope at BBC.

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PHOTOS BY TIM VALENTINO | CONTRIBUTING PHOTOGRAPHER


RéVive hosted a friends and family celebration on Dec. 12, at the RéVive skin and laser therapy center that invited guests to observe RéVive’s showcasing of their “Boutique style concept,” as laser technicians performed a live demonstration on an excited participant. RéVive’s VelaShape III body contouring laser was also utilized to illustrate how easy and painless this “fat cell destroying” process can be. Over 100 guest were invited to give their skin the gift of sparkle and shine for the holiday season, while they enjoyed fantastic food from Havana Rumba.

Dara Collins, Kathy Hays, Caroline Johnson, Carol and Lauren Hamilton.

Owners Greg Clough, Chuck Morton and Barry Bohannon.

Marti Hazel and Tim Manning.

Kellie and Scott Krantz.

Sheryl Jones, Cheryl Dortch and Kim Shellhart.

Ashley Davis, Chuck Morton, Barbara Eckert and Klaus Wilmsmeyer.

PHOTOS BY BILL WINE | CONTRIBUTING PHOTOGRAPHER

Bob Morton, Sue Seigle and Brandon Warren.

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RéVive Holiday Celebration


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Stinson, Haner, Lewis and Stinson Holiday Party George Stinson, Eric Haner, Ed Lewis and Julian Stinson warmly hosted friends at the Louisville Country Club for a fantastic holiday party that featured love tunes and jazz standards by Sarah Stivers & Band. Mary Lou and Leonard Meyer, Bob Haner, Sr., Angela McCormick Bisig and Arnold Rivera.

Jackie Beard, Margaret Harris and Kara Mackey.

Julian and George Stinson, Eric Haner, Kay Matton and Ed Lewis.

Aaron Hutton, Ellen Hessen, Craig Scherman and Maryanne Elliott.

Diane and Dennis Heishman with Cindy and Ray Carcione.

Eric Graninger, Jeff Been, Ken Herndon and Chris Hartman.

John Shaw-Woo, Kathy Hensley, Shaio Woo and Amy and Herman Kessler.

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

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PHOTOS BY TIM VALENTINO | CONTRIBUTING PHOTOGRAPHER


SOCIETY

Wayne Jenkins, Kathy Hensley, and Larry Johnston.

Morgan and Chris McGarvey with Judge Jennifer and Brad Wilcox.

Jeanne and David Ferguson.

Father Jerry Eifler was celebrating his birthday.

Bob and Christine Haner with Janice and Darrin McCauley.

Greg and Darlene Dean, Bob Haner, Sr., Jean King and Ken Haner.

Judge Eric Haner and Metro Council District 13 Representative Vicki Aubrey Welch.

Judge Jerry Bowles, Judge Angela McCormick Bisig and Arnold Rivera.

PHOTOS BY TIM VALENTINO | CONTRIBUTING PHOTOGRAPHER

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Vivian Surace and Frank Texas.

W W W . V O I C E -T R I B U N E . C O M •

JANUARY 1, 2015


SOCIETY

A New You for the New Year Let’s be honest. Most of us are going to make New Year’s resolutions that will fizzle out in a few months. It can be daunting when your list of resolutions is as long as your holiday shopping lists. However, it is important to remember that taking smaller steps towards your goals can actually be more effective. Most of us are looking for positive change and new possibilities to enrich our lives. One way to ring in the New Year is with a new skin regimen. Spas are a fantastic place to relax and gather your thoughts, and enjoy some much needed “Me” time. I sat down with Erica McDowell from SKYN Lounge for recommendations on the most beneficial products and treatments available.

tly warmth of the Light is safe for With so many skincare products on the market and all skin types and tones and can be various price points. What are performed weekly. some of your favorite products and why? It is true that it What suggestions can you can be a bit confusing with all the give someone who is just startskin care options available now. I ing skincare treatments and have always been a firm believer in Conversations is on a budget? One of the most utilizing a Retinol of Retin-A prodcommon questions I am asked is LORI uct to assist with skin cell turnover, “What are just a couple easy steps KOMMOR rebuilding collagen, treating acne, or treatments I can do to keep my and removing hyperpigmentation. skin looking fresh I have used this product on and off for over and youthful?” I always 10 years with consistently noticeable results. recommend an exfoliate In my book, it is still the gold-standard anti treatment. Whether that be aging cream. a daily exfoliating cream or unitizing a scrub a couVitamin C serum is a valuable anti-oxiple times a week, it is so dant applied in the morning. Not only does it important to keep the dead protect against photo damage, it also aids in skin cells off the top layer. building collagen. Vitamin C is excellent for Secondly, applying an SPF use in conjunction with sunscreens, which are each day is crucial and precrucial to any skin care regime. vents future damage to the skin. These specific prodCan you share with me some of ucts are very affordable and the latest skincare treatments you are extremely effective. Addoffering? We have recently added the CARing a customized monthITA European Facials to the Menu of Serly facial for that extra deep vices. CARITA treatments are the result of cleansing and visible glow the combination of an aesthetician’s expert is highly beneficial as well. hands and highly effective products, including the brand’s Renovateur Massage, offering each client the best possible visible and lasting There are many conresult. Three CARITA facials including the tributing factors to a Lagoon Hydration, Cotton Softness, and Lisse successful business. Supreme are offered for different skin types. Do you mind sharing a few of yours with me? Customer service is our What new technology(s) have you number one priority. We been most excited about that has given pride ourselves on providyour clients great results? LED Light ing a unique skin care experience that fits Therapy has been an extremely popular treatwithin your particular lifestyle. SKYN Lounge ment when added to a facial or peel or peris a boutique spa specializing in rejuvenating formed alone. This FDA-Cleared devise is a and anti-aging 30 minute to one-hour skin very effective and affordable technology for care treatments. Offering trend-forward skin achieving healthy and youthful skin. We have care services and products, combined with noticed significant improvement in reduchighly skilled aestheticians, has been the halling redness, calming rosacea, and plumping mark of our success. VT the skin with this new technology. The genJ A N U A R Y 1 , 2 0 1 5 • W W W . V O I C E -T R I B U N E . C O M

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Erica McDowell, SKYN Lounge


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velyn and David Sympson held their annual holiday party at their home in Indian Hills. The house is always beautifully decorated and filled with fascinating “things” to enjoy. Evelyn always has a winter village that fills the shelves of the library. David collects American historical items that are fascinating. He has an amazing collection of antique and new miniature model American Revolution-era ships, most made of bone or ivory. The most fascinating piece was an antique sofa that Hubert Schuwey made new ball feet for. It raises the sofa to a comfortable height for senior citizens. He also made a beautiful table to match. I covet them both! Hubert is a genius. You can always count on a good time with the Sympsons. And, there are always a goodly number of SAR’s present and that leads to interesting conversations. CELEBRATION Nobody plans a gala holiday party better

William and Susan Yarmuth.

than George Stinson. When back in November he called to say that after laying off for a few years, he was resuming his Christmas tradition, it was a date to look forward to. Hosted by George, Eric Haner, Ed Lewis and their son Julian Stinson, family and friends, voters and well-wishers showed up help celebrate the holiday and Eric’s re-election.

enjoyed the passed mini crab cakes, sausage-stuffed mushrooms and artichoke fritters before giving the buffet of wonderful cheeses, sausages, stone crab claws and pork tenderloin a good workout.

Partyline CARLA SUE BROECKER

The music and the food were great and the guests were happy. What more could this crowd want? Eric’s father Bob, came up from North Carolina, and his aunt Darleen Haner Dean, his sister Nancy Grantz were present, as well. And scads more relatives joined the enormous crowd of friends.

Sarah Stivers & Band, always a hit with the young and the old, sang a combination of holiday and nostalgic oldies the entire evening. His Honour Mayor Greg Fischer and his mother Marylee Fischer, David Karem, Lee & Babs Robinson, Diana and Bill Schmied, Jean & Billy Shewciw, H. J. Redmon, Kay Matton, Jimmy and Linda Jackson, Maryanne and Tommy Elliott, Henry Heuser, Brad Calobrace, Jerry Eifler, Michael Ozment, Angela Bisig, Philip Koenig and Kathy Hensley

YARMUTH

On Christmas evening Cathy and John Yarmuth held a Wind Down party at their lovely home in Glenview where the dress was casual and the wonderful mix of friends and relatives were ready to do just that. Wind down. The Silver Spoon was in charge of all good things to eat and started off with passed salmon with cream cheese in phyllo dough and mini Reuben sandwiches. The dinner buffet was highlighted by a mammoth jambalaya with shrimp, scallops, lobster and sausage; tenderloin, asparagus, and Brussels sprouts. Enjoying it all were Steve and Terri Bass, Milly Hays, Ann and Nate Zimmerman, William McNulty, Kathy Hensley, Philip Koenig, Seth Baleban, Edith and Bill Weyland, Mary Moss and John Greenebaum, Cheryl Chapman, Keith Runyon, and lots of Yarmuths too numerous to name. VT

Evelyn and David Symspon in front of her holiday village.

Jim and Linda Jackson, Herbert Redmon, and host Ed Lewis.

Hostess Cathy Yarmuth.

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Brad Calobrace and Jerry Eifler at the Stinson/Lewis/Haner party.

W W W . V O I C E -T R I B U N E . C O M •

JANUARY 1, 2015

SOCIETY

Holiday Parties in Full Swing


SOCIETY

Give the Gift of Life This Year

T

family waited and prayed that he he beginning of the would receive the Gift of Life. New Year marks the In 2012, Ethan's family received season of resolutions. a phone call they will never forget. As you make your list of resDue to the generosity of others, olutions for 2015, I ask you the long-awaited transplant finalto consider giving the Gift of ly became a reality. Now Ethan is Jefferson County Life by joining the Kentucky Circuit Court Clerk 4 years old, thriving and going to preschool – all thanks to the KenOrgan Donor Registry. This tucky Organ Donor Registry. simple act of kindness costs DAVID L. more than 1,000 children nothing, takes less than a NICHOLSON andToday, adults in Kentucky are waiting minute and leaves a lasting impact on a person’s life, like 4-year- for a life-saving transplant. Across the country, nearly 124,000 patients are waiting for old Ethan. their Gift of Life. It is estimated that an averShortly after Ethan was born in 2010, doctors discovered that his digestive system was not functioning properly and that he would need an organ transplant to survive. Only a few weeks old, Ethan was placed on the transplant list for small intestines. For two years, Ethan's J A N U A R Y 1 , 2 0 1 5 • W W W . V O I C E -T R I B U N E . C O M

age of 21 people die each day waiting for a transplant. As your Circuit Court Clerk, I am deeply involved with the Trust For Life, the Kentucky organ donor awareness organization. My staff and I ask each and every person obtaining a Kentucky driver's license or ID card if they

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would like to join the Kentucky Organ Donor Registry and if they wish to donate a dollar to the Kentucky Trust For Life. Through a strategic partnership with Kosair Charities, the Kentucky Trust For Life has been able to bring awareness about organ donation and help children throughout Kentucky. Thanks to the selfless acts of kindness from individuals across the state, Kentucky has reached a milestone in the fight to end the wait and save lives. More than 1.5 million Kentuckians have joined the Kentucky Organ Donor Registry, but we still need your help. Please consider adding your name to the Kentucky Organ Donor Registry in 2015. Anyone, regardless of medical history or age, can join and help give hope to those awaiting their Gift of Life. Best wishes for a healthy and prosperous 2015! For more information on Donate Life Kentucky, please visit www.donatelifeky.org or call (866) 945-5433.


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EAR READERS: Welcome to 2015! If the last year was challenging for some of us, a new one has arrived, bringing with it our chance for a new beginning.

Today is the day we have an opportunity to discard destructive old habits for healthy new ones, and with that in mind, I will share Dear Abby’s often-requested list of New Year’s Resolutions, which were adapted by my late mother, Pauline Phillips, from the original credo of Al-Anon: JUST FOR TODAY: I will live through this day only. I will not brood about yesterday or obsess about tomorrow. I will not set far-reaching goals or try to overcome all of my problems at once. I know that I can do something for 24 hours that would overwhelm me if I had to keep it up for a lifetime. JUST FOR TODAY: I will be happy. I will not dwell on thoughts that depress me. If my mind fills with clouds, I will chase them away and fill it with sunshine. JUST FOR TODAY: I will accept what is. I will face reality. I will correct those things that I can correct and accept those I cannot. JUST FOR TODAY: I will improve my mind. I will read something that requires effort, thought and concentration. I will not be a mental loafer. JUST FOR TODAY: I will make a conscious effort to be agreeable. I will be kind and courteous to those who cross my path, and I’ll not speak ill of others. I will improve my appearance, speak softly, and not interrupt when someone else is talking. JUST FOR TODAY: I will refrain from improving anybody but myself. JUST FOR TODAY: I will do something positive to improve my health. If I’m a smoker, I’ll quit. If I am overweight, I will eat healthfully – if only just for today. And not only that, I will get off the couch and take a brisk walk, even if it’s only around the block. JUST FOR TODAY: I will gather the courage to do what is right and take responsibility for my own actions. ••• DEAR ABBY: I’m a single mom. My child’s father has refused to take any responsibility since before the baby was born. I never cut ties because I’m sure my son will someday long for and want to know his real father. Even though he renounced his responsibility, he took it back and said he’d try to be there for

my child. We are geographically many miles apart, and I no longer expect or hope for any possibility of a reconciliation – which is fine. I just never wanted to seem like someone who has been dumped, so I reason that we’re cool.

and his wife split up, we let him stay on our couch for a few months. Then we found out Sierra was pregnant and that she and Karl had been sleeping together before he split with his wife. My daughter is upset that we want to involve the police and press charges because she was underage. How can I get Sierra to stop hating me and understand that this relationship isn’t healthy? – “THE ENEMY MOM” IN SOUTH CAROLINA

Abby, he never calls to ask how our Dear Abby child is. What should I do? Should I cut ties with him forever, or must I JEANNE continue to be the one to message him PHILLIPS informing him about the milestones? Should I keep this connection going or let it go? – CONFUSED SINGLE MOM, DEAR “ENEMY MOM”: Sierra is mad at you YOKOHAMA, JAPAN because you are injecting an unwelcome note of DEAR CONFUSED: A man who “tries” to reality into her fantasy of “love.” Karl is a predbe responsible for his children pays at least token ator who needs to be answerable for what he did. child support to ensure that they are fed, clothed He will also have to support that child until he or and educated. Nowhere in your letter did you she is no longer a minor. Because he has shown indicate that your child’s father has done that – himself to be amoral and irresponsible, involve or intends to. not only the police but also the department of social services to ensure that he lives up to all of If you want to stay in touch so your child will his responsibilities. have an address to reach him when he’s older, I think that’s laudable. But if you’re expecting he ••• will suddenly develop an interest – or a conscience DEAR ABBY: I am recently divorced and now – the pattern that has been set seems pretty well seeing a wonderful woman who is pretty much established, so don’t get your hopes up. everything I was looking for except for a couple ••• of issues, which concern going out to eat -- which we do often. Not once has she offered to pay for DEAR ABBY: We’re in the middle of a dispute a meal. with my mother-in-law. She insisted on using place cards at our family’s Thanksgiving dinner to indiI make good money, but she is not financialcate where she wanted us to sit. I felt it was conly strapped by any means. While I can live with trolling because it was only a small group of peoher not paying, what annoys me is she rarely says ple. When I asked her why she needed a seating thank you after a dinner date. Once, she ordered plan, she said it would be “fun.” a to-go selection to take home to her daughter. I paid for it, but again got no thanks. When we While it ended up that we all sat where we arrived at her house, she gave the food to her wanted and everyone conversed nicely, she said daughter without mentioning that I had bought her holiday was “ruined” because I ridiculed her it for her. for wanting to use place cards. What is your opinion? Would you ask your immediate family to sit Other than her manners, she’s a great gal and in their appointed chairs, or let everyone sit where I’m happy we’re together. Am I being petty and they would like? – MUSICAL CHAIRS IN NEW overly sensitive? My ex-wife never appreciated me, ENGLAND so I guess it’s a sore spot. How should I approach this without jeopardizing everything else? -- HESDEAR MUSICAL CHAIRS: One of the perks ITANT TO SPEAK UP IN THE MIDWEST of hosting a sit-down dinner is having the privilege of controlling the seating, regardless of whether DEAR HESITANT: Your great gal has poor guests are friends or relatives. That it was a “fammanners. Approach it by telling her exactly what ily dinner” is beside the point. For you to have you have written to me. Then ask her why she made such a scene that you ruined your hostess’s never says thank you and didn’t bother to give evening was rude, and you owe her an apology. you credit when you did something nice for her daughter. ••• DEAR ABBY: My 16-year-old daughter, “Sierra,” started baby-sitting in the afternoons for a couple when she was 15. Sometimes her dad or I would drop her off; sometimes the husband, “Karl,” would before he left for work. My husband and Karl became friends, and when Karl

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Either this woman never learned basic manners, or she takes you for granted. And if this is a pattern with all the women in your life, it’s important you understand why and do something about it before you marry again or you will never be happy. W W W . V O I C E -T R I B U N E . C O M •

JANUARY 1, 2015

SOCIETY

Another Year Brings Opportunities to Begin Anew


Don’t see yourself?

Visit our redesigned website at www.voice-tribune.com for extended photo galleries and purchase options.


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Home of the Week

A December Surprise

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Out & About

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Life

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Arts & Entertainment

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Calendar

Page 60

Feast BBQ


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street SMARTS

Stephanie Ellis “I like to shop at Work The Metal because they have a clothing line section now. I also like DotFox and Bermuda Highway, which is new. But if I have to go to the mall, then Ann Taylor for work and Macy’s. I think my sense of style is comfortable, but I don’t really think I am that stylish! If I’m going out though, I like to get jazzed-up in heels, of course. I get all my ideas from Pinterest, and probably wouldn’t have any style if it wasn’t for Pinterest.” J A N U A R Y 1 , 2 0 1 5 • W W W . V O I C E -T R I B U N E . C O M

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


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IT UP

You may have to put a little more thought into looking stylish and staying warm in the winter months. It’s easy to lose interest when temperatures drop into the single digits, and we tend to pile on the layers without putting much thought into it. The only thing that’s on our mind is how to stay warm. My advice is to choose your layers wisely. Start with thin comfortable clothing that adheres to your body shape.

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CASHMERE AND WOOL B L E N D S W E AT E R B Y J O I E . AVA I L A B L E AT BLINK BOUTIQUE 3706 L E X I N GTO N R OA D, 40207. 502.899.9885. E M Y M A C K I TA L I A N L E AT H E R B O OT S W I T H BUCKLES. AVAILABLE AT R O D E S 4 9 3 8 B R O W N S B O R O R OA D, 40222. 502.753.7633.

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W W W . V O I C E -T R I B U N E . C O M •

JANUARY 1, 2015

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mixing

SUMMER ELIASON ANTIQUE FILIGREE HEART SHAPED E A R R I N G S . AVA I L A B L E AT RODES 4938 BROWNSBORO R OA D, 4 0 2 2 2 . 5 0 2 . 7 5 3 . 7 6 3 3 .


LIFE

the Collectors

K

elley Carson apologized for having removed all the Christmas decorations in the house. It was only Dec. 26 but, she explained, she and husband Ernest Sampson were heading out of town.

developer, Cordon Bleu-trained caterer, truck driver, skier, founder of a clinical trial medical research company, founder of a ski wear company, developer of a day care center. Worn out yet?

Home of the Week

When she moved into this Louisville home, she took on another role: redesigning it to evoke some of the same virtues of her ColoSTEVE rado home – melding the inside KAUFMAN Considering that the and outside, such a big part 8,000-square-foot Glenview home was filled of the Aspen lifestyle, where the outwith garlands, wreaths and eight Christmas side includes soaring mountains, thick trees, it must have been an intense evening of stands of trees and impossibly blue skies. activity. But her new Louisville house was not But one gets the sense that being intensely letting the outside in. “The house had busy is how Sampson likes it. Her husband calls wallpaper everywhere,” Carson said, her a “serial entrepreneur,” and just discussing “and it was loud and busy, blue and pink all her ventures wears out most listeners. and full of peacocks. It made the house She relocated to Louisville from Aspen, feel dark and closed in. So we repaintColorado, in 2009 after meeting Sampson ed most of it a soft white linen and took through mutual friends. He runs a series of down all the drapes.” successful investment companies, including Kentucky Financial Group. She has been, a nurse anesthetist, home builder, real estate J A N U A R Y 1 , 2 0 1 5 • W W W . V O I C E -T R I B U N E . C O M

natural light now pouring into the house from the uncovered windows. The Colonial red brick house sits on a narrow acre of land that extends far into the back, offering unbroken outside views and plenty of privacy. Among the reflective pieces is a mirrored table that sits front and center in the entry foyer, a piece Sampson bought by himself when Carson was away. She liked it enough to keep it in its place of prominence. And if she hadn’t liked it?

Carson also tried to introduce reflective materials – like shiny metals, glass and mirrored surfaces – to reflect the

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


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wood floors. Dotting the wall shelves are antique mallard duck decoys from Sampson’s large collection.

“A client gave one to me years ago and I’ve never stopped adding to it,� he says, admitting “it’s kind of a compulsion of mine.�

But on the subject of compulsive collecting, they both admit he runs a far second to his wife. Or, as he says, “don’t take Kelley to an auction, she’s likely to buy anything!� “When I start bidding, I have to win,� she says, admitting she once bought an East Tennessee farm at an auction. “I love land, I could just buy it all day long.� Thus the couple’s art collection, which includes a Chagall and a Miro hanging in the kitchen, a Salvadore Dali in the basement, and a Picasso. She also loves sculpture. There’s David Stuempfle pottery in the library and an Estella Loretto sculpture of a Native American woman, a smaller version of the same piece that sits in front of the statehouse in Santa Fe, New Mexico. And there are glass pieces in the kitchen, including a colorful glass chandelier, made by students of Dale Chihouly.

“I would have liked it because he bought it,� she answers. The table sits on a red and white Russian silk Oriental rug, which influenced the red berry-colored walls in the foyer, giving the entry a bright and welcoming feel. The furniture is a yours-mine-ours collection of pieces Sampson had, pieces Carson brought from Colorado and pieces they acquired together. A common theme is soft patterned fabrics with heavy, dark wood trim, some of which reflects the woodsy, ski lodge feel of Aspen.

However, Carson says her favorite piece of art in the house is a colorful abstract oil above the fireplace in the living room painted by none other than Sampson himself. The bright canvas of yellow, red and blue orbs, which Sampson painted on a whim, is very interpretive, says his wife. “Some see pool balls, some see eyeballs,� she says. “I call it ‘the eyes of the world.’ � The large basement is Ernest’s playroom, with a pool table and three actual working Las Vegas slot machines that jing-jing-jing when he turns them on. It also houses his burgeoning wine collection in a temperature-controlled cellar that Carson also uses to store her furs. “Why not?� she wonders, with assured practicality. “The cool air is great for preserving furs. They love it.� VT Advertisement

Much of the furniture they acquired locally is from Ryser’s, which Carson describes as an incredibly high-end Eastern Kentucky furniture store “a diamond in the rough, in the middle of nowhere.� Actually, it’s in the middle of East Bernstadt, Ky., in the coal country of Laurel County. How do you get there? “You go to London, Kentucky,� says Sampson, “turn left and then go a little further.� The library is a study in wood, from the heavy built-in floor-to-ceiling cabinets along one wall to the beamed ceilings to the dark

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Parks & Weisberg, RealtorsŽ 502-238-1921 W W W . V O I C E -T R I B U N E . C O M •

JANUARY 1, 2015


LIFE

A December

Surprise Celebrating Wayne Jenkins and Stephen Van Hooser


LIFE

I

Written By Sue Baughman

n early December, Wayne Jenkins and Stephen Van Hooser mailed a lush, scarlet invitation to a small group of close friends, requesting their presence at a Christmas party later in the month. Little did the recipients know what the evening held in store for them at the Dartmouth on Saturday night, Dec. 20.

Wayne Jenkins and Stephen Van Hooser.

Upon arrival at the lovely building just off of Cherokee Park, guests were met with a first-class cocktail party hosted in the lobby, where Jenkins and Van Hooser had temporarily installed a fabulous bar for this special occasion. Champagne and Silver Oak flowed, and hors d’oeuvres were consumed as the precursor to an exquisite dinner many floors up. After all the guests had arrived, Larry Johnston stepped forward to quiet the crowd. No one in the room except Larry’s wife, Martha, had an inkling of the news he was about to share. Imagine the surprise when everyone learned that while on their annual Christmas shopping trip to New York with Martha the previous week, Wayne and Steve had got married. With Martha as their witness and

PHOTOS BY BILL WINE | CONTRIBUTING PHOTOGRAPHER

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only a photographer, the ceremony had been performed by Reverend Michael Cerrato on Sunday, Dec. 14, alongside the Christmas tree in Rockefeller Plaza, where New Yorkers and tourists alike stopped to witness the ceremony, and applauded graciously. The ceremony was followed by lunch and Champagne at Le Train Bleu, and shopping. Upon hearing this news, everyone quickly realized that the Christmas party they were enjoying was also a wedding celebration. With drinks in hand, and everyone abuzz, they transitioned upstairs to Steve and Wayne’s residence. What a sight it was to behold. The beautiful living room had been emptied of its furniture and turned into an elegant dinner party. Stunning red, green and gold Christmas décor accented the room, while crystal lamps on each of four tables illuminated extraordinary flower arrangements, linens, and fine china. The guests soon found their places, and shortly thereafter the first course of dinner was served. Longtime friend Kathy Cary had prepared a feast that began with the most delicious mushroom soup, moved on to incredible lamb shanks with Brussels sprouts, and concluded with divine cakes to choose from for dessert. The mood in the room was jubilant as continued on page 59 W W W . V O I C E -T R I B U N E . C O M •

JANUARY 1, 2015


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Andrew Gentile and DeeDee McLeod. Steve Bass, Diana Schmied and Todd Johnson.

Davis Edwards and Madeline Blue.

Wayne Jenkins, Sue Baughman and Stephen Van Hooser.

Larry and Martha Johnston with Tracy and Jonathan Blue.

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from page 57

many rose to toast the newly married couple after dinner. Having been together 10 years, Steve and Wayne spoke individually about what the friendship and support of those present has meant to them. Turning your home into a dinner party for one night has many advantages, among which are great conversation and wild dancing. That and much more took place before the last of the guests departed, long after midnight, giving their heartfelt congratulations to Wayne and Steve on their marriage and the wonderful evening of celebration. VT Matt Carter, Andrew Gentile, Fran Jasper and Brent Bruner.

Andie Camden and Todd Johnson.

Ron McLeod and Bobby Clarkson. Martha Johnston and Susan Clarkson.

Katherine and William Vesely, Karen Keith, Stephen Van Hooser.

Margaret Woodside, Martha Johnston and Stephen Van Hooser.

Dan Woodside, Larry Johnston and Bill Schmied.

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Pulled pork.

F

Pork cakes.

Crispy smoked tofu.

A Smokeable Feast

east is an homage to the art of barbecue, a cuisine traditionally all about devotion to a particular style: Texas, North Carolina, Kansas City, Memphis. Feast’s approach is to take the best from all styles, and create simple, consistent, quality barbecue, something Louisville hasn’t had much of until now.

Tastes ADAM DAY

Founded over two years ago by Ryan Rogers, with an initial location in New Albany, the newest iteration of Feast opened just a couple of weeks ago in the heart of NuLu. Rogers, born in Louisiana, eventually found himself at the French Culinary Institute in New York. After gaining experience at some of the best known restaurants in New York and Louisville, Momofuku, Shake Shack, The Oak Room, and Mozz, Rogers opened Feast with the goal of serving simple, traditional barbecue in the best way possible. “All we’re trying to do is take something simple in barbecue, and apply the best techniques possible to make it the best bite of barbecue you’ve ever had,” Rogers says. And they’re not far off. Built in the 1920s for the Hausman Motor Company, the décor is inviting and rustic, much like the ethos of the food. The first thing we dug into at Feast were pork cakes, created with crab cakes in mind. Smoked pulled pork is mixed with cream cheese, green onions, and cayenne, then floured and deep-fried. They came out a gorgeous dark caramel, sitting on a smear of barbecue sauce created with Indiana gnaw bone

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

sorghum. They were delicious. In the mouth they are lightly creamy, but with a weight and texture that is satisfying to the palate. The phenomenal BBQ sauce is made in house, and then cooked, so the tomato in it becomes caramelized, giving it a mild fruit note. Topping the pork cakes is a coleslaw that is neat, crisp, fresh and slightly tangy. Nothing could better compliment the pork cakes

The pulled pork sandwich, which uses much-sought-after Martin’s Potato Rolls, is very traditional, and brined in house in a Coca-Cola brine for 48 hours, as are all of Feast’s meats. Then the pork is pulled out and rubbed with house rub, slowly hotsmoked over hickory initially, then they turn the temp down low. The ribs are baby back, brined and rubbed, and while tender and “fall off the bone,” there’s nothing sloppy about them. For vegetarians and omnivores, there is the crispy smoked tofu, which is smoked and sliced in house, floured and deep fried. The flavor is pleasing to the palate, to say the least, and you’re not going to find a texture like it anywhere else in a barbecue joint, nor in most veggie restaurants.

pie will send you to heaven, though perhaps through insulin shock as much as through sheer sensory pleasure. It’s got a slight shell too it and a soft, delectable middle. On the liquid side, you have ginger or eggnog bourbon slushies to choose from. The ginger offers the traditional icy slushy approach and is a palate cleanser and refreshing; the eggnog slushy is milkshake consistency and the pleasure of it knocked us on our butts. When it’s all said and done Feast is doing precisely what Rogers perceives Louisville to be in more need of. “Look at strong food towns like Charleston, Nashville, they have great chef owned, chef driven restaurants. Others who aren’t the chefs don’t dictate what is to be done in those restaurants. Chefs need to be given the means to put across what they can and want to, with restraint and maturity, and with what the Louisville scene wants and needs in mind,” Feast has certainly filled an important niche, and is filling it deliciously. VT Feast BBQ is located at 909 E. Market Street. For more information visit www.feastbbq.com or call 502.749.9900.

As sides go, there are eight-hour-cooked baked beans made from scratch. Ours were slightly undercooked. But, come on, non-processed baked beans! If you prefer mac and cheese, Feast’s is made with Mornay sauce, made in house from scratch; Parmesan; smoked gouda; cheddar; and extra melt cheese that provides the right amount of gooeyness. And for dessert, you can go solid or liquid. The house made chocolate chess s’more

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Egg nog bourbon and ginger and bourbon slushies.

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


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The memory came rushing back of n 1987 it was my family’s the first time my dad took me on a second year in Louisville, tiresome winter walk to this proud when we moved from a local grocery chain and back with temporary suburban rental in heavy bags (I must have been a whiny J-town to a home of our own in 11-year old at the time). Since it was Clifton - a slightly more urban Nancy’s Bagel Out & About replaced, Melton neighborhood with historGrounds. stores in Louisic Frankfort Avenue at the end BENNETT ville have decreased of our street. In my memory, DUCKWORTH down to the one surthere wasn’t much to this area viving location on Third Street. for a kid when we moved in. We had Bingham Park nearby and only a few This is followed by a new addiother kids living on my street. tion – and frustration. When I By the time I reached a superficial self-conscious stage at the beginning of middle school, I was embarrassed by my neighborhood, thinking it looked a little rough compared to the subdivisions or upscale areas where some of my friends lived. My area of Frankfort Avenue was not then what it is today. To refresh my memory on some of these changes, I took a little trek down the road on a rainy day, starting at a typical destination of my youth, the mammoth Crescent Hill Baptist Church. During my life, this beautiful brick building has seen little-to-no alterations on its exterior. I made my way from there, past Carmichael’s Bookstore to Heine Brothers, which opened its second location here in 1995 to the satisfaction of my Oregonian family, who until then, had trouble finding espresso served in Kentucky. The new Eggs Over Frankfort, next door, was once a Fat Jimmy’s pizzeria and next to that, it looks as though a Bourbon Barrel Foods store will soon be opening. Before the mid-‘90s, this strip had very little prominence. Approaching Hite Street, I saw Margaret’s Fine Consignments, which has been the go-to place for affordable upscale attire since I was very young. There’s also the Wine Rack for connoisseurs of bottled joy and Oscar’s Hardware still stands as a simple neighborhood resource for handy folk. After passing the local firehouse and then Arch L. Heady & Son – Cralle Funeral Home at the corner of Peterson, I came across a place of major change at the corner of Ewing: Walgreens, which used to be a Melton Food Mart.

was in my teens, I started collecting vinyl, but in my car-less existence, I had to go to the Highlands to find any retailers of this “dying” format. Where a liquor store briefly stood next to the Walgreens, is now Matt Anthony’s, one of THREE record shops on Frankfort (the others being New Cult and Guest Room).

Up ahead is El Mundo, a hole-in-the-wall Mexican Restaurant, which started in 1995 and became a workplace of mine from 2005 - 2009. To this day, I always send people their way who desire great food and better Margaritas. Directly across the street, are the three shotgun houses converted into one connected facility, Hair by Bennie and Friends salon, which opened in 1992. Up another block is The Irish Rover. If you’ve not been, shame! Then comes Volare, a restaurant, which has stood for some time, but I remember its building as West Coast Video – one of my first jobs – where I gained more film knowledge, all while preventing kids from sneaking into the porno room. When leaving at night, the aroma of Allo Spiedo’s brick oven chimney across the street would spread the pizza smell down the block. Now, Vint does its best to spread their delicious coffee aroma from the same building. Further down is the recently closed River City Tires, may it rest in peace. They served as my mechanics from the day I learned to drive. I’m sad they recently shut down. What thankfully still stands, is Clifton Pizza, which I remember making a big impression on the city when it opened in 1990 – and advertised every Sunday night to be a place to dine in and watch “The Simpsons”

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Frankfort Avenue: Yesterday And Today

Volare.

El Mundo.

during its first season. After this spot, is perhaps the most notable change in Frankfort Avenue’s history during my life. Genny’s Diner was one of the few Frankfort Avenue staples when I was younger. It was a tourist attraction, which prided itself on greasy food and a tacky atmosphere. It was also the location of one of my first dates at the insistence of a so-called vegetarian who enjoyed non-meat items from places notorious for serving animal products. The owner of the diner was responsible for a house next door, under the protection of the local historical society. There was a lot of ugly news related to his care of this property, but eventually, he went out of business and the house was renovated and expanded into one of the city’s best ice cream parlors, The Comfy Cow. I stopped for lunch at my favorite pan-Mediterranean restaurant, The Grape Leaf, which has been there since 1992. While eating my delicious Falafel sandwich with cauliflower rice, I gazed across the street to see another recently closed restaurant in a building, which has great significance. It was the first home of Lynn’s Paradise Café. In the years after it moved to its now empty location on Barrett Avenue, its legacy has been tainted for various reasons. Regardless, Lynn’s had a line out the door and down the block most Sundays during its first year on Frankfort, and undoubtedly sparked the restaurant boom, which raised the value of the neighborhood considerably. By the time I was out of high school with two jobs in the area, I found myself walking up and down Frankfort Avenue more often than ever before, while realizing that I loved my neighborhood and all the people that made it great. Living in Germantown now, I feel a similar story of progress unfolding. VT W W W . V O I C E -T R I B U N E . C O M •

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2014: Keep Everything Weird

Maybe we’ll remember this n 2014, we kept everyas the worst year for comedy thing weird, from Austin in history. Bill Cosby’s secret, to Portland to, derivativelong (alleged) history is probaly, Louisville. I don’t remembly the saddest, maddest thing ber how the year started for I think I’ve ever heard. Robin Williams’ early exit was terribly us; I’m sure it seemed perfectArts & sad and, at first, unbelievable, ly normal at the time. LocalEntertainment though eventually understandly, many were excited about able. The great Joan Rivers was the idea of Mitch McConnell PETER a young 81, but at least she went being sent into retirement, BERKOWITZ out on top. Tracy Morgan sufPeter’s Picks fered a terrible brain injury in aka – making a whole bunch a crash that took the life of one more money than ever as a lobbyist. of his friends. While he’s working towards But that whole episode, which seemed recovery, he might never be the same again, endless for a while, with the constant a real loss. Mike Nichols, whose life in comedy grew from being a sketch pioneer in the ads, mailings, knocks on doors and ‘50s to a director of some very influential non-news stories about minor gaffs movies, was, like Rivers, in his 80s, and his from both sides – seems so long ago life had been full of so much achievement. now, no? Only this week’s pointless At least we mostly retired the cretinous Jay greeting card from Secretary Grimes Leno, whose late night show should have been called “The Walking Dead (With O.J. and her loverman reminds me that Simpson Jokes).” we ever thought we had a chance. What will history remember about 2014? Probably the horrific racism and brutality involved in the deaths of men who could have done so much more with their lives, if they had more time or been born into different circumstances. But to those of us old enough to remember Rodney King, Ferguson 2014 was just like 1992 Los Angeles all over again. J A N U A R Y 1 , 2 0 1 5 • W W W . V O I C E -T R I B U N E . C O M

But maybe 2014 will be remembered as the year Seth Rogen, Evan Goldberg and James Franco took us to the brink of war like Kennedy’s men arriving at the Bay of Pigs. Oh, yeah, and we’re cool with Cuba again. Based on the events of this year, at this point I fully expect Chelsea Handler to cure cancer while Vladimir Putin is marrying Edward Snowden by this time in 2015. Also, Burt Reynolds will once again be the biggest movie star in the world, and Hillary Clin-

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ton will decide against running for President because she will have decided to become a full-time Elvis impersonator instead. This, or some even weirder stuff, will all happen, definitely. Did anything good happen? Sure. St. Vincent, Tune-Yards, Beck and Aphex Twin made some great albums we’ll be digging into for a long time. “How to Get Away With Murder” and “Gotham” got off to pretty fun starts. Leslie Jones breathed some life into “Saturday Night Live.” Oh, man, and how about “Boyhood”? That was an amazing accomplishment. Did “Frozen” come out this year? You’re reading this post-New Year’s Eve party planning. So, hopefully, if you hadn’t been to 8Up yet, New Year’s made for an interesting time to take in the food, music and overall ambiance in the hotel nightlife hotspot. Holy Grale offered an “Around the World Dinner Party” with a special guest famous DJ (we could not confirm if it was Daft Punk or someone else, like Will Oldham, at press time). Play offered one of the world’s most famous Britney Spears impersonators, Derrick Barry. If you like doing it live, perhaps you took in Jason Isbell and Shovels & Rope at the Palace Theater, or Tropical Trash and Humongous at Nachbar. See you next year, when Dolly Parton is revealed to be a serial killer...VT


Film Review BENNETT DUCKWORTH

bennettduckworth.blogspot.com

ship of the Laketown people, and the demonic White Orc’s ill-fated mission to wipe out the dwarves, are all unnecessary additions which lead to boring exposition and tedious action scenes.

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.

T

A great amount of attention in this film, is given to Bard (Luke Evans), man of the people, who is fighting for the survival of his refugee townsfolk and his children. In more than one scene, he hilariously jeopardizes their lives in the process of saving them.

2.5 OUT OF 4 WHOLE STARS

here’s a forgiving fan in me, who is simply happy to see familiar characters and places, when viewing a movie attached to a franchise, which I love. While watching “The Hobbit: The Battle of the Five Armies” Peter Jackson’s final entry in the Middle-Earth saga - I enjoyed myself in spite of the cold truth: The final film of the “Hobbit” trilogy confirms that it wasn’t worth the 8.5 hours of material spread over three years of our lives to explore Middle Earth before Frodo would go on a quest to save it. Throughout these three movies, I faithfully believed that even under the studio pressure to milk this series for every last drop, Jackson and Co. would conceive worthwhile expansions to this short children’s novel. However, it turns out that

Whenever Martin Freeman is onscreen as Bilbo Baggins, something is incredibly right with the movie. Casting him as a younger version of a character played by Ian Holm turned out to be worth the risk. Freeman brings all the whimsical anxiety of this reluctant hero summoned to adventure, which is pretty much what the book was all about. When you think about it. These movies seem to have gotten most of the original story right. It’s what’s been added that brings them down. nearly every subplot, distracting us from the journey of the title character, lacks a satisfying payoff. The growing love between a young dwarf and a beautiful warrior elf lady; wizards searching for the Necromancer (aka Sauron); Bard’s leader-

Seriously, aspiring movie editors of the 21st century, get to work on these. There’s a very good single movie buried beneath this trilogy of waste and it must be uncovered. I really want to see it! VT

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The Hobbit: The Battle Of The Five Armies


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event calendar

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

THIS WEEK’S VOICE CHOICE

T H U R S D A Y, J A N U A R Y 8

LOUISVILLE JUG MUSIC: FROM EARL MCDONALD TO THE NATIONAL JUBILEE Forged on the Ohio and Mississippi Rivers during the nineteenth century, jug band music was the early soundtrack for a new nation. Louisville was at the heart of it all. Artists like Earl McDonald and his Original Louisville Jug Band made the city legendary. Some stayed in this so-called money town, passing on licks and melodies that still influence bands like the Juggernaut Jug Band. Tune in to Louisville’s jug band music history with local writer Michael Jones and discover a tradition that has left a long­lasting impression on America’s musical culture. Hosted by The Filson Historical Society, this hour long event begins at 6pm at The Library at Oxmoor Farm. Admission is $10 for non-members and free for members. MORE INFO www.filsonhistorical.org

F R I DAY, JA N UA RY 2 KENTUCKY FLEA MARKET NEW YEARS SPECTACULAR Over 1100 booths including 400 antique/collectible booths in the pavilion with dealers from across the nation. Antiques/collectibles, crafts, furniture, candles, bath and body, jewelry, surplus. Friday 10-6 p.m., Saturday 10-6 p.m., Sunday 11-5 p.m. Admission is free. MORE INFO www.stewartpromotions.com

T U E S DAY, JA N UA RY 6 LAFAYETTE 148 NEW YORK SPRING 2015 TRUNK SHOW Lafayette 148 New York will present their Spring 2015 Collection at Rodes for Her! Designer Edward Wilkerson is the creative force behind the brand. His line is inspired by his frequent world travels and the women he meets. From the boardroom to an evening out to a weekend getaway, Lafayette 148 allows a woman to exude her own personal style! James Goodman from Lafayette 148 will be here to assist customers in their choices Jan. 6–8, but the collection will remain through Jan. 17. MORE INFO www.rodes.com/calendar_event. html

F R I DAY, JA N UA RY 9 MUSIC WITHOUT BORDERS “Music Without Borders” brings the Louisville Orchestra to you! This Neighborhood Concert Series reaches locations throughout Louisville for your enjoyment and convenience. Amadeus J A N U A R Y 1 , 2 0 1 5 • W W W . V O I C E -T R I B U N E . C O M

will feature conductor, Bob Bernhardt and Emily Albrink as soprana. MORE INFO www.louisvilleorchestra.org

S AT U R DAY, JA N UA RY 1 0 JAM FOR A CURE V-Groove and the Greg Foresman Band have co-hosted the Jam For a Cure since 2008. All proceeds go to benefit the National Multiple Sclerosis Society. Money is raised through the selling of raffle tickets for items that are donated to the cause and the selling of tickets to the annual concert featuring The Greg Foresman Band, John Mann and Danny Flanigan and the Rain Chorus and V-Groove This year’s event will be held at Headliner’s Music Hall Friday, January 10th. Tickets are $10 for this year’s Jam For a Cure and can be purchased at the door the evening of the show or through Headliner’s Music Hall. MORE INFO www.jamforacure.com

S U N DAY, JA N UA RY 1 1 CABO WABO COAT PARTY The Cabo Wabo 22nd Coat Party, at the Mellwood Art Center from 8 p.m. to 1 a.m., is sure to impress and raise the bar on every Cabo Wabo event to date. Not to be missed! This year, proceeds will benefit Down Syndrome of Louisville. Admission is $15; new and gently used coats will be collected at the door for St. Vincent’s. Musical guests will be The Crashers! MORE INFO www.mellwoodartcenter.com TUSCAN DINNER SERIES The second class of the Tuscan Dinner Series,

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where guests will learn how to make classic Italian dishes with Chef Gina Stipo at Bourbon Barrel Foods. MORE INFO www.eventbrite.com/e/ tuscan-dinner-series-tickets-14539817987

S AT U R DAY, JA N UA R Y 1 7 “PLAY IT FORWARD: CHAMPION’S NIGHT” GALA Three organizations will come together to host “Play It Forward: Champions Night,” a gala fund-raiser celebrating the World Premiere Production of “And In This Corner … Cassius Clay” and to celebrate the birthday and legacy of Muhammad Ali. Commissioned by StageOne from playwright Idris Goodwin. Working to inspire the next generation of young leaders, StageOne Family Theatre, the Muhammad Ali Center and The Kentucky Center for the Arts came together to build a dual-venue field trip opportunity for students grades four through 12 to experience his story on stage in the state-of the-art Bomhard Theater at The Kentucky Center and also tour the world-renowned Muhammad Ali Center. Funds raised will be used to build a scholarship program for low-income schools to attend the dual field trip regardless of financial limitations. The event will begin with drinks and dinner catered by Wiltshire Pantry at the Muhammad Ali Center, continuing with StageOne’s premiere performance of “And In This Corner … Cassius Clay,” culminating in a post-show celebration with the cast, playwright, and special guests. Tables of eight are available for $1,500 and include preferred seating at the show along with other


LIFE

benefits. Single tickets that include dinner, show, and reception are available for $150. Single tickets for the show and post-show reception will be available for $50. MORE INFO 502.498.2444.

Recommended for ages 8 and up. Dates: Jan. 17, 1 p.m.; Jan 24* & Feb. 14, 2 p.m.; Jan. 31 & Feb. 7, 2 p.m. and 7 p.m. Single tickets are $20 for adults; $15 for children 12 and under. MORE INFO www.kentuckycenter.org

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THE SPEED ART MUSEUM 2014–15 CONCERT SERIES PRESENTS VADYM KHOLODENKO As the 2013 gold medal winner at the Van Cliburn International Piano Competition, pianist Vadym Kholodenko is building an international reputation as a musician whose performances are “impeccable, tasteful and vibrant, and also something more: imaginative” (Cleveland Plain Dealer). He currently tours internationally in addition to his position as the first artistic partner at the Fort Worth Symphony Orchestra. MORE INFO www.speedmuseum.org/ speed-concert-series.html

ONCE, TONY AWARD-WINNING MUSICAL Winner of eight Tony Awards including Best Musical and winner of the 2013 Grammy Award for Best Musical Theater Album, will play The Kentucky Center for a limited engagement from Jan. 20-25. Groups of 10 or more call 502-569-3060. MORE INFO 502.584.7777 MAKER’S MARK AFTER DARK Bourbon experts will explain and show your small group the bourbon making process from grain to bottle on your guided tour of the picturesque distillery. Then, you’ll enjoy specialized bourbon tastings before dipping your very own bottle in their signature red wax. The tour culminates with Maker’s Mark® inspired cocktails and southern style appetizers inside a barrel warehouse, underneath the stunning, handblown glass ceiling by world renowned artist, Dale Chihuly. The 2015 dates are as follows: January 30, Feb. 27, March 20, April 3, May 21, June 12, July 16, Aug. 7, Sept. 3, Oct. 9 and Nov. 6. The best part is, all you have to do is sit back and relax! Your friendly Mint Julep Tours driver and guide will await you at The Galt House Hotel Rivue Tower, 3rd Floor 140 N. Fourth St. in Louisville, Kentucky 40202. The tours begin at 1:15 p.m. and return back at 7:30 p.m., just in time for dinner. Reserve your spot now, exclusively through Mint Julep. MORE INFO www. mintjuleptours.com

M O N DAY, JA N UA R Y 1 9 SAM 2015 LAUNCH PARTY Sharing America’s Marrow (SAM) is a Louisvillebased nonprofit with a goal of registering 50,000 bone marrow donors in 50 states in 2015. On January 19th, the SAM team will be taking off on a year-long tour of the U.S., hosting bone marrow donor drives in over 190 cities with the hopes of finding life-saving bone marrow donors for patients fighting blood cancer. Come send of the SAM Team at Against the Grain on 1/19/15 from 6-9 p.m. Free appetizers, happy-hour priced drinks, music, raffle prizes, and swabs (all it takes to join the bone marrow registry is quick cheek swab and consent form!). Join us for a fun night of celebrating life and the SAM journey in 2015! MORE INFO 502.819.4377

NEW & IMPROVED

Online Calendar

S AT U R DAY, JA N UA R Y 3 1

STAGEONE WORLD PREMIERE, AND IN THIS CORNER CASSIUS CLAY Keeping strong roots in new play development, StageOne presents And In This Corner… Cassius Clay written by playwright, Idris Goodwin. There have been African American sports heroes whose celebrity helped shine light on the struggles of the communities from which they emerged. But there was no one more colorful, dynamic and larger than life than the one and only, the true greatest of all time, Muhammad Ali. Before he shook up the world he was just Cassius Clay, Jr. from Louisville, Kentucky; and the Louisville where he grew up in the 1950s was not like Louisville today…

THE BEN FOLDS ORCHESTRA EXPERIENCE Relentlessly entertaining for one night only! Ben Folds, leader of the critically-acclaimed, platinum-selling Ben Folds Five, performs his hit songs including “Brick,” “Battle of Who Could Care Less,” “Army” and more. The singer-songwriter and pop icon will perform his own brand-new piano concerto with the Louisville Orchestra. Be one of the first to hear a new piece by this modern day Piano Man. The show starts at 8pm in The Kentucky Center’s Whitney Hall. MORE INFO www.kentuckycenter.org

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JANUARY 1, 2015

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

ANCHORAGE Anchorage Café 11505 Park Rd. The Village Anchor 11507 Park Rd.

Joseph’s Salon 3988 Dutchmans Lane

5th & Market Southeast Corner

Wild Eggs 3985 Dutchmans Lane

6th & Market Northwest Corner

BEECHMONT

Actors Theatre 316 West Main St.

Heine Brothers 822 Eastern Pkwy.

Against the Grain Brewery 401 East Main St.

Sunergos Coffee 2122 South Preston St.

Art Eatables 631 South 4th St.

IRISH HILL

BARDSTOWN RD. & THE HIGHLANDS

Beechmont Bombshells 309 W Woodlawn Ave.

Andrew Gentile Antiques 1287 Bardstown Rd.

Sunergos Coffee 306 W Woodlawn Ave.

Breadworks 2204 Dundee Rd.

BROWNSBORO RD.

Carmichael’s Bookstore 1295 Bardstown Rd. Comfy Cow 1449 Bardstown Rd.

Heine Brothers 4901 Brownsboro Rd. Kroger 2219 Holiday Manor Center

Artspace 323 West Broadway BBC Theatre Square 660 S 4th St.

Louisville Free Public Library 6768 Bardstown Rd.

Louisville Free Public Library 200 North Juneau Drive

GERMANTOWN

Paul’s Fruit Market 12119 Shelbyville Rd.

Baxter Jacks 427 Baxter Ave. Red Hot Roasters 1401 Lexington Rd.

Sunny Daize 11809 Shelbyville Rd. Wild Eggs 153 South English Station Rd. NORTON COMMONS Verbena Cafe 10619 Meeting St.

Liquor Barn 4301 Towne Center Drive

Thorntons #97 4500 Shelbyville Rd.

ST. MATTHEWS

Tin Roof 3921 Shelbyville Rd.

60 West Bistro & Martini Bar 3239 Shelbyville Rd. BBC East 3929 Shelbyville Rd. Big O Tries 3623 Lexington Rd. Bluegrass Burgers 3334 Frankfort Ave.

NuLu

Bruegger’s Bagels 119 Breckinridge Lane

Ghylsain 721 East Market St.

Cox’s Smokers Outlet 294 North Hubbards Lane

Bearnos 131 West Main St.

Spring Street Bar & Grille 300 South Spring St.

BUECHEL

Bistro 301 301 West Market St.

Ward 426 420 Baxter Ave.

Harvest 624 East Market St.

CVS 3721 Lexington Rd.

Bill Collins Ford 4220 Bardstown Rd.

The Café 712 Brent St.

IROQUOIS

Market St. Barbers 748 East Market St.

Fidelity Pawn 4238 Shelbyville Rd.

Kroger 3616 Buechel Bypass

City Café 505 West Broadway

Please and Thank You 800 East Market St.

The Fishery 3624 Lexington Rd.

Java Brewing Company 1707 Bardstown Rd.

Steilberg Strings 4029 Bardstown Rd.

Toast on Market 620 East Market

Kroger 2440 Bardstown Rd.

CLIFTON

City Café – UofL Medical Plaza 500 South Preston St.

Heine Brothers 119 Chenoweth Lane 4305 Shelbville Rd.

Day’s Espresso 1420 Bardstown Rd. Heine Brothers 3060 Bardstown Rd. Homemade Ice Cream & Pie Kitchen 1041 and 2525 Bardstown Rd.

KT’s Restaurant 2300 Lexington Rd. Louisville Free Public Library 1250 Bardstown Rd. McDonald’s 1245 Bardstown Rd. North End Cafe 2116 Bardstown Rd. O’Sheas 956 Baxter Ave. Twig & Leaf Restaurant 2122 Bardstown Rd. Uncle Maddio’s Pizza Joint 2011 Grinstead Drive Uptown Cafe 1624 Bardstown Rd. Urban Attic 1608 Bardstown Rd. Valu Market 1250 Bardstown Rd. Wick’s Pizza 975 Baxter Ave. BON AIR Bearno’s Pizza 2900 Taylorsville Rd.

Rite Aid 3805 Brownsboro Rd.

Carmichael’s Bookstore 2720 Frankfort Ave. Clique Boutique 2846 Frankfort Ave. The Comfy Cow 2221 Frankfort Ave. Heine Brothers 2714 Frankfort Ave. Homemade Ice Cream & Pie Kitchen 2232 Frankfort Ave. The Irish Rover 2319 Frankfort Ave. Louisville Free Public Library 2762 Frankfort Ave. Lyndia R Willis Salon 2850 Frankfort Ave. Vint 2309 Frankfort Ave. Volare 2300 Frankfort Ave. CRESCENT HILL Mellwood Antique Mall 1860 Mellwood Ave. North End Cafe 1722 Frankfort Ave.

Down One Bourbon Bar 321 West Main St. Galt House West West Garage Entrance Gifthorse 554 South 4th St.

Iroquois Ampitheater 1080 Amphitheater Rd. Louisville Free Public Library 601 West Woodlawn Ave. JEFFERSONTOWN Barnes & Noble 801 South Hurstbourne Pkwy. Brownie’s the Shed 237 Whittington Pkwy.

Sam Swope Autoworld Sam Swope Center Drive

Burning Bush Grille 13206 West Highway 42

Snap Fitness 3831 Ruckriegel Pkwy.

Captain’s Quarters 5700 Captains Quarters Rd.

Tou-che Boutique 1249 S Hurstbourne Pkwy.

Homemade Ice Cream & Pie Kitchen 9561-B US Highway 42

DOWNTOWN

Saint Stephens Church 1018 South 15th St.

The Fresh Market 10480 Shelbyville Rd.

21C Museum Hotel 700 W Main St.

Wild Eggs 121 South Floyd St.

Heine Brothers Coffee 801 Blankenbaker Pkwy.

Baptist Hospital East Waiting Rooms

4th & Main Northeast Corner

FERN CREEK

Books-a-Million 994 Breckinridge Lane

5th & Main In front of Humana

Homemade Ice Cream & Pie Kitchen 12531 Shelbyville Rd.

Baptist East/ MileStone Fitness 750 Cypress Station Drive

Vines & Canines 1760 Frankfort Ave.

Homemade Ice Cream & Pie Kitchen 5606 Bardstown Rd.

PROSPECT Blackstone Grille 9521 West Highway 42

The Fishery 11519 Shelbyville Rd.

BRECKENRIDGE LANE

Louisville Free Public Library 3305 Northwestern Pkwy.

Paul’s Fruit Market 3704 Taylorsville Rd.

Regalo 562 South 4th St.

Louisville Free Public Library 2816 Del Rio Place

Kroger 12501 Shelbyville Rd.

Ghyslain 1215 Herr Lane

Lonnie’s Best Taste of Chicago 121 Saint Matthews Ave.

Music Go Round 3640 South Hurstbourne Pkwy.

Dairy Queen 11806 Shelbyville Rd.

The Comfy Cow 1301 Herr Lane #18

POPLAR LEVEL

Luigi’s Pizzeria 712 West Main St.

MIDDLETOWN

Camelot Family Dental Center 7420 Westport Rd.

Louisville Free Public Library 8100 Westport Rd.

PORTLAND

PNC Bank Lobby Shop 500 West Jefferson St.

WESTPORT RD.

Kroger 291 North Hubbards Lane

Louisville Free Public Library 10635 Watterson Trail

Valu Market 315 Whittington Pkwy.

UofL SAC 2100 South Floyd St.

Kroger 12450 Lagrange Rd.

Louisville Free Public Library 301 York St.

PNC Bank 5th & Liberty

Tom + Chee 319 W Cardinal Blvd.

Louisville Athletic Club 9463 Westport Rd.

Kroger 4009 Poplar Level Rd.

Pendennis Club 218 West Muhammad Ali Blvd.

Quills Coffee 337 West Cardinal Blvd.

Jewish Community Center 3600 Dutchmans Lane

Louisville Athletic Club 9565 Taylorsville Rd.

Mrs. Potter’s Coffee 718 West Main St.

The Comfy Cow 337 West Cardinal Blvd.

Forest Springs Dental 12466 LaGrange Rd.

The Leading Man 564 South 4th St.

Marketplace Restaurant 651 South Fourth St.

Churhill Downs 700 Central Ave.

Homemade Ice Cream & Pie Kitchen 3737 Lexington Rd.

Kroger 9812 Linn Station Rd. 12611 Taylorsville Rd.

Manny & Merle 122 West Main St.

UofL

PEWEE VALLEY

Heine Brothers 462 South 4th St.

Patrick O’Sheas 123 West Main St.

Sam’s Hotdog Stand 1991 Brownsboro Rd

The Voice-Tribune 735 East Main St.

Tom + Chee 111 Saint Matthew Ave.

Lotsa Pasta 3717 Lexington Rd. Louisville Executive Aviation 2700 Gast Blvd. Louisville Free Public Library 4030 Grandview Ave. Lucky’s Market 200 N Hurstbourne Pkwy. Mellow Mushroom 3920 Shelbyville Rd. Molly Malone’s 3900 Shelbyville Rd. The Neighborhood Cafe 119 Saint Matthews Ave.

Kroger 9501 Westport Rd.

Norton Immediate Care Center 1321 Herr Lane Thorntons #34 605 Lyndon Lane Wild Eggs 1311 Herr Lane INDIANA Bristol Bar & Grill 700 West Riverside Drive, Jeffersonville Comfy Cow 109 East Market St., New Albany Derby Dinner Playhouse 525 Marriott Drive, Clarksville

KingFish 3021 River Rd.

Plehn’s Bakery 3940 Shelbyville Rd.

Homemade Ice Cream & Pie Kitchen 3113 Blackiston Mill Rd., Clarksville

Kroger 9151 US Highway 42

Rainbow Blossom 3738 Lexington Rd.

John Kenyon Eye 519 State St., New Albany

US Post Office 9523 US Highway 42

Saint’s 131 Breckinridge Lane

SPRINGHURST

Sam Swope Fiat 4311 Shelbyville Rd.

Kroger 305 Lewis & Clark Pkwy., Clarksville 2956 East 10th St., Jeffersonville

Sassy Fox 150 Chenoweth Lane

Perkfection Cafe 359 Spring St., Jeffersonville

Speedy Mart 316 Wallace Ave.

Quills Coffee 137 East Market St., New Albany

Barnes & Noble 4100 Summit Plaza Drive Homemade Ice Cream & Pie Kitchen 3608 Springhurst Blvd. Kroger 9440 Brownsboro Rd.

Tafel Mercedes 4156 Shelbyville Rd.

Toast On Market 141 East Market St., New Albany


CLASSIFIEDS

classifieds

CLASSIFIEDS MAY BE PLACED BY CALLING 502.897.8900 OR EMAILING CIRC@VOICE-TRIBUNE.COM

Court-Ordered Auction Court-Ordered Auction

EMPLOYMENT

Wednesday Oct8241111 Thursday Jan amam

Do You Have A Product Or Service You Would Like To Feature In The Voice-Tribune?

Quickway Transportation has a new customer & needs additional Drivers! Home Every Day, Excellent Benefits, High Earnings. CDL Class A Req. Call: 877-600-2121 www. quickwaycarriers.com

5,719 TSF Commercial Buildings

2823 7th Street Road, Louisville 5,719 TSF Commercial Buildings (Building 1: 3,300 SF; Building 2: 2,419 SF) • 0.72 AC Corner Lot • Zoned C-2 (Commercial District) • Don’t Miss This Opportunity! Preview: By Appointment

Mark’s Hallmark seeking Accounting Clerk Monday - Thursday, Immediate opening. Email resume to: tmollak@gmail.com SERVICES

See Website for Full Terms and Conditions Case#: Case No. 14-CI-400855 Jefferson Circuit Court Division Twelve (12) 10% Buyer’s Premium Jonathan Baker: RP2788, Seth D. Seaton: RP2788

Burnett Construction and Handyman Services - FALL SPECIAL on all exterior maintenance or projects!! My company has 25+ years experience in construction and all phases of home maintenance and repair. Includes additions, remodeling, drywall repair, interior and exterior painting, plumbing and electrical repairs, tile work, and much more. FREE estimates. Fully insured. Local references. Call MIKE BURNETT, OWNER (502) 442-3391

(855) 353-1100

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

Contact Stephanie at circ@voice-tribune.com or call 502.897.8900 today

DON’T FORGET ABOUT PARKING AT YOUR NEXT EVENT Call the pros at Ready Valet. ValetParking/Parking Management. CALL CHASE AT 502-417-6332 OR VISIT www.readyvalet.com. FULLY INSURED AND LICENSED!

Classified AD POLICIES AND RATES

Rack Locations May Be Found Online at voice-tribune.com

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

67

W W W . V O I C E -T R I B U N E . C O M •

JANUARY 1, 2015


PUZZLES

pets of the week Lucy

Lucy is a seven-month-old Labrador retriever/Australian cattle dog mix. As you can probably guess, she still has a lot of puppy play in her. She loves to chase after balls and would love to play tug with you. Lucy will need someone who has the time to take her on long walks, and she would be delighted if you wanted to help her learn commands, which will help her understand and do what you want. Lucy is a big girl, and because of her high energy level, she would probably do better with children over the age of five. Lucy has been spayed, microchipped and is up-to-date on her vaccinations. Come meet her today at the Kentucky Humane Society’s Springhurst Feeders Supply adoption center, 9485 Brownsboro Road. For more on Lucy or any of our adoptable pets, please call 502.366.3355 or visit kyhumane.org.

Tiger

Eight-year-old Tiger is a loving orange and white domestic medium-hair cat. Tiger loves people and will be one of the first to greet you when you come for a visit. With your permission, he will jump in your lap and bask in the warm comfort of your pets. He’ll purr; he’ll lean into the pets; he’ll definitely let you know just how happy he is that you are there. Tiger is neutered, micro-chipped and up-to-date on his vaccinations. Come meet him today at the Kentucky Humane Society’s Main Campus, 241 Steedly Drive. For more on Tiger or any of our adoptable pets, please call 502.366.3355 or visit kyhumane.org.

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

68


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Thursday, January 15 • 6:00 p.m. • $100 Evan Williams Bourbon Experience • 528 W. Main Street • Louisville

Before it was the ubiquitous term for a night of heavy drinking, Thirsty Thursday had an entirely different meaning. Join The Filson Historical Society as we commemorate the last day of legal alcohol sales with a tasting of “Old G.D. Bourbon,” a product that was bottled in the 1890s, along with Evan Williams and Larceny Bourbons from Heaven Hill. Bourbon Historian Mike Veach will share the history of the temperance movement that created the long dry spell commonly known as PROHIBITION.

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*Sale price net factory rebates and incentives plus tax, license & fees and may require financing with Chrysler Capital (with approved credit). RAM price includes RAM bonus bucks while they last. Offer expires 12/31/14. **39 mo. lease, 12,000 miles per year, $2,999 due at signing + tax, license, fees & security deposit. RAM must finance with Chrysler Capital.

Gourmet food products that reflect the rich heritage of Kentucky’s Bourbon Country.

To order online or find a retail location, visit www.bourbonbarrelfoods.com.

Learn how to make unique cocktails at Bourbon Barrel Foods! Bourbon Barrel Foods’ mixology classes include a tasting of four cocktails and heavy appetizers. Tickets are $45.00 and can be purchased by calling 502-333-6103 x 4. Thursday, January 22nd at 7 p.m. Facility tours | Corporate gifts

bourbonbarrelfoods.com

info@bourbonbarrelfoods.com | 502.333.6103 | 1201 Story Ave. Suite 175 | Louisville, KY 40206


Beverage World Wine & SpiritS J-toWn Now Open • 502.873.5669 • 10306 Taylorsville Road • Louisville, KY 40299

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

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the art of organization


IN ASSOCIATION WITH



eastwood records Eastwood Records is a fresh new record label out of Louisville, KY dedicated to finding and fostering the best in local and regional talent. Started in late 2014 by Louisville native Wesley Allen, Eastwood Records is not only a personal outlet for his passion of local, grassroots music, but also serves as a memorial to his father James “Eastwood” Allen, whose love of local music will forever be remembered by all that knew him. Eastwood Records will be headquartered at 2354 Frankfort Ave, a space shared with Matt Anthony’s Record Shop. A full backline of music equipment including guitars, drums, and PA equipment will be available on site for live auditions and demos. Live auditions will be available 4-7pm Mon-Fri, or appointment by calling 502.442.8808. The days of waiting to be discovered are a thing of the past.



 The Deadbird Sessions Vol. 1   The Tunesmiths Rust ‘n’ Bones Matt Jaggers

31 

SATURDAY

jan

Deadbird Studios Crescent Hill Radio Matt Anthony’s Record Shop Tim Faulkner Galleries The Vernon Club

Juke Joint Revival Ricky Morse Music The Foxtones

 Doors @ 6 MUSIC @ 7 SIX BANDS

$10 ADMISSION $15 ADMISSION + THE DEADBIRD SESSIONS VOL. 1 CD


we would like to thank ouR ClientS and aGentS FoR anotheR G R e at Y e a R heRe’S to 2015

3803 Brownsboro Road 502.899.2129 lenihansir.com

L O U I S V I L L E ’ S # 1 LU X U R Y R E A L E S TAT E B R O K E R AG E


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