TOWN TALK+ education 101 SEPTEMBER 3, 2014 | FRONT
12 th annual Dan Mclaughlin golf tournaMent october 13 – norwooD hills country club
PHOTO ALBUM
Chefs
Signature
An evening to benefit babies and families.
Auction
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connecting our community. [ local & independently owned ]
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<<PUBLISHER [ LAUREN B. RECHAN ]
EDITOR IN CHIEF>> ASSOC. PUBLISHER [ DOROTHY F. WEINER ]
PARTICIPATING ResTAuRANTs (as of August 20th) Annie Gunn’s Boone Valley Golf Club
Thursday September 11, 2014
The Caramel Room at Bissinger’s
6:00 pm | The Ritz-Carlton, St. Louis 100 Carondelet Plaza in Clayton
Gregory’s Creative Cuisine Gamlin Whiskey House
The March of Dimes Signature Chefs Auction is a fundraiser that’s always in good taste! Enticing culinary creations from top chefs along with distinctive auction items including:
The Highway 61 Roadhouse and Kitchen
Café Napoli
CREATIVE DIRECTOR>> [ JULIE STREILER ]
Chaumette Vineyards & Winery
Herbie’s Vintage ‘72
<< SENIOR EDITOR [ TONY DI MARTINO ]
ASSOCIATE EDITOR>> [ KARYN MEYER ]
<<STYLE EDITOR [ SUZY BACINO ]
<<MANAGING EDITOR [STEPHANIE ZEILENGA ]
Home Wine Kitchen Il Bel Lago Iron Barley
NYC Experience: Watch a taping of Andy Cohen’s hit Bravo show “Watch What Happens Live.” Includes roundtrip
J. Buck’s Restaurant
HEALTH WRITER>> [RICHARD STOFF]
BEAUTY WRITER>> [MARYYLYN SIMPSON]
<<EDITORIAL INTERN [AMBER PETERSON]
Juniper LoRusso’s Cucina
airfare, hotel and dinner at Lady Ga Ga’s family restaurant, Joanne Trattoria.
Oceano Bistro Old Warson Country Club
Sparkling Jewels: Novia custom designed chandelier earrings. 14k white gold. $4,300 value.
CONTRIBUTOR>> [ DR. TIM JORDAN ]
Prasino The Racquet Club Ladue
<<CONTRIBUTOR [ PAUL DOERNER ]
<<HEALTH WRITER [ SARA SAVAT]
The Ritz-Carlton Scape
Your participation and generous support allows the March of Dimes to continue its community programs, dvocacy and research to give all babies a healthy start.
Sub Zero Vodka Bar Truffles
CONTRIBUTOR>> [ JUDY GOODMAN ]
CONTRIBUTOR>> [ ELLEN SOULE ]
<<FOOD CRITIC [ JONATHAN CARLI ] (INCOGNITO) <<
CONTRIBUTOR [ KENNETH BLAND ] CONTRIBUTOR>> [ BILL BEGGS JR. ]
CONTRIBUTOR>>
[JOAN BERKMAN ]
CONTRIBUTOR>> [ RASCHELLE BURTON ]
DICK
Retrospective September 20 - October 31, 2014
PHOTOGRAPHER>> [ SUZY GORMAN ]
<<PHOTOGRAPHER [ BILL BARRETT]
PHOTOGRAPHER [ TIM PARKER ] SOCIETY>> PHOTOGRAPHER [ CARLA FALASCO ] <<SOCIETY PHOTOGRAPHER [ MARGARET RAMBO ]
SR. ADVERTISING EXEC.>>
SR. ADVERTISING EXEC.>> [ WENDY KREMS ]
Opening Night Cocktail Reception: Saturday, September 20th - 6-9pm 9650 Clayton Road in Ladue (314).993.4477 www.kodnergallery.com
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TOWN&style
| SEPTEMBER 3, 2014
SOCIETY >> PHOTOGRAPHER
[CHARLES BARNES]
SALES EXEC.>>
[MATUSCHKA BRIGGS]
[WENDY JABLONOW ]
<<
Artist Author Educator Historian
SALES EXEC. [VIVIAN FORTUNATO] SALES EXEC. [JENNIFER LYONS]
<<
For over 50 years, Missouri native R.H. Dick has been sharing his enlightened narrative and unique vision with paintbrush, camera and written word. Please join us for a landmark exhibition and sale of paintings, sculpture, works on paper and photography, spanning an acclaimed and influential career.
<<CONTRIBUTOR [ CORY CUFF]
<<
R.H.
PHOTOGRAPHER>> [ COLIN MILLER ]
<<CONTRIBUTOR [ PATTY HANNUM ]
SALES EXEC.>> [ JANIE SUMNER ]
GRAPHIC DESIGNER>> [ JON FOGEL ]
OFFICE MANAGER >> [ KATHY COWHEY ]
<<SALES EXEC. [SUSAN TORMALA]
<<GRAPHIC DESIGNER [ SARAH GIBSON ]
<<GRAPHIC DESIGNER [GAYLE VAN DYKE]
<< SALES & SPECIAL PROJECTS COORDINATOR [ANNA KACZKOWSKI]
fall into
now is tHe perFect time
sAvings
to get your game room ready arcade
game room
billiards
Next day
*
delivery guarantee * Exclusions apply. Not valid with any other offer or prior purchase. Must be purchased by 2pm preceding day. Offer only valid for metro area. Offer good at Amini’s Tagged Sale Prices. Weekday deliveries only.
cHesterField
17377 Chesterfield Airport Rd. Hwy 40 & Boone’s Crossing
(636) 537-9200
coMForT, quAlITy & vAlue: only at amini’s
aminis.com
PHOTO BY COLIN MILLER OF STRAUSS PEYTON | MAKEUP BY NEIMAN MARCUS
TABLE OF
CONTENTS
september 3, 2014 // look for our next issue september 10
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[ LETTER FROM THE EDITOR ] What better time for discussing grammar snafus than today, to go along with our special section on education? This time we single out a few misspoken snippets from national newscasts that illustrate how easy it is to say something you don’t mean. When ABC recently reported an Army sex scandal, it noted: The Army general had an improper relationship with two subordinates, but I’m quite sure they weren’t referring to a ménage. It should have been, The general had improper relationships—plural. And in reference to the recent Ferguson tragedy, the NBC network news reported, Michael Brown’s parents are planning to bury their son three weeks after getting shot, which implies that the parents got shot! Shows us how important a little pronoun like ‘he’ can be. This next one seems benign enough: People usually borrow money when they feel good about the economy. But it’s saying that as soon as the economy is good, people run out to borrow money. Really? The actual message is supposed to be: Borrowing increases when people have confidence in the economy. Language is a lot trickier than it seems. Which is why we print journalists are lucky. It’s a minefield out there, but we have the luxury of writing and re-writing until we get it right. Assuming we know what right is.
—Dorothy F. Weiner Editor in Chief
TOWN TALK+ SEPTEMBER 3, 2014
[ on the cover ]
PHOTO ALBUM
education 101
| FRONT
THE 12TH ANNUAL DAN McLAUGHLIN GOLF TOURNAMENT & DINNER AUCTION, A BENEFIT FOR THE SPECIAL EDUCATION FOUNDATION, TAKES PLACE OCT. 13 AT NORWOOD HILLS COUNTRY CLUB. COST PER GOLFER IS $350; DINNER ONLY IS $75. PICTURED ON THE COVER: JORDYN WALKER (HOLDING BENTLEY BUHR), EVENT CO-CHAIR MIKE HOPSON, PORTER HOPSON, DAN McLAUGHLIN, AND MATTHEW PEARL. FOR MORE INFORMATION, CALL 314.394.7030 OR VISIT SEF-STL.ORG. COVER DESIGN BY SARAH GIBSON PHOTO BY COLIN MILLER OF STRAUSS PEYTON
ent
tournaM Mclaughlin golf club 12 th annual Dan hills country october 13 – norwooD
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[ town talk ] TOWN NEWS 8 INSIDER 9 COVER STORY – Special Education Foundation 10 TALK OF THE TOWNS 14 ON THE PAGE EDUCATION 101 16 COVER STORY – C+E Tutoring 17 Where Our Grads Are Going
[ photo album ] 28 SNAPPED! Ranken Jordan Pediatric Bridge Hospital 29 Chesterfield Wine & Jazz Festival 30 West St. Louis County Chamber of Commerce 31 Easter Seals Midwest
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WE’RE SORRY | On p.20 of our Aug. 20 issue, in the Ask the Experts column, we listed an incorrect question for personal insurance expert Fonda Hereford of AHM. The question she answered was regarding updating the dwelling and contents value of your homeowner’s insurance. On p.6 of our Aug. 6 issue, we incorrectly identified the people pictured on our cover, who are event co-chairs Angela Schaefer, Carey Stuesse and Tamara Hill, and Graham Hill, co-owner of St. Louis Motorcars with J.J. Mills (not pictured).
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Don’t miss the LArGEST Warehouse Sale in 15 years.
4 DAyS oNLy! Joy TribouT
annual
Warehouse Sale! 711 South Illinois Street | Belleville, Illinois 62220
Located just 15 minutes from downtown St. Louis!
9:30 am to 5:00 pm
Tuesday Sept 23 THROUGH
Friday Sept 26 doors open at 9:30 am 100s of deeply discounted Century furniture pieces n Over 1,000 pillows with prices starting at just $50 n Largest Jan Barboglio inventory in the country! n Loads of one-of-a-kind area rugs n Artwork & prints n Collectors items & accessories n Bolts of fabric – first time ever! n The latest in designer lighting from contemporary to traditional n Custom headboards n Coffee, dining and side tables n Sofas & love seats n Upholstered & accent chairs n
Directions from Hwy 40 & 255 • Take Hwy 40/64 East across Poplar Street Bridge • Keep right to exit 2 (hwy 64 east) • Continue on Hwy 64 to exit 7 (hwy 255 south) • Go 3.7 miles to exit 17A (hwy 15 east) • Go 8 miles on Hwy 15 to Hwy 159 (s. illinois st.) • Go left on Hwy 159 (north on s. illinois st.) • Continue .7 miles, and cross the railroad tracks
Joy Tribout interiors is the first white building on the left.
618-233-0600
THE[IN]SIDER A glimpse at what’s going on around St. Louis and beyond.
#TS smalltalk St. Louisans say a lot in 140 characters. Check out the tweets of the town and join the conversation on Twitter using #TSsmalltalk.
8/21 Allison Collinger @AhawkCollinger Great 2 see #STL-based, on move @PrismMedicalUS featured in @Town_and_Style 4 supporting #veterans! http://ow.ly/A1wyS 8/24 Corey Rudd @CoreyRudd Just walked the dogs, whew, it’s hot out there. Milk was a bad choice #StL #summer #HeatWave
8/20 Elizabeth Arthur @e_lizA522 Having my first Ballpark Village experience! #bpv #CardinalNation 8/25 Alec Heitert @theHeitert Ready to welcome Paul Stastny and see the new jerseys at the Blues Icebreaker event tonight on @FSMidwest! #Blues
JORGE PITA CARRERAS WITH LUCIANO PAVAROTTI
GARDEN ON JONES ROAD
Local garden designer ADAM WOODRUFF of Adam Woodruff + Associates recently won an award for BEST PROFESSIONAL LANDSCAPE from gardenista.com, an online gardening sourcebook. Woodruff was recognized for a prairie-inspired garden at a private residence in Girard, Ill.
Galati, resident artists, and internationally renowned tenor Jorge Pita Carreras,
who studied under Placido Domingo and has appeared with Rene Fleming and the late Luciano Pavarotti. Tickets are $125 per person and include dinner, wine and entertainment. For more information, visit winteroperastl.org.
THE RITZ-CARLTON BALLROOM, scene of dozens of charity galas and fashion shows annually, now has a new look. The transformation includes ENHANCED LIGHTING CAPABILITIES AND NEW CARPETING, WALL FABRICS AND FURNISHINGS. And, just in time for the fall social season, the hotel’s pre-function area, washrooms and guest corridors are also getting an upgrade.
::::
8/25 Matt Cable @cabes92 Its a little hot but it feels great to have a sweater on with the #BlueNote Cant wait for the @StLouisBlues #IceBreaker #BPV @BPVCommish
WINTER OPERA ST. LOUIS kicks off its eighth season Sept. 26 with a cocktail reception and five-course dinner at Dominic’s Trattoria on Brentwood Boulevard. Guests will be treated to performances by general director and founder Gina
8/26 eebsworthgoold @eebsworthgoold Tuesday morning isn’t anything a good cup of coffee and a Luna bar can’t fix. 8/23 Amanda Carter @AmandaMCarter Going to see @El_Monstero with @coleswonder and friends. #pinkfloyd #stl #arthill TWITTER.COM/TOWN_AND_STYLE JOHN O’DONNELL
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TOWN&style
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MARGARET CRANE
MARGARET CRANE, senior writer and researcher at Jewish Federation of Saint Louis, has a new book out: The Kitchen
NACHO FIGUERAS
caliente polo player and Ralph Bible: Designing the Muy Lauren model IGNACIO ‘NACHO’ Perfect Culinary Space. FIGUERAS competes at this year’s Co-authored with kitchen Glennon Gallop Sept. 13 at designer Jennifer Gilmer Kraftig Polo Club in Defiance, Mo. and former St. Louisan and
Post-Dispatch writer Barbara Ballinger, it offers inspiration and advice for do-it-yourselfers, as well as for homeowners working with designers.
The event, presented by Fifth Third Bank, supports the Danis Pediatric Center at SSM Cardinal Glennon Children’s Medical Center. Handsome heartthrob Figueras, ranked one of the top 100 polo players in the world, plays professionally in his native Argentina and on the Black Watch team in the U.S.
That Endless Summer look will work for cooler seasons, too. See for yourself Sept. 19 at ‘WELCOME HOME, JOHNNIE-O!’, an event at Crescent Coast, the Clayton shop that specializes in the sophisticated surf look. Guest of honor is St. Louis native John O’Donnell, founder of johnnie-O, a line of casual apparel with a ‘West Coast prep’ look favored by casually cool Hollywood insiders (including John’s brother, NCIS Los Angeles actor Chris O’Donnell).The event, SPONSORED BY TOWN & STYLE, runs from 5–9 p.m. and features refreshments from Trattoria Marcella.
TOWN TALK
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COVER STORY
SPECIAL EDUCATION FOUNDATION]
FoLLow uS on TwiTTer See exclusive photos, find out the happenings around town—and tell us what you are up to!
And keep an eye out for T&S contests and giveaways only on Facebook!
121 Hunter Ave Suite 201 | 314.657.2100 townandstyle.com
by tony di martino
PHOTO COURTESY OF ERICA RUNGE
A SHY TEEN WITH A LEARNING DISABILITY takes part in a leadership program that reveals hidden talents. Devoted teachers get funding for innovative projects their school districts can’t afford. And hearing-impaired students excel in school with help from high-tech hearing aids. These are just three ways in which the Special Education Foundation helps children with disabilities—and their families. “SEF picks up where tax dollars stop, offering Special School District (SSD) students programs, scholarships and specialized equipment that aren’t covered by public funding,” says executive director Diane Buhr. Erica Runge developed self-confidence by participating in SEF’s Fred Saigh Leadership Program when she was a junior at Oakville High School. “I was painfully shy, and having a learning disability didn’t help,” Runge recalls. “But through the Saigh program, I discovered a passion for public speaking.” She entered the 2010 Miss Teen St. Louis pageant—and won. Now 22, she’s majoring in elementary education at Lindenwood University. Each year SEF awards more than $45,000 in Dana Brown Charitable Trust mini-grants to SSD teachers for enrichment activities beyond the basic curriculum. The grants support up to 50 programs not funded ERICA RUNGE PARTICIPATED IN SEF’S FRED SAIGH LEADERSHIP PROGRAM. through the district. “SEF grants enable teachers to create learning opportunities for students in a wide range of areas, including literacy and math skills, physical fitness, personal care and character development,” says Stephanie Valleroy, principal of Northview School. “These programs help kids build friendships and gain confidence, which leads to success in school and beyond.” SEF, now celebrating its 30th anniversary, serves more than 5,000 students annually, but the waiting list keeps growing. The foundation is financially independent from SSD and receives no support from United Way. “We rely on donations from generous St. Louisans,” Buhr says. The annual Dan McLaughlin Golf Tournament & Dinner Auction, a major fundraiser, takes place Oct. 13 at Norwood Hills Country Club. Co-chairs are Lee Tilghman, Mike Hopson, Bob Kijowski and Don Davis; Karen Carter and Barbara Prueitt serve as coordinators. SEF also provides assistive devices seldom covered by Medicaid or private insurance, including more than $30,000 annually in hearing aids to families in need. “My children, Alexandra and Matthew, have a rare genetic disorder that causes cancer and malformed eardrums,” explains Diane Pearl of Eureka, Mo. “Alexandra’s impairment was so severe, she couldn’t learn to read. Both kids required digital hearing aids—Matt needed two. But they cost more than $3,000 each, and insurance didn’t cover it.” Thanks to SEF, the kids got their hearing aids. Alexandra, who now loves to read, graduated from Eureka High School and starts college soon, with help from an SEF scholarship. Matthew, 17, plays in a rock band and has a lab internship at Harvard Medical School next year. “Most parents’ three favorite words from their kids are ‘I love you,’” Pearl says. “But in our house, we rejoiced the first time they turned on their aids and said, ‘I can hear!’ The boost in their independence and selfesteem has been life-changing.”
SEPTEMBER 3, 2014
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TALK [TOWNS] by bill beggs jr.
Albert and Deirdre Pujols still live in St. Louis during the offseason, and although the golf tourney that used to bear the slugger’s name is now the Matt Holliday Golf Classic, proceeds from the charity event still benefit Pujols’ nonprofit, the Albert Pujols Family Foundation. Now, before you Pujols haters start to wailing and gnashing your teeth about his ‘abandoning’ the Lou BALLWIN for L.A. and $240 million, let’s take a look at what the tourney, held last month and for 12 years previously, accomplishes. First and foremost, it has raised money for both young people with Down syndrome and impoverished residents of the Dominican Republic, Pujols’ homeland. Held at Meadowbrook Country Club in Ballwin, the contest still pulls in plenty of celebrity players, not to mention corporate and civic leaders, some of whom are not duffers. Yes, the sponsorships are taxdeductible, and Pujols’ foundation provides some relief for him from Uncle Sam. And true, many players are not very good role models, easily falling in the category of serial womanizer, drug abuser or worse. And then there’s Barry Bonds. But you have to give Albert Pujols credit for walking the walk. His daughter Isabella has Down syndrome, and he hasn’t turned his back on his hardscrabble beginnings. You may not like him, but the man’s an Angel now. Although some may remember last spring’s Spirit of St. Louis Air Show as nearly impossible to watch (except from the roadside during traffic snarls in Chesterfield and beyond), the nonprofit driving the event is soaring. That organization (its name is a mouthful), the 2014 Spirit of St. Louis Air Show & STEM Expo, is donating $100,000 to aviation education groups, local STEM (Science, Technology, Engineering and Math) organizations and other nonprofits established to aid veterans. The first $20,000 was allocated last month. Recipients are: • Missouri Friends of Injured Marines/Semper Fi Fund - $10,000 • Franklin County Honor Flight - $7,500 • YMCA Veterans Programs - $2,500 Missouri Friends of Injured Marines/Semper Fi Fund provides financial assistance and lifetime support to wounded, critically ill and injured members of the U.S. Armed Forces and their families. Franklin County Honor Flight transports veterans to Washington, D.C., to visit their war memorials, with top priority given
OF THE
to World War II survivors and terminally ill veterans. Major corporate support for the 2014 air show came from Monsanto, Boeing, Emerson and MasterCard. The police shooting death of Michael Brown has spurred unprecedented community support for his family. His mother works at Straub’s in Clayton, and the grocery has posted a simple note encouraging patrons to send her notes of sympathy or donate to a memorial fund for her son. Respond to: Michael Brown Jr. Memorial Fund c/o Lesley McSpadden P.O. Box 52011 St. Louis, MO 63160 Meanwhile, the Clayton School District is partnering with Operation Food Search to provide non-perishable foods and toiletries to Ferguson families. Through Sept. 9, items can be dropped off at area schools, each of which also has an inside collection area for students, parents and staff. The city is collecting donations at Clayton City Hall, 10 N. Bemiston Ave., and The Center of Clayton, 50 Gay Ave. The following items are especially needed: canned chicken, canned tuna, Cheerios and Honey Nut Cheerios (store brands welcome), deodorant and laundry detergent. No glass containers, please. Creve Coeur is already a hotbed for international business. Think, in a word, Monsanto. But at least one other company in the ‘city of the broken heart’ also is growing by leaps and bounds. Bradford & Galt, an IT-consulting and stragetic staffing firm. It already has offices in Kansas City and will now expand to Louisville, Ky., by the end of the year with an office staff of about 30 employees. At present, B&G has 240 employees, 190 based in St. Louis. Brad Layton founded the company in 1984. Similar to an IT firm’s stock in trade, only part of the company’s name is based in reality. The other part is, well, virtual. The name merges Layton’s first name with the first and last of fictional character John Galt, from the novel Atlas Shrugged by Ayn Rand. In the book, Galt personifies capitalism and holds the world on his shoulders. Layton felt this was symbolic of Bradford & Galt’s “commitment to supporting clients by providing outstanding information technology services delivered with uncompromising integrity.” Bold statement; tall order.
Strange Donuts expanded to Kirkwood, then Columbia, Mo. And now, one of the region’s most exquisite chocolatiers, Good Food Award-winning Kakao, opened a shop last month in Clayton in the Centene building at 7700 Forsyth Blvd. Its original location is on Jefferson Avenue in South City; the yummy confection is made there and in the Maplewood store. And while no chocolate is made in Clayton, this is the only location that whips up espresso and other frou-frou coffees. Meanwhile, Maplewood’s biggest and bestest craft-beer maker, Schlafly Bottleworks, plans to build a second brewery in the Lou (possibly on 20 to 50 acres in north city), and also has deals to brew beer at facilities in Nashville, Stevens Point, Wis., and Coralville, Iowa— not too shabby for a homegrown boutique brewery. Hip and hoppenin’ Maplewood, yo! Harvest, which has been a fixture around the corner from the Esquire Theater at 1059 S. Big Bend Blvd., closed in June. It had been open for 18 years which, in the topsy-turvy business of eateries in the Lou, is practically a century. Lamentable, yes, but taking its place is another popular restaurant moving up (and out) of its off-Cherokee Street neighborhood: Riverbend. The N’awlins-style cookery should be open by October. You don’t have to be Goth to get married in a cemetery. Bellefontaine Cemetery in north St. Louis has held numerous weddings in its chapel. Earlier this summer, the cemetery in its entirety was listed on the National Register of Historic Places. Louis Sullivan designed the Wainwright Tomb, which, among other iconic gravesites or mausoleums, was already on the register. Now all 314 acres of hallowed ground have been officially designated as such by the ST. LOUIS
Anyone who still disses Maplewood as ‘The ’Wood,’ listen up: This inner-ring community continues to distinguish itself for its attractive little businesses—many of which have expanded beyond the confines of the homey ’burb. First, the aptly named
[ TT TRIVIA ] WHO ARE THE FOUNDERS OF SCHLAFLY BOTTLEWORKS?
THE FIRST CORRECT EMAIL ANSWER WE RECEIVE AT TOWNTALK@TOWNANDSTYLE.COM WILL WIN AN EXCLUSIVE TOWN & STYLE TOTE BAG OR APRON! LAST ISSUE’S ANSWER | BUZZ WESTFALL, COUNTY EXECUTIVE PRIOR TO CHARLIE DOOLEY, DIED IN OFFICE IN 2003.
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Cyclists, and motorists, may soon be subject to greater protection under Wildwood’s peace disturbance code. The city is considering additional language to protect cyclists from harassment by motorists. And, we surmise, viceversa. There are jerk* motorists, and there are jerk* cyclists. Cyclists, of course, have less protection in an encounter with a raging motorist who’s not too interested in sharing the road. On the other hand, we’ve seen more than a few cyclists ride side-by-side, rather than single file, which obstructs vehicular traffic. On some of Wildwood’s narrow, winding roads, that’s really tempting fate. Council members supported language that would apply to anyone whose actions were intended to ‘frighten or startle’ another road user. After extensive discussion, the council kicked the issue back to the Board of Public Safety for fine-tuning. (*Since we are a family-friendly magazine, we have abstained from using any of the more colorful language often ‘expleted’ by road hogs, whether on two or four wheels.)
[ it’s the talk of our town ]
314.657.2100 | townandstyle.com
National Park Service. At 4947 W. Florissant Ave., Bellefontaine is the final resting place for dozens of St. Louis notables, from ‘beat’ writer William S. Burroughs to Louisiana Territory explorer William Clark, brewer Adolphus Busch and architect James Eads. They are just a few among the 400-some famous folks at Bellefontaine listed on the Findagrave.com website. There’s a billboard touting Bellefontaine as ‘the other Forest Park,’ and that isn’t far off. One of the main differences is that Bellefontaine, also rolling and worthy of arboretum status, is much more crowded. But quiet…87,000 people are buried there. With 100 acres available, plenty more will be able to join them. Knuckleheads know no shame. Their heads sprout knuckles because they attempt strong-armed robberies in broad daylight, as was the case last month when two juvenile suspects tried to wrestle a cellphone away from a jogger near Webster University (near East Lockwood and Plymouth avenues). The incident spurred authorities to lock down both the university and the high school a few blocks away for about 45 minutes around noon. No one was hurt, the jogger held on to his phone, and the apparently unarmed suspects were arrested a short time later and turned over to juvenile authorities. Ahh, cellphones: the coin of the realm for petty thieves. But once you snag one, what are you gonna do with it? The owner’s cell provider will deactivate it, of course. Before that, however, the company can provide a pretty good location for it via GPS.
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SEPT 12 | 9AM-5:30PM
AND
SEPT 13 | 9AM-4PM
•
CRAIG WERTHEIM FROM SCABAL FABRICS & JIM TOGNONI FROM NETTLETON SHOES WILL BE IN TOWN FOR 2 DAYS ONLY.
•
TO CELEBRATE THIS EVENT, WE WILL BE OFFERING 30% OFF SUIT, SPORTCOAT, TUXEDO, TROUSER AND TOPCOAT FABRICS.
•
REGISTER TO WIN A FREE PAIR OF NETTLETON SHOES [$795 MSRP]
•
REFRESHMENTS WILL BE SERVED.
FEATURING
for an appointment please call 314.721.7848 8101 MARYLAND AVENUE | CLAYTON, MO 63105 SAVILEROWSTL.COM | 314.721.7848 SEPTEMBER 3, 2014
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THIS & THAT 1
1 | DISTINCTIONS
Join us for a Marisa Baratelli trunk show Sept. 11 to 13, featuring new and exciting designs from one of the top designers of special occasion gowns. 12354 Olive Blvd. | 314.434.5445
2 | THE NEXT STEP
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We provide financial assistance for individuals active in recovery from alcohol and/or chemicals and pursuing an academic and/or vocational education. We awarded $121,000 in funds to 51 individuals for the 2014/15 academic year. Our annual dinner auction is Oct. 24 at MAC downtown.
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314.719.2880 | thenextstepstl.org
3 | STAGES ST. LOUIS
On our stage now: one of the most touching creations in the history of Broadway, Fiddler On The Roof, featuring beloved songs Sunrise, Sunset, Matchmaker, Matchmaker and others!
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111 S. Geyer Road | 314.821.2407 | stagesstlouis.org
4 | LINK AUCTION GALLERIES
Offering fine antique and contemporary furniture, artwork, silver, porcelain, Oriental carpets and jewelry at auction. Complimentary auction appraisals provided. 5000 Washington Place 314.454.6525 | linkauctiongalleries.com
5 | ST. LOUIS RAMS
Be there to help ‘Defend Our Turf’ at the Rams home opener Sunday, Sept. 7, against the Minnesota Vikings. Attendees will receive a Rams Rally Towel presented by Washington University Physicians and BarnesJewish Hospital. 1 Rams Way | 314.RAMS.TIX | stlouisrams.com/tickets
6 | MARCH OF DIMES MISSOURI CHAPTER
Sample amazing dishes and bid on one-ofa-kind auction items at the Signature Chefs Auction Sept. 11 to benefit March of Dimes. Pictured: Ambassador Family, Bryan and Ashley Knapp with daughter Elle.
10 | SPECIAL EDUCATION FOUNDATION
Mike and Courtney Hopson salute the Ladue Early Childhood Program. 13545 Barrett Parkway Drive | 314.394.7030 | sef-stl.org
11 | MISTER GUY WOMEN’S STORE
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Mister Guy Women’s now carries celebrity favorite clothing line Milly, with on-trend, wearable pieces that bring an effortless whimsy to your wardrobe. 9817 Clayton Road 314.991.5262 | misterguyclothiers.com
12 | AMINI’S HOME RUGS & GAME ROOM AND JAFFE LIGHTING
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Amini’s new Rug Gallery celebrates the future of rug shopping with in-store innovations that showcase the latest trends. 17377 Chesterfield Airport Road 636.537.9200 | aminis.com
11829 Dorsett Road | 314.513.9990 marchofdimes.org/missouri
8
7 | MOSBY BUILDING ARTS
Embracing technology is a kitchen trend for 2014. Mosby can create a functional, hightech kitchen with USB outlets, iPad docking stations and smart appliances.
9
645 Leffingwell Ave. | 314.909.1800 | callmosby.com
8 | WINDING BROOK ESTATE— LAVENDER FARM
Experience lavender at one of our fall events: Tea Lunches, Sample Saturday, and Lavender and Libations (Girls’ Night Out). 3 Winding Brook Estate Drive 636.575.5572 | windingbrookestate.com
9 | MERCEDES-BENZ OF ST. LOUIS
Tri-Star Imports in Ellisville has changed its name and moved locations to the corner of Hwy. 40 and Hampton Avenue. 1048 Hampton Ave. | 314.647.2400 | mbstl.com
SPECIAL ADVERTISING FEATURE
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TOWN&style
| SEPTEMBER 3, 2014
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TOWN TALK
Leading expert on parenting girLs Dr. Tim Jordan is a Developmental and Behavioral Pediatrician, Author, Speaker, School and Media Consultant. His counseling practice specializes in girls only, ages 6 through college years and focuses on helping them with issues such as:
t FrienDSHiP ConCernS t SelF eSTeeM t MilD DePreSSion AnD AnxieTy t STreSS AnD BAlAnCe t FAMily relATionSHiPS
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CaLL for an appointment
636 -530 -1883
drtimJordan.com
or visit
TAVON AUSTIN THE SONIC BOOM
14
15 TOM SEGHI, LEMON ON GREEN, 1991, OIL ON CANVAS, 60 X 40 INCHES.
16 13 | SAVILE ROW
J. Paul skin care products are designed exclusively for men and developed from carefully selected ingredients that address men’s daily grooming and skin care needs. 8101 Maryland Ave. | 314.721.7848 | savilerowstl.com
14 | SIGN OF THE ARROW
Lampe Berger’s best-selling fragrances to purify and scent your home are now available at Sign of the Arrow. Fragrances include Ocean Breeze, Lavender Fields, Orange Cinnamon and others. 9814 Clayton Road | 314.994.0606 | signofthearrow.com
15 | JOY TRIBOUT INTERIORS
Don’t miss the 2014 Joy Tribout Interiors warehouse sale Tuesday, Sept. 23, through Friday, Sept. 26, held just 15 minutes from downtown St. Louis. 711 S. Illinois St., Belleville, Ill. | 618.233.0600 | joytribout.com
16 | KODNER GALLERY
Please join us for an opening night cocktail reception from 6 to 9 p.m. Sept. 20 for ‘R.H. Dick: Retrospective,’ a landmark exhibition of paintings, drawings, works on paper and photography spanning the almost 50-year career of this Missouri master. Offered at auction Sept. 12. 9650 Clayton Road | 314.993.4477 | kodnergallery.com
SEPTEMBER 7 NOON vs
All fans in attendance receive a
RAMS RALLY TOWEL presented presented by by the the Washington Washington University University and and Barnes-Jewish Barnes-Jewish Heart Heart & & Vascular Vascular Center Center
Join us as we celebrate Hall of Famer
AENEAS WILLIAMS
STLOUISRAMS.COM/TICKETS
314-RAMS-TIX SEPTEMBER 3, 2014
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ON THE PAGE ]
FUN FIND >>
PHOTO: B THE COLLECTION
compiled by dorothy weiner, tony di martino, karyn meyer & stephanie zeilenga
cute home photos >> PAT TOVO’S cat Vinny ponders the world outside his porch in Brentwood.
SEND YOUR CUTE PHOTOS TO TELLUS@TOWNANDSTYLE.COM
Look + Listen + Taste Does throwing out your carefully selected pumpkin at the end of the Halloween season make you blue? Attend Third Degree Glass Factory’s annual GLASS PUMPKIN PATCH HARVEST from 6 to 10 p.m. Sept. 19 at Third Degree Glass Factory (5200 Delmar Blvd.). Peruse handblown gourds in all styles and colors and watch glassblowers demonstrate their craft. You can even try it yourself!
“to boot ”
[ short & simple | BLACK CHERRY BBQ SAUCE] RECIPE FROM CHRIS LEE OF CHEF’S TABLE STL
1/2 t. smoked paprika 1/4 t. cayenne 1 garlic clove 1/4 t. ground ginger 1 t. black pepper 1/2 t. kosher salt
>> Combine and blend well in a blender. >> Cook on medium low for 15 to 20 minutes, stirring occasionally until thick. >> Makes about 2 cups sauce; serve with grilled vegetables or meats.
14 |
TOWN&style
| SEPTEMBER 3, 2014
PHOTO: CHEF’S TABLE STL
1/2 t. mustard
phraseology [ freyz • ŏ • lō • gy ]
Don’t get too excited, shoe fanatics. The term ‘to boot’ has nothing to do with Jimmy Choos or Louboutins. Forms of the phrase, which means ‘moreover’ or ‘in addition to,’ were found in Middle English and Old English around 1000 A.D. ‘Boot’ is thought to be a derivative of the earlier ‘bat’ and ‘bote,’ which meant ‘good’ or ‘advantage,’ and also seems to be the root of the word ‘better.’ Over the years, the idiom broadened to include anything that was additional, either good or bad. Robert Manning included a version of the phrase in Langtoft’s Chronicle, 1330: “A hundreth knyghtes mo...and four hundreth to bote, squieres of gode aray.”
Sample more than 40 beer styles and enjoy food and live music at HOP IN THE CITY, noon to 5 p.m. Sept. 13 at the Schlafly Tap Room. Tickets include a commemorative tasting glass and unlimited beer samples. Country-rock fusion band Cory B. Clay and The Twains plays 12:30 - 4:30 p.m.
(available at local grocery stores)
THE LINE IS AVAILABLE AT MISTER GUY, THE WOMAN’S EXCHANGE, SWEET BOUTIQUES AND EMBROIDER THE OCCASION.
End the warm-weather season with one last concert under the stars. The ST. LOUIS SYMPHONY, conducted by David Robertson, plays a free concert at 7 p.m. Sept. 9 on Art Hill in Forest Park. Expect to hear favorites, including The Star-Spangled Banner and Pirates of the Caribbean. And be sure to stay through the end—fireworks are planned for the show’s finale.
2 c. cherries, pitted 2 T. apple vinegar 1 T. gluten free tamari 1 to 2 T. maple syrup 1 T. cherry syrup
Hometowner Brooke Schultz, center, has launched B The Collection, a series of U.S.-made sheaths, tunics, pants and sweaters, many constructed with tapestry-like patterned fabrics. On Brooke: The Club Pant in ‘Hot to Trot.’ On the others: the B Timeless Tunic in ‘Tally Whoa’ and ‘The Hunt.’
EDUCATION 101] [ SPECIAL SECTION
? + % รท
A learning environment that fosters collaboration and creativity.
sunday, november 2 noon to 4 pm
PHOTO: BILL BARRETT
Open House We invite families to join us in exploring our campus.
Contact us at 314.810.3566 or admissions@vdoh.org to schedule a private tour for your family. A CATHOLIC EDUCATION IN THE SACRED HEART TRADITION FOR YOUNG WOMEN GRADES 7-12 AND BOYS AND GIRLS AGE 3-GRADE 6
JOSEPH EISNER
COVER STORY
C+E TUTORING
by karyn meyer
Leaders are not made, they are discovered. Experience the Rohan Woods Difference... • Personalized Instruction • Small Class Size • Family Environment
• Daily Physical Education & After School Sports • Experiential Learning
Learn more at RohanWoods.org Cherish • Encourage • Prepare • Lead
1515 Bennett Avenue • St. Louis 63122 314.821.6270 16 |
TOWN&style
| SEPTEMBER 3, 2014
A PASSION FOR MATH, plus the desire to help others learn, is the perfect equation for success in the new business launched by Joseph Eisner. The owner and founder of C and E Tutoring, opened recently in Ladue, wanted to offer a learning environment that fosters collaboration and creativity for high school students who need math assistance. “I started tutoring when I was a student at Washington University, and I have been working with students on a one-on-one basis since I graduated in 2012,” says Eisner, who received a bachelor of arts in mathematics and a minor in electrical engineering. After two years offering private tutoring, Eisner realized students need a place to go that gives them more than basic tutoring services. “I really enjoy sharing my love of math, and there is something truly exciting about a student understanding a concept they didn’t before. I love being a part of that.” At his center on Clayton Road, Eisner intends to recreate the kind of collaborative learning environment that helped him thrive during college, a place where multiple outlets are available to solve a problem. “It was an environment that offered resources to encourage me to explore beyond the direct instruction I received,” Eisner explains. “If someone couldn’t answer my question, they would push me in the right direction.” He says tutoring in homes or coffee shops was fine for helping with homework, but now he wants to take his instruction a step further. “Being able to control the students’ environment is a major advantage in having a learning center,” he says. Eisner continues to offer private tutoring sessions in libraries, coffee shops or homes, but all group help sessions, group workshops and test preparation workshops are held at the center. Currently, help sessions run from 3 to 7 p.m. every weekday except Wednesday, but Eisner will expand to weekends and extended hours to meet demand. “Keeping a flexible schedule is key when working with students who have busy schedules,” he says. Students can set up a regular weekly appointment, as well as use the center as a collaborative environment to brainstorm with others needing instruction. “I walk around the room and help answer any questions, but everyone gets exposure to the problems presented,” he says. “They can work through problems together and help each other.” Although the center is newly opened, Eisner has lofty goals for the future. “I would love to expand to other subjects, like reading comprehension, and to group students by subject to work together,” he says. “And I hope to have summer workshops where I’m able to teach concepts and applications not offered through the school curriculum to prepare students for the upcoming school year.”
C + E TUTORING, LOCATED AT 9651 CLAYTON ROAD, STE. C, OFFERS MATH INSTRUCTION TO HIGH SCHOOL STUDENTS THROUGH PRIVATE AND GROUP TUTORING, GROUP WORKSHOPS AND TEST PREPARATION WORKSHOPS. CALL 314-348-3896, EMAIL CE.MATHHELP@GMAIL.COM OR VISIT COUNTINGTOCALCULUS.COM FOR MORE INFORMATION. COVER DESIGN BY JON FOGEL | COVER PHOTO BY BILL BARRETT
TOWN TALK
WHERE [OUR GRADS ARE GOING
by stephanie zeilenga
<< parkway west
<< st. josephâ&#x20AC;&#x2122;s academy
Appalachian State [1] Arizona State [1] Ball State [1] Baylor [1] Berklee College of Music [1] Brigham Young [1] Brigham Young, Idaho [4] Case Western Reserve [3] Central Methodist [4] College of Wooster [1] Colorado Mesa [1] Concordia, River Forest [1] DePaul [1] DePauw [2] Drake [1] East Central College [1] Emory [1] Fontbonne [1] Fordham [2] Fort Lewis College [1] Greenville College [2] Harris-Stowe State [1] Illinois Central College [2] Indiana U., Bloomington [5] Kansas State [4] Le Cordon Bleu, St. Louis [1] LeTourneau [1] Lincoln [1] Linn State Technical College [1]
Arizona State [2] Arkansas State [1] Auburn [1] Avila [1] Ball State [1] Bradley [1] Butler Community College [1] Butler [1] Colgate [1] Creighton [1] Drake [1] Drexel [1] Fordham [1] Illinois State [1] Indiana U. [1] Iowa State [1] Judson [1] Lindenwood [1] Louisiana State [1] Loyola, Chicago [1] Loyola, New Orleans [1] Marquette [3] Maryville [2] Miami [1] Pacific [1] Regis [2] Rockhurst [2]
Loyola, Chicago [1] Maryland Institute College of Art [1] Maryville [5] Mercer [2] Miami U., Ohio[4] Mineral Area College [1] Missouri Baptist [3] Missouri State [9] Missouri U. of Science and Technology [19] Murray State [1] New York U. [1] Northeastern [1] Northwest Missouri State [1] Northwestern Oklahoma State [1] Paul Mitchell The School [1] Principia College [1] Purdue [2] Ranken Technical College [1] Rose-Hulman Institute of Technology [1] Saint Louis U. [12] Saint Xavier [1] Shawnee State [1] Southeast Missouri State [4] SouthWest Collegiate Institute for the Deaf of Howard College [1] St. Louis College of Pharmacy [2] SLCC, Forest Park [4] SLCC, Meramec [21] SLCC, Wildwood [20]
Stonehill College [1] Texas Christian [1] Texas Tech [1] Truman State [13] U. Alabama [1] U. Arizona [2] U. Arkansas [5] U. California, Berkeley [1] U. Central Missouri [4] U. Colorado, Boulder [3] U. Illinois, Springfield [1] U. Illinois, Urbana-Champaign [1] U. Indianapolis [1] U. Kansas [6] U. Memphis [1] U. Mississippi [1] U. Missouri, Columbia [42] U. Missouri, Kansas City [3] U. Missouri, St. Louis [4] U. Nebraska, Lincoln [2] U. Oklahoma [2] U. Tulsa [2] U. Washington [2] U. Wisconsin, Madison [2] VirginiaPolytechnicInstituteandStateU.[1] Washington and Jefferson College [1] Washington U., St. Louis [3] Webster University [1] William Jewell College [1]
Rockford [1] Saint Louis U. [9] Santa Clara [1] Southeast Missouri State [2] Spring Hill College [1] St. Louis College of Pharmacy [1] SLCC, Wildwood [1] Texas Christian [1] Truman State [4] U. Alabama [2] U. Arizona [2] U. Arkansas [9] U. California, Berkeley [1] U. Dayton [2] U. Evansville [1] U. Kansas [2] U. Kentucky [2] U. Louisville [3] U. Michigan, Ann Arbor [1] U. Mississippi [8] U. Missouri, Columbia [32] U. Missouri, St. Louis [2] U. Notre Dame [2] U. South Carolina [1] U. Tulsa [2] U. Virginia [1] Western Kentucky [1]
SEPTEMBER 3, 2014
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<< kirkwood high school
Alabama A&M [1] Arizona State [1] Belmont [2] Benedictine College [2] Bradley [1] Brigham Young [1] Central Methodist [1] Clark Atlanta [1] Clemson [1] Colorado Mountain College, Alpine [1] Colorado Mountain College, Spring Valley [1] Colorado School of Mines [1] Colorado State [3] Columbia College, Chicago [3] Concordia U., Wisconsin [1] Cottey College [1] Cuesta College [1] Culver-Stockton College [1] Denison [1] DePaul [2] Drake [1] Drury [1] Elon [2] Emory [1] Fairfield [1] George Mason [1] Graceland [1] Hickey College [2] Hope College [1] Illinois College [2] Illinois Wesleyan [1] Indiana U., Bloomington [8] Kansas City Art Institute [1] Kansas State [1] Kent State [1] Knox College [1] Lincoln Land Community College [1] Lindenwood [3] Lindenwood, Belleville [1] Linn State Technical College [2] Loyola, Chicago [4] Marquette [1] Maryville [1] Memphis College of Art [2] Mercyhurst [1] Metropolitan Community College, Maple Woods [1] Miami U., Ohio [6] Michigan State [1] Millikin [2] Missouri Baptist [3] Missouri State [16] Missouri U. of Science and Technology [8] Missouri Western State [1] Murray State [1] New York U. [1] North Carolina State [1] Northeastern [1] Northwest Missouri State [1]
Ozarks Technical Community College [1] Paul Mitchell The School [1] Purdue [2] Ranken Technical College [2] Rhodes College [1] Rockhurst [5] Saint Louis U. [6] Samford [3] San Diego City College [1] San Diego Mesa College [1] Santa Fe College [1] Smith College [1] South Dakota State [1] Southeast Missouri State [14] Southern Illinois U., Carbondale [1] Southern Illinois U., Edwardsville [4] Southern Methodist [1] Southwest Baptist [2] St. Charles Community College [1] St. Louis College of Pharmacy [1] SLCC, Florissant Valley [2] SLCC, Forest Park [7] SLCC, Meramec [70] Stephens College [1] Temple [1] Tennessee State [1] Texas A&M, Galveston [1] Texas Southern [1] Truman State [15] U. Alabama [4] U. Arkansas [6] U. Central Missouri [7] U. Dayton [3] U. Denver [2] U. Illinois, Urbana-Champaign [1] U. Iowa [2] U. Kansas [14] U. Miami [2] U. Minnesota, Twin Cities [2] U. Mississippi [2] U. Missouri, Columbia [66] U. Missouri, Kansas City [4] U. Missouri, St. Louis [4] U. Nebraska, Lincoln [1] U. New Orleans [1] U. North Texas [1] U. Tampa [1] U. Tennessee, Knoxville [1] U. Wisconsin, Madison [1] U.S. Military Academy [1] Washington U., St. Louis [2] Webster University [10] Western Illinois [1] Western Kentucky [1] Wheaton College [1] William Jewell [4] Worcester Polytechnic Institute [1] Xavier [1] Xavier, Louisiana [1] Yale [1]
<< cor jesu academy Arkansas State [1] Bellarmine [2] Benedictine College [3] Bradley [1] Clemson [1] Creighton [4] DePaul [3] Fordham [1] Franciscan U. of Steubenville [1] Georgetown [1] Illinois Institute of Technology [1]
Illinois State [2] Indiana U., Bloomington [2] Kansas State [1] Marquette [1] Maryville [2] Missouri State [1] Missouri U. of Science and Technology [1] New York U. [1] Northwestern [1] Purdue [1]
Rockhurst [12] St. Louis College of Pharmacy [1] Saint Louis U. [12] Seton Hall [1] Southeast Missouri State [1] Texas A&M [1] Texas A&M, Galveston [1] Truman State [6] U. Alabama [6] U. Arkansas [1] U. Dallas [1] U. Dayton [5] U. Denver [1] U. Kansas [1] U. Michigan [1] U. Mississippi [4] U. Missouri, Columbia [27] U. Missouri, Kansas City [2] U. Notre Dame [1] U. Oklahoma [1] U. Pittsburgh [1] U. San Diego [1] U. Southern California [1] U. Tulsa [2] Xavier [1]
<< chaminade Arkansas State [1] Ball State [1] Bellarmine [2] Benedictine College [1] Boston College [2] Bradley [1] Butler [2] DePaul [2] Drury [1] Florida Institute of Technology [1] Georgetown [1] Gettysburg College [1] Haverford College [1] Illinois Wesleyan [1] Indiana U. [3] Kansas State [1] Lafayette College [1] Loyola, Chicago [1] Miami U., Ohio [3] Missouri State [1] Missouri U. of Science and Technology [1] Murray State [1] North American Hockey League [1] Pennsylvania State [1] Pratt Institute [1] Purdue [2]
Rockhurst [4] Saint Louis U. [6] Saint Maryâ&#x20AC;&#x2122;s [1] Seattle U. [1] Southeast Missouri State [2] Spring Hill College [1] Texas Christian [1] Truman State [2] U. Alabama [1] U. Chicago [2] U. Dayton [4] U. Denver [1] U. Illinois, Chicago [1] U. Illinois, Urbana-Champaign [1]
U. Iowa [1] U. Miami, Fla. [3] U. Michigan [1] U. Mississippi [4] U. Missouri, Columbia [27] U. Missouri, Kansas City [1] U. Missouri, St. Louis [1] U. North Carolina, Chapel Hill [1] U. Tulsa [3] U. Vermont [1] U. Washington [2] U.S. Hockey League [1] Washington U., St. Louis [1] Westminster College [1]
<< marquette high school Arizona State [2] Aurora [1] Baylor [1] Bellarmine [1] Belmont [1] Berry College [1] Brandeis [1] Brigham Young [1] Brigham Young, Idaho [1] Catholic U. of America [1] CCC, Harold Washington College [1] Columbia College, Chicago [1] Concordia U., Irvine [1] Cornell [1] Covenant College [1] Culver-Stockton College [1] DePaul [2] Dominican [2] Drake [1] Drury [1] Duquesne [1]
18 |
TOWN&style
| SEPTEMBER 3, 2014
Fashion Institute of Design and Merchandising, Los Angeles [1] Ferris State [1] Florida Atlantic [1] Florida Southern College [1] Fontbonne [1] Fort Valley State [1] Georgia Institute of Technology [1] Georgia Southern [1] Harding [1] Harris-Stowe State [4] Hillsdale College [1] Indiana U., Bloomington [5] Jefferson College [2] Kansas State [1] Lehigh [1] Lincoln [1] Lindenwood [2] Linn State Technical College [3] Livingstone College [1] Loyola Marymount [1]
Loyola, Chicago [1] Maryville [9] McKendree [1] Miami U., Ohio [4] Missouri Southern State [1] Missouri State [30] Missouri U. of Science and Technology [33] Missouri Western State [1] Montana State, Bozeman [1] Murray State [2] New York U. [1] Ohio State [4] Orange Coast College [1] Princeton [1] Purdue [1] Quincy [1] Ranken Technical College [2] Rice [1] Ringling College of Art and Design [1]
Rockhurst [3] Roosevelt [1] Saint Johns River Community College, St. Augustine [1] Saint Louis U. [7] School of the Art Institute of Chicago [2] Southeast Missouri State [12] Southeastern Illinois College [1] Southern Illinois, Carbondale [1] Southern Illinois, Edwardsville [2] Southwest Baptist [1] Southwestern [1] St. Charles Community College [1] St. Louis College of Pharmacy [3] SLCC, Florissant Valley [1] SLCC, Forest Park [1] SLCC, Meramec [30] SLCC, Wildwood [53] Stony Brook [2] Temple [1]
Texas A&M, Galveston [1] Texas Christian [1] Texas Southern [1] The Art Institute of St. Louis [1] Three Rivers Community College [1] Truman State [12] U. Alabama [3] U. Alabama, Huntsville [1] U. Arkansas [14] U. California, Berkeley [1] U. Central Missouri [8] U. Denver [1] U. Illinois, Urbana-Champaign [4] U. Indianapolis [1] U. Iowa [1] U. Kansas [5] U. Kentucky [2] U. Louisiana [1] U. Michigan [1] U. Mississippi [2] U. Missouri, Columbia [98]
U. Missouri, Kansas City [1] U. Missouri, St. Louis [8] U. Notre Dame [1] U. Oklahoma [3] U. San Diego [2] U. South Carolina [1] U. South Florida, Tampa [1] U. Southern California [2] U. Wisconsin, Madison [1] U.S. Naval Academy [1] Valencia College [1] Vanderbilt [1] Wabash College [1] Washington U., St. Louis [2] Watkins College of Art and Design [1] Webster University [1] Wheaton College [1] William Jewell College [1] William Woods [2]
Alabama A&M [1] Art Institute of Atlanta [1] Art Institute of Pittsburgh â&#x20AC;&#x201C; Online Div. [1] Ball State [1] Bethel U., Tennessee [1] Bethune-Cookman [1] Blinn College [1] Bradley [1] Brigham Young, Idaho [1] Bryn Mawr College [1] Butler [1] Carnegie Mellon [1] College of Staten Island [1] Columbia College [1] Creighton [1]
Culver-Stockton College [2] DePaul [3] DePauw [2] DeVry, St. Louis [1] Georgia Institute of Technology [1] Harris-Stowe State [1] Haskell Indian Nations [1] Hickey College [1] Howard [1] Indiana State [1] Iowa Central Community College [1] Jefferson College [1] Kansas State [1] Lincoln [1]
Lindenwood [7] Lindenwood, Belleville [2] Linn State Technical College [1] Lipscomb [1] Loyola, Chicago [2] Madison Area Technical College [1] Maryville [10] Millikin [1] Mineral Area College [2] Minnesota State, Mankato [1] Missouri Baptist [3] Missouri State [9] Missouri State, West Plains [1] Missouri U. of Science and Technology [14] Missouri Western State [1]
New York U. [1] Oklahoma City U. [1] Ranken Technical College [3] Rochester Institute of Technology [1] Rockhurst [1] Saint Louis U. [4] Santa Clara [1] Santa Monica College [3] Southeast Missouri State [8] Southern Illinois, Carbondale [4] Southern Illinois, Edwardsville [3] Southwest Baptist [2] Spelman College [1] St. Charles Community College [6] St. Louis College of Pharmacy [1]
SLCC, Florissant Valley [6] SLCC, Forest Park [3] SLCC, Meramec [62] SLCC, Wildwood [1] Tennessee State [1] Truman State [19] Tulane [1] U. Alabama [1] U. Arkansas [1] U. California, Los Angeles [1] U. Central Missouri [3] U. Colorado, Denver [1] U. Iowa [1] U. Kansas [4] U. Kentucky [1] U. Mississippi [1]
U. Missouri, Columbia [31] U. Missouri, Kansas City [5] U. Missouri, St. Louis [9] U. Montana, Western [1] U. South Florida, Tampa [1] U. Tulsa [1] U. Vermont [1] Vatterott College, St. Louis [1] Waldorf College [1] Washington State [1] Washington U., St. Louis [1] Webster University [4]
<< parkway south Alabama State [1] Austin Peay State [1] Ball State [1] Baylor [1] Bellarmine [1] Boston U. [1] Bradley [3] Columbia College [1] Columbia College, Chicago [1] Drake [2] Drury [1] Florida State [1] Georgia Institute of Technology [1]
Greenville College [2] Harris-Stowe State [1] Illinois State [1] Iowa State [1] John Brown [1] Johns Hopkins [1] Lindenwood [2] Marquette [1] Maryville [9] McKendree [1] Missouri Baptist [1] Missouri State [12] Missouri U. of Science and
Technology [9] Missouri Western State [1] Northern Arizona [1] Northern Illinois [1] Northwestern [3] Ohio State [1] Paul Mitchell The School [1] Pratt Community College [1] Ranken Technical College [4] Robert Morris, Illinois [1] Rochester Institute of Technology [1] Rockhurst [1] Saint Louis U. [10]
San Diego State [1] Savannah College of Art and Design [1] Southeast Missouri State [8] Southern Illinois U., Carbondale [1] Southern Illinois U., Edwardsville [3] St. Louis College of Pharmacy [3] SLCC, Florissant Valley [2] SLCC, Forest Park [3] SLCC, Meramec [26] SLCC, Wildwood [4] Stanford [1] Truman State [12]
Tulsa Welding School [1] U. Alabama [1] U. Arkansas [6] U. California, Los Angeles [1] U. Central Missouri [9] U. Colorado, Boulder [1] U. Illinois, Urbana-Champaign [1] U. Kansas [3] U. Kentucky [4] U. Minnesota, Twin Cities [1] U. Mississippi [2] U. Missouri, Columbia [49] U. Missouri, Kansas City [4]
U. Missouri, St. Louis [5] U. Montevallo [1] U. North Carolina, Asheville [1] U. Southern California [1] U. Southern Indiana [1] U. Tulsa [2] U. Wisconsin, Madison [1] Washington U., St. Louis [3] Webster University [3] Westminster College [1] Wheaton College, Illinois [1] William Jewell College [1]
<< micds American U. [2] Arizona State [2] Auburn [1] Boston College [1] Boston U. [3] Bucknell [1] Carleton College [1] Case Western Reserve [1] Chapman [2] College of the Holy Cross [2] Columbia [2] Connecticut College [1] Cornell [1] Dartmouth [1] Denison [1] DePaul [1]
DePauw [1] Duke [1] Emory [1] Furman [1] George Washington [1] Georgia Institute of Technology [1] Goldsmiths College, U. London [1] Indiana U., Bloomington [2] Ithaca College [1] Johns Hopkins [2] Kansas State [2] Lake Forest College [1] Lehigh [1] London School of Economics [1] Loyola Marymount [1] Loyola U., Chicago [1]
Miami U., Oxford [8] Millikin [1] Missouri State [1] New York U. [1] Northwestern [2] Ohio Wesleyan [2] Princeton [1] Purdue [1] Rhodes College [2] Rollins College [1] Saint Louis U. [3] Santa Clara [3] Sarah Lawrence College [1] Savannah College of Art and Design [1] Skidmore College [1]
<< priory Baylor [1] Belmont [1] Benedictine College [1] Boston College [1] Case Western Reserve [2] Catholic U. of America [1] College of William and Mary [1] Creighton [2] Drury [1] Elon [2] Franciscan U. of Steubenville [1] George Washington [1] Indiana U., Bloomington [2] Kenrick-Glennon Seminary/Saint Louis University [1] Loyola, Chicago [1] Loyola, Maryland [1] Missouri U. of Science and Technology [3] Northwestern [2] Princeton [1] Rice [1] Rochester Institute of Technology [1] Saint Louis U. [3] Southern Methodist [1] Spring Hill College [1] Texas Christian [2] Truman State [2]
Tulane [1] U. Alabama [1] U. Dallas [2] U. Dayton [2] U. Denver [1] U. Evansville [1] U. Kansas [1] U. Miami [4] U. Michigan [1] U. Missouri, Columbia [4] U. Missouri, Kansas City [1] U. Missouri, Kansas City School of Medicine [2] U. Oregon [1] U. of the Pacific [1] U. Richmond [2] U. Southern California [1] U. Tulsa [3] U.S. Naval Academy [1] Vanderbilt [2] Washington U., St. Louis [5] Worcester Polytechnic Institute [1]
<< westminster christian academy
<< parkway north
TOWN TALK
Southern Methodist [6] Spelman College [1] Texas A&M [1] Texas Christian [1] Trinity College [1] Tufts [1] Tulane [3] Truman State [2] U. Alabama [1] U. California, Berkeley [1] U. California, Los Angeles [1] U. California, San Diego [1] U. Central Florida [1] U. Georgia [1] U. Kansas [2] U. Miami [2]
Auburn [1] Baylor [7] Belmont [1] Biola [2] Bradley [2] Bucknell [1] Butler [1] Calvin College [2] Coastal Carolina U. [1] Columbia College [1] Covenant College [1] DePauw [2] Earlham College [1] Fisk [1] Florida Southern College [1] Greenville College [2] Hampton [1] Harris-Stowe State [1] High Point [1] Hope College [1] Indiana U., Bloomington [3] Indiana Wesleyan [1] Jefferson College [1] John Brown [1] Lindenwood [7] Lipscomb [1] Liverpool Institute for the
U. Michigan [2] U. Mississippi [2] U. Missouri, Columbia [9] U. Missouri, Kansas City [3] U. Missouri, St. Louis [1] U. New Haven [1] U. of the Pacific [1] U. Pennsylvania [1] U. Pittsburgh [1] U. Richmond [6] U. Southern California [2]
U. Tampa [1] U. Tulsa [1] U. Virginia [1] U. Wisconsin, Madison [1] Vanderbilt [2] Wake Forest [1] Washington and Lee [1] Washington U., St. Louis [4] Whitman College [1] Williams College [1]
Performing Arts [1] Loyola [1] Marquette [1] Maryville [2] Miami U., Oxford [3] Michigan State [1] Missouri State [5] Missouri U. of Science and Technology [1] Morehouse College [1] Northern Illinois [1] Oklahoma State [1] Pennsylvania State, University Park [2] Regis [1] Rhodes College [1] Saint Louis U. [1] Samford [1] Savannah College of Art and Design [1] Southeast Missouri State [1] Southern Methodist [2] St. Louis College of Pharmacy [1] SLCC, Meramec [8] Taylor [1] Texas Christian [2] Trinity Christian College [1]
Truman State [1] U. Alabama [1] U. Arizona [1] U. Arkansas [2] U. Central Missouri [1] U. Denver [1] U. Illinois, Urbana-Champaign [1] U. Iowa [1] U. Minnesota, Twin Cities [1] U. Mississippi [1] U. Missouri, Columbia [50] U. Oklahoma [1] U. Tulsa [5] Webster University [2] Wheaton College [2] Xavier [1]
SEPTEMBER 3, 2014
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<< ladue horton watkins high school
American [1] Arizona State [1] Art Center College of Design [1] Ball State [1] Baylor [1] Belmont [1] Benedictine College [1] Boston College [1] Bowdoin College [1] Bradley [2] Brigham Young [1] Butler [1] California Polytechnic State, San Luis Obispo [1] Carleton College [1] Central Methodist [1] Chapman [1] Clemson [1] College for Creative Studies [1] Colorado College [2] Colorado State [1] Columbia [2] Culver-Stockton College [1] DePaul [4] DePauw [3] Drake [2] Duke [1] Eastern Illinois [1] Eckerd College [1] Edison State [1] Elon [1] Emory [1] Fordham [1] George Washington [1] Georgia Institute of Technology [1] Grambling State [1] Grinnell College [1] Hamilton College, New York [3] Harris-Stowe State [1] Hendrix College [3] Indiana U., Bloomington [4] Jacksonville [1] Kansas State [1] Knox College [2] Lafayette College [1] Lake Forest College [1] Lehigh [1] Lewis & Clark College [1] Lincoln [1] Lindenwood [2] Linn State Technical College [1] Loyola, Chicago [1] Maryland Institute College of Art [2] Mercyhurst [1] Miami U., Ohio [1] Michigan State [1] Missouri State [10] Missouri U. of Science and Technology [8] Missouri Western State [1] Murray State [1] New York U. [2] Northeastern [2] Northern Illinois [1] Northwest Missouri State [1] Ohio State [2] Oklahoma City U. [2] Paul Mitchell The School [1]
<< lafayette high school
Pomona College [1] Rhodes College [2] Rochester Institute of Technology [1] Rockhurst [1] Saint Louis U. [10] Saint Maryâ&#x20AC;&#x2122;s College, California [1] Seton Hall [1] Southeast Missouri State [7] Southern Illinois U., Carbondale [1] Southern Methodist [3] St. Louis College of Pharmacy [3] SLCC [15] Stanford [2] Texas Christian [2] Transylvania [1] Truman State [5] Tufts [1] Tulane [3] U. Arizona [2] U. Arkansas [3] U. British Columbia [1] U. Central Missouri [2] U. Chicago [1] U. Dayton [3] U. Delaware [1] U. Denver [1] U. Illinois, Chicago [1] U. Illinois, Urbana-Champaign [1] U. Iowa [1] U. Kansas [6] U. Kentucky [1] U. London [1] U. Maryland, College Park [1] U. Miami [2] U. Minnesota, Twin Cities [3] U. Mississippi [3] U. Missouri, Columbia [33] U. Missouri, Kansas City [4] U. Missouri, St. Louis [4] U. North Carolina, Chapel Hill [3] U. Oklahoma [1] U. Pennsylvania [1] U. Pittsburgh, Greensburg [1] U. Puget Sound [1] U. Rochester [1] U. Southern California [3] U. Southern Maine [1] U. Tampa [1] U. Texas, Dallas [1] U. Texas, San Antonio [1] U. Tulsa [4] U. Washington [1] U. Wisconsin, Madison [5] U.S. Coast Guard Academy [1] Vanderbilt [1] Washington U., St. Louis [13] Westminster College [1] Willamette [1]
Arizona State [2] Auburn [1] Bellarmine [2] Belmont [3] Benedictine College [1] Bethel [1] Binn College [1] Bradley [1] Brigham Young [3] Butler [3] Case Western Reserve [2] College of DuPage [2] Colorado Mesa [1] Colorado State [3] Columbus State Community College [1] Culver-Stockton College [1] Denison [1] DigiPen Institute of Technology [1] East Central College [1] Eastern Illinois U. [1] Edison State College [1] Florida State [1] Fontbonne [1] Georgia Institute of Technology [2] Golden West College [1] Harding [3] Harris-Stowe [1] Hickey College [1] Hobart and William Smith College [1] Illinois State [1] Indiana U., Bloomington [2] Iowa State [1] Ivy Tech State College [1] Jefferson College [1] Kansas City Art Institute [1] Kansas State [1] Lindenwood [13] Lipscomb [1]
20 |
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| SEPTEMBER 3, 2014
Kansas State [2] Kenrick Glennon Seminary [1] Langston [1] Lindenwood [4] Loyola, Chicago [4] Loyola, Maryland [1] Macalaster College [1] Marquette [2] Masterâ&#x20AC;&#x2122;s College and Seminary [1] McKendree [1] Miami U., Ohio [2] Milwaukee School of Engineering [1] Missouri U. of Science and Technology [13] Missouri State [2] Missouri Western State [2]
U. Alabama [4] U. Arizona [2] U. Arkansas [10] U. California, San Diego [1] U. California, Santa Cruz [1] U. Central Florida [2] U. Central Missouri [4] U. Colorado, Boulder [2] U. Evansville [1] U. Iowa [1] U. Kansas [5] U. Kentucky [3] U. Maine [1] U. Miami [2] U. Mississippi [3] U. Missouri, Columbia [80] U. Missouri, Kansas City [4] U. Missouri, St. Louis [2] U. New Mexico [1] U. North Dakota [1] U. North Texas [1] U. Oklahoma [4] U. Oregon [1] U. Tampa [1] U. Wisconsin, Madison [1] U.S. Military Academy [1] U.S. Naval Academy [2] Unity College [1] Vanderbilt [2] Waldorf College [1] Washburn U. of Topeka [1] Washington U., St. Louis [3] Webster University [4] West Virginia [1] Western Illinois [1] Western Kentucky [1] Westminster College [3] William Woods [1] Xavier [1]
<< whitfield Alabama A&M [1] Brigham Young [1] Dartmouth [1] DePauw [2] Elon [1] Florida Institute of Technology [1] Grinnell College [2] Harris-Stowe State [1] Hendrix College [2] High Point [1] Illinois Wesleyan [1] Indiana U., Bloomington [1] Kenyon College [1] Knox College [1] Lake Forest College [1] Lindenwood [1] Macalester College [1] Marymount [1] Maryville [2]
<< de smet jesuit high school Ball State [1] Benedictine College [1] Bradley [1] Clark Atlanta [1] Clemson [1] Colorado School of Mines [1] Creighton [5] Culver Stockton College [3] Drake [1] Drury [3] Eastern Illinois [1] Emporia State [1] Illinois State [1] Indiana U., Bloomington [1] Iowa State [1] Jefferson College [1] Kansas City Art Institute [1]
Loyola, Chicago [8] Marquette [1] Maryville [7] Massachusetts Institute of Technology [1] McKendree [1] Miami U., Ohio [1] Missouri Baptist [1] Missouri State [20] Missouri U. of Science and Technology [12] Monroe College [1] Montana State, Bozeman [1] Murray State [2] Northwest Missouri State [1] Northwestern [1] Ohio U. [1] Ozarks Technical Community College [1] Palm Beach Atlantic [1] Pennsylvania State, University Park [1] Purdue [3] Quincy [1] Ranken Technical College [1] Ridgewater College [1] Rockhurst [1] Saint Louis U. [9] Southern Illinois U., Carbondale [2] Southeastern Missouri State [15] Southern Methodist [1] St. Charles Community College [3] SLCC, Florissant Valley [1] SLCC, Forest Park [5] SLCC, Meramec [8] SLCC, Wildwood [44] Stephens College [1] Stevenson [1] Texas A&M [1] Truman State [11]
Morehouse College [1] Ohio State [3] Parsons New School of Design [1] Quincy [2] Rockhurst [17] Saint Louis U. [10] Santa Clara [1] Southeast Missouri State [1] Southern Illinois U., Carbondale [1] Southern Illinois U., Edwardsville [1] St. Louis College of Pharmacy [1] SLCC, Florissant Valley [1] SLCC, Meramec [2] SLCC, Wildwood [1] Truman State [8] U. Alabama [1] U. Alabama, Tuscaloosa [1]
U. Arkansas [3] U. Colorado, Boulder [1] U. Dallas [1] U. Dayton [1] U. Indianapolis [1] U. Kansas [2] U. Mississippi [4] U. Missouri, Columbia [52] U. Missouri, Kansas City [3] U. Missouri, St. Louis [3] U. Nebraska, Lincoln [1] U. San Diego [1] U. Tulsa [1] U. Wisconsin, Milwaukee [1] U.S. Army [1] William Jewell College [1] Xavier [2]
Miami U., Ohio [1] New York U. [1] Northeastern [1] Rhodes College [2] Saint Louis U. [2] Santa Clara [1] Southeast Missouri State [1] Southern Methodist [1] Southwestern [1] St. Lawrence [1] Texas Christian [2] U. Alabama [1] U. Arizona [1] U. Arkansas [1] U. Colorado, Boulder [1] U. Dayton [2] U. Miami [2] U. Mississippi [1] U. Missouri, Columbia [11]
U. Redlands [1] U. Tulsa [2] U. Vermont [1] U. Wisconsin, Madison [1] U. Wyoming [1] U.S. Naval Academy [1] Vanderbilt [1] Washington U., St. Louis [2] Webster University [2]
<< thomas jefferson Birmingham Southern [1] Case Western Reserve [1] College of William and Mary [1] Colorado College [1] Columbia [1] Johns Hopkins [1] Kenyon College [1]
Knox College [1] Pacific Lutheran [1] St. Olaf College [1] U. Illinois, Chicago [1] U. Rochester [1] U. Texas, Austin [1] Washington U., St. Louis [3]
<< villa duchesne
TOWN TALK
Baylor [1] Boston College [1] Centre College [1] Claremont McKenna College [1] College of Saint Benedict [1] Cornell [1] DePauw [1] Drury [1] Elon [3] Fontbonne [1] George Washington [1] Georgetown [1] Indiana U., Bloomington [1] Johns Hopkins [1] Lehigh [3] Loyola, Chicago [1] Marquette [4] Miami U., Ohio [3] Northwestern [1] Rhodes College [1] Rockhurst [1] Saint Louis U. [9] Southern Methodist [2] Spring Hill College [2] Syracuse [1]
Texas Christian [4] Trinity [1] Tulane [3] Truman State [1] U. Alabama [1] U. Arizona [1] U. Arkansas [1] U. Dallas [2] U. Georgia [2] U. Illinois, Urbana-Champaign [1] U. Kentucky [4] U. Miami [3] U. Minnesota, Twin Cities [1] U. Mississippi [2] U. Missouri, Columbia [8] U. North Carolina, Chapel Hill [1] U. Notre Dame [1] U. Pittsburgh [1] U. Tulsa [2] Washington U., St. Louis [1]
<< maplewood richmond heights Alabama A&M [3] Columbia College, Chicago [1] Extreme Institute/Vatterott College [1] Grand Rapids Community College [1] Lincoln Land Community College [1] Lincoln [1] Lindenwood, Belleville [1] Loyola., Chicago [1] Missouri Baptist [1] Missouri U. of Science and Technology [1] Missouri State [7] Northwood [1] Riverside Community College [1]
Roosevelt [1] Saint Louis U. [1] Southern Illinois [1] St. Charles Community College [1] Stephens College [1] SLCC, Forest Park [4] SLCC, Meramec [18] Truman State [1] U. Central Missouri [2] U. Missouri, Columbia [2] U. Missouri, Kansas City [2] U. Missouri, St. Louis [5] U.S. Army [2] Webster University [1]
Cultivating ethical, confident, successful students. O P E N H O U S E • S U N DAY, N OV E M B E R 2 • 1 P. M . G R A D E S 6 -12
•
CO E D
•
CO LLEG E PR E PA R ATO RY
CORNER OF LADUE AND MASON ROADS • 314.434.5141 • WHITFIELDSCHOOL.ORG Whitfield_TownandStyle '14_Open House_FINAL.indd 1
8/21/14 5:00 PM
More Success with Less Family Stress For the Parents of College-Bound Children with Learning Challenges
<< visitation academy
Tutoring Bellarmine [1] Belmont [1] Boston U. [2] Bowling Green State [1] Clemson [1] Cornell College [1] Creighton [1] Elon [1] Emory [1] Fordham [1] Georgetown [1] Indiana U., Bloomington [2] Johns Hopkins [1] Knox College [2] Loyola, Chicago [1] Loyola, New Orleans [1] Marquette [2] Maryville [1] Mercer [1] Miami U., Ohio [3] Missouri U. of Science and Technology [2] New York U. [1] Northeastern [2] Oklahoma State [1] Purdue [2] Rhodes College [3] Rider [1] Saint Louis U. [5] Samford [2] Santa Clara [1]
Sewanee: The U. of the South [1] Southern Methodist [1] St. Louis College of Pharmacy [1] Stephens College [1] Texas Christian [4] Truman State [1] U. Alabama [2] U. Arizona [1] U. Arkansas [5] U. Chicago [1] U. Colorado, Boulder [3] U. Dayton [1] U. Florida [2] U. Kentucky [1] U. Louisville [1] U. Mississippi [3] U. Missouri, Columbia [3] U. Missouri, Kansas City [4] U. Missouri, St. Louis [1] U. North Carolina, Chapel Hill [1] U. Notre Dame [2] U. Tulsa [2] Villanova [1] Washington U., St. Louis [2] William Woods [1] Xavier [1]
Counseling Social Skills ADHD Coaching ACT/SAT Prep College Prep Assessment Advocacy
314-475-5035 SpecialSolutions.com
Special Solutions Private Learning Center 9225 Manchester Road | Suite 100 St. Louis 63144 SEPTEMBER 3, 2014
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THE COURAGE TO GROW << crossroads
The Strength to Lead Itâ&#x20AC;&#x2122;s a promise.
At St. Josephâ&#x20AC;&#x2122;s Academy, we are dedicated to developing strong leaders who go on to make a profound impact in the world. Through our values and guiding principles, we speak a common language that unites us, inspires others and propels our community forward.
<< john burroughs school
stjosephacademy.org For more information call: 314.394.4321
In 2014, CDS 3-6 grade students outperformed their independent school peers in 28 out of 28 categories of the ERB Comprehensive Test. Give your children the education they deserve.
V isit today! w w w.che ste rfie lddayschool .org 22 |
TOWN&style
Lake Forest College [1] Loyola, Chicago [2] Millikin [1] Missouri State [1] Northwest Missouri State [1] Ripon College [1] Tennessee State [1] U. Chicago [1] U. Cincinnati [1] U. Dayton [1] U. Illinois, Urbana-Champaign [1]
U. Miami [1] U. Michigan [1] U. Missouri, Columbia [3] U. Pennsylvania [1] Vanderbilt [1] Washington U., St. Louis [1] Wesleyan [1] Wright State [1] Xavier U. of Louisiana [1]
<< clayton high school
We are St. Joe.
8-13-14.indd 2
AMDA College and Conservatory of Performing Arts [2] Bard College [1] Brandeis [1] California Institute of the Arts [1] Colorado State [1] Columbia College, Chicago [1] Fontbonne [1] George Mason [1] George Washington [1] Howard [1]
| SEPTEMBER 3, 2014 7/30/2014 12:57:07 PM
Alabama A&M [2] Arizona State [1] Avila [1] Bard College [1] Boston U. [1] Bradley [3] Butler County Community College [1] Case Western Reserve [2] Centre College [1] Chapman [1] Clark [1] Colgate [1] College of Charleston [1] Colorado College [1] Colorado State [2] Columbia College, Chicago [1] Cornell College [2] Cornell [2] Creighton [1] DePauw [1] Dominican [1] Drake [1] Duke [2] Elmhurst College [1] Emory [1] Florida International U. [1] Fontbonne [1] George Washington [1] Georgetown [1] Harvard [1] Harvey Mudd College [2] Hendrix College [1]
Indiana U., Bloomington [4] Iona College [1] Johnson & Wales [1] Knox College [1] Lafayette College [1] Macalester College [1] McGill [1] Metropolitan State U. of Denver [1] Miami U., Oxford [1] Mineral Area College [1] Missouri State [2] Missouri Western State [3] Montana State, Bozeman [1] Muskingum [1] New College of Florida [1] Occidental College [2] Osaka [1] Princeton [2] Saint Louis U. [3] Santa Barbara City College [1] Seattle U. [1] Southeast Missouri State [4] Southern Illinois U., Carbondale [2] Southern Methodist [1] Spring Hill College [1] St. Louis College of Pharmacy [1] SLCC, Florissant Valley [1] SLCC, Forest Park [5] SLCC, Meramec [9] St. Olaf College [1] Stanford [2] Stephens College [1]
American [1] Barrett Honors College at Arizona State [6] Bates College [1] Berklee College of Music [1] California Polytechnic State [1] Carnegie Mellon [2] Case Western Reserve [1] Colgate [2] Colorado College [1] Columbia College, Chicago [1] Creighton [1] Dartmouth [1] Davidson College [1] Duke [1] Emory [1] Georgetown [2] George Washington [1] Grinnell College [1] Hamilton College [1] Haverford College [1] Indiana U., Bloomington [1] Kenyon College [1] Knox College [1] Lafayette College [1] Lake Forest College [1] Lawrenceville School [1] Loyola, Chicago [2] Miami U., Ohio [3] New York U. [3] Northeastern [2] Northwestern [2]
Oberlin College [1] Parsons Paris School of Art & Design [1] Pennsylvania State [1] Pitzer College [1] Princeton [3] Purdue [1] Santa Clara [1] Scripps College [1] Sewanee [2] Skidmore College [1] Southern Methodist [1] St. Olaf College [1] Syracuse [2] Texas Christian [2] Trinity [1] Tufts [1] Tulane [2] U. Alabama [1] U. California, Berkeley [1] U. of Chicago [2] U. Florida [1] U. Kansas [2] U. Miami, Fla. [5] U. Michigan [1] U. Missouri, Columbia [2] U. Pennsylvania [3] U. Pittsburgh [1] U. Puget Sound [1] U. Richmond [3] U. Southern California [3] U. Virginia [1]
Truman State [4] Tufts [2] Tulane [2] U. Alabama [2] U. Arizona [4] U. Central Missouri [2] U. Chicago [2] U. Colorado, Boulder [1] U. Denver [2] U. Evansville [1] U. Illinois, Urbana-Champaign [3] U. Iowa [1] U. Kansas [4] U. Maryland, College Park [3] U. Miami [1] U. Missouri, Columbia [26] U. Missouri, Kansas City [3] U. Missouri, St. Louis [2] U. Pennsylvania [2] U. Puget Sound [1] U. Redlands [1] U. Tulsa [1] U. Vermont [1] Villanova [1] Washington U., St. Louis [14] Webster University [2] Whittier College [1] Worcester Polytechnic Institute [1] Yale [1]
Vanderbilt [1] Wabash College [1] Wake Forest [1] Washington U., St. Louis [5]
TOWN TALK
<< parkway central Augustana College [1] Baylor [1] Bradley [3] Brigham Young [1] Carthage College [2] College of Charleston [1] Columbia College, Chicago [1] DePaul [3] Drake [1] Elmira College [1] Florida Gulf Coast U. [1] Harvard [1] Hawaii Pacific [1] Indiana U., Bloomington [7] Iowa State [1] Ithaca College [1] Johns Hopkins [1] Lewis & Clark College [1] Lindenwood [4] Macalester College [1] MacMurray College [1] Maryville [7] Miami U., Ohio [4] Millikin [1] Missouri Baptist [1] Missouri State [8] Missouri State, West Plains [1] Missouri U. of Science and Technology [8] Missouri Western State [3] New York U. [1] Ranken Technical College [2] Robert Morris U., Illinois [1] Saint Louis U. [5] Santa Clara [1] Southeast Missouri State [6] Southern Illinois U., Edwardsville [1] Southwest Baptist [2] St. Charles Community College [3] St. Louis College of Pharmacy [2] SLCC, Florissant Valley [3] SLCC, Forest Park [7]
SLCC, Meramec [26] SLCC, Wildwood [5] Stephens College [2] Tennessee State [1] Truman State [11] Tulane [2] U. Alabama [1] U. Arizona [1] U. Arkansas [8] U. California, Berkeley [1] U. Central Missouri [3] U. Cincinnati [1] U. Colorado, Boulder [3] U. Illinois, Urbana-Champaign [6] U. Iowa [1] U. Kansas [6] U. Kentucky [2] U. Massachusetts, Amherst [1] U. Miami [2] U. Michigan [3] U. Minnesota, Twin Cities [5] U. Mississippi [1] U. Missouri, Columbia [40] U. Missouri, Kansas City [6] U. Missouri, St. Louis [4] U. North Carolina, Chapel Hill [1] U. North Carolina, Pembroke [1] U. Notre Dame [1] U. South Carolina [1] U. Texas, Austin [1] U. Tulsa [1] U. Washington [2] U. Wisconsin, Madison [1] Valencia College [1] Vanderbilt [1] Vanderbilt – Blair School of Music [1] Washington U., St. Louis [1] West Virginia [1] Western Illinois [1] Westminster College [1]
<< slu high school Beijing U. [1] Boston College [1] Bradley [3] Canisius College [1] Carleton College [2] Case Western Reserve [2] Catholic U. of America [1] Christian Brothers [1] College of Charleston [1] College of the Holy Cross [1] College of Wooster [1] Creighton [4] DePaul [1] Drake [1] East Central College [1] Elon [1] Fairfield [1] George Washington [1] Georgetown [1] Indiana U., Bloomington [8] Kenrick-Glennon Seminary [1] Kenyon College [1] Knox College [1] Lafayette College [1] Loyola, Chicago [5] Marquette [3] Miami U., Ohio [1] Millikin [1] Mississippi State [4] Missouri U. of Science and Technology [13] Morehouse College [1] Murray State [1] New York U. [1] Northeastern [2] Ohio U. [1] Oklahoma City U. [1] Purdue [3] Quincy [1] Regis [1] Rhodes College [1] Rockhurst [13]
Saint Louis U. [23] Santa Clara [1] Seton Hall [1] Southeast Missouri State [2] Southern Illinois U., Edwardsville [1] Spring Hill College [1] Temple [1] Tennessee State [1] Texas Christian [2] Truman State [9] U. Alabama [6] U. Central Missouri [1] U. Chicago [3] U. Cincinnati College-Conservatory of Music [1] U. Dayton [9] U. Denver [2] U. Kansas [4] U. Kentucky [2] U. Minnesota, Twin Cities [2] U. Mississippi [2] U. Missouri, Columbia [52] U. Missouri, St. Louis [1] U. Nebraska, Lincoln [1] U. North Carolina, Chapel Hill [1] U. Notre Dame [5] U. Southern California [2] U. Texas, Austin [1] U. Tulsa [20] U. Wisconsin, Madison [2] U.S. Air Force Academy [2] Vanderbilt [4] Villanova [1] Washington U., St. Louis [5] Webster University [1] Xavier [3]
Sneak a Peek at Mirowitz
p ksho Worparents for 5 v. . No m d e p W –9 7
Learn how children grow to be tenacious learners and ethical leaders.
Experiential learning, Jewish knowledge and social responsibility for grades K-8. RSVP online: www.mirowitz.org. For a tour, call Patty: 314-576-6177 or pbloom@mirowitz.org
EvEry family has a story. We Want to hear yours. 6” x 3.119” ad for Town & Style
In celebration of St. Louis’ 250th birthday,
“
Town & Style is compiling tales from readers about their families’ history in St. Louis. What brought your family here? How did they contribute to the fabric of our town? Where did they work? Did they start a business? Settle Wildwood? Build homes in Clayton?
”
We want everyday stories about everyday people. Help T&S publish 250 stories in honor of St. Louis’ 250th!
Email 150 words or fEwEr, along with an old or currEnt photo that illustratEs your story to tEllus@townandstylE.com or mail to t&s, 121 huntEr avE., stE. 201, 63124 in partnErship with (stl250.org)
OUR FOCUS:
your child
Our students’ national test scores are consistent with acceptance requirements of prominent St. Louis secondary schools. • Average class size is 10-15 students • Personalized instruction • Advanced traditional curriculum • Music, Art, Spanish, Computer instruction • Public Speaking, K-6
For a tour and interview call 314-878-1883
• STEM (Science, Technol ogy, Engineering, Math)
• Physical Education and Interscholastic Sports • Extended daycare hours at no charge • Financial assistance available
JR. KINDERGARTEN THROUGH SIXTH GRADE Enrolling Through September 1st Birthdays
888 N. Mason Road | Creve Coeur | 63141 AndrewsAcademy.com
SEPTEMBER 3, 2014
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INDEPENDENT COEDUCATIONAL GRADES 7-12
PARENT [PERSPECTIVE
Striking a Balance
1 | CHESTERFIELD MONTESSORI SCHOOL
“This is our eighth year at CMS, where academic rigor is second to none. However, more important, all children there develop a passion for learning. Our kindergartener and fourth-grader thrive in an authentic Montessori structure, while immensely enjoying and benefiting from the impressively international student body.”–The Pellegrini Family
314-993-4040 • jburroughs.org
14000 LADUE ROAD | 314.469.7150 CHESTERFIELDMONTESSORI.ORG
900 Lay Road 63124 314.991.0005
communityschool.com communityschool.com
755 S. PRICE ROAD | 314.993.4040 | JBURROUGHS.ORG
9225 MANCHESTER ROAD, STE. 100 314.475.5035 | SPECIALSOLUTIONS.COM PICTURED: ABBI AND KATIE STEIN
3 | CROSSROADS COLLEGE PREP
6 | ROSSMAN SCHOOL
500 DEBALIVIERE AVE. | 314.367.8085 CROSSROADSCOLLEGEPREP.ORG
A C A D E MIC E X C E L LENCE B IB LIC A L WO R L DVIEW Age 3 - Grade 6
6235 WYDOWN BLVD. 314.726.4542 | FORSYTHONLINE.COM
5 | SPECIAL SOLUTIONS PRIVATE LEARNING CENTER
“Crossroads offers something unique in St. Louis: the opportunity to combine outstanding academics with true socio-economic diversity. Every day our kids learn life lessons about advocating for themselves and others, and about using their intelligence and creativity to positively impact the world..”–The Handelman-Hirshman Family
O��� H����: N��. 8 - 9:00 �� C������ ���� C��������: N��. 17 - 9:15 ��
“We love Forsyth because it offers a challenging curriculum fostered by a close-knit community of faculty, staff and families. All this is centered around developing our children to their fullest potential. The unique campus of old houses has added an experience that has helped all of our kids to flourish. ” –Nida Bockert
2 | JOHN BURROUGHS SCHOOL
“John Burroughs School provides our children with the opportunity to be challenged, to explore, and to build upon their varied interests and gifts. We believe the knowledge they acquire in the classroom, on the playing fields, in art studios and from their fellow classmates will inspire them with the confidence to pursue whatever path they may choose.” –The McNett Family
Admission Events
4 | FORSYTH SCHOOL
1
“I’m grateful for all the knowledge Shelley Smith has given me, not just on ADHD and college, but life in general. I really look up to her not only as a woman, but also as a mentor. So thanks to her for giving me the chance to learn. Lots of love!”” –Abbi Stein
“We chose Rossman because we wanted a nurturing environment where our daughter could excel both in academics and personal growth. Rossman’s enthusiastic, dedicated teachers have inspired her to become a confident, independent and responsible young lady, and the fun, challenging learning environment has motivated her to achieve her fullest potential academically.”–Natalie Wong Calhoon 12660 CONWAY ROAD | 314.434.5877 ROSSMANSCHOOL.ORG
2
Ranked in the Top 10% of Christian Schools in America 12928 Ladue Road - Town & Country, MO 63141 - 314-434-4349 www.kirkdayschool.org
5
age 4 through grade 6
FALL OPEN HOUSES Saturday, October 18 9 - 11:30 a.m.
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Wednesday, October 22 9 a.m. Creve Coeur | 314-434-5877 www.rossmanschool.org
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TOWN TALK
ur o in n n pe catio o w o No new l
Dash & Albert Tote Bags and Rugs Now available at Sign of the Arrow
7 | C + E TUTORING
“Joe is an excellent tutor dedicated to helping his students learn and be successful in math. He has encouraged my children with positive reinforcement, and they have become more confident and able to solve more advanced problems as a result.”–The Moten Family 9651 CLAYTON ROAD | 314.348.3896 | COUNTINGTOCALCULUS.COM
8 | MICDS
“The facilities and programs are world class, and getting better all the time. But what we most appreciate about MICDS are the teachers and administrators who, from the first days of junior kindergarten through senior year, have educated our children with care and, more important, helped influence their character in the best way possible.”–The Warren Family 101 N. WARSON ROAD | 314.995.7367 | MICDS.ORG
9 | VISITATION ACADEMY
“We love Visitation Academy not only for its academic rigor and reputation, but also the values, virtues and spirituality the Visitation Sisters exemplify and have instilled throughout this community for more than 180 years. Viz nurtures our daughters’ minds and spirits.” –Amy & Josh Kramer 3020 N. BALLAS ROAD | 314.625.9103 | VISITATIONACADEMY.ORG
9814 Clayton Road Saint Louis 63124 314.994.0606 www.signofthearrow.com
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SPEND A DAY AT VIZ Shadowing opportunities are available.
Call: 314-625-9103 Catholic | Independent Coed Montessori Toddler - K All-Girls 1 - 12
visitationacademy.org
SEPTEMBER 3, 2014
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10 | COMMUNITY SCHOOL
“Community School has it all! Our children have thrived in the hands of thoughtful and dedicated faculty and staff. They are inspired to their highest potential in a challenging yet nurturing environment. We’re so happy to have them experience the energy and spirit of learning in an outstanding school!”–The Granger Family 900 LAY ROAD | 314.991.0005 COMMUNITYSCHOOL.COM
11 | ANDREWS ACADEMY
“Our boys are getting an excellent education in a safe environment, but just as important, they enjoy their school days! We also love the variety of afterschool programs like Chinese, gymnastics, piano and chess, as well as the weekly assemblies where students have the confidence to speak in front of large groups.”–The Blase Family 888 N. MASON ROAD | 314.878.1883 ANDREWSACADEMY.COM
Schedule your visit anytime!
12 | WHITFIELD SCHOOL
“Whitfield’s exceptional academics, individualized education and small class sizes, great project/ team-based learning, and diverse extracurricular opportunities made Whitfield the best choice for our three children. Thanks to Whitfield’s dedicated faculty and nurturing atmosphere, our kids are well-prepared for college, the work world and life.” –Paul and Molly Minorini
CHALLENGE INDEPENDENCE COMMUNITY
Close-knit international community 7:1 student/teacher ratio, day & boarding Rigorous classical curriculum, all AP by senior year
��� scores () among U.S. boarding schools as listed by
175 S. MASON ROAD | 314.434.5141 WHITFIELDSCHOOL.ORG
BoardingSchoolReview.com
Grades 7–12
13 | ROHAN WOODS
“Our son continues to surprise us with his level of knowledge as a first-grader at Rohan Woods. We couldn’t have asked for a better environment that nurtures his curiosity for learning and provides a setting to help cultivate his leadership skills. The family atmosphere at Rohan Woods naturally creates a genuine and sincere partnership between the parents, teachers and administration.”–The Riley Family 1515 BENNETT AVE. | 314.821.6270 | ROHANWOODS.ORG
14 | VILLA DUCHESNE AND OAK HILL SCHOOL
“The best place for our four children is Villa Duchesne and Oak Hill School. The teachers provide an excellent education in a warm and caring way. There is also a wonderful family community that makes everyone feel welcome. The school is wellgrounded with the guidance and leadership of Head of School Elizabeth Miller.” –Lynn Finnie 801 S. SPOEDE ROAD | 314.432.2021 | VDOH.ORG
15 | COR JESU ACADEMY
“Our daughter chose Cor Jesu because of its academic reputation, and the education is challenging and excellent. But it’s Cor Jesu’s fierce commitment to its vision—creating a community of young women who can transform the world—that makes it such a remarkable place. The staff, faculty and community believe in this vision. It is real, and it is possible.”–The Janson Family 10230 GRAVOIS ROAD | 314.842.1546 | CORJESU.ORG
TJS .org | admissions@tjs.org | ( ) -
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121 Hunter Ave. | 314.657.2100 | townandstyle.com
16 SPECIAL ADVERTISING FEATURE
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TOWN&style
| SEPTEMBER 3, 2014
TOWN TALK
the adventure of a lifetime
[ Preparing students for success in an ever-changing world ]
16 | KIRK DAY SCHOOL
“Our family has been well served through Kirk Day School’s exceptional staff and faculty, who have challenged and equipped our children to engage the world with a biblical foundation. The strong academic programs at Kirk Day School are preparing them for middle school and beyond.” –Linsey and Scott Highmark 12928 LADUE ROAD | 314.434.4349 | KIRKDAYSCHOOL.ORG
17 | SAUL MIROWITZ JEWISH COMMUNITY SCHOOL
The Wilson School: Learn more at our Open House, Saturday, October 25th, 9 – 11am
“Mirowitz is more than a school. It’s a family where mutual respect and a love of learning are nurtured by an exceptional faculty and staff. Choosing Mirowitz has been one of our best parenting decisions!” –The Smith Family 348 S. MASON ROAD | 314.757.1546 | MIROWITZ.ORG
18 | CHESTERFIELD DAY SCHOOL
“CDS is a second home for us as a family because there is a warm sense of community here. We chose CDS for its personalized education, which prepares children not only to excel academically, but also to be good stewards of humanity. The teachers and methods at CDS inspire children to do their best and instill a lifelong love of learning, exploration and creativity.” –The Ahmed/Mian Family 1100 WHITE ROAD | 314.469.6622 | CHESTERFIELDDAYSCHOOL.ORG
19 | THE WILSON SCHOOL
“We chose Wilson because we loved the nurturing environment and felt the school’s approach provided a strong academic foundation in a way that is both exciting and fun. Since they started at Wilson, our children’s confidence has grown as they take ownership over what they are able to achieve.” –Cole McBride 400 DEMUN AVE. | 314.725.4999 | WILSONSCHOOL.COM
Be a scholar and an athlete. Be an artist and a chess whiz. Be a success in college. Be someone who makes a difference in the world. But most importantly...
Be Yourself!
Open House: SunDAY, Oct. 26, 1-4 pm Grades 7-12 • Near Wash U. & SLU • LEED Platinum certified campus • 60+ zip codes • 100% college acceptance with 97% receiving academic scholarships • www.crossroadscollegeprep.org • 314.367.8085
We help people in recovery take the next step in improving their lives.
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Fall Dinner Auction Friday, October 24 Missouri Athletic Club Historic Downtown location
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We awarded over $121,000 in college scholarships to 51 individuals for the 2014/15 school year. All funds stay local and go towards tuition and books. 314-719-7880
TheNextStepSTL.org PRESENTING SPONSOR
SEPTEMBER 3, 2014
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lavender experience
one of Life’s Little Luxuries
Relax and enjoy a lavender pastry,
hot tea, soda or ice cream. Shop for everything lavender, all occasion gifts, florals, gourmet food, home decor and more. exploRe how to use lavender for health, beauty and well-being.
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Fall Events
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[SNAPPED!] RANKEN JORDAN
September 16, 24 & OctOber 4, 24
Lavender Tea Lunch
September 20 & OctOber 18
Sample Saturday
PEDIATRIC BRIDGE HOSPITAL
September 26
Lavender & Libations Girls Night Out
by margaret rambo
September 27
Lavender Cooking Class Now Booking Fall Tours, Lunches and Workshops for groups of 10 or more
Olde Red Barn available for private events
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LAVENDER FARM
WHAT | 10th Annual Golf Tournament WHERE | Norwood Hills Country Club WHY | To further the work of the pediatric hospital in caring for
3 Winding Brook Estate Drive Eureka 63025 636-575-5572
children regardless of family resources, and to help them transition home healthier and happier WHO | Event chair Stephen Ricci, president/CEO Laureen Tanner, chief medical officer Dr. Nicholas Holekamp, Adam Jokisch, sponsors, volunteers, staff and guests HIGHLIGHTS | Comments by patient Cooper Burks, who said, “They keep me out of bed all day,”auctions and golf tournament award winners
For details & reservations: WindingBrookEstate.com ., Tue-Sat 10am to 4pm
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now you can read town&style anywhere Go to townandstyle.com/archive and start reading! Every issue is online and available on your computer, smartphone or tablet.
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1| KATRINA, REESE AND STEPHEN RICCI 2| JAKE AND COLIN TAYLOR 3| LAURI TANNER 4| COOPER BURKS 5| LISA DEADY, COLLEEN DRAZEN, ELAINE HICKERSON 6| JOE BRINKER, STEVE CORTOPASSI, TOM HARRIS 7| ADAM JOKISCH 8| BETSY AND JOHN PROSPERI 9| BRIAN HUNZIKER, TYLER BERBECK, JOHN BOSEN 10| PETER HOLEKAMP, BARNEY DEPENALOZA, DR. NICK HOLEKAMP 11| FRANK CUSUMANO, MARTIN KILCOYNE, TOM ACKERMAN 314.657.2100 | townandstyle.com
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<<< GO TO TOWNANDSTYLE.COM TO SEE MORE [ SNAPPED! ] >>>
PHOTO ALBUM
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CHESTERFIELD WINE & JAZZ FESTIVAL by bill barrett WHAT | Chesterfield Wine & Jazz Festival WHERE | Chesterfield Amphitheater WHY | Music festival to bring the community together for a free
outdoor concert
HIGHLIGHTS | Music by The Yellowjackets, Bach To The Future, Freddie Washington featuring Maurice Carnes, Ptah Williams, and the Christopher Braig and Erika Johnson Quintet
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1| DAWN AND PHIL DAHMER 2| LETICIA AND GIOVANNI LOURENCO 3| CINDY KING, PAT ISRINGHAUS, REBECCA BIRNER, DIANA MORA 4| ALLISON DAURELLE, SUSAN AND BOB DEAN 5| JAKE, JOSE AND KATIE SALDANA 6| MEGHAN, MIKE AND KIM BROGAN 7| TOMMIE AND YVONNE YOUNGER
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visit today and try our new features. CHECK townandstylE.Com
out tHENEw
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[SNAPPED!] EASTER SEALS MIDWEST
digital edition
by margaret rambo WHAT | Par-Tee Dinner Auction WHERE | Meadowbrook Country Club WHY | To provide resources to help individuals with developmental
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disabilities lead productive lives WHO | CEO Wendy Sullivan; COO Ron Ekstrand; tournament chairs Bill Bartelsmeyer, Matthew Goldenberg, Les Wagner and Erin Woerther; sponsor Lockton Companies; board chair Christopher Wittenauer; auctioneer Rob Weiman; and emcee Chris Hrabe of KMOX HIGHLIGHTS | Eye-catching auction items, an inspiring video on the life of Chris and his journey into community participation, and dinner
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7| 1| NICOLE JOHNSON, RON EKSTRAND, LAUREL TAYLOR 2| MATTHEW GOLDENBERG, LES WAGNER, ERIN WOERTHER, BILL BARTELSMEYER 3| CEO WENDY SULLIVAN, STEPHANIE SCHECHTER 4| KIRK AND KELLY SPISAK 5| ERIKA WHITTAKER, MICKI KEIM 6| PHIL AND VICKI KRUPA, KATHY AND MARK IANNI 7| JOE AND DANA RADETIC, ANNE AND RICH HARKWELL 8| MARK TRUDEAU, ELIZABETH RODRIGUEZ 9| MAGGIE AND HOMER SEDIGHI 10| HEATHER AND JIM SCHEETZ 11| LAURIE AND SEAN LOCK <<< GO TO TOWNANDSTYLE.COM TO SEE MORE [ SNAPPED! ] >>> 314. | townandstyle.com 30 657.2100 | TOWN&style | SEPTEMBER 3, 2014
PHOTO ALBUM 1|
grow
your business with
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<< call janie sumner at 314.749.7078
314.657.2100 | townandstyle.com
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WEST ST. LOUIS COUNTY CHAMBER OF COMMERCE by margaret rambo WHAT | Monte Carlo Casino Night WHERE | The Wildwood Hotel WHY | To help fund the Chamber in its support of businesses
and community and economic development and sustainability in far West County WHO | Mayor Tim and Kelley Woerther, board chair John and Jeanne Sullivan, Chamber president Lori Kelling, committee members, sponsors and 225 guests HIGHLIGHTS | A Vegas-style buffet, gaming, fabulous prizes and a silent auction
Shoes are back in Ladue: Donald Pliner at
9817 Clayton Road | St.Louis 63124 | 314.991.5262 MisterGuyClothiers.com
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BOARD CHAIRMAN JOHN AND JEANNE SULLIVAN 2| LORI KELLING, SARAH ROESSLEIN 3| SHANNON DROHAN, HEATHER JOGGERST, MICHELLE SOMERS, JESSICA WILHELMUS 4| WILDWOOD MAYOR TIM WOERTHER 5| MIKE PATE, KIM HUGHES, WALT YOUNG 6| MARISSA NEVILLS, KALI KIRCHNER 7| MOLLY AND MIKE MCKAY 8| SAMIE AND JAMES PURSLEY 9| JON BOPP, MISSIE NICHOLLS 10| DEB PINSON, MARK EVANS 11| SHERRI AND DR. DERRICK NOHL SEPTEMBER 3, 2014
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leisure
health&beauty+ stroke
SEPTEMBER 3, 2014 | FLIP
Chefs event Conservation Celebration 2014
Shaw Nature reServe • 1-5 pm • OctOber 5
t&s home+ fall market preview
HURRY
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Live Life
Carefree
You deserve to live a life more carefree. Move into a new, modern senior living residence free of maintenance and worry at Friendship Village. But, only a few new apartment homes remain. Only a few remain because the apartment homes feature all the amenities from spacious patios, balconies, walk-in closets, ample storage and underground parking. Our expansion also boasts more dining choices, a clubhouse with a new library, gift shop, business services and more. Though much is new, we remain the area’s exclusive LifeCare® community. For more than 30 years, we have provided unlimited days of assisted living and skilled nursing, on site, if needed. That means trusted, quality care at a predictable monthly rate and at substantial savings over other health care options. Call today to learn about your new carefree lifestyle and to find out about the unique services and amenities at Friendship Village. HURRY! Don’t miss your new apartment home and your carefree new life!
Call or visit today! (314) 499-2059 SUNSET HILLS 12503 Village Circle Drive Sunset Hills, MO 63127 www.FriendshipVillageSTL.com/SunsetHills
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TOWN&style
| SEPTEMBER 3, 2014
Th e B a n k
363 Festus Centre Drive • Festus, MO 63028 • (636) 232-2681
of tradition and progress.
[ leisure ] F5 COVER STORY – Magnificent Missouri F6 Community–Supported Agriculture Programs F7 QUICK BITES F8 ON THE TABLE – The Grill at The Ritz-Carlton F10 ARTS & ENTERTAINMENT
[health&beauty ] STROKE F12 COVER STORY – SLUCare F13 HEALTH – Stroke F16 TREND REPORT – Natural Products F17 FACE TO FACE – Creating the Naked Face
[ t&s home ]
F16
F19 STYLE INSIDE – Mix ‘n’ Match F22 D ESIGN OF THE MONTH F26 H OMEWORK F30 N EIGHBORHOOD GEMS – The Daniel Boone Home & Heritage Center F32 HOSTING AT HOME – Rosh Hashanah F37 SOLD! & OPEN HOUSES F36 CLASSIFIEDS leisure SEPTEMBER 3, 2014
stroke health&beauty+
| FLIP
Chefs event Celebration 20145 Conservation reServe • 1-5 pm • OctOber Shaw Nature
t&s home+ fall
market preview
[ on the cover ] MAGNIFICENT MISSOURI ORGANIZES FUNDRAISERS TO BENEFIT LOCAL CONSERVATION AND ENVIRONMENTAL GROUPS. THE THIRD ANNUAL CONSERVATION CELEBRATION WILL BE HELD FROM 1-5 P.M. OCT. 5 AT SHAW NATURE RESERVE. FOR MORE INFORMATION OR TO BUY TICKETS, VISIT MAGNIFICENTMISSOURI.ORG. COVER DESIGN BY JULIE STREILER | PHOTO PROVIDED BY MAGNIFICENT MISSOURI
COVER STORY
MAGNIFICENT MISSOURI
by karyn meyer NOT TOO MANY OF US wake up thinking about how to conserve Missouri’s Burkhardt says. “We asked if he would help us connect people to this cause through
PHOTO: BILL BARRETT
natural resources. But Dan Burkhardt hopes to change that. He and John McPheeters local restaurants, and he jumped onboard. As someone who has had an interest in created Magnificent Missouri for just that reason: to teach more people that conservation for a long time, Gerard and other chefs have done more to get people thinking about the value of our farms than anything I’ve seen.” conservation is vital, and that each of us can make a difference. Through events that put good food on the table, Magnificent Missouri wants to “We started Magnificent Missouri three years ago because we wanted to develop communicate to people that they can’t get quality local cuisine a platform for a variety of conservation groups to come together without clean soil, water and air. One such event is the annual and celebrate the cause in a way that created excitement Conservation Celebration, this year slated from 1 to 5 p.m. Oct. 5 and buzz,” explains Burkhardt, partner at Oakwood Medical at Shaw Nature Reserve. Representatives of about 20 groups will Investors. “The idea is to broaden the circle of awareness. More be on hand to talk about their efforts with guests, and Burkhardt people need to know this is a good cause.” hopes this personal interaction will increase poeple’s interest. The St. Louis-based nonprofit helps organize fundraisers Tickets range in price from $50 to $200 a person and can be to benefit Missouri conservation groups. The criteria for purchased at magnificentmissouri.org. Festivities include live involvement is for each group to have a connection to the music, local beer and wine, and, most important, food prepared by countryside around St. Louis or eastern Missouri and to be some of St. Louis’ most respected chefs: Gerard Craft, Kevin Nashan involved with on-the-ground conservation work, which can CRAFT, JOSH GALLIANO, of Sidney Street Cafe, Josh Galliano of The Libertine and Mike include anything from planting trees to improving wildlife GERARD KEVIN NASHAN, MIKE EMERSON Emerson of Pappy’s Smokehouse. “Mike will barbecue locally raised habitats. Both founders have a longstanding interest in land preservation and the state’s natural resources. McPheeters owns Bowood Farms in the red wattle hogs, a breed that is very historic and most of all, very tasty,” Burkhardt says. Central West End, and Burkhardt owns Bethlehem Valley Farms near Marthasville, Guests also will have a chance to tour parts of the 2,300 acres of the reserve, which includes Mo. He and his wife developed the Katy Land Trust to preserve Missouri forests and Whitmire Wildflower Garden, habitat to more than 100 Missouri native wildflowers. “Food is really relevant because local farms and growers are dependent on good farms. But the two men want to attract those who aren’t dedicated environmentalists, environmental conditions,” Burkhardt explains. “That’s what brings this home. and what better way to do that than with great local food, Burkhardt says. “The most crucial thing we did was solicit the help of Gerard Craft (of Niche, Everything we do centers around a theme of conservation and the value of the natural Pastaria and Brasserie by Niche), who is a real believer in the Missouri countryside,” resources we have around St. Louis.” MAGNIFICENT MISSOURI ORGANIZES FUNDRAISERS TO BENEFIT LOCAL CONSERVATION AND ENVIRONMENTAL GROUPS. THE THIRD ANNUAL CONSERVATION CELEBRATION WILL BE HELD FROM 1-5 P.M. OCT. 5 AT SHAW NATURE RESERVE. FOR MORE INFORMATION OR TO BUY TICKETS, VISIT MAGNIFICENTMISSOURI.ORG. COVER DESIGN BY JULIE STREILER | COVER PHOTO COURTESY OF MAGNIFICENT MISSOURI
mums
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[SNAPPED!] << go to townandstyle.com to see more [SNAPPED!] >>
HorstmannBrothers.com Call us today
314-432-0880
314.657.2100 | townandstyle.com
SEPTEMBER 3, 2014
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PHOTO: BILL BARRETT
Toto’s Eco Drake line of high-efficiency toilets has attractive designs and water-saving, gravity-fed E-Max flushing systems (using only 1.28 gallons per flush, which helps preserve our most valuable resource: water. 314.965.9377 | tonylamartinaplumbing.com
ANN JOHNSON AND VICTORIA WEBER OF THE LIBERTINE
by karyn meyer
You can experience ‘farm to table’ dining at many restaurants around town. But if you want to practice it at home, CSAs make it easy. Community-Supported Agriculture programs connect local farmers to city dwellers by offering home deliveries of whatever produce/meats are fresh-from-the-farm that week.
HORSTMANN BROTHERS Horstmann Brothers rainscapes yards by installing rain gardens, bioswales and native plantings. Rainscaping helps manage storm water runoff, reduces water in our sewer system, and creates beauty, plant diversity and wildlife habitats. 314.432.0880 | horstmannbrothers.com
TOWN&style
The Libertine Neighborhood Bag is one such program that operates through the Clayton restaurant’s established relationship with farms in the region. Victoria Weber, general manager at The Libertine, is one of the masterminds behind the restaurant’s CSA, launched this past spring. “My husband (Nate Weber, also general manager) and I worked on an organic farm in Oregon before we moved here, and we wanted to incorporate our love for agriculture through the restaurant,” she says. “We have so many connections to all these local farms and producers and we thought, ‘How great would it be to extend that back to the community?’” All of the roughly 20 participating farms are located within 100 miles of St. Louis, except for one in Kentucky. “We don’t know what we’re going to get until the day it arrives, and then we just portion out all the produce and meat to the appropriate tote bags,” Weber explains. The program strives to make it convenient for each shareholder, with four different options—omnivore, vegan, vegetarian and paleo—every nine-week, ‘season.’ Prices vary from $45 to $55 a week, depending on the selection, Weber says. Since the restaurant takes care of gathering the goods, which include items like vegetables, cheese, eggs and meat, from local farms, all customers have to do is pick up their bags every Tuesday at the restaurant. “It’s an easy opportunity to bring fresh, healthy ingredients home,” Weber says. “People can just swing by after work to pick up their groceries for the week.” Each bag also includes recipes from chef Josh Galliano correlating with what’s inside, a specialty item from the restaurant’s kitchen, and a print-out that explains the origin of each item. The demand has been huge, Weber says, evident by the current wait list. “We started with 50 shareholders in the spring and bumped it up to 65 for the summer, and that’s about where we want to stay.” Leslie Moore founded Farmer Girl Meats from that same love of agriculture and land preservation. Her company, from its central hub in Warrenton, Mo., provides grass-fed beef and pasture-raised pork, lamb and chicken to customers through home delivery, by mail or at various pick-up sites. The company is a collaboration between three small farms on the Missouri-Kansas border; one is her family’s farm, where Moore was raised and her parents still live. “I started this program first and foremost because I’m really passionate about the product,” she says. “It’s what I grew up eating and what I feed my family.” When people started inquiring about how they, too, could get the meat, which is low in fat and filled with omega-3s and other healthy nutrients, Moore says starting the company was a natural progression. “The mission became getting this great meat that promotes good health into the city and onto more plates,” she says. Farmer Girl Meats officially launched in July 2012, and the response has been overwhelming. “Since it’s a natural production system, we need to let the land and animals lead our supply,” Moore explains. Customers can sign up online for a onetime delivery or a recurring subscription and can regulate delivery frequency and selection. “The Farmer Girl Box is our most popular option,” she says. “We select what goes in, so it’s representative of what comes off the farm and is truly a farm-to-table experience.” A blog, weekly newsletter and informational articles serve as resources for customers on topics such as cooking the various meats (as well as the benefits of eating them) and farm practices. Her early exposure as a child to healthy eating and sustainable food practices has driven Moore’s passion for helping others understand the process of getting food to the table. “The basis for all of this is about bringing farmers together to revitalize the land and find ways to help it be as productive as possible,” she says. LESLIE MOORE OF FARMER GIRL MEATS PHOTO: BILL BARRETT
[CONSERVING THE FUTURE
TONY LaMARTINA PLUMBING COMPANY
MAGNIFICENT MISSOURI— CONSERVATION CELEBRATION 2014 Magnificent Missouri sponsors fundraising events to support local conservation organizations and better connect St. Louisans to the countryside around them. Chefs from Niche, Sidney Street Cafe, The Libertine and Pappy’s Smokehouse will contribute to the spectacular buffet at the Conservation Celebration Oct. 5 at Shaw Nature Reserve. 314.991.7979 | magnificentmissouri.org
SPECIAL ADVERTISING FEATURE
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AT HOME
farm fresh
| SEPTEMBER 3, 2014
LEISURE
QUICK BITES]
by stephanie zeilenga
[ baking champs ]
St. Louisans AL WATSON and LIA WEBER won TLC’S NEXT GREAT BAKER COMPETITION last month. The pair was nominated by Florissant’s Wedding Wonderland Cakeshop, where they first met. Watson is general manager and wedding cake decorator there, and Weber is now pastry chef at HENDEL’S MARKET CAFE and also runs a dessert company, MADE BY LIA. The finale episode, which aired Aug. 19, featured the local duo beating out nine other teams.
[ top chef ]
JOSH GALLIANO, chef of THE LIBERTINE and semifinalist for the JAMES BEARD AWARD FOR BEST CHEF: MIDWEST, will prepare a dinner at the James Beard House in New York City in mid-October. The meal, titled ‘Along the Mississippi,’ highlights ingredients and culinary traditions found up and down the Big Muddy.
[ cocoa & cream ]
KAKAO CHOCOLATE opened its third location in Clayton’s Centene building at 7700 Forsyth Blvd., which also houses Niche and Pastaria. Unlike the chocolatier’s other two spots, this one is retail only and serves coffee and espresso drinks from local, smallbatch coffee roaster Stringbean Coffee.
[ new kids on the block ]
Pay attention, landlocked shellfish lovers—this one’s for you! KEVIN NASHAN, executive chef of Sidney Street Cafe and a James Beard nominee for Best Chef: Midwest, recently opened THE PEACEMAKER LOBSTER & CRAB CO. The Benton Park eatery and oyster bar serves coastal favorites, including poorboys, ‘boil’ and lobster rolls. Other recent newcomers to town include STEVE’S HOT DOGS and TICK TOCK TAVERN, both in Tower Grove East.
[ let’s brunch ] PICCIONE PASTRY
introduced small-plate brunch items to its weekend offerings. Available Saturday and Sunday from 9 a.m. to 1 p.m., the new menu includes ricotta pancakes, mixedberry Italian toast and Piccione Benedict, a soft-poached egg with pancetta, citrus risotto cake and hollandaise.
Roy DeCarava, America, Coltrane on Soprano, 1963, gelatin silver print, 13 1/8 x 9 3/4 inches From the Richard McDonnell Collection
Barnum & Bailey: The Only Show With 7 Open Dens of Trained Wild Beasts, circa 1890, 156 x 83 5/8 inches From a Collection of Circus Posters from Kopperman’s Deli, Central West End, St. Louis
autumn auction p r e v i e w o p e n s s u n day
a u c t i o n , September 13, 10am p r e v i e w , September 7 - 1 1, 10am-5pm
[ original spirits ]
SAINT LOUIS DISTILLERY, artisan creator of Cardinal Sin Vodka, is bringing starka, an aged vodka traditionally produced in Eastern Europe, to the local market early this month. The spirit starts with the distillery’s vodka, which is then slow-filtered and stored in Missouri White Oak bourbon barrels for six months, resulting in an amber spirit with hints of vanilla, toffee, banana and pepper.
Oscar Edmund Berninghaus, American (1874-1952) First Snow on Taos Mountain, oil on canvas, 20 x 24 inches
catalogue available and online
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SEPTEMBER 3, 2014
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townandstyle.com
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[ ON THE TABLE ] by jonathan carli | photos by bill barrett
[ THE GRILL AT THE RITZ-CARLTON ] 100 carondelet ave. | 314.863.6300
[ amuse bouche ] THE SCENE
Clubby, elegant hotel restaurant with dark woods and low lighting
THE CHEF
Damien Faure
THE PRICES
$7 to $10 starters $15 and $16 flatbreads $21 to $39 entrees
THE FAVORITES
PEI Mussels, Tuscan Kale & Hearts of Palm salad, Lemon Fennel Glazed Grouper, New York Strip, Prosciutto & Arugula Flatbread, Blackened Steak & Blue Cheese Flatbread, Morgan Street Brewery Beer Can ½ Chicken, Seasonal Sorbets
IT IS RARE TO EAT AT A RESTAURANT
where everything that comes out of the kitchen is superior. Yet that was was the case recently at The Grill at The Ritz-Carlton. Executive chef Damien Faure (a native Frenchman) launched a new menu a couple of months ago, one described as “an urban infusion: seasonal elements, simply crafted, perfectly grilled.” And they really mean ‘infusion,’ since the servers go to great pains to introduce a half-dozen bottles of olive oil infused with elements like black garlic/herb, lemon verbena avocado, spring onion chipotle, etc. These can be used on everything from bread to the grilled entrees, all of which are “simply crafted” to better pair with the rich oils. I should add that if you did absolutely nothing to the food, it would still be wonderful. A starter of Prince Edward Island Mussels ($10) was a far cry from the typical wine-steamed mussel dish. Instead the broth was creamy and very buttery, fragrant with Eastern
flavors like lemon grass, kaffir lime and peppery basil. Served with well-oiled naan (Indian flatbread), the sauce is too tempting not to soak up every last bit. The Tuscan Kale & Hearts of Palm salad ($15), big enough to split, is greatly understated by its modest name. This is an enticing mix of premium ingredients that all share the stage, not a pile of kale dotted with a few goodies. Toasted marcona almonds, sliced hearts of palm, juicy strawberries, fresh orange segments, creamy goat cheese and tender baby lettuce leaves share the spotlight with the kale, which is itself tender. The dressing is sweet and citrusy. The 12-ounce New York Strip ($36) was excellent on all counts: juicy, flavorful, well-trimmed, lightly charred and “perfectly grilled,” as promised in the menu’s tagline. The accompanying béarnaise sauce, too, impressed me, as it was not dominated by the tarragon as so many are. The infusions—especially the
black truffle and blackened garlic varieties—showed off their merits when used as dipping sauces for the meat. I guess that’s why the menu sticks to “simply crafted” foods—those work best with the oils. Entrées come with a choice of sides, which in my case was Smoked Gouda Mash, whipped Yukon Gold potatoes flavored judiciously with gouda cheese. The Lemon Fennel Glazed Grouper stands out as one of the finest fish dishes I’ve had in St. Louis. It came with a light, crusty exterior and sweet fish flavor. The lemon fennel glaze was barely detectable, a plus with this delicate fish. Our chosen side, Roasted Cauliflower, is another dish that was too modestly described. The tricolored crucifer—purple, white and green—liberally coated with black truffle oil—was positively orgasmic. While hotel restaurants aren’t top of mind for most St. Louisans, this one deserves to be. It was pretty near perfect—and that goes for the service, as well.
[ food • ŏ • lō • gy ]
[ chef chat ]
MARCONA ALMONDS | Sweeter than standard almonds, these are native to Spain. HEARTS OF PALM | Native to Costa Rica, these come from the inner core of certain
Jeanne D’Arc Aulnoye Aymeries (France)
BLACK TRUFFLES | The fruiting body of the ascomycete fungus, these grow near the roots of oak and hazelnut trees.
palm trees.
FAVORITE RESTAURANT
Sidney Street Cafe or Elaia
>> My meal was terrific, and it was fun having them present all those infused oils as a bonus to
FAVORITE INGREDIENT
Scallops
[ aftertaste ] the meal.
>> damien faure PEDIGREE
—ROBERT F. OF CLAYTON
>> Wow! I loved this food--— everything was delicious, even though I find the atmosphere a little dark and stuffy.
‑—ELLIE T. OF BRENTWOOD
UP NEXT | ERNESTO’S WRITE TO FOOD@TOWNANDSTYLE.COM TO SHARE YOUR OPINION.
FAVORITE COOKBOOK
Larousse Gastronomique
MOST MEMORABLE DINING EXPERIENCE
At Michel Troisgros’ restaurant in Roanne; everything was perfect.
GUILTY PLEASURE
Cured meats and cheese
f9|
TOWN&style
| SEPTEMBER 3, 2014
When you want the very best care At McKnight Place we provide quality care you can trust and peace of mind you can depend on. We build close relationships with our Residents and their families to assure that their needs and wishes are fulfilled. Our beautiful, intimate environment is the perfect place for Residents to socialize with other Residents, friends and family. We offer: - Great staff to Resident ratios delivered by specially trained, compassionate caregivers - A wide range of entertainment and activities that provide many opportunities for intellectual and social interaction - Art Therapy & Music Therapy in both group and private sessions - A fully equipped Therapy gym staffed by licensed therapists offering Physical, Occupational, Speech & Restorative Therapy - All-inclusive rates that are simple, predictable and worry-free Experience the difference for yourself! For Assisted Living please call 314-997-5333. For Skilled Nursing please call 314-993-2221. Conveniently located on The Gatesworth campus at Delmar and I-170.
We are committed to equal housing opportunity that does not discriminate in housing and services because of race, color, religion, sex, handicap, familial status or national origin.
[ARTS&ENTERTAINMENT] [SEPTEMBER]
by amber peterson
[ ART ]
5
[ MOVIES ] t&s saw it!
schlafly art outside
5–10 p.m. Friday; 10 a.m.–10 p.m. Saturday; noon–4 p.m. Sunday Schlafly Bottleworks | Free schlafly.com >> Now in its 11th year, Schlafly Art Outside is a three-day juried alternative art fair featuring art from more than 50 artists based in the St. Louis area. Show your support for local art and local beer. Through Sept. 7
now–12/7 brett weston: photographs Saint Louis Art Museum | Free | slam.org
9/3–10/31 pieces of impressionism
Green Door Art Gallery | Free | greendoorartgallery.com
9/5–9/7 saint louis art fair
MAGIC IN THE MOONLIGHT >> There’s a dreamy retro vibe to the latest Sophie (Emma Stone). Unconvincingly, Stanley Woody Allen film that is appealing, but the movie feels more than a little like a justification of his personal love life. Set in 1929 Europe, Magic in the Moonlight looks at the most unlikely of romances and basically concludes, The heart wants what the heart wants. That disingenuous and selfserving message gets in the way. As does Allen’s odd choice of setting, in which cynical middleaged magician Stanley (Colin Firth), based in pre-Hitler Berlin, romps around the French countryside with beautiful young spiritualist
questions his lifelong rationalism, concluding that Sophie’s smile has the power to conquer his decades of cynicism. And while we’re on the subject of improbability, how likely is it for a penniless, 20-something ingenue to fall for a much older misanthrope while a young (if silly) heir has offered her a lifetime of travel and leisure (remember, this is 1929)? Disappointing: That’s my best description of Magic in the Moonlight. SHOULD YOU SEE IT? Wait for the DVD. —D.W. VIEWED AT LANDMARK PLAZA FRONTENAC
5–10 p.m. Friday; 11 a.m.–10 p.m. Saturday; 11 a.m.–5 p.m. Sunday | Clayton Free | culturalfestivals.com
[ ETC. ] 9/8 the silver screen series: on golden pond 1–4 p.m. | AMC Creve Coeur 12 | Free | 314.420.1444
9/10 parties in the park featuring griffin and the gargoyles 5–8:30 p.m. | Downtown Clayton | Free | partiesinthepark.org
9/13 friends and family expo benefiting epworth
12:30–5 p.m. | Brentwood Recreation Center | Free | 314.874.5286
budweiser taste of st. louis
4–10 p.m. Friday, 11 a.m.–10 p.m. Saturday, 11 a.m.–9 p.m. Sunday Chesterfield Amphitheater | Free | tastestl.com >> Budweiser Taste of St. Louis, in its new Chesterfield location, will include perennial favorites, including Kid City, Art & Wine Walk, and the Stella Artois Chef Battle Royale Culinary Competition. The event also will feature celebrity chefs Tyler Florence and Duff Goldman. Through Sept. 21.
jr.
19
9/6
DINO DINNER 1–2 p.m. Saint Louis Science Center | $5 slsc.org
TOWN&style
| SEPTEMBER 3, 2014
CLASSIC OF THE WEEK Purple Rain (1984) | Tivoli Theatre | Sept. 5
OPENING FRIDAY As Above, So Below
one man, two guvnors
The Repertory Theatre of St. Louis $17.50–$79.50 | repstl.org >> Mistaken identities and slapstick antics are just a few things that can be found in this laugh-out-loud, awardwinning comedy. Through Oct. 5.
10
now–9/4 ring of fire: the music of johnny cash
NOW ON DVD Only Lovers Left Alive | Fading Gigilo | Belle
Lyceum Theatre | $35.50 | lyceumtheatre.org
9/10–9/21 purlie
Edison Theatre | Presented by The Black Rep $35–$45 | theblackrep.org
9/10–9/14 around the world in 80 days Lyceum Theatre | $35.50 | lyceumtheatre.org
[ MUSIC ] 9/5 arianna string quartet: dynamic duo
8 p.m. | Touhill Performing Arts | $10–$27 | touhill.org
9/6–9/7 loufest
12:15–10 p.m. Saturday; noon–10 p.m. Sunday | Forest Park $60–$350 | loufest.com
9/11 the chapel series: passion
7:30–9 p.m. | The Chapel Venue | $5–$15 chamberprojectstl.org
joyce manor
8:30 p.m. | Firebird | $12–$14 | pagan-stl.com >> Joyce Manor was conceived in the back of a car in the Disneyland parking lot, the kind of beginning California dreams are made of. A pop-punk band trapped inside a folkpunk duo, these guys think playing loud is just more fun!
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PHOTO: DAN MONICK
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ALSO IN THEATERS Frank Miller’s Sin City: A Dame To Kill For What If | November Man | The Trip to Italy
[ THEATER ]
>>>9/20 WORLDWIDE DAY OF PLAY
9:30 a.m. – 5:30 p.m. | The Magic House Free with admission | magichouse.org Visitors are invited to join The Magic House for a giant play date to celebrate Worldwide Day of Play, an annual event that encourages kids to turn off the television and play outside. From noon to 2 p.m., Isaac Bruce and members from the St. Louis Rams will join in the celebration.
seen on the screen
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TOWN&style
| SEPTEMBER 3, 2014
SLUCARE
by stephanie zeilenga IN 2012, 53-YEAR-OLD WAYNE OLDROYD had just wrapped up a work meeting when
he realized his left arm wasn’t working. “At first I thought I was hyperventilating because I had been talking fast and furious, but I soon realized I was actually having a stroke,” he says. Less than 40 minutes later, he began receiving treatment from SLUCare physicians at Saint Louis University Hospital, which received the gold award for stroke from the American Heart Association. That’s where he met Dr. Eli Feen. “After identifying that he had a hemorrhage in his brain and that his blood pressure was elevated, we admitted him to the neurocritical care unit to get his blood pressure under control and make sure he remained stable from a neurological standpoint,” says Dr. Eli Feen, SLUCare neurologist and associate professor of neurology at Saint Louis University School of Medicine. Patients receiving treatment at Saint Louis University Hospital’s neurointensive care unit undergo continuous monitoring by SLUCare physicians so intervention can be administered at the first sign of additional stroke episodes. This means that patients like Oldroyd, who suffered a second stroke less than 48 hours after his initial episode, can receive treatment almost immediately. “Twenty-four hours a day, he was in front of a specialist nurse who made sure his blood pressure remained under control,” Feen says. “And if there was any change in his neurological condition, a neurologist was literally minutes away.” Because stroke can cause myriad issues and complications, SLUCare’s stroke team has immediate access to other specialists, including cardiologists, neurointerventionalists, neurosurgeons, vascular surgeons and emergency medicine specialists, Feen says. “I can utilize colleagues to identify what needs to be done to maximize a patient’s recovery,” he says. This can mean anything from calling in a WAYNE OLDROYD, WHOSE STROKE RECOVERY WAS psychiatrist to handle depression after a SUPERVISED BY DR. FEEN. stroke or a neuropsychologist to identify areas of cognitive weakness that need special rehabilitation, or having a physician place a heart rhythm monitoring device, he explains. Getting Oldroyd in a stable condition was only the beginning of his recovery. “We sat him down with our experts to determine what would be the best plan for rehab,” Feen says. And as part of his rehab, Oldroyd continues to see Feen. “I want to make sure the patient’s rehab is progressing, determine what caused the stroke—in Mr. Oldroyd’s case it was high blood pressure—and make sure we are treating that,” he says. “I also was concerned with helping him maximize reintegration into the world.” Although his rehabilitation was difficult and he relies on the assistance of a cane or wheelchair to get around, Oldroyd was able to return to his work as Maryland Heights’ director of city planning, a phenomenal outcome from the perspective of both patient and doctor. “Getting back to work was a huge motivator for me,” Oldroyd says. “It kept my head in the game as I was recovering, and I was ultimately fortunate that the stroke affected my physical, not my mental, well-being. Dr. Feen was empathetic, he listened and he engaged, and as a stroke patient, that’s really what you’re looking for.”
PICTURED ON THE COVER: SLUCARE NEUROLOGIST DR. ELI FEEN, WHO PRACTICES AT THE SLUCARE DOCTORS OFFICE BUILDING AT 3635 VISTA AVE. FOR MORE INFORMATION, CALL 314.977.4440 OR VISIT SLUCARE.EDU. COVER DESIGN BY SARAH GIBSON | COVER PHOTO COURTESY OF SLUCARE
STROKE by rick stoff
We all know what a heart attack is: the disruption of blood flow to the heart muscle. But when it comes to understanding stroke, people tend to be a little fuzzy. Stroke is the disruption of blood flow to the brain. Also not widely known: Stroke is a leading cause of disabilities and the most common cause of death in the U.S. after heart disease and cancer.
IMPROVE YOUR ODDS
(MANY RISK FACTORS ARE CONTROLLABLE)
w NEARLY 14 % OF THOSE OVER 80 WILL HAVE A STROKE w 1 IN 200 PEOPLE AGES 20- 39 WILL HAVE A STROKE
RISK FACTORS
ACCORDING TO THE NATIONAL CENTER FOR HEALTH STATISTICS
Prevention is the only cure, DR. FRASAT CHAUDRY stresses. “Once a stroke has occurred, the damage is done.”
w More than 795,000 Americans suffer strokes each year; about 130,000 of them will die from complications. w High blood pressure is the leading risk factor, with others being atrial fibrillation, diabetes, family history, obesity, high cholesterol, smoking and race (African-Americans are almost twice as much at risk.)
ACCORDING TO THE U.S. CENTERS FOR DISEASE CONTROL AND PREVENTION
BRAIN ATTACK IT’S SCARY TO THINK WE’RE JUST ONE, SMALL, BLOOD VESSEL IRREGULARITY AWAY FROM DEATH. However, interrupted blood
flow can happen at any time, without warning, the experts explain. “Colloquially, we call stroke a ‘brain attack,’” says Dr. Frasat Chaudry, a neurologist at St. Luke’s Hospital. Millions of brain cells die during each minute blood flow is interrupted. “Brain tissues are deprived of oxygen and nutrients,” she says, which means that stroke can result in loss of function in sight, sleep, bladder or bowel control, body movement,
TWO TYPES The majority of strokes (about 87 percent) are ISCHEMIC, which occur when the blood supply is interrupted or reduced by a blood clot that either forms in an artery in the brain or travels from another part of the body. Ischemic stroke can be treated with the medication tPa (tissue plasminogen activator) if the patient reaches the hospital quickly enough and the stroke is determined to be caused by a clot, Twyman says.
“The other type, HEMORRHAGIC, is the bleeding stroke,” Chaudry says. “This occurs when a blood vessel ruptures and the blood supply to a part of the brain is interrupted.” We’ve all heard of an aneurysm, and that can be the culprit in bleeding strokes. “An aneurysm is an abnormal dilatation of a blood vessel that can be described as a bulge in the wall of a blood vessel. If an aneurysm ruptures in the brain, it can cause bleeding there,” Chaudry explains. “Hemorrhagic stroke may require emergent neurosurgery, where a hole is drilled in the skull to relieve pressure,” adds Twyman.
memory and more depending on which part of the brain has been affected, according to the National Stroke Association (NSA). A stroke on the left side of the brain impacts the right side of the body, and vice versa. “Strokes can occur at the time of birth,” says Dr. Michael A. Twyman of Des Peres Hospital and Premier Medical Specialists, although they’re more common in the elderly, when the blood vessels are hardened. “But nobody is too young to have a stroke,” he points out.
WHEN IS IT A STROKE? “One of the keys is a sudden change, like the sudden loss of strength on one side of the body, a sudden onset of numbness on one side of the body, a facial droop or double vision,” Chaudry describes. “Some people feel a sudden loss of balance or the ability to walk straight.” Another telltale symptom is “the worst headache of your life,” she says. “It is called the ‘thunderclap headache’ because one second you are OK, the next you are not.”
“THE MOMENT ANY OF THESE SYMPTOMS COME ON, CALL 911,” TWYMAN CAUTIONS: THE FAST TEST >> FACE: Ask the person to smile to see if one side of the face droops.
ARMS: Ask the person to raise both arms to see if arm drifts downward.
SPEECH: Ask the person to repeat a sentence to see if it is slurred or strange.
TIME: If you suspect
stroke, call 911 immediately.
SEPTEMBER 3, 2014
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TIME IS BRAIN DOCTORS SAY YOU CAN’T OVERESTIMATE THE IMPORTANCE OF IMMEDIATE TREATMENT FOR STROKE. THAT’S WHY THEY’VE COINED THE PHRASE, ‘TIME IS BRAIN.’ TREATMENT IS MEASURED IN SECONDS AND MINUTES, NOT HOURS, WITH QUALITY OF LIFE IN THE BALANCE. THE GOOD NEWS
Fatalities and disabilities resulting from stroke have decreased dramatically in recent years. “Stroke, by definition, cuts off the blood supply to the brain, causing cells to undergo death—quickly,” says Dr. Amer Alshekhlee, an interventional neurologist with the SSM Neurosciences Institute at SSM DePaul Health Center. “The brain is very frail, very friable tissue, not like muscle. Delaying the opening of a blockage can lead to more cell death—and more debilitating and deadly strokes.”
STAT!
Utilizing new imaging techniques, researchers determined the brain loses 1.9 million of its 130 billion neurons each minute blood supply is disrupted during a stroke. Each minute of acute ischemic stroke produces the same effects as 3.1 weeks of ‘accelerated aging.’ “The medical response comes from one angle—getting the patient as quickly as possible to the emergency room to treat that blockage,” Alshekhlee says. “Our institution, and the majority of others, rely on CAT scan imaging to localize the clot inside the brain and tell us exactly what we can do for it.” When a stroke is caused by a blood clot blocking an artery, “the most common treatment has been clot-busting medicine,” he says. This approach is typically used with patients whose stroke happened within four and a half hours.
NEW ALTERNATIVES
Patients who reach a hospital too late for the clot-dissolving medication may benefit from a relatively new technique similar to cardiac catheterization, a minimally invasive procedure used to diagnose and treat other cardiovascular issues. Performed with a needle and fine flexible tubing threaded through the blood vessels, interventional neurology has become a common treatment for strokes in the last three or four years, Alshekhlee says. CAT images “tell us whether we can safely say this person is a candidate for catheter treatment,” he says. “The most common site for introducing the catheter is the groin; then we pass it up the carotid or vertebral artery to the brain. Then we pass a very small microcatheter through the larger catheter and localize the clot, which we remove.”
LOCAL ABUNDANCE
There are 14 hospitals in the St. Louis metropolitan area recognized as primary stroke centers by The Joint Commission, which accredits health care organizations and programs. An additional two centers, SSM DePaul Health Center and BarnesJewish Hospital, are accredited as comprehensive stroke centers capable of treating patients with “the most complex strokes.” Saint Louis University Hospital is the only one in Missouri to receive the Gold Award for stroke from the American Heart Association.
BRAIN SAVED
“Blood clots in the brain used to have a very high mortality. Using the new technologies, the percentage of deaths has dropped from 60 or 70 percent down to 20 or 25 percent or less,” Alshekhlee says. Educational efforts are ongoing to make more people across the country—patients, emergency medical service providers and medical professionals—aware of the need to respond quickly, he adds. “Strokes often are painless, unlike a heart attack. So people don’t report them as soon as they start having symptoms.”
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TOWN&style
| SEPTEMBER 3, 2014
STR KE SECRET
FIRST WE WERE BOMBARDED BY THE NEWS THAT WOMEN ACTUALLY SUFFER MORE HEART ATTACKS THAN MEN. NOW WE LEARN THEY ARE ALSO AT GREATER RISK FOR STROKE LATER IN LIFE. LET’S SEE WHY.
Throughout much of life, women and men have similar stroke risk rates. But in the later years, women suffer about 55,000 more strokes a year than men, according to the American Heart Association. “It appears that women are mostly protected until they enter menopause,” says Dr. Michael J. Lim, director of the division of cardiology and co-director of the Center for Comprehensive Cardiovascular Care at Saint Louis University School of Medicine. “The natural estrogen that women have tends to protect them against cardiovascular disease.” In fact, the incidence of strokes increases greatly for both genders as they age. About 2.4 percent of women aged 40 to 59 will have a stroke, according to the National Center for Health Statistics. The portion increases to 8.2 percent for women 60 to 79 and 14.8 percent for women 80 and older. As if the figures weren’t bad enough, strokes also tend to be more dangerous in the later years. “When you are older you have less ability to make it through the acute problem and recover from it,” Lim says. “It is not necessarily that the event is more severe, but tissues don’t regenerate as quickly so healing doesn’t happen as quickly.”
KNOW THE RISKS
HRT
EQUAL OPPORTUNITY
“Women need to know they have some additional risk factors “About 20 years ago Recommended preventive measures “are equally effective in for strokes that men do not face,” says Dr. David A. Carpenter, a there were some studies lowering the risk of stroke in men and women,” Carpenter says. neurologist and director of the Comprehensive Outpatient Stroke that suggested hormone “Treatment of high blood pressure in women has been shown to Center at Washington University School of Medicine. “Pregnancy replacement therapy might lower the risk of stroke by half. It is more important for Africanincreases risk, and the use of oral contraceptives does as well. It lower the risk of stroke in American women because they have a higher risk of stroke and further increases if women using them also smoke,” Carpenter women,” Carpenter says. hypertension. Smoking doubles the risk of stroke overall. And says. He adds that women who have migraines with aura also are at “When later studies were when it interacts with the effects of contraceptive use and greater risk, as are women who had preeclampsia during pregnancy. done, it was found not to migraine with aura, smoking gives women an extra-high risk.” “Women with a history of preeclampsia need to be a bit more aware be the case, and in a couple The growing rate of obesity among the young is a special cause of taking measures to treat high blood pressure and quit smoking,” of studies, it appeared to for concern, Lim adds. “There is a lot of physical inactivity, and it Carpenter advises. “Restricting salt intake can help lower blood pressure, increase the risk. The current seems like we can’t get smoking out of the younger population. and following the Mediterranean diet, which has a lot of fruits and olive recommendation is that This could be very bad.” He advises women to seek medical oil, helps control cholesterol and bring the stroke risk down.” women who have had a stroke care at the slightest hint of a health risk. “We expect a lot from Atrial fibrillation, or abnormal heart rhythm, is another issue of concern. should not take hormone women in our society. They are supposed to be tough and be “Women have a slightly higher risk of stroke with atrial fibrillation than men replacement therapy.” the family caretakers. I urge women to seek attention for do,” he says. any symptoms before it is too late.”
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TREND REPORT NATURAL PRODUCTS by dorothy weiner | photo by bill barrett
CONSUMER ARE BECOMING increasingly aware of what they put into their bodies. It started with a desire for foods without chemicals, especially for their children, whose little bodies might react adversely even to small amounts of artificial ingredients. Then people clamored for cleaner air and water— to the point where we're paying upwards of $6 for a liter of bottled water! Now there is a growing concern over chemicals in our cosmetics. What, exactly, are all those hard-to-pronounce ingredients in our skin cream, shampoo, soap and more? That is something consumers are asking more and more, as they turn to products made with oils and extracts from nature.
[ soft skin ] >> ACURE BODY LOTION LEMONGRASS + MOROCCAN ARGAN OIL
This cream, which is softening and moisturizing, is vegan, paraben free, sulfate free, cruelty free, gluten free and has no synthetic fragrance. All these features put it squarely in the 'natural' category. The scent is light and lemon-y, thanks to essential oils of rosemary, lavender and lemongrass. $10 AT WHOLE FOODS
[ don't forget the hair ] >> ANDALOU NATURALS LAVENDER & BIOTIN SHAMPOO
The first body care company to be 100-percent certified free of GMOs, these products include Aloe Vera as the first ingredient, which is known to increase and retain hydration levels. The lavender oil is calming, and the biotin is a B vitamin that creates stronger hair. $10 AT WHOLE FOODS
[ the short list ] >> KIND NATURAL ARTISAN SOAP BULGARIAN ROSE
From our own local soap purveyor in Webster Groves, this bar smells amazing and lists only a handful of ingredients, mostly olive, coconut, palm, sunflower, soy and geranium oils, goat milk and shea butter. It's softening and dreamy-smelling in the shower. And Kind products were included in celebrity gift bags at the Emmys! Way to go! $7 PER BAR AT WHOLE FOODS
[ squeaky clean ] >> NOURISH ORGANIC MOISTURIZING CREAM FACE CLEANSER
This one's a gentle cleanser that washes impurities without drying or irritating the face. The vitamins enrich, and the cucumber acts as an antioxidant. Technically 'unscented,' it does have a 'green' odor from the watercress that takes some getting used to. After all, we're spoiled by all those odoriferous—and artificial— perfumes in commercial products. $14 AT WHOLE FOODS
[ the eyes have it ] >> MYCHELLE DERMACEUTICALS FABULOUS EYE CREAM
Especially for this most sensitive of facial areas, you want something mild and 'clean.' Using Edelweiss plant stem cells, this cream inhibits collagen breakdown, purporting to reduce wrinkles after only 20 days. Hyaluronic acid, long recognized as beneficial for the face, firms the skin. $30 AT WHOLE FOODS
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TOWN&style
| SEPTEMBER 3, 2014
HEALTH&BEAUTY
Plastic Surgery
talk
with Dr. William G. Hart, Jr. Fractora Fractora fractional rejuvenation and resurfacing is an effective procedure to slow the effects of aging and restore your skin, so you can look and feel younger. Fractora uses fractionated radiofrequency energy for the broadest range of skin aging symptoms including improving wrinkles, texture, pigment irregularities, prominent blood vessels or redness. Using a matrix of micro pins to resurface the skin and provide superior results, Fractora resurfacing options require minimal patient downtime and improves the broadest range of symptoms, all in one treatment. Other fractional resurfacing options available normally require multiple different technologies and often help to improve only one or two symptoms of aging skin.
FACE TO FACE
LAUREN DUNNING by marylyn simpson
Certain beauty looks take skill and a time commitment to achieve, and sometimes it’s the simplest, most classic looks that can take several attempts to master. This is especially true for the ‘no makeup’ look. Perfectly nude lips, cleverly defined eyes and flawless skin are undeniably beautiful, but one too many layers of foundation will leave you looking more fake than fresh-faced. Neiman Marcus PR assistant Lauren Dunning, a freelance makeup artist whose experience ranges from Elle magazine photo shoots to commercials, says that getting the no makeup look requires little more than the right color palettes and minimal application. “The look is really about keeping things simple,” Dunning says. “Personally, I like to see the skin. I think the biggest misconception about putting on makeup is that you need lots of concealer and foundation. You do not need to ‘put a full face on.’ There are only a few places where women really need coverage.” Those places include underneath the eyes, around the nose and around the mouth. According to Dunning, once you’ve applied your concealer with your fingertips, adding a translucent powder is the key to getting a natural look. Using a product like Laura Mercier’s Universal Translucent Powder is great for setting your foundation, but remember to keep your setting powders matte; a shimmer powder can leave you with a white film across your face in photos, a far cry from natural. When you want to add a little color, Dunning suggests cream blush with a touch of bronzer. “I really like the idea of layering,” she says. “I would use a cream blush on the apples of the cheeks and blend out. Bobbi Brown has great cream blushes. If you want a more bronzed look you can take a flat bronzer (no shimmer) and put it on a flat brush and apply it across the cheeks and forehead by the hairline, any place where the sun would hit your face.” The finishing touches to your no makeup look don’t have to be understated. Dunning says a bone-colored eyeshadow for lighter complexions or banana tones for olive skin give you a clean look, and adding a darker, brown tone to your lid crease gives your eyes an effortless pop. Fill in your brows as you usually would and match your lipstick to your natural lip color. Avoid skintone lipsticks so you won’t look washed out. Last, a swipe or two of mascara will complete your no makeup look, leaving you with a flawless complexion that lets your natural beauty shine.
Fractora can be used in areas that demonstrate fine or deep wrinkles, scars or discolored red and brown skin. The most common areas for treatment are the lower and upper eyelid, smile lines, forehead, cheeks, mouth and neck. Patient can expect to have between one and four sessions depending on the treatment settings and should expect to see results within two weeks after treatment and continue up to three months.
Fractora FIrM Fractora Firm is a clinically advanced thermal skin rejuvenation treatment designed to revitalize and renew your skin allowing you to put your best face forward. As we age, skin becomes less elastic with creases and folds, which can make us look older than we feel. Feel more confident with smoother, clearer and tighter skin. Fractora Firm can be used to treat sagging skin in areas such as the forehead, crows feet, upper lids, lower lids, nasolabial fold, jowls, simile lines and neck. Treatment of the body can include the arms “bat wings”, abdomen and other areas that may need contraction. Radio frequency advancements are used to form new collagen and provide optimal skin contraction in the deep layers of your skin, using concentrated heating to ensure consistent outcomes. Weekly sessions are performed over a six-week period with individuals with mild laxity possibly being treated with fewer sessions. Combine these treatments with facials, injectables or fillers. Most Fractora Firm patients combine Fractora Firm with Fractora resurfacing for a treatment series called FracTotal Facial. This combines both technologies, which can be performed in the same setting for maximal improvement.
If you have any questions or other topics you’d like to know more about, email us at DrHart@HartMD.com.
Hart Cosmetic & Reconstructive Surgery Institute
314-991-1700
Mercy Hospital Medical Tower A 621 South New Ballas Suite 676A 63141 SEPTEMBER 3, 2014 | townandstyle.com | f 18 HartMD.com | BodyTiteStL.com
Your neighborhood pharmacy with the personal touch, now under new ownership. All INSURANcE AccEpTEd
transfer your prescriptions today!
314.394.2404
l Free delivery available l convenient curbside pickup l Drug compounding services An independently-owned pharmacy where the pharmacist knows you.
Tony Roberts, owner
OFFERING EXTENdEd HOURS: Monday - Friday: 9a to 7p | saturday: 9a to 5p
introducing...
[DESIGN]
OF THE MONTH ...a look at st. louis’ interior spaces and how they were created.
ENTER TODAY
visit us at townandstyle.com for more information >> Please submit photos and information
about a special design project you would like T&S to consider.
>> Projects must be no more than two years old
WASHINGTON UNIVERSITY PHYSICIANS
Dr. Mike Valente, director of adult audiology at Washington University, will discuss the symptoms and treatment options related to hearing loss from 10-11:30 a.m. Sept. 10 at BarnesJewish West County Hospital. Call 314.747.0972 for reservations.
DR. MIKE VALENTE
PHOTO: BILL BARRETT
301 South Kirkwood Road • Kirkwood 63122 • Greentree-RX.com
[HEALTHY OUTLOOK
Please let us know how we can seRve you.
DR. JASTIN ANTISDEL
SAINT LOUIS UNIVERSITY SINUS INSTITUTE
Otolaryngologists at Saint Louis University Sinus Institute use the latest technology and diagnostic skills to determine the root cause of recurring sinus infections and to treat nasal blockages, deviated septums and tumors. 621 S. New Ballas Road, Ste. 307 314.977.4440 | slucare.edu/sinus
TONY AND ASHLEY ROBERTS WITH SON FORD
GREENTREE PHARMACY
New owners Tony and Ashley Roberts will celebrate Greentree Pharmacy’s grand reopening from noon to 4 p.m. Sept. 27 with a petting zoo, sidewalk sale, refreshments and more. New store hours are 9 a.m. to 7 p.m. Monday through Friday and 9 a.m. to 5 p.m. Saturday. 301 S. Kirkwood Road | 314.394.2404 | greentree-rx.com
(completed no earlier than summer 2012).
>> Enter as many projects as you like.
[ dofethes ig n ]
CALLING ALL Designers & DiYers
date of design
june 2013
mo nt h
>>
kind of home>>
ranch in creve coeur goals of the homeo
wner >>
I wanted to make this room warm and our family. We coming home to it useful for after a long daylove every day of work. your favorit e part concep tually of the comple ted projec t >> I have
created a modern
but welcoming space
your favorit e item in teh the newly designe d space>>
Has to be the red seat
cushions!!
designe r
jAn E sm iTh comapa ny name
RESIDENT PHYLLIS C.
FRIENDSHIP VILLAGE-SUNSET HILLS 1|
TOWN&style
|
DATE
314.657.2100 | townandstyle.com
Friendship Village provides social, physical, spiritual and intellectual outlets for residents through interesting activities such as yoga classes, trivia challenges, fine art shows and holiday celebrations. 12503 Village Circle Drive | 314.449.2059
SPECIAL ADVERTISING FEATURE
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TOWN&style
| SEPTEMBER 3, 2014
FALL MARKET PREVIEW] [ SPECIAL SECTION
The Pollmann living room
by stephanie zeilenga | photos by suzy gorman
A flowing floor plan awash in light—that’s what captivated Kate and Dan Pollmann when they first saw their University City home in 2006. Eight years and two kids later, the home has been masterfully decorated by Kate, who has an eye for bright colors, inviting textures and unique art. Now, it’s a fresh, stylish haven for the young, growing family. T&S | For a time, you lived in New York. How did that experience influence the decor of your home? KP | I lived in little tiny shoeboxes in New York, but I’ve always loved colors, patterns and different textiles. When we finally bought a home and had space, and I knew we were going to stay awhile, it was fun to put things together. T&S | How would you define your design aesthetic? KP | It’s pretty eclectic. I definitely like to mix antiques with more modern furniture. I also like to mix colors and artwork that don’t initially seem like they would go together, but then they somehow do once you get them into the right space. T&S | What’s your design process like? KP | It kind of just comes together, but for most of the rooms there has been one thing I love that I decorated around: a piece of fabric or art that set the tone. In our living room, the sofa
The Pollmann family: Dan, Charlie, Ava and Kate with dog Pete
is from my grandparents from the ’50s. It had an old fruitwood finish and old cushions, but I had it reupholstered and new pillows made, so that’s a special piece. I had to convince my grandmother to give it to me, and I’ve had it since 2008 and just love it. I’ve changed all the furniture around it, but that piece always stays. T&S | Where do you get design inspiration? KP | I’m always out and about looking for new things and always seeing things in magazines and online. T&S | What’s your favorite feature of the home? KP | Although I love the dining room and its blue curtains, the room I love the most is my daughter’s nursery. It’s the room I completed most recently, and I decorated it with so much love and excitement for her to get here. It’s a warm room and not too babyish—I walk into it, and it just feels good to be in there.
T&S | It looks like you really know how to maximize space. KP | In an old University City house, you don’t necessarily have a real foyer, so I wanted to create something that felt like you weren’t walking into the living room. T&S | You have a lot of art on your walls— where do you find it? KP | We have a couple of artist friends, and some of the pieces have been given to us by them. The abstract painting near the front door I picked up at a flea market. In the dining room we have two groups of four prints, which are actually old Italian furniture catalog pieces I found on eBay and had framed. It’s hard, and it takes time to collect interesting art, but I’m always looking for something different to fill the walls, because I feel like art is what sets a home apart and makes it unique. CLOCKWISE, FROM TOP RIGHT: The kitchen; Ava’s room; Kate’s couch from her grandparents; the home’s entry way
T&S | Is the picture over the fireplace of any special significance? KP | My husband and I were in Maine a few years ago on vacation, and we came across that painting in a gallery. We loved it but didn’t know if it would fit over our mantel or whether we wanted to purchase it on the spot. I thought it would be fun to buy it for my husband as a gift, but I waited a few years to contact the artist, Peter Roux. He still had the piece, so I had it delivered one Christmas Eve. T&S | Your son’s room is adorable. How did you put that together? KP | My aunt actually painted the zebra. I have papier-mâché animal heads on the wall; when I first started seeing those, I thought it would be so cool to do a jungle theme. So I went out to find fun fabrics to make his room cute but not too ‘baby.’ I feel like at some point the pale blue won’t be right for him anymore, but he should be able to grow up with the artwork.
[ DESIGN ] OF THE MONTH HOUSE LOCATION & TYPE>>
A Colonial-style home in Webster Groves GOALS OF THE HOMEOWNER>>
The owners wanted to add some pizazz to the home’s flat front and create a shady porch for lounging. They also asked for better landscaping. FAVORITE PART OF THE PROJECT>>
The stone and wood textures add a welcome depth to the front of the home, and the AZEK floor of the porch makes it virtually maintenance-free. FAVORITE ITEM>>
We love the two flower beds added to each end of the porch—a clever way to cap the addition.
brian yount, aia MOSBY BUILDING ARTS
Dielmann Sotheby’s International Realty 314.881.3902
DAVE & SABRINA ROBB direct: 314.727.2001 www.robbpartners.com
*
CLAYTON
8001 Clayton Lane Clayton
6304 Fauquier Drive
$1,050,000 8001Clayton.com
SPECS: Martiz & Young designed home with 4 bedrooms & 2½ baths. Beautiful architectural details. 1st floor family room. Large fenced-in backyard. One block from Forest Park, Metro & Wash U. PRICE: $875,000
*
CENTRAL WEST END 4554 Laclede Avenue #306
SPECS: City living at its finest! Recently updated top floor condo, largest floor plan at the Wexford. 2 bedrooms, 2 baths, new kitchen, fireplace, solarium and garage space. PRICE: $399,900
*
CLAYTON
NEW LISTING 7550 Cornell Avenue University City
$324,900 7550cornell.com
306 North Brentwood Blvd. SPECS: Updated Clayton Garden’s townhome with an open floor plan is blocks from Downtown Clayton. Large eat-in kitchen opens to deck, 3 bedrooms including large master suite, 3½ baths, vaulted ceilings & skylights. PRICE: $619,000
f 23 |
TOWN&style
| SEPTEMBER 3, 2014
STEVEN
STEPHANIE
322.6992
314. 314.725.0009
Recognized by the St. Louis Business Journal as Top-Ranking Realtors
10 Overbrook Drive, Ladue Offered at $1,749,000.
21 Deerfield Road, Ladue Offered at $1,995,000.
15862 Richborough Road, Offered at $1,395,000.
10 Country Life Acres, Village of Country Life Acres Offered at $1,095,000.
850 Kent Road, Ladue New Listing. $1,649,000. Open 9/7, 1-3 PM.
40 Washington Terrace, CWE Offered at $889,000.
25 Ladue Terrace, Ladue Offered at $1,250,000.
2378 Highway JJ, Elsberry Offered at $875,000.
305 North Bemiston Avenue, Clayton Offered at $819,000.
9960 Holliston Court, Ladue Offered at $685,000.
1425 Wheatfield Lane, St. Albans Offered at $619,000.
9119 Clayton Road, Ladue Offered at $998,000. Open 9/7, 2-4 PM.
17516 Orrville Road, Wildwood Offered at $574,900.
791 Bordeaux Circle, St. Albans Offered at $506,000.
10043 Springwood Drive, Ladue New Listing. Offered at $574,000.
janet mcafee inc. | 9889 clayton road | saint louis, missouri 63124 | 314.997.4800 | www.janetmcafee.com
Visit us Open sunday, sept. 7th
1612 Mississippi Avenue, Lafayette Square Offered at $419,000.
1040 Golden Orchard drive, O’Fallon New Listing. $261,275. open 9/7, 1-3 PM.
NEW LISTINGS 850 kent road, Ladue. This 4BR/3.5BA English Country Manor on 2.45 acres has been updated for today’s lifestyle while maintaining its beauty. $1,649,000. open 9/7, 1-3 PM 43 rio vista, Ladue. Fabulous home with all of today’s spaces and curb appeal. Kitchen with breakfast bar, family room plus inviting sun room, pool and patio! $799,000 10043 sPringwood drive, Ladue. 5BR/4BA updated home in the heart of Ladue. Walkout and finished lower level. Almost ¾ acres with pool! $574,000 12 Foxboro road, Ladue. 3BR/2BA Ranch, bright open floor plan! Newer kitchen! Plantation shutters, ceiling fans, 2 car garage, fenced yard with private patio. $399,000 2513 trenton station, St. Charles. Spacious brick twostory with heated pool, custom decking, finished walkout lower level, newer roof and access to Katy Trails! $335,000 1374 Mosswoods drive, Fenton. Open and bright twostory in Rockwood Schools offers a custom deck, walkout lower level, loft on 2nd floor... the list goes on! $334,900 367 coPPer lakes blvd., Wildwood. Wonderfully updated Copper Lakes home with newer kitchen and master bath, screened porch and private backyard! $259,000 1040 golden orcHard dr., O’Fallon. 1.5-story main floor master, hardwood floors, vaulted family room with wall of windows. $261,275. open 9/7, 1-3 PM 1509 HedgeFord drive, unit 3, Chesterfield. 2BR/2BA condo in a great location! New stove and dishwasher. Pool and underground, secure parking. $129,000
LuxuryCollection 318 wardenburg FarMs dr., Wildwood. 12 HuntleigH woods dr., Huntleigh. 1042 wings road, St. Albans. 21 uPPer ladue, Ladue. 38 glen eagles, Ladue. 1055 wings road, St. Albans. 21 deerField road, Ladue. 24 oakleigH lane, Ladue. 2307 nortH geYer road, Frontenac. 10 overbrook drive, Ladue. 5105 lindell boulevard, CWE. 395 HigHwaY v, Troy. 5505 lindell boulevard, CWE. 22 uPPer ladue, Ladue. 12 Hillvale, Clayton. 5175 lindell boulevard, CWE.
$8,700,000 $5,295,000 $3,960,000 $3,600,000 $2,350,000 $2,125,000 $1,995,000 $1,985,000 $1,899,000 $1,749,000 $1,695,000 $1,654,000 $1,599,000 $1,598,000 $1,595,000 $1,499,000
2513 Trenton Station, St. Charles New Listing. Offered at $335,000.
1374 Mosswoods Drive, Fenton New Listing. Offered at $334,900.
6177 Washington Boulevard, St. Louis Offered at $239,999.
50 Portland Place, CWE. 22 westMoreland Place, CWE. 1303 eaglewinds court, Chesterfield. 15862 ricHborougH road, Chesterfield. 2019 s. Mason rd., Town & Country. 300 FeMMe osage valleY, Augusta. 514 Fox ridge road, Frontenac. 15 clerMont lane, Ladue. 25 ladue terrace, Ladue. 729 HigHwaY H, Troy. 650 Morel court, St. Albans. 10 countrY liFe acres, Village of Country Life Acres. 9119 claYton road, Ladue. 5925 lindell boulevard, CWE. 803 soutH warson road, Ladue. 8919 Pine acre road, Ladue. 1263 cedars valleY rd., St. Albans. 8 arbor road, Olivette. 9 Pebble creek road, Ladue. 14 dunleitH, Ladue. 108 club creek ct., St. Albans. 40 wasHington terrace, CWE. 17360 orrville road, Wildwood. 2378 HigHwaY JJ, Elsberry. 405 conwaY gardens lane, Creve Coeur. 67 woodoaks trail, Ladue. 305 n. beMiston ave., Clayton. 25 brookwood road, Town & Country. 1178 HaMPton Park, Richmond Heights.
$1,495,000 $1,475,000 $1,395,000 $1,395,000 $1,300,000 $1,299,000 $1,299,000 $1,298,500 $1,250,000 $1,195,000 $1,150,000 $1,095,000 $998,000 $990,000 $949,000 $929,000 $899,000 $899,000 $895,000 $890,000 $890,000 $889,000 $875,000 $875,000 $874,000 $829,000 $819,000 $795,000 $795,000
RESIdENTIAL HOMES 2 MidPark lane, Ladue. 9960 Holliston court, Ladue. 1425 wHeatField lane, St. Albans. 17516 orrville road, Wildwood. 12674 conwaY road, Creve Coeur. 1406 wHeatField lane, St. Albans. 486 HickorY trace, St. Albans. 6943 PersHing avenue, University City. 791 bordeaux circle, St. Albans. 99 old FarM road, Foley. 10432 caPitol Place, Frontenac. 208 tiMber trace, St. Albans. 1616 dearborn dr., Warson Woods. 16831 asHberrY circle dr., Chesterfield. 4474 MarYland avenue, CWE. 8332 gannon avenue, University City. 7946 teasdale avenue, University City. 3140 russell blvd., St. Louis. 4153 west Pine, CWE. 7504 gannon avenue, University City. 7217 lindell avenue, University City. 16212 trade winds ct., Wildwood.
$749,000 $685,000 $619,000 $574,900 $550,000 $549,000 $538,900 $534,900 $506,000 $499,500 $468,500 $465,000 $465,000 $424,900 $425,000 $399,900 $385,000 $349,900 $345,000 $329,000 $324,000 $289,900
9119 claYton road, Ladue. $998,000.
2-4 PM
8 arbor road, Olivette. $899,000.
1-3 PM
14 dunleitH, Ladue. $890,000.
1-3 PM
305 n. beMiston ave., Clayton. $849,000.
1-3 PM
67 woodoaks trail, Ladue. $829,000.
1-3 PM
7946 teasdale ave., University City. $385,000.
1-3 PM
929 alanson drive, University City. $289,900.
1-3 PM
2628 McknigHt crossing ct., Rock Hill. $115,900.
1-3 PM
6209 Mardel Avenue, St. Louis Offered at $199,900.
929 alanson drive, University City. 6528 oleatHa, St. Louis. 3556 st. albans road, St. Albans. 6177 wasHington blvd., St. Louis. 6209 Mardel avenue, St. Louis. 12420 larkwood drive, St. Louis. 532 central Place, Kirkwood. 7021 trainor court, St. Louis. 620 soutH 6tH street, St. Charles. 424 rose Hill west, Kirkwood.
$289,900 $275,000 $260,000 $239,999 $199,900 $179,900 $155,000 $149,900 $145,000 $139,900
815 Westwood drive, Unit 1N, Clayton Offered at $199,000.
CONdOMINIUM/VILLA HOMES 768 bordeaux circle, St. Albans. $465,000 9 Portland court, CWE. $429,000 1612 MississiPPi ave., Lafayette Square. $419,000 7560 wYdown boulevard, #1c, Clayton. $369,000 410 nortH newstead, #4w, CWE . $329,000 116 nortH central avenue, #1s, Clayton. $277,900 725 s. skinker, #7s, Saint Louis. $265,000 7515 buckingHaM dr., #3s, Clayton. $215,000 815 westwood drive, #1n, Clayton. $199,000 541 rosedale, #102, St. Louis. $159,900 801 soutH skinker blvd., #3a, St. Louis. $150,000 921 soutH HanleY rd., #e, Clayton. $139,000 2628 McknigHt crossing ct., Webster Schools. $115,900 123 w. woodbine avenue, unit H, Kirkwood. $94,900
541 Rosedale Avenue, Unit 102, St. Louis Offered at $159,900.
LOTS/ACREAGE/FARMS 2330 ossenFort road, Glencoe. 302 wardenburg FarMs, Wildwood. 303 wardenburg FarMs,Wildwood. 317 wardenburg FarMs, WIldwood. 1 little lane, Ladue. 916 bluFF road, Pevely. 4114 HigHwaY dd, Salem. 72 acre Horse FarM, Bunker. 1133 wings road, St. Albans. 1138 wings road, St. Albans. 73 acre aQuatic FarM, Bunker. lot 4 breton woods ct., Wildwood. lot 5 breton woods ct., Wildwood. lot 3 breton woods ct., Wildwood. lot 6 breton woods ct., Wildwood. lot 7 breton woods ct., Wildwood. lot 8 breton woods ct., Wildwood. lot 11 breton woods ct., Wildwood. lot 12 breton woods ct., Wildwood. governor Place #2 lot 46, St. Charles.
$1,425,000 $600,000 $600,000 $600,000 $595,000 $429,000 $416,900 $399,900 $350,000 $350,000 $299,900 $235,000 $235,000 $225,000 $225,000 $225,000 $225,000 $225,000 $225,000 $98,000
7021 Trainor Court, St. Louis new Price. Offered at $149,900.
620 South Sixth Street, St. Charles Offered at $145,000.
NEW CONSTRUCTION 809 tara estates ct. tbb, Chesterfield.
$875,750
Global Affiliations
janet mcafee inc. | 9889 clayton road | saint louis, missouri 63124 | 314.997.4800 | www.janetmcafee.com
[HOMEWORK:
hidden ‘sideburns’
DEAR HOMEWORK,
My husband and I bought our house about two years ago, and it was supposed to be a compromise between charm (me) and modern practicalities (him). The façade has always bothered me. We want to keep the Tudor look, but it seems like it was forced, and the orientation of the front porch looks wrong to me. All the landscaping has to be replaced, so we’d love your thoughts on enhancing curb appeal, too. Thanks for your consideration! ———TRANSFORM MY TUDOR
DEAR TRANSFORM MY TUDOR,
I agree with you that the overall composition and balance of your house leaves much room for improvement. I especially focus on the ‘stone sideburns’ that bracket the façade. All handsome houses have a strong sense of composition because the component parts (doors, windows, porches) form a hierarchy in which the most important features (perhaps the entry) dominate over subordinate ones. Beyond this, it is necessary for all these parts to be in balance with each other. ———HOMEWORK
triple arched-top window
half-timbered gable
SCHEME I
In the first revision, you will see I have added a half-timbered gable to the entry porch. This and a new raised gable on the service wing help spread the half-timbering along the façade, making it seem less like an afterthought. I also have simplified the design of the original half-timbering, eliminating the ‘x’s.’ I also show a triple, arched-top window in the dining room. This and the new entry porch help draw the eye to this portion of the composition. New, lower planting makes the house look taller, and I deliberately hid the stone sideburns. It looks better, but we can do more.
BEFORE
We Invite You to
Live the Dream Payne Family Homes is now open at Vintage Grove in Wildwood, Missouri. Located off of Old State Road, Vintage Grove features our exclusive Louis Collection series of upscale ranch, 1.5-story and 2-story homes priced from the $490,000s. The homes offered at Vintage Grove have been thoughtfully designed and are feature rich and full of function. With only 11 scenic, tree-lined homesites, don’t miss out on this unique opportunity to select your new home from our prestigious Louis Collection. Donna Cusumano: 314-565-8465 | dkc@paynefamilyhomes.com
paynefamilyhomes.com f 27 |
TOWN&style
| SEPTEMBER 3, 2014
T&S HOME
new entry element
new tree
enlarged windows
large
new stone
gable
hedged drive court
SCHEME II
In this version, I have been much more aggressive with the architecture, enlarging many of the windows, raising the entry element, adding light piers and a hedged drive court. A new street tree helps frame the composition, which now seems much less timid and unconvincing.
elements
walled
curving
service court
flower beds
SCHEME III
The first two schemes show how the house can become more forcefully symmetrical. This version shows that the main body of the house could also become symmetrical while still feeling more authentically Tudor. New stone elements distribute the material more evenly across the elevation, making it feel integrated rather than a last-minute addition. Further, a new large gable and a walled service court increase the visual importance of the one-story wing, making it feel less like a tail and more like the â&#x20AC;&#x2DC;grammarâ&#x20AC;&#x2122; of the main house.
HOMEWORK IS PENNED BY PAUL DOERNER, PRESIDENT, THE LAWRENCE GROUP. IF YOU WOULD LIKE YOUR HOME CRITIQUED, CONTACT US AT HOMEWORK@TOWNANDSTYLE.COM.
Finally, this scheme shows a less formal and more English Country landscape scheme. Curving beds of flowers add charm and color, and the plants at the street edge give the feel of a typical English hedgerow. There are many ideas here to choose from, but any combination will help transform your Tudor.
Open Sunday 1-3
Open Sunday 1-3
Showings Sat. by appt.
Ann Wroth 31 WestWood Country Club | Westwood Village ~ $1,299,000 Priced below appraisal! Classic Tudor offers 5,000+sf/5br/4.5ba on 1+acre, 2-car detached garage, attached 2-car garage, exterior Rhino Shield Paint..
314.440.0212 amwroth@aol.com
25 southmoor drive | Clayton ~ $999,000
6br/4.5ba home available in sought after Southmoor! Large level lot backing to Oak Knoll Park, geothermal heat pump.
Ann Wroth | Holly Bry
Holly Bry
Open Sunday 1-3
Holly Bry 3051 thornbury drive | Town and Country ~ $799,950
Family home offering 6br/4.5ba, main floor master suite, hardwood floors, finished walk-out LL & pool. Near shopping, highways, hospitals.
314.276.7727 hfb1226@aol.com
Holly Bry
Proud to Be Locally Owned & Operated Since 1936
7250 lindell boulevard | University City ~ $340,000 Updated throughout including stunning kitchen and fabulous full bath, hardwood floors, close to Clayton, Washington University and Metrolink. Holly Bry
l
GladysManion.com
| townandstyle.com 314.721.4755
l SEPTEMBER 3, 2014
| f 28
Proud to Be Locally Owned & Operated Since 1936
31 Fair oakS drive Ladue ~ $2,695,000 This exquisite decorator’s home built by Covert is finished to perfection! 7,600+ total square feet on 1.8 acres, 3 levels with the finest construction and details. melinda johnson 825.5695 | debi miller 304.0112 Open Sun. 1-3
2120 South WarSon road
Ladue ~ $2,599,000 Three levels of living. Main-floor master plus 4br suites, 2 kitchens, pool, 4-car garage.
stephanie connell 265.4739
32 Clermont lane
Ladue ~ $2,150,000 Cape Cod gem in heart of Ladue. 7,000+sf, main floor master, 5-car garage, pool & patio.
gina bundy 267.6262
33 PiCardy lane
Ladue ~ $1,999,999 Stately Colonial, 1.9 acres. Fully updated, 5br, multiple living areas, saltwater pool.
gina bundy 267.6262
2433 toWn & Country lane
Town and Country ~ $1,675,000 Stately home on 1 acre. 7,175+/- total sf of living space, 6br/7ba, 3-car garage.
melinda johnson 825.5695
Open Sun. 1-3
13074 StarbuCk road Town and Country ~ $1,175,000 2-story, Grotpeter-built, Williamsburg-style. 5br/6ba, main-floor master, chef’s kitchen. stephanie connell 265.4739
18720 doCtorS PaSS lane
Wildwood ~ $899,000 1.5 story Cape Cod, 1+ acres, timber frame, post & beam, views of Babler State Park.
stephanie connell 265.4739
under cOntract
129 eaSt Clinton PlaCe, #3b
Kirkwood ~ $599,000 Heart of Kirkwood luxury penthouse condo. Gated community, impeccable finishes.
linda robben 265.2444 | rex w. schwerdt 800.4755
314.721.4755
l
11 ClydehurSt drive
Webster Groves ~ $525,000 Four plus bedrooms, 3 baths. Charming retreat, exceptionally well updated.
rex w. schwerdt 800.4755 | norma mcgehee 393.1750
GladysManion.com
91 lake ForeSt drive
Clayton ~ $740,000 Lake Forest 5 br/3f, 2h ba. New kitchen, flooring and more. Clayton Schools.
margie kubik 954.2513
Open Sun. 1-3
stephanie connell 265.4739
n ew p rice
3909 Fillmore Street
1022 dauPhine lane
melinda johnson 825.5695
3br/2ba/1,221sf features updated kitchen, hardwood floors, 1-car garage, fenced yard. stephanie connell 265.4739
Holly Hills ~ $224,900 Two-family, great for owner/occupant or convert to single family. 2,800+/- total sf.
l
6 ladue eStateS Creve Coeur ~ $559,000 Fully renovated 3br/2ba on one acre. Cook’s delight kitchen, Sub-Zero, custom cabinets.
Ballwin ~ $164,900
8227 Maryland Avenue, Clayton
Saint Louis’ Finest Homes 972 MaSOnridge rOad
5 SquireS Lane Open Sunday 1 – 3 3 Bridle lane ~ Frontenac ~ $2,275,000
tOwn & COuntry ~ $2,675,000
HuntLeigH ~ $1,795,000
18 gLen abbey drive under COnStruCtiOn
FrOntenaC ~ $1,689,000
Wayne & Ben 314
Wayne Norwood & Ben Patton 314 .629.3931
.721.4755
GladysManion.com
36 Portland Place
12119 Oakcrest Estates Court Under Contract
16 Princeton Avenue New Price ~ Open Sunday 1 – 3
Central West End ~ $1,385,000
Sunset Hills ~ $895,000
University City ~ $549,900
Home is the nicest word there is.
— laura ingalls wilder
new price
Kirkwood 651 North Clay Avenue 5 beds/4.5 baths $849,000 The Denny Team 314-775-2050
Sunset Hills
new price
The Adams Property Team 314-775-2050
Richmond Heights
open sunday, sept 7 ~ 1-3pm
8024 Park Drive 5 beds/3 full, 2 half baths $1,250,000 The Denny Team 314-775-2050
Clayton
sold fast
812 South Central Avenue Elaine Medve 314-726-6442
Town and Country
coming soon!
2427 North Ballas Road $1,050,000 4 beds/5 baths John Rudder 314-726-6442
Weldon Spring
chef ’ s dream kitchen
213 Camelot Drive 4 beds/5 baths $779,900 OwnStl Group 314-726-6442
Select Properties
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| SEPTEMBER 3, 2014
NEIGHBORHOOD GEMS The Daniel Boone Home & Heritage Center
by rebecca koenig
9920 Hilltop Drive 5 beds/5 full, 2 half baths $789,000
WHAT // The Daniel Boone Home & Heritage Center
WHEN // Open daily, except on major holidays WHERE // Defiance, Mo. WHY // To see what life was like in the early 1800s and to learn about our state’s history
WITH THEIR WINDING ROADS, BIKE TRAILS, QUAINT BED AND BREAKFASTS, AND AWARD-WINNING WINERIES, Defiance and Augusta make perfect weekend getaways for city-weary St. Louisans. But it’s not all biking, wining and dining —more historical diversions can be found just a short jaunt off Highway 94. Nestled among rolling hills, the Daniel Boone Home & Heritage Center, owned and operated by Lindenwood University, offers visitors a glimpse of what life was like for one of Missouri’s most famous residents and folk heroes. A $7 ticket gets you a professionally guided tour of the three-story Georgian-style home and includes fascinating stories about Boone and his time in the state. The Boone family settled in Missouri in 1799. At the time, Daniel Boone was well-known throughout Europe and America as an explorer and frontiersman. To draw settlers to the area— then called Upper Louisiana—the Spanish invited him to move from Kentucky, offering him a position as judge and commandant of the Femme Osage District. Technically owned by Boone’s son Nathan, the Defiance home is where Boone passed away in 1820. Impressive even by today’s standards, it would have been considered quite the estate at the time, built with Missouri’s abundant natural resources, including limestone and oak. Although self-guided tours also are available, the professional guides bring history to life, explaining details like holes in the exterior limestone walls, made so the Boones could defend themselves from local Osage Native Americans. And the guides are quick to point out that the kitchen, charming and light-filled today thanks to doors installed after Boone’s time, would have been an unpleasant place where the Boone women spent many hours preparing meals during the winter months. The history alone is worth the trip, but the beauty of the surrounding property is another reason to visit. Situated atop a hill, the home’s porch overlooks the Femme Osage Valley, where large trees and on-site picnic tables offer a pleasant spot to sit and enjoy lunch. What remains of one of Boone’s ‘Judgment Trees,’ where Boone held court, also is on the property, and a memorial Judgment Tree, planted on the 200th anniversary of Boone’s arrival from Kentucky, can be viewed just off the Katy Trail at The Daniel Boone Original Judgment Tree Park in Matson, Mo. Visitors who want to explore beyond the home can tour the surrounding historic village at an additional cost. The display of 19th-century buildings, all transported from within 50 miles of the property, includes a general store, schoolhouse, grist mill and the Old Peace Chapel. The historic site hosts a variety of events throughout the year, including Pioneer Days Sept. 20 and 21, which offer plenty of family-oriented activities such as pioneer games and music. Halloween, Spirits from the Past is Oct. 18 and features a nighttime, lantern-lit tour of the village. In early December, visitors can take the Christmas Candelight Tour for a glimpse of how the holidays were celebrated in Boone’s time.
314.725.0009
NEW LISTING! 1st AVAILABLE 9.6.14
NEW LISTING! 57 LOG CABIN DRIVE | LADUE 5 BEDROOMS, 5 FULL & 3 HALF BATHS $2,200,000 Wonderful home offers salt water pool with stone patio, waterfalls & special gardens all on 2.265 acres.
LONG VIEW FARM | HERMANN 7 BEDROOMS, 6 BATHS $1,999,900 175-acre estate in the heart of wine country. Three lakes, twin swimming pools & stone patios.
11445 CONWAY ROAD | VILLAGE OF WESTWOOD 4 BEDROOMS, 4 FULL & 2 HALF BATHS $1,395,000 Stunning gem overlooking fourth green of Westwood Country Club. 1+ acres. Ladue Schools.
40 LEMP ROAD | KIRKWOOD 10 ACRE WOODED ESTATE $1,385,000 Beautiful 10-acre custom-built home on historic grounds. Borders the Powder Valley Nature Preserve.
NEW PRICE!
NEW LISTING!
NEW LISTING!
NEW LISTING!
16441 WALNUT RAIL DRIVE | CLARKSON VALLEY 5 BEDROOMS, 5½ BATHS $1,270,000 Exceptional home with pool set on picturesque 3+ wooded acres backing to lake. Perfectly appointed throughout.
617 BROOKHAVEN COURT | KIRKWOOD 5 BEDROOMS, 4 FULL & 2 HALF BATHS $899,900 Open floor plan with soaring ceilings, spacious bedrooms, lower level with wine cellar & outdoor entertaining areas.
1 SCARSDALE LANE | LADUE SCHOOLS 4 BEDROOMS, 4 BATHS $699,800 Sophisticated ranch with updated eat-in kitchen, finished lower level and pool.
21 SACKSTON WOODS | CREVE COEUR 5 BEDROOMS, 3 FULL & 2 HALF BATHS $595,000 Sprawling 4,100+ sq. ft. mid-century ranch on a beautiful treed 2-acre lot. Open floor plan.
COMING SOON!
NEW LISTING!
NEW LISTING!
4 ENFIELD ROAD | LADUE SCHOOLS 3 BEDROOMS, 2 BATHS $499,900 Delightful home in Chevy Chase. Updated kitchen, open floor plan, main floor master & finished lower level.
197 CEDAR BRIDGE COURT | CHESTERFIELD 3+ BEDROOMS, 3+ BATHS $450,000 Large, custom atrium entry ranch. Situated on a wooded lot in desirable Ladue Farms Estates.
10 SHERWYN LANE | CREVE COEUR 1+ ACRE $450,000 Outstanding opportunity to build on a level lot in Ladue School District. Convenient location.
7442 STRATFORD AVENUE | UNIVERSITY CITY 3 BEDROOMS, 2 FULL & 2 HALF BATHS $539,000 Lovely home in the Alta Dena neighborhood includes grand fireplace, finished lower level & 2-car garage.
NEW LISTING! 310 NORTH NEWSTEAD AVE. | CENTRAL WEST END 4 BEDROOMS, 2½ BATHS $449,900 Remodeled home with irrisistible kitchen & bath finishes. Carport space under deck & street parking.
12502 TRAMMELL COURT | CREVE COEUR 4 BEDROOMS, 2½ BATHS $329,000 Sits on over half an acre on quiet cul-de-sac. Spacious master suite, hardwood floors & fireplace.
NEW LISTING!
NEW LISTING! 7175 WASHINGTON AVENUE | UNIVERSITY CITY 3 BEDROOMS, 2½ BATHS $449,900 This house has the secret sauce! Location, additions, renovations & charm! Newer kitchen & baths.
19499 HIGHWAY W | CLARKSVILLE 4 BEDROOMS, 2½ BATHS $449,000 Enjoy some of the best views in Missouri! Beautiful 10-acre farm with indoor and outdoor riding ring.
NEW LISTING!
NEW LISTING!
7550 CORNELL | UNIVERSITY CITY 3 BEDROOMS, 2 BATHS $324,900 Colonial style with old world charm. Open living room, dining room, hardwood floors & master suite.
7325 GOFF AVENUE | RICHMOND HEIGHTS 3 BEDROOMS, 1½ BATHS $299,000 Impeccable brick charmer with updated kitchen, stainless appliances, hardwood floors & 2 fireplaces.
308 CHEVAL SQUARE | CHESTERFIELD 4 BEDROOMS, 3 BATHS $329,000 Charming home in Rockwood School District. Open floor plan, updated kitchen & finished lower level.
1501 LOCUST #205 | DOWNTOWN 2 BEDROOMS, 2 BATHS $209,900 Spacious loft condo with two parking spaces. New wood floors, open floor plan & walk-in closets.
See all of our listings at www.dielmannsothebysrealty.com
Tell Your Family, Friends, Colleagues & Coworkers:
1 TEAM
THE # IS SELLING HOMES*
g n i t s AT HOME] o h ROSH HASHANAH
by stephanie zeilenga
*8-1-14 St. Louis Business Journal
Rosh Hashanah, the Jewish New Year, is right around the corner. Celebrate with your loved ones, and perhaps a few close friends, by hosting a dinner party based in tradition, but don’t be afraid to mix it up with a few twists. THE DECOR
314-336-1991 | TheGellmanTeam.com 2203 South Big Bend Boulevard
PREMIER GROUP
PRIVATE FENCED YARD ~ OPEN Sun Sept 7 ~ 1 to 3 pm
155 Carondelet Plaza, #308
$1,450,000
A unique & rare opportunity! This 3,446sf home is one-of-a-kind at Clayton’s most desirable address. Open plan with well-designed flow. Fantastic urban views from three exposures: sunny terrace, roomy balcony and grassy, fenced sideyard. Lavish details and rooms thruout are enhanced with natural materials, exotic finishes and numerous premium upgrades.
• 3br/3.5ba split bedroom layout • Gourmet kitchen: Wolf & Sub-Zero, custom cabinets, granite, breakfast bar, double ovens, 5-burner gas cooktop • Large master suite with garden access and huge custom walk-in closet • Spa-like master bath with jetted tub, separate shower and water closet
Debi Mehlman 314
2774465
dMehlman@MehlmanRealty.com
OFFICE: 7745 Carondelet | Suite 305
Clayton 63105 | 314 726 3320
Taking Real Estate to the Next Level
KIM CARNEY
314 422 7449 I do things differently than other top agents. I don’t stick a sign in the yard “ and hope your home sells. My unique & aggressive marketing plan works! ”
THE MENU
As a nod to tradition, set the table with sliced apples and round challahs, available at a variety of local bakeries, including Kohn’s Deli & Market, which offers vanilla egg and honey wheat challah. Guests will dip the treats in honey as a symbol of hope for the new year (5775). Serve an appetizer of tzimmes, the traditional dish of diced carrots sweetened with honey, brown sugar and sometimes cooked with short ribs.
•
The usual Rosh Hoshanah meal consists of a brisket, chicken, turkey or a whole fish, but consider something different. Peruse cookbooks, such as Yotam Ottolenghi’s Jerusalem or Plenty, for recipes that use traditional ingredients—fish, apples, honey, pomegranates, leeks and dates—in new and interesting ways.
•
If you’d rather let someone else do the heavy lifting in the kitchen, Protzel’s Deli, Kohn’s Deli and Whole Foods offer catered traditional Rosh Hashanah meals.
•
For dessert, serve honey cake from Breadsmith or miniature apple pies from Pie Oh My.
72 Fair Oaks Drive | Ladue 63124 SO
LD
40 Burroughs Lane Ladue | 63124
1448 Topping Road | Town & Country 63131
Coldwell Banker Premier Group TheCarneyTeam.com
1
# #1 company-wide Agent and #1 Coldwell Banker Affiliate Agent in the State of Missouri
2203 South Big Bend Boulevard | Suite 200 | Saint Louis 63117 314-336-1924 | TheCarneyTeam@aol.com
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TOWN&style
| SEPTEMBER 3, 2014
Unlike the secular New Year, Rosh Hashanah is a more subdued affair suitable for a classic, elegant setting. Set out your best linen and china, decorate in shades of white, cream and gold, and light tall, tapered candles.
•
It is tradition to enjoy an unfamiliar fruit as a symbol of tasting the newness of the year: Place colorful bowls of exotic fruit, such as pomegranates, on the table. Sallie Home carries a wide selection of beautiful bowls, including some in gold-flecked glass by Vietro.
•
Place small glass pots or bowls with honey around the table. Also available at Sallie Home is an elegant bee pot and spoon by Vagabond House that looks stunning filled with golden honey.
THE EXTRA TOUCHES Send invites to guests a few weeks in advance. Etsy shop TheJoyofColor makes beautiful watercolor pomegranate cards.
•
If youngsters are attending your get-together, plan a few apple-themed games, such as Apples to Apples, for them to stay entertained. To involve children in the meal preparation, bring them to Eckert’s beforehand to pick apples to serve at the meal.
•
Have plenty of kosher wine on hand for blessings and sipping. Imbibe magazine has a list of the top 10 at imbibemagazine.com/bestkosher-wines.
3 GLOCCA MORA LANE, LADUE N EW E NGLAND C HARMER I 4
BR ,
5.5
BATHS I
$1,549,000
150 CARONDELET PLAZA #901, CLAYTON A MENITY -F ILLED I 2
12 BERKLEY LANE, LADUE
S OUGHT -A FTER F EATURES G ALORE I 4
BR ,
3.5
BATHS I
BR ,
2.5
BATHS
I $895,000
5 COUNTRY ESTATES, FRONTENAC S TUNNING C ONTEMPORARY I 5
$1,100,000
BR ,
4
BATHS
I $849,000
13311 FAIRFIELD CIRCLE, TOWN & COUNTRY F UNCTIONAL , E ASY L IVING I 3
BR ,
4
BATHS
I $615,000
381 CONWAY GARDENS COURT, CREVE COEUR D EFINING L UXURY I 4
BR ,
4.5
BATHS I
CLAYTON - 314.725.5100
$634,500
62 LAKE FOREST DRIVE, RICHMOND HEIGHTS A RCHITECTURAL M ASTERPIECE I 3
WWW .LAURAMCCARTHY . COM
BR ,
2.5
BATHS
I $839,000
TOWN & COUNTRY - 314.569.1177
[NEIGHBORHOOD LISTINGS BY
9| ESTATES AT ENCLAVE BELLERIVE
[ CENTRAL WEST END ]
PORTLAND PLACE 1 1A| 50 superb, 1912 Adam-style residence combines both
9
elegance and comfort and features crisp architectural detailing throughout, with fresh and stylish updates. Impeccably maintained and ideally situated in the park-like setting of Portland Place. $1,495,000 | Jim Human & Kevin Hurley Janet McAfee Inc. | 314.795.9839 314.506.4977 | janetmcafee.com
2
3
2 | 232 N. KINGSHIGHWAY BLVD., NO. 908
The sophisticated Chase Park Plaza condo is a lightfilled corner unit with 3 bedrooms and an ideal layout enhanced by cove ceilings, crown moldings and hardwood floors. Chef’s kitchen boasts marble counters and stainless appliances; master suite has dual closets and a luxurious bathroom. $1,050,000 | Alison Schneider | Laura McCarthy 314.725.5100 | 314.941.0421 | lauramccarthy.com
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[ CHESTERFIELD ]
11
5
6
3½-bath, two-story home tucked behind trees offers a one-of-a-kind living experience. Each room on the main level features a French door opening to the brick patio. $1,250,000 | Dielmann Sotheby’s International Realty 314.725.0009 | dielmannsothebysrealty.com
7
For the first time in many years, this home is available in sought-after Southmoor! It has 6 bedrooms, 4.5 baths, a large level lot backing to Oak Knoll Park, Geothermal heat pump, main-level family room and more. Price Upon Request | Ann Wroth & Holly Bry Gladys Manion Real Estate | 314.440.0212 314.276.7727 | 314.721.4755 | gladysmanion.com
[ COMPTON HEIGHTS ] 7 | 3140 RUSSELL BLVD.
[ CREVE COEUR ]
8 | MANORS AT ENCLAVE BELLERIVE
Fischer & Frichtel’s majestic 1.5-story Greenbriar home from the Signature Collection is the epitome of relaxed elegance. Fischer & Frichtel now offers its prestigious Signature Collection homes on 14 magnificent sites, the largest ones in the community, and all larger than a half acre. From the $900s The Manors at Enclave Bellerive by Fischer & Frichtel 314.469.4436 | villagesatenclavebellerive.com
SPECIAL ADVERTISING FEATURE
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TOWN&style
| SEPTEMBER 3, 2014
13 | 5 SQUIRES LANE
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Truly one-of-a-kind at the most desirable address in Clayton, this 3,446-square-foot residence in The Crescent features outdoor spaces on three exposures, including a fenced side yard. Lavish details, exotic finishes and premium upgrades enhance the 3-bedroom, 3.5-bath home. $1,450,000 Debi Mehlman | Mehlman Homes Realty 314.277.4465 | dmehlman@mehlmanrealty.com
An historic brick home with three bedrooms, three fireplaces and an updated kitchen. $349,900 | Gary Boyson | Janet McAfee Inc. 314.374.5764 | janetmcafee.com
8
[ HUNTLEIGH ]
5|155 CARONDELET PLAZA, NO. 38
6 | 25 SOUTHMOOR DRIVE
A magnificent Georgian thoroughly remodeled for today’s lifestyle offers a stunning kitchen that opens to breakfast area and hearth room. Includes luxurious main-floor master suite and three en-suite bedrooms. Private setting with park-like vistas, pool, patios and covered porch. $1,595,000 | Joan Schnoebelen & Megan Rowe Laura McCarthy | 314.569.1777 | 314.406.0005 314.378.4077 | lauramccarthy.com
| 10910 CLAYTON ROAD 12 12 Sanctuary found! A private 4-bedroom,
Gorgeous two-story, elegant home located on a quiet street lined with big, beautiful trees. Four spacious bedrooms are all located on second floor, and home has 2.5 baths. Center hall plan with 9-foot ceilings. $2,800/month for lease Kelly Manion | West End Management 314.629.2971 | westendmgt.com
[ CLAYTON ]
A luxury 2,690-square-foot ranch features 2 bedrooms, 2 ½ baths and a three-car side entry garage. Inside and out, builder Simon Homes focuses on open styling and spacious, luxury living. The free-standing villas are customized to your lifestyle and situated on generously proportioned homesites that include landscaping, irrigation and snow removal. From the $700s The Villas at Enclave Bellerive by Simon Homes 314.469.4888 | villagesatenclavebellerive.com
11 | 19 PORTLAND DRIVE
4 | 14554 FAIRFIELD FARM DRIVE
4
10 | VILLAS AT ENCLAVE BELLERIVE
[ FRONTENAC ]
3 | 5201 WESTMINSTER PLACE
Beautifully appointed landmark home in significant private neighborhood offers understated elegance and captivating architectural details. The three-plus-story home was built in 1900 but has 2014 livability, and it’s within walking distance of St. Louis hotspots. $965,000 | Dielmann Sotheby’s International Realty 314.725.0009 | dielmannsothebysrealty.com
The 1 ½-story, 4,262-square-foot Bentley home from McKelvey Homes’ Luxury Portfolio lets you experience life at its finest. We have 11 prime homesites on a private cul-de-sac backing to lavishly landscaped common ground that creates a park-like setting. From the $800s The Estates at Enclave Bellerive by McKelvey Homes 314.469.4446 | villagesatenclavebellerive.com
One of Huntleigh’s very best settings, this 1.5-story Bernoudy is a balance of function, form and symmetry. Balconies and terraces overlook estate grounds with pool, spa and classic wine cellar. Lot is level, with walkout above grade, 4-car garage and private setting. $1,795,000 | Wayne Norwood & Ben Patton Gladys Manion Real Estate | 314.721.4755 314.629.3931 | gladysmanion.com
[ LADUE ]
14 | 32 CLERMONT LANE
14
15
A Cape Cod-style gem, with more than 7,000 square feet, sits on a professionally landscaped lot in the heart of Ladue. Featuring a five-car garage, private pool, patio, and main-floor master suite with his and her bathrooms. $2,150,000 Gina Bundy | Gladys Manion Real Estate 314.267.6262 | 314.721.4755 | gladysmanion.com
15 | 72 FAIR OAKS DRIVE
An English charmer with 5 bedrooms and 5.5 baths in the highly sought-after Fair Oaks neighborhood has a gourmet kitchen and updated his and hers private baths. Set on a nearly 1-acre, professionally landscaped, level yard, there is a heated Pebble Tec pool and rock waterfall that flows into a koi pond. $1,069,000 Kim Carney, The Carney Team Coldwell Banker Premier Group 314.422.7449 | thecarneyteam.com
16 16 | 8919 PINE ACRE ROAD
A charming, historical home on 1.26 acres, is completely renovated with a crisp and spacious interior. Enormous updated kitchen offers plentiful storage, and the move-in-ready home includes three fireplaces and a three-car garage. $929,000 Kathy Driscoll | Janet McAfee Real Estate 314.704.1474 | janetmcafee.com/kathydriscoll
T&S HOME [ RICHMOND HEIGHTS ] 17 17 | 8024 PARK DRIVE
Architecturally amazing, this castle-like three-story Hampton Park home offers more than 5,900 square feet on a 1.5-plus acre lot. Includes magnificent spaces for entertaining and enjoyment. $1,250,000 | The Denny Team Berkshire Hathaway HomeServices Select Properties 314.775.2055 | soldonstouis.com
18 18 | 1066 TERRACE DRIVE
Amazing opportunity in Clayton schools: home with 3 bedrooms, 1.5 baths and beautiful details throughout. Notable features include attached garage, four-seasons room, large and private backyard, gleaming hardwood floors, and beamed ceiling. $274,900 | Sally Goldkamp Gladys Manion Real Estate 314.479.9396 | gladysmanion.com
19 [ ST. LOUIS CITY ]
21 | 930 REVERE DRIVE
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22 | 12855 KENT MANOR DRIVE
22
23 | 7448 AMHERST AVE.
A wonderful English Tudor boasts diagonal-leaded windows, plantation shutters and refinished hardwood floors. The living room offers handsome details, stone fireplace and built-ins, and the eat-in kitchen has custom cabinets, stainless appliances and granite countertops. Finished lower level. $339,000 | Jean Schneider | Laura McCarthy 314.725.5100 | 314.973.3065 | lauramccarthy.com
Great neighborhood with updated bungalow south of Carondelet Park. Home has hardwood floors, new kitchen in 2006, newer windows and HVAC, finished lower level, and a one-car garage. $149,900 | Kathy Bussmann | Janet McAfee Inc. janetmcafee.com | 314.997.4800
[ TOWN & COUNTRY ]
[ WILDWOOD ]
20 | 2433 TOWN AND COUNTRY LANE
20
Spectacular 5-bedroom, 3.5-bath showplace is extensively updated and sits on a picturesque 1.34-acre cul-de-sac lot. The more than 4,000 square feet of living space includes finished walkout lower level, gourmet kitchen, breakfast room, vaulted four seasons room and luxury master suite. $699,000 | Mark & Neil Gellman The Gellman Team | Coldwell Banker Premier 314.336.1991 | thegellmanteam.com
23 [ UNIVERSITY CITY ]
19 | 7021 TRAINOR COURT
The fabulous floor plan has impeccable finishes and features and all the amenities discriminating buyers require. The 7,175-total-square-foot home may well be your dream house, with 6 bedrooms, 5 full and 2 half baths, and three-car garage. $1,675,000 | Melinda Johnson Gladys Manion Real Estate 314.825.5695 | gladysmanion.com
Take a time-honored floor plan, give it a contemporary setting, and voila! You have distinctive style that is at once dramatic and comfortable. The 1-acre lot offers privacy and space for a pool. $850,000 | Dielmann Sotheby’s International Realty 314.725.0009 | dielmannsothebysrealty.com
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24 | VINTAGE GROVE
Vintage Grove will feature our exclusive and elegant new Louis Collection, five unique designs that include upscale ranch, 1.5-story and 2-story homes. From the $490,000s | Donna Cusumano Payne Family Homes 314.565.8465 | paynefamilyhomes.com
“Restored my faith in insurance companies.” Member enthusiasm like this inspires us every day. PURE is a member-owned insurer for responsible families with homes insured for $1 million or more. Innovative. Proactive. And dedicated to an exceptional member experience. TM Fonda Hereford of AHM Insurance Group is among a select group of brokers authorized to help clients join PURE.
(314) 523-8800 fhereford@ahmins.com
HIGH VALUE HOMEOWNERS | AUTOMOBILES | JEWELRY, ART & COLLECTIONS | WATERCRAFT | PERSONAL EXCESS LIABILITY PURE® refers to Privilege Underwriters Reciprocal Exchange, a Florida-domiciled reciprocal insurer & member of PURE Group of Insurance Companies. PURE Risk Management, LLC (PRM), a for profit entity, serves as PURE’s Attorney-In-Fact for a fee. PURE membership requires Subscriber’s Agreement. Visit pureinsurance.com for details. Trademarks are property of PRM used with permission. ©2014 PURE.
SEPTEMBER 3, 2014
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Grand Opening Friday, September 5th! We offer a wide range of antique, unique and boutique items. We have many talented vendors displaying their creative works that they have found, refurbished, up-cycled or just added their own personal touch. Painted furniture, home decor, jewelry, art, bath and body items, etc. We truly have Everything from A to Chic! Located in Chesterfield, MO near the valley!
I Love To Clean! Let Me Show You! Deep, Thorough & Detailed Cleaning. My Job Isn’t Done Until You Are 100% Satisfied. 15 Years Experience. Excellent Ref’s. Please Call Dana - 636-577-7158
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ANTIQUES/COLLECTIBLES COLLECTOR PAYS TOP $ Guns Old or New Military Items Swords & Knives Antiques of Any Type Fishing Tackle Steve Lapin (314) 571-9427 (618) 271-8200
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TOWN&style
| SEPTEMBER 3, 2014
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BI-STATE CONCRETE
Specializing in Residential TearOut & Replacement, Professional Workmanship, Driveways, Patios, Sidewalks, Porches, Steps, Garage Floors, Exposed Aggregate, Repair Work, Stamped Concrete, Custom Patterns & Colors 8062 Watson Rd. 63119 314-849-7520 Family Owned Serving the Area Since 1963 Insured • Free Estimates
RENT • SELL 314-773-1930 RememberMeCostumes.com 1021 Russell in Historic Soulard Hours: 11-6 Mon-Sat Or By Appointment
EDUCATION/TUTORS GUITAR LESSONS
Acoustic/Clues/Folk/Electric Berkelee College of Music Certified Instructor Beginners to Advanced Mosby Music Group (636) 368-5085 (314) 973-2882
ESTATE BUYING JSD ESTATE BUYERS
WE NEED GOLD!!! Also Jewelry, Diamonds & Colored Stones We will separate your real from costume. Immediate payment since 1976. Call Jamie at 314-997-1707 A division of Albarre’ Jewelry
GUTTERS/ROOFING THE GUTTER GUY
Cleaning, Repairs, Drainage Solutions, Screen Installation & Window Cleaning Professional, Reliable & Insured No Mess Left Behind • Free Estimates Contact Tony 314-413-2888 thegutterguy-stl@hotmail.com
HANDYMAN SERVICES
HOME IMPROVEMENT Kitchens, Bathrooms, Basements AND MORE!
EMPLOYMENT OPPORTUNITY We are looking for an experienced full-time sales representative to join our rapidly growing publication. Candidate should have a minumum of three years sales experience preferably in media-related environment. Great opportunity and fantastic work environment. Please send resume and references to jobs@townandstyle.com or mail to: Sales Rep,
Licensed • Bonded • insured FuLL-serVice, cerTiFied remodeLer
KELKAT Construction & Remodeling
FREE ESTIMATES 314-249-6905 CERTIFIEd GRAnITE InSTALLER
LAWN & GARDEN
Town & Style 121 Hunter Ave., Ste. 201, St. Louis, Mo 63124.
Town & Style is an equal opportunity employer.
HELP WANTED
Looking for women who live in/near Chesterfield to work part time at West County’s most unique wine shop/bar. Some wine knowledge needed. 636-536-0711
HOME HEALTHCARE St. LouiS
314.631.1989 St. CharLeS
636.724.4357
“Helping people remain independent & safe at home.”
Complete Lawn Maintenance for Commercial & Residential Aeration, Overseeding, Fertilizing, Planting, Sodding, Seeding, Mowing, Mulching, Edging, Spraying, Weeding, Pruning, Trimming, Bed Maintenance, Dethatching, Brush Removal, Retaining Walls, Paver Patios & Drainage Work Licensed Landscape Architect & Designer Member of BBB For a Free Estimate Call 314-426-8833 www.mplandscapingstl.com Licensed Landscape Architect & Designer
-Allen and Sally Serfas, Founders
RELIABLE HOME SERVICES
Home Improvement Projects Kitchen, bath, painting, drywall, and general repairs. Decks, garage organizing, landscaping Commited to professional quality customer satisfaction. Ref’s provided. CALL EDWARD 314-651-8832 OR EMAIL edgo1414@yahoo.com
HAULING GOT TRASH?
Call Rod; For Entire House Cleanout, Yard Waste Removal, Appliances, Hoarding Situations & More. Reasonable Prices. Same Day Service. 314-713-HAUL (4285)
stlhomecare.com
HOME IMPROVEMENT REMODEL & REPAIR
Rotted Wood, Painting, Tile, Drywall, Floors, Electrical, Carpentry, Plumbing, Power Washing. Insured. Free Est. 37 Years Experience. Don Phillips 314-973-8511
MARTIN WIPE~N~SHINE
Window Cleaning • Gutters Exterior & Interior Painting CALL HERBERT (618) 610-2321 Serving the St. Louis Area SCHEDULE YOUR APPOINTMENT ONLINE AT www.martinwipenshine.com 20% OFF FOR NEW CUSTOMERS
YEAR ROUND MAINTENANCE • Mulching • Edging all garden beds • Cutting Back Perennials • New Plantings • Seasonal Pots Specializing in Landscape Design & Year Round Maintenance Call 314-498-0877
PAINTING M & M CUSTOM PAINTING Interior & Exterior Painting, Staining, Powerwashing, Wallpaper Removal. Insured and Free Estimates. Dependable. Owner & Operator Matt 314-401-9211
PAINTING
Full Service, Affordable, Experienced Call Dan 314-706-3201
PLUMBING
TREE SERVICES Stump Removal • Trimming • Shaping • Removals • Cabling Spraying • Residential • Commercial • Plant Healthcare
636-391-9944
www.omnitreeservice.com omnitree@omnitreeservice.com Member Local & National Arborists Associations
155 CARONDELET PLAZA, NO. 308 | $1,450,000 | 1-3 P.M. | 314.277.4465 DMEHLMAN@MEHLMANHOMESREALTY.COM
[ 63116]
REAL ESTATE
SERVICES $ CASH 4 OLD STUFF $
---------Light Hauling--------We Cleanup, Haul Away and/or Purchase: Garage, Estate and Moving Sales! Also, Warehouse, Business & Storage LockerLeftovers! FAY FURNITURE 618-271-8200
TREE SERVICE PROFESSIONALS
Trimming • Deadwooding Reduction • Removals Stump grinding • Year round service • Fully insured Contact Michael Baumann for a free estimate & property inspection at 636-375-2812 You’ll be glad you called!
TREE SERVICES
TUCKPOINTING & MASONRY
20+ Years Experience ALL WORK GUARANTEED Complete Home Tuckpointing Spot Tuckpointing with Color Match Chimney Repair & Rebuilding Brick or Stone Patio & Walkway Repair CULTURED STONE FIRE PITS & FIRE PLACES WATER FEATURES Free Estimates • Insured tuckpointingandmasonry.com 314-352-4222 All Major Credit Cards Accepted
WINDOW CLEANING Tree Removal, Brush Removal, Pruning, Plant Healthcare, Deadwooding, Stump Grinding, Deep Root Fertilization, Cabling & Storm Cleanup Over 40 Years Experience For a free estimate call 314-426-2911 or email us at info@buntonmeyerstl.com
[ 63130]
8024 PARK DRIVE | $1, 250,000 | 1-3 P.M. | 314-775-2055 SOLDONST.LOUIS.COM
7946 TEASDALE AVE. | $385,000 | 1-3 P.M. | 314.997.4800 JANETMCAFEE.COM
91 LAKE FOREST DRIVE | $740,000 | 1-3 P.M. | 314.721.4755 GLADYSMANION.COM
7448 AMHERST AVE. | $339,000 | 1-3 P.M. | 314.725.5100 LAURAMCCARTHY.COM
[ 63122]
[ 63132]
11511 CRAGWOLD ROAD | $849,000 | 1-3 P.M. | 314.569.1177 LAURAMCCARTHY.COM
8 ARBOR ROAD | $899,000 | 1-3 P.M. | 314.997.4800 JANETMCAFEE.COM
[ 63124]
929 ALANSON DRIVE | $289,900 | 1-3 P.M. | 314.997.4800 JANETMCAFEE.COM
14 DUNLEITH DRIVE | $890,000 | 1-3 P.M. | 314.997.4800 JANETMCAFEE.COM 850 KENT ROAD | $1,649,000 | 1-3 P.M. | 314.997.4800 JANETMCAFEE.COM
Our Family Owned & Operated Residential Window Cleaning Company is Insured, Fast, Efficient, & Trusted. Gutter Cleaning • Power Washing Now offering House Cleaning Services Deep cleanings • Basic Cleanings FREE ESTIMATES Call Today 314-322-0655 NavarroWindowCleaning@gmail.com
[ 63368]
1040 GOLDEN ORCHARD DRIVE | $261,275 | 1-3 P.M. | 314.997.4800 JANETMCAFEE.COM
[SOLD!] [ 63005 ]
[ 63122 ]
18016 BONHOMME BEND COURT | $875,000 COLDWELL BANKER GUNDAKER-T&C | AGENT: KEVIN MCCARTY PR/SQFT: $174.13
614 W. WASHINGTON AVE. | $610,713 BERKSHIRE HATHAWAY HOMESERVICES SELECT PROPERTIES AGENT: DIANE DENNY PR/SQFT: $232.92
[ 63017 ]
123 E. ESSEX AVE. | $1,000,000 LAURA MCCARTHY-CLAYTON | AGENT: ANNE HIZAR PR/SQFT: $270.34
17704 COPPER TRAIL COURT | $612,000 BERKSHIRE HATHAWAY HOMESERVICES SELECT PROPERTIES AGENT: DONNA GIAMALVA PR/SQFT: $151.79
14640 SUMMER BLOSSOM LANE | $593,000 COLDWELL BANKER GUNDAKER-T&C | AGENT: ETTY MASOUMY PR/SQFT: $178.40
[ 63038 ]
3122 SUMMIT VIEW PLACE DRIVE | $699,800 KELLER WILLIAMS REALTY ST. LOUIS | AGENT: JAMES VATTEROTT
[ 63105 ]
155 CARONDELET PLAZA NO. 806 | $1,050,000 LAURA MCCARTHY-CLAYTON | AGENT: ALLISON ROSSINI PR/SQFT: $351.17 43 RIDGEMOOR DRIVE | $1,077,500 GLADYS MANION | AGENT: ANN WROTH PR/SQFT: $340.23 7545 WESTMORELAND AVE. | $1,246,000 BERKSHIRE HATHAWAY HOMESERVICES SELECT PROPERTIES AGENT: DIANE DENNY PR/SQFT: $327.89
[ 63108 ]
Complete Tree Service for Residential & Commercial
2628 MCKNIGHT CROSSING COURT | $118,000 | 1-3 P.M. | 314.997.4800 JANETMCAFEE.COM
[ 63117]
314-725-6159
TUCKPOINTING
9119 CLAYTON ROAD | $998,000 | 2-4 P.M. | 314.997.4800 JANETMCAFEE.COM
32 CLERMONT LANE | $2,150,000 | 1-3 P.M. | 314.721.4755 GLADYSMANION.COM
PRUNING ■ FERTILIZATION PLANTING ■ SPRAYING TRIMMING ■ REMOVAL
Insured gammatree.com
67 WOODOAKS TRAIL | $829,000 | 1-3 P.M. | 314.997.4800 JANETMCAFEE.COM
3909 FILLMORE ST. | $224,900 | 1-3 P.M. | 314.721.4755 GLADYSMANION.COM
Tim Gamma B.S. Horticulture Board Certified Master Arborist Tom Gamma Certified Arborist
LADUE SENIOR SERVICES Caring Companionship for Senior Citizens Locally owned, we offer a variety of non-medical services & compassionate care to enhance the daily lives of senior citizens who could use a little extra attention. Affordable eldercare is available both in-home and in retirement centers. We are here to enhance the lives of the senior citizens you love! Jennifer Row McLaughlin 314-971-5052 ladueseniorservices@gmail.com
[ 63105]
305 N. BEMISTON AVE. | $819,000 | 1-3 P.M. | 314.997.4800 JANETMCAFEE.COM
A+ rated from BBB Serving St. Louis for over 30 years 314.965.9377 www.TonyLaMartinaPlumbing.com $20 off any service call Please present ad - Expires 10/10/14
Premier custom home development firm Michael Lauren Development LLC seeks suitable infill building lots in Frontenac, Ladue & Clayton. Developer will purchase your home “as is” and homeowner will pay no commission on the sale and can have close dates of up to 6 months. Call 303.898.3527
>> sunday 9/7 <<
Free Estimates • Certified Arborist
TONY LAMARTINA PLUMBING
HAVE A LOT TO SELL?
[OPEN] HOUSES
415 VENNEMAN AVE. | $535,000 LAURA MCCARTHY-TOWN & COUNTRY | AGENT: CARLA BRITTON PR/SQFT: $198.44
[ 63124 ]
2 TAMARACK DRIVE | $539,500 JANET MCAFEE | AGENT: BARBARA WULFING PR/SQFT: $221.74 16 ELLSWORTH LANE | $675,000 LAURA MCCARTHY-TOWN & COUNTRY | AGENT: SUSAN MCLAUGHLIN PR/SQFT: $176.66 44 GODWIN LANE | $950,000 DIELMANN SOTHEBY’S INTERNATIONAL REALTY | AGENT: TED WIGHT PR/SQFT: $307.64 2000 LOG CABIN LANE | $1,125,000 GLADYS MANION | AGENT: WAYNE NORWOOD PR/SQFT: $207.72 37 CLERMONT LANE | $1,250,000 JANET MCAFEE | AGENT: CHRISTINE THOMPSON PR/SQFT: $270.21 628 HIGH HAMPTON ROAD | $1,575,000 GLADYS MANION | AGENT: WAYNE NORWOOD PR/SQFT: $279.85
600 S. PRICE ROAD | $2,100,000 4466 WEST PINE BLVD. NO. 24 F&G | $540,000 LAURA MCCARTHY-CLAYTON | AGENT: STUART MINTON DIELMANN SOTHEBY’S INTERNATIONAL REALTY | AGENT: SABRINA ROBB PR/SQFT: $321.49 PR/SQFT: $274.11
[ 63119 ]
417 SOUTH PARK AVE. | $365,000 LAURA MCCARTHY-CLAYTON | AGENT: LUCYANN BOSTON PR/SQFT: $173.81 420 ALGONQUIN PLACE | $644,000 LAURA MCCARTHY-TOWN & COUNTRY | AGENT: LINDA HODGE PR/SQFT: $194.03 644 LOCKSLEY PLACE | $881,000 BERKSHIRE HATHAWAY HOMESERVICES ADVANTAGE AGENT: PETER VISHION PR/SQFT: $198.96
[ 63130 ]
7434 STRATFORD AVE. | $435,000 DIELMANN SOTHEBY’S INTERNATIONAL REALTY | AGENT: TED WIGHT PR/SQFT: $171.53
[ 63131 ]
12832 HUNTERCREEK ROAD | $379,900 BERKSHIRE HATHAWAY HOMESERVICES SELECT PROPERTIES AGENT: ELEANOR LYONS PR/SQFT: $144.72 10354 CAPITOL PLACE | $440,000 DIELMANN SOTHEBY’S INTERNATIONAL REALTY | AGENT: JOANNE E. QUICK PR/SQFT: $216.32
SEPTEMBER 3, 2014
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small charities big impact