812-856-4283 [email protected] Ja

Total Page:16

File Type:pdf, Size:1020Kb

812-856-4283 Uclub@Indiana.Edu Ja University Club VOLUME 22, ISSUE 2 NewsJ U L Y 2 0 1 3 Dear University Club Members and Friends, Inside News As June has arrived, I have officially taken over the duties of president of the University Club from Ed and Linda Heath. They did a wonderful job as co-presidents and they will be a tough act to follow. I have learned a great deal from them and I look forward to learning even more as the board works together to make the University Club better and stronger. We are fortunate to have so many dedicated people serving on the board. The UClub Office will Kate Kroll and Suzanne Phillips have graciously agreed to serve together as co-vice presidents be closed July 4 and and I know that they will make a strong team and do a good job for the club. They are already 5th for the Holiday. planning some great events for the coming year and I am excited to tell you that we are once again hosting the Madrigal Dinner this December. Carolyn Anderson and Suzanne Roberts have planned some interesting programs for the Luncheon Program Club as well. Be sure to read your monthly newsletters for all the details on all the upcoming programs and events. I also wish to congratulate Marilyn Uselding, who is the new Women’s Club president. Here is the list of the current University Club board officers: Jazz in July UCLUB BOARD OFFICERS FOR 2013-2014 President Marilyn Brinley Annual Picnic Buffet Co-Vice-Presidents Kate Kroll and Suzanne Phillips Secretary Barbara Steininger Friday, July 12, 2013 Treasurer Phil Hathaway Past Co-Presidents Ed and Linda Heath See flyer inside for Academic TBA Community Ed Heath more details IMU Director Bruce Jacobs Webmaster Lu Cregar Women’s Club Marilyn Uselding, President Women’s Club Kathleen Boggess, First Vice-President Luncheon Program Club Carolyn Anderson and Suzanne Roberts House Carol Pierce, Kate Kroll, TBA Indiana Memorial Union Membership TBA 900 E. 7th Street Publicity Ruth Albright Scholarship Suzanne Philips Bloomington, IN 47405 Club Manager Barb Aspy Office: 812-855-1325 Fax: 812-856-4283 I wish to acknowledge and thank those who served on the board last year. We could not do this job without your help. Thank you all. www.indiana.edu/~uclub E-mail: Yours, [email protected] Marilyn Brinley 1 Table of Contents Presidents’ Letter………..……………………………………..1 University Club Notes and Information………..………...……3 University Club Special Events Jazz in July………………………….....………………....4 UWC—Membership Tea...………….…………………...…....5 Be Our Guest………………………………………………….6 Meadowood Trips, Events and Theater…….………............7-12 Interest Group Information………….………………...…..13-19 General Membership dues are due and payable by July 15th. Single Membership $60.00 Family Membership $80.00 If you have any questions, please contact the office at 855-1325. 2 UClub Notices Speaker Luncheons: Payment for a luncheon entitles you to 2 hours free parking in the IMU Lot 1 and Lot 2. As has always been the case, if you would like to hear the speakers, but cannot make the lunch, you are more than welcome to join in and sit on a comfortable chair and listen. Speakers usually start about 12:15 p.m. and go to approximately 1:00 p.m. or short- ly thereafter. Reservations: Reservations are required for events. In many cases, a meal choice is also requested. If you make a reservation and do not cancel by the deadline date for the event and do not attend the event, you will be invoiced for the cost for the event. Prepayment Events: Some programs require pre-payment by the deadline date for an event. If you make a reservation and pre-payment is not received either in person or by mail by the deadline date, you will be removed from the attendance list. Future Events: As always, we do have a group of people planning UClub events and Luncheon Speakers. If you have an idea to share regarding future events, please contact the office at 855-1325. Your ideas will be passed on to the appropriate people. Reminder for Parking: Just visiting the IMU for some reason or any other place on cam- pus and parking at the IMU? Don’t forget, your membership entitles you to 1/2 off the parking rates. Stop in the office between 9:00 a.m. and 3:00 p.m. to have your parking ticket stamped. For those with Food Allergies: Please let us know if you have food allergies when order- ing your meals. Currently, all sauces and gravies are made with vegetable stock. Credit Cards: Unfortunately, the University Club does not accept credit cards. Dues: General Membership Renewal Notices were distributed in May, and will be due no later than July 15th. Any membership not renewed by July 15th will be considered delinquent and member privileges will be revoked. Life Membership and Meadowood Membership will be sent out in July and due by September 15th. Any membership not renewed by September 15th will be considered delinquent and member privileges will be revoked. Life Membership and Meadowood Membership renewals can be made by an email, sending the form back or calling the office at 855-1325 . 3 University Club proudly announces our annual azz in July Picnic Dinner to be held on Friday, July 12, 2013 in the Presidents’ Room of the UClub. Cocktails and light snacks at 7:00 p.m. Light Summer Buffet starting at 7:30 p.m. until ?? July 12 at the IU Museum in the Sculpture Terrace—Double Feature 6:30 p.m. Hip Harp Jazz Trio - In commemoration of the 9th USA International Harp Competition, Jazz in July is proud to feature the Hip Harp Jazz Trio. Led by harpist Jan Aldridge Clark, the trio offers a unique and hip blend of jazz, rock, Irish, and African sounds. 8:00pm - Tonos Triad - Indianapolis-based trio Tonos Triad has continued to push beyond the boundaries of genre. Reminiscent of a combination of Astor Piazzolla and John Zorn, Tonos Triad’s music offers a diverse, and almost im- possible to label sound. Menu Vichyssoise Soup Sliced tomato with cucumber, red onion and feta cheese tossed in a basil dressing Pasta Salad Sliced Ham, baked and fried chicken Iced water at tables, Coffee, Iced Tea, and Lemonade Desserts Karen Whiteside—Chair Committee: Rob and Barb Aspy, Marilyn Brinley, Bob Cutter, Paula Griesel, Jackie Harding, Ed and Linda Heath, Sally Isom, Martha Smiley, Bob Whiteside, Sondra Woodhouse Cost: $18 for members and $20 for guests. Reservation Deadline: Tuesday, July 9th @ Noon If you make a reservation and do not attend and no cancellation was received by Noon on July 9th, the University Club will bill you for the event. Name:_______________________________ $ 18.00 Make checks payable to: Name:_______________________________ $ 18.00 University Club IMU, #150 Guest:_______________________________ $ 20.00 900 E. 7th St. Bloomington, IN 47405 Guest:_______________________________ $ 20.00 Payment can be sent to the UClub or pay at the door. This event was planned for by the University Club 4 You’re Invited -BRING A FRIEND! University Women’s Club August Membership Tea August 15, 2013 2 P.M. TO 4 P.M. The UWC has planned this Tea for you to share Your Club & favorite Interest Groups with your Friends and promote membership. Come and enjoy Tea & Refreshments with us! This is a free event but reservations are required Thursday, August 15, 2013 Indiana Memorial Union ……. Presidents’ Room R.S.V.P to Barb Aspy by August 8, 2013 855-1325 or [email protected] 5 Be Our Guest is the invitation the University Club has extended in recent years to individuals who have never been a University Club member. This invitation gives folks a special incentive to attend an event or program FREE and become familiar with the club. They can experience the fun and gain the knowledge that programs provide and also meet the interesting and stimulating individuals who make up the University Club membership. Anyone can click the Be Our Guest button near the lower left of the web site home page to see the current list of events and programs for which they can register for FREE. There is no obligation to become a member but we are confident that once a person has a taste of the club, they will be eager to join. This is also an excellent way for every current member to introduce a member prospect to the club. All a person needs to do to Be Our Guest is to call the club office (812.855.1325) to be added to the participant list for an event or program. July 4th 6 The Spirit of Bardstown July 17 – 19, 2013 Wed Depart 7:30, Tour Bardstown Pioneer Village (historic buildings + pass to several museums); Lunch at historic Old Talbott Tavern* Spirits of Bourbon Trolley Tour. My Old Kentucky Home tour (Stephen Foster’s inspiration) Happy hour, Dinner at historic Kurtz Restaurant*; Stephen Foster, The Musical overnight—Hampton Inn Thu Basilica tour and shopping Gourmet lunch on My Old Kentucky Train Willett Distillery Tour (operating since the Civil War) Happy hour, Dinner at BJ’s Steakhouse* Hampton Inn Fri Tour Wickland (home to three governors) Return to Pioneer Village (see more of the buildings and museums) Lunch at Rickhouse * (serving a bourbon inspired menu) Tour Oscar Getz Museum of Whiskey History (a 50 year collection of rare whiskey artifacts). Arrive Meadowood about 6pm $385 double, $495 single includes bus transportation, 2 nights lodging, 2 breakfasts, 1 lunch (meals marked * are not included in the trip price), 2 “happy hour” gatherings, admissions, tours, and musical production, and snacks and drinks on the bus.
Recommended publications
  • Springtime in the Hoosier & Bluegrass States
    Springtime in the Hoosier & Bluegrass States May 11 - 21, 2015 HIGHLIGHTS Bridgeton Mill and Covered Bridge Churchill Downs Jim Beam Distillery My Old Kentucky Home State Park Keeneland Race Track Visit the Renfro Valley Music Covered Bridge Capital of the World Cumberland Falls Corvette Museum and Plant Tour Mammoth Cave Tour Paducah Quilt Museum “Sound of Music” at Circa 21 Playhouse “I didn’t realize how much Kentucky had to offer!” Wendy Nilsson, Minneapolis MAP AT A GLANCE Illinois Rockville Ohio Indiana West Baden Renfro Valley Music Springs Kentucky Louisville Lexington Mt Vernon Paducah Bowling Green “Travel with R&J to see the best of the US from small towns to big cities, well known and little heard of attractions. R&J knows where to find them all and have fun doing it.” Margaret, St. Paul 98 West Baden Springs Hotel Day 1 - Home to Bloomington, IL our travels take us to the Turkey Run State Park. Our home tonight We begin our springtime tour headed south to the beautiful states of will be the Turkey Run Inn. We dine this evening in their warm Indiana and Kentucky. So it’s over the river and through Wisconsin and cozy dining room and have time to explore and enjoy the area we go today. Our first stop is at a favorite R&J Restaurant for lunch. before turning in. We’ll continue this afternoon, getting to know our fellow travelers Included Meals: Breakfast, Lunch, Dinner on our luxury motorcoach! Hotel: Turkey Run Inn Included Meals: Lunch Hotel: Comfort Suites Day 3 - Rockville to West Baden Springs, IN After enjoying a great hot breakfast, take a little time to enjoy the Day 2 – Bloomington to Rockville, IN beauty of the park before we board our coach head out for the day.
    [Show full text]
  • 2015 National AITC Conference
    2015 National AITC Conference Friday, June 19, 2015 Tours Galt House Hotel, Louisville, Kentucky #1 Historic Kentucky Lunch at the Old Talbott Tavern The Talbott Tavern has been nationally recognized for its significant place in American History. This tavern has been continuously operated since it was built (except the time necessary to repair fire damage) in the same building and at the same location. Since the late 1700s, the Old Talbott Tavern on Court Square has provided shelter, food and drink to American travelers. It has been a silent witness to a stunning array of historical personages and events right out of the pages of American history. These historical figures sought food and shelter here during their travels: as a young boy Abraham Lincoln and his family; Gen. George Rogers Clark; Daniel Boone; and exiled French King, Louis Phillipe and his entourage stayed here, even painting murals on the upstairs walls. There are noticeable bullet holes in the now faded paintings where it is legend that Jesse James shot them. My Old Kentucky Home The house that came to symbolize Kentucky’s gracious hospitality, and according to legend, inspired Stephen Collins Foster to write his immortal song, “My Old Kentucky Home” is one of the most cherished historical sites in the commonwealth. Built between 1795 and 1818, Federal Hill, the home of Judge John Rowan, became a part of the Kentucky State Parks System on February 26, 1936. Located near Bardstown in Nelson County, the house and estate had been the home of the Rowan family for three generations, spanning a period of 120 years.
    [Show full text]
  • Historic Preservation in Kentucky
    Historic Preservation in Kentucky by John I. Gilderbloom, Erin E. House, and Matthew J. Hanka Sponsored by Preservation Kentucky, Inc. Acknowledgements Preservation Kentucky, Inc. Kentucky Department of Tourism Joanna Hinton, Executive Director Capital Plaza Tower 22nd Floor P.O. Box 262 500 Mero Street Hodgenville, Kentucky 42748 Frankfort, Kentucky 40601 Kentucky Heritage Council Sustainable Urban Neighborhoods Donna Neary, Executive Director and State Historic Preservation Officer Urban Studies Institute 300 Washington Street University of Louisville Frankfort, Kentucky 40601 426 West Bloom Street Louisville, KY 40208 Kentucky State Data Center/ Kentucky Population Research University of Louisville Kentucky Institute of Environment and Sustainable Urban Studies Institute Development (KIESD) 426 W. Bloom Street Russ Barnett Louisville, Kentucky 40208 Office of the Vice-President for Research University of Louisville City of Newport Louisville, Kentucky 40292 636 Monmouth Street Newport, Kentucky 41071 City of Covington Gail J. Melvin, Economic Development and Community Relations Director 638 Madison Avenue Covington, KY 41011 Distinguished members of our Advisory Panel Joanna Hinton, Holly Weidermann, Jody Robinson, Donna Neary, Zanne Jefferies, Cash Moter, Merrill Moter, Mark Issacs, Hal B. Goode, Elaine Walker, Dick Heaton, Chris Black, Shailen Bhatt, Tommy Turner, Tom Sheeran, Gail Melvin, Mayor Lisle Cheatham, Charles Raith, Lynn Osmond, Steve Wiser, Todd Blue, Bill Weyland, Tommy O’Shea Thanks to Cynthia Cooke, Robert Yoder, Steve Wiser, Joe Strummer , Roger Stapleton, Peggy Guier, Charles Raith, Nancy Turner, Eric Schneider, Vernon Smith, Michael Price, Patrick Piuma, Ron Crouch, Richard Jett, Chris Goodlett, Mayor Tom Guidugli, Emily Jarzen, Mayor Gale Cherry, Dexter, Snoopy, Dr. Rob Mullins, Debbie Richards, Nikki King, Carrie Beth Lasley, William Strunk, E.
    [Show full text]
  • Bardstown-Nelson County Official Visitors Guide TABLE of CONTENTS
    Bardstown-Nelson County Official Visitors Guide TABLE OF CONTENTS Bourbon...................................................................................12 There’s no Wine..........................................................................................16 History .....................................................................................17 law that says Spiritual ...................................................................................20 Christmas.................................................................................22 bourbon has Attractions & Entertainment .............................................23 Restaurants ............................................................................26 to be made in Bars, Pubs & Shopping .......................................................30 Recreation & Tour Operators.............................................32 Bardstown. 2021 Events & Festivals .....................................................33 Accommodations .................................................................35 Map ...........................................................................................38 2 There’s no law that says bourbon has to be made in Bardstown. But once you step out of your car and breathe in the fresh country air, walk our gently rolling hills, take in the vast fields of wheat and corn and experience true Southern hospitality, you start to get the sense that Bardstown was made for making bourbon. It’s a place to relive history, tour bourbon distilleries,
    [Show full text]
  • Schedule for Graves Family Gathering Sept. 8-10, 2016
    Schedule for Graves Family Gathering Sept. 8 - 1 0 , 201 6 From Hampton Inn-Bardstown 502 349-0100 $109/night plus tax with group code of GGP book by August 7 to get disc. rate 985 Chambers Blvd. Bardstown, Kentucky OVERVIEW A gathering will be held for Graves family members whose ancestors of the 1700s hailed from Virginia and went on to other states including the site of this gathering - Visit Bardstown, Kentucky - America’s Most Beautiful Small Town (by Rand McNally/USA Today in 2012). Bardstown is a 45 min. drive south of Louisville. The dates are the weekend prior to the annual Kentucky Bourbon Festi- val so the town will be at peak for touring (minus the thousands in the festival mob). Following in succession from a 2015 gathering in Harrisonburg Virginia that brought together known cousins and close Y-DNA matches, this Kentucky event is organized by two previous participants, Deb Lowe (Danville, KY) and Michael “Mike” D. Graves (Humble, TX). The focus largely is on participants who are in Graves Family Association (GFA) generations numbered 77, 94, 118, 150, 152, 215, and 511 since Family Tree DNA testing in Houston indicates that these “Graves family tree branches” have shared common “recent” ancestors dating back to the mid-1700s in Virginia and originally to Francis Graves (Gen. 220), son of Capt. Thomas Graves (1580-1635) who was among the early settlers who founded Jamestown in Virginia. All Graves descendants welcome! While we don’t yet know exactly through whom or when these branches (GFA Gen. #s) connect, this gathering looks into inter- esting bits of Graves family history in the company of closely related cousins with hopes of figuring out our historical connection.
    [Show full text]
  • Bardstown's Shops on Third Know How to Display Kentucky's Holiday Spirit
    Mary Carey, proprietor of At Mary’s, is fit for a holiday card from the merchants of historic North Third Street Bardstown’s SHOPS ON THIRD KNOW HOW TO DISPLAY By: Rick Hill KENTUCKy’s Photographed by: Amy Reinhold HOLIDAY SPIRIT With its distinguished red brick and cast iron storefronts, its dazzling display windows, and its convivial shops and cafes, North Third Street brims with holiday bourbon spirits. ocated in downtown Bardstown, North Historic buildings Third Street is more than a charming boulevard lined with irresistible shops. It are more than is a quintessential main street experience something to preserve in a 35 square-block national historic “ - they are containers Llandmark district. of cherished This holiday season; find out why Bardstown is memories. North called the “bourbon capital of the world” by its Third is filled like an residents and the “most beautiful small town in America” by USA Today. Plan a weekend shopping old holiday stocking trip to downtown Bardstown and make shopping stuffed with meaning part of the season’s joy. and memories Located about 45 minutes southeast of Louisville, seldom found in KY, 20 minutes east of I-65, and 2 miles from Americana today. the Bluegrass Parkway, Bardstown features a lively downtown marketplace. With 30+ shops, restaurants, and cafes, Bardstown promises a Holiday 2014 gorgeous gift of holiday spirit. Bardstown’s historic he shops on North Third Street kick downtown district reveals a rich commercial off the 2014 holiday season with a history. It was recognized and registered as a select preview from Friday, November National Historic District by the U.S.
    [Show full text]
  • Index to Volume 5
    Index to Volume 5 OHIO VALLEY HISTORY 2005 5th Kentucky Volunteers, (3)17 aircraft engines, (1)7, 11 Akron, Ohio, (1)91-92, (2)92, (3)101 Alabama, (2)32, (3)45-51, 57; National Guard, (3)56; State Police, (3)45 Albany, New York, (2)14, (4)26 A Albee Theater (Cincinnati), (2)102 Alexander, William, (2)27 ABC Sports, (2)72 Aley, Ginette, “Grist, Grit, and Rural Society in the Early Abernathy, Rev. Ralph, (3)57 Nineteenth Century Midwest: Insight Gleaned from Abernethy, Thomas Perkins, Western Lands and the Ameri- Grain,” (2)1-3 can Revolution, (3)91 Alger, Horatio, (3)102 Abingdon, Virginia, (3)4, 7, 9 Allan, Nigel, (3)51-52, 55 abolition,(2)43 Allegheny Conference on Community Development, (2)96, abolitionists, (1)85, (2)102; in Kentucky, (2)45, 47 (3)65-66 Abu Ghraib prison, (1)90 Allegheny County, (3)66, 75 Ackerman, Bishop Richard, (2)72 Allegheny River, (3)66, 76 activists, (3)43-56; Berea, (3)43, 45-49, 54-56; civil rights, Allen Chapel (Cincinnati), (4)66 (3)51; Kentucky, (3)47 Allen Temple A.M.E. Church (Cincinnati), (4)65-66 Adams, John Quincy, (4)14, 16-17, 32-33; presidential cam- Allen Temple A.M.E. Church Special Photograph Collection, paigns of, (4)16, 19; as Christian gentleman, (4)19 (4)65-66 “Addition through Division: Robert Taft, the Labor Vote Allen, Julia, (3)44, 59 and the Ohio Senate Election of 1950,” by Michael Allen, Richard, (4)65 Bowen, (3)1, 21 All-Star Game, Baseball (1970), (3)69 Adler, Felix, and Society for Ethical Culture, (4)57 Alt, Susan M., review of Cahokia’s Countryside: Household adultery, (4)9-10, 13-14, 19-20 Archaeology, Settlement Pattern, and Social Power, by Africa, (2)99, (3)59 Mark W.
    [Show full text]
  • One for the Guys!
    BOURBON TRAIL GIRLS GetawaysGetaways ATLANTA PAGE 61 Plus one for ASHEVILLE WATERCOLOR the guys! SAVANNAH THE KIDS HAD THEIR SPRING BREAKS IN MARCH, and your husband’s watching golf anyway. So now is the perfect time to grab your girlfriends and savor some much-deserved R&R. Whether you feel like shopping, sightseeing, or just chilling on a beach, we’ve got the perfect itinerary for you. Your man doesn’t golf, you say? Send him and his buddies to visit the bourbon distilleries in Kentucky. Of course, a bluegrass jaunt isn’t a bad option for the ladies either. GIRLS GETAWAYS pools and winding boardwalks. If that’s the the peekaboo shower in your guest room, its Books stocks shelves of beach reads. case when you arrive, sink into the quiet eye level tiled with clear glass for ogling the Duly tempted at breakfast, we headed arms of the Inn’s “adults-only” pool. There waves while shampooing. back to Fish Out of Water for dinner. Our you’ll find no crying babies or cannonballs The spacious rooms also come with a server, a knowledgeable Luke Wilson dop- to distract from tanning or heart-to-hearts plush queen bed and queen sleeper sofa, pelganger, steered us to a silky tuna tartare, in the hot tub. We settled onto its patio our fitting four comfortably. But if your crew playfully punched up with soy vinaigrette, first night there, as waiters from the Gather- is bigger or prefers more privacy, sorbet- and a locally caught grouper, tender and ing Spot sushi bar fetched us the requisite colored vacation cottages wind out from paired well with a creamy corn pudding.
    [Show full text]
  • James Kilgore Collection
    object ID Medium Format Title Location Scope and Content / Description associated Date Qualifier associated Date Qualifier Series appx running Production People, Preservation Status date 1 1 date 2 2 time Information Actors, Contributors 2017.0217 video VHS Tuesday Together - 1990 VHS00002 Tuesday Together - 1990 ??/??/1990 Annotated date Kilgore 02:00:00 Collection 2017.0218 video VHS Adult Fellowship Picnic 05/31/1986; VHS00003 Adult Fellowship Picnic 05/31/1986; ??/??/1986 Annotated date ??/??/1987 Annotated date Kilgore 02:00:00 Tennessee Renaissance Festival Tennessee Renaissance Festival Collection 06/22/1986; Busc Slope First Avenue 06/22/1986; Busc Slope First Avenue 02/27/1987; Cruise on General 02/27/1987; Cruise on General Jackson 04/01/1988 Jackson 04/01/1988 2017.0219 video VHS Tuesday Together 1993 1994 Master; VHS00004 Tuesday Together 93 94 Master; ??/??/1993 Annotated date ??/??/1994 Annotated date Kilgore 00:38:00 Rescue In the Night Master Rescue In the Night master Collection 2017.0220 video VHS Tuesday Together 1993, 1994 VHS00005 Tuesday Together 1993 1994 ??/??/1993 Annotated date ??/??/1994 Annotated date Kilgore 00:38:00 Collection 2017.0221 video VHS Tuesday Together 1992, 1993, 1994 VHS00006 Tuesday Together 1992 (33 minutes), ??/??/1992 Annotated date ??/??/1994 Annotated date Kilgore 01:44:00 1993 and 1994 (38 minutes) Collection 2017.0222 video VHS Beersheba 1993; Presentation of VHS00007 Beersheba 1993; Presentation of ??/??/1991 Annotated date ??/??/1993 Annotated date Kilgore 02:00:00 Brazel Paque Tuesday
    [Show full text]
  • Bardstown-Nelson County Official Visitors Guide TABLE of CONTENTS
    Bardstown-Nelson County Official Visitors Guide TABLE OF CONTENTS Bourbon...................................................................................12 There’s no Wine..........................................................................................16 History .....................................................................................17 law that says Spiritual ...................................................................................20 Christmas.................................................................................22 bourbon has Attractions & Entertainment .............................................23 Restaurants ............................................................................26 to be made in Bars, Pubs & Shopping .......................................................30 Recreation & Tour Operators.............................................32 Bardstown. 2020 Events & Festivals .....................................................33 Accommodations .................................................................35 Map ...........................................................................................38 2 There’s no law that says bourbon has to be made in Bardstown. But once you step out of your car and breathe in the fresh country air, walk our gently rolling hills, take in the vast fields of wheat and corn and experience true Southern hospitality, you start to get the sense that Bardstown was made for making bourbon. It’s a place to relive history, tour bourbon distilleries,
    [Show full text]
  • The 'Glass Gazette
    The ‘Glass Gazette NOVEMBER 2015 Kentucky One Lap (KY 1-Lap) I NSIDE T HIS I SSUE By Dick hammaker 1 K ENTUCKY O NE L AP 2 NVCC Contacts Kentucky One Lap is part of the National Corvette Museum's (NCM) Museum In Motion (MiM) Program and partnership with the Kentucky State Police (KSP). KY 1-Lap is also 3 President’s Corner a charity event for NCM and KSP Trooper Island, a summer camp for disadvantaged 7 Spotlight on Members youth. 8 Halloween Update Day 1 – October 24, 2015 8 Upcoming Events First leg of the trip was to Louisville, KY. Easy 600 mile, 9.5 hours trip, averaging 71 mph, and 29.7 mpg. Once west on I-64 the fall leaf colors really popped...red, yellow, 10 10/27/15 GBM Minutes orange, green, brown. Close to WV state line the rain started and stayed with us until 11 Banquet Info Louisville. 12 President’s Holiday Day 2 – October 25, 2015 Party Flyer Louisville is the largest city in the Commonwealth of Kentucky and the 30th-most populous city in the United States. Louisville was founded in 1778 by George Rogers Clark and is named after King Louis XVI of France, making Louisville one of the oldest cities west of the Appalachian Mountains. Sited beside the Falls of the Ohio, the only major obstruction to river traffic between the upper Ohio River and the Gulf of Mexico, the settlement first grew as a portage site. It was the founding city of the Louisville and Nashville Railroad, which grew into a 6,000-mile system across 13 states.
    [Show full text]
  • Kentucky 2018
    CELEBRATING THE ENERGY OF YOUR COMMUNITY KENTUCKY 2018 MUSIC MEN Pentatonix’s Kevin Olusola and J.D. Shelburne Fall Festival GUIDE BARDSTOWN Celebrates Bourbon SEPTEMBER 2018 • KENTUCKYLIVING.COM WATERFURNACE UNITS QUALIFY FOR A 30% FEDERAL TAX CREDIT* Smart homeowners around the world have scrapped their old furnaces and air conditioners and replaced them with a WaterFurnace geothermal comfort system. That’s because WaterFurnace geothermal systems use the clean, renewable energy in your own backyard to provide savings up to 70% on heating, cooling and hot water. You won’t need that old inefficient furnace or that unsightly outdoor air conditioner because a WaterFurnace system provides complete comfort for your home with a single unit. And because the system doesn’t burn fossil fuels, there are no fumes or carbon monoxide concerns. Make the smart switch to geothermal. Contact your local WaterFurnace dealer today to learn more. YOUR LOCAL WATERFURNACE DEALERS Bardstown Danville Hager Hill Madisonville Olive Hill Brown’s Htg, A/C Feistritzer Htg & A/C Big Sandy Htg & Clg Advanced Air, LLC Lemaster, Inc. & Plbg (859) 236-0850 (606) 297-4328 (270) 825-0187 (606) 286-4282 (502) 348-5468 M02584 HM04205 HM03448 HM04017 HM02566 Elizabethtown Lexington Maysville Richmond Rock Drilling, Inc. Dever Enterprises Arronco Comfort Air Jefferson Htg & A/C Jones Htg & Clg (Loops, drilling, grout GEOPRO GEOPRO GEOPRO GEOPRO & GPS service) (270) 737-8594 (859) 252-0403 (606) 759-7030 (859) 623-9295 (502) 348-6436 HM01509 HM04474 HM03260 HM02813 Burlington Gray Engineered Htg & Air Mt. Sterling Shelbyville Arronco Comfort Air Moses Drilling, LLC GEOPRO Comfort Air Randy Tennill GEOPRO (Loops, drilling & (859) 231-0505 (859) 499-4247 Service (859) 525-6407 grouting) HM05043 HM00862 (502) 633-4630 HM04474 (606) 523-1215 HM02954 London Nicholasville Columbia Glasgow Leo Jones & Son Christopher & Shepherdsville Wall Htg & Clg, Inc.
    [Show full text]