01.29.2015

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Otmj Thursday, January 29, 2015

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over the mountain journal ❖ otmj.com

Super Bowl

Ronnie Baynes was an NFL official from 1987-2000.

Stripes Baynes Officiated Football’s Biggest Show By Lee Davis

Baynes – a former Auburn University football player and Mountain Brook baseball coach – was an NFL official from 1987-2000. During that period, he worked many preseason and regular season games, numerous playoffs and, as a reward for his good work, served as the line judge in Super Bowls XXIX

See baynes page 7

Photos special to the Journal

Ronnie Baynes has seen the Super Bowl from the best spot in the stadium. And that doesn’t mean a luxury box.

inside

final four Cherokee Bend teacher is up for national award. School page 28

King and country This year’s Krewe Ball ruler loves the outdoor life. people Page 6 european union When Jackson Jones went to Brest, France, to get a master’s degree in international business, he left with an unexpected benefit. Weddings Page 26


2 • Thursday, January 29, 2015

Birmingham Delegation Goes for the Gold – and Gets It

Birmingham is already abuzz about an event that won’t happen for another six years. And with good reason. The World Games are coming to Birmingham. City leaders traveled earlier this year to Lausanne, Switzerland, to pitch Birmingham as the best choice to host the 2021 World Games. José Perurena, president of the International World Games Association, announced Jan. 22 that Birmingham had been selected. Also in the running were Lima, Peru, and Ufa, Russia. The World Games are under the patronage of the International Olympic Committee. The games are held every four years and showcase more than 25 sports, including gymnastics, billiards, canoe polo, squash, tug of war, sumo and roller sports. Some 4,500 athletes and officials from about 100 countries are expected to participate. The next World Games will be in Wroclaw, Poland, July 20-30, 2017. When Birmingham hosts the games in July 2021, it will be the first American city to do so since the event was held in Santa Clara, Calif., in 1981. The Birmingham delegation included Edgar Welden, a Birmingham business leader who is chairman of the Alabama Sports Hall of Fame; Scott Myers, Alabama Sports Hall of Fame executive director; David Benck, Hibbett Sporting Goods vice president and general counsel and USA Gymnastics board member; Kristin Allen, USA Gymnastics team member and Larry Probst, United States Olympic Committee chairman. Birmingham City Council President Johnathan Austin also made the trip to Lausanne to represent the city. In announcing Birmingham’s selection, Perurena said the city has “all prerequisites” for staging an event like the World Games. “We have to deliver nothing less than outstanding World Games,” he said. “We are convinced that Birmingham will exceed these expectations.”

in this issue About Town 3 people 6 news 8 life 12 social 14

home 20 food 23 weddings 26 schools 28 sports 32

On otmj.com

There’s so much happening in the Over the Mountain area, we can’t fit it all in the paper! Visit www.otmj.com for more stories and photos.

Opinion/Contents

OVER THE MOUNTAIN Journal

murphy’s law

A Half Ton of Torment

M

Why indeed. y daughter is moving to Since then, I’ve been looking at Ireland. Yes, the actual my belongings in a whole new light. country across the big pond. If I had to ratchet my stash down to She and her husband got a corporate 1,000 pounds, what would I keep? I transfer and they’re leaving in April have nine holiday cheese spread knives and they’re taking my grandchildren, - snowmen and bunnies and turkeys but we won’t talk about that right now and mummies and ghosts, and they’re mostly because I can’t do it without all cute as a bug, but I don’t imagine crying. the cheese would taste any different The thing I’m focusing on right spread with a rabbit than it would with now is…how? a snowman. Eight of them could go. Or A multi-hour plane trip with two maybe I could just spread my cheese babies, learning how to drive on the with a regular butter knife. Sure I other side of the road, finding schools could. and pediatricians and someone new to I have 17 coffee mugs featuring cut their hair - it’s going to be a monuSue Murphy pithy quotes or cartoon characters and mental task. I use them all, but only one But, one monument at a time. I have 17 coffee mugs again, at a time. One mug for me, one for The problem they’re facing immefeaturing pithy quotes Harold, wash and repeat. Why do I diately is what to do with all their stuff. or cartoon characters keep the others? What would make my 1,000 The corporate relo package will and again, I use them all, pound package? What do I need that pay to ship up to 1,000 pounds of but only one at a time. I could not duplicate in a new locabelongings, but how far will that go? Think about it. A saucepan One mug for me, one tion? Photographs, but those could digitized down to a few ounces. weighs 5 pounds. Two hundred of for Harold, wash and be Music, pretty much the same. those and you’re done, not that anyrepeat. Why do I keep Books? I suppose I could ramp them one needs 200 saucepans. onto one of those light-up tablet dooMy daughter could probably the others? dads, but that wouldn’t be the same buy one there along with sheets and thing at all. towels and most other things. It’s A few nonessential items would not like she’s moving to the far side of the moon. But there are some things, personal things, get an emotional pass – my grandmother’s sewing rocker, my dad’s red plaid skimmer, the leather coat that is that you simply cannot duplicate - the children’s cribs, now too small that Harold bought me back when buying their toys, Christmas decorations, Easter baskets. It’s it was a financial reach. So I end up in a new country a puzzle that’s been keeping me up at night and it’s not with one chair, a fashion-backward hat and a coat that even my stuff. doesn’t fit. Probably not good either. My daughter will be gone for three years and then I don’t know what my daughter will pick to pack supposedly they’ll be back, so the preliminary plan is to for her 1,000 pounds but maybe I could sneak in there leave some things behind in storage. But which things stay and which things go? When we were discussing the someplace. I don’t weigh much and I might come in handy helping to unpack the rest of her things…in situation over the holidays, my other daughter thought Ireland. Across the big pond. An eight hour plane ride a minute then said, “If you can get along without someaway. Oh dear, now I’m crying again. ❖ thing for three years, why do you need it at all?”

over the Mountain Views

What are you looking for in a friend?

OVER THE MOUNTAIN

JOU RNAL

January 29, 2015

Publisher: Maury Wald Features Writer: Donna Cornelius Office Manager: Christy Wald Editorial Assistant: Stacie Galbraith Sports: Lee Davis Contributors: Susan Murphy, June Mathews, William C. Singleton III, Emil Wald, Marvin Gentry, Lee Walls Jr., Bryan Bunch, Emily Williams Advertising Sales: Suzanne Wald, Julie Trammell Edwards, Tommy Wald Intern: Jacob Fuqua Vol. 25, No. 2

Over The Mountain Journal is a suburban bi-weekly newspaper delivered to Mountain Brook, Homewood, Vestavia Hills, Hoover and North Shelby County areas. Subscriptions for The Journal are available for $24 yearly. Mail to: Over the Mountain Journal, P.O. Box 660502, Vestavia Hills, AL 35216. Phone: (205) 823-9646. E-mail the editorial department at editorial@otmj.com. E-mail our advertising department at ads@otmj.com. Find us on the Web at otmj.com. Copyright 2015 Over The Mountain Journal, Inc. All rights reserved. The Journal is not responsible for return of photos, copy and other unsolicited materials submitted. To have materials returned, please specify when submitting and provide a stamped, self-addressed envelope. All materials submitted are subject to editorial review and may be edited or declined without notification.

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Thursday, January 29, 2015 • 3

About Town

OVER THE MOUNTAIN Journal

Cultural Connection

Jan. 29 - feb. 11 Thurs., Jan. 29

IPC’s Religious Arts Festival Will Spotlight Spain Independent Presbyterian Church is bringing Spain to Birmingham before its choir goes to Spain. The church’s 44th annual Religious Arts Festival, set for Feb. 2-8, will explore that country’s music, arts and food. Jeff McLelland, IPC’s director of music and fine arts, said each festival’s focus is developed by the church’s fine arts committee. And there’s a good reason that “The Magic of Spain” was chosen as this year’s theme. “Our choir is taking a trip to Spain this summer,” McLelland said. This year’s festival starts Feb. 2 at

For more information about the 2015 Religious Arts Festival, visit the church’s website or call the church office, 9331830. Independent Presbyterian Church is at 3100 Highland Ave. in Birmingham.

7 p.m. with Andrew Hicks’ lecture on art nouveau and the work of Antoni Gaudi. Dancer Ana Diaz and guitarist Roberto Verdi will team up for a lecture and demonstration on flamenco dancing Feb. 3 at 7 p.m. “A Taste of Spain” from 5:307:30 p.m. Feb. 5 includes tastings of Spanish wine and tapas at the Birmingham Museum of Art. Museum curators will be on hand to talk about Spanish art, too. “A Taste of Spain” is the only festival event that’s not at Independent Presbyterian Church and that has an admission charge. Tickets to the tasting are $25. To make reservations, visit the church’s website, www.ipcusa.org. All other events are free. “The Land of Three Faiths: Voices of Ancient Mediterranean Jews, Christians and Muslims” at 7 p.m. Feb. 6 will feature The Rose Ensemble, a Minnesota-based vocal group that will perform rarely-heard music. The festival ends Feb. 8 at 3 p.m. with the IPC Centennial Celebration: A Festival of Hymns and Anthems. This presentation features the hymn arrangements and compositions of Richard Webster, director of music and organist at Trinity Church in Boston’s Copley Square.

Hoover

Rosewood Performance Hoover Public Library Rosewood, an acoustic trio, will perform from 6:30-8:30 p.m. This is a free event. For more information, visit www.hooverlibrary.org or call 444-7821. Homewood

Relay for Life Kickoff Eighteenth Street Orientals The American Cancer Society’s Relay for Life in Homewood gets started with this kickoff party from 6-8 p.m. The free event for all ages includes entertainment, appetizers and beverages. For more information, visit www.cancer.org.

Photo by Michael Haug Photography

By Donna Cornelius

Jan. 31-Feb. 4 The Rose Ensemble will appear at this year’s Religious Arts Festival. Their presentation will include rarely-heard music written before 1600.

The production will be conducted by Webster and feature the Ambassador Brass, McLelland as organist, and choirs from IPC, Cathedral Church of the Advent, First United Methodist Church of Birmingham, St. Mary’s-on-theHighlands, All Saints’ Episcopal Church and the Episcopal Church of the Ascension. McLelland said the festival is primarily for the community. “The festival was originally

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designed because there was a lack of fine arts events in the Birmingham area at that time,” he said. “That’s not true anymore. But the festival does give you an opportunity to hear great singers and musicians, for example, at no charge.” A past festival, he said, featured Chanticleer, a male chorus which has since been a Grammy winner. “We had them here when they were first getting started,” McLelland said. ❖

Hoover

Family, Friends and God Prince of Peace Catholic Church Father James V. Marchionda, a Dominican priest, composer, singer and instrumentalist whose work was sung at the funeral of Mother Teresa, will preach at all weekend Masses. His Monday through Wednesday evening missions will begin at 6:30 pm in the church sanctuary. The event is free and open to the public.

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4 • Thursday, January 29, 2015

Birmingham

Small Treasures Exhibition Opening Birmingham Museum of Art The Birmingham Museum of Art will welcome the first exhibition to explore small-format, 17th-century paintings from the Dutch Golden Age with the “Small Treasures: Rembrandt, Vermeer, Hals and Their Contemporaries” exhibition. The exhibit is open Tuesdays through Fridays from 10 a.m.-5 p.m. and on Sundays from noon-5 p.m. For more information, visit www.artsbma.org or call 254-2565.

Sat., Jan. 31 Homewood

ROAR Gala The Club Dr. Larry Lemak, founder of Lemak Sports Medicine & Orthopedics, is the honoree of the fourth annual James Bond ROAR Gala, set for Jan. 31. The annual event benefits cancer research. Lemak was diagnosed with oral cancer in 2012. The James Bond-themed event will feature martinis, food and fun photo opportunities. For more information, email ROARthecure@gmail.com or call 492-0472.

Sun., Feb. 1 Hoover

Art Exhibit Opening Artists on the Bluff The Birmingham Branch of the National League of the American Pen Women will open its annual art exhibit with a reception and awards presentation from 2-4 p.m. The exhibit runs through Feb. 25. Birmingham

Organ Concert Cathedral Church of the Advent Charles M. Kennedy, the church’s associate director of music and organist, will perform a free, full-length concert on the 100-rank Grieb-Williams organ at 3 p.m. For more information, visit 226-3505.

Mon., Feb. 2

Meal Service

Canterbury UMC Dishes out Help for International Hunger Program Some 2,000 volunteers will gather at Canterbury United Methodist Church Feb. 8-10 to work in the church’s fifth annual Stop Hunger Now campaign. Additional volunteers will come from Saint Stephen’s Episcopal Church and Saint Luke’s Episcopal Church. The workers plan to assemble a half-million meals for schoolchildren and orphanages outside the U.S., said Rachel Estes, Canterbury’s outreach director. Volunteers will work in one-and-a-half and two-hour shifts between 6:30 a.m. and 9 p.m. each day to package the meals. Some shifts will include childcare. Additional “power hours,” 7-9 p.m. Sunday and Monday, will offer volunteers who are high school age and older the opportunity to help with the large project. “Our combined resources, both in volunteers and financially, will result in a tremendous accomplishment for the fight against hunger,” Estes said. “Last year’s volunteers’ assembly program at Canterbury was an amazing success, resulting in just under 500,000 meals being packed, even in the midst of last year’s February snow and ice storm.” The national Stop Hunger Now meal packaging program, which began in 2005, has resulted in the packaging of more than 30 million meals by more than 100,000 volunteers in churches across America. The meals packed at Canterbury last year were delivered to the four schools of Robert Ford Orphanage in Haiti and to the Philippines Convoy of Hope. The meals include a combination in small meal packets of rice, soy, dehydrated vegetables and a flavoring

Fri., Feb. 6 Homewood

Pointe Ball The Club The Alabama Ballet’s 15th annual fundraiser begins at 6:30 p.m. with a performance by members of Alabama Ballet’s professional company followed by a gourmet dinner and dancing. Tickets are $400 per person and $650 per couple. To buy tickets, call Mary Reynolds Porter at 322-4300. For sponsorship information, call Melanie Moody at 322-1259. Homewood

Choral Vespers: A Cappella Choir Hodges Chapel, Samford University The choir’s performance will start at 5:30 p.m. The Choral Vespers Series combines the university’s sacred spaces and Christian mission with several musical ensembles. The event is free and open to the public. For more information, call 726-2011. Birmingham

Homewood

Birmingham Historical Society Meeting Littlehouse Galleries The group’s annual meeting at 7 p.m. also is an autograph party for Bob Moody, author of “Bob Moody’s Birmingham: A City in Watercolor.” His books and 75 of his original Birmingham watercolors will be available for purchase. The paintings will be on display at the gallery through March 14.

OVER THE MOUNTAIN Journal

high-calorie foods that can hinder weight loss. Classes are 7:15-7:45 a.m. or noon-12:30 p.m. The class is free, but registration is required. Call 408-6550 to register.

Go Red Day St. Vincent’s One Nineteen St. Vincent’s One Nineteen will offer blood pressure and/or BMI screenings plus educational materials. The free event is from 8-11:30 a.m. For more information, visit onenineteen.com.

Feb. 6-7 Mountain Brook

Sweet Repeats Children’s Consignment Sale Mountain Brook Community Church This annual sale is from 9 a.m.-6 p.m. on Friday and from 9 a.m.-noon on Saturday. Proceeds go to church

Wed., Feb. 11 Birmingham

Photos special to the Journal

Jan. 31-April 26

About Town

Volunteers assemble meals at one of Canterbury United Methodist’s Stop Hunger Now work sessions.

mix with vitamins and minerals. Each meal costs 25 cents. The food can be stored easily, has a shelf-life of five years and transports quickly. Volunteers should sign up in advance at www. CanterburyUMC.org/SHN. To make donations, visit the website, send an email to Rachel.Estes@canterburyumc.org or call 871-4695. Estes said that a donation of $25 will feed 100 people. Stop Hunger Now is an international hunger relief agency that has been fulfilling its commitment to end hunger for more than 16 years. Since 1998, the organization has coordinated the distribution of food and other lifesaving aid to children and families in countries all over the world. For more information, visit stophungernow.org. ❖

missions. For more information, visit mbccsweetrepeats.blogspot.com or the event’s Facebook page.

Sat., Feb. 7 Homewood

Spiritual Spa Morning Retreat Trinity United Methodist Church Storyteller Dolores Hydock will be the featured speaker at this women’s retreat. The event is from 9 a.m.-1 p.m. Tickets are $22 and include a boxed lunch. Childcare will be available with reservations. For more information or to buy tickets, call the church office, 879-1737, or visit www. trinitybirmingham.com. Birmingham

Beaker Bash: Unlock the Puzzle McWane Science Center Families are invited to attend this 14th annual event to test their brain power and problemsolving skills. The Beaker Bash, from 5-8 p.m., also includes food, beverages and educational demonstrations featuring the museum’s newest exhibit, Mindbender Mansion. To buy tickets or for more information, visit mcwane.org. Birmingham

Heart 2 HeART 2015 BridgeStreet Gallery and Loft aTeam Ministries will present its annual fundraising event from 6-9 p.m.

The Heart 2 HeART program supports children with pediatric cancer by pairing them with professional artists. For more information, visit www.ateamministries. org or call 865-809-5198. Hoover

Riverchase Loves Artists Riverchase Country Club The Riverchase Women’s Club’s annual art show is from 10 a.m.-4 p.m. Local and regional artists will sell and exhibit works in a variety of mediums. Admission is free. Foods and drinks will be available. For more information, visit www.riverchaselovesartists.com or call Riverchase Country Club, 988-4140. Birmingham

GBHSA Jazz Cat Ball Old Car Heaven The Greater Birmingham Humane Society Auxiliary’s fourth annual Jazz Cat Ball will begin at 7 p.m. Tickets are $125. For more information, call 9421211 or visit www.gbhs.org.

Sun., Feb. 8 Hoover

Hiroya Tsukamoto Hoover Public Library The Japanese guitarist and singer will perform original acoustic music and Japanese folk songs from 2:30-4:30 p.m. This is a free event. For more information, visit www.hooverlibrary.org or call 444-7821.

Tues., Feb. 10 Birmingham

Healthy Eating Class St. Vincent’s One Nineteen “Eat This, Not That” is a class for those who want to learn more about

Joint Garden Club Program Birmingham Museum of Art Red Mountain Garden Club and Little Garden Club members are inviting the public to their joint meeting at 11 a.m. to hear speaker Douglas Thomas tell the story of “Twin Maples: A Natural Landscape.” Twenty years ago, the Mississippi native and her husband bought a historic tract of land in the northwest corner of Connecticut and built a house there. The property has been developed with formal gardens, 40 acres of wildflower meadows and native plants. The lecture is in the museum’s large auditorium.

save the date Fri., Feb. 13 Homewood

A Night under the Big Top The Club The Glenwood Junior Board fundraiser will have live music, food and drinks, casino games, and a silent auction. All proceeds benefit programs and services for children with autism. For tickets, visit www.glenwood.org. Hoover

Hearts and Harmony Gala Hyatt Regency Birmingham-The Wynfrey Hotel The Hoover Service Club will present this third annual gala from 6:30-11:30 p.m. The event will feature the Hoover High School First Edition Jazz Ensemble, silent and live auctions and Miss Alabama Jaime Nutter. Tickets are $100. For sponsorship information, contact Elaine Thompson at lthom10136@bellsouth.net or 428-7404. For ticket information, call 903-4987. Hoover

Positively Funny Improv Show Hyatt Regency Birmingham-The Wynfrey Hotel This pre-Valentine’s Day show includes games for couples and musical numbers made up on the spot. Shows are at 7:30 and 9:30 p.m. Tickets are $10. Food and drinks will be available. For more information or to buy tickets, visit www.positivelyfunny.com or call 888-680-6640.

Thurs., Feb. 19

Homewood

Legacy League Scholarship Luncheon The Club Christian comedian Anita Renfroe will headline this event at 11:30 a.m. Tickets are $50. For reservations, go to www. samford.edu/legacyleague. ❖ Send About Town information to: editorial@otmj.com


Thursday, January 29, 2015 • 5

About Town

OVER THE MOUNTAIN Journal

He is a regular guest at Wexford Festival Opera, one of today’s leading stages for rarely performed and contemporary repertoire. His 2010 production of Saverio Mercadante’s “Virginia” won the Best Opera prize at the Irish Theatre Awards, immedi-

Carlos Izcaray

Photo special to the Journal

Alabama Symphony Has New Music Director

ately followed by another nomination for his 2011 production of “La Cour de Célimène” by Ambroise Thomas. Izcaray also is a composer. His most recent orchestral piece, “Cota Mil,” was premiered by the Orquesta Sinfónica Municipal de Caracas. ❖

Internationally acclaimed conductor Carlos Izcaray has been appointed music director of the Alabama Symphony Orchestra. The Venezuelan-born conductor, currently based in Berlin, Germany, will relocate to Birmingham and begin his tenure in September 2015. Izcaray has signed an initial fouryear contract that calls for up to 20 weeks per season. He will lead the ASO in a variety of concerts each season and will play a key role in programming, community engagement and educational activities, according to ASO officials. His next ASO appearance will be the Regions EBSCO Masterworks concerts Feb. 13 and 14. “It is with great joy and humility that I am invited to become the

Alabama Symphony’s next music director,” Izcaray said. “I felt an immediate connection with the musicians and with the incredibly welcoming people of Birmingham. Their warmth has touched my heart, and my family and I are looking forward to joining the Birmingham community.” ASO President Curt Long called Izcaray “one of the greatest young musical talents of our time.” “Carlos impressed us with his exceptional skills both on and off the podium, and I’m certain he’ll be a major asset for Birmingham and the cultural life in the state of Alabama,” Long said. Izcaray made his ASO debut in September 2014 and was immediately invited back for a special concert in December.

Born in Caracas, Venezuela, Izcaray at age 3 was enrolled in Venezuela’s renowned public system of youth orchestras, El Sistema. Conducting with his father since he was a teenager, Izcaray went on to become a distinguished fellow at the American Academy of Conducting at Aspen. He is an alumnus of the Interlochen Arts Academy, New World School of the Arts, and Jacobs School of Music at Indiana University. For three years, Izcaray was conductor of the MozarteumCaracas Chamber Orchestra. Another of Izcaray’s interests is contemporary music, and he will take charge of the ASO’s award-winning Wells Fargo The Classical EDGE series.

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6 • Thursday, January 29, 2015

people

King and Country This Year’s Krewe Ball Ruler Loves the Outdoor Life

Foots and Allene Parnell love spending time at the cabin they built on their hunting property near Maplesville. Photo special to the Journal

By Donna Cornelius Royal life isn’t all it’s cracked up to be – at least for Foots Parnell. Parnell, this year’s Beaux Arts Krewe Ball King, said a friend asked him if his newly-acquired noble status excused him from household chores. “I told him I still had to take out the garbage,” Parnell said, smiling. The commercial mortgage banker will reign over the 48th annual ball, set this year for Feb. 13 at Birmingham’s Boutwell Auditorium. The event has two purposes. First, it’s a night filled with pageantry and tradition as Boutwell Auditorium is turned into a Great Hall with banners and candles. Twenty-nine young women will make their debut at the ball this year. From those, four ladies-in-waiting and the queen will be chosen and announced that night with lots of fanfare. The ball also has a philanthropic goal, raising money for the Birmingham Museum of Art. Parnell, who lives in Mountain Brook, said he was excited about the event and honored by his selection as king. “But it’s not my nature to be in the spotlight,” he said. “My thinking is that I’ll be in the spotlight for a few minutes, and then people will be looking at the queen and the presentees.” Parnell’s association with the Krewe came through his father, the late Dr. L.C. “Foots” Parnell Jr. The elder Parnell, a well-known Birmingham obstetrician and gynecologist, was a longtime Krewe member. “One day, I got a call from my

dad,” Parnell said. “He was supposed to present a girl, the daughter of a friend that year. He told me, ‘I’m out, you’re in’ as a Krewe member – and also that I’d be presenting the girl.” Parnell was no stranger to the Krewe balls. He escorted several princesses when he was a student at the University of Alabama, he said. His two daughters were first trainbearers and then ladies-in-waiting, and he has served as a King’s Duke and member of the Queen’s Guard. Parnell’s brother-in-law, James Earnest Grisham, is Krewe president this year. Mary Virginia Grisham, his niece, will be among the presentees. Like his British royal counterparts, this year’s Krewe King is a sportsman. He loves to spend time at Foothills, his hunting property in Maplesville, he said, where he and his wife, Allene, built a cabin. “I like to go there as often as I can,” Parnell said. “My six-generation grandfather homesteaded there. Over the years, I ended up with the property.” While the land has a large deer population, he likes hunting turkey and “pretty much anything with wings,” he said. Allene likes the outdoor life as well. To celebrate their 40th wedding anniversary, the couple and some friends went to Africa for a twoweek photo safari in Zimbabwe and Botswana. “That was the first time I’d been on vacation that long,” Parnell said. “I love what I do.” As managing member of Birmingham’s InterFirst Capital LLC, “I’m the middle man,” he said. “I

help developers find the right source of financing. I love the art of the deal.” Parnell also likes being involved in his community. After his daughter, Carleton Benners Parnell, died of cancer at age 22, the UAB Comprehensive Cancer Center became a cause that’s close to his heart. He joined the advisory board there and has served as its chairman. His other daughter, Allene Neighbors, drew his attention to another organization. She is development director for PreSchool Partners, which helps prepare at-risk 3 and 4-year-olds to enter kindergarten at Birmingham City schools. “Right now, we’re building a new school for PreSchool Partners, and I’m co-chairing the capital campaign,” Parnell said. The building project has had lots of supporters, he said, ranging from a friend who donated the old McElwain school property for PreSchool Partners’ new home to the architect, contractor and subcontractors. “We’ve had so many in-kind donations,” Parnell said. The UA graduate maintains ties with his alma mater, especially the Crimson Tide baseball program. He played baseball at Alabama for two years, and the university’s SewellThomas Stadium gets part of its name from Bama baseball great Joe Sewell, Parnell’s maternal grandfather. Parnell is a member of the UA Baseball Steering Committee. He’s also pleased that Joe Sewell will be the focal point of a museum at the updated facility. “We have lots of memorabilia that we’ll give to the museum,” he said. Sewell was inducted into the Baseball Hall of Fame in Cooperstown, N.Y., in 1977, the only University of Alabama player to receive the sport’s highest honor. “I accompanied him when he was inducted,” Parnell said. Sewell also helped his grandson develop a love for hunting, Parnell said. “Now, I’m a member of a group of 15 guys who call ourselves the Smiling Mallards,” Parnell said. “I’m the fourth Smiling Mallard to be the Krewe King.” The king chooses eight friends to serve as his dukes at the ball, and seven of Parnell’s entourage are fellow Smiling Mallards: Mac Beale, Hubert Goings, Mike Goodrich, Jim Hughey, Richard Hydinger, Alex Nading and Mo Smith. The eighth Duke is Parnell’s cousin, Stan Starnes of Tuscaloosa. “He’s an honorary Smiling Mallard,” Parnell said. Just for fun, all the men will wear – somewhere on their regal attire – colorful buttons depicting a mallard head. While Parnell is an avid hunter, committed businessman and dedicated community worker, another part of his life takes top priority. Daughter Allene and her husband, Hugh Neighbors, have two children, Hugh, age 3, and Carleton, who’s 1 ½ years old. “They’re the loves of my life,” Parnell said. ❖

OVER THE MOUNTAIN Journal

Lakeshore’s Lujano Publishes Autobiography When Bob Lujano was 9 years old, he contracted a rare form of meningitis. To save his life, all four of his limbs had to be amputated. That was in 1979. Today, he lives a completely independent life, has a demanding career and is an active athlete. He’s told his compelling story in his new book, “No Arms, No Legs, No Problem.” Lujano will sign copies of his autobiography Feb. 21 from 1-3 p.m. at Barnes and Noble at The Summit. The books also are available through Amazon. Lujano earned a master’s degree in recreation/sports management from the University of Tennessee and won a bronze medal at the 2004 Paralympic Games in Athens, Greece. He co-starred in the Academy Awardnominated documentary “Murderball” and was a guest on “Larry King Live.” Bob Lujano Lujano has worked at Lakeshore Foundation for 16 years and recently became information specialist for the National Center on Health, Physical Activity, and Disability. He was named one of the 20 Most Beautiful People in Birmingham by Birmingham magazine in 2013. In addition to his job and his participation in sports, Lujano volunteers at his church and is an advocate for adaptive and competitive wheelchair sports. He is president of the United States Quad Rugby Association and is a motivational speaker. Lujano said he is actually grateful for the childhood that stole his limbs, scarred his face and body, and left him with a questionable future. “It was the best life I could ever ask for,” he said. “The pain and abuse and rejection were all necessary.”

American Cancer Society Recognizes Jefferson County Volunteer The American Cancer Society recently announced that Laura McDonald has won the Jefferson County Volunteer of the Year Advocating and Fight Back 2014 award. The award recognizes outstanding volunteers in the community who work to make a significant impact for cancer patients. The American Cancer Society selected McDonald as the recipient of this award for her diligent commitment to fundraising and dedication to ensuring local cancer patients continue to receive valuable resources and programs to assist with a cancer journey, according to ACS officials. McDonald was the ACS’s volunteer chairman of the Jefferson/Shelby County Volunteer Board of Directors in 2013-2014. “The American Cancer Society’s mission to eliminate cancer as a major

health issue is lofty but attainable,” McDonald said. “It is a privilege to serve as a leadership volunteer for an organization that is having a significant impact on the fight against cancer. I am deeply grateful for the many volunteers and donors who generously give of their time, talents and resources in the Jefferson/Shelby County area.” McDonald has also chaired and served on the ACS Hope Gala committee. McDonald gets her family involved as her children participate in one of the nation’s top high school youth-led events at Mountain Brook High School’s Relay For Life. Ginny Tucker, ACS community engagement senior director in Birmingham, said McDonald’s leadership style is “dynamic and purposeful.” “I admire her dedication and her tenacity for our mission as she devotes much time and attention to ensuring other families don’t experience the pain of losing a loved one,” Tucker said.

From left: Ginny Tucker, American Cancer Society community engagement senior director; Randall Morrow, ACS Jefferson/Shelby County board of directors president; and Laura McDonald, volunteer award winner and board of directors past president. Photo special to the Journal


Thursday, January 29, 2015 • 7

people

OVER THE MOUNTAIN Journal

Official Family Photo Ronnie Baynes’ three sons are also in the officiating business. From left: Rusty Baynes, an NFL line judge; Ronnie Baynes; Allen Baynes, an NFL side judge; and Mark Baynes, a Conference USA umpire. Allen worked the Detroit-Dallas first round playoff game. Rusty worked the second round Dallas-Green Bay game and has been selected as an alternate in this year’s Super Bowl officiating crew. Photo special to the Journal

Baynes,

From previous page

and XXXIII. “It was an honor to be a part of the Super Bowl,” Baynes said. “To work alongside great professionals, including players, coaches and officials, in the world championship of professional football has to be one of the highlights of my career.” Baynes officiated legendary quarterbacks turning in great performances in both Super Bowls. San Francisco’s Steve Young was brilliant as the 49ers crushed the San Diego Chargers 49-26 in Super Bowl XXIX at Miami’s Joe Robbie Stadium in early 1995. Four years later, Denver’s John Elway paced the Broncos to a 34-19 pasting of the Atlanta Falcons in Super Bowl XXXIII on the same field – by then called Pro Players Stadium – where Baynes had called his first Super Bowl. The victory marked Elway’s final game. While NFL officials undergo intense preparation for any game they

‘I’m not sure if it’s any easier to throw a football that weighs less.’ call, the Super Bowl is always special, Baynes said. “An official can try to tell himself that calling the Super Bowl is just like any another game, but of course it isn’t,” he said. “You know that probably 100 million people are watching. A good official will try to put that out of his mind, but of course he knows that this is football’s ultimate showcase.” Baynes’ strongest memory of officiating a Super Bowl involved something he didn’t do. “In Super Bowl XXXIII, the penalty flag never came out of my pocket,” he said. “I don’t think that’s something I’d done in all my years as an official. People say that the officials have a ‘let ’em play’ philosophy in the Super Bowl because the world championship should not be determined by a penalty. But I think it’s more likely that both teams are so focused on this particular game that they don’t make many little mistakes like jumping offside.” The use of television instant replays to determine the final outcome of questionable calls is simply part of the modern game, Baynes said. “We went a long time without instant replays, but now it’s part of the rules and regulations of NFL football today,” he said. “I don’t think having a call overturned is in the back

of an official’s mind. They do the best they can to get the calls right. The public wants instant replay, and it will always be a part of modern college and professional football.” Baynes retired as an official after the 2000 season and went to work in the NFL’s New York City office as a supervisor of officials. “I was in New York on Sept. 11, 2001,” he said. “The NFL office is about 40 blocks from the World Trade Center, but I’ll never forget the sounds and the sights. That’s a day everyone will always remember.” After eight years in New York, Baynes moved back to the Birmingham area to serve as a league director of scouting and training of incoming officials. “My computer and telephone is all connected through New York, but I don’t have to live there anymore,” he said. “Getting to continue to work for the NFL and live in Alabama is the best of both worlds.” The process of selecting game officials for the NFL is similar to how players are chosen. Baynes and his associates scour the collegiate ranks to find the best possible candidates to be professional officials. The cream of the crop go through an intense training process which includes work at mini-camps, college all-star games and exhibition games as part of the screening process. “Some of the young officials move on to the NFL, others are told they need more experience at the college level, and some unfortunately are told it won’t work out,” he said. “There are plenty of fine college officials that won’t have a place in the NFL.” Despite his position with the NFL, Baynes isn’t shy about expressing his opinions about issues facing the league. He admitted to being puzzled by the recent controversy over whether the New England Patriots intentionally used underinflated footballs in their 45-7 rout of the Indianapolis Colts in the AFC championship game Jan. 11. “The footballs are weighed by the officials in the dressing rooms before the game,” Baynes said. “They should weigh between 12.5 and 13.5 pounds. After that, the footballs go to the ball boys of each team, who are handling them in a stadium in front of thousands of people. So there might be a way someone could manipulate the weights of the footballs, but it would be very difficult.” Baynes also questioned why the Patriots or any other team would knowingly deflate footballs. “I’m not sure if it’s any easier to throw a football that weighs less,” he said. Footballs designated strictly for kicking are constantly under the offi-

cials’ care, Baynes added. “We have one guy in charge of the kicking footballs all the time,” he said. “They are mailed directly to the officials at the stadium.” Baynes said he intends to retire from the NFL soon, but he isn’t walking away from sports. He plans to

work with Birmingham’s Cornerstone School in developing an athletic program. “I have a passion for helping Cornerstone get started with athletics, especially football and baseball,” Baynes said. “With my experience, I hope I can make a contribution.” ❖

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News

8 • Thursday, January 29, 2015

OVER THE MOUNTAIN Journal

Support System

‘Our Homewood community has been amazing, but so have our friends from Vestavia, Mountain Brook and Birmingham. It’s just been overwhelming the love and support we’ve received. It’s just hard to express how grateful we are for the many kindnesses.’ Craig Smalley

u homewood

By William C. Singleton III Following a recent hit-and-run accident that left Homewood parks and recreation board member Paula Smalley injured and currently confined to a wheelchair, she needed a home to stay in that was handicappedaccessible. Enter a Homewood neighbor, with whom Smalley and her husband, Craig, have been staying for the time being. “Some friends of ours in Homewood had taken in another friend previously, so their home is set up well for us,” Craig Smalley said. “We’ve been staying with them while others have been working on our house to make it more accessible. What a gift, what a Godsend that they’ve taken us in.” Speaking on behalf of his wife, who is still recovering from her injuries, Smalley said his family has been overwhelmed by the support from the

Over the Mountain community and beyond since his wife’s accident. Friends have come through to offer meals and their homes, to wash laundry and shower the Smalleys with love, affection and words of encouragement, said Craig Smalley, canon of pastoral care and counseling at Birmingham’s Cathedral Church of the Advent. “We’ve eaten better than we’ve ever eaten,” he said. Letters have come from other cities where they’ve lived, including their former church in Atlanta that has put the family on its prayer list, he added. “Our Homewood community has been amazing, but so have our friends from Vestavia, Mountain Brook and Birmingham,” he said. “It’s just been overwhelming the love and support we’ve received. It’s just hard to express how grateful we are for the many kindnesses.” Paula Smalley still has a ways to

go on her personal road to recovery. She is a pre-kindergarten teacher at All Saints Episcopal Church in Homewood. She has been on the park board for two years and is also a Girl Scout Troop leader and is involved in Homewood High School activities. “This has interrupted her normal routine,” Craig Smalley said. “She’s not able to do the volunteer activities at the high school. She’s not able to teach preschool. She hasn’t been able to go to park board meetings or lead the Girl Scout Troop in things she typically does. “She’s a very active and energetic person and just loves to serve. But she’s very limited at the present time.” Paula Smalley and her husband were leaving WorkPlay Dec. 19 shortly after 11 p.m., crossing Fifth Avenue and 23rd Street South, when a vehicle struck her and sped away. Birmingham police are still looking for the driver of the vehicle that

u vestavia hills

Homebuyers Unhappy about Possible Patchwork Farms Apartments By William C. Singleton III Potential homeowners building houses near Patchwork Farms in Vestavia Hills say they’re concerned about possible apartment units being built adjacent to their future homes. The homeowners said they were initially informed no apartment homes would be built in Patchwork Farms, which influenced their decision to buy lots on which they are building their homes. Dwight Sandlin, owner of Signature Homes, and potential homeowners attended a December Vestavia Hills City Council meeting to voice their concerns. Sandlin said his company

‘Apartments do not add value to any neighborhood.’ Brian Southerland purchased five residential lots adjacent to Patchwork Farms with the understanding that the city’s plans for the property didn’t include residential dwellings. Patchwork Farms consists of nearly 85 acres between Cahaba River and Caldwell Mill roads between U.S. 280 and Interstate 459. When the city purchased Patchwork Farms in 2007, its vision for the property included commercial develop-

ments, homes, park area, sports fields and a school. The city’s plans for the property have changed several times. Based on public meetings held in December 2013 to discuss with businesses and residents the city’s plans for Patchwork Farms, Vestavia Hills officials have decided the best use of the property would be a mixed-use development featuring retail shops, a grocery store and other developments that would give the property a village appeal. A Ross Bridge-like village area with apartment units would fit the concept of what developers hope for Patchwork Farms, said Doug Neil, a representative for Daniel Corp., the master developer for Patchwork Farms. “Ross Bridge is a large residential community (in Hoover) that has a small village component that integrates single family residential, townhome communities, village properties and multifamily as well as the resort hotel,” he said. Neil said Daniel Corp. would bring the same high quality mixed-use development to Patchwork Farms as it has to other areas. He also said there would be appropriate buffers and green space so as not to impact nearby residential homes. But Sandlin said he feels the city misled residents regarding plans for Patchwork Farms. He said the school

system originally said it didn’t want additional residential homes because they could destabilize the school’s student population. The school system sold 22 acres it purchased from the city back to the city last year. “It’s confusing to us that the city would not allow 40 additional homes because of the overcrowding of the school capacity, and now the city is entertaining putting apartments there,” Sandlin said. Vestavia Hills resident Brian Southerland said he and his wife are building a home next to Patchwork Farms but would not have chosen to do so if they had known apartments would be built nearby. “Apartments do not add value to any neighborhood,” he said. “There’s no pride of ownership in any of them. They simply deteriorate over time. I personally believe that there’s still time to stop this and do the right thing.” Currently, there are no plans or designs for apartment units, Neil said. But city leaders also say they’ve properly vetted the issue with the community and feel the mixed-use development is the way to go. Mayor Alberto “Butch” Zaragoza asked Neil to meet with potential homeowners to address their concerns when Daniel Corp. moves forward with residential development. ❖

Photo special to the Journal

Homewood Family Deals with Accident’s Aftermath – But Not Alone

struck Mrs. Smalley. The vehicle is believed to be a dark-colored Saturn SL made between 1996-2000. Paula Smalley sustained “extremely serious injuries from head to toe,” her husband said. She had to go through multiple surgeries and was in the hospital for 20 days. “We still have a very long recovery ahead,” Craig Smalley said. “My wife will be in a wheelchair for three months, so both the Church of the Advent and the community have

kicked in to help so she can get in the house.” Craig Smalley won’t say how much the community has given financially to their situation. He merely wants to focus on the gratitude his family has for the support they’ve received during this time of difficulty. “It’s such a gift to not feel like you’re doing this alone and to have so much encouragement and support,” he said. “It has really sustained us in a wonderful way. God has brought great things out of a very difficult situation, and you really feel the love and the kindness and the concern and generosity from the community and our church.” ❖

u mountain brook

u hoover

Rep. Faulkner Appointed to Three House Committees

Reese Named Interim School Superintendent

State Rep. David Faulkner, R-Mountain Brook, has been appointed to serve on the Judiciary Committee, the Financial Services Committee and the Insurance Committee. Faulkner was elected to the Alabama House of Representatives in 2014 and represents Homewood, Hoover, and Mountain Brook. Faulkner said his legal experience will help him as a member of each committee. “I will work to ensure that our court system operates smoothly and that the deep-rooted, systemic problems in our corrections system are solved,” he said in a press statement. “In addition, I’ll also use my post on the Financial Services and Insurance Committee to ensure that Alabama remains a business-friendly state that attracts jobs and opportunities. I look forward to working closely with the chairmen of these three committees for the betterment of all Alabamians.” Alabama Speaker of the House Mike Hubbard, R-Auburn, said committee assignments were based on the experience and expertise each member of the House possesses. —William C. Singleton III

The Hoover school board has chosen former Enterprise City Schools Superintendent Jim Reese to lead the school system on an interim basis. Reese spent nine of his 40 years with the Enterprise school system as a superintendent before retiring in 2010. Reese will lead the Hoover school system while the board searches for a new superintendent. Hoover is now looking for a permanent leader following Andy Craig’s surprise resignation last month. Craig has agreed to become deputy superintendent of administrative and financial services for the Alabama Department of Education in Montgomery. Reese said he understands his role as interim superintendent. “I want to keep the ship afloat and want to keep the morale high among faculty, staff, students and parents and want to contribute the best way that I can,” he said. Reese will be paid $24,000, the most he can make under the state’s retirement system. He presided at his first board meeting on Jan. 12. —William C. Singleton III

Paula and Craig Smalley


Thursday, January 29, 2015 • 9

news

OVER THE MOUNTAIN Journal

u hoover

Freestanding Emergency Facility Will Get Tax Incentives Brookwood Medical Center also will be exempt from sales taxes related to construction costs. That amount totals about $210,000 from the state, Shelby County and Hoover. Council President Jack Wright said although the city may lose tax dollars, “these are taxes we wouldn’t receive

if this project wasn’t built.” He also noted that the arrangement the council agreed to isn’t unlike similar arrangements. “It’s like UAB Hospital, which is a tax-free entity,” he said. That’s the reason the Medical West emergency clinic didn’t have to go

through the same channels, the mayor said. Hoover Executive Director Allen Pate said the Brookwood emergency facility is expected to serve about 15,000 patients in its first year. He added that the Medical West facility will serve about 12,000 patients in its first year. The Brookwood emergency center is scheduled to break ground within three weeks and open in September or October, Ivey said. ❖

“We got exactly the house we wanted” By William C. Singleton III Brookwood Medical Center will receive more than $900,000 in tax incentives from the city of Hoover to build a freestanding emergency facility. The Hoover City Council at its Jan. 20 meeting approved an incentive package that exempts the emergency facility from property and sales taxes. Brookwood Medical Center plans to build a $19 million, 23,000-squarefoot freestanding emergency facility near U.S. 280 and Alabama 119. It is the second freestanding emergency room being built in Hoover, the other being a $13 million emergency care facility at Interstate 459 and Alabama 150. That emergency center, to be run by UAB’s Medical West, is scheduled to open May 5. The city of Hoover paid $875,000 for nearly 2.5 acres for a road leading to the emergency facility. Mayor Gary Ivey said the investment the city is making in the medical facilities will reap dividends in the lives saved by the facilities. Each facility will be strategically located in Hoover, he added. “Our two biggest thoroughfares,

once you get off the interstates, are (U.S.) 31 and (U.S.) 280,” he said. “We have lots of accidents on both of them, lots of residential (communities) around both of them. We respond to a lot of medical emergencies, not just traffic accidents but heart attacks, strokes and other stuff that time is truly the essence to get these people to a doctor.” These trauma centers, “will truly save lives, and you can’t put a dollar value on that,” Ivey said. However, he added, the emergency centers will produce business for the city. “The new ER room on (Alabama) 150, we’re already seeing a few commercial sites come up because of it,” Ivey said. The agreement with Brookwood Medical Center would make the Hoover Medical Clinic Board the technical owners of the emergency facility. The board would lease the facility back to CGP MedVest, the real estate developer of the emergency center. The arrangement would exempt the emergency facility from property taxes, which would have cost Brookwood nearly $700,000, city officials said.

Mac, Champ, Lynlee, Adele and Alan Palmer on the front porch of their new Mountain Brook home

When Lynlee and Alan Palmer decided to sell their home and buy more space for son Mac, daughter Adele, and the family’s black lab Champ, they looked to long-time friend and experienced Realtor Kim Maddox with ARC Realty for guidance. “We had some challenges selling our home, but Kim worked through the obstacles,” says Alan. “Our search for a new home started right here,” says Lynlee, referring to the location of their new home in Mountain Brook. “We looked at other houses, but we got exactly the location we wanted. I’d be happy to live here forever.” Helping clients (who typically become friends) is what Kim loves about being a Realtor. “It’s rewarding to help a family find a home they love.” Kim made a move last year, too, to ARC Realty. “This is an exciting time to be a Realtor, and the ARC team makes it fun. ARC believes in training and customer service, which translates to happy customers!”

A Relationship Company 4274 Cahaba Heights Court, Suite 200 Birmingham, AL 35243 • 205.969.8910

www.arcrealtyco.com

Kim Maddox • (205) 790-4044 • kmaddox@arcrealtyco.com


10 • Thursday, January 29, 2015

u homewood

Drennen Takes Over Chamber Top Job By William C. Singleton III The new Homewood Chamber of Commerce executive director chose Homewood before Homewood chose her. Meredith Drennen said she picked Homewood as a place to live in 2011 because of all the amenities it has to offer.

‘Any time I can showcase what a diverse business community we have, I think that’s great for Homewood as a whole.’ Meredith Drennen

“I loved that it was close to work,” she said. “It was safe. It has great schools. I felt at home here. “There are so many things that make Homewood just a great community to live in.” When former executive director Tricia Ford announced she was retiring at the end of 2014, Drennen said she saw it as an opportunity to JoyLeague58 ad square_Layout 1 9/10/14 9:00 AM Page 1 make Homewood the place where she

news works as well as lives. “I just thought it was a great opportunity to utilize my unique set of skills in the town I live in and the town I love so much,” she said. Drennen comes to the chamber with eight years of experience at the Birmingham Business Alliance, where she was director of operations. In that role, she managed the alliance’s board of directors and executive committee and handled strategic planning. She also held management positions with the Birmingham Regional Chamber of Commerce, which merged into the Birmingham Business Alliance. Chamber President Trey Schaefer said Drennen’s experience in chamber work should serve the organization well. “A chamber director has to be able to wear many hats,” he said. “From supporting and promoting Homewood and our businesses to implementing long-range plans, it was important for our board to find someone (who) had extensive experience and knowledge in community activities. “Meredith’s background and expertise will make a significant contribution in leading the Homewood Chamber to the next level.” Drennen, who has bachelor’s and master’s degrees from the University of Alabama, said the Homewood business community has a lot of strengths to build upon. “We’ve got a really diverse business community,” she said. “We have some fantastic local Homewood retailers. We’ve also got some really good industry in west Homewood. That business diversity is just a really good asset to have.” Drennen said she wants to engage the business community across those lines. She also said she wants to provide opportunities for businesses to develop and grow. “I want to make sure there are opportunities for seminars, for professional development and for networking across the community,” she said. “Any time I can showcase what a diverse business community we have, I think that’s great for Homewood as a whole.” ❖

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OVER THE MOUNTAIN Journal

u mountain Brook

Piggly Wiggly Return to Crestline a ‘Win-Win for the Community’ By William C. Singleton III Piggly Wiggly is returning to Crestline. The Mountain Brook City Council last month voted to rezone two lots on Vine Street from residential to commercial and another lot on Vine Street from professional district to commercial to pave the way for a new Piggly Wiggly store. Construction of the new store could begin in February and should take about eight months to complete, the project’s architect told council members. Naseem Ajlouny, co-owner of the new store, said he and his partner, Andy Virciglio, are looking forward to returning to Crestline and tried to address the concerns of all the parties impacted by the decision to move the proposed store to its new location. Those concerns included moving a service entrance for truck deliveries from Vine Street to a road that runs parallel to Vine Street, funneling traffic exiting the store away from Crestline Elementary on Vine Street, adding a pedestrian crosswalk on Vine Street, and adding a decorative fence as a buffer between Crestline Field and Vine Street. Residents had complained that traffic generated by the

Though not a part of the incentive agreement, the developer has agreed to build the Girl Scouts a new building. new store would pose a danger to children leaving the school and playing fields. “I think it’s a win-win for the community of Crestline and Mountain Brook and Piggly Wiggly,” Ajlouny said. The council also approved an incentive agreement with the developers of the new store. According to the agreement, the developer will split sales tax revenue with the city of Mountain Brook. The developer will keep up to $4 million the store generates in sales taxes or the amount it collects over a 20-year period, whichever comes first. The developer also agreed to make $1.2 million in improvements for a parking lot and an access road to connect the Piggly Wiggly store to Church Street and then convey the property to the city. Though not a part of the incentive agreement, the developer has agreed to build the Girl Scouts a new building. The property slated for rezoning includes the Girl Scouts’ office, a local business and a learning center. Mountain Brook residents have been clamoring for a return of a Piggly Wiggly to Crestline ever since the former store at 93 Euclid Ave. closed a year ago, ending a 30-year relationship with the community. The new store will be larger than the previous store – about 28,250 square feet with more than 90 parking spaces. “When the Pig left about a year ago, Crestline and the city were devastated,” said Mountain Brook Mayor Terry Oden. “It was like losing a friend. We immediately with the owners started searching for a place to build another one. And we found a place. It’s like we’ve come full circle.” ❖

u hoover

Council Rejects Plans to Build Gas Station By William C. Singleton III The attorney representing Covenant Bank said his client hasn’t decided whether to fight rejection of its plans to build a gas station and convenience store at Alabama 119 and Doug Baker Boulevard in court. “When somebody owns a piece of property, typically, they can use that property for whatever the law allows as long as it’s not illegal, and there’s nothing illegal about what they wanted to do,” Jesse Evans said. The Hoover City Council voted at its Jan. 20 meeting to deny conditional zoning for a proposed Valero gas station. The council followed the opposition from neighbors and Barber Companies, which owns the Cadence Place shopping complex near the proposed site. Council President Jack Wright said the issue came down to a matter of more people being against the proposal than for it. “The opponents outranked the proponents,” he said. “It came down to this: The two sides were represented, and one side had more sentiments and more thoughts that it wasn’t the best thing for the area.” The city’s Planning and Zoning Commission approved the request 4-3 at its November meeting. At the January council meeting, Don Erwin, vice president for corporate development at Barber Companies, spoke against the proposed gas station/convenience store, saying it isn’t the best fit for the property. Erwin said Barber Companies has invested $10 million in Cadence Place and would prefer a business more suitable to the area. He also said with four gas stations already located nearby, the project

wouldn’t add much sales tax revenue to the city because it would merely take business from other stations. “It’s not needed. It’s not wanted, and it won’t generate much tax revenue,” he said. “We’re not against development. We just thought it wasn’t appropriate, and we’re happy the city council made the decision that it did.” Evans told council members that Covenant Bank has met all the requirements for “conditional use” to build a gas station/convenience store on the

property. He said developers would leave in place the natural 50-foot buffer of trees and bushes at its south side to shield it from neighbors. He also said the gas station would have no repair shop, oil change or car wash and would be 300 feet away from a place of public assembly. “We meet all the conditions that are applicable to this property,” Evans said. “So we submit that we are entitled to the approval of the conditional use.” ❖

u hoover

Council Must Fill Lott’s Seat Hoover City Council President Jack Wright said he hopes the council will fill the seat vacated by Trey Lott by next month, preferably by someone who has served on the council previously. Mayor Gary Ivey announced at Monday’s council meeting Lott had resigned his position on the council. Lott, who did not attend the Jan. 20 meeting, has moved to Alabaster, which means he had to give up his seat on the council because he’s no longer a Hoover resident. The council will be responsible for appointing his successor. Lott, a chiropractor, has 20 months remaining on his term. Wright said he has already received inquiries from residents about serving on the council. “There are a lot of people who are willing to serve,” he said. “I’ve had half a dozen to a dozen people ask me. In fact, we have people daily who are interested in being on the council.” Wright said he still needs to consult with other council members on whether they will have an official application and interview process. But he said his preference would be to select someone who is either a former council member or a person who is knowledgeable about the city. “For the normal person, it takes about 12 to 18 months just to have a working knowledge of a city of 750 employees, $130 million budget and 45 square miles,” he said. “There’s obviously not that kind of time for a rookie councilmember, so we’d like to have someone who’s pretty further along on the learning curve.” Following Lott’s announcement that he would be leaving the council, his colleagues expressed their appreciation for his service to the community. “Dr. Lott has always brought a level-headed, common sense style of leadership that will be truly missed,” said Council John Lyda on his Facebook page. “We enjoyed serving with Dr. Lott, and we wish him the best,” Wright said. —William C. Singleton III


Thursday, January 29, 2015 • 11

news

OVER THE MOUNTAIN Journal

Breast Cancer Foundation Makes Largest-ever Donation to UAB Center

u homewood

By William C. Singleton III The Homewood City Council last month agreed to continue paying for full bus service through January until city officials can meet with the Birmingham-Jefferson County Transit Authority’s board to resolve funding issues which could lead to reductions or the continuation of transit services within the city. The council unanimously approved allocating $8,000 to continue full transit service in Homewood between Dec. 22 and Jan. 31. The council in September passed a 2014-2015 operating budget that reduced Homewood’s contribution to the BirminghamJefferson County Transit Authority (also called Metro Area Express or MAX) by 50 percent. MAX is asking for $266,000, but the city allocated only $133,000. Homewood’s reduction in its contribu-

‘We’re just trying to do what’s best for our residents who need transit services while being fiscally responsible.’ Walter Jones

tion to MAX stems from a decision by the BJCTA to drop Homewood’s and Mountain Brook’s seats on the board. According to BTJCA’s governing legislation, board representation is determined by population. Hoover and Vestavia grew in population, while Homewood and Mountain Brook fell behind those two cities in terms of population, thus losing their seats on the board. Homewood officials, however, disagree with cutting its seats from the MAX board, especially before the term of its representative ended. The BJTCA informed Homewood that not paying the full amount would

eliminate bus and paratransit service between 10 a.m. and 3 p.m. along two routes. The reduction in service was scheduled to go into effect Dec. 22. However, many residents who rely on bus and paratransit services contacted city officials, begging them not to cut the services. Paratransit services offer door-to-door transportation to those not able to ride regular buses. Some of those residents attended a Dec. 15 finance committee meeting that preceded a special-called council meeting. “Folks need this bus service,” said the Rev. Lawton Higgs, a local minister and advocate for Birmingham’s impoverished population. “It’s a ride to the tree of life for jobs and for healthcare for their community. We need our buses to make life meaningful.” In lieu of full MAX bus service, the council has been looking to hire ClasTran to fill the void. The council, at the same Dec. 15 special-called meeting, authorized the mayor to enter into a contract with ClasTran to provide paratransit services to Homewood residents. But the ClasTran contract is dependent upon the BJTCA board because it administers federal funds on behalf of ClasTran. MAX Executive Director Ann August said she hopes Homewood will continue offering full transit services to its residents. “People need to get to work. People need to get to training, they need to get to medical facilities and any place else they need to go,” she said. “And it’s not just the paratransit people. It’s anybody who wants to ride the service.” Having two transit providers servicing Homewood wouldn’t be as efficient in an urban area, August added. Councilman Walter Jones said the council is open to exploring ways to provide transit services to its residents. “We’re just trying to do what’s best for our residents who need transit services while being fiscally responsible,” he said.

Winter Sale

Photo special to the Journal

City Will Pay for Bus Service through January

From left: Carol Sue Nelson, Immediate Past President of the BCRFA Board of Directors; Kate Kiefer, President of the BCRFA Board of Directors and Edward E. Partridge, M.D., Director of the UAB Comprehensive Cancer Center.

The Breast Cancer Research Foundation of Alabama presented its largest-ever donation of $650,000 to the UAB Comprehensive Cancer Center on Jan. 20. Since its inception in 1996, the BCRFA has made an annual donation to the cancer center with the proceeds from its fund-raising efforts during the previous year, including sales of specialty breast cancer research license plates, BCRFA events and from individual and community donations. This year’s contribution brings the Birmingham-based organization’s cumulative total for research at UAB to more than $5.1 million.

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1. Go to a designated public shelter if your home loses power or heat during periods of extreme cold but avoid driving when those conditions include sleet, freezing rain or drizzle, snow or dense fog. 2. Before tackling strenuous tasks in cold temperatures, consider your physical condition, the weather factors and the nature of the task. 3. Protect yourself from frostbite and hypothermia by wearing warm, loosefitting, lightweight clothing in several layers. Stay indoors, if possible.

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12/23/14 4:26 PM


life

12 • Thursday, January 29, 2015

OVER THE MOUNTAIN Journal

Comfort Food

Cookbook Author Finds Inspiration, Solace in Her Kitchen

Nita Colson’s Chicken Salad

Kay Yeager calls this recipe from her cookbook the “very best” chicken salad. Ingredients: 2 eggs, plus 1 egg yolk 1/3 cup milk ½ teaspoon salt 1 teaspoon dry mustard Dash of celery seed Miracle Whip (to taste) ¾ cup celery, chopped fine 3 hard-boiled eggs, grated 3 tablespoons white vinegar 1 teaspoon liquid butter ½ teaspoon sugar 4 large chicken breasts, cooked Directions: Cook chicken and process in food processor. In a separate bowl, beat eggs and vinegar together and then add milk, butter, salt, mustard and celery seed. Cook over hot water in a double boiler until thick and creamy. Mix mixture and Miracle Whip, celery and hard-boiled eggs with chicken. Chill.

Western Supermarket on Rocky Ridge Road is hosting book signings for Yeager Feb. 6 from 4-6 p.m. and Feb. 7 from 10 a.m.-noon.

Clockwise from above: Kay Yeager displays her new cookbook, “KayKay’s 100 Favorite Recipes,” in her favorite place – her kitchen. Kay Yeager’s meatballs spice up a simple spaghetti dish. Prosciutto-wrapped turkey breast has just a few ingredients but lots of flavor. The recipe is in Yeager’s cookbook. Journal photos by Lee Walls Jr.

By Donna Cornelius Kay Yeager’s new cookbook is more than just a collection of recipes. To her, it’s a legacy. Yeager, who lives in Vestavia Hills, put her cookbook together as a way to preserve her favorite recipes for her family and friends. But “KayKay’s 100 Favorite Recipes” is reaching a wider audience and soon may have even more fans. Western Supermarket on Rocky Ridge Road is hosting book signings for Yeager Feb. 6 from 4-6 p.m. and Feb. 7 from 10 a.m.-noon. “We’re already on our third printing of the cookbook,” she said. “It took me a year to write it. When I got through, I cried.” Yeager said she grew up in Eutaw “loving to cook” with her grandmother, who had a wood stove. She also grew up with more responsibilities than most children. “My dad died when my younger brother, Jim, was just 9 months old,” she said. “When Jim was 5 and I was 18, my mother died of breast cancer.” She and her husband, architect Fred Yeager, raised Jim and two sons of their own, Josh and Joe. Twenty-four years ago, Yeager had to face another challenge—one that threatened her life. “I went in for a routine hysterectomy and was diagnosed with Stage III ovarian cancer,” she said. “I was 36 years old. I was given less than a 40

percent survival rate.” During all the tough times in her life, Yeager found comfort and inspiration in the kitchen, she said. And she loves sharing her love of cooking with others. In fact, that’s how the cookbook got started. She and Fred serve as “in-town grandparents” to the 2-year-old twin sons of Lindsay Roebuck, who’s married to Yeager’s cousin, she said. Teaching Lindsey to cook and sharing the fun of cooking with her made Yeager decide to compile

‘I went in for a routine hysterectomy and was diagnosed with Stage III ovarian cancer. I was 36 years old. I was given less than a 40 percent survival rate.’ Kay Yeager her recipes into a book. “I had tried doing it on the computer, but that felt so cold and impersonal,” Yeager said. Instead, she bought a ready-made recipe notebook at Vestavia Hills Apothecary and hand-wrote her recipes on its pages. A bout with skin cancer confined her indoors for a while, so she used the time to work on her project. “Lindsey’s parents have a print shop in Florence, and they were able to copy the pages for me,” she said. “I started out with 25 copies.”

Those didn’t last long. As soon as you turn to the first page, you know this is a one-of-a-kind book. Yeager’s recipes come from her own collection, from relatives and friends, and from culinary luminaries like Frank Stitt, Chris Hastings and even Julia Child. Photos show Yeager and her husband during their 40th anniversary trip to Paris in 2013. “We took a cooking class from Catherine Reed,” Yeager said. “Freddie and I really love to cook together.” Just as her grandmother passed on her love of cooking, Yeager is nurturing another budding chef in the family – her 11-year-old granddaughter, Lily. “Lily loves to cook, and she’ll be with me at the book signings,” Yeager said. “For Christmas, I gave her cooking tools.” Although Yeager didn’t anticipate becoming a cookbook author, she’s already thinking about her next project. For now, she’s having fun hearing from folks who have tried her recipes in the book and loved them. “I’m passionate about this cookbook,” Yeager said. “I think it tells a story.” If you can’t make it to the book signings, where Yeager will sell her books for $44.95, including taxes, you can order “KayKay’s 100 Favorite Recipes” by sending an email to kayyeager@att.net. You also can get a copy by sending a $50 check, which will cover shipping costs, to Kay Yeager, 2313 Overlook Crest, Vestavia Hills, AL 35226. ❖


OVER THE MOUNTAIN Journal

Life

Thursday, January 29, 2015 • 13

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14 • Thursday, January 29, 2015

social

OVER THE MOUNTAIN Journal

Poinsettia Presentation

Thirty-one Make Their Debut at 47th Annual Holiday Event

T

27.

he Ballet Women’s Committee and Poinsettia Men’s Club hosted the 47th annual Poinsettia Debutante Ball Dec.

Thirty-one young women were presented by their fathers at the festive holiday event at Vestavia Country Club. The Ballet Women’s Committee was founded in 1960 to foster and promote fine arts in the greater Birmingham area. The Poinsettia Men’s Club was formed in 1969 to support, promote and cultivate goals and activities of the Ballet Women’s Committee. All proceeds from the ball help support the Alabama Ballet. Vestavia Country Club was decorated with Christmas greenery, gold ribbons, ornaments and red poinsettias provided by Carole Sullivan of Lagniappe Designs. Sullivan suspended red spheres in the ballroom over the seated debutantes. The debutantes, dressed in white ball gowns, carried bouquets of red poinsettias and juniper greenery. The evening began with the debutantes’ presentation at the Benefactor’s Dinner sponsored by the Poinsettia Men’s Club and coordinated by Nancy Kennedy. Dinner attendees included Mr. and Mrs. David G. Askins, Mr. and Mrs. Terry J. Bagwell, Steve Brown, Mr. and Mrs. John D. Guest, Mr. and Mrs. J. Paul Henderson, Mr. and Mrs. Taylor Henderson, Ashton Henderson, Mr. and Mrs. R. David Hendrickson, Mr. and Mrs. Morris O. Kay, Mr. and Mrs. James Caswell Kennedy and Mr. and Mrs. James C. Kennemer. Others enjoying the dinner were Mr. and Mrs. Joseph M. Lassiter, Mr. and Mrs. Joseph A. Marino Sr., Julia E. Meyers and Mrs. Greg Meyers, Dr. and Mrs. Chandler Hargrove Smith, Mr. and Mrs. Dan L. Summers, Mr. and Mrs. David D. Wininger Jr., Mr. and Mrs. Foster F. Yeilding, Gaines Yeilding and Wilson Yeilding. Liz Guest served as Ball Board president. Cynthia McDaniel was ball chairman, and Sherry Bohorfoush was Ball Board social secretary. The Men’s Club president is Morris Kay. Ballet Women’s Committee President Melissa Lassiter was on hand to greet the debutantes. Other Ball Board members coordinating the holiday event were Mary Angelo, Beth Glisson, Patti Pierce, Beth Sasser, Michelle Schmidtke, Susan Vawter and Leigh Ann Yeilding. Committee members included Karen Askins, Una Ray Barnett, Elizabeth Ferguson, Lianne Hand,

From left: Ali Cash, Caroline Beauchaine, Leah Reeve and Caroline Stanphill.

Ellen Marsh, Gina Maiola, Francesca Malensek and Shea McCord.

Meagan Willis, Anna Robbins, Catherine Angelo and Emily Crawford.

Anna Leigh Sharp, Sanders Ammons, Cahterine Harris and Caroline Garrison.

Julia Simmons, Maggie Seeley, Margaret Sharbel and Grace Cato.

Kelle Summerlin, Anna Donze, Catherine Wininger and Alex Cool. Journal photos by Emil Wald

Debutantes presented but not pictured: Anna Christiansen, Caroline Gaylard, Jaclyn Howell, Mary Ann Stevenson and Haley Visintainer.

Leta Head, Allison Miller and Elizabeth Sandoval. Don Mosley of Sounds of Birmingham was master of ceremonies for the evening. After the presentation to music by harpist Judy Hicks, the ball’s traditional father-daughter waltz began. Guests then enjoyed dancing to the music of Creativity. ❖

Virginia Barr and Monicka Roden.


social

Thursday, January 29, 2015 • 15

Photo special to the Journal

OVER THE MOUNTAIN Journal

From left: Lee Styslinger, Jr., Catherine Styslinger, Lee Styslinger III, Kelly Styslinger, Nelson Bean, 2014 Tocqueville Society Chair, Kimberly Bean, Jon Styslinger, Babbie Styslinger, Mark Styslinger and Jennifer Styslinger

Family of Philanthropists Tocqueville Society Dinner Honors Styslingers

More than 350 guests were present to honor the Styslinger family with United Way of Central Alabama’s 2014 Tocqueville Award at the 19th annual Tocqueville Dinner in November. “This exceptional family is invaluable to central Alabama’s philanthropic fabric as well as other communities where Altec Inc. operates, and it is United Way of Central Alabama’s honor to present them with the 2014 Tocqueville Society of Central Alabama Award,” said Drew Langloh, United Way of Central Alabama, Inc. president and chief executive officer. He was at the event with his wife, Ann Lynn Langloh. Recipients of the award are philanthropists who exemplify the spirit of caring and the power to make a meaningful impact on the community’s most pressing issues. The Styslingers – Lee III, Jon and Mark – grew up in Birmingham watching their parents, Catherine and Lee Styslinger Jr., volunteer in church and civic activities. “Giving back is foundational to our values and culture,” said Lee Styslinger III, chairman and CEO of Altec Inc. “This goes back to 1929 when our company was founded by my grandfather, Lee Styslinger.” The Styslinger family and Altec associates throughout the country are involved in United Way and in affiliated organizations such as the American Red Cross and Habitat for Humanity. At the dinner, small plate stations offered Cox Farm

beef tenderloin, chicken with cipollini, seared halibut, shrimp and grits, sliced roasted Brussels sprouts, butternut squash, parmesan risotto, truffle mashed potatoes, baby carrots, wild mushrooms, whipped cauliflower succotash, heirloom tomatoes, mushrooms and scallions with a lemon butter sauce Desserts included a gelato bar, mini lemon meringue tarts, chocolate peanut butter squares and mini Banoffee tarts. Flowers were by Wyatt Wilson. String Theory provided music for the evening. Among the guests were Kimberly and Nelson Bean, 2014 Tocqueville chairman; Tricia and Mark Drew, 2014 United Way Campaign chairman; Deepa and Sam Bhate; Rich and Tracey Bielen; Hansell and Robert Boehme; Margaret and Will Brooke, Mr. and Mrs. Ronald G. Bruno, Karen and Todd Carlisle; Collins and Trey Clegg; Betts and Felix Drennen; Jenny and Lee Edwards; Lisa and Jared Flake; Nancy and Glenn Goedecke; Gillian and Mike Goodrich; and Frances and Miller Gorrie. United Way’s Tocqueville Society was founded to deepen the understanding, commitment and support of United Way’s most generous and community minded investors. It officially began in 1986 with William J. Rushton Jr. and Jimmie and Emil Hess serving in its first leadership positions. Today, the society consists of more than 700 families. ❖

For over 90 years, Levy’s has been Birmingham's Specialist in Antique and Estate Jewelry as well as Fine Diamonds, Art and Antiques.

Faire Play

Waldorf School Event Includes Fun, Fundraising

Katrina Turnbach and Shelliegh Buckingham.

Photo special to the Journal

The 27th annual Holiday Faire at Alabama Waldorf School in December exceeded organizers’ expectations, school officials said. The Dec. 6 Holiday Faire featured an international lunch buffet and bake sale, live music, games, the Little Elves Store, a drum circle with John Scalici and a climbing wall from Idlewild. Local vendors sold handmade goods, toys and jewelry to the estimated 300 guests at this year’s event. Those attending included Betsy Mills, Katrina Turnback, Shelliegh Buckingham, Ashish Pradham, Opal South, Lisa Grupe, Holly Terrell, Hampton Terrell, Sadhna Udharam and Glenny Brock. ❖

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16 • Thursday, January 29, 2015

social

OVER THE MOUNTAIN Journal

KD Christmas Party Mountain Brook Alums Honor Daughters, Collegians

The Mountain Brook Kappa Delta Alumnae Association held a Christmas party honoring their daughters and collegiate members. The event was hosted by Lori Reich, whose home was beautifully decorated for the holidays. Liz Woods helped add holiday touches with her holly wreaths and garlands. Lunch was prepared by Lucie Haynes, Amy Knight and Anna Carson. Those at the party included Helen Catherine Reich, Ann Wilson Reich, Elizabeth Outland, Sheila McCallum, Kelly McCallum, Irene Gardner, Lucy Gardner, Enid Athanas, Mary Martha Athanas, Lori Barber, Emily Barber, Caroline Barber, Savannah Wright, Julie Wright, Laura Sink, Emily Sink, Susan Davies, Caroline Davies, Melissa Kenan, Francie Kenan, Margaret Ritchie, Sarah Yarbro, Susan Yarbro, Cynthia and Louise Shearer, Lisa Flake, Suzanne Hughes, Jennifer Debruge, Alice and Natalie Womack, Adelaide and Delia Vandevelde, Carol Hunter and Liz Briggs. Others at the party were Amy, Lee and Louise Knight; Katie, Kathleen and Laura Lou Patrick; Beaty and Evelyn Coleman; Rebecca Lankford; Celeste Brady; Leigh and Leacy Bromberg; Margaret and Anna Howell; and Marion and Mary Hanlan Webb. Also at the gathering were Caroline Poellnitz; Liz Wood; Frances Hand; Susanne McMillan; Robin and Mallie Reed; Ivey, Murray and Kate Brown; Suzanne and Ann Thomas; Landon and Walton Stivender; Anne Oliver; Lane DeWine; Marlea Foster; Jean Reed Woodward; Betsy and Eliza Harmon; Catherine and Alison Creighton; Beth and Elle McMillan; Mary Frances Thetford; and Frances Faulkener. ❖

From left: Liz Woods, Julie Wright and Caroline Poellnitz

Katie Patrick, Lori Reach and Jennifer DeBruge

Catherine Creighton, Alison Creighton, Celeste Brady and Rebecca Lankford. Photos special to the Journal

Poetry-based Play

Students Perform for NSAL Meeting

Catherine MacKenzie Cullen

The National Society of Arts and Letters’ Birmingham Chapter’s Nov. 19 meeting featured a play performed by Alabama School of Fine Arts students. The meeting was at Birmingham Country Club. ASFA Fine Arts Director Jonathan Fuller presented the play, which is based on two poems by Mary Oliver. Melissa Cox Summey was a guest director. First-year ASFA students featured in the play were Tre Perry, Annetwynette Cooks, Lauren Lamphere, Mallory Waggoner, Seona Griffith, Gus Borkent, A.J. Turner, Mary Handsom, Dorian Davis and Amina Johnson. Mildred Allen Taub presided over the meeting. Guests included Venera Brumley, Elizabeth Ross and Andy Thorp. The chapter’s drama competition will be April 4 at the Altamont School. ❖

Big Apple Ball Vestavia Resident Makes Debut in New York A Vestavia Hills woman made her debut at the 60th International Debutante Ball Dec. 29 in New York City. Catherine MacKenzie Cullen, daughter of Stephen Gary Cullen of Vestavia Hills, was presented at the event held in the Grand Ballroom of the Waldorf Astoria. Cullen is a senior at BirminghamSouthern College. She was presented at the 46th annual Poinsettia Debutante Ball in 2013. ❖

From left: Edie Barnes, Elizabeth Ross and Andrew Thorp.

Photo special to the Journal


OVER THE MOUNTAIN Journal

Eventful Year

Thursday, January 29, 2015 • 17

social

Rehab Reality by Jeff (Bonzo)

Antiquarians Enjoy Special Speakers, Programs The club year has been a busy one for Antiquarian Society of Birmingham members. The group began its current club year with Dr. Robert Schindler, curator of European Art at the Birmingham Museum of Art, speaking on “Small Treasures: Vermeer, Hals and Their Contemporaries.” These 40 small-format oil paintings from the Flemish and Dutch Golden Age will be exhibited at the Birmingham Museum of Art Jan. 30-April 26. At the club’s Christmas luncheon on Dec. 10 at Mountain Brook Club, Amanda Tapley, Miss Alabama 2008, sang and played the piano. At the November meeting, Ian Crawford spoke on the development of antebellum ornamental gardens in Alabama. As director of the Jemison-Van de Graaff Foundation in Tuscaloosa, Crawford manages the 1859 house museum and its contents. Newly-elected Antiquarians were welcomed at the October meeting. They included Caroline Sparrow,

Bartlett, Redonda Broom, Ellen Broome, Kirke Cater, Kay Clark, Patricia Clark, Florence Cole, Sahra Coxe Lee, Martha Lee Culp, Susan Dasher, Margie Denton, Marsha Duell, Jane Ellis, Shirley Evans, Marjorie Forney, Joann Fox, Diane Gay, Anne Gibbons, Betty Noe Gonder, Claire Goodhew, Kay Grayson, Annie Green, Charmion Hain, Judy Haise, Judith Hand, Bernice Hill, Sandra Holley, Margaret Howell, Rosemarie Ippolito, Sara Jackson, Rosemary Jager, Mary Ann Jones, Nancy Jones, Rusty Kirkpatrick, Lena Knight, Rose Lofton, Judy Long, Harriet Maloof, Bitty Mason, Nancy Mason, Rebecca Mason and Nancy Morrow. Also spotted at the events were Patricia Natter, Betty Northen, Margaret Northrup, Nelda Osment, Shasta Parker, Sue Patrick, Meridith Peeples, Barbara Petzold, Louise Pinkerton, Helen Pittman, Kathryn Porter, Margie Preston, Gail Pugh, Lucianne Pugh, Peggy

From left: Sarah Yang, Melissa Miller, Amy Huddleston, Regina Newsome and Cindi Stehr. Photo special to the Journal

Farm to Table Fundraiser

Hilltop School Event Has Gardening Theme Hilltop Montessori School in the Town of Mt Laurel hosted its annual gardening, farm to table-themed dinner Nov. 6 at the Stone’s Throw in Mt Laurel. Guests mingled in the brisk fall air underneath festive lights and viewed the model of the school’s Phase Three Expansion project, presented by Bill Segrest and Jonathan Meadows of Williams-Blackstock Architecture. Patrons dined on short ribs, shrimp and grits, and homemade bread pudding prepared by Chef Chris Harrigan, while Jack Granger and Joey Longoria of Granger, Thagard and Associates conducted a live auction featuring items organized by Jenn Sides Stephens of Teach Me Beauty. The most popular auction items were the Frank Stitt Experience, a Girls Night Out for 12 at Bellinis with swag bags from Teach Me Beauty, a Fleming’s Prime Steakhouse and Wine Bar Party for 12, and a reserved parking spot at the school. The most heavily sought-after item was a “Priceless Experience for Him and Her” that included a Louis Vuitton Damier Trevi GM handbag and wallet, a $5,000 shopping spree at Saks Fifth Avenue, a personal style consultation with Southern Femme founder Megan LaRussa, and organizational services from Amanda LaBlanc of “The Amandas” as well as golfing excursions. Sponsors of the event included EBSCO Industries, Inc., Teach Me Beauty, JohnsonKreis Construction, Bromberg’s, Frank and Pardis Stitt, Newsome Law LLC, Cardiology P.C., American Family Care, FoodBar and Bellinis Ristorante. Organizers said this year’s event was the most successful in the school’s history, raising more than $70,000 for the school’s future expansion. The expansion is a $3 million project that will include a community center, a teaching kitchen that will offer organic lunches from the school’s outdoor gardens, expanded classrooms, a science laboratory and a multimedia center. Those attending included Head of School Michele Wilensky, Michael Wilensky, Sarah Yang, Melissa Miller, Amy Huddleston, Regina Newsome, Cindi Stehr, Cindy Richmond, Marie Freeman, Carla Irwin, Matthew Rodgers and Brooke Rodgers. ❖

From left: Margie Williams, Nancy Jones, Linda Stewart, Annie Green and Babs Simpson. Photo special to the Journal

Ragland, Kathie Ramsey, Natasha Randolph, Carolyn Reich, Julia Alice Rice, Lucy Richardson, Aubrey Ross, Babs Simpson, Nan Skier, Jan Smith, Mary Carol Smith, Caroline Sparrow, Linda Stewart, Rhetta Tatum, Rebekah Taylor, Carole Thomas, Barbara Wall, Laura Wallace, Celeste Waller, Liz Warren, Doris Wayman, Leila Welch, Lynda Whitney, Elouise Williams, Margie Williams, Eukie Woodall, Paulette Yelverton, Janis Zeanah, Caroline Daniel, Sylvia Patrick, Kay Savage, Lee Scott, Angela Comfort, Jane Paris Smith, Lois Turnipseed and Jean Vaughn. Guests included Judy Leesburg, Cece Dillard, Nancy VanWanderham, Donald Roth, Amy Tully, Daphne Bradley and Shelley Graham. ❖

Send social news to: editorial@otmj.com

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Angela Comfort, Laura Wallace, Redonda Broom, Kay Clark, Zandra Krulak (honorary), Lynda Whitney and Jan Smith. The Antiquarian Society has a full membership of 100 active members and a lengthy waiting list. Jane Ellis is membership chairman. The society focuses on maintaining interest in antiques and heirlooms by study and display. President Nan Teninbaum presided at the business meetings, and Vice President Carolyn Satterfield introduced the programs. Rebecca Taylor gave the invocation at the October meeting, and Lucianne Pugh gave the invocation at the November meeting. Seasonal table décor was designed by Mandy Adams in October. Annie Green and Nancy Jones collaborated on the November centerpieces with a Thanksgiving theme of pumpkins, pilgrims and ceramic turkeys. In December, Martha Lee Culp gave the invocation. Lynda Robertson and Kay Grayson arranged the tablescapes. Those attending the Antiquarian Society’s events included Amanda Adams, Barbara Baird, Martha

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It’s the cornerstone of addiction. How many times have you heard someone say “I had no idea”. Or, “I knew he/she was drinking, but didn’t realize it was that bad”. This is all to common, yet there are usually signs all around. For example: 1. Never having enough money or not working. 2. Missing appointments or habitually late. 3. Lack of care for personal grooming and hygene. 4. Pawn shop receipts or missing items from your home. The list goes on and on. Many times we think of these things as just a part of who that person is, irresponsible and imature. But most of the time they are signs of an addiction controling the behavior. True, some people live their lives struggling with items 1 though 3 and it’s not addiction causing it. It’s a learned or accepted behavior. But for those who struggle with addictions that control their behavior, it’s a different story. All too often we hear the comments from loved ones that they “had no idea” after it’s too late. After someone has overdosed or even died from alcohol poisoning. It’s also then that families say they would have done anything if they had only known. Getting quality help is hard. Bayshore Retreat is dedicated to helping .. it might not be with us, since we only have 6 clients at a time, but we’ll help you find a place that might be appropriate. Don’t ignore the signs. Don’t be afraid to confront the issues.

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18 • Thursday, January 29, 2015

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OVER THE MOUNTAIN Journal

Still Growing

Forest Park Garden Club Marks Milestone Anniversary

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Discover the Difference!

Current and former members of the Forest Park Garden Club gathered last month to celebrate the organization’s 60th anniversary. To mark the special occasion, a brunch was held in the Redmont Room at The Club in Homewood Dec. 15. Those attending celebrated the club’s six decades of heritage, gardening and friendship through conversation, photos, historical scrapbooks and a video compiled for the Forest Park Garden Club’s 50th anniversary. The theme of the anniversary brunch, “60 Years Old and Still Growing,” was reflected in the invitations created by Martha Hare and sent to all former and current garden club members. The party was organized by a committee that included members Catherine Browne, Bryding Adams, Susan Ragland, Liz Selden, Ann Gober and Martha Hare. The table decorations featured seasonal greenery, including holly, boxwood, magnolia leaves and berries from members’ gardens. Ann Gober and committee members Amanda Wilson, Barbara Morgan, Nona Stine and Martha Hare were in charge of the table decorations. After members enjoyed quiche, fruit and The Club’s famous orange rolls, Catherine Browne, the club’s beautification and preservation committee chairman, gave a short talk about the special people and moments

Above: From left: Susan Durham, Barbara Morgan, Martha Hare and Jeannie Davis. left: Rachel Cornelius, Gabrielle Matese and Rita Smith. Photos special to the Journal

of the club’s past. Browne discussed how the club helped save Forest Park from road development and preserve Avondale Villa. Jeannie Davis set up a display of the club’s scrapbooks and a collection of both new and historical photos of members and club events. Bryding Adams, co-president with Susan Ragland, presided. The club members wrapped up their anniversary celebration by look-

ing to the future and planning events for the new year, including monthly gatherings, helping with the butterfly and native plant gardens at Avondale Park, and working to deter the growth of invasive plants in their Forest Park neighborhood. Others attending included Anne Rand, Brenda Howell, Rita Smith, Margaret Ann Peterson, Patsy Straka, Susan Durham, Rachel Cornelius and Gabrielle Matese. ❖

Gaities Gala

Club Hosts 66th Annual Christmas Ball

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Shades Mountain Christian School smcs.org 205.978.6001 Call to schedule a tour!

Gaities President Becky Bates and husband, David, led the dancing at the club’s Christmas Ball at the Country Club of Birmingham Dec. 5. Robert Logan illuminated the entrance of the club’s East Room with giant-sized Christmas packages. Dance Chairman Judy Feagin and husband, John, worked on the event with Logan. This was the 66th year for the Christmas Ball. The gathering was started to welcome men returning home from World War II. Those enjoying the festivities were Lucy and Dan Alison, Ann and John Baker, Coquette and Bill Barns,

Becky and David Bates, Leslie and Rob Black, Martha Bradford and Jack Powers, Nan and Buddy Carter, Linda and David Roberts, Kim and Corbin Day, June and John Eagan, Brownie and Barry Evans, Carolyn Featheringill with escort Irvine Rich, Marjorie Forney, Louise and Sharp Gillespy, Barbara and Bobby Klyce, Marcia and Ken Little, Jackie and Bruce McClary, Dana and Pete McCarn, Edith and Fred Astaire Medley, Lovie and John Montgomery, Harry and Betsy Miller, Peggy Morgan and her son, A. Martin Morgan, Ann Martin, Betty and Charlie Northern, Sandra and Terry Oden, Bette and Crawford Owen, Valerie and Tommy Pankey, Kathleen and George Petznick, Helen and Walter Gay Pittman, Lee and Mark Rives, Catherine and Stewart Smith, Mary and Terrell Spenser, Mary Steiner, Cindy and Andy Strickland, Rosalyn and Jim Stroud, Virginia and Tommy Tucker, and Betty and Albert Tully, Jeannie and Lee Walthall, Suzanne and Mike Wald, Margaret and Bill Whitaker, Doris and Joe McCracken, Doris and Jim Wilson and Janie and Walter Wilson. ❖

From left: John and Judy Feagin and Becky and David Bates. Photo special to the Journal


Thursday, January 29, 2015 • 19

social

OVER THE MOUNTAIN Journal

and Steve Reich, Nancy and Bart Morrow, Staci and Ben Thompson, Elise Warren, Judy and Bruce Matthews, Kathie and Pringle Ramsey, Martha Lee and Billy Culp, Mary Ellen West, Susan and Wyatt Haskell, Mims and Mary Cooper, Anne and Tom Lamkin,

Diane and Reb Beck, Brenda and Alan Ross, Lochrane and Mell Smith, Olivia Alison, Martha Ann Doyal, Nell Larson and Russell Kilgore, Carolyn and Thad Long, Sue Watkins, Babs Simpson and Greg Despinakis, and Janis Zeanah. ❖

We Have Solutions to Your Resolutions From left: Dr. Ed Jones, Nancy Jones and Elam Holley.

Photos special to the Journal

Hitting High Notes

BMC Guild’s Christmas Party Draws a Crowd The Guild of the Birmingham Music Club drew a big crowd to its Dec. 12 Christmas party hosted by Sandra and Elam Holley at First Partners Bank on Highland Avenue. Christmas carols were played by keyboardists Maurice Nix and Bessie Sheldon, who also sang. BMC Executive Director Ron Bourdages led all the guests in singing familiar carols accompanied by his guitar and Nix at the keyboard. The bank’s reception rooms were beautifully decorated for the party, and a variety of heavy hors d’oeuvres were provided by members. A drawing for an array of items

benefited the Guild’s music scholarship fund. Nancy Jones and Fran Howard co-chaired the event. Pat Grant is president of the Guild. Among members and guests spotted in the crowd were Marsha and Jim Drennen, Judy and Charlann Anderson, Liz and Tom Warren, Katherine and John Sechrist, Roberta and Jim Atkinson, Faye and Bobby Boyd, Jane and Ronald Dykes, Cheree and Eric Carlton, Nan and Phil Teninbaum, Becky and Greg Keyes, Judy and Edward Wiggins, Pat and Gerry Durward, Angie and Allen Holder, Bettie

Music and Merriment

Sprig O’Holly Club Hosts Christmas Party

Babs Simpson and Greg Despinakis

Davenport and George Smith, Pat and Perry Grant, Kay and David Clark, Virginia and Shine Guthrie, Nancy and Dr. Ed Jones, Shirley and Bob Brown, Martha and Bob Black, Judy and Jim Haise, Grace Cooper, Linda and Cara Cooper, Elaine and Oliver Clark, Tallulah Hargrove, Dot and Jim Anderson, Jane and Charles Ellis, and Randi Bourdages. Also at the party were Caroline

1) Lamps

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What is it that makes us different here? To: Tricia From: Over The Mountain Journal, phone 205-823-9646, fax 205-824-1246 Date: January 29 This is your aD prOOF from the Over The MOunTain JOurnal for Jan. 29, 2015 issue. please fax approval or changes to 824-1246.

please make sure all information is correct, including address and phone number!

Sprig O’Holly Garden Club celebrated the holiday season with a Christmas luncheon and caroling at Vestavia Country Club. The club’s living room was the setting for the annual get-together. A garland glittering with bronze and gold ornaments decorated the mantle, and a tree with bronze and gold ornaments was a focal point. Round luncheon tables were centered with bronze metal angels. Helen Smalley planned the annual event and asked members to share memories of the season. Virginia Chappelle presented a reading about the true meaning of Christmas. President Joan Hinkle welcomed members. Guest pianist Betty McDaniel accompanied the caroling. Other members at the luncheon were Betty Bowen, Sarah Dodd, Marilyn Gross, Tallulah Hargrove, Fay Hart, Nell Larson, Jan McElroy, Betty Nunis, Adrienne O’Brien, Barbara Randle, Cille Spader, Betty Weeks, Elaine Wood and Janis Zeanah. ❖

please initial and fax back within 24 hours.

if we have not heard from you by 5 pm of the Friday before the press date, your ad will run as is. We print the paper Monday.

Thank you for your prompt attention.

Maybe it’s just knowing when to help. Here in Alabama, some people are having trouble paying their bills. You can help us help them. Just make a small donation to Project SHARE on your next Alabama Power bill. Or give online at AlabamaPower.com/ProjectSHARE. Together with the American Red Cross we can show everyone what makes us different here.

From left: Virginia Chappelle, Helen Smalley, Betty Weeks, and Janis Zeanah. Photo special to the Journal

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12/8/14 1:18 PM


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20 • Thursday, January 29, 2015

OVER THE MOUNTAIN Journal

‘Organizing is beneficial to everyone’s life, but one of my favorite spaces to organize is a woman’s master bedroom closet.’ Amanda LeBlanc

The homeowner wanted to make her master bedroom pop with a wow factor to end all wow factors, including lots of bling and a sparkling crystal chandelier. Photos special to the Journal

Rockin’ the Closet

Makeover Brings Glitz and Glamour to Formerly Plain Jane Storage Space By June Mathews Say you’re a professional organizer, and a client tells you she wants her run-of-the-mill walk-in closet organized and decorated in a glamorous rock-star style. She wants it to pop with a wow factor to end all wow factors, including lots of bling and a sparkling crystal chandelier. And during the consultation, she mentions carte blanche, free rein and other terms a creative contractor loves to hear. So what do you do? Mostly likely, you’ll do what Amanda LeBlanc did: Jump right in, go all out and have a great deal of fun in the process. LeBlanc, an organizer and designer with two-and-a-half decades of experience helping clients get organized with style, is the owner of The Amandas, an organizing firm based in Cahaba Heights. She has been featured on the Today Show, in a Style Network reality series bearing the same name as her business, and in publications like Better Homes and Gardens, the Washington Post and Woman’s World. She is also a regular contributor to local lifestyle publications and TV shows. The Mountain Brook homeowner who requested the rock-star closet saw LeBlanc on the Style Network show and decided she was the perfect professional to develop the concept. So the call was made, and a consultation was scheduled. “She was ready to redo the whole thing, so we pulled together a color palette and design options,” LeBlanc said. “The chandelier was the first piece we picked out.”

Amanda LeBlanc, an organizer and designer with two-and-a-half decades of experience helping clients get organized with style, is the owner of The Amandas, an organizing firm based in Cahaba Heights.

LeBlanc and her team advised lightening the walls and covering the ceiling with glittery wallpaper accented with tiny glass beads. “We had to glue it to the ceiling, then used push pins painted silver and stuck into the paper to give it extra support,” LeBlanc said. “Silver glitter was also brought onto the walls with a shiny metallic paint. We found a company out of Florida to mix that special paint for us.” While the sparkling surroundings, enhanced by the chandelier, provide the perfect backdrop for the “rock star” décor, a huge lighted display cabinet with glass shelving is the undisputed centerpiece of the room. “When we first started talking about a cabinet, I suggested we go dark and sexy and totally different from the rest of the room, so we brought in the dark wood,” LeBlanc said. “We used it to display her fabulous shoe collection, and it’s the first thing you see when you enter the room. It really sets the stage.” An old vanity was mirrored and put in the same area as the glass cabinet. The clothing area was outfitted with wooden bins for smaller accessories and hanging racks at two heights. It was then sectioned off according to clothing type, which was then arranged by color. For example, one section of the closet is set aside solely for workout clothes organized by color. An 84-inch-tall jewelry board serves as a focal point on one wall of the closet, not only adding an interesting component to the mix but a high level of function as well. “I love the way jewelry boards look, and they’re so useful,” said

See, Closet, page 22


Operation Let’s Get Started An Organizing Q&A for Beginners

Dody Rookis, owner of Organize It Now, has been helping Birmingham-area clients with their organizing issues for 17 years. She said she enjoys showing people how easy getting and staying organized can be and often responds to questions from individuals just beginning the organizing journey. Here are a few of her favorites: What is your “quickest and dirtiest” tip for organizing kitchen cabinets?

Take it one cabinet at a time, starting with the cabinet you use most. Take everything out of the cabinet and then decide what you don’t need or use. You’ll be surprised at how much you’ll be able to toss. Then continue. Make sure you place items that you don’t use every day, like food processors and waffle irons, in cabinets that

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don’t take up prime cabinet space. By this I mean don’t put rarely used items in cabinets that are near the stove or sink. Save those cabinets for Tupperware, pots and pans, etc. My linen closet is a disaster. What do you recommend?

Begin the same way as you did in the kitchen: Take everything out of the linen closet. Pair up the sheets and use a fabric marker to mark the sheets for different bedrooms. Get rid of old sheets or sheets without mates. We’ve accumulated so much junk in our garage we can’t park a car in it. What’s the key to dealing with a big project like this?

We always seem to think of the garage as a storage unit for everything we can’t fit into our closets, so clean-

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Thursday, January 29, 2015 • 21

HOme

OVER THE MOUNTAIN Journal

ing out is always a major project. But don’t panic. Just get started. Divide the garage into 5-foot-square sections and begin clearing one section at a time. Throw away anything you should have gotten rid of years ago, keep what you really want and donate whatever you can.

Can you tell me how to keep it that way?

First and foremost, throw away all junk mail as soon as it hits your desk. The second most important thing is to file papers when you are finished with them, using a color-coded filing system. Get rid of that “to be filed”

My elderly mother’s house is overrun with her “treasures.” What’s the first item on my de-cluttering list and why?

We often discover older relatives have been hoarding things for years, and if they are truly hoarders, there is always trash. So the first thing you do is dispose of the trash. Also try to engage the help of other family members. It took years to accumulate all these “treasures,” and organizing them will take a while, even with lots of help. Just take it slow, using firm but loving hands and criteria for clearing the clutter. Okay, my office is finally organized.

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To: From: Date:

Barbara Over The Mountain Journal, PHONE: 205-823-9646 To: Babara FAX: 205-824-1246 From: Over The Mountain Journal, PHONE: 205-823-9646 FAX: 205-824-1246 Jan. 2015 Date:

June 2014

This is your AD PrOOF from the OvEr THE MOuNTAiN JOurNAl for the is your PrOOF from the OvEr THE MOuNTAiN JOurNAl for the Jan. 15, 2015 issue. Please fax approval or This changes to AD 824-1246. June 26, 2014 issue. Please fax approval or changes to 824-1246.

Please make sure all informationPlease is correct, address andis correct, phone number! makeincluding sure all information including address and phone number! Please initial and fax back within 24 hours. Please initial and fax back within 24 hours.

if we have not heard from you by 5 pm of the Friday before the press date, your ad will run as is. We print the paper Monday.

if we have not heard from you by 5 pm of the Friday before the press date, your ad will run as is. We print the paper Monday.

Thank you for your prompt attention.Thank you for your prompt attention.

bin. All you will have is a stack of papers that keeps getting taller, and filing becomes a bigger task than it needs to be. Contact Dody Rookis at 873-0302 or dodyrookis@gmail.com. —June Mathews


22 • Thursday, January 29, 2015

HOme

OVER THE MOUNTAIN Journal

closet,

From page 20

Wolbach Flooring, Inc. • Natural Fiber Rugs

(Host Dry Carpet Cleaning Available)

LeBlanc, adding that the boards are one of her favorite organizational tools. The day the redo began, the client left town and didn’t return until around midnight the day the project

was finished. So while LeBlanc was disappointed about missing out on the homeowner’s initial reaction, the ultimate payoff was worth waiting for, she said. “When she sent me a text the next morning to tell me she was so thrilled that she had actually slept on the floor of her closet, I couldn’t have been more excited,” the organizer said.

“Organizing is beneficial to everyone’s life, but one of my favorite spaces to organize is a woman’s master bedroom closet,” LeBlanc said. “And I love when I get to come in and arrange everything in an organized fashion with aesthetic elements that make you smile. When you start the morning that way, it changes your whole day for the better.” ❖

• Flooring Specialist • Commercial & Residential • Free in House Estimates

‘When she sent me a text the next morning to tell me she was so thrilled that she had actually slept on the floor of her closet, I couldn’t have been more excited.’

Call for an Appointment Office: 205-942-8636 • Cell: 205-281-9807 Email: wolbachflooring@aol.com 161 Citation Court, Suite 109 • Homewood, AL 35209

Amanda LeBlanc

While the sparkling surroundings, enhanced by the chandelier, provide the perfect backdrop for the “rock star” décor, a huge lighted display cabinet with glass shelving is the undisputed centerpiece of the room. Photos special to the journal

Wolbach Flooring Over The Mountain Journal, 205-823-9646 ph., 205-824-1246, fax October

This is your ad proof from the over the mountain Journal for the ber16th, 2014 issue. Please contact your sales representative as soon as possible to Kathy’s Designer Kitchens, Inc. approve your ad or make changes. You may fax approval or changes to 824-1246.

1831 29th Ave. S. • Homewood, AL 35209

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please initial and fax back within 24 hours.

If we have not heard from you by 5 pm of the Friday before the press date, your ad will run as is. We print the paper Monday.

Thank you for your prompt attention.

Gulas Launches New Real Estate Company

Birmingham real estate broker Gusty Gulas has formed a new real estate company, Brik Realty. Gulas, Brik Realty’s broker and owner, said he’s brought together a team that collectively sold $43 million worth of homes in 2014. The Gusty Gulas Group has sold more than 400 homes in the past two years, he said. Birmingham Business Journal named Gulas one of the Top 40 Under

40 in 2011, and he was Birmingham magazine’s Best Realtor for 20132014. “We are really thrilled to be able to create this exciting, technologydriven company,” Gulas said. “We are planning to use social media, phone Gusty Gulas apps and more to streamline the home buying and selling for our customers. “Our team will have all the best

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digital tools and sales techniques available on the market today. And all of this will help expose the properties to a larger audience and make the entire process easier, which will ultimately help our clients, and that is what this company is all about. We want to create the most positive experience we can for homebuyers and sellers.” Gulas said Brik Realty will service all sectors of the residential real estate market, home sellers and investors. “Exceptional customer service has always been one of our main goals,” Gulas said. “We are the highest rated and reviewed Realtor in Birmingham on Zillow.com and Trulia.com, which is proof that we live up to that. Brik Realty will remain committed to this same goal.” Brik Realty’s new offices are at 3430 Independence Drive in Homewood. For more information, call 206-­4321 or send an email to excellence@brikrealty.com. ❖


food

OVER THE MOUNTAIN Journal

Game Day Grub

Thursday, January 29, 2015 • 23

On Super Bowl Sunday, Score Big with Beer and Pizza By Donna Cornelius At Super Bowl parties, guests often have split allegiances. And no, we’re not talking about loyalties to the New England Patriots or Seattle Seahawks. For some fans, no game day menu is complete without pizza. For others, it’s not Super Sunday without chicken wings. Even the best hosts can’t please both sides when it comes to who wins the game. But you can hit a tasty compromise between the propizza crowd and the chicken wing contingent. Slice Pizza and Brew’s Wing and a Prayer pizza splits the difference between these two favorite dishes. It combines tried-and-true wing flavors on a tasty crust. “It’s like a tailgate on a plate,” said Chris Bajalieh, who co-owns the Lakeview District eatery with brothers Jeff and Jason. All three are John Carroll Catholic High School graduates. The Wing and a Prayer pizza has housebraised chicken, bacon, green and red onions, Roma tomatoes and blue cheese crumbles, Bajalieh said. Instead of red sauce, this pizza has house-made hot sauce and then a drizzle of Ranch dressing. “We grill and chop whole onions inSee Game day, page 25

Slice Pizza created its Wing and a Prayer pizza with traditional chicken wing flavors.

Huntsville Couple Brings Its Brand to Birmingham with Galley and Garden

Turning the Tables By Donna Cornelius

T

he restaurant that was formerly Veranda on Highland has new proprietors, a new menu, a new look and a new name. And like the ingredients of a good dish, all the changes combine to make Galley ‘Birmingham and Garden an appealing new option for is an awesome Birmingham diners. restaurant town. There’s so much Chef James Boyce and his wife, variety here...’ Suzan, opened Galley and Garden in October at 2220 Highland Ave. South. Although this is the Boyces’ first restaurant in Birmingham, they’re well known in the culinary world. James started his career at New York’s Le Cirque, where he worked for six years under French chef and restaurateur Daniel Boulud. He later headed west to The Phoenician in Scottsdale, Ariz., earning a Best Chef of the Southwest nomination from the James Beard Foundation, and then to Caesar’s Palace in Las Vegas.

Journal photos by Lee Walls

See Galley and garden, page 25

piggly wiggly

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Gr

k a e t S er t t e B ill a

James and Suzan Boyce, top, own three restaurants in Huntsville. Galley and Garden is their first venture in Birmingham. Diners at Galley and Garden can eat in what the Boyces call the “fun” bar area, bottom, with its granite-topped tables or in more private spaces. Journal photos by Lee Walls Jr.

www.pigbham.com The Certified Angus Beef® brand is a cut above USDA Prime, Choice and Select. Ten quality standards set the brand apart. It’s abundantly flavorful, incredible tender, naturally juicy. Piggly Wiggly is the only grocery store in the area with Certified Angus Beef. Taste the Difference!


24 • Thursday, January 29, 2015

Food

OVER THE MOUNTAIN Journal

Primeaux Hosts Cuban Takeover Night

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La Catrina Comes to English Village

La Catrina, a Mexican restaurant, has opened in the former Salvatore’s location in Mountain Brook’s English Village at 2031 Cahaba Road. The restaurant also has locations in Homewood, Vestavia and Trussville. For more information, call 290-5270 or visit lacatrinarestaurant.com.

iew v d l or lty Date: W u l c a a F ic iadblproof edmountain USA Today Spotlights Little This is your from the over the Journalyfor the B fi i l g a o January 15, 2015 issue. Please contact your sales representative as soon as possible to l u Donkey homewood o to 824-1246. The LittleinDonkey, Q nchanges y h approve your ad or make changes. You may fax approval or l 2821 Central Ave. c h ig Te in Homewood, was recently featured H n o Please make sure information is correct, in USA sisall and including address phone number! a cs i h t Today’s travel p e l h t Em section as A Aback within 24 hours. 1 please initial and fax one of the top A Ayou by 5 pm of the Friday s the press date, If we have not heard from before e S places in America to get the best tequila. z H i Aad will run as is. We print your theS paper Monday. Chicago restaurateur and Mexicans s aprompt l eatery aficionado Arturo Gomez made C Thank you for your attention. l l the selection. Sma Little Donkey offers original Mexican

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Shades Mountain Christian School smcs.org 205.978.6001 Call to schedule a tour!

food and drinks with Southern influences. For more about the restaurant, visit thelittledonkey.com

Johnny’s Meatballs Make Garden & Gun List

A dish from Johnny’s Restaurant in Homewood drew accolades in the December 2014/January 2015 issue of Garden & Gun magazine. The restaurant’s Greek Meatballs were one of “John T. Edge’s Top 10 Dishes of the Year.

From left: Primeaux Cheese and Vino Owner Paul Primeaux, Executive Chef Ric Trent and Guest Chef Dr. Camilo R. Gomez. Photo special to the Journal

S

CIALIZING I N PE

Cuban cuisine was on the menu at Primeaux Cheese and Vino when the restaurant hosted a special dinner Dec. 18. Primeaux, a European-style wine and cheese café at The Summit, had a five-course, five-wine Cuban Takeover dinner that was sold out with 84 attendees, restaurant officials said. Guests celebrated Cuban food, music and culture with guest chefs Camilo R. Gomez, M.D. of Birmingham and Primeaux owner Deborah Primeaux. The event was held the same day the U.S. government announced relations with Cuba would be normalized. At the event, the two guest chefs directed the kitchen in creating classic Culinary Cuban fare, which Community News and included roasting two Events Fudge Family Farms pigs in the traditional Cuban style, shrimp and grouper ceviche served in a fried plantain shell, black bean bisque, red snapper served with yucca fries and a special Cuban sauce, roasted pork with ripened fried plantains, and flan served three ways, including traditional, coconut and chocolate. The five-course meal was served with five Spanish wines selected by Primeaux’s resident wine sommelier, Alexis Douglas. The night’s guest chefs were also assisted by Primeaux Executive Chef Ric Trent, Sous Chef Cory Bolton and Pastry Chef Ashley Hebert. A portion of the event’s proceeds benefited the city of Birmingham’s Division of Youth Services Youth First Holiday Campaign that assists needy Birmingham young people by providing food and toys for them during the holidays.

Edge writes in the article that the meatballs “decode as a grind of beef and pork, scented with thyme, oregano, sumac, and mint, and they taste like gyro meat that worked its way through night school to earn a postgraduate degree.” Johnny’s is at 2902 18th St. South, Suite 200.

Andrew Zimmern Writes about Miss Myra’s Pit Bar-B-Q

Miss Myra’s Pit Bar-B-Q in Cahaba Heights made Andrew Zimmern’s bucket list of must-visit restaurants. Zimmern, a well-known Travel Channel food authority, visited Miss Myra’s in 2013 to film an episode of his TV show, “Bizarre Foods America.” The barbecue section of his article in Delta Airlines’ in-flight magazine, Delta Sky, included the Cahaba Heights restaurant. Zimmern paid special tribute to Miss Myra’s ribs, chicken, white barbecue sauce and desserts. Miss Myra’s Pit Bar-B-Q is at 3278 Cahaba Heights Road in Vestavia Hills.

On Tap Will Move to La Paz Location in Hoover

On Tap Sports Café at the Riverchase Galleria is moving – but not far. On Tap recently announced plans to relocate to the former La Paz Mexican Restaurant and Cantina site near On Tap’s current home. La Paz still has a restaurant at 99 Euclid Ave. in Mountain Brook’s Crestline neighborhood. On Tap has three other locations at 810 Inverness Corners in Hoover and in Birmingham’s Lakeview District and in Fultondale.

YB’s Daylight Donuts Has New Owners

Kerry and Lou Youngblood, former Louisiana residents, have bought YB’s Daylight Donuts at 5291 Valleydale Road in North Shelby. The eatery offers a wide variety of donuts plus its own coffee label. For more information, call 981-3337 or visit daylightdonuts.com.

One Nineteen Offers Cooking Class

A cooking class at St. Vincent’s One Nineteen will feature Paul Heim, executive chef partner at Seasons 52. Seasons 52 is a fresh grill offering seasonally inspired dining choices with dishes less than 475 calories. The “Cuisine at One Nineteen” class is from 6:30-8 p.m. Feb. 17. Participants will spend the evening cooking with Heim. On the menu are Sonoma Goat Cheese Ravioli with a

trio of roasted mushrooms and a zesty onion jus and Cedar Plank Roasted Salmon, Roasted Vegetables and Smashed Potatoes with a dill-mustard sauce and grilled lemon. Dessert is pecan pie with vanilla mousse or Belgian chocolate S’mores. The cost is $25. Call 408-6550 for reservations. Childcare is available with reservations. For more information, visit onenineteen.com.

Homewood Ready for 14th Food Festival

The 14th annual Taste of Homewood is set for Feb. 19 from 5:30– 8:30 p.m. at Rosewood Hall in City Hall at SoHo. The Mardi Gras-themed event features more than 30 Homewood restaurants, caterers, bakeries, coffee shops and beverage merchants. The Taste of Homewood showcases the city’s growing number of food purveyors and gives the public a chance to sample a taste of food from their menus. Already signed up to participate are Birmingham Beverage, Pepsi/Buffalo Rock, Birmingham Budweiser, Brio, Chick-fil-A, Chili’s Grill & Bar, Nabeel’s, Ruth’s Chris Steak House, Homewood Gourmet, JoJo’s, Jackson’s, The Happy Catering Company and Urban Cookhouse. Tickets are $30 in advance and $35 at the door. Buy tickets at the Homewood Chamber of Commerce office, 7 Hollywood Blvd., or online at www.homewoodchamber.org. For more information about the event and for a list of other locations to purchase tickets, call the Homewood Chamber at 871-5631 or visit its Facebook Page.

Vulcan Will Host Italian Food Event

Mary Jo Gagliano and Chef Chris Vizzina will demonstrate Sicilian cooking techniques at a March 12 event at Vulcan Park and Museum. “Birmingham Revealed: Cooking Southern Italian – An Evening in a Sicilian Kitchen” will focus on cooking secrets and tips as well as the origin of spices and herbs used in Sicilian recipes. The class is part of Vulcan’s La Storia: Birmingham Italian Community exhibition. The event is from 5:30-7 p.m. Tickets are $8 for Vulcan members and $10 for nonmembers. For more information, go to visitvulcan.com. ❖


food

OVER THE MOUNTAIN Journal

galley and garden, From page 23

He also was top chef at Loews Coronado Bay Resort in San Diego and at Studio restaurant at Montage Resort and Spa in Laguna Beach, Calif. James and Suzan are both graduates of the Culinary Institute of America in Hyde Park, N.Y. But they attended at different times and didn’t meet until both were at Montage Resort and Spa. The couple moved to Huntsville in 2007 and started Boyce Restaurant Concepts. They own three restaurants, all in downtown Huntsville: Cotton Row, Pane e Vino, and Commerce Kitchen. “We were looking for a lifestyle change,” James said about the move to Alabama. “Huntsville seemed like a great place to raise our family and own our own business.” The Boyces have two children, a 9-year-old daughter and 7-year-old son, who share their parents’ fascination with food. “We’re raising true gourmands,” James said. “They’re not happy with one-course meals.”

Ed Hardin, a Birmingham attorney who owns the antebellum Highland Avenue building that housed Veranda, approached the Boyces about bringing their brand to Birmingham, James said. “Birmingham is an awesome restaurant town,” the chef said. “There’s so much variety here – and a larger population density.” While the Boyces are old hands at opening restaurants, it’s never a simple task, James said. “We make it hard on ourselves because all of our restaurants have different concepts,” he said. What diners will find at Galley and Garden is a menu with modern American-French dishes. While offerings will change with the seasons, guests might expect to find starters like Skillet Cornbread with pork belly, Alabama white barbecue sauce and a farm egg, or LagerRoasted PEI Mussels with Spanish olives, Andouille sausage, jalapeno and cilantro. Main courses on the menu recently were Carolina Almond-crusted Rainbow Trout with maple sweet potatoes, wilted spinach and sage brown butter; Maple Leaf Farms Duck Breast with wild rice, pickled

Thursday, January 29, 2015 • 25

p.m. den to table once spring arrives. cherries, celery root, kale and duck “We want this to be a very excitGalley and Garden serves dinjus; and Braised Hereford Beef Short ner from 5-10 p.m. Monday through ing restaurant,” James said. “It’s Ribs with parmesan grits, Portobello ever-changing.” Saturday and has Sunday brunch mushrooms and garden herbs. For more information, visit from 10:30 a.m.-3:30 p.m. “We never want to be stagnant,” www.galleyandgarden.com or check On Feb. 11, the restaurant Suzan said. out the restaurant on Facebook and The restaurant might bring in ruby will begin serving lunch Monday Instagram. ❖ red trout or fluke from North Carolina through Saturday from 11 a.m.-2:30 or rabbit from the Tennessee Valley, James said. But he loves the bounty in the Birmingham area. “There are so many farmers around here,” he said. “Our purveyors keep us updated weekly on what’s available.” Galley and Garden also has an extensive wine list, said Suzan, a sommelier. “We offer quite a variety of wine Call today – probably 750 to 800 selections,” she to book you said. “Our wine list is all-encompassValentine'sr ing and worldly, from every major region. You can get a $1,500 bottle Day from Bordeaux or a $30 bottle from w it h us! Portugal.” Suzan said the restaurant’s staff members are educated about wine and are happy to offer suggestions to guests. “We don’t want choosing wine to be intimidating,” she said, adding that many Birmingham diners are interested in what’s new and different. “They tend to drink more French wine here,” she said. The restaurant got an extensive remodel. The Boyces worked with architect Jeff Dungan of Dungan LOcATED AT THE TOP OF SHADES MOuNTAIN ON HWy 31, NEXT TO VESTAVIA HILLS cITy HALL, BISTrO V OFFErS Nequette on the design. Suzan and ONE OF THE FINEST cuLINAry EXPErIENcES IN BIrMINgHAM! designer Grant Trick came up with the décor. Open Monday-Saturday 11am-2pm & 5pm-9pm The updated interior is inviting 521 Montgomery Hwy, Vestavia Hills, AL 35216 • (205) 823-1505 and understated with neutral colors, lightened hardwood floors and carpets, and banquettes as well as freestanding tables. Diners can eat at granite-topped tables near the new bar, in more private rooms or outside on the patio or balcony. To: Jeremy Foodies will love the windows that From: Over The Mountain Journal, PHONE: 205-823-9646 give them a full a view of the kitchen, FAX: 205-824-1246 which James said combines a “home Date: January and industrial” vibe, and of Chefs This is your ad proof from the over the mountain Journal for the J Steve Fressel and Sean Kane and their 29,2015 issue. Please fax approval or changes to 824-1246. staff at work. Outside, Birmingham garden designer June Mays is planting herbs please make sure all information is correct, inclu and vegetables that will go from gar-

Vestavia's Award Winning Restaurant

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The updated interior is inviting and understated with neutral colors, lightened hardwood floors and carpets, and banquettes as well as freestanding tables. Diners can eat at granite-topped tables near the new bar, in more private rooms or outside on the patio or balcony. Journal photo by Lee Walls Jr.

Game Day, From page 23

house,” he said. At Slice, pizzas are cooked on an open flame at 700 degrees. “That helps marry the flavors,” Bajalieh said. Another thing you won’t want to leave off your Super Bowl party list is as traditional as arguing about the best and worst TV ads: beer. This year, consider branching out by offering suds not named Bud. Matt Kilpatrick of AlaBev, whose business card reads “Manager of Great Beer,” had three suggestions for brews that will pair well with the Wing and a Prayer’s bold flavors: the Founders All Day IPA, Abita Amber and Straight to Ale Sand Island Lighthouse. “The Founders All Day IPA was one of the first session IPAs on the market,” Kilpatrick said. Session IPAs have lower alcohol content than most IPAs, making them good choices for lengthy parties, he said. “Most IPAs have a 7 percent ABV (alcohol by volume),” Kilpatrick said. “This is more like a Coors Light but has all the flavor profile of an authentic taste for this type of beer. It helps cut through the creaminess of the blue cheese on the pizza.”

The Abita Amber, he said, “tastes caramelized but not burnt. It brings just enough sweetness to balance the bite of the red onions.” Taste-wise, the Straight to Ale Sand Island Lighthouse is “in the middle” of the other two beers, Kilpatrick said. “It’s the cousin of a Pilsner,” he said. “It leaves some residual sugar behind.” The Straight to Ale brewery is in Huntsville. Birmingham-based AlaBev is a distribution company, and its representatives visit Slice weekly to educate servers, Bajalieh said. “Our menu includes suggested beer pairings, but check with your server, too, to see what other possibilities might be available,” he said. “The servers know which beers are seasonal.” While the Wing and a Prayer has been on the restaurant’s menu since Slice opened, there’s always a variety of flavors created by Head Chef Terrill Brazelton. “Whatever we can source locally inspires him to create new pizzas,” Bajalieh said. “We have a chalkboard at the end of the bar listing the local farms we’re using.” The Slice staff likely won’t have much time to watch the Super Bowl – and not because they’re not football fans. “Our to-go business will be great that night,” Bajalieh said. ❖

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weddings

26 • Thursday, January 29, 2015

OVER THE MOUNTAIN Journal

Newlyweds Jackson Jones and Katarina Motuzova were accompanied by musicians playing traditional Slovak songs as the couple and their guests walked from the church to the reception.

European Union Jackson Jones and Katarina Motuzova

W

By Donna Cornelius

hen Jackson Jones went to Brest,

France, to get a master’s degree in international business, he left with an unexpected benefit. Jackson, who grew up in Mountain Brook, met his future wife in September 2011 when both were students at École Supérieure de Commerce Bretagne Brest – in English, the Graduate School of Management of Brittany, France. “After I graduated from Birmingham-Southern College, I worked for my grandfather for about a year and then decided to get a master’s degree,” Jackson said. As a college student, Jackson had studied in Brussels, Belgium, so he knew he’d be comfortable going to school in a French-speaking country. “The graduate programs were cheaper there, too,” he said. Katarina Motuzova, a native of Slovakia, was in Brest to get a degree through the European Union exchange program, she said. “She was rooming with three other Slovak girls,” Jackson said. “She invited me to her apartment to have her national dish, halušky, which is shaggy dumplings with sheep’s cheese, bacon and onions.” Katarina extended her stay in Brest by a semester. Then the couple moved to Bratislava, the capital city of Slovakia. They got engaged on Dec. 24, 2012. “In Slovakia, Dec. 24 is Christmas Day,” Jackson said. “Baby Jesus brings gifts – not Santa Claus.” Jackson’s parents, George and Virginia Jones of Birmingham, knew beforehand that their son was about to ask

Katarina to marry him. “My family knew because the engagement ring was one that’s been passed down in my family,” Jackson said. Katarina said she had no idea about Jackson’s plans. “He gave me a pair of workout shoes, and the ring was in one of the shoes,” she said. The couple married June 21, 2014 in a dual language ceremony at Kostol Najsvätejšieho Spasiteľa Jesuit Church – the Holy Savior Church -- in Bratislava. The church was built by the city’s German Protestant community between 1636 and 1638. Jackson said about 16 of his friends and family members, including his parents and sister, made the trip from the United States to Slovakia for the wedding. His father and Christopher Trammell were his attendants. His sister, Lillian Jones of New York City, was among Katarina’s bridesmaids. Katarina’s parents, Mr. and Mrs. Vladimir Motuz, live in northern Slovakia. She has one brother, Vladimir. Katarina, escorted by her father, wore a gown by Pronovias of Barcelona and carried a rose bouquet. After the ceremony, guests lined up to present the bride with flowers, a Slovakian tradition. Then members of the wedding party and the guests walked the short distance to the reception at the Bratislava Carlton Hotel. “We stopped in front of the hall where the party was, and a man welcomed us with shots of vodka and water,” Jackson said. “You didn’t know which was which.” Slovakian tradition says that the one who chooses the vodka will be the head of the house. Jackson picked the shot glass with vodka, he said. “Then the same man holds up a plate and drops it so it

From Top: Jackson and Katarina’s wedding was in Bratislava, Slovakia’s picturesque capital city. With Jackson and Katarina at the wedding are Jackson’s family: sister Lillian Jones of New York City and parents Virginia and George Jones of Birmingham. The bride and groom enjoy a playful moment on their wedding day. Far left: Justmarried Jackson and Katarina toast each other on this pier in Bratislava. Photos special to the Journal

smashes on the floor,” he said. “After the plate is dropped and broken, the groom does the sweeping, and the bride holds the dustpan. They have to work together to sweep up all the pieces of the broken plate. “The pieces of the broken plate represent luck, so the bride and the groom want to sweep up as many pieces as possible. But during the sweeping process, people can come and make it harder, and it’s the groom and bride’s job to work together to take as much luck as possible.” After Jackson carried Katarina into the hall – another Slovakian custom – the reception continued with dancing and two dinners, the couple said. “Slovak weddings can last until 4, 5 or 6 in the morning, so you have a second dinner,” Jackson said. “We cut ours off at 2 a.m.” Their second dinner included hearty goulash, schnitzel, potato salad and a big cheese plate, he said. Before the wedding, George Jones hired a bus to take American guests on a day trip to Budapest, Hungary, just across the border from Slovakia. That night, guests were invited to dinner and drinks at a brewery and restaurant in Bratislava’s Old Town to have beer and traditional Slovak food. Katarina and Jackson’s honeymoon took them to the beach in See Jones-Motuzova, facing page


Womack–Sanford

Mr. and Mrs. William Gregory Womack of Birmingham announce the engagement of their daughter, Anne Hourigan Womack, to William Hopson Sanford, son of Mr. and Mrs. James Hopson Sanford of Prattville. The bride-elect is the granddaughter of Mr. and Mrs. Alton Hugh Long of Birmingham and Mr. and Mrs. Richard Muse Womack, also of Birmingham, and the late Mrs. Nancy Brewer Womack. Miss Womack is a 2003 graduate of Mountain Brook High School. She graduated magna cum laude from

Justice-Russell

Mr. and Mrs. Michael Justice of Vestavia Hills announce the engagement of their daughter, Elizabeth Rae Justice, to Clinton Ryan Russell, son

Kettig-Wade

Mr. and Mrs. John Morgan Kettig of Mountain Brook announce the engagement of their daughter, Katherine Barrow, to Michael Douglas Wade Jr., son of Mr. and Mrs. Michael Douglas Wade of Vestavia Hills.

Thursday, January 29, 2015 • 27

weddings & engagements

OVER THE MOUNTAIN Journal

Auburn University in 2007, where she received a bachelor’s degree in history with a minor in Spanish. She was a member of the War Eagle Girls and Plainsmen, vice president of the Cater Society, and is a member of Alpha Gamma Delta sorority. Miss Womack also holds a master’s degree in higher education administration from the University of Virginia. She was presented at the Ball of Roses and currently serves as the executive director of the Mountain Brook City Schools Foundation. The prospective groom is the grandson of the late Mr. and Mrs. Joseph Clinton Hardage Sr. of Columbus, Ga., and the late Mr. and Mrs. Robert Lee Sanford Sr. of Prattville. Mr. Sanford is a 2004 graduate of Prattville High School. He graduated from Auburn University in 2009 with a bachelor’s degree in economics and a minor in finance. He was project coordinator for IMPACT, leading volunteers for Habitat for Humanity and Parkerson Mill Creek clean up, and parliamentarian for the SGA Senate. He is currently employed with Home Place Farm Incorporated in Prattville. The wedding is planned for April 11 at Brookwood Baptist Church. of Mr. and Mrs. James Russell of Burlington, N.C. The bride-elect is the granddaughter of Ms. Myra Sutton of Nashville, Tenn., and the late Mr. Ronald Sutton of Bayou La Batre and Mr. and Mrs. Eugene Justice of Big Canoe, Ga. Miss Justice is a 2012 graduate of Elon University, where she received a bachelor’s degree in sports and event management. The prospective groom is the grandson of Mr. Sidney Lee Russell and the late Mrs. Larry Ruth Russell and Mr. and Mrs. Billy Hole, all of Burlington. Mr. Russell is studying agricultural business at North Carolina State University. The wedding will be July 25 at Saint Mark the Evangelist Catholic Church in Birmingham. The bride-elect is the granddaughter of the late Mr. and Mrs. William Henry Kettig Jr., the late Mr. Samuel Earle Hiden and the late Mrs. Barrow Gore Ryding, all of Birmingham. Miss Kettig is a graduate of Mountain Brook High School and Auburn University. She was presented at the Beaux Arts Krewe Ball, the Ball of Roses, the Heritage Ball and the Redstone Club Ball. She is employed in Birmingham. The prospective groom is the grandson of the late Commander and Mrs. Aredus Buck Wade of Memphis, Tenn., and the late Mr. and Mrs. Clarence Hill McDougal of Winona, Miss. Mr. Wade is a graduate of Vestavia Hills High School and Auburn University. He is employed in Birmingham. The wedding is planned for March 21 at the Country Club of Birmingham.

Ballenger-Banks

Frances Keegan Ballenger and

jones-motuzova, From previous page

Bulgaria and back to Brest, where they met. They’re now living in Bratislava. “We’re still working our future plans out, but we’re happy there now,” Jackson said. Katarina is a financial analyst, and she and Jackson also have their own business. “We started a small language school for adults,” Jackson said. “There are not many English-speaking natives there.” After the wedding ceremony and during dinner, one of Jackson’s students played traditional Slovak folk music along with his quartet. “They wore traditional clothes and really gave the ceremony a little more culture,” Jackson said. Salaries are much lower in Slovakia, but the cost of living is less, he said. “You’re never going to go hungry,” Jackson said. “People are very hospitable. You’re always offered food, coffee or slivovitsa.” Slivovitsa is a distilled beverage made from plums. During the wedding festivities, Katarina’s father served his own version of the drink made from plums he grew. Jackson said he likes experiencing the history and culture of Bratislava. The country’s largest city, it straddles the Danube River and borders Austria and Hungary. One of the city’s most prominent structures is Bratislava Castle, which sits on a plateau above the river. “It’s so cool to look up from various vantage points in the town and see the castle,” Jackson said. “There are cobblestone streets and lots of old wine cellars.” The couple said they often take advantage of their proximity of other European cities. They’ve traveled to Vienna, Prague and Krakow and also love skiing in Slovakia. “There are always many things to do and events that are put on by the city of Bratislava, such as concerts in the main square, wine tours and festivals of all sorts and varieties,” Jackson said. He and Katarina also like cooking together, they said. Jackson said that Slovakian is very different from English but that with Katarina’s help, he’s become much more proficient in the language. One difference between life in the U.S. and in his adopted country is that

Williams Bryant Banks were married Sept. 6 at Grayton Beach, Fla. The Rev. Chris Ballard officiated the ceremony. A reception followed at Grayt Grounds of Monet Monet. The bride is the daughter of Ms. Francie Marelle Shuttlesworth and Mr. Jon Cecil Ballenger III of Birmingham. The groom is the son of Mr. Thomas DuPre Banks Jr. and the late Mrs. Carla Cohen Banks of Gadsden. Give in marriage by her father and loving family, the bride was attended by her sister, Jane Austin Ault of Birmingham, as maid of honor and Allison Baggett Truitt of Birmingham as matron of honor. Bridesmaids were Frances Tate Shuttlesworth and Margaret Marelle Shuttlesworth,

cousins of the bride, and Margaret Julia Tarpley, all of Mountain Brook; Susan Hinshaw Ballenger, sister-inlaw of the bride, of Birmingham; and Ansley Jayne McNulty of Atlanta. Lane Elizabeth Pyle and Harper Ann Pyle of Nashville, Tenn., were the flower girls. Thomas DuPre Banks III, brother of the groom, of Gadsden was the best man. Groomsmen were Horace Glenn Banks III of Hoover, Michael Joseph Wright of Tuscaloosa, Brody Robert Summerall of Dallas, Alex Jospin Cohn of Nashville, James Montgomery Clark and Jon Cecil Ballenger IV, brother of the bride, of Birmingham. After a wedding trip to Greece, the couple live in Nashville.

the Slovakian government pays for three years of maternity leave, Jackson said. “You are also entitled to a minimum of four weeks of vacation per year plus all of the public holidays, of which there are several throughout the year,” he said. “This longer vacation time really gives you time to travel, enjoy having more time off from work, relax and lower stress levels, and to focus more on your hobbies.” The newlyweds visited Jackson’s parents during Christmas. This was Katarina’s third trip to the U.S., she said. While Jackson is still learning Slovakian traditions and the language, Katarina had an adjustment to make while she was in Birmingham. “There’s one thing about

Southerners Katarina is still getting used to,” Jackson said, looking at his wife. “It’s how much they hug,” Katarina said, laughing. ❖

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28 • Thursday, January 29, 2015

schools

Mountain Brook’s First Finalist Cherokee Bend Teacher Is Up for National Award

By Emily Williams Cherokee Bend Elementary School teacher Ann Marie Corgill is a finalist for the 2015 National Teacher of the Year award. Corgill was named a finalist on Jan. 14. One of four finalists – the other three are from Hawaii, Indiana and Texas – Corgill earned a bachelor’s degree and master’s degree at the University of Alabama and has been an educator for 20 years. She teaches fourth grade at Mountain Brook’s Cherokee Bend Elementary School, where she is the school system’s first National Teacher of the Year finalist. After she learned that she was a finalist for the award, Corgill had to keep her success a secret until a scheduled press release. “I was in disbelief at first, because I had to keep it a secret for five days,” she said. “I thought, ‘Is this really happening? I can’t tell anybody. I don’t see it written anywhere. Am I making this up?’ It was a little bit shocking, but fun.” After the press release came out, Corgill’s students and colleagues threw a pep rally in her honor at Cherokee Bend Elementary. “I’m really thankful for my colleagues,” Corgill said, adding that her fellow educators were only too happy to celebrate. “We are fans of pep rallies, because we get kids to scream on purpose.” As a finalist, Corgill will soon travel to Washington, D.C., for a three-day interview by a 15-person panel. Once that’s completed, the finalists and each State Teacher of the Year are invited to the White House for a ceremony during which President Barack Obama will recognize the National Teacher of the Year. Once inducted into the position, the National Teacher of the Year becomes a spokesperson for the teaching profession, traveling the country to give lectures on the state of education and how it can be improved upon and celebrated. That’s why, during the application process, each teacher is asked to provide his or her own platform on education. Corgill’s personal platform focuses on the relationship between academic education and

Bravo!

Hoover Teacher Named Top Director

Photos special to the Journal

Hoover High School’s Nancy Malone was selected as the 2015 Alabama Thespian Troupe Director of the Year. Teachers are nominated by students. The winner is selected by a committee of theater educators around

Nancy Malone

Ann Marie Corgill is a finalist for the 2015 National Teacher of the Year award. She teaches fourth grade at Mountain Brook’s Cherokee Bend Elementary School, where she is the school system’s first National Teacher of the Year finalist. Journal photo by Lee Walls Jr.

social understanding. “My hope is that – yes, we teach for college and career readiness – but that we can teach children for a civil and productive democracy so that children learn, not just the academic part of school, but that they learn how to be better human beings,” Corgill said. Teachers also should employ non-academic lessons, she said. “All of those things are necessary to live in the world today, and I don’t know if we spend enough time focusing on those skills,” she said. “I think there needs to be a balance.” If she’s named National Teacher of the Year, Corgill said, she will travel the country and spread the message that education can be more than just keeping up to date with the Common Core Standards. She said teachers should spend

the state. Malone has been the director of Drama and Theatre at Hoover High School since 2005 and directs all fall, winter and spring shows. She has a bachelor’s degree in theatre from the University of Alabama and currently teaches Drama One, Advanced Theatre, Tech Theatre and IB Theatre at Hoover. Under her instruction, Hoover High School students have placed in many categories of theatrical competitions, including dramatic and comedic monologues and scenes, classical monologues, musical theater, pantomime and Readers Theatre. The department’s recent production of “Antigone” placed in the top five one-act plays in the state, receiving awards for Best Actors, Best Supporting Actors and Best Costuming. Malone also is the creator of “Malone Mysteries,” through which she writes and directs original murder mysteries for corporate events. In May, she will direct the high school’s spring musical selection, “Footloose.”

time teaching those social lessons that cannot be found in textbooks. Corgill said she sees a need to teach children lessons that include “how to problem-solve with one another, become more independent, respectful and learn how to have conversations.” She’s learned some lessons from her students during her 20-year career as a teacher, Corgill said. “I think that they have taught me to stop talking so much and to listen, because they have important and wise and powerful things to say,” she said. Corgill also said that to be a responsive teacher, “I have to be quiet. I have to listen.” For more information on the National Teacher of the Year Program, visit www.ccsso. org/ntoy. ❖ Tully Mitchell won second place and a $3,000 college scholarship and Luke Keown won third place and a $1,500 scholarship in the HOAR GoDaddy Bowl Reading and Writing Contest.

Edgewood Fifth-graders Earn Scholarships It may be a few years before Tully Mitchell and Luke Keown have to decide what their college majors are going to be, but the Edgewood Elementary School fifth-graders already have scholarship money to fund their collegiate pursuits. Mitchell won second place and a $3,000 college scholarship and Keown won third place and a $1,500 scholarship in the HOAR GoDaddy Bowl Reading and Writing Contest. Mitchell is a student in Lindsay Cook’s class. Keown is a student in Ashley Caffey’s class. Both students were invited to attend the weeklong events leading up to the GoDaddy Bowl, including the Mayor’s Luncheon, the Greers-Al.com Mardi Gras Parade and the football game.

OVER THE MOUNTAIN Journal

Altamont Senior Is Scholarship Finalist Altamont School senior Olivia Jones is a finalist in the prestigious Morehead-Cain Scholarship Program at the University of North Carolina. Jones is the first MoreheadCain finalist from Altamont and one of only two from Alabama. She and some 125 other finalists will take part in the final selection weekend in March in Chapel Hill, N.C. Of that group, approximately 55 will become Olivia Jones Morehead-Cain Scholars. Selection criteria for the award are leadership, academic achievement, moral force of character and physical vigor. Recipients are chosen solely on the basis of merit and accomplishment. The Morehead-Cain Scholarship covers all expenses for four years of undergraduate study at UNC-Chapel Hill. In addition, the program features summer enrichment. Over four summers, scholars will have the opportunity to complete an outdoor leadership course, carry out public service in the United States or abroad, conduct research at sites across the world and gain experience in private enterprise. Jones has been elected class president for a number of years and has taught students at Altamont, Samford University and the Avondale Library. She was recognized at the 2014 National Philanthropy Day celebration for her dedication to serving her community.

OLS Student Wins Water Festival Logo Contest Tess Gardner, (below) a fourth-grader at Our Lady of Sorrows Catholic School in Homewood, won the Jefferson County Water Festival logo contest. Fourth-grade students throughout the county participated in the competition. Students were asked to design a logo to represent the Water Festival, which educates students and teachers about water and other natural resources to instill environmental awareness and stewardship ethics. Students from the participating schools were asked to use the theme “Rain, Rain, Don’t Go Away” in their drawings. Gardner’s drawing and her name and school were printed on all the T-shirts for the festival. She and her teachers each received $50 for the award.


Thursday, January 29, 2015 • 29

schools

OVER THE MOUNTAIN Journal

Spartanettes Win at State Dance Championship

On Jan. 15 4-year-old cancer survivor Connor was surprised with a trip to Walt Disney World made possible with funds raised by Vestavia Hills High School’s annual fall philanthropy drive. Photo special to the Journal

A Meaningful Mission Vestavia Students Raise Money for Magic Moments

By Emily Williams Vestavia Hills High School students, in association with Magic Moments, on Jan. 15 surprised 4-yearold cancer survivor Connor with a trip to Walt Disney World. This event, led by the VHHS Student Government Association, was made possible with funds raised by the school’s annual fall philanthropy drive. Fundraising for Connor’s Magic Moment included ticket sales to events such as powderpuff football games. “Vestavia Hills High School students find joy in giving back to our community, so it has been a privilege to raise money for Magic Moments,” SGA President James Harris said. “The ‘Rebel Edge’ is alive and well, and we are excited to have the opportunity to make a magic moment happen for a deserving child in our area.” Each year, the VHHS Student Government Association chooses a Birmingham charity to support through its fall fundraising events. This year, the SGA chose Magic Moments. A local charity conceived in 1984, Magic Moments seeks to provide

Alabama children suffering from chronic illnesses with a “once-in-alifetime memory.” These life-changing experiences range from New York vacations to tuition assistance and are bestowed upon Alabama children with a wide range of chronic and lifethreatening illnesses. In addition to granting children’s wishes, Magic Moments offers a “Beyond the Magic” program that invites families to join in on regional activities throughout the year. Since it began, Magic Moments has given more than 4,200 Alabama children life-changing experiences, averaging about 100 “Magic Moments” each year. “It is so meaningful when young adults get involved with our mission of bringing joy to children suffering with chronic, life-threatening diseases,” said Joyce Spielberger, executive director of Magic Moments. “Through (VHHS’s) work with Magic Moments, they are able to see and understand firsthand the impact their fundraising efforts have and, in turn, maybe stop for a moment and count the blessings in their own lives.” For more information on Magic Moments, visit www.magicmoments. org. ❖

The Mountain Brook Junior High School Spartanettes won honors at the Universal Dance Association’s Alabama Dance Championship held at Spain Park High School Jan. 10. The Spartanettes competed in the High Kick Division, where they were defending their title for the fourth year in a row. The team took home the firstplace trophy with the highest score in the division. The Spartanettes also competed for the first time in the Pom Division and won the fifth-place trophy with a score separated by only 1.3 points from the first-place spot. Team members include: Adele Bloodworth, Anna Catherine Brown, Fredda Cardwell, Ginny Carney, Caroline Chamoun, Lucie Christian, Reagan Clark, Ella Cobbs, Mary Inzer Hagan, Emilyn Hamn, Elizabeth Harris, Kate Hinson, Ryann Holley, Lindsay Kahn, Olivia Keating, Greer

The Mountain Brook Junior High School Spartanettes won a first-place trophy at the Alabama Dance Championship Jan. 10. Photo special to the Journal Kelly, Elizabeth Kinsaul, Caroline Knight, Caroline Kohn, Laura Miles, Ferris Schwefler, Kate Seibels, Abigail Shepherd, Hayden Sledge, Molly

VHEW’s Bids & Bites Includes Auctions, Food Vestavia Hills Elementary West will host Bid & Bites, its 10th annual live and silent auction, Feb. 6 from 6-9 p.m. at the former Cokesbury location, 623 Montgomery Highway. There is no admission charge. While bidders browse, they can have complimentary food from IZ Catering. Sam Shober of Meteorite will provide live acoustic entertainment, and bidders can enjoy this year’s fun addition, a photo booth. Among the auction items are several vacations and travel-related extras, including a three-night stay at the Atlantis Casino Resort Spa in Reno, Nev., a lake house vacation, and a mountain cabin retreat. Parents may be interested in bidding on orthodontic gift certificates, summer camps, a Leon Loard signature oil portrait, photography sessions, and passes for zip lining and rock climbing. A small number of American Girl dolls will be up for auction, including Kit and hard-to-find Molly. Gift certificates for restaurants and retail shops, furniture from Summer Classics, Lifetime Fitness memberships,

Planning VHEW’s auction are, from left: event co-chairmen Carolyn Jordan and Evan Wright, principal Kim Hauser and PTO President Christine Osborn. paintings from local artists, and handmade jewelry also will be on the auction block. VHEW families may also like to bid on first-in-line carpool passes and themed baskets.

Bluff Park Student Wins Farm/City Poster Contest

Teacher Shawn Argo congratulates Bluff Park Elementary fifth-grader Campbell Hecklinski on winning the Jefferson County Farmers Federation’s Farm/City Poster Contest. Photo special to the Journal

A Bluff Park Elementary School student was recently named the winner in the Jefferson County Farmers Federation’s Farm/City Poster Contest. Fifth-grader Campbell Hecklinksi and her art teacher, Shawn Argo, attended an awards ceremony in November at the Hyatt Regency Birmingham-The Wynfrey Hotel in Hoover. Hecklinski received $100 for her winning poster, and Argo received $100 to use in her classroom. Hecklinski’s poster will now be sent to Montgomery for the state competition. The poster contest was part of National Farm/City Week, observed every year during the week before Thanksgiving to recognize the cooperation between farmers and consumers.

Simpson, Lizzy Walker and Sarah Yates. Debbie Stump and Lisa Lewis are the team’s sponsors.

For more information, call auction co-chairmen Carolyn Jordan at 9141574 or Evan Wright at 585-6316.

Mary Charles’ Doll House New, Collectible Antique Dolls 2820 Petticoat Lane Mtn. Brook Village 870-5544 Open Thur. - Sat. 10am - 4:30pm

The Korduroy Krocodile Homewood’s Unique Consignment Shop

Cherokee Bend Elementary School in Mountain Brook held its annual Geography Bee Jan. 13. Fifth-grader Nicole Hatton placed first, and sixthgrader Pearson Bedingfield placed second. Photo special to the Journal

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30 • Thursday, January 29, 2015

sports

Mountain Brook dive team members include, from left: Alec Johnston, Wills Black, Hughes Thomas and Hannon Tatarek. Not pictured are Coach Brooke Gibbons, Mallie Lundberg, Caroline Selesky and Lilly Martin.

Mountain Brook Dive Team Competes at State Meet The Mountain Brook varsity dive team competed in the Alabama High School Athletic Association’s state dive meet held recently in Auburn. To qualify for the state meet, divers had to first compete and place in the sectional competition, held in November at Birmingham’s Crossplex. Mountain Brook’s varsity team is on the younger side, team officials said, with most of them attending Mountain Brook Junior High School. They competed against 7th-12th graders at the state event. Mountain Brook took 8th, 13th and 16th place titles in the boys’ division and 10th, 14th and 15th place titles in the girls’ division.

LPMS Forms Bowling Team Liberty Park Middle School began a new tradition this year with the addition of a bowling team. The Alabama High School Athletic Association began recognizing bowling as a sport for the 2014-2015 school year, and LPMS was one of the first schools in the state to form a team. The LPMS girls won first place in the first Warrior Classic at Oak Mountain Lanes. Team member Suha Mohiuddin was the overall girls’ champion at the tournament. The bowling team also participated in Vestavia’s Rebel Roll Tournament and in 10 matches. LPMS bowling team members include Mackenzie Abts, Gabby Blue, Taylor Brown, Suha Mohiuddin, Emma Robertson, Chloe Ruggiero, Zoe Woodrow, Evans Crane, Jeffrey Deneen, Hayden Green, Matthew Hardwick, J.T. Helms, Campbell Miller, Cameron Monistere and Phillip Zuccala.

Lakeshore Hosts Pioneer Classic Wheelchair Tourney The New York Rollin’ Knicks took first place in the 2015 Pioneer Classic Wheelchair Basketball Tournament’s championship division with a 71-46 win over the Shepherd Stealers. The tournament was held Jan. 16-18 at Lakeshore Foundation in Homewood. In Division III, Shepherd won the championship with a 56-43 victory over the Music City Lightning. The Lakeshore Storm beat San Diego 68-51 to finish in fifth place in the championship division. In Division III play, USM defeated the Lakeshore Lightning 40-36 to take fifth place. From top: Lakeshore’s Ryan Hynes puts up a shot as teammate Clayton Brackett looks on. Members fo the Lakeshore Storm discuss strategy with coach Lisa Hilborn. The Storm’s Jeremy Campbell (30) and teammate Brad Lawler, right, go for a loose ball against the Orlando Magic. Journal photos by Marvin Gentry

Mountain Brook Jets Beat Vestavia Swish to Claim Fourth-grade Jingle Bell Jam Championship

From left, front row: Coach Jack Kubiszyn, Coach Scott Kubiszyn, John Colvin, Ford Moffat, Daniel Kubiszyn, Walker Ray and Coach John David Kubiszyn. Back: Heath Griffin, Jackson Beaty, Trent Wright, Carter Brooks and Thomas Sargent. Not pictured - Carter Kelley

OVER THE MOUNTAIN Journal


OVER THE MOUNTAIN Journal

Rebels Take Two Wins In Tri-Meet By Lee Davis The Vestavia Rebels took two victories in a tri-wrestling match with visiting Spain Park and Central of Phenix City recently. In the first match, the Rebels upended the Jaguars by a 66-12 score. Winners for Vestavia included Hunter Sounders, 106 pounds; William Jemison, 113 pounds; Quin

Estes, 120 pounds; Spencer Haddock, 126 pounds; Matthew Paugh, 132 pounds; Jeremy Strong, 138 pounds; Hayden Hill, 145 pounds; Bowman Hill, 152 pounds; Morgan Paugh, 160 pounds; George Dazzio, 170 pounds; Zachary Nelson, 182 pounds; and Benjamin Cage, 285 pounds. Winners for Spain Park were Andres Allen, 195 pounds, and Kevin McClure, 285 pounds.

homewood, From page 32

Ward said. “Our girls have handled it well. They were excited at first, but they’ve also been humbled. “Being ranked No. 1 is a big responsibility. Every team we face is going to be playing its best against us. It’s as if we have a big target on our backs every night. I don’t think our younger girls understood that at first, but they do now.” The Lady Patriots play an aggressive, pressing defense that tries to force turnovers. Offensively, they love to run and gun, as reflected by their 62 points per game average. “Pressing on defense and moving the ball rapidly down the court gives us the opportunity to have a lot of possessions,” Ward said. “And we think we have enough depth to wear a lot of our opponents down. Doing that can make it a good situation for us.” Homewood’s inside game is led by sophomore forward Shelby Hardy, who averages seven points and seven rebounds per contest. The Lady Patriots’ overall scoring is remarkably balanced. Ajia Wayne, a freshman forward, averages 13 points a game, while Hannah Barber, a freshman guard, scores about 12 points a game. Tori Webb, yet another freshman, and Maya Cook, a senior, each average about six points a game. Webb also grabs six rebounds per contest. A good example of Homewood’s balance came in its recent win over Briarwood as Wayne, Barber and Hardy each scored 10 points. Senior Jaylon Underwood chipped in nine. “We believe that balanced scoring keeps the opposing defenses guessing,” Ward said. “They can’t key on one or

Thursday, January 29, 2015 • 31

sports

In the second match, Vestavia dumped the Red Devils 51-20. The Rebels’ winners included Quin Estes, 120 pounds; Spencer Haddock, 126 pounds; Jeremy Strong, 138 pounds; Hayden Hill, 145 pounds; Grant Redden, 152 pounds; Morgan Paugh, 160 pounds; George Dazzio, 170 pounds; Zachary Nelson, 182 pounds; and Benjamin Cage, 285 pounds.

two players.” Ward has so much confidence in her team that she has no qualms changing starting lineups. “I don’t want anyone to be too comfortable,” she said. “Whether they are starters, first-off-the-bench substitutes or role players, nobody should be complacent. I want the starters to understand that they have to keep earning their positions, and the other players are expected to work hard with the goal of becoming starters one day.” Other contributors include senior Alex Studdard and freshmen Lia Roberson, Sakeria Hollis, Kayla Mikula, Kalia Cunningham, Kassidy Crawford and Yamiah Hill. There are no juniors on Homewood’s roster. “This is a fun group to coach,” Ward said. “They are a bunch of good kids. Just like all youngsters, they are a little unpredictable. We are so young that maybe the girls don’t realize how good they can be if they continue to work hard.” The Lady Patriots are joined by John Carroll Catholic and Pelham along with Briarwood in Area 9 and will be heavily favored to win their league tournament. Ward understands that greater challenges may well be ahead. “We are taking things one game at a time and trying to improve every time we play,” the coach said. “But at the same time, we know that everyone takes their game to the next level in the post-season. If we can stay grounded and humble, we will be okay. “That No. 1 ranking means a lot to us. It’s been a great run, and we can’t expect to stay No. 1 by coasting along.” Few of the Lady Patriots may have driver’s licenses, but if the girls keep winning, they won’t have any trouble finding rides to the Final Four.

Youth Movement No less than nine of the 13 players on Homewood’s roster are freshmen including Ajah Wayne, left and Lia Roberson, right. Journal photos by Marvin Gentry

Mountain Brook’s Jordan Rich drives against Spain Park’s Garrett McGuffie. More photos at otmj.com Journal photo by Marvin Gentry

jags,

From page 32

Class 7A poll. Robert E. Lee of Montgomery moved to No. 1 with Spain Park second, while Mountain Brook fell to third. The Jags’ victory last Thursday put the two teams in a tie for the area lead. Mountain Brook’s 71-54 win over Hewitt-Trussville and Spain Park’s 49-33 victory over Vestavia Hills the following Friday assured the Spartans and Jags of the Area 6 cochampionship. In cases of a tie, the host of the area tournament is determined by a coin flip. So now that two of Alabama’s best high school basketball squads have clashed twice, here are some conclusions that we can take away: Spain Park is a much better team with Austin Wiley than without him. If the Jaguars make a serious postseason run, their strength off the bench will be a big factor. Even when facing a healthy Wiley and a strongly-pro Jaguar crowd on the road, Mountain Brook is still a formidable team. The Spartans were much more competitive against Spain Park in the second meeting than the Wiley-less Jaguars were in their first match with Mountain Brook. The Spartans will have to shoot better from the three-point arc than they did against Spain Park if they expect to win a third consecutive state title. The fact that Spain Park defeated Mountain Brook despite committing 19 turnovers – the Spartans had only eight – says a lot about the high quality of the Jags’ talent level. The winner of the area – and perhaps beyond – could come down to a coaching battle of wits between the Spartans’ Bucky McMillan and Spain Park’s Neal Barker. The size and intensity of the crowds at both schools’ arenas have been great for high school basketball in this area.

There’s no way to predict who’s going to ultimately triumph in this compelling new rivalry between the Spartans and the Jaguars. But whether the bounces of the ball dictate only one or possibly two more matches between the pair – they are going to be special.

Gann honored…

If there is a first family of coaching in Over the Mountain athletics, it has to be veteran former coach Gerald Gann and his two sons, Doug and Lee. The elder Gann, a protégé of the late Bob Finley, was an outstanding assistant football coach who also worked basketball and baseball at the old Berry High School before becoming head football coach at Homewood in 1979. Gann promised he would make the Homewood football game the biggest thing going on in the town on Friday night, and he did exactly that, producing a long procession of winners for the Patriots before moving to Hoover in the mid-1990s. Gann ended his coaching career at John Carroll Catholic. Gann’s sons, Doug and Lee, have continued in that tradition. Both were multisport stars at Homewood during their dad’s tenure and quarterbacked the Patriots’ football team. Both have been successful high school coaches in their own right and have earned Over the Mountain Baseball Coach of the Year honors. Doug followed his father’s footsteps by building his career at Homewood. Lee, now the head baseball coach at Mountain Brook, was recently honored as the Distinguished Service recipient at the Alabama Baseball Coaches Association’s 17th annual Hall of Fame banquet. Those people, including me, who have followed the athletic exploits of the Gann brothers since their days of playing at the Homewood Park League can take a special pride in their success. In the case of Doug and Lee Gann, the apples definitely did not fall far from the tree.


OVER THE MOUNTAIN Journal

Thursday, January 29, 2015

Sports

Lakeshore Hosts Pioneer Classic Wheelchair Tourney P. 30 Lee Davis

Round Two Goes to Jags: But What about Three?

Members of the 2014 All-Over the Mountain Volleyball team include, from left, first row: Abby Garrett, Mountain Brook; Sara Chandler Mitchell, Mountain Brook; Jordan Nakayama, Spain Park; Manon Burris, Vestavia Hills; Cameron Rueschenberg, Oak Mountain; Sara Carr, Mountain Brook; Julia Smith, Mountain Brook; Olivia Portera, Hoover. Second row: Coach Haven O’Quinn, Mountain Brook; Kathryn Cather, Hoover; Mary Catherine Hart, John Carroll Catholic; Kelsi Hobbs, John Carroll Catholic; Lucy Hart, John Carroll Catholic; Morgan Adamson, John Carroll Catholic; and Ali Lowe, Hoover. Not pictured: Rachel Nix and Lauren Palmer, Briarwood; Savannah Francis, Oak Mountain. Journal photo by Marvin Gentry

Double Volley

Lady Spartans and Cavs Lead First All-OTM Volleyball team By Lee Davis Any way you look at it, 2014 was a special year for Over the Mountain volleyball. For the first time ever, area schools swept state championships in the top classifications. Mountain Brook claimed the title in the brandnew Class 7A, and John Carroll

Catholic took the blue trophy in Class 6A. Additionally, Hoover was a strong runner-up to the Lady Spartans in the Class 7A finals in the Elite Eight. So there probably couldn’t be a better season to showcase the first Over the Mountain Journal All-Over the Mountain Volleyball Team. The team was chosen by an exclu-

sive poll of the Over the Mountain volleyball coaches. A pair of junior outside hitters, Mountain Brook’s Sara Carr and John Carroll’s Kelsi Hobbs, were chosen Co-Players of the Year. The Lady Spartans’ Haven O’Quinn was named Coach of the Year. Carr finished with 648 kills, 513 digs and 81 aces in helping lead

Hannah Barber, a freshman guard, is averaging about 12 points a game. The Lady Patriots were 21-3 at the end of last week and enjoyed the No. 1 ranking in the most recent Class 6A polls. Journal photo by Marvin Gentry

Mountain Brook to its first-ever state crown in volleyball. Hobbs had 469 kills, 246 digs and 110 aces as the Lady Cavs also earned their first-ever volleyball top prize. “It was an amazing year for volleyball in this area, and this is a great way to cap it off,” Hobbs said. Joining Carr from Mountain Brook on the all-star squad are Sarah Chandler Mitchell, Abby Garrett and Julia Smith. In addition to Hobbs, John Carroll was represented by Morgan Adamson, Lucy Hart and Mary Catherine Hart. Other members of the All-Over the Mountain team include Rachel Nix and Lauren Palmer, Briarwood; Kathryn Cather, Ali Lowe and Olivia Portera, Hoover; Savannah Francis and Cameron Rueschenberg, Oak Mountain; Jordan Nakayama, Spain Park; and Manon Burris, Vestavia Hills.

Driver’s Education Lady Patriots Are Young But Win Like Veterans

By Lee Davis

If Homewood girls’ basketball coach JoVanka Ward was organizing a carpool, she’d be in big trouble. That’s because the vast majority of her Lady Patriots are too young to drive. The good news is that they are all really good basketball players. “Yes, we are a little on the young side, and I have to keep reminding myself of that,” Ward said. “Sometimes younger girls don’t react to things the same way more experienced kids do. But it’s my job as their coach to help them grow and mature as young ladies and as players.” When Ward says her team is young, she isn’t kidding. No less than nine of the 13 players on Homewood’s roster are freshmen. In the Lady Patriots’ 66-26 rout of Class 6A Area 9 opponent Briarwood last week, Ward had four freshmen and a sophomore in her starting lineup. Whatever Homewood is doing, it’s working. The Lady Patriots were 21-3 at the end of last week and enjoyed the No. 1 ranking in the most recent Class 6A polls. “The No. 1 ranking has really meant a lot to the school, and we are grateful for the support we’ve gotten from the community,” See homewood, page 31

Spain Park’s Jamal Johnson.

Last Thursday, Mountain Brook traveled to the Jaguars’ court for the equally-hyped Area 6 rematch, with Wiley back to full health. This time, the result was very different: Wiley scored 22 points as Spain Park took a 57-49 victory. He scored seven of Spain Park’s 13 fourth-quarter points and put together a three-point play that sealed the verdict just as the Spartans cut the margin to 52-49 with less than a minute to play. Depth also played a key role in the victory – as no less than eight Jaguars saw meaningful playing time. Mountain Brook actually led 23-19 in the second quarter but allowed a 14-2 Spain Park run that turned the tide. The Spartans could connect on only nine of 35 from the three-point range. Jack Kline paced Mountain Brook’s scoring with 15 points. “You’d have to name just about everybody on our team tonight,” a modest Wiley said after the game. “Everybody had a great game for us.” Spain Park’s victory knocked the Spartans out of the top spot in the Alabama Sportswriters Association See jags, page 31

Journal photo by Marvin Gentry

From left: 2014 Co-Player of the Year Sara Carr of Mountain Brook, 2014 Coach of the Year Haven O’Quinn of Mountain Brook and 2014 Co-Player of the Year Kelsi Hobbs of John Carroll Catholic.

Eleven days, a home court and one player can make a big difference in basketball. If you don’t believe it, ask the Spain Park Jaguars. In one of the most hyped games of the season, Mountain Brook – Class 7A’s top-ranked team – thrashed the Jags 66-44 in the Spartans’ home gym on Jan. 9. Mountain Brook’s impressive win was somewhat tainted by the fact that Austin Wiley, Spain Park’s talented sophomore forward, was at home nursing an illness. Despite Wiley’s absence, the Spartans showed themselves to be a team quite capable of winning its third consecutive state championship.


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