StreetScape Magazine Winter 2008

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S T. C H A R L E S C O U N T Y

Salvation Army 5 0 Ye a r s o f B e l l R i n g i n g

Winter Kisses Capturing Snow Crystals

WINTER

2008

It’s up to you Liza Broadway legend opens J. Scheidegger Center for the Arts on the Lindenwood University Campus

A Complimentary Publication Celebrating Local People and Events




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CONTENTS

F E A T U R E S

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Winter 2008 22 25 28 40 44

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| SKIN CARE— Beating Old Man Winter & Mother Nature | SALVATION ARMY ST. CHARLES CORPS— 50 years of humble service

| A SHOPPER’S DREAM— The real tale on retail in St. Charles | IT’S UP TO YOU LIZA— Broadway legend opens J. Scheidegger Center for the Arts on the Lindenwood University Campus | WINTER KISSES— No two really are alike | DEMI LOVATO— No Pressure | HARVESTER CHRISTIAN CHURCH— A journey in time | SAFE PLACE— Program provides safe haven for kids

D E P A R T M E N T S

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4 6 12 20 32 34 36 42

| COMMENTARY | FEATURED ARTIST | DYNAMIC DUOS | EDUCATION | A LA CARTE | STATE YOUR BUSINESS | BEST SHOPPING FINDS | HEALTH WATCH

46 48 50 54 56 60 61 63

| SEASONAL HUNT | PET TALES | WOMAN TO WOMAN | YOU CAUGHT OUR EYE | FITNESS & LIFESTYLE | STATE YOUR BUSINESS | FEATURED MUSIC ARTIST | CALENDAR

ON THE COVER | Photography: Dr. Richard Walters/© All rights reserved

Please Note: The choice of a lawyer is an important decision and should not be based solely upon advertisements. This disclosure is required by rule of the Supreme Court of Missouri. STREET SCAPE MAGAZINE |3


BEHIND THE SCENES

C O M M E N TA RY

PUBLISHER & FOUNDER

Winter Wonderland! Welcome to the 10th edition of Streetscape Magazine! As always, we invite you to come as our reader and stay as our friend. As we kick off this final edition of 2008, we look forward to growth and prosperity in the new year. First, a Christmas welcome and salute to the most renowned chorus line—The Radio City Rockettes. Look inside and get a kick out of our exclusive interview with a local lady who made it to New York and to the world famous kick line. The Rockettes perform more than 300 kicks in every show and appear in eight different costumes. For information about the Radio City Christmas Spectacular at the Fox Theatre, call the box office, all Metro Tix outlets, or charge by phone at 314-534-1111 or visit www.metrotix.com. Ticket prices range from $29.50 to $69.50. For more information, visit www.fabulousfox.com. Ever wonder what a real snow flake looks like? Turn back to our Winter Edition cover to find out. We featured the works of Dr. Rick Walters, a genuine snow crystal photographer from St. Louis. This dermatologist by day has perfected the art of bringing the miniscule to the masses. Read about him and his art in this edition. If the cold is already getting you down, warm up in the individual shops at The Meadows at Lake Saint Louis. We have also given you some great fashion and jewelry gift ideas as well as a sneak peek at a phenomenal live, work, play center coming to St. Charles--The Streets of St. Charles at Noah’s Ark. Happy 50th anniversary to St. Charles County’s first Salvation Army Corps! Please remember to be generous during this holiday season and remember those who are less fortunate with gift giving to the Tree of Lights Campaign. By donating money to the bell ringers with the familiar red kettles, you can give a gift of love and hope this holiday season. Beat old man winter as well as the summer’s leftovers with these skin care techniques and treatments. Look good and feel good going into the new year with a renewed sense of vigor and a newer looking you. See our page on reconnecting with women for a chance to win a free makeover with Mom Me Makeover’s Ola Hawatmeh. St. Charles County played host to two music divas in the last few months, one a burgeoning pop star, the other a legendary Broadway star. Demi Lovato, a great role model for today’s young girls, signed nearly 1,000 autographs at Mid Rivers Mall in July. And Liza Minnelli opened the new J. Scheidegger Center for the Arts at Lindenwood in September with a little Cabaret and a lot of sizzle. Throughout this issue, we will be saying so long to summer and welcome winter with candid shots of events all around St. Charles County. A final thought, find something to be passionate about in 2009. Rather than a list of seemingly unattainable and discouraging resolutions (like losing 50 pounds!) identify what makes you thankful. I’m thankful for my Streetscape Family who make this magazine happen. My wish for everyone is that they find their true passion, whether it be a charity, a hobby or interest, or family and friends, express gratitude and make a difference this year! Surprise! I’m putting my passion to work in the new year. Look for an annual sister publication to Streetscape Magazine that will focus more on the night life with a little attitude. We’re calling it “Streetscape By Night.” Happy reading!

TOM HANNEGAN Tom, Co-Owner of Hannegan Real Estate & Construction, LLC holds a master’s degree from Lindenwood University. Hannegan shares his passion for real estate, community volunteering, and his appreciation of St. Charles in Street Scape magazine.

CONTRIBUTING WRITERS ROBIN SEATON JEFFERSON Robin has been a writer/journalist for more than 15 years working in print and electronic media. She holds a bachelor’s degree in communications from UM–St. Louis, with minors in writing and criminal justice. ANN HAZELWOOD Ann is the owner of Patches, Etc. on Historic Main Street in St. Charles, Missouri. Hazelwood is an accomplished quilt author, historian, and appraiser with several titles to her credit.

MONICA ADAMS Monica is a certified personal trainer and hosts a health and fitness show Sunday afternoons on KMOX Radio, and is the traffic reporter for FOX 2 News in the Morning. Monica is a St. Louis native who enjoys entertaining family and friends, and doing charitable work.

NATALIE WOODS Natalie Woods is the owner of Daisy Clover Boutique in Webster Groves. Her goal at the store is to help make women look better and feel better in clothes. She is also obsessed with getting women in the right pair of jeans.

MARY ELLEN RENAUD Mary Ellen is a seasoned Public Relations & Marketing professional. You can contact her at Facets Creative (cell) 314-660-1975 renaud7207@centurytel.net.

CONTRIBUTING PHOTOGRAPHER MICHAEL SCHLUETER Michael photographs people and places for advertising and corporate accounts locally and nationally. “The exploration and discovery process is what keeps photography so exciting for me.”

EVENT PLANNER DONNA COSTELLIA

Be Thankful, Be Passionate, Life is not only good it is GREAT!

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Donna was a tourism professional for 25 years as the Assistant Director of the St. Charles CVB. She is now an independent meeting & event planner. Contact Donna by email at donna@streetscapemag.com or 314341-2790 for your next event.


BEHIND THE SCENES ADVISORY BOARD Denice McKeown Bob Millstone Sandy Mohrmann Suzanne Matyiko Maurice Newberry Craig Norden Grace Nichols Toekie Purler Sue Riddler Kathy Robertson Marc Rousseau Rocco Russo Richard Sacks Keith Schneider Bob Schuette Teri Seiler Joyce Shaw Kelley Scheidegger-Barbee Scott Tate Karen Vehlewald Aleece Vogt Brian Watkins Brian Wies Mary West Gail Zumwalt

Deborah Alessi Mary Banmiller Susan Berthold Nadine Boon Diane Burkemper Erica Butler Jody Cox Ann Dempsey Barbara Drant Cindy Eisenbeis Sally Faith Lorna Frahm Bill Goellner Sheryl Guffey Mary Lou Hannegan Grace Harmon Ann Hazelwood Chris Hoffman Jason Hughes Jan Kast Mike Klinghammer Martha Kooyumjian Caryn Lloyd Jeremy Malensky Nancy Matheny

ADVERTISING JUDY PETERS Judy has been a PR and marketing professional for many years and now joins the Streetscape Sales staff as an Account Manager. Contact Judy by email at judy@streetscapemag.com or 636-448-2074. DISTRIBUTION Call Tom Hannegan at 636-916-4386 or via email at tom@streetscapemag.com Distributed to: Chesterfield, Cottleville, Dardenne Prairie, Maryland Heights, Lake St. Louis, St. Charles, St. Peters, New Town, O’Fallon, Weldon Spring, Wentzville, Wright City and Warrenton.

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Volume 3, Issue 4 • Winter 2008 TPH Media 223 North Main Street, St. Charles, Missouri 63301 PHONE 636-916-4386, FAX 1-866-231-6159 WWW.STREETSCAPEMAG.COM Any reproduction of Street Scape magazine or its contents requires publisher’s prior written consent. Street Scape magazine aims to ensure that information is accurate and correct at all times but cannot accept responsibility for mistakes. Street Scape magazine reserves the right to refuse any advertisement and assumes no responsibility for submitted materials. Unsolicited material must include a self-addressed stamped envelope. © 2006 TPH Media. All Rights Reserved.

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FEATURED ARTIST a human who needs the natural world.” He said he hopes that people are drawn in by the wonder of what and how he has created these sculptures and into the greater depths the works offer. Long said he knew he was an artist “from day one. My mother saw my proclivity and gave me what I needed.” Long said his mother's side of the family was a creative lot. Even the depression-era people in her family were “creative in their private time. They went out to make a living because art work was not a part of that.” Long later found out that his mother's uncle was a hermit-painter in the desserts of Arizona and New Mexico. “He lived a hermit's life.”

Adam Long Environmental art

“Once I started discovering creative people in my family line, I started asking questions of my mom and aunt,” Long said. “I found I come at this not alone.”

Long's natural figure sculptures are a testament to the artist's flair for the unique. And though artists have been using natural materials to create their art for centuries, Long's three-dimensional characters scream out to be noticed. The figures speak to the beholder in a way that has to be seen to be believed.

Always known as “the artist” among his friends, Long realized in high school that he was more of a sculptor than anything else. “I am a skilled draftsman and painter, but sculpting is what I really have an inclination for. It's more interesting and challenging. I see my art in three dimensions. When I'm drawing or painting, I'm still thinking in three dimensions. I have a scientific mind. Astronomy and physics are often inspirations for me. Geometry is innate in many artists. I have to translate that into two-dimensional form. For me, I'd rather not translate.”

“Environmental art often has a political or social message,” he said. “My sculptures more often celebrate a love of natural forms; examine man's interactions with nature; how science helps us understand our environment; and what it means to be

Long got his idea for using natural materials in his work while attending college. He said he was becoming an environmentalist. “But I was also developing a love of forms and textures you find.”

Story by Robin Seaton Jefferson Photos by Michael Schlueter

Adam Long's mother was an art teacher. Long became an artist. His twin sister a teacher.

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“While working on a figure sculpture, that I didn't have any resolution for, I decided to cover it with pine bark I found in my backyard. I was amazed by the visual effect,” he said “There was so much potential in that one experiment. Since then I have explored many paths within this idea, but most often the sculptures remain as humans unified with natural forms. I have been asked many times if they are people changing into trees or trees changing into people. They are neither. They are people as we could be in our relationship with the world around us.” Long holds a bachelor of arts in art education, a master of arts in studio art and a master of fine arts in sculpture. He has been an educator for 15 years working in public middle and high schools as well as at the university level. Long said he gets his materials from just about anywhere he goes including along the Katy Trail. He uses grape vine bark for the hair on some of the female sculptures and white oak bark for the bodies. He uses Spanish moss from Georgia and oak bark from Minnesota, “basically anywhere I am that these things have shed naturally from the trees.” Long's art is as natural and environmentally friendly as he can make it. He makes his own clay from recycled paper and at least a third of his colorants come from stain made from walnuts from his neighbor's tree. “I try to preserve natural things.” He was most inspired by the Spanish moss that he found hanging from the trees in Georgia. Ironically, the moss suffocates the trees to death. “There was just beauty and loss ruminating in my brain. We lost the tree but gained this beauty.” And like the moss, the wood often guides his work. “It's like a conversation with sticks. That could be a knee. That could be a shoulder. They guide the pose. Who is this person? What are they doing? What do they want to be?” For more information on Long's work, visit www.adamlongsculpture.com or call him at 636-916-0952. ■


20th Anniversary

locosgrill.com

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SOCIAL SCENE

Dr. John M. Conoyer Dr. J. Matthew Conoyer joins Midwest ENT. He is a seventh-generation resident of St. Charles County and a second-generation otolaryngologist—head and neck surgeon. He graduated from the Academy of the Sacred Heart in 1991 and from Duchesne High School as a member of the Class of 1995. He is pictured above with his father Dr. Michael Conoyer.

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BEAUTY / WELLNESS

Skin Care Beating Old Man Winter & Mother Nature Story by Robin Seaton Jefferson Photos by Michael Schlueter

As the population of older adults hits an alltime high, more Americans are looking for ways to halt or at least slow the onset of “looking” older. And they're finding out that many of the clues that give away their age are right in front of their face—literally. But improving on the look of the skin isn't the only way to look and feel better about one's appearance. Shedding those stubborn inches and smoothing out those dimples are every bit as important to overall looks and confidence. Dr. Cathy Sinkler has invested in a new affordable laser treatment that she said easily and painlessly burns away inches, fat and cellulite with no down time. And better yet, the average Joe, or Josephine as the case may be, can afford it. Sinkler charges just $60 per session for treatment with the Synergie Aesthetic Massage System. And most people see results after only a few sessions. Sinkler said the optimal treatment amount is 16 sessions done twice a week for eight weeks. Nearly three decades ago, while developing a new method to soften scar tissue from burn injuries, European scientists discovered that their new treatment also spot-reduced cellulite and fatty deposits on the stomach, buttocks and thighs and improved skin tone, Sinkler said. “The Synergie Aesthetic Massage System was born.”

Doctors in the United States gained access to the FDA-approved system in 1996, paving the way for a whole new concept in cellulite reduction and skin toning, Sinkler said. She said the Synergie System delivers deep, subdermal tissue massage, also referred to as liponic sculpting. “The Synergie method works with the waste system of your body, or the lymphatic system,” Sinkler said. “It releases the lymphatic system deep in the body to purge out waste through urination, burning fat and shrinking fat cells. That's how the fat cells get smaller and we tighten and tone the body.” The non-invasive procedure utilizes vacuum massage technology, which is an easy and effective non-surgical alternative for body sculpting, that results in lost inches, Sinkler said. The treatment combines suction and applied pressure to the whole body providing optimal stimulation, stretching and pressure to subcutaneous tissues, a type of therapy not possible through traditional massage techniques. Sinkler said she does the whole body because the lymphatic system runs throughout the body. “As remarkable as it sounds, all you have to do is lie down, relax and watch the fat, inches and cellulite disappear'” she said. Sinkler recommends her patients wear compression hose or athletic ware for six-to48 hours following treatment to push the fluids out of the body faster.

Sinkler also offers an Electro Meridian Imaging body scan (EMI) in her office that can show a “picture of the energy flow in the body.” The scan generates a graph and a symptom sheet that will show any imbalances. “Once I get it in balance, your body can take care of whatever is going on,” she said. She said she had a male patient with shingles. “He was 90 percent better with acupuncture and light treatments. The light treatments speed healing and regenerate nerves,” Sinkler said. “It amazes me everyday what these treatments can do.” Sinkler charges $50 per session for acupuncture. Sinkler is the owner of all About Health at 765 West Terra Ln. in O'Fallon. She can be reached at 636-240-4617. All About Health also offers acupuncture, massage therapy and light treatment. Having a board certified physician and surgeon who specializes in weight management and body sculpting procedures makes all the difference in cosmetic services, said Linda Weaver, marketing director for Spa Winghaven. Dr. Vishnu Subramani, M.D. serves as the medical director at Spa Winghaven at 2327 Technology Dr. in O'Fallon. Subramani has done over 2,500 body sculpting procedures, including LipoDissolve, Smart Lipo and Tumescet Liposuction. Weaver said Subramani was trained under one of the leading authorities in Smart Lipo, Dr. Todd Malan, who has performed the most Smart Lipo procedures in the United States. Subramani is an associate member of both the American Society of Cosmetic Physicians and the American Society of Bariatric Physicians. Spa Winghaven offers literally hundreds of services from hair, makeup and nail services, to body sculpting to medical skin care to just about any facial available today. Lana Weaver, a medical aesthetic technician at Spa Winghaven, said she recommends the HydraFacial TNS Serum Treatment to bring new life to damaged skin.

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Spa Winghaven

A breakthrough in aesthetic technology, the HydraFacial takes its name from the root word Hydrate, which means to cause to take up moisture. “The ability to moisturize the skin separates the HydraFacial from all other


skin resurfacing procedures,” said Lana Weaver. “The HydraFacial removes dead skin cells and impurities while simultaneously bathing the new skin with cleansing, hydrating and moisturizing serums. The treatment is soothing, refreshing, nonirritating and immediately effective.” The treatment itself takes about 20 minutes. There is no discomfort during the procedure. The treatment is two-fold with the cleansing, exfoliation, extraction and hydration done first and the application of TNS Serum done last. Lana Weaver said the multi-action specialized serum contains NouriCel-MD, a proprietary mixture of over 110 Cytokines and human growth factors, soluble collagen, antioxidants and matrix proteins, discovered through wound-healing research. Lana Weaver performs the treatment. As a medical aesthetic technician trained by a physician, Lana Weaver can also offer glycolic peels that non-medical spas can not. “A regular spa can only do 30 percent peals,” said Linda Weaver. “With a medical spa we can do 40 to 70 percent glycolic peels or physician-grade peels because our technicians are trained by physicians. The professionalism is there because you are under the tutelage of a doctor. This knowledge of the skin is what sets us apart.” A registered nurse performs all injectables at Spa Winghaven, including Juvederm, Radiesse, Restylane and Perlane. These cosmetic dermal fillers are hydroxyapatite (Radiesse), collagen, hyaluronic acid (Juvederm, Restylane, Perlane and others). They are injected in the mid-to-deep dermis to restore volume and fullness to the skin to correct moderate to severe facial wrinkles and folds, such as the lines from the nose to the corners of the mouth (nasolabial folds). “With injectables we can do a complete liquid lift,” Linda Weaver said. “We're working with moms who have families and jobs. We're doing more non-invasive things because of that.” Aside from its many options for improving damaged skin, Spa Winghaven attempts to promote good ski care. “My goal always has been skin health. You're body can be healthy, but if your skin is not healthy, you look old.” For more information on Spa Winghaven visit www.spawinghaven.com or call 636625-8772. A leader in the area in both surgical and nonsurgical cosmetic procedures, Dr. Mark Boschert of Renaissance Plastic Surgery, said permanent results, although requiring a little more down time, are becoming easier, more efficient and more affordable all the time.

Renaissance Plastic Surgery

Boschert received his master of science degree and his medical doctorate from the University of Missouri at Columbia. He completed his general surgery and plastic surgery training at the University of Missouri at Columbia and a cosmetic surgery fellowship with Plastic Surgery Associates of Miami, Florida. Boschert said because most facials of any kind last little beyond the skin's normal cycle of four-to-six weeks, and because they normally only target the outer layer, or epidermis, of the skin, he recommends taking advantage of the many laser therapies that are available today. “The epidermis is basically the outer layer or the top 10 percent of the skin. In four to six weeks, it grows up and flakes off,” Boschert said. The dermis, on the other hand, is the deep layer of the skin made up of the cells that make pigment and contain hair follicles. “That skin doesn't go away,” he said. “It is that deep layer that shrinks as we age and gets damaged by the sun and smoke and wind and rain. Long-term damage is stored in this layer.” Boschert said any treatment or product that penetrates the dermis must be FDA-approved and used by a physician. He said often products are marketed as “deep penetrating” when in actuality they only penetrate the epidermis. He said non-prescription strength medications that are typically purchased at department stores are “watered down” to the point of not being effective. “Everybody that goes there has to be able to tolerate these products because someone somewhere is going to be overly sensitive to it so they have to water it down.”

and American Laser Center can have their doses regulated and adjusted. When a physician prescribes a medication, that medication is strong enough to penetrate the dermis and repair it, stimulating the cells of the dermis to create more collagen and thicken, he said. “That's how you really get improvement in the quality of your skin,” he said. Still, medications can only go so deep, he said. That's where fractional lasers come in. “Facials just leave you pink. They are basically removing three-to-five microns of skin. That is a very, very thin layer of skin,” he said. “In order to get into deeper layers, I want to remove 300-to-500 microns.” Boschert likened the fractional laser treatment to aerating soil. “We are actually punching microscopic holes down into the face all over the face, covering five percent of the face with each treatment. As each hole heals, it stimulates deep skin to produce more collagen and thicken the dermis.” Boschert said at least three treatments are needed at two-week intervals. He said the healing from each set of holes actually spreads, producing more collagen to the entire face. “The heat stimulates the points that were done and spreads and melts into surrounding tissue. The healing affect spreads. It's sort of like planting a Zoysia plug.” The treatment gets rid of wrinkles, fine lines and brown spots. “And that will give long lasting permanent results.” For more information call 636-896-0600 or go to www.rpsplasticsurgery.com. ■

Boschert said in a doctor's office or medical spa, patients are monitored by a physician S T R E E T S C A P E M A G A Z I N E | 11


YOU CAUGHT OUR EYE

Story by Robin Seaton Jefferson Photo by Michael Schlueter

For the Glosier’s, lasting love, happiness and giving is all in the family. Robert “Bob” Jr. and Mary Dean Glosier have been married for 55 years. When asked to be interviewed for Streetscape’s Dynamic Duos portrait, Bob replied simply, “My wife and I are hardly dynamic.” We beg to differ.

more than they’ve taken, though. The couple have strived to help the less fortunate in many ways, including through their parish, St. Charles Borromeo, and through the St. Vincent DePaul Society. For more than two decades, the two have given their time and resources to these and other organizations, including Birthright. “I guess it’s just an urge to give something back or at least a willingness,” Bob said. He has taken care of the school and church yards at Borromeo for at least 20 years. “As a giver you receive more than you give. If people realize there’s a supreme being who is good to them, they have a wonderful opportunity to return that. If you’ve been the recipient of many blessings, it seems to me you do have a responsibility to help somebody else.”

Dynamic Duos The Glosiers The two grew up in St. Charles and mingled with the same crowd. Though Bob attended the former St. Peters High School and Mary Dean the Academy of the Sacred Heart, the two knew all the same people. “St. Peters was going to have a 25th anniversary formal dinner at a country club in St. Louis,” said Mary Dean. “He asked me to go.” Bob said prior to that, Mary Dean had dated his friend. “In the early 1950’s, St. Charles was a small town. For the most part, all of the young people knew all of the other ones.” Bob’s father was a cattle farmer. Bob followed in his father’s footsteps on their farm on Droste Road across from McNair Park. Mary Dean attended Miss Hickey’s Secretarial School in St. Louis. While she was working as a secretary to the dean of students at then Lindenwood College, Bob asked her on a date. Following the couple’s wedding, they bought a farm on Pitman Hill Road. They sold the piece of land 20 years ago. Bob was in the concrete business before his retirement. Mary Dean credits the couple’s marital longevity to “give and take and our faith.” Bob said it was due to “a lot of, ‘Yes, dear’ from both sides. Most would say the Glosier’s have given

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Mary Dean said the more she does, the better it feels. “The more you do, the more you realize how many blessings you have to give these people in need.” Bob said now that the couple is retired, volunteering just seems like the right thing to do with his golden years. “Time is a big thing. It’s different for young people with young families. It’s a much greater sacrifice for young families to do. Old people have more time.”

Rob was best friends with one of Genny’s nine siblings, also named Rob, one of the six Fleming sons. Rob Gloiser said he hung out a lot at the Fleming’s house in his grade and high school years. He asked Genny out after he went to college. He was home for the weekend from the University of Missouri at Rolla. She was in high school. It was 1979. Genny said one of her little brothers used to tease Rob when he came to the house after that. “He’d say, ‘Are you here for Rob or Genny’?” Although Rob was oblivious to her for some time, Genny said she “had her eye on him for a long time. I was very shy,” she said. Today, Rob and Genny have three children of their own, two boys and a girl. Rob is an engineer for Laclede Gas and Genny is an artist. Genny studied art therapy at Maryville College in St. Louis. Along with private work and many donated pieces, she does pen and ink drawings for ornaments for a company in West Virginia. Genny said she gets her artistic gene from her mother’s mother, who picked up oil painting in her seventies. Ironically, Genny was named for Genevieve Erker. Rob and Genny said they had always talked of getting married. They dated for five

Bob and Mary Dean raised two kids, a daughter, now a retired school teacher, and a son, an engineer. The son is half of the other Glosier team in St. Charles. Rob and Genny Glosier were also both raised in St. Charles. The two had known each other from their preschool days.

Gloisers, (left to right) Robert, Mary Dean, Genny and Rob.


years. “It was maybe, kinda, I’m not sure, then yes,” Rob said. They went out and purchased the engagement ring that day and were married June 4, 1983. Rob and Genny said their parents, on both sides—including Bob and Sissy Fleming—have been mentors in the marriage department. “They are all, all four of them, role models for us,” Rob said. Genny agreed. “They kept God as the center of their lives and I firmly believe it starts there.” The two said separation and divorce were simply never an option in their household or that of their parents. “We learned from them,” Rob said. Rob and Genny concede that they have very different interests. He loves sports. She loves the arts. “But we come together. together,” Rob said.

We pray together.

We have fun

The two share something else with their parents, volunteerism. Rob and Genny have co-chaired Foresight, Duchesne High School’s largest fundraiser dinner and dance. Genny is also on the advisory board of Duchesne. “Giving back is such a great experience on multiple levels,” Genny said. ■ S T R E E T S C A P E M A G A Z I N E | 13


COMMUNITY FOCUS

Lorna Frahm and Lisa Baue

The Salvation Army St. Charles Corps 50 years of humble service Story by Robin Seaton Jefferson Photos by Michael Schlueter and Robin Seaton Jefferson

In the spirit of quiet servitude for which they're so well known, The Salvation Army recently marked its 50th year in St. Charles with a celebratory prayer service. With a low-cost, no-frills ceremony, the original captains visited the St. Charles Corps at 2140 North 4th Street. There were no television cameras, no radio personalities, not even a print reporter, save for this one. Some dedicated personnel, a few dignitaries and a couple of beneficiaries of The Salvation Army's goodness turned out to hear The Salvation Army Band play old time hymns and to meet Walter and Shirley Lockhart, the very first St. Charles County Corps officers. The Salvation Army began in an old building next to the theatre building at 416 South Main in St. Charles. That building burned down November 30, 1958. Just two months before the fire, on September 21, 1958, Captains Walter and Shirley Lockhart, along with Arthur C. Baue, grandfather of Baue Funeral Home Owner

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Lisa Baue, extended the reach of The Salvation Army to St. Charles County. The Captains Lockhart worked feverishly to begin many of the programs that still give hope to families today across the St. Charles County area. The two canvassed the St. Charles area, knocking on doors and handing out brochures, spreading the good news that The Salvation Army would now be a refuge for those in need. For five decades St. Charles County residents with no place to go have turned to The Salvation Army for compassion, strength and encouragement. Over the last 25 years, The Salvation Army in St. Charles County has provided nearly 680,000 meals to hungry men, women and children; 164,000 nights of shelter to the community's homeless; 364,000 food pantry boxes to families in need; 55,000 visits to seniors without support; and 107,000 Christmas gifts. The prayer service kicked off a year-long celebration of half a century of helping others, as well as focused attention on the kickoff of The Salvation Army's annual Tree of Lights Campaign this month. The

Salvation Army hopes to raise $550,000 in honor of its 50 years in St. Charles County for those in need. Hundreds of bell ringers will stand aside the traditional red kettles ringing bells and asking for help to feed, cloth and house those in the most dire of circumstances. At the 50th anniversary celebration, Major Randall Polsley, Midland Division General Secretary, quoted verses from Matthew 25 of the Holy Bible. “When Jesus talks about Judgment Day,” Polsley said, “He said, 'For I was hungry and you gave Me food; I was thirsty and you gave Me drink; I was a stranger and you took Me in; I was naked and you clothed Me; I was sick and you visited Me; I was in prison and you came to Me.' He said, 'I say to you, inasmuch as you did it to one of the least of these My brethren, you did to Me'.” “Those are powerful words,” Polsley said. “And it embodies the very mission of The Salvation Army. The mission of The Salvation Army is seeking out and finding the least of these and extending a helping hand and offering hope.” Polsley said The Salvation Army is not only


celebrating the last 50 years but looking ahead to the next 50 with renewed hope and enthusiasm. He said the Army is currently engaged in a strategic planning process in Missouri and Illinois to identify “who we are, who we want to be and what we're going to do.” The first Captain of The Salvation Army in St. Charles County, Walter Lockhart took the stage at the celebration first to honor Arthur C. Baue, who he said helped the hopeless long before The Salvation Army organized in St. Charles, and second to share some of the history of the Army's humble beginnings. “What a great time we had back in 19 hundred and 58,” he said. “It's not me and it's not you. God is in this thing, and he moves and shows people what they ought to be doing.” “Arthur Baue had collected money for years,” Lockhart said. “He more or less helped transients informally.” Baue's granddaughter, Lisa Baue, spoke at the celebratory prayer service. “I think my grandfather was a very humble man,” she said. “He always said it was your responsibility as a business person to give back and support your community's greatest needs.” Lockhart shared an old Salvation Army tune with the audience that he said they used to entice people to join the Army even at the first tent revival in St. Charles. “The Salvation Army has the right to beat the drum, the tambourine, the banjo to make the Devil run. Come join our Army and shoot the gospel gun at the Devil if you want to see him run.” “St. Charles back in 1958 was ready for the work of The Salvation Army because when we walked up and down Main Street, there were people coming out of the wood work. I had the privilege of walking almost every street in St. Charles.” “There were kids all over the streets,” said Shirley Lockhart. “One family had seven children and they were un-churched and they began coming.” Patricia Mayor, a former resident of The Salvation Army shelter in O'Fallon said the Army changed her life, as well as that of a friend she met in the shelter. The two women now share a household and take care of their children together. “The Salvation Army teaches people how to help other

people when they don't have a lot to help out with,” she said. The Salvation Army provides educational training, social services, character-building programs, religious programs and recreational activities. The Emergency Social Services program helps individuals and families meet their emergency and basic needs while working through temporary financial crises with grocery vouchers, utility assistance, clothing and casework. The Salvation Army offers food pantry access as well as meals during lunch and dinner in St. Charles. Disaster Services helps rebuild the lives of those devastated by natural or man-made disasters with clothing, temporary shelter, meals, personal care items and spiritual counseling. The Salvation Army will hold its Tree of Lights Campaign Kickoff Luncheon at The Columns in St. Charles November 18. All net proceeds from the luncheon will count toward the $550,000 goal. Committee chairwoman and local attorney, Lorna Frahm, said this year, several local groups are challenging each other to raise the most money for The Salvation Army including the “Battle of the Banks,” “First Responders” (police and firefighters), municipal governments, realtors and attorneys. “One way civic groups, churches, youth groups and employee groups can help, without any out-of-pocket expense to them is to volunteer to be a bell ringer in front of a kettle placed at a Schnucks, Dierberg's or high traffic location,” Frahm said. “We have found that kettles that are manned with volunteers produce higher donations than those without bell ringers. There are not enough bell ringers to man each of the kettles.” For more information on giving to The Salvation Army or its programs, call the O'Fallon shelter at 636-240-4969 or the St. Charles Corps at 636-946-7966. To volunteer to be a bell ringer, call 314-6067847. ■

Walter Lockhart first St. Charles Salvation Army Corps Captain S T R E E T S C A P E M A G A Z I N E | 15


ENTERTAINMENT

Radio City Rockettes come home Famous kick line visits town where they debuted Story by Robin Seaton Jefferson Photos by the Fox Theatre

As The Rockettes descend on St. Louis, for the Radio City Christmas Spectacular, at least one of them will be right at home. Karilyn Ashley Surratt, 26, grew up in St. Louis, where she studied ballet, tap and jazz at Pelagie Green Wren Academy of Dance with Pelagie Wren and Danny Clark. She also studied ballet at Ballet Conservatory in St. Louis under Nathalie Levine and jazz at the Center of Creative Arts under Lee Nolting. While at Rosati-Kain she studied music and theatre with John Contini, Sarah Cannon and Christine Pauley. Born in Oklahoma City, OK, Surratt moved to St. Louis at the age of four. Her mother, a doctor, completed her residency training at St. Louis University. Her dad, a former Marine, was a lineman for Southwestern Bell. It was Surratt’s grandmother who encouraged her to dance and started her with lessons at the age of two. “I spent a lot of time with my grandparents on their ranch in Oklahoma,” Surratt said. Surratt said her unofficial career began when a fellow student at Rosati Kain High School was sick and unable to perform in “Once Upon a Mattress.” A tad “bored with ballet,” Surratt took the part and in doing so discovered new outlets for her dance. Soon after, she took a part in another Rosati Kain production—Pantomime Princess. During the show, jazz instructor Lee Nolting happened to be sitting next to her mother in the audience. After the show, Nolting found her and the rest is history. “Lee Nolting introduced me to different aspects of dance,” she said. Surratt said she originally intended to follow in her mother’s footsteps and go to medical school. “I figured I can go back to medical school later. I can’t wake up when I’m 40 and decide to be a Rockette,” she said. 16 | S T R E E T S C A P E M A G A Z I N E

Surratt graduated summa cum laude from Oklahoma City University, with a BPA in dance performance and a minor in history in May 2005. Soon after, she was on her way to becoming a part of one of America’s most famous chorus lines. For more than 75 years, the Radio City Rockettes, the world’s most famous precision dance troupe, has been a legendary force in entertainment. From their USO Tours during WWII, to showstopping Super Bowl Halftime appearances, to the annual Macy’s Thanksgiving Day Parade performances, the Rockettes are a national treasure. Their annual starring role in the Radio City Christmas Spectacular at Radio City Music Hall, and in numerous other cities across North America, is seen by more than 2.1 million people annually. This year, the Radio City Rockettes will kick up their heels in six cities across North America. The “Missouri Rockets” made their show business debut in St. Louis in 1925, the realization of a long-time dream of their creator, Russell Markert. The Rockettes were discovered and brought to New York by showman S.L. (Roxy) Rothafel who first dubbed them the “Roxyettes.” On December 27, 1932, they shared the stage with 17 diverse acts, among them the Flying Wallendas, Ray Bolger and Martha Graham. An instant sensation, The Rockettes were the quintessential American chorus line. Starting with just 16 women,

the numbers grew over the years to what is now a 36-member Rockette kick line. In 1933, Radio City featured a new movie and a lavish stage production every week starring The Rockettes. Markert’s stringent requirements never varied and he continued to stage and choreograph productions at the Music Hall until his retirement in 1971. The concept of the dance line was to achieve absolute precision. The audience saw 36 Rockettes perform intricate routines, but always moving as “one dancer.” Everything—the height, the costumes and steps—was kept completely identical. The illusion of uniform height is maintained to this day by putting the tallest dancers in the center, and gradually decreasing the height with the shortest women at either end. Surratt said a Rockette must be proficient in ballet, tap, jazz and modern dance; be at least 18 years old; and be between five-footsix and five-foot-ten-and-a-half inches tall. Rockettes represent America. Today’s line is made up of businesswomen, fashion designers, students, actresses, volunteer workers and young mothers. Surratt said soon after college, she answered one of the group’s open call auditions and made the cut. “The Rockettes are such an American legacy,” Surratt said. “I called everybody, my mom, my aunts.” Just 200 women make up all of the Rockette kick lines across the United States, including two casts in New York. Since


One famous featured number, direct form the Big Apple is called “Christmas in New York” and features dancing snowmen, a larger than life New York skyline and a dazzling salute by the Rockettes. Two of the most cherished scenes in the Radio City Christmas Spectacular are the “Parade of Wooden Soldiers” and “The Living Nativity,” both of which have been part of Radio City’s holiday tradition since they first performed in 1933. 1994, The Rockettes have brought their legendary style of dance to 30 cities outside of New York as well. The requirements today remain almost exactly as they were at the dance troupe’s inception. Since 1932, more than 3,000 women have danced as Rockettes. Surratt said tremendous stamina is required to complete the “Twelve Days of Christmas” routine in the Christmas Spectacular, during which dancers tap for seven minutes straight. Other performances include two minutes of The Rockette’s trademark eyehigh kicks. She said a woman can remain a Rockette as long as she’s in adequate shape to handle it, and she has no intentions of leaving any time soon. “I’ll be a Rockette as long as they’ll have me,” she said. “It’s really amazing. Everyone has some memory of the Rockettes that puts them in a great place.”

The Rockettes perform more than 300 kicks in every show and appear in eight different costumes. Nearly 100 pounds of paper snow fall onto the stage during one Christmas Spectacular season as teddy bears dance, wooden soldiers come to life, reindeer fly and the Radio City Rockettes perform their fancy footwork and eye-high kicks. For tickets, call the Fox Theatre box office, all Metro Tix outlets, or charge by phone at 314-534-1111 or visit www.metrotix.com. Ticket prices range from $29.50 to $69.50. For more information, visit www.fabulousfox.com. ■

Throughout their history, the Rockettes have reached more than theatre audiences with their talents. Surratt said part of the honor of being a Rockette is giving back to the community. In Chicago, they help raise funds for COACH Care Center, which provides children with chronic, high-maintenance special health care needs a continuum of care from diagnosis on. In Seattle, they work closely with the Juvenile Diabetes Research Foundation. In Cleveland, Milwaukee and Phoenix, they read stories to children and run book drives at local libraries and children’s hospitals. In Tampa, it’s the Ronald McDonald House. St. Louis will be a site for sore eyes for Surratt, as will a certain local pizzeria. The last time she came home, her first stop was Imo’s for a large cheese pizza. And what of her figure? “When you’re doing four or five shows a day, and they’re two-hour shows, you need the calories,”

Karilyn Ashley Surratt

The 2008 Edition of the Radio City Christmas Spectacular, sponsored by Ameren UE and presented by Dance St. Louis, will return to the Fox Theatre for 38 performances from December 11 through 28. A cast and crew of nearly 100 includes 22 Rockettes, 14 singers and dancers, two children, four little people, Mrs. Claus and Santa Claus. S T R E E T S C A P E M A G A Z I N E | 17


THE BUZZ

Love is in the air . . . Streetscape is looking to publish winning Valentine stories. Tell us about your first date or how you first met. Was your proposal funny, interesting or bizarre? What happened that you want to share with the world or maybe not? We want to include your stories in the February edition of Streetscape! Our editorial staff will judge all entries. Please mail entries to Streetscape Magazine, ATTN: Love Stories, 223 N. Main St., St. Charles, MO 63301 or email to tom@streetscapemag.com with Love Stories in the subject box. â–

MacDonald Black Angus Farm Barbeque hosted by Grace Harmon and Fraser Leonard at MacDonald Black Angus Farm. Fun, food, fotographs and a hayride were enjoyed by all! The Day was Mooo-rific!!

Academy of the Sacred Heart Playground Renovation Mr. and Mrs. John Hannegan had made a lead gift to fund the new Lower School playground - and encouraged others to match it. A total of $78,000 was raised for the playground.

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EDUCATION

Happy Choices

Local music educator helps kids develop character Story by Robin Seaton Jefferson Photos by Michael Schlueter

It all started with a little girl who wanted to play the piano on her own terms. But Teondra Lyles grew up to be anything but an ordinary music teacher. Known simply as Mrs. Tena to her young charges, she's made it her life's work to educate children, not only in the art of song, but about the concept of doing the right thing. Lyles has been featured on KTVI Fox 2 News, as well as in the “St. Louis American”, and the “St. Louis PostDispatch.” “Happy Choices” is a series of sing-a-long compact discs that teach kids about character development, family values, diet, health, social skills and a host of other lessons. Each CD includes a booklet and activities. When she's not out performing for and with kids, she works as a substitute school teacher in the Francis Howell School District. She lives in Weldon Spring. A graduate of the University of Missouri at St. Louis (UMSL) in social work, Lyles has been a music educator for 12 years.

Teondra Lyles

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She said her work isn't that far off from what she learned at UMSL. “Every day of life is a social work experience,” she said. “I gave myself that title of music educator. I don't focus on children and music theory, though. I focus on children learning through music how to make happy choices and how to be encouraged.” Lyles works mostly with children ages two through first grade, though her lessons could be used by kids even older. “I let them know they can be anything they want to be,” she said. She started playing the piano when she was eight years old, but soon found out she had the gift of playing by ear or without music. “My teacher would say, 'You're not playing what I want you to play. Play with one finger not three and chords',” she said. Born in Cleveland, Ohio and raised in St. Louis, Lyles admits she didn't make all of the happy choices she sings about today. “I smoked cigarettes and drank,” she said. “It took me nine years to get my degree.” But after college, she stumbled upon a music teaching job with Kings Learning Center in University City and stayed there for 12 years. “God gave me a gift to play, and he and I just went about creating these songs to redirect children's behavior.” Today she does her presentations at preschools and elementary schools, parties, churches and l e a r n i n g c e n t e r s — wherever there are kids that want or

need to learn her life lessons. Her daughter Sydney as well as Jamari Jackson, Selena Cossia, Lauren Gibson and Naomi Foster sing with her on the CD. She said none of it would be possible, however, without the support of her husband Paul Lyles and oldest daughter Jade. She said “Lose that Attitude” is a favorite of kids and moms, as is “Put on Your Thinking Cap.” “Happy Choices” songs teach cognitive and motor skills as well as fine motor and range of motion, she said. “Those are four topics that educators are trying to instill in their students. When I go to these schools, and the teacher or director hears these songs, they say, 'Character development is what we're working on--teaching respect, patience, encouragement and keeping your hands to yourself'.” Teondra, said she knows her songs have changed the lives of the children with whom she sings. She tells the story of a little boy named Travis who, when she began teaching him, would neither sing a note nor move a muscle. Today, the child leads the class, she said. “Blooming Like a Flower” is a track on the newest CD, Volume III. “It's the first one we do with educators. It shows a teacher how important their role is in a child's development. A child is a seed and it's important for us to plant things in that child that will nourish them and help them bloom into a flower,” she said. Teondra sings a little of the tune: “Water me always. Water me with love and kindness. Water me with encouragement. Water me with the book of knowledge. And together we will grow.” For more information on “Happy Choices” go to www.happychoices.net or call Teondra at 314-517-1938. ■


SOCIAL SCENE

WILLOWS WAY 8th ANNUAL

CHILI COOK-OFF & SALSA FESTIVAL

Photos by Michael Schlueter S T R E E T S C A P E M A G A Z I N E | 21


SHOPPING

Story by Robin Seaton Jefferson Photos by Michael Schlueter

Retailers in St. Charles County are hoping a sputtering economy won't keep shoppers away this holiday season, especially as one premier shopping and dining mecca opens its doors and another breaks ground. After more than four decades, the signature ark and Noah have been removed and his giant fiberglass animals herded away from Fifth Street. Gone are the famous kiddy cocktails and the cheap plastic, orange giraffes that the waitresses passed out, as are the sun-faded photos of celebrity guest star Milton Berle and parade floats in downtown St. Louis. The restaurant closed in 1996, and the accompanying hotel has been used now and again for a haunted house, but patrons of the 1970's landmark will always speak gallantly of a day when leopard-print chairs and pre-Hooters mini-skirted waitresses were considered all in fun and brought a curious magic to the place called “Noah’s Ark”. But what's to come on Noah's site promises to carry on a St. Charles tradition of progress and prosperity and an all-new kind

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A Shopper’s dream The real tale on retail in St. Charles of magic. Cullinan Properties of St. Louis started grading the 26-acre site at Interstate 70 and Fifth Street for the The Streets of St. Charles in October.

shoppers are happy to have a new and unique place to shop and retailers are happy to be part of this new shopping destination.”

Meanwhile, just 15 miles west, The Meadows at Lake Saint Louis opened its many retail doors for business August 23. With the likes of Chico's, Jos A. Banks, Talbots, Coldwater Creek, Clarkson Jewelers, Banana Republic, Ann Taylor Loft, Aeropostale, Victoria's Secret, Bath & Body, The Walking Company, Kay Jewelers and White House/Black Market, The Meadows promises shoppers a high-end retail extravaganza. The new center features landscaped boulevards in a downtown street grid and more than 260,000 square feet of specialty stores, junior anchors and restaurants.

Located on the southeast corner of Interstate 64 and highway 40 at Lake Saint Louis Blvd., The Meadows' first phase was completed in the fall. Developers Davis Street Land Company and retailers leasing space in the center say they've chosen the right spot for their latest ground-up development. “The Meadows at Lake Saint Louis will benefit from strong demographics surrounding the trade area,” Geiss said. “The total population of the trade area is nearly 324,000 people with an average household income of $77,480. Retail development in the area has been explosive with nearly 2 million square feet of retail opened in the last two years.”

“We are very pleased with the direction things are going since we have been open,” said Bridget Geiss, marketing director for The Meadows. “Feedback from both shoppers and retailers alike have indicated

Geiss said retailers are geared up for the holiday season, notwithstanding the economy's ups and downs. “The retailers are excited about the upcoming holiday and


winter season for a number of reasons,” she said. “Not only do they experience an overall increase in traffic and sales, but The Meadows offers close, store-front parking and easy-access walkways between stores. This is particularly convenient for customers, especially during colder months.” The Meadows will host a tree lighting this season along with Christmas Carolers, local school choirs, complimentary carriage rides, hot chocolate, Breakfast with Santa and many more activities for the whole family. Phase II of the Meadows at Lake Saint Louis will focus on the grand opening of Von Maur in the fall of 2010. Based out of Davenport, Iowa, the upscale family-owned department store features designer clothes for men, women and children. Of their 23 upper-Midwest stores, The Meadows will be their first Missouri location. For more information on The Meadows and upcoming events, visit www.themeadowsatlsl.com. The Streets of St. Charles promises to be the premier lifestyle center in the St. Louis Metropolitan Area, said Rob Wetherald, vice president of development for Cullinan

Properties Ltd. Architectural firm Durrant of St. Louis is currently undertaking the design development phase of the project. The engineering group is analyzing the site grading of the somewhat challenging site, Wetherald said. A grade slope of 50 feet exists from Fifth Street to Main Street. The developer hopes to raise the site on the east side to virtually flatten out the site. “That will make the site easier for pedestrians and cars to navigate,” he said. A four-story parking deck along Main Street tucked into the side of the hill will take up most of the elevation change, he said. Though future patrons of The Streets of St. Charles don't know it, much is taking place on Noah's old site. “Many people driving by the site don't see what's going on behind the scenes,” Wetherald said. “A great deal of design and engineering work is going on.” Wetherald said research done prior to the project indicated that The Streets of St. Charles will perhaps be the first of its kind in the state. “In our research, our opinion was that this is a completely new model, not just for St. Charles or even St. Louis, but perhaps all of Missouri.” As comparisons were done on what's

happening in metropolitan areas across the country, Cullinan found that The Streets of St. Charles is just what people are looking for. “People want to live in very dense urban environments. This is not just a shopping center. This is a live, work, play center.” The 26-acre, mixed-use development, slated to open in the summer of 2010, will include retail office and residential components in an intense new Urbanism theme, Wetherald said. “The center is strategically located in the void of upscale fashion retail—sitting 18 miles from its primary fashion retail competition.” Over 250,000 square feet of retail and entertainment space will be available, including a Village Roadshow Gold Class Cinema from Sidney, Australia. The theater will be one of only a dozen like it worldwide with private seating of 60 to 80 guests resembling home theater seating or business class seats on international flights. Premovie receptions will be held with concierge services and cocktails. “It will be more than just going to the movies,” Wetherald said. The first U.S.-based theater of this kind is in Barrington, IL, a suburb of Chicago. This will be the second U.S. Location, Wetherald said. S T R E E T S C A P E M A G A Z I N E | 23


Lake Saint Louis Mayor, Mike Potter and Bridget Geiss, marketing director for The Meadows

“This speaks volumes of the potential of this site and it serves to set the bar very high,” Wetherald said. Some 133,000 square feet of office space and a 150-room premium hotel with a conference facility and over 750 residential units will also be included at The Streets of St. Charles. “We see the project as very upscale, urban and sophisticated,” Wetherald said. “We will also be designing the center so that it is LEED certified with the U.S. Green Building Council. It is one of the very first mixed-use projects of this sort that will be LEED certified.” Construction on phase one of The Streets of St. Charles is due to begin in the Spring. This phase will include the properties immediately adjacent to Interstate 70 and Fifth Street, along with 50,000 square feet of retail space, 30,000 square feet of restaurant space, and 20,000 square feet of office space. Wetherald said plans are in the works for a second hotel for extended stays. Restaurants in the development will range from casual to fine dining. Shopping will range from convenience retail to spas and high fashion, he said. “The whole approach to this center is a lifestyle center,” he said. ■ 24 | S T R E E T S C A P E M A G A Z I N E


CELEBRITY FOCUS

It’s up to you Liza! Broadway legend opens J. Scheidegger Center for the Arts on the Lindenwood University Campus. Story by Robin Seaton Jefferson Photos by Michael Schlueter

Legendary Broadway and Hollywood icon, Liza Minnelli, opened the J. Scheiddeger Center for the Arts with a grand presence and an outpouring of support from both young and old for the Academy Awardwinning actress. True to her style and image—with the jet black hair, huge eyes and extravagant eyelashes—Minnelli took on Cabaret and New York, New York and fans couldn’t get enough. Just about every age group was represented at Lindenwood University’s newest and most famous addition yet. Yelling accolades like, “I love you Liza,” and “You’re beautiful Liza,” Minnelli’s followers made the show count, some paying in upwards of $125 per ticket. On display in the main lobby of the center was a piece of Minnelli’s past, rather several pieces. On loan from Donna Hafer, owner

of The Mother-in-Law House Restaurant, Lindenwood displayed a set of China that had been owned by none other than Minnelli’s mother, “Wizard of Oz” starlet Judy Garland. Hafer said Garland purchased the china for fellow performers Eddy and Shug Foy as a gift. Hafer acquired the service for eight in 1993. Hafer said, while she was a Judy Garland fan, her primary interest was the china. “I am a Judy Garland fan, but I am a Havilland collector,” she said. “This set just got back from Vegas. It travels more than I do.” Hafer owns the Havilland Museum at 625 South Main St. in St. Charles. She has been collecting for nearly four decades. “This used to be a service for 16. A full set is hard to come by. In my 35 years of collecting, the first set I purchased was a service for eight at $35. Now you can’t even buy a cup for $35.”

1,200 seats, the Bezemes Family Theatre-named for the center’s first director, Peter Bezemes--is equipped with the latest lighting and sound technology, a vast amount of fly space and a stage large enough to accommodate traveling Broadway shows. The Emerson Black Box Theatre features movable seating and staging and both theatres are supported by fully equipped scene and costume shops in which costumes and scenery can be designed and made from scratch.

Lindenwood opened the $32-million, 138,000-square-foot center this year. With

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Appropriately, Minnelli began her first set with “Teach Me Tonight, Starting With the ABC’s.” “There is so much opportunity for us here,” Lindenwood Junior Betsy Bowman said.

The Charter Communications LUTV HD Studio is the new home of the university’s television program and is only the second high-definition television studio in St. Louis. Actor Malcolm McDowell paid a visit to Lindenwood in September to open the studio. After a showing of “A Clockwork Orange”—in which McDowell starred--he signed autographs and answered questions from the audience on the movie and his career. Minnelli and Lindenwood opened the new theatre without the man that is credited with bringing the school back from the brink of bankruptcy--former Lindenwood University President Dennis Spellman. But vice president of operations and finance, Julie Mueller said Spellman would have been pleased. “He would be awestruck,” she said. Spellman died two years ago.

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Shawn McLaughlin agreed. The history education major said the new facility was miles above the old Jekyll Theatre at Lindenwood. “This place is absolutely gorgeous,” he said. “It’s good for the university in so many ways. My degree will be better 10 years from now than it is now, so my work in education is going up in people’s eyes.” ■


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H O L I D AY F E AT U R E

Winter Kisses Story by Robin Seaton Jefferson Photos by Richard Walters ©

Dr. Richard Walters encourages people to pay close attention to their jackets and windshields this winter. As the snow begins to fall and blankets the local landscape, Walters said there is beauty in the details, beauty he goes to great lengths to capture— on film. As many curse the snow because of the way it inhibits their comings and goings, Walters said he “sees the beauty of the fallen snow instead of the nuisance of it.” Walters is one of a handful of snowflake photographers in the world.The dermatologist by day specializes in bringing the miniscule to the masses. He said he was inspired by a farmer who, in the 19th century, took photography to a new level and wound up getting his work in the Smithsonian. While the first observer to convey the snow crystal graphically was Olaus Magnus, Archbishop of Upsala, in the 14th century with wood carvings, it was W.A. Bentley of Jericho, Vermont who captured individual snow crystals on microphotographs. “At age 20, his parents gave him bellows and a microscope contraption,” Walters said. “And in 1885, the first snowflake was photographed. The man took 5,000

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pictures over his lifetime.” Bentley's photographs were history in the making, Walters said. “He took what we would consider now primitive equipment and took leading edge and innovative photographs of a subject that had never been photographed before.” It is true, Walters said, that as with fingerprints, no two snow crystals are alike. “Mathematically, it's practically impossible that any two snowflakes would be identical. The way those water molecules would be arranged, is nearly infinite. That's why scientists think no two snowflakes are alike.” Walters refers to a single piece of snow as a snow crystal. He said a snowflake is actually a bundle of snow crystals. “Technically, a snowflake is a fluffy collection of many snow crystals clumped together,” Walters

said. “Snow crystals come in a variety of shapes depending on the temperature and amount of water in the atmosphere at the time they are forming.” Snow crystals come in the shapes of sixsided plates, six-armed crystals, columns, needles, bullets, shapeless irregular ice, miniature popcorn snow and many combinations.. Walters said the ideal temperature to photograph a snow crystal is between about 18 and 25 degrees Fahrenheit. “If it's warmer than 25, it's too close to the melting point of 32 degrees. If it's colder than 18 degrees, it's just too cold to work for hours at a time. The six-sided stars form at -15 degrees Centigrade and with average amounts of water in the clouds. It's what's happening two to six miles over your head.”


“An interesting phenomenon occurs when snow crystals fall through clouds of supercooled water droplets. The tiny droplets of water can exist in liquid form despite being in temperatures below freezing,” Walters explained. “The instant the water droplet touches anything, it crystallizes into an ice droplet. This rime ice, as it is called, can completely obscure the fine details of the snow crystal it encases.” Those six-sided stars have been more rare in the St. Louis Metropolitan area in recent winters, Walters said. “The temperature and amount of water in the clouds is different enough that we don't tend to get six-sided crystals as much.” Walters said at the center of every snow crystal is a speck of ice or dust or mold. “Then the water molecules begin to grow. Scientists even now don't know how it happens. They freeze and grow out. It is all based on the symmetry of the water molecule.” A fascination and love of snow crystals began with Walters when he was just a boy. Growing up in a small rural town in Pennsylvania, the six-year-old boy studied the tiny shapes on the sleeves of his coat and thought how “beautiful and marvelous they were.” But it wasn't until high school in Central Illinois that Walters borrowed a teacher's camera and took his first photos. “And it wasn't until my graduation from medical school that I owned my first camera, which was a gift from my parents,” Walters said. “I asked for a close-up lens as I knew I would be using it in my dermatology residency. But I found myself more often outdoors using the camera and close-up lens to photograph the small intimate details of nature. Soon I discovered that my passion was in the photography of nature subjects smaller than one inch, especially insects with their endless variety of colors and shapes.” But when Walters realized he couldn't perform his most loved hobby during the winter months, he took to photographing a more winter-friendly subject. S T R E E T S C A P E M A G A Z I N E | 29


a sliver of wood and places them on a piece of glass under which are the electronic flash units. The camera is pointed down onto the glass with the snow crystal on it and the flash is pointed up to give the crystal its sparkle. Walters said a typical snow crystal will last up to 10 minutes if he does everything just right. But other factors come into play as well. “I often hold my breath, because any kind of heat is a big problem,” he said. “Even your fingers generate heat, which can be a problem in focusing my lens because I can’t wear gloves and still focus the special lens.” Walters said it’s no surprise he finds pleasure in the details. A dermatologist by trade, Walters spends his days looking at the little imperfections of the skin. “I'm into the details,” he said. Walters' work has been published in more than 20 magazines in eight languages and a number of textbooks including mathematics, science and biology books. He encourages others to look at the snow in a more discriminatory way this winter. “Put some dark fabric over a piece of cardboard and see what crystals are falling. Check several times during the snowfall. The types of crystals often change from hour to hour.” ■

As the snow is falling, usually in the dead of night, and most people are snug in their beds, Walters will venture out into the harshness of winter equipped with, well a piece of black velvet. “I use the black velvet because the threads point straight up so you 30 | S T R E E T S C A P E M A G A Z I N E

can lift things off of it easily,” he said. After catching the snow crystals, Walters moves into his detached garage where he houses a 12-inch fluorescent light. He then lifts the snow crystals off of the velvet with


S T R E E T S C A P E M A G A Z I N E | 31


A LA CARTE

Locos Grill and Pub First in Midwest

Story by Robin Seaton Jefferson Photos by Michael Schlueter

Joy Brother was selling real estate when her client, Martin Kaiser, asked her to locate a piece of real estate on which to open a new kind of eatery—new to the Midwest that is. She found him a space at 3803 Elm Street, and Missouri's first Locos Grill and Pub came to St. Charles. Now with 25 stores in the southeast including Alabama and Georgia, Locos was already on its way to becoming a household name. And with Missouri added to the lineup, via St. Charles, Locos has entered the Midwest market just as the grill famous for the big moose head that hangs in its entry way celebrates its 20th anniversary. “We picked St. Charles because of the community,” Brother said. “They're the first in Missouri to have a Locos.” Brother, now Locos corporate director in St. Charles, oversaw the construction and decorated the place on Elm herself.

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Locos was born twenty years ago, when Hughes Lowrance and Jamey Loftin, two University of Georgia students, made a $10,000 investment and opened a small general store and deli in Athens, Georgia. At the time, Locos Deli and General Store sold about 10 types of sandwiches, milk, toilet paper and other basic necessities. The pair delivered these items to the residents and students around the UGA. After a couple of years working between classes, Lowrance and Loftin moved the original Locos to a new location on the UGA campus. In 1992, they invested $25,000 in a second Athens location and two years later a third. Today franchises are located in Georgia in Macon, Statesboro, Savannah, St. Simons, Valdosta, and Auburn. Franchises are also in Birmingham, Alabama, and the suburbs in and around Atlanta. The Locos name originated from two people's names: Logan, a friend of Hughes Lowrance's Father, and Collie, Lowrance's father.

The tradition of the stuffed moose head began on the UGA campus. Lowrance used to have a moose head in his apartment at school. Due to its popularity, he decided to hang it in the restaurant. Today the moose head is a fixture in all Locos locations. Brother said Locos serves a wide variety of appetizers, entrees, grilled items, and specialty sandwiches and salads. “The concept offers guests multiple ways to enjoy the Locos experience whether dining in, picking up or taking advantage of catering and delivery services,” she said. Today, Locos Grill and Pub is a growing franchise organization. Lowrance and Loftin are still leading the company and promoting their original desire to provide communities with great food and an excellent place for friends and families to meet. The original Locos Deli and General Store still sits on top of the hill on Oconee Street, but it is now another establishment. Locos Grill and Pub goes through nearly 1.5


Featured Burger Locos Grill and Pub

Black & Bleu Burger

KAPOW! Can you take it? Blackened and served with punchy melted Bleu cheese crumbles, Onion Straws and Locos® Cajun Bistro sauce

million pounds of chicken wings every year. All wings are served with Locos proprietary sauce. Other top selling items are “The Redneck Deluxe Burger”; with American cheese, lettuce, tomato, red onion and mayo; “The Gobbler”, with smoked turkey grilled with Locos barbecue sauce, served on a sub roll with melted cheddar jack cheese, bacon and mayo; “The Looney Bird”, with smoked turkey smothered in swiss cheese on an onion roll; “The Cuban”, with roasted pork, ham, salami, swiss cheese, banana peppers and mayo on a grill-pressed roll; and “The Biggest Thing We've Got”, with three Locos deli meats, including lean roast beef, ham and smoked turkey, American cheese, lettuce, tomato and Locos famous house dressing on a foot-long French roll. The average bill at Locos is $10 per person. ■

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STATE YOUR BUSINESS

Oma’s Barn Four sisters, one unique collaboration

Story by Robin Seaton Jefferson Photo by Michael Schlueter

Oma's Barn Home and Garden sits alongside the farm house that Owner Lisa Hagemann called home for most of her life. It's a testament to what family can do and especially to what sisters are made of. She named the store for her grandmother who also lived in the house. "Oma is German for grandma," Hagemann said, adding that her own father always told her that her grandmother was English but had married a German (Runge). "Dad always referred to everything as his mom's. Everything was always Oma's." Theodosia Runge later married Maurice Thro of Thro's/Michelle's fame after her first husband's death. Hagemann's dad was Edward Runge. “Mo Thro was French. He was the perfect gentlemen, quiet and mild-mannered,” Hagemann reflected. “I can remember him coming home and taking off his hat and hanging it up and kissing my grandma.” The house was built in 1870. Hagemann uses it for inventory.

Today,

Hagemann, a horticulturist, was working as a landscape designer when she and her sister, Julie Cleaveland, a laboratory technician for Monsanto, were trying to come up with a way they could start their own business. The two wanted to stay on the nine acres along Highway 79 they had left of the land that belonged to their grandparents. Adolphus Busch purchased the other 600 acres some two decades ago. “We were ready to do something ourselves. We were always trying to do something together. One day we were standing outside and thinking, 'Wouldn't it be nice if we could work close to home? What can we do with the barn?' There's no friend like your sister,” Hagemann said. So Hagemann and Cleaveland cleaned up the barn and set up shop. When they began to ready the place for business, there was no floor or electricity. They hauled out 20 lawnmowers stored inside. There was hay and barrels and motors. There were birds' nests and bicycles. The two power-washed the structure, laid a foundation and had electricity run into their new store. And Oma's was born.

Now the two, along with their “adopted” sister and employee, Danielle Murray, travel to Atlanta each year to one of the biggest shopping markets in the country to purchase clothing, jewelry, furniture, rugs and whatever else they think their destination-shoppers might like. “We buy for the entire year in one week in January,” Cleaveland said. And so far, they haven't looked back. “We're not too serious. We have fun,” Cleaveland said. “For me it was a family choice. It was a lifestyle choice.” Each of the sisters, including the adopted one, have different tastes. Whether it's traditional, casual, chic or eclectic, each brings a unique and curious perspective to the mix of inventory sold at Oma's. “We finally figured it out that we are a destination store,” Hagemann said. “People drive specifically to come here. We're not a strip mall.” Oma's is a destination to ecstasy for the antique lover, the weekend gardener, the collector and the home designer. The atmosphere begs customers to adorn their homes with its many wares. “We don't buy 10 of anything,” Hagemann said. “Everything is unique. We have heard our customer's tell their friends, 'If you like it, you better buy it because it won't be here when you come back'.” “People like the feel of the store,” Cleaveland said. “It's a very comfortable place. People just like to be here.” Hagemann, Cleaveland and Murray instruct customers on their home décor as well as their gardens and will even travel to individual homes to give advice. Hagemann nurtures another sisterly bond. She houses and sells the original Santa creations of Karen Didion at Oma's. A mother-of-four, former critical care nurse and a life-long crafter, Didion started out selling hand-painted sweatshirts in the early

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1990's. She admits she had no idea the journey on which her hobby would take her. “I was always making something. I would teach myself macramé. I would teach myself crocheting. I would teach myself embroidering,” Didion said. Didion would make paper mache witches and ghosts to adorn her sweatshirt booth at the craft shows she worked. “People starting asking, 'How much for the ghost?' I said, 'I'm selling sweatshirts'.” But Didion soon found out her customers wanted her holiday crafts more than her sweatshirts and she started making Nativity scenes, Christmas trees, Easter crafts and sleighs. She began doing special events and country clubs. By 1996, her sister Jill Blackford, now her sales manager, moved to Texas and soon talked her into doing a country club show in Dallas. It was at that show that Didion was approached by a buyer from NiemanMarcus' Christmas Catalog Division. “They ended up putting one of my sleighs in the catalog. I said, 'Well maybe we've got something here',” Didion said. “Now I had some big decisions to make. This was all in my basement up to this point.” Didion decided to rent space in Dallas at a trade show and her work seemed to take on a life of its own. “It just kept evolving. I started buying Santas to put in my sleighs. Then I was hand painting Santas.”

In no time, she rented permanent space at a trade show in Atlanta. And just as the buyer from Nieman-Marcus had casually approached her in Dallas, a group from China did the same in Atlanta. They wanted her to design her own line of Santas and they would manufacture them in China. Today, Didion travels to China at least three times a year. She makes a physical sample and the China company molds the pieces there. All of her “Karen Didion Originals” are hand-painted and hand-sewn. Her Crakewood Collection by Karen Didion— named for her father's mother, Grandma Crake—are one-of-a-kinds. She specializes in the traditional to the whimsical—Santas holding martini glasses and wine bottles; Santas with toys; Santas with all kinds of themes. She even designed a “Hope” Santa for breast cancer survivors. Her Santas today can demand in upwards of $6,000 each in some markets. Movie Star “Halle Berry has one of

my Santas,” she said. “It's crazy. I even do work for Burgdorf Goodman in New York and Malibu Colony in California. I sell in high-end, exclusive shops like Saks and Bloomingdale's.” So Didion went from her basement to a 20,000-square-foot facility at Elm and 370 where her Santas are imported, unloaded and distributed. Didion said selling her Santas at Oma's is the perfect fit. “Lisa and Julie are like Karen and Jill. Lisa is creative in the design phase like I am and then we have our sisters gnawing on us like we need to be gnawed on.” Didion imported 50,000 Santas this year. Not bad for a creative sister. For more information on Oma's, visit www.omasbarn.com. For more information on Karen Didion, visit www.karendidion.com. ■

Oma’s will host a Santa signing with Karen Didion from 10 a.m. to 8 p.m. November 13 at the shop at 1057 Highway 79 in St. Peters. S T R E E T S C A P E M A G A Z I N E | 35


BEST SHOPPING FINDS

WINTER 2008 FASHION FINDS To Tr e n d o r N o t To Tr e n d … … That is the question ……

Story by Natalie Woods Photos by Michael Schlueter

So, what are the trend rules?

metallics are “in” pick out a great metallic bag or shoe if you are more conservative – and if you are a little more daring grab a cute metallic jacket or top. Then pair these items with more basic pieces. You will always look modern when you just touch on the trends and not go over the top.

• NEVER do trend head to toe!! A little goes a long way in the trend department. Too much, and you look like you are wearing a costume. For example, if

• If you have to question whether or not you can pull off a trend – then don’t try. Your first instinct is normally the correct one!

As you will soon find out if you keep coming back to visit Streetscape Magazine, I am a firm believer that fashion is a personal decision and you shouldn’t let the trends and what everyone else is doing, completely run your choices. You need to be aware of your own personal style and be true to it – it will very rarely let you down – as long as you know the types of clothes that flatter your body.

• Go crazy with shoe trends – feet can pull off just about anything (as long as you can walk in the shoe you choose, of course)! • You can also be more daring with jewelry trends. Shoes and jewelry are a great way to kick up your style if you are worried about trying clothing trends. • As I said earlier – stay true to your own personal style, but don’t be afraid to try new things. For example, if you have always been a little more rock n roll – you definitely should embrace some of the 80’s styles that are coming back but you could also try a a more feminine piece and then pair it with a rock and roll leather jacket. On the other hand, if you are more feminine or conservative, those are the obvious choice but don’t be afraid to grab an edgier rock n roll, 80’s style tee to put under a classic blazer with jeans. • Always keep in mind your age! In your 20’s and 30’s you can be more daring and try things that are a little crazier and even revisit some trends you may have worn in the past (P.S. It is somewhat of a myth that

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if you wore a trend once you shouldn’t wear it again – it depends on the trend and how old you are during round 2, or 3). But when you enter your later 40’s, 50’s and 60’s you will want to stick to trends that are more classic in nature so that you don’t look like you are trying too hard. An example would be the current legging craze …. If you are in your 30’s, chances are you already rocked this out back in the 80’s but you can also revisit it in some of the new ways … like under a flowy dress. BUT, if you are a bit older –only wear a legging as hosiery – DON’T TRY IT UNDER A LONG TOP

– you will look like you are trying too hard. But women of all ages can try the waist accenting styles that are super popular, like a big wide belt around a dress or cardigan. If all of this confuses you, find a salesperson or store owner you trust and ask for their advice. First of all, they are familiar with you and your style. And if they are worth their salt, they will tell you the truth about what you should or shouldn’t try. They want you to feel and look your best because you represent their store. Tell them the trends that interest you or grab your attention and let them guide you. But have

an open mind and try things on that they suggest even if you aren’t completely convinced. Bottom line …… a little trend goes a long way and don’t forget that fashion is supposed to be fun!! ■ Natalie Woods is the owner of Daisy-Clover Boutique in Webster Groves, MO.

BOUTIQUE PROFILE Phyllis Wehde - owner Carrie’s 107 O'Fallon Commons Dr., O’Fallon MO 63368 636.281.1254 carriesboutique.com When did the store open? Fall of 1984 What made you decide to go into the wonderful world of retail? I got the bug for retail while my Husband was in the Army in Indianapolis, Ind. and we both worked retail in the evenings. I worked in a gift shop. Why should people shop with you vs. other retail (department stores etc)? We have built our reputation by always trying to have things you DO NOT find in other stores. I am always looking for new lines. Personal Service has always been our specialty. What are some of your best sellers? Brighton Jewelry and Accessories / Tribal / Blue House Drive / Kasper / August Silk / Curio / Think Tank / Spanner / Karen Kane & many more. Plans/hopes for the future? Continue as we are always trying to make our customers happy and giving them a good experience in Carrie’s.

S T R E E T S C A P E M A G A Z I N E | 37


Winter Wares

1 Hot Pink Candlesticks -- Only in France would they come up with these candlesticks. For a table or mantle that says, "Ooh La La!" Salt of the Earth 8150 Big Bend Blvd., Webster Groves | 314.963.1919 2 Fall Scarves --- Hottest trend this season !! Wear these colorful scarves around your neck or as a shawl. Daisy Clover 8146 Big Bend Blvd., Webster Groves | 314.962.4477 3 Black and white Glass Cuff Bracelet -- A cool sophisticated glass cuff from Phuze Designs in Mexico City makes the right statement with any outfit Salt of the Earth 1123 Locust Street, St. Louis | 314.241.8008 4 Ombre Black and Brown Patent Bags – Hobo Internations designs bags for women and this one isn’t only functional but very “in” as well in the Ombre print. Daisy Clover 8146 Big Bend Blvd., Webster Groves | 314.962.4477 5 Gold Circle Vase -- Hand screen printed with sophistication and style, this vase has both Italian style and craftsmanship. It looks great empty and even better filled with your favorite bouquet. Salt of the Earth 1123 Locust Street, St. Louis | 314.241.8008

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6 Forest Green Shoes – Cute and comfortable … can it be ?? And at a great price ?? With this Volatile Rio it’s all true. Daisy Clover 8146 Big Bend Blvd., Webster Groves | 314.962.4477


S T R E E T S C A P E M A G A Z I N E | 39


CELEBRITY FOCUS

Demi Lovato No pressure

Story and photos by Robin Seaton Jefferson

Demi Lovato doesn't understand why child stars have trouble with their lives later on. She said she doesn't feel like she's missing a thing. In fact, to hear her tell it, she's the luckiest girl in the world. The 16-year-old teen sensation and star of Disney Channel's latest pre-teen movie smash, “Camp Rock” stopped by Mid Rivers Mall in St. Peters in July. She signed nearly 1,000 posters and shook hands with each and every fan that turned out--some as early as 6 a.m.--to meet her. The singer/songwriter/actress was touring with teen heart throbs “The Jonas Brothers.” She just calls them “the boys.” Lovato got her start as Angela on “Barney and Friends” in 2001, a role she played alongside her best friend, Selena Gomez of Disney Channel's “Wizards of Waverly Place.” Born August 20, 1992 in Dallas, Texas, Lovato's singing talent parlayed her into numerous pageants on both the local and state level from the time she was seven years old. She later studied vocals, piano, guitar and songwriting, as well as hip-hop dance. Since “Barney,” Lovato has written well over 100 songs, producing four in-studio, including “Shadow,” which helped her land the lead role as Charlotte in the Disney Channel short-form series “As The Bell Rings.” She also had a lead role in Nickelodeon's “Just Jordan” and a guest appearance on 20th Century Fox's “Prison Break.” She's been featured in national television commercials for Hasbro, the Fort Worth Zoo and DirecTV. 40 | S T R E E T S C A P E M A G A Z I N E

In “Camp Rock” Lovato played Mitchie Torres, an immensely talented yet insecure singer who must learn to step into the spotlight and overcome her fears, with the help of Jonas Brother Joe Jonas. Lovato said being 16 and traveling the country as a teen singing sensation doesn't put as much pressure on her as people assuming the worst will come of it. “I don't believe in age,” she said. “Labeling me as a 16-year-old puts pressure on me. My family knows who I am and I know who I am. That's fine with me.” Lovato said her best friends are the ones she's made at Disney. “We're all really close on the Disney Channel. We're all we have and we stick together. If there's ever drama, it's like 'Peace'.” Like any other teen her age, Lovato has favorite bands. Hers are Bright Eyes, Motley Crew and her “all time favorite” Paramore. Lovato has two sisters, Dallas, 20, and Madison, 6. She resides in Los Angeles. And as for her current schedule of 70 shows in 90 days all across the United States, this level-headed mother's dream takes it all in stride. “You don't think this is fun?” ■


S T R E E T S C A P E M A G A Z I N E | 41


HEALTH WATCH

Story by Robin Seaton Jefferson Photo by Michael Schlueter

minds toward the sciences. “People do need to be educated,” she said. “Young people look at this as a career interest.”

On a typical day, her alarm goes off at 4:50 am. Before 9 am. she has signed off on five deaths, one respiratory failure, two carbon monoxide intoxications and two suicides. Forty-five minutes later she's called by a prosecuting attorney who asks her to testify in a murder investigation involving a woman she autopsied years ago. Five minutes after that, she's reviewing neuropathology reports on brains she examined a few days before. Dr. Mary Case is a forensic pathologist and the chief medical examiner for St. Louis County. She is also a professor of pathology at St. Louis University (SLU) and serves as chief medical examiner for St. Charles, Franklin, Lincoln and Jefferson counties. The medical examiner's office is created under state statute to investigate individuals who die suddenly, unexpectedly or from possible unnatural causes. “These are the homicides, suicides and accidents that you think about from watching CSI, but we handle many natural deaths also,” she said.

And viewers can find truths among the exaggerations, such as the tremendous job that medical examiners and crime scene technicians do. “Generally there is a distrust of government, but this is an area where people really go above and beyond,” Case said. “They should be appreciated by the American people of how valuable these people are to justice and freedom.”

Dr. Mary Case

handle autopsies involving head injuries ad child injuries. Producers of Forensic Files as well as those of productions on HBO, Discovery Channel and Court TV have utilized Case's expertise in many of their programs. “There's a huge appetite for forensic stuff and television people are always looking for information,” she said. “I welcome that interest.”

Of 10,000 deaths in St. Louis County in a year, 8,000 will be reported to the medical examiner. Of this number, 600 will be autopsied, including all homicides and all child deaths, she said. Any death of a person under the age of 18 must be reported to the medical examiner, she said. “We don't want any child to get away from our investigation.” Case mentors many young people in her roles both as a full time faculty member at SLU and at the chief medical examiner's office. Many times, students apply directly to her office to study under her.

Case supervises the office of the chief medical examiner including Education is one of the the clerical staff, morgue major functions within the staff, toxicology laboratory, Division of Forensic investigative staff and five Pathology at SLU, which Making a Case for Pathology other forensic pathologists she co-directs with Dr. as well as performing Michael Graham. The autopsies. She's done division hosts death literally tens of thousands of autopsies since But, Case cautions, there is a “huge investigation courses and lectures which are coming to the office over 30 years ago. discrepancy” between television, the movies attended by coroners, law enforcement and real life. She said time lines mainly, as personnel and medical examiners from all St. Louis County was a coroner system until well as who performs what job are over the world. Every other year, Case and 1969 when Dr. George Gantner became the shortened and jumbled, respectively, in other physicians, investigators, court first medical examiner. Case was mentored Hollywood. “In real life, DNA isn't done personnel, anthropologists and professors by Gantner. unless there is a real suspect. The backlog host a master's level course in medico legal on that is huge. That is really distorted on death investigation. “We've educated Case is one of maybe a dozen physicians in television. They combine the roles of crime thousands of people,” she said. the country who can boast of board scene detective with that of the medical certifications in anatomical pathology, Assistant Professor of Pathology Dr. James pathologist.” neuropathology and forensic pathology. McGivney is a dentist as well as a forensic The neuropathology and forensic pathology Still, she finds it refreshing that television is odontologist at SLU and his expertise is certifications qualify her unequivocally to encouraging a whole new age of young often called upon by Case. Case said

Forensics

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McGivney developed a computer program called WINID that assists medical examiners and legal personnel all over the world with identification through dental records. McGivney also teaches courses with Case. Case graduated high school in Jefferson City. The daughter of an engineer father and an artist mother, Case said she always wanted to be a scientist. “From five years old, I was playing with chemistry sets. I was not a typical child of that age. I had very defined ideas of what I wanted to do and I pursued that.” Case obtained a degree in psychology from the University of Missouri at Columbia (MIZZOU) and a medical degree at SLU. “At 15, I decided I wanted to become a doctor,” she said. “In those days, in the 1950's, women didn't become doctors. I wanted to become a neurosurgeon.” Of the 108 students in her 1965 medical school class, eight were women. “Today that number is 50 percent,” she said. Case had a warm enough welcome at SLU,

however. “Life gives you what you want out of it,” she said. At SLU, Case found her place in the pathology department. “I developed an interest just by looking at the text books. It always amazed me what you could find out by examining a body.” Case said autopsies and the work that amazed her never scared her. She said over the years she has had more fear of the senseless ways that people find to destroy their bodies and the accidents that can result from living a life without caution. “Dead people don't bother me. It's a very clinical thing, like surgery,” she said. “What has the job done to me? It's made me very cautious. There are so many bad things that you can prevent happening just by living your life in a safe and prudent fashion. I see what happens when people don't. I see the waste. Drugs have cost so much havoc and loss of life.”

with the people who survive. “Dealing with the living, that is where the impact comes from,” she said. “There are so many different emotional responses. My job is clinical. I don't get any emotional response in my morgue.” Handling the dead also keeps her cognizant of what's good about life. She said she lives her life purposefully and intentionally and appreciates every part of it. “Every day there is not something wrong…you're not suffering or dying from a terminal illness, you should be so thankful. I hear people say, 'I don't remember what happened last week.' Don't do that to your life. Remember your life. I remember the details of my childhood and trips I have taken because I have attended to it. I never have a boring minute. I don't watch television. When I’m alone I can spend time going through my memories.” ■

She said the real tough jobs are those of the law enforcement officers who have to deal

S T R E E T S C A P E M A G A Z I N E | 43


H O L I D AY SPOTLIGHT

Harvester Christian Church A journey in time

Story by Robin Seaton Jefferson

Since 1992, Harvester Christian Church has led thousands on a pilgrimage, through the closest experience of the real story of Jesus' birth they can come to in the modern day. “Journey to Bethlehem, ”or simply “Journey,” as it's referred to by the majority of the church's members, has served as Harvester Christian's “Christmas Gift” to its community—a living legacy to the very first Christmas. Attendance that first year, when nearly all of the church's 400 members participated in the re-enactment, was 3,425. In the past few years, over 750 members have put on the Christmas story to nearly 16,000 people. Attendees from all over the country have traveled back in time with members of Harvester Christian Church to experience the people, places and circumstances surrounding the birth of Jesus Christ. The evening begins with a stage production inside the church at 2950 King's Crossing in St. Charles. Attendees are then taken outdoors to begin the journey wherein guides lead them from Nazareth to Bethlehem all the while encountering live animals, a bustling marketplace, Roman guards, wise men from the east, shepherds, angels and finally the baby Jesus lying in the manger. “From our church's perspective, it's successful because it's something our entire church gets behind,” said Don Sanders, adult discipleship minister at Harvester Christian Church. “It takes hundreds and hundreds of people and thousands and thousands of hours to complete. We believe in it obviously because of the message of it. But we also believe in it because we believe it is a great way to serve.”

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Sanders said he can only explain the massive draw of visitors by the realism that is portrayed in the story. “What draws outsiders is the quality of it,” he said. “It's not just something you drive by. It's something you participate in. I think it speaks to our culture as well. Our culture today is looking for some meaning in life or some direction to follow regarding where their lives are going. We believe the message of Christ is the message our world needs.” Sanders admits that traversing the property behind a church in St. Charles is a far cry from what the people of Jesus' day saw on their journey to Bethlehem. Still, if one allows the imagination a little leeway, “Journey” is as close as most might ever come to experiencing that fateful night. “Walking through the woods in St. Charles is different than walking through Israel. But it's a more engaging fashion than just listening to someone tell the story. People that come through are participants. They are not just listening. They are part of the performance.” Preparations for “Journey” begin several

months before the engagement that takes place which this year is December 11-14 . Sanders said the final two weeks will see parishioners working “around the clock” to ready the grounds. “People take vacation time to work on it,” he said. “You don't


mark out vacation time for something unless you really believe in it.” The church provides child care for the cast and crew of over 750 members that spend thousands of hours fashioning costumes, working on the trail, decorating and painting. From the parking attendants to the Jewish priests to the tax collectors to the baby Jesus, church members supply all of the manpower, save for the horses, sheep, goats and camels that are brought in from area farms. The play runs continually as visitors arrive, with each station and mini-scene in full operation up and until the final scene of Jesus in the manger. The living experience draws church groups and individuals from all over the country to St. Charles. Sanders said the church has no plans to discontinue “Journey” any time soon. “We want to do this as long as it is effective, as long as it is a great tool to spread the Gospel. It's completely free. It's our gift to the community.” ■

SUNRISE TO SUNSET

SOCIAL SCENE Fraser Leonard Art Exhibition Ogletree-Deakins, Clayton, Mo

Photos by Michael Schlueter S T R E E T S C A P E M A G A Z I N E | 45


SEASONAL HUNT

The Love of the Hunt! No place I’d rather be Story by Robin Seaton Jefferson Photos by Randy Basye

Randy Basye loves deer. He loves to hunt. He loves the land. The co-owner of Basye Flooring in St. Charles spends just about all of his free time on his land with his deer. Some of them even have names. Basye owns two farms in Howard County, Missouri. Both have been in his family for generations. The 90-acre farm was owned by his grandfather, Charlie Basye. He now owns 34 acres. His brother owns the rest. The largest farm, spanning 138 acres, has been in his family since 1852 when his great-great grandfather, Michael Nauzy Basye, purchased the land. Randy Basye purchased the land from his dad's cousin eight years ago. It is his home away from home. The place on Earth he enjoys most. His refuge. “I'm there 50 out of 52 weeks a year,” Randy said. “Deer hunting to me is a

passion. There is something I do every weekend that is associated with white tail deer. I know that sounds weird, but there are a lot of people like me.” Not necessarily. Randy names some of the deer that roam his farms. “T.R.”, short for Tall Rack, is eight-and-a-half years old. (Deer in Missouri rarely live past 10 years.) Others are High Roller, Pretty Boy and Ram Rod. Randy said actually hunting the deer on his 138-acre farm is just the icing on the cake. “Hunting is a very small portion of the puzzle. We work very hard to try to have a balanced quality deer herd in our area,” he said. Randy is a member of the national organization, Quality Deer Management Association (QDMA). Managing deer populations is the premier goal of the QDMA and its something Randy sincerely believes in.

Part of managing a herd is letting the deer live in the wild. “We let the young deer live,” he said. “We don't harvest them until they're four or five years old, before that they haven't reached their full potential for their rack.” Deer lose their antlers every year and grow a new set. “The third year is a very respectable rack, but the fourth year they really put their horns on. It's a nicer looking trophy,” Randy said. Some years go by when Randy said he just gets a doe. He said if he doesn't see the buck he wants, he doesn't settle. “QDMA is all about letting the young bucks walk, but it's also about harvesting an adequate number of females to have an adequate deer herd on your property,” Randy said. “Hunters play a very important roll in herd health. Without them there would be extreme cases of disease and over population.” Randy said most hunters could harvest four to eight deer in a year's time. Hunters usually cannot eat that much meat in a year, so many, including Randy, pay to have it processed and then donated to the underprivileged. “It does not go to waste,” he said. Randy's farm is a haven for deer. He's planted 15 acres of alfalfa, along with corn, soybeans, clover and brassicas. “I work hard to provide a quality deer habitat to help them reach their full potential.” But he's not always working on the population or even hunting those among it. Many times, he's simply enjoying the view. “In the summertime I go sit in my deer towers in the evening when the deer come out and feed. It's not uncommon to see forty deer,” he said. “So I enjoy so many more aspects of white tail than just hunting them.” Randy bow hunts from September 15 through January 15. He hunts with

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firearms for ten days after the second Saturday in November. He basically takes advantage of every opportunity the law will allow. “There is a high or a rush of being within 30 yards of a white tail deer. It's just a tremendous challenge,” Randy said. “The white tail deer is one of the most skittish animals in North America. You do have to be still. The wind has to be in your favor because their sense of smell and their eyesight is tremendous. They can smell you from 200 yards away.”

hunters. I guess there just isn't as much land. It's hard to find a good hunting spot. I would love to take some kids hunting with me.”

Randy, who only found his own passion for hunting 22 years ago, said he wants to get more kids involved in the sport. “There are just not as many new hunters as there used to be. Most are older

Randy said with all of his hunting and deer managing mania, his wife is the patient one. “She just scratches her head. I've got a great wife that lets me play my games.” ■

Randy hunts with friend and business partner Tom Johnson in Canada and Kansas as well as on his land. The two still hunt with John Dickherber, Randy's best friend and owner of Wholesale Flooring USA in O'Fallon. Dickherber owns a 66acre property just a mile from Randy's.

S T R E E T S C A P E M A G A Z I N E | 47


PET TALES

Amen Dogs Couple helps disabled & troubled youth Story by Robin Seaton Jefferson Photos by Michael Schlueter

They started out raising what she calls “maintenance-free” dogs for handicapped people. For years, Faun and Doug Collett of Warrenton have been training service and support dogs through their 501c3 charitable organization AMEN Dogs (Academy of Missouri Educational Network). But while training the dogs to perform some 89 different tasks to assist people with disabilities, the Collett's stumbled upon an equally daunting task. The two now hope to use the school for dogs as a training ground for at-risk youth—to provide diversion programs, support groups, reentry, residential, transitional and independent living programs for them. The Collett's have already proven their program can work. The two have had tremendous success with troubled and adjudicated youth who have assisted with the training, feeding and care of the animals at their facility. “These individuals find that they can walk away when angry, and return with praise and positive reinforcement,” Faun Collett said. “They learn self-worth, the value of hard work, and enjoy the satisfaction of earning genuine praise.”

Faun and Doug Collett were trained to assist service and support dogs for people with ambulatory disabilities such as walking difficulties from broken hips or diseases such as Multiple Sclerosis, Faun said. The two are charged with raising and training the more than 50 dogs in the Faun Haven Kennel who will one day help a disabled person through their day. The Collett's work mainly with Labradoodles and Goldendoodles, which have been in development for more than three decades, Faun said. “They started with the Labrador and the Standard Poodle and brought in different coats. They are the dogs of the century,” she said. “The dogs have hypoallergenic, non-shedding coats. They come from the standard poodle, which is the most intelligent dog on earth.” Faun said the dogs have been a raging success with people with disabilities. “They have beautiful temperaments, don't cause allergies, and they don't have to be groomed,” she said. “They are a family dog. They are maintenance-free for physically challenged people.”

The Collett's supported their kennel and their programs themselves on Doug Collett's retirement, until Faith Christian Family Church in Wright City stepped up to help them. Faun said the church looks kindly on the kennel and the Collett's, as the couple has taken in some 65 families from the church since 1995. Along with parenting the various doodles in the kennel, the Collett's have been foster parents to many young people over the years. “It's what we do,” Faun said. “We try to help people go forward in their lives.” Unfortunately, Faun said, neither of the couple's humanitarian endeavors will last much longer if some additional funding is not identified. The support dog handler and long-time foster parent said her own money is quickly running out and her dreams are unfortunately bigger than her pockets. The Collett's want to use their 15-acre wooded site to operate diversion programs for at-risk youth. She has been in contact with Jack London of parkcabins.com who designs “Call of the Wild” cabins. She said London, whose own son committed suicide, wants to build the cabins that would house the youth enrolled in her programs at a discounted price. Faun said she needs funds to clear and level her land, to bring in septic and electric utilities and to bring in staff.

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“Unless I get cloned about 20 times I don't think that I can do it alone,” she said. Faun said she wants to use the kennel as a training ground to help kids who are “aging out” of the foster care system to learn nurturing behaviors and leadership. “First these kids are rescued by the state from abuse and neglect, but at 18 they're done,” she said. “They have no home to go to, no roots. Often their parents are incarcerated or chemically dependent. At 18, they are not ready to go into the world. And adult services don't pick up until they are 21.” Faun said she wants to create an 18month transitional program that teaches these young people life and job skills. “Working with the dogs would be their job training. They learn to walk away when they are angry and to return with praise and positive reinforcement. They learn work ethic. They could even leave

and work with nursing homes and hospitals. It works because dogs will only follow leaders—stable, calm and assertive leaders.”

animal behavior and developing leadership skills assist in the development of the life skills needed to be a successful employee and productive citizen.”

Young people in the program would engage in all phases of kennel care and maintenance along with quality playtime, bonding and relating to each other, Faun said.

The dogs themselves learn to pull wheelchairs, turn light switches on and off and do laundry in front-loading machines for quadriplegics, among other things.

“Effective training of a service dog requires developing a relationship by feeding, watering, cleaning and grooming the dog as well as bonding through exercise and quality playtime. By doing this as a part of a daily routine, the dog in training will be responsive to their leader and willing to work at their command,” Faun said. “Scheduled routines at the same time daily give these gentle canines security and teaches them discipline for their future placement in support and service. It also brings structure and order to the trainer's life experience. Learning

“We really believe we can train these young people and network them all over the United States,” Faun said. “These are good kids, not criminals. They have been rescued from bad situations. We want to help them so they can have a hope, a future, and a destiny.” For more information call Faun Collett at 636-456-3115, visit www.amendogs.com, or email her at amendogs@hotmail.com. ■

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WOMAN TO WOMAN

Ola Helping Women Reconnect Story by Robin Seaton Jefferson Photos by Michael Schlueter

and emotional support needed throughout their chemotherapy, illness and isolation.

the mind and helps you stay in shape. It combines sports, fitness and fun.”

Streetscape is proud to welcome Ola Hawatmeh and Mom Me Makeover to the magazine’s lineup. Beginning with the Winter edition, Hawatmeh will be a regular guest commentator, bringing Streetscape readers tips and secrets on all things beautiful. Whether it’s makeup tips or ways to help others, Hawatmeh will have some fresh and unique ideas for her readers. So, let’s get started!

The organization held its 16th Annual Friends of Kids with Cancer Fashion Show and Boutique last month at the RitzCarlton Hotel in Clayton. The theme of the show--in which children with cancer actually serve as the models--was “Touch the Heart of a Child.”

Hawatmeh said there are three weapons used in the sport of fencing including the foil, epee and the saber. Each is used differently and has unique rules. “But my favorite is the saber,” she said. “It’s for the more aggressive fencers.”

“The Friends mission is never more evident than on fashion show day when your support fills the kids’ hearts with love and memorable moments,” Hawatmeh said. The 2008 show featured “A Salute to Survivors” and brought back some past models, who are in remission, for an encore performance.

• Hawatmeh and Kristen Hunter recently traded beauty secrets during a chance meeting at Streetscape’s annual Urban Expressions: A Vine Affair Fashion Show and Wine Tasting for women’s charities. Reigning Mrs. St. Louis and contestant for Mrs. Missouri, Ola Hawatmeh, just happened to run into Kristen Hunter, a current contestant in the Missouri Teen USA pageant.

• Hawatmeh, along with Bruce Sikes, will be holding beginning fencing classes at the Webster Groves Recreational Center every Tuesday from 7:30 to 8:30 p.m.

• Hawatmeh has signed on to assist “Friends of Kids with Cancer.” “Friends” is devoted to enriching the daily lives of children undergoing treatment for cancer and blood-related diseases in the St. Louis Area. Their mission is to advocate for these special children and to provide them and their families with recreational, educational

Hawatmeh, a member of the Academy Fencing Club and the Christian Fencers Association, said fencing teaches speed and coordination and promotes confidence. “When you’re holding a sword you have to be pretty confident,” she said. “I call it the human chess game because it balances physical and mental discipline. It sharpens

• Mom Me Makeover will sponsor the following workshops: November 12--A shoe party at Bronx Diba shoe warehouse at 6:30 p.m. at 3630 Corporate Trail Dr. in Earth City. December 18—A coffee workshop at 9:30 a.m. at Yia Yia's Euro Bistro at 15601 Olive Blvd. in Chesterfield. The cost for this workshop is $10. For more information on these and other events with Mom Me Makeover, call Ola Hawatmeh at 314-456-3936. ■ Streetscape and Mom Me Makeover challenge you to tell us which of your friends or loved ones needs a makeover. In 300 words or less, describe who your special person is and why you believe they deserve a day of pampering, including makeup, hair and a home visit and a oneweek follow-up visit with a personal trainer. Did your mom raise 18 kids and never treated herself to a makeover? Did your friend do something special for someone in need? Does your sister take care of everyone but herself? Whatever the reason, we want to know, and Mom Me Makeover wants to treat her.

Kristen Hunter and Ola Hawatmeh 50 | S T R E E T S C A P E M A G A Z I N E

Send essays to: Streetscape Magazine, 223 N. Main St., St. Charles, MO 63301, ATTN: Tom Hannegan, publisher.


S T R E E T S C A P E M A G A Z I N E | 51


COMMUNITY FOCUS

200 years . . . The Expedition Continues

Story by Amy N. Armour

A planned 200-event celebration in 2009 will mark the city of St. Charles’ bicentennial. Plans are already underway to make the year-long celebration a memorable and exciting historical experience. “It’s really important to show our citizens how proud we can be of our city’s history,” said Venetia McEntire, co-owner of the Boone’s Lick Trail Inn on South Main Street and committee member for the bicentennial committee. About two dozen residents have teamed up with city staff to plan the event that will celebrate the rich heritage and history of the city, while making a little history of its own. “There are not that many cities out there that make it to the 200-year mark and are still healthy,” said Steve Powell, committee member and co-owner of the Boone’s Lick Inn on South Main Street. “Business on Main Street continues to grow and I hope it creates a legacy for the next 200 years.” The city of St. Charles incorporated in 1809. This predated the state of Missouri’s admission as the 24th state in the union on August 10, 1821. The city of St. Charles served as the first—albeit temporary— capital for Missouri from 1821 to 1826 while a permanent state capitol was under construction in Jefferson City. Planning for the bi-centennial has begun with members contemplating many events including parades, fireworks, a concert series, a photo exhibit and a series of

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children’s days at the park. Powell said he wants the committee to create events that will leave something tangible behind for future residents. The committee plans to interview residents who have lived in the city for many years and create an oral history for future residents. “There are so many people with a history (to share) and when they pass away we lose it,” said Powell. “There’s no shortage of history in this area.” Randy Charles, superintendent of the St. Charles School District, wants to draw children into the city’s birthday celebration and maybe help them learn a bit of history along the way. “I’m looking at how I can get the kids involved so they can remember and develop a sense of pride and respect for the history of the community,” said Charles. The committee is considering a “St. Charles Week” that may include research or writing contests for students and perhaps incorporating the bicentennial theme into graduation ceremonies. Committee members hope to involve libraries and parks in this initiative. “The school district is a huge part of the community, and even the school district has a long-standing history,” said Charles. “One

of our buildings dates back to 1896.” The committee also wants to identify the 100 most influential people—past and present—who shaped the city. And the city is considering hosting an international fair that incorporates the history of the nationalities—French, Spanish and Irish— that both settled and inhabited St. Charles. Other features being discussed for the bicentennial include a run/walk event, a tour of historical homes and replicas, a time capsule and a banquet celebration, as well as a logo that will incorporate a central theme. The bicentennial committee is looking for individuals and families who have lived in the area for many years. Interested citizens may contact Gina Yacovelli, community relations liaison for St. Charles, for more information at 636-949-3361. ■

visit www.stcharlescitymo.gov


SOCIAL SCENE

Lake Saint Louis Chamber of Commerce Luau

StreetScape Magazine was proud to be one of the many sponsors of the 1st annual “Life is Good Festival”

Photos by Michael Schlueter S T R E E T S C A P E M A G A Z I N E | 53


YOU CAUGHT OUR EYE

Com Air Keeping heroes in flight

Story by Robin Seaton Jefferson Photos by Michael Schlueter

There are ghosts at Smartt Field. They're authentic examples of the World War II generation combat aircraft that took to the skies over six decades ago displaying the technological might of the United States military. They're part of the Ghost Squadron of the Commemorative Air Force (C.A.F.). The Ghost Squadron is the proud heritage of all Americans, maintained by the Missouri Wing Chapter of the C.A.F, an allvolunteer organization of World War II aviation enthusiasts who help to preserve the military aviation heritage of World War II. The groups recently kicked off a “Keep 'Em Flying” campaign designed to keep its three venerable World War II aircraft maintained.

Lt. Col. Pat Kessler

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Spearheaded by Tee Baur, chairman and CEO of Baur Properties, and Jack Taylor, founder and chairman emeritus of Enterprise Corporation and a World War II fighter pilot veteran, the campaign is seeking funds to acquire, restore, maintain and operate the aircraft in the Missouri Wing's care. Retired Air Force Lt. Col. Pat Kessler is one of 180 members of the Missouri Wing of the C.A.F., a not-for-profit, totally selfsupporting and tax-exempt organization that receives neither federal nor state funding. Operating from the St. Charles County Airport at Smartt Field, the Missouri Wing displays three authentic examples of World War II combat aircraft assigned to its care including the North American B-25J Mitchell Medium Bomber, the Brumman TBM-3E Avenger Torpedo Bomber, and

the U.S. Army Aeronca L-3B Observation Plane. “The C.A.F.'s mission is not only to preserve the aircraft and artifacts of the World War II, Korea and Vietnam eras, but also the memories of the millions of brave men and women who participated in or witnessed these wars,” Kessler said. “By displaying and flying these plans, it is the Missouri Wing's intent to perpetuate the memory and hearts of all Americans the spirit in which these great planes were flown for the defense of our nation.” Kessler said a group of 25 dedicated World War II aviation enthusiasts formed a squadron of the Commemorative Air Force in St. Louis in 1980. One year later, the squadron was granted Wing status and became the 25th C.A.F. Wing. The Missouri Wing moved from the Spirit of St. Louis Airport to its current facility at Smartt


Field on February 1, 1984. A additional new hangar was built in 1995 to better accommodate “Show Me”, the North American B-25J Mitchell Medium Bomber. “The planes can stay here as long as people are here to take care of them,” Kessler said. In addition to the aircraft, the Missouri Wing houses a significant collection of authentic World War II artifacts and memorabilia, including Allied country uniforms, as well as armament, photographs, weapons and equipment from both Allied and Axis countries. Some of the artifacts were destroyed during the Great Flood of 1993, when the St. Charles County Airport was lost to rapidly rising flood waters.

with

Ann Hazelwood

What do you wish for yourself, this holiday season? Ruth Williams | Owner - Raines Victorian Inn For our family to remain healthy.

The B-25J, which is currently undergoing a complete engine overhaul, rolled off of the assembly line at the Fairfax Assembly Plant in Kansas City, Missouri, in December 1944, Kessler said. “It was supposed to go to the South Pacific, but early in 1945, they knew we would be dropping the big bomb in August. That's why they didn't send her over.”

Susan King In this tiny world, I want to enjoy those precious to me. Love and laughter are the purest gifts of all and we humans would do well to share these everyday, with who we meet. It is not difficult to do, just open your heart to the universe as it unfolds before you, each and every day.

After the war, the “Show Me” was used for training and all armament was removed. “There are only 24 of these in the world that are airworthy,” Kessler said.

Clyde Thomlinson | retired teacher I wish health and happiness for my whole family.

The plane is insured for $750,000. It's costing the C.A.F. $45,000 just to rebuild the engine. Finding parts for the 14-cylinder engine of a 1945 B-25J bomber isn't easy. “You can't buy new ones,” said Kessler. It's taken nine months to rebuild the engine. Before it was disarmed, the plane carried 13 .50-caliber machine guns. Kessler said a trust-worthy plane is like an appendage to an experienced pilot. “With your flight suit and gloves on, it's like you strap the aircraft on your back,” he said. “It becomes an extension of you. When you get in this aircraft, you go back to when these 18, 19 and 20-year-olds were flying this plane.” The plane holds about 660 gallons of no-lead gasoline. Each of the plane's engines hold 37.5 gallons of oil.

Jim Brown | Owner - Riverside Sweets I would like to run another marathon! Cindy Cummins | Owner - DIY Style I want to take time to slow down and spend some much needed time with my family and friends, have a good laugh, and be truly thankful for all the positive things in my life. Ron Stivenson | St. Charles City Councilman Ward 9 I wish good things for my family, like good health and happiness!

An active member of the C.A.F. can ride the planes to and from air shows and has an ongoing invitation to the organization's annual “Hangar Dance” held each September at Smartt Field. In the three and one-half years of World War II, America produced nearly 300,000 aircraft and trained two million military pilots to fly them, Kessler said. “The Commemorative Air Force was chartered in 1961 to acquire, restore and preserve in flying condition a complete collection of these fast-disappearing combat aircraft to pass on the World War II military aviation heritage to future generations.” Today, the C.A.F. has approximately 145 planes in its fleet—known as the Ghost Squadron—making it the world's eighth largest air force. At any one time, approximately 100 of these historic planes are flying; the others are in restoration or maintenance. Each year, an estimated 1 million people view these vintage aircraft—in some cases, the only remaining examples—at air shows across the nation. For more information on the C.A.F., call Kessler at 636-578-3254. ■ S T R E E T S C A P E M A G A Z I N E | 55


FITNESS & LIFESTYLE

Lifestyle Work-Outs Exercising with disease

Story by Monica Adams

We are in the midst of two of the most sluggish seasons in the calendar year. What I mean by that is, this is the time of year many of us in the fitness industry see a drastic drop off in membership renewals and attendance in classes or in the weight room. It's as if the cold air prompts you to stop exercising because you figure the bulkier clothes can cover up the imperfections. Many take a three month hiatus and then try to kick start their workout regime come New Year's. I now want you to imagine WANTING to work out and to have the energy to fuel those workouts daily. This is what those who suffer from diabetes, cardiovascular disease and so many other diseases long for but don't have the know how as they are trying to stay healthy while fighting it. I started seeing this wonderful man this past month that was diagnosed with juvenile diabetes when he was 30; nine years ago. Juvenile Diabetes, or Type 1, is one of three forms of diabetes mellitus. Type 1 Diabetes is a disorder of the body's immune system which makes it difficult to protect itself from viruses, bacteria or any foreign substance. Type 1 diabetes occurs when the body's immune system attacks and destroys certain cells in the pancreas. These cells, called beta cells, are contained along with other types of cells within the pancreatic islets. Beta cells normally produce insulin, a hormone that helps the body move the glucose contained in food into cells throughout the body, which use it for energy. When the beta cells are destroyed, no insulin can be produced, and the glucose stays in the blood instead where it can cause serious damage to all the organ systems of the body. Those who have type 1 diabetes know a daily routine of pricking their fingers and 56 | S T R E E T S C A P E M A G A Z I N E

giving multiple insulin shots a day is a way of life. Those who love them and are around them need to be their support system. It is just as much a part of their lives as it is the one who suffers from this disease. Insulin is the life support system for those with juvenile diabetes. What is also important, though, is a balanced intake of food and exercise in order to regulate blood sugar levels in an attempt to avoid hypoglycemia/low blood sugar or hyperglycemia, high blood sugar, which could be life threatening. I write this article to make you aware of possible symptoms of this potentially life threatening illness. According to the Juvenile Diabetes Research Foundation if you have signs of extreme thirst, frequent urination, sudden vision changes, increased appetite, sudden weight loss, fruity, sweet or wine-like odor on your breath, heavy or labored breathing and unconsciousness you should be checked for Juvenile Diabetes. This disease is normally found in children, teenagers or young adults but in the case of my boyfriend it was not diagnosed until he was 30 years old. Researchers and doctors do not yet know what the cause is but they believe autoimmune, genetic and environmental factors are involved. I believe in the importance of a support system and for any of you who suffer from diabetes and have made remarkable changes in your life I would love to hear from you. I have heard stories of an iron man competitor who faced his fears and followed strict guidelines by nutritionists and physicians who were able to regulate his blood sugar and allow him to excel in that sport. While the unknown can be frightening, I am encouraged by stories of overcoming the odds and excelling. My boyfriend is looking to take on an extreme training

program and I offer this advice to him as I do all of my clients, follow the advice of your physician. Trust in the medical professional who has followed your diagnosis. Look in to any and all ways to take care of your body and when it gives you signs of weakness or lethargy, listen to it and slow down. I believe in the power of western and eastern culture medicine. Research all that is out there to help you, have the will power and overcome the odds. To all who read this with a debilitating disease, or life threatening illness, I say lean on those around you for it is in those toughest of times that the love and care of family and friends will allow you to cross that coveted finish line. ■


S T R E E T S C A P E M A G A Z I N E | 57


NEIGHBORHOODS

Safe Place Program provides safe haven for kids

Story by Robin Seaton Jefferson Photos by Michael Schlueter

Local youth now have several “Safe Place” locations they can turn to in times of turmoil or danger, thanks to Youth In Need's part in this national program. YIN’s Karen Sieve says local kids need the organization's new “Safe Place” program just as much as the many other services the nonprofit agency offers. “They're defenseless children and they need those people to be their champions,” she said. The “Safe Place” program educates young people about the dangers of running away and provides them with a network of safe places, or youth-friendly businesses across the St. Louis Metropolitan Area during times of crisis. It's a preventative program aimed at children and teens in crisis. The locations are identified by a yellow and black “Safe Place” sign or decal. The marker lets children and teens in crisis know they can enter the designated location if they need help. Employees are trained ahead of time to find a quiet, comfortable place for the youth to wait while he or she calls Youth In Need, the local “Safe Place” contact. YIN will then call the location back to identify the volunteer or staff member who will come to meet the young person at the location, ideally, within 20 or 30 minutes. The volunteer or staff member will talk to the youth and transport him or her to Youth In Need for counseling, support, a place to stay or other resources. Lastly, YIN personnel or volunteers will contact the youth's family to let them know he or she is safe. All St. Louis Metro Area QuikTrips are sites, as are all libraries, the T.R. Hughes Ballpark, the St. Louis Science Center, YMCA's, community fire stations, and some churches, local grocery stores and banks.

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Sieve said the child may be lost, abused or just afraid. A “bully” or a stranger may be chasing them. She said the 24-hour hotline took 18 calls last year that ran the gamut from abuse to simply being locked out of the house. Youth In Need serves over 10,000 kids each year with its many programs. There are 30 sites—many in high-risk neighborhoods—spanning 100 miles from St. Louis City on the East to Montgomery County on the West.

Youth In Need was founded in 1974 by a group of volunteers to assist runaway and homeless youth. Today, the organization works as a crisis safety net that SM assists abused or neglected children of all ages, as well as a broad range of high-risk kids who need long-term support. Sieve said Youth In Need welcomes any business to become a “Safe Place.” For more information, visit www.youthinneed.org or call Karen Sieve at 636-946-5600 ext. 251. ■

Karen Sieve introduces the “Safe Place” program at St. Andrew’s Cinema.

Sieve said Youth In Need, which serves mainly children from birth to 21 years, helps everyone, rich and poor. “It can be any family, from upper middle class families to poor families,” she said. “Crisis can strike anywhere.”


Triathlete Sets World Record

Dr. John Curtin

Dr. John Curtin of Lake St. Louis, Missouri, swam, biked, and ran his way into the Guinness Book of World Records right here in the Heartland. “101 triathlons in 100 days” On September 7th, 2008, Dr. Curtin completed his 101st triathlon in 100 days, setting the world record for the most consecutive triathlons in a year. He started his marathon of triathlons to raise awareness for Missouri Kids First, an advocacy group which helps families who are traumatized by abuse and violence.

Streetscape welcomes Mary Ellen Renaud to the team. In her corner, she will provide incites on how to stretch your marketing dollar and how to grow your business with marketing and advertising. We welcome questions and comments to Mary Ellen that she will answer in the following edition. Please send any inquiries to Streetscape Magazine, ATTN: Mary Ellen’s Corner, 223 N. Main, St. Charles, MO 63301

8th Annual Celebration of Trees - Nov. 13 Habitat for Humanity of St. Charles County will hold the Celebration of Trees gala at Ameristar Casino in the Discovery Ballroom. For tickets and sponsorship information please call, (636) 978-5712

Mary Ellen’s Corner FACETS CREATIVE

5 Ways to Stretch Your Marketing Budget: • “How-To Articles” and “Tip Sheets”. Print media reaches thousands of readers. Approach an editor with an offer to write a “How-To” story. A byline and a short description about your service may be included and will go a long way toward establishing yourself as an expert and garnering business for you. • Newsletters. Newsletters are another valuable tool that allow you to communicate directly with your current and prospective customers. One good tip in a newsletter will encourage the recipient to hold onto it and perhaps call you for more advice. • Networking/Volunteering. Offering your expertise to serve on a committee or assisting a charitable organization related to your product or service can expose you to those who might use your service and helps build referral relationships. • Sales Letter. Do not ignore a traditional sales letter as an effective marketing tool. A well-written sales letter still generates leads. The key is to tailor the content and terminology to the readers’ interest, and answer the question, “What’s in it for me?” in more than one way. • Seminars, Clinics, Workshops. Seminars are one of the most powerful promotional tools and can position you as an expert in your field and bring you face-to-face with prospects who are most interested in the product or services you offer. At a seminar, prospective customers have the opportunity to ask questions, and quite often the attendees who are most interested in purchasing your products or services, will stay to speak with you individually. Mary Ellen Renaud

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STATE YOUR BUSINESS

Captivations One-of-a-kind jewelry design Story by Robin Seaton Jefferson Photos by Michael Schlueter

Nathan Adams had an interest in jewelry design when he was just a teenager. At 16 and just a sophomore at Francis Howell High School, Adams began working for a custom jeweler. There, he learned the business from the ground up. He cleaned and sold jewelry at first. Then he taught himself how to design it. Nearly two decades later, the father-of-three owns Captivations Jewelry Design Studio at 122 North Main Street in St. Charles. The ingenious, creative and inspired business man has garnered a love of gems and has dedicated the past sixteen years to learning and perfecting his craft. Since his high school job, Adams has spent many years designing and selling jewelry and has worked for major diamond dealers

in St. Louis, including an Israeli diamond company whose U.S. office is based in St. Louis. He was the sales manager for the U.S. market for several years for that company. Seven years ago, after hosting appointments in his home for several years, Adams opened Captivations. Adams soon realized that having $100,000 or more of jewelry in his home wasn’t working. “I would sit down with clients and design and make pieces for them. Before long, I had two or three people a night coming to my home.” Adams said he chose Captivations because he wanted something unique, and well, captivating. “I enjoy talking to people and interacting with them. I enjoy designing too.” Captivations has a sales staff of three, including a master craftsman. Captivations

Nathan Adams

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specializes in custom-made jewelry and oneof-a-kind pieces, including gems from Germany, Israel and the United States. Adams said his business is 99 percent referral-based. “My biggest business is fashion and design and custom, one-of-akind pieces. Many people just bring in a pile of stuff and say, ‘Make me something’.” Captivations is a posh and stylish store with a combination of old St. Charles and a classy, modern feel. Adams said he enjoys meeting new people and building longlasting relationships with new customers and old ones and finds full satisfaction in knowing his customers are happy. ■


F E AT U R E D M U S I C A RT I S T

Story by Robin Seaton Jefferson Photo by Michael Schlueter

A group of local guys brought together during a field day at their children's school have found creative genius close to home.

The Solar Power Band's music is all original, written and produced by band members. McKee said he likens the sound to the jazz sounds of Steely Dan, Al Jarreau and Michael Frank. Although members did work the club circuit for a short time, they quickly agreed that they preferred creativity to commonality.

The Solar Power Band, lead by front man Jim McKee and keyboardist Clarence Solar, both fathers of students at the Academy of the Sacred Heart, is working on its second compact disc which is due out in December. Other members are Lance Garger on percussion and Barry Siegel A l l O r i g i n a l on bass.

on the Other Side.” Solar said the band enjoyed playing for audiences at a now closed bar in St. Peters, Sally T's, which encouraged bands to play original material. Now, the band just wants to create, he said. “Our focus over the last several years, has been to concentrate on our original material. All of the musicians in the band are very serious about our music. Clubs just don't nurture original material.”

The Solar Powered Band

“We have fun getting together. We're just four guys in a garage in Maryland Heights just being creative with a very high level of musicianship,” said McKee, a father of four, who has taught middle school band for years in the Fort Zumwalt School District. “We're four guys in a garage but this is not a garage band. It's fun on the one hand, but we aspire to the highest levels of creativity.”

“We are a creative outlet. We've cut down playing in the public almost to nothing. We just decided after trying to play clubs that it's just better to do our own music,” McKee said. “We were sitting on a lot of our own stuff.” “Power Lines,” the group's first CD came out in 2005. The band plans to reissue that CD as it debuts with its newest collection, to be called “Little Secrets.” McKee said Solar has written literally hundreds of piano pieces. “I take those and start looking for a melody in there and adding lyrics. We take it to the other guys and they add the bass and percussion. By the time it's done, it has changed so much from the original, but if you strip everything away you can still go back to Clarence's piece.”

The Solar Powered Band

Some of those songs include a tune about a woman in love with the ghost of French Poet Charles Bautelaire or “Hummingbird” about a bird McKee observed on his windowsill or one that the group left largely unchanged—a song Solar wrote when his mother passed away, “I'll See You

Solar said the band is a jazz quartet that leans toward pop music more than anything.

Although Solar and McKee are the principal writers for the group, the band is soaked in talent. Garger is a music teacher on the faculty at Fontbonne University and Webster University. Siegel has a music degree from Berkeley. Solar is a perfusionist during the day. He's the guy who runs the heart/lung machine during open heart surgery. Solar started playing the accordion when he was eight years old. After six years and exhausting his uncle's knowledge (his uncle and his father played together in a wedding band), Solar moved on to the piano. He then took lessons from renowned jazz pianist Joe Howard in Cleveland, Ohio. Howard played on the original Michael Douglas Show in the 1970's. Howard also taught Solar's uncle and his great uncle to play. But again, Solar tapped out the teacher. “He taught me all he knew,” Solar said. Solar went on to serve as musical director of a dinner theater in a hotel in Cleveland. He then played in a five-piece band and later in a duo. After working six months on a cruise ship, he opened a jazz club and restaurant in Cleveland. Solar then took a music hiatus and spent some time at Lake Tahoe being a “ski bum” before attending perfusion school at the Cleveland Clinic. The Solar Power Band's CD's can be purchased on line at www.cdbaby.com. ■

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Holiday Shopping Captivations

Walters Jewelry

Zanders Jewelry

Ring: Custom designed 18KW gold 9.87cts oval natural aquamarine ring with .64cts total weight in round brilliant diamonds.

Love comes in many colors!

Ladies 14k white-gold Modern Antique diamond pave Tennis Braclet with 2.74cts of round diamonds total weight.

Necklace: 14KW 1.00ctw round brilliant diamond circle pendant with 1ct oval pink tourmaline on 16" double rolo chain.

2.03 carat fine white princess cut diamond.

122 North Main Street St. Charles, Missouri 63301 636.946.6265 www.captivationstudio.com

2.38 carat exquisite natural fancy yellow pear shape diamond.

North Main Street St. Charles, Missouri 63301 636-946-7352

Cottleville Uncorked

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Ladies Platinum diamond and Celon Sapphire Ring. There are 1.51cts of round and baguette accent diamonds around the center 2.95ct Celon Sapphire. 1015 South 5th Street St. Charles, Missouri 63301 636-946-6618

Photos by Michael Schlueter


Winter

Calendar of Events NOVEMBER

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DECEMBER

| Celebration of Trees | Habitat for Humanity of St. Charles County will be presenting their 8th Annual Celebration of Trees event in partnership with General Motors Wentzville Assembly Plant, which will be held November 13, 2008 at Ameristar Casino Resort and Spa’s Discovery Ballroom in St. Charles, Missouri at 6pm. 636-978-5712 | Mom Me Makeover 1 year Anniversary Celebration | Join Mom Me Makeover for their one year anniversary celebration. Learn how Mom Me Makeover has changed the lives of mothers who never never made time for themselves. Enjoy the "Express Yourself" fashion show that starts at 10pm. Meet and mingle with the M3 models and the four Mom Me Makeover women of the year. HOME Nightclub - Doors open at 9pm. Fashion show at 10pm. Tickets are $12 at the door and $10 in advance. Call 314.456.3936 for tickets or e-mail ola.h@mommemakeover.com. Visit: www.mommemakeover.com | Center Stage Theatre presents “What I Did Last Summer” | The show is set on a well-to-do vacation colony during the final stages of World War II, and tells the story of a rebellious 14-year-old who defies societal and parental expectations by deciding to follow his heart. Nov. 19-22 at 8 p.m. and Nov. 23 at 2 p.m. in the Fine Arts Building Theater at St. Charles Community College. 636-922-8050 or www.stchas.edu/events/productions. | Women in Investing Seminar | Wamhoff Financial Planning and Investing will be hosting a free seminar for women in investing from 6:30 to 9 p.m., November 20 at Bogey Hills Country Club. Call Keely Fisher at 314-3737010 to make your reservation.

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→ www.historicstcharles.com → www.historicfrenchtown.com → www.newtownatstcharles.com → www.augusta-chamber.org → www.stpetersmo.com

| Holiday Concert | Holiday Concert presented by the St. Charles County Symphony & the Foundry Art Centre on December 13 & 14. Tickets $20 each, cash bar, snacks & desserts for sale. Call 636-255-0270 for reservations. www.foundryartcentre.org | Young People’s Theatre presents “Babes in Toyland” | This fresh holiday tale transports audiences to the familiar Mother Goose Land and the magical, mysterious Toyland. Dec. 19 at 7 p.m. and Dec. 20-21 at 2 p.m. in the Fine Arts Building Theater at St. Charles Community College. 636-922-8316. www.stchas.edu/events/upcomypt. | "Candlelight Concerts" at the Capitol | Candlelight Concert with "Papa" and Jackie Wright. The Wrights narrate and perform "The History of Christmas Music". This warm holiday show with marimbas, drums, and various instruments will leave you in the holiday spirit. Lit entirely by candles, the concert will be held in the legislative chambers of the First Missouri State Capitol State Historic Site on December 22. The doors open at 7:30 pm and concerts start at 8pm. Tickets are $6 and go on sale Nov. 24 at the site only. 636-940-3322

JANUARY

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| St. Louis Travel Show & Tastes of the World | Jan. 31 - Feb. 1. St. Charles Convention Center. www.stltravelshow.com

A charming and warm story set in post World War II England -London and the Guernsey Islands. A passion for books ignites a letter exchange between a London author and the residents of Guernsey Island, the only area of Great Britain to be occupied by the Nazis. The book is full of courageous characters to love -and a few to dislike. It's very reminiscent of the much-loved older novel, 84 CHARING CROSS ROAD. I loved this book. Random House/Dial Press Hardcover, $22.00

THE GUERNSEY LITERARY AND POTATO PEEL PIE SOCIETY by Mary Ann Shaffer and Annie Barrows

BOOK CLUB

For more information on events in our area, visit these helpful websites:

| Augusta's Annual Christmas Candlelight Walk | Friday, December 6 & 13 Luminaries will once again light the streets of Augusta where visitors to the historic village can enjoy holiday shopping or feast on meals at the local restaurants. For information regarding this event or for a listing of Bed & Breakfasts to spend the evening, please visit www.augusta-chamber.com. or call 636-228-4005.

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| Women’s Fair | A day of shopping, presentations, fashion show, and seminars on health, beauty, and personal development. $5 general admission, $20 includes luncheon catered by Grappa Grill and JCPenney fashion show. Nov. 22 from 9 a.m. to 3 p.m. in the Student Center at St. Charles Community College. 636-922-8233 or www.stchas.edu/womensfair. | SCC Student Fall Art Show | This student art exhibit is free and open to the public. Nov. 24-Dec. 9 from 8 a.m.-8 p.m. in the Fine Arts Building Gallery at St. Charles Community College. 636-922-8202 or www.stchas.edu/events/artgallery.

| Holiday Marketplace & Happy Hour | Nonprofit and specialty vendors selling holiday goodies, stocking stuffers, and seasonal gifts for all! December 4th, 4:00p.m. - 7:00p.m. at Old Hickory Golf Club. Tickets are $20. Includes gourmet appetizer buffet! Cash bar available. Tickets available at UMB Bank St. Charles locations, Community Council of St. Charles County, and participating nonprofits. For more information, call Community Council at 636-936-8023

Available at Main Street Books 307 South Main | 636-949-0105 S T R E E T S C A P E M A G A Z I N E | 63


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