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On a roll Red Yeti owners give new business a spin AUGUST 20, 2015 — Issue 79 A News and Tribune Publication TOP THREE: Horseshoes & Hand Grenades in New Albany PLAY: "The Food Chain" in Louisville

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Page 1: SoIn 08202015

On a rollRed Yeti owners give new business a spin AUGUST 20, 2015 — Issue 79

A News and Tribune Publication

TOP THREE: Horseshoes & Hand Grenades in New Albany PLAY: "The Food Chain" in Louisville

Page 2: SoIn 08202015

EDITORJason Thomas

DESIGNClaire Munn

STORYElizabeth Beilman

PHOTOGRAPHYChristopher Fryer

WHERE TO FIND SOIN:• ON RACKS: We offer free copies of SoIn at numerous hotels and restaurants around Clark and Floyd counties.• IN YOUR PAPER: Every Thursday in the News and Tribune• ONLINE: newsandtribune.com /soin• ON FACEBOOK: facebook.com/YourSoInWeekly• ON TWITTER: @newsandtribune

2 | THURSDAY, AUGUST 20, 2015 | SOIN

Brandi Ronau is pictured inside Too Tired Bike and Bean, a new coffee and bike repair shop located at 250 Spring St., in downtown Jefferson-ville. Ronau owns the new business with her husband, and they plan to open Sept. 1. | STAFF PHOTO BY CHRISTOPHER FRYER

More interesting stories from Southern Indiana.NEXT SOIN:

Got a story you're just dying to see in SoIn? Tweet or Facebook us and your idea could be our next SoIn feature. For the latest SoIn content, follow/like us online.

follow us on TWITTER @newsandtribune FACEBOOK/YourSoInWeekly

ON THE COVER:

Downtown Jeffersonville keeps upping the hip factor.

Its collection of trendy new restaurants and galleries is about to get a boost from a concept new to the area, if not region.

The folks who brought us Red Yeti Brew-ing Co. on Spring Street soon will launch Too Tired Bike and Bean, a coffee/bicycle shop that will occupy space adjacent to the brewpub. It’s called a bike café, and it’s a trend in larger cities across the nation, Elizabeth Beilman writes in today’s cover story.

That’s how we roll in SoIn: We see an opportunity and pounce.

Too Tired Bike and Bean is a pretty simple concept, Beilman explains.

Park your bike outside the shop, order a drink or a quick snack and be on your way — or come in for repairs or grab

some accessories for your two-wheel companion.Brandi Ronau, co-owner of Red Yeti and Too

Tired, said Spring Street is a perfect location for a combination coffee and bike shop, espe-cially since Perkfection closed last fall. Patrons of Red Yeti often ask Ronau where they can find some coffee.

Downtown Jeffersonville has been teeming with cyclists and pedestrians since the opening of the Big Four Bridge more than a year ago. Opening a bike shop makes perfect sense. Who

doesn’t like to have a cup of joe in-hand while perusing local shops or just strolling around?

Just try to keep two hands on the handlebars ...

— Jason Thomas is the editor of SoIn. He can be reached by phone at 812-206-2127 or email at [email protected]. Follow him on Twitter: @ScoopThomas.

A new kind of buzz in Jeffersonville

ABOUT THE PLAY, FROM THE LOU-ISVILLE REPERTORY COMPANY:

Amanda, an anorexic poet of some pretensions, has been married for three weeks, but her husband, Ford, has been missing for two.

She calls a crisis hotline and reaches Bea, a volunteer. Bea’s answer to Amanda’s problems is to diminish them by complaining about her own deceased husband’s inattentiveness, her son’s embarrassing nature, and also to dispense hilarious but useless advice.

Just as Amanda nears her wit’s end, Ford walks in so she simply hangs up on Bea. Meanwhile, across town, Serge, a completely vain runway

model, paces as he waits for the arrival of his latest paramour. He is intruded upon by a former one-night stand, Otto, who worships him and who tips the scales at about 300 pounds.

Otto tortures, harangues and cajoles Serge while swilling Yoo-hoo, eating junk food and taking phone calls from his mother until Serge can take no more. Serge explodes but is interrupted by a phone call — his new lover will not be coming. This leaves Serge and Otto in the same state: Both are now victims of fickle romance.

The scene shifts back to Amanda’s at the crack of dawn. Serge is banging on the door, looking for his lover,

surprising Amanda. It was with Serge that Ford had spent his lost two honey-moon weeks. Having followed Serge, it isn’t long until Otto shows up, with breakfast, threatening suicide. Next to arrive is Bea, furious at Amanda for hanging up on her as Bea does not tolerate rudeness.

As riotous chaos builds, we learn that Bea is Otto’s mother, that Otto and Amanda are old school friends, that Serge will settle for both Amanda and Ford and that Ford has absolutely nothing to say. Bea takes charge and offers a solution.

Although short on practicality, it is long on pleasure.

Naughty by their nature

JASON THOMASSoIn Editor

SOIN THE KNOW• WHAT: ‘The Food Chain’• WHEN: Aug. 21-22, 28-29, 8

p.m.; Aug. 23, 6 p.m.; Aug. 30, 5 p.m.

• WHERE: The Bard’s Town Theatre, 1801 Bardstown Road, Louisville

Page 3: SoIn 08202015

SILVER IN THOSE HILLSGET YOUR TAN ON• WHAT: ‘The Tuley Homestead on Silver Hills’

• WHEN: 7 p.m. Tuesday, Aug. 25• WHERE: Elsa Strassweg Auditorium of the

New Albany-Floyd County Public Library, 180 W. Spring St., New Albany

Tuesday marks the beginning of the 2015-16 Floyd County Historical Society program year. Kelly Carnighan will present the program titled: “The Tuley Homestead on Silver Hills.” Carnighan is the executive director of the Silver Hills Historical Society. The meeting will be held at 7 p.m. in the Elsa Strassweg Auditorium of the New Albany-Floyd County Public Library. The meeting is free and open to the public.

• WHAT: Tony and the Tan Lines concert• WHEN: 7 p.m. Friday, Aug. 21• WHERE: RiverStage, Spring Street and River-

side Drive, JeffersonvilleTony and the Tan Lines, the world’s "newest,

hottest, sexiest musical adventure" is ready to party with you. Capturing the smooth soul of the '70s and the hot Miami sound from the early '80s, Tony and the Tan Lines are sure to bring the celebration wherever they pull into port. And when it’s all over, you will undoubtedly be thirsty for more.

GOTTA GO: Interested in seeing your event in our 3 To Go? Email SoIn Editor Jason Thomas at [email protected]

• WHERE: New Albany Bicentennial Park, Spring and Pearl streets, New Albany

• WHEN: 6 p.m. Friday, Aug. 21• WHO: Horseshoes & Hand GrenadesHorseshoes & Hand Grenades is a blue-

grass and folk band that released its third album earlier this year. Hailing from the river town of Stevens Point, Wisc., it plays something like pro-gressive high-energy old-time folk music. With strong roots in old-time and bluegrass, the band has formed its own unique style born from the diverse musical backgrounds and interests of the five friends who make up the band.

| 3SOIN | THURSDAY, AUGUST 20, 2015

1 BLUEGRASS ROOTS3 TO GO Where to go and be seen in Southern Indiana

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Page 4: SoIn 08202015

randi and Paul Ronau know libations.

The second business venture for the owners of Red Yeti Brewing Co this time will offer

a different kind of buzz — caffeine, with a spe-cial theme.

Too Tired Bike and Bean — a coffee shop next door to Red Yeti on Spring Street in Jeffersonville opening

Sept. 1 — will also welcome cyclists in need of a pick-me-up or a repair.And it’s part of a ‘bike café’ trend seen in larger cities

across the nation. Brandi Ronau, co-owner of Red Yeti and Too Tired Bike and Bean, said Spring Street is a perfect location for one of them.

“Lots of people [downtown] are on bikes, and they’re looking for things to do on their bikes, and this is kind of a place to chill out,” Ronau said.

The concept is simple. Ride up, park your bike (a detail Ronau said will soon be worked out), order a

drink or quick snack, enjoy and be on your way.Or — come in for a couple repairs or to buy some two-wheeled accessories. Any exten-

sive repairs will need to be scheduled with the mechanic.

“I would think that it’s going to be tremendously well received by the

biking community,” Jeffersonville Main Street Inc. Executive Director Jay Ellis said. “If someone has lost some of their pep after coming to

the Big Four Bridge, then Too Tired Bike and Bean will be perfect to fill their need.”

Of course, the coffee shop won’t just be for cyclists.

Since Perkfection Café closed last fall, Ronau said downtown has been in serious need of another caffeine outlet. She said customers at Red Yeti often ask her, ‘Where’s the coffee shop?’

Having a portable drink in hand helps stimulate pedestri-

an traffic flow along downtown streets, she said.“I think other businesses will ben-

efit [Too Tired] because a lot of people

like to grab a coffee and window shop or peruse the other busi-nesses, so it’ll be a nice addition,” Ellis said.

He said he expects Too Tired to become a new hangout spot for some as well.

“The flip side of that is that some people like a coffee shop to have meetings or to catch up on a little bit of work,” Ellis said.

The idea for Too Tired Bike and Bean came about because Ronau said Red Yeti needed more grain storage space for its beer.

Because there was so much interest in a new coffee shop, the Ronaus decided to put one in the front of the new storage space.

Red Yeti’s chef, Michael Bowe, had the idea to incorporate bicycle repairs and accessory sales — “things that people just rolling across the bridge may need,” Ronau said — because of an influx of cyclists downtown.

Brewing coffee isn’t a new culinary endeavor for the Ronaus. The two ran a mobile cafe unit when they lived in California.

To support the Ronau’s caffeine expertise, Bowe is attending pastries training to learn how to make something “a little bit nicer, a little bit fancier,” Ronau said.

Also available will be soups and salads, tea, fruit smoothies and protein shakes.

Too Tired Bike and Bean will be open from 6 a.m. to 8 p.m., seven days a week.

“We’re just excited that there’s another business that’s open-ing in downtown Jeffersonville,” Ellis said. “It’s a very positive thing for downtown and show that we’re moving in the right direction.

Pedaling their wares

Red Yeti Brewing Co.’s success in the first year has far exceeded what Brandi Ronau said she expected

“It has been mind-blowing,” she said.The Jeffersonville brewery opened a few days before

the Big Four Bridge opened, and pedestrians and cyclists funneled right through its doors.

“In the beginning, we didn’t realize the bridge and the impact that it would have for us, and it has been incredible,” she said.

In its first year, Red Yeti has brewed 50 barrels — that’s 100 kegs, each with 124 pints, for a grand total of 124,000 pours.

The brewery has 10 or so rotating varieties of its own but also offers craft beers from around the country.

“It’s really kind of what our customers are looking for, that’s how we determine what beers we order in,” Ronau said. “We like to be a little bit different. We don’t want to carry what they have down the street [at Flat 12 Bierwerks]. We want to have another option for them, and that’s what keeps customers coming back I think.”

— Staff writer Elizabeth Beilman

The facade of Too Tired Bike and Bean is pictured at 250 Spring St. in downtown Jeffersonville. The owners of the new business plan to open the shop Sept. 1. | STAFF PHOTOS BY CHRISTOPHER FRYER

SO YOU KNOW• WHAT: Too Tired Bike and Bean, a

coffee shop with bike repairs and accessories for sale

• WHEN: Soft opening is Sept. 1• WHERE: 250 Spring St., Jefferson-

ville• HOURS: 6 a.m. to 8 p.m., seven

days a week

New coffee shop in Jeffersonville caters to cyclistsBy ELIZABETH BEILMAN

[email protected]

B

TOP LEFT: A painting of a

bicycle gear is pictured on a

wall inside Too Tired Bike and

Bean, a new coffee and bike repair

shop, located at 250 Spring

St. in down-town Jeffer-

sonville.

RIGHT: A bicy-cle sculpture

is pictured above the

front entrance to Too Tired

Bike and Bean.

Employee John Oswald paints the entrance to Red Yeti Brewing Co.’s restaurant entrance on the corner of Walnut and Spring streets in downtown Jeffersonville in this file photo. | FILE PHOTOS

A year in reviewRED YETI

Bikers, walkers, joggers and runners use the Big Four Bridge when it opened in May 2014. Red Yeti opened a few days later.

Page 5: SoIn 08202015

randi and Paul Ronau know libations.

The second business venture for the owners of Red Yeti Brewing Co this time will offer

a different kind of buzz — caffeine, with a spe-cial theme.

Too Tired Bike and Bean — a coffee shop next door to Red Yeti on Spring Street in Jeffersonville opening

Sept. 1 — will also welcome cyclists in need of a pick-me-up or a repair.And it’s part of a ‘bike café’ trend seen in larger cities

across the nation. Brandi Ronau, co-owner of Red Yeti and Too Tired Bike and Bean, said Spring Street is a perfect location for one of them.

“Lots of people [downtown] are on bikes, and they’re looking for things to do on their bikes, and this is kind of a place to chill out,” Ronau said.

The concept is simple. Ride up, park your bike (a detail Ronau said will soon be worked out), order a

drink or quick snack, enjoy and be on your way.Or — come in for a couple repairs or to buy some two-wheeled accessories. Any exten-

sive repairs will need to be scheduled with the mechanic.

“I would think that it’s going to be tremendously well received by the

biking community,” Jeffersonville Main Street Inc. Executive Director Jay Ellis said. “If someone has lost some of their pep after coming to

the Big Four Bridge, then Too Tired Bike and Bean will be perfect to fill their need.”

Of course, the coffee shop won’t just be for cyclists.

Since Perkfection Café closed last fall, Ronau said downtown has been in serious need of another caffeine outlet. She said customers at Red Yeti often ask her, ‘Where’s the coffee shop?’

Having a portable drink in hand helps stimulate pedestri-

an traffic flow along downtown streets, she said.“I think other businesses will ben-

efit [Too Tired] because a lot of people

like to grab a coffee and window shop or peruse the other busi-nesses, so it’ll be a nice addition,” Ellis said.

He said he expects Too Tired to become a new hangout spot for some as well.

“The flip side of that is that some people like a coffee shop to have meetings or to catch up on a little bit of work,” Ellis said.

The idea for Too Tired Bike and Bean came about because Ronau said Red Yeti needed more grain storage space for its beer.

Because there was so much interest in a new coffee shop, the Ronaus decided to put one in the front of the new storage space.

Red Yeti’s chef, Michael Bowe, had the idea to incorporate bicycle repairs and accessory sales — “things that people just rolling across the bridge may need,” Ronau said — because of an influx of cyclists downtown.

Brewing coffee isn’t a new culinary endeavor for the Ronaus. The two ran a mobile cafe unit when they lived in California.

To support the Ronau’s caffeine expertise, Bowe is attending pastries training to learn how to make something “a little bit nicer, a little bit fancier,” Ronau said.

Also available will be soups and salads, tea, fruit smoothies and protein shakes.

Too Tired Bike and Bean will be open from 6 a.m. to 8 p.m., seven days a week.

“We’re just excited that there’s another business that’s open-ing in downtown Jeffersonville,” Ellis said. “It’s a very positive thing for downtown and show that we’re moving in the right direction.

Pedaling their wares

Red Yeti Brewing Co.’s success in the first year has far exceeded what Brandi Ronau said she expected

“It has been mind-blowing,” she said.The Jeffersonville brewery opened a few days before

the Big Four Bridge opened, and pedestrians and cyclists funneled right through its doors.

“In the beginning, we didn’t realize the bridge and the impact that it would have for us, and it has been incredible,” she said.

In its first year, Red Yeti has brewed 50 barrels — that’s 100 kegs, each with 124 pints, for a grand total of 124,000 pours.

The brewery has 10 or so rotating varieties of its own but also offers craft beers from around the country.

“It’s really kind of what our customers are looking for, that’s how we determine what beers we order in,” Ronau said. “We like to be a little bit different. We don’t want to carry what they have down the street [at Flat 12 Bierwerks]. We want to have another option for them, and that’s what keeps customers coming back I think.”

— Staff writer Elizabeth Beilman

The facade of Too Tired Bike and Bean is pictured at 250 Spring St. in downtown Jeffersonville. The owners of the new business plan to open the shop Sept. 1. | STAFF PHOTOS BY CHRISTOPHER FRYER

SO YOU KNOW• WHAT: Too Tired Bike and Bean, a

coffee shop with bike repairs and accessories for sale

• WHEN: Soft opening is Sept. 1• WHERE: 250 Spring St., Jefferson-

ville• HOURS: 6 a.m. to 8 p.m., seven

days a week

New coffee shop in Jeffersonville caters to cyclistsBy ELIZABETH BEILMAN

[email protected]

B

TOP LEFT: A painting of a

bicycle gear is pictured on a

wall inside Too Tired Bike and

Bean, a new coffee and bike repair

shop, located at 250 Spring

St. in down-town Jeffer-

sonville.

RIGHT: A bicy-cle sculpture

is pictured above the

front entrance to Too Tired

Bike and Bean.

Employee John Oswald paints the entrance to Red Yeti Brewing Co.’s restaurant entrance on the corner of Walnut and Spring streets in downtown Jeffersonville in this file photo. | FILE PHOTOS

A year in reviewRED YETI

Bikers, walkers, joggers and runners use the Big Four Bridge when it opened in May 2014. Red Yeti opened a few days later.

Page 6: SoIn 08202015

ALBUMS: BOOKS:MOVIES:AUG. 25é “Rising Strong” by Brené

Brown “NeuroTribes” by Steve Silberman

AUG. 21é “Right Here, Right Now”

by Jordin Sparks “Burning Bridges” by Bon Jovi

AUG. 21é “Hitman: Agent 47”

“Some Kind of Beautiful”

6 | THURSDAY, AUGUST 20, 2015 | SoIn

ENTERTAINMENT This week's entertainment releases

LOUISVILLE — Kentucky Sci-ence Center’s proposal to operate the Challenger Learning Center — Louisville, located at The Academy Shawnee in Louisville, (Shawnee Challenger) was approved by the Jef-ferson County Public School Board.

Beginning this fall, the Science Center will operate the Shawnee Chal-lenger as an offsite destination serving schools, after and out-of-school groups, families and corporations from across the region, according to a Ken-tucky Science Center news release.

“We’re thrilled to have collectively found a way to continue this powerful, immersive learning experience here in Louisville,” said Science Center Director of Education and Experience, Kim Hunter. “This is a win for kids in our community and a major win for STEM education — just when the allure of space exploration is being rekindled with exciting projects Iike New Horizons.”

Kentucky Science Center begins operating the Shawnee Challenger with the start of the new school year. It will offer all three missions currently owned by the Shawnee Challenger — “Rendezvous with a Comet,” Voyage to Mars” and “Return to the Moon” — along with a new suite of programs

designed to maximize reach into pub-lic, private and home schools across the region.

The Kentucky Science Cen-ter’s new Challenger Flight Di-rector comes from the renowned Space Camp in Huntsville, Ala., bringing with him more than four years of experience managing flight simulations in both space travel and aeronautics.

Overseeing these missions, the Science Center and their new Flight Director will ensure that Shawnee Challenger programs match the

performance expectations of the Next Generation Science Standards and

expand the core target student audience from pre-k through 12.

Expanding beyond the school district, Kentucky Science Center will utilize Shawnee Challenger facilities to deliver after-school and out-

of-school Challenger simulations to organizations across the region. Mis-sions will now be available for scout programs, birthday parties, corporate retreats and so much more.

Liftoff at the Challenger Center

SOIN THE KNOW• WHAT: Challenger Learning Center• WHEN: Ongoing• INFO: Call 502-560-7128 or go online to KYScienceCenter.org

LOUISVILLE — A new exhibit will launch Thursday, Aug. 27, at PUBLIC art gallery in downtown Louisville. “Quiet Lines Over Time” is the creation of artist Dale Leys.

“The space between objects is just as important as the objects themselves,” curator Andrew Cozzens said in a news release from Louisville Visual Art about "Quiet Lines Over Time.” “In these drawings, Dale meticulous-ly builds layers upon layers of delicate lines that carve the space of the paper.

“He subtly captures the energy of the unseen so that we may have the chance to perceive the intricacies of these spaces. He draws attention to what we nor-mally disregard as negative space, creating a holistic experience that interweaves our physical, metaphorical and psychological understanding of space and time.

“Dale Leys stresses the impor-tance of each and every line: ‘You start somewhere, go somewhere, and stop somewhere.’ Throughout his career, Dale has created draw-ings that beautifully exemplify this approach. ‘Quiet Lines Over Time’ is a collection of draw-ings that visually interprets the synergy of positive and negative space.”

ABOUT DALE LEYSLeys earned his master’s of

fine arts from the University of Wisconsin after earning his bachelor’s of fine arts from the Layton School of Art and Design in Milwaukee, and studying at the

Yale University Summer School of Art and Music in New Haven, Conn.

He has been a visiting artist and has had solo exhibitions at universities and art centers all over the U.S., such as the Gould Gallery at the Western Colo-rado Center for the Arts, Grand Junction, Colo., The Speed Art Museum in Louisville, and his re-cent Retrospective at the Yeiser in Paducah, Ky. Dale is a professor of art at Murray State University where he has taught drawing since 1977. He also frequently teaches summer art courses in Rome and Florence in Italy and Prague in the Czech Republic.

Dale lives and works in Mur-ray, Kentucky.

A hush over the crowdSOIN THE KNOW• WHAT: ‘Quiet Lines Over

Time’: Drawings by Dale Leys

• WHEN: Aug. 27 through Sept. 26, artist’s reception, 6 to 8 p.m. Friday, Sept. 4, Second and Main Streets (Whiskey Row Loft Build-ing)

• WHERE: PUBLIC, 131 W. Main St., Louisville

• EXHIBITION TITLE: Quiet Lines Over Time

• CURATOR: Andrew Coz-zens

• GALLERY HOURS: Thurs-day through Saturday, 11:30 a.m. to 4:30 p.m., and by appointment

Page 7: SoIn 08202015

LOCAL SOIN HAPPENINGS | 7SoIn | THURSDAY, AUGUST 20, 2015

Feeling left out? Send your establishment’s and/or orga-nization’s upcoming events/new features/entertainment information to SoIn Editor Jason Thomas at [email protected]

LIVE MUSIC AT HUBER’SWHEN: 1 to 5 p.m. Saturday, SundayWHERE: Huber WinerySaturday, Aug. 22: Joe Dotson; Sunday, Aug. 23:

Petar Mandic; Saturday, Aug. 29: Joe & Arrow; Sunday, Aug. 30: Josh Glauber

[huberwinery.com]

LIVE MUSIC AT WICK’SWHAT: Live on StateWHERE: Wick’s, 225 State St., New AlbanyFriday, Aug. 21: Polly O’Keary & The Rhythm Meth-

od; Saturday, Aug. 22: Six Mile South; Saturday, Aug. 29: Usual Suspects

CONCERTS IN THE PARKWHEN: 7 p.m. FridayWHERE: Warder Park, Court Avenue and Spring

Street, JeffersonvilleFriday, Aug. 21: The Saints Blues Band; Aug. 28:

Indigo; Sept. 4: Moonlight Big Band; Sept. 11: Cloigheann Irish Band; Sept. 18: Wulfe Brothers

BICENTENNIAL PARK CONCERT SERIESWHEN: 6 p.m. FridaysWHERE: Bicentennial Park, Pearl and Spring streets,

New AlbanyFriday, Aug. 21: Horseshoes & Hand Grenades:

A Bluegrass and folk band that released its third album earlier this year; Aug. 28: Anderson East: A singer and songwriter from Alabama; Brooks Rit-ter: A songwriter and musician specializing in rock, folk and soul.

RIVERSTAGE CONCERT SERIESWHEN: 7 p.m. FridayWHERE: RiverStage, Riverside Drive and Spring

Street, JeffersonvilleFriday, Aug. 21: Tony & the Tanlines with guest

Blues and Greys; Aug. 28: 100% Poly with guest

Muji Fuji; Sept. 4: Steamboat Days The Louisville Crashers with guest Derby City Rockers; Sept. 5: Steamboat Days; Sept. 6: Steamboat Days Dance-A-thon/ Kidz ROCK the Stage; Sept. 12: Zumba Glow Party; Sept. 13: Rock on Water Ja-son Gray with guest Carrollton & Hush Harbor

LIVE MUSIC AT NAPHWHERE: New Albany Production House, 1736 E.

Main St., New AlbanyFriday, Aug. 21: Fools’ Brew, Guerilla Red, The Get

Up, Get Downs, 6:30 p.m., $6 advance/$8 day of show; Saturday, Aug. 22: Acoustic Live! with Demi Hollis, more, 6:30 p.m., $6 advance/$8 day of show; Saturday, Aug. 29: Second To Last, Chas-ing Morgan, Better Than Salem, For The Birds, Ashley Ledrick, 6:30 p.m., $8 advance/$10 day of show

[naproductionhouse.com]

LIVE MUSIC AT BIG FOUR BURGERS + BEER JEFFERSONVILLEWHERE: Big Four Burgers + Beer, 134 Spring St.,

JeffersonvilleWHEN: Friday and SaturdayFriday, Aug. 21: Kyle Hastings; Saturday, Aug. 22:

Kelsey Allen; Friday, Aug. 28: Tyler Stiller; Satur-day, Aug. 29: Kelsey Allen

[bigfourburgers.com]

LIVE MUSIC AT BIG FOUR BURGERS + BEER NEW ALBANYWHERE: Big Four Burgers + Beer, 114 E. Main St.,

New AlbanyWHEN: Friday and SaturdayFriday, Aug. 21: Kelsey Allen; Saturday, Aug. 22:

Tyler Stiller; Friday, Aug. 28: Katie and Kaela; Saturday, Aug. 29: Chris Wiles

[bigfourburgers.com]

COMMUNITY FOCUSED.COMMUNITY MINDED.No other news source brings you the important local information you want to know like the News and Tribune.

• Daily breaking news and weekly analysis to inform readers• Advertising to empower shoppers• Editorials and columns to engage conversation

COMMUNITY FOCUSED. COMMUNITY MINDED.

Scan this QR code with your phone to visit the News and Tribune's website.

CLARKSVILLE — Derby

Dinner Playhouse will present

the all new musical comedy

“The Last Potluck Supper,” run-

ning through Sept. 27.

It’s 1979 and past parish-

ioners have gathered to share

stories from the last 100 years,

a Derby Dinner news release

stated. As the women work

in the kitchen, these shared

memories burst into life through

a series of flashbacks. Travel back to 1897 and meet

Vivian’s grandmother, one of

the founding members of the

church. See Karin as a newly-

wed, cautiously navigating her

way through the politics of the

kitchen.

And be there on that day in

1944 when Mavis first barreled her way through the swinging

door.

“The Last Potluck Sup-

per” was inspired by the books

of Janet Martin and Suzann

Nelson, including the best seller

“Growing Up Lutheran.” The

musical was written by Greta

Grosch with music and lyrics

by Drew Jansen. Songs featured

are “You Can Learn A lot About

a Lady,” “Use It or Ya Lose It,”

“An Old Wooden Spoon” and

more.

“The Last Potluck Supper” is

under the direction of Bekki Jo

Schneider with choreography by

Barbara F. Cullen and musical

direction by Scott Bradley. Cast

includes Cary Wiger, Rita Thomas,

Colette Delaney, Tina Jo Wallace

and Katelyn Webb.

Take a bite out of ‘Potluck’SOIN THE KNOW• WHAT: ‘The Last Potluck

Supper’• WHEN: Through Sept. 27• WHERE: Derby Dinner

Playhouse• INFO: For ticket informa-

tion call 812-288-8281 or visit derbydinner.com

Page 8: SoIn 08202015

8 | THURSDAY, AUGUST 20, 2015 | SOIN

3rd Annual

SOS Car Show

FUNDRAISER

Classic Car/Motorcycle ShowLunch & Dinner available starting at Noon1:00 – Classic Car/Motorcycle Show 1:30 – Live Music featuring “Don’t Fret” with Jenna & Tommy3:00 – Live Auction – Includes a Fallen Soldier Statue, UK Bench, Gift Baskets, Gift Certifi cates and more! 4:30 – Live Music featuring tribute artist “Travis Albertson” as ELVIS

DATE: Saturday, August 22nd, 2015WHERE: Old Utica School Preservation Bldg. 208 South 4th St., Utica , IN

Teens in grades 6-12, who are

residents of Kentucky and South-

ern Indiana, are encouraged to

submit their experiences and re-

flections about living with cancer

for the “Write Stuff Teen Con-

test” from Gilda’s Club Louis-

ville, 633 Baxter Ave., together

with The Miller Family Founda-

tion. Teens may submit essays,

poetry, 2-dimensional artwork or

videos.

Cash prizes will be awarded:

$500 for first place, $250 for sec-

ond and $125 for third. In addi-

tion, entries may also be published

or displayed in an effort to help

educate students, teachers, coun-

selors and others about the teen

perspective of living with cancer.

Only submissions from teens

who have/or had cancer or

teens whose family member or

friend has/had cancer will be eli-

gible. Entries must be received

by midnight Oct. 2 and must be

accompanied by an entry form,

available online at gildasclublou-

isville.org/writestuff. Entries will

be scored by a panel of judges,

and an awards ceremony will be

held at Gilda’s Club on Jan. 16.

For more information go to gil-

dasclublouisville.org/writestuff or

contact Janet Gruenberg at janet@

gildasclublouisville.org.

Club hosts writing contest