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Sep 15, 2023 |
todayswomannow.com | Gioia Patton |Sara Jessick
By Gioia PattonWhat: México Lindo is a group of families who gather together to share their love for Mexican Folklore and culture. Members: The group is formed by children, teenagers, and adults. Formation: Created the summer of 2009 by Ana Lane, who has become the choreographer/director. Mission: “We want our children to continue celebrating the diversity of this Beautiful city that has welcomed the traditions and folklore of the Hispanic people.
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Sep 11, 2023 |
todayswomannow.com | Sara Jessick
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Aug 30, 2023 |
todayswomannow.com | Sara Jessick
Tawana Bain is CEO of TBAIN _ CO and Today_s Woman magazineTawana Bain is CEO of TBAIN & CO and Today's Woman magazine
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Aug 28, 2023 |
todayswomannow.com | Sara Jessick
Written by Jean West | Photo courtesy of the Kentucky Science Center (Louisville)It was the best deal for families with children. The dual membership to the Louisville Zoo, and the Louisville Science Center. For many years we alternated on weekends, my sons choosing which they wanted to visit when weather wasn’t a deciding factor. If it was raining the Science Center always won. Unlike other attractions, Science Center staff say they pray for rain. It brings in the families.
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Aug 25, 2023 |
todayswomannow.com | Sara Jessick
Written by Rana Alsoufi | Provided photoGive for Good is an online giving day event that aims to support local organizations through funding and increased awareness. In the past ten years, the campaign has successfully raised over $50.6 million for local organizations in eight counties in the Kentuckiana region, providing support to all kinds of nonprofit organizations, from churches, to educational institutions, to governmental units, and so much more.
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Aug 23, 2023 |
todayswomannow.com | Sara Jessick |Rocko Jerome
Written by Rocko JeromeVaShaun Mosby is a woman who doesn’t shy away from a challenge. A Lexington native who overcame a young adulthood spent on public assistance to become a successful technology business owner and “serial entrepreneur,” she is a determined, focused dreamer who saw hard work as her way out. “I make no qualms about it: I was a good girl gone bad… gone good,” says VaShaun. “My mother was a preacher and my father is a lieutenant in the Marine Corps.
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Aug 23, 2023 |
todayswomannow.com | Sara Jessick |Tabnie Dozier
Written by Tabnie Dozier | Photographed by Bill WineThere’s a program in Kentuckiana that’s going beyond the school walls to make sure that aspiring college students are equipped with the tools necessary to graduate from high school and attend college. The Lincoln Foundation is devoted to identifying talented, underserved students for its Whitney M. Young Scholars program that provides mentorship, support and funding to make their goal of higher education a reality.
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Aug 22, 2023 |
todayswomannow.com | Sara Jessick
Written by Rocko Jerome | Provided photoWhen Jessica Tretter founded Misters for MS seven years ago, it was the fruition of a concept she had in her head for a long time. “I had wanted to do sort of a faux bachelor auction for years, like almost a parody of those events from decades ago where guys would go on a date for charity with the highest bidder at a ball,” she says.
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Aug 17, 2023 |
todayswomannow.com | Sara Jessick |Gioia Patton
Written by Gioia Patton/Arts InsiderPlein Air Painting with PastelsConnect with Mother Nature and capture her beauty through the use of soft pastels, an immediate medium that allows you to translate onto paper what surrounds you in the Gardens. In this three-day series, students will work the first day in Studio learning fundamentals before rendering the late summer garden with its luminous variety of light and colors. The other two days will be spent outside, plein air painting with pastels.
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Aug 17, 2023 |
todayswomannow.com | Sara Jessick
Reporting by Christine Fellingham and Rocko Jerome | Photographs by Kylene White and Benji KoellingIt’s no secret that women are in the minority in higher education leadership. In 2022, only thirty-three percent of college presidents were women. That number has barely budged in years. Except in Louisville. Here, the majority of the presidents leading our local universities are female.