Tri-Village March/April 2016

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March/April 2016

Upper Arlington

Grandview Heights

Marble Cliff

Something to Chew On Schools share students’ favorite lunches

w w w. t r iv il l a gemagazine. c om

INSIDE

Voice and piano teacher Jamie Massa Grandview Library’s guitar rental program Favorite cafeteria items around Tri-Village PRSRT STD US POSTAGE PAID Columbus, Ohio Permit No. 4697


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1335 Dublin Rd., Suite 101C Columbus, Ohio 43215 614-572-1240 • Fax 614-572-1241 www.cityscenecolumbus.com

2016

Kathleen K. Gill Dave Prosser Gianna Barrett

Make your voice heard!

Vote for Columbus’ best arts, entertainment, food and events for CityScene Magazine’s fifth annual Best of the ‘Bus!

Hannah Bealer Sarah Sole Amanda DePerro Bill Johannes William Kosileski Leah Kunnath Bob Valasek Jessica Williams Zoe Zeid Julie Camp Lauren Prehm Amber Young Jamie Armistead Circulation

Contributing Editor Contributing Writers

Editorial Assistant Advertising Sales Accounting Manager 614-572-1240

www.trivillagemagazine.com

Voting is open through April 15!

CityScene Media Group also publishes:

Winners will be featured in the July issue of CityScene.

CityScene Magazine www.CitySceneColumbus.com

cityscenecolumbus.com

Luxury Living

what’s your style?

Realtors!

Showcase your home listings to every homeowner in the Tri-Village area. Your listings will also appear in the digital edition of the magazine, hosted on the Tri-Village Magazine home page: www.trivillagemagazine.com Contact Lauren Prehm today for more information: 614-572-1256 lprehm@cityscenemediagroup.com Get a great response from your ads in TRI-VILLAGE MAGAZINE! 4

Garth Bishop Gary Hoffman

President/CEO Chief Creative Officer Vice President, Sales Managing Editor Creative Director Editors

Dublin Life Magazine www.DublinLifeMagazine.com Westerville Magazine www.WestervilleMagazine.com Healthy New Albany Magazine www.HealthyNewAlbanyMagazine.com Pickerington Magazine www.PickeringtonMagazine.com The publisher welcomes contributions in the form of manuscripts, drawings, photographs, or story ideas to consider for possible publication. Enclose a SASE with each submission or email hbealer@cityscenecolumbus.com or ssole@cityscenemediagroup.com. Publisher does not assume responsibility for loss or damage. Tri-Village Magazine is published bimonthly in January, March, May, July, September and November. Subscriptions are free for households within the city limits of Upper Arlington, Grandview Heights and the Village of Marble Cliff. For advertising information or bulk purchases, contact Lauren Prehm at 614-572-1256 or lprehm@ cityscenemediagroup.com. No part of this publication may be reproduced without the written consent of the publishers. Tri-Village Magazine is a registered trademark of CityScene Media Group. Printed in the U.S.A. March/April 2016 • www.trivillagemagazine.com


5 STAR FACILITY V OL U ME 1 7 N U M BER 1

M ARCH /AP RIL 2016

6 Community Calendar 8 News & Info from

Upper Arlington

9 News & Info from

The Village of Marble Cliff

14

10 News & Info from Grandview Heights

12 faces

Hitting the Right Note

UA voice and piano teacher’s passion for music spans decades

Congratulations to Darby Glenn for being ranked as a 5 Star Facility by the Centers for Medicare and Medicaid.

14 in focus

18

Rock ‘n’ Roll Rental

Library program allows members to rent out guitars

18 living

A Distinguished Dwelling

1898 home meant a fresh start for Grandview newlyweds

21 on the table

21

Better than Brown Bag

A look at local school lunch menus

26 Around Tri-Village Snapshots from the community

28 The Greater Good(will)

Grandview art studio empowers those with disabilities

28

30 bookmarks

Union Savings Bank

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Find Tri-Village Magazine on Facebook and Twitter

On the Cover:

Julia Doran, senior at the Wellington School. Photo courtesy of Wellington

March/April 2016 • www.trivillagemagazine.com

• Conventional Financing Only; FHA, VA also available • Property, Loan Type, LTV, Subordinate Financing and Credit Scores may require additional fees • $500 + Recording and Courier fees apply to Purchase Loans

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community calendar

March-April 2016

Arts and Entertainment

March 3-6

March 26

April 23

Throughout Columbus, www. arnoldsportsfestival.com

10-11 a.m., Thompson Park, 4250 Woodbridge Rd., www.uaca.org

7-11 p.m., St. Agatha Monsignor Kennedy Center, 1860 Northam Rd., www.goldenbearrockfest.com

Arnold Sports Festival

March 3-30

Concourse Gallery Exhibit Series: Middle Schools Municipal Services Center, 3600 Tremont Rd., www.uaoh.net

March 7

Cory Henry

9 p.m., Woodlands Tavern, 1200 W. Third Ave., www.woodlandstavern.com

Easter Candy Hunt 2016

March 31

Tri-Village Chamber Partnership’s Celebration! … A New Beginning 5-9 p.m., The Ohio State University 4-H Center, www.grandviewchamber.org

April 6-28

Concourse Gallery Exhibit Series: High Schools

Municipal Services Center, 3600 Tremont Rd., www.uaoh.net

April 13

Volunteer UA Expo

10 a.m.-7 p.m., Upper Arlington Library Main Branch, 2800 Tremont Rd., www.uaoh.net

Golden Bear Rock Fest

April 29

Arbor Day Celebration

9 a.m., Hastings Middle School, 1850 Hastings Lane, www.uaoh.net

April 30-May 1

NARI’s Spring Home Improvement Showcase

10 a.m.-5 p.m., Saturday; noon-5 p.m., Sunday, Throughout Central Ohio, www.trustnari.org

To submit your event for next issue’s calendar, contact ssole@cityscene mediagroup.com

March 11

Tri-Village Lions Club Senior Prom

March 13

Tri-Village Lions Trivia Pub Quiz

2-5 p.m., Smokehouse Brewing Company, 1130 Dublin Rd., www.uaoh.net

March 24

The Ragbirds

9 p.m., Woodlands Tavern, 1200 W. Third Ave., www.woodlandstavern.com

6

Photos courtesy of Woodlands Tavern and Upper Arlington Civic Association

6-9 p.m., Upper Arlington High School, 1650 Ridgeview Rd., www.uaoh.net

March/April 2016 • www.trivillagemagazine.com


Events Calendar Proudly Presented by

Upper Arlington Public Library 2800 Tremont Rd., www.ualibrary.org

March 6

Downton Abbey Series Finale Party 6-8:30 p.m., main branch

March 12

Writing from a Small Publisher Perspective 2 p.m., main branch

columbus/osu

March 15

Take a Break from Stress with Adult Coloring 7 p.m., main branch

April 20

UAPL Book Circle Photos courtesy of the Upper Arlington Public Library

1:30-3 p.m., main branch

1685 W. First Ave., www.ghpl.org

March 3

Music in the Atrium: Cherry Chrome 7 p.m.

March 4

COSI Adventure Days 10:30 a.m.

April 1-30

Goodwill Art Show March/April 2016 • www.trivillagemagazine.com

April 5

Discover Cape Cod 7 p.m.

April 7

The Oberlin-Wellington Rescue of 1858 7 p.m.

www.grandviewyard.com

Grandview Heights Public Library

7


News & Information from Upper Arlington

insideUPPER ARLINGTON By Leah Kunnath

Living to Serve City hosts annual volunteer expo

Maureen Conley, community outreach associate at CASA of Franklin County, speaks with an Expo attendee.

Grandview and UA chambers merge On Feb. 1, the Grandview Area Chamber of Commerce and Upper Arlington Area Chamber of Commerce finalized their merger, creating the TriVillage Chamber Partnership. Michelle Wilson, who has served as executive director for the Grandview Chamber since 2009, will serve as the executive director. In January, more than 97 percent of voters from both chamber boards voted in favor of the merger. The new board of directors will consist of current members from both chambers. Jamie Gentry of the Grandview Chamber and Kevin Fix of the Upper Arlington Chamber will serve as the board’s co-chairmen. 8

Expo attendees can learn about various volunteer opportunities in Upper Arlington.

Last year, the expo introduced a “lunch and learn” session with exhibitors, in which they were invited to have a lunch break and share tips on how to further engage more volunteers to get involved with their organizations. The discussion centered on how social media could be used to bring more people to their organizations. This year, the expo is hoping to assemble a panel that will discuss how these groups could tap into local universities in order to gain more volunteers. The first expo was held in fall 2007. It has grown since then and now features more than 25 different volunteer organizations. All organizations at the expo function within Upper Arlington. This year, the expo includes the Upper Arlington Parks and Recreation Department, UA Civic Association, UA Women’s Club, HandsOn Central Ohio, Homeless Families Foundation, Northwest Kiwanis, UA Historical Society and Citizen Police Academy. Community Service Hours High school students with community service hours to fill can look for exhibitors with signs reading “Get it in 6,” an indicator that their volunteer organizations have work for high school students.

Pam Shields prepares her display for CareSource, a group that provides managed health care plans to un- and under-insured people in need.

Leah Kunnath is a contributing writer. Feedback welcome at ssole@cityscenemediagroup.com.

March/April 2016 • www.trivillagemagazine.com

Photos courtesy of the City of Upper Arlington

A

one-stop shop for information regarding volunteer opportunities is available for Upper Arlington residents at the ninth annual Volunteer UA Expo. The city’s largest showcase of various community volunteer organizations will be held 10 a.m.-7 p.m., April 13, at the Upper Arlington Library Main Branch, 2800 Tremont Rd. Megan Hoffman, community affairs coordinator for the city, says the expo gives residents the opportunity to meet with organizations of which they might not have been aware. “Essentially, it acts as a good refresher for both the active adults as well as high school students in Upper Arlington,” Hoffman says.


inside

News & Information from the Village of Marble Cliff

THE VILLAGE OF

MARBLE CLIFF

Listening to the Heart

Deacon Rob Joseph found meaning through music and faith By Bill Johannes, Marble Cliff Administrative Assistant

Photo courtesy of Rob Joseph

A

fter several people recommended I interview Marble Cliff resident Rob Joseph for this article, I met him at his home one December evening. Joseph, who might be best known for serving as deacon at Our Lady of Victory Catholic Church in Marble Cliff, was just as people described: warm, caring, humble, insightful Deacon Rob Joseph and easy to talk to. Born in Bethlehem, W.Va., Joseph moved to Pickerington with his family when he was 11. After graduating from Pickerington High School, he attended The Ohio State University, but found being a musician with an entrepreneurial spirit didn’t fit into the typical music media curriculum. “I knew I wanted to be in the music business, but that type of success is elusive and subjective. I had to find my place in the world,” Joseph said. So in 1984, Joseph joined the U.S. Air National Guard, and about the same time, “a light bulb went on,” he said. “I came to the realization that if I sought God’s will for my life, I’d always be happy.” Soon thereafter, Joseph met his wife, Krista, at church. They married in 1987. The couple moved to an apartment on Broadview Avenue, because Krista had grown up in Grandview Heights. “I think I fell in love with Grandview as much as I did Krista,” Joseph joked. The Josephs lived in Clintonville and Upper Arlington before moving to Marble March/April 2016 • www.trivillagemagazine.com

Cliff on Cambridge Boulevard in 2009, when their son, Max, was about to enter high school. “We’ve been happy ever since,” Joseph said. Grandview Heights City Schools were an ideal fit for Max, now 21 years old and a junior at Wittenberg University, and for Alexandra, 17, a junior at Grandview Heights High School. Joseph has always been a self-professed “gear head.” This passion, along with his experience in music and production, sparked a new career path in the early 1990s. Joseph started his own firm in 2000. MusicMax Inc., with offices on Hess Street (off King Avenue), continues to grow. The company is contracted as manufacturers’ representatives for 22 professional audio and lighting companies, and acts as their outsourced sales and marketing team. Clients include A/V contractors, retailers and production companies throughout the Midwest. “As a result, I spend a lot of time traveling and am blessed to call many iconic names within our industry – people I have long admired – my friends,” Joseph said. Krista joins her husband on some trips when her schedule allows her to step away from her work as director of religious education at Our Lady of Victory. “Hitting the sales numbers and making it all happen keeps the pressure on,” said Joseph. “I’m not complaining. We are very blessed and grateful for our successes and never take them for granted.”

Joseph’s faith vocation is also important to him. He studied at the Pontifical College Josephinum and was ordained a deacon in the Catholic Church in late 2008. “Being a deacon is not about what I do, but who I am,” Joseph said. “It’s hard to put into words, but this vocation speaks to the very core of my being. It’s a calling that permits me to assist at Mass and also preach about how I see God at work every day. Being a deacon allows me the great honor to be an ambassador of Christ to people during their best and worst times.” As clergy, he can marry, bury, baptize and preside at prayer services, but he doesn’t consecrate the host during Mass or hear confessions. In his spare time, Joseph still plays the guitar and drums, but not professionally, as he once did. He’s retired from the Reaganomics, a popular local band he started in 1996. He serves on the board of directors of the National Association of Music Merchants, the international trade association of the music products industry. Despite his busy life, Joseph manages to stay positive about his different duties. “I consider my responsibilities a privilege, not a burden,” he said. “It is not lost on Krista and I what a blessing it is to be in the Marble Cliff/Grandview area. There is simply no better place to live in central Ohio. It’s the area and life that we dreamed of.” Bill Johannes is the administrative assistant for the Village of Marble Cliff. Feedback welcome at ssole@ cityscenemediagroup.com.

9


inside

GRANDVIEW

By Jessica Williams

A Case for Creativity

www.grandviewheights.org 10

F

or Chris Hawker, founder of Trident Design, the realization that he had a knack for innovation came at a young age. At 17, while working at his own aquarium maintenance company, Hawker generated the idea for his first invention: a specialized filter for saltwater marine aquariums. He named the devices “trident” filters – after the three-pronged spear carried by Poseidon, Greek god of the sea – and the name stuck. “Trident also represents the three goals of the company: fun, impact and profit,” Hawker says. While the Grandview Heights-based company originally served as a way for Hawker to bring his own ideas to life, it

Photos courtesy of Trident Design

Grandview-based company helps inventors market products

Chris Hawker shows off two of Trident Design’s kitchen gadgets: the Onion Goggles and the Pitzo, a pizza cutter.

has evolved into a one-stop shop for inventors looking to bring their unique designs to market. Trident’s range of successful products begins with Hawker’s early aquatic offerings, such as the Kent Marine Pro-Scraper, which he developed the same year he graduated from college, and includes everything from guitar accessories to handy kitchen gadgets like Onion Goggles. His most successful product is the PowerSquid, a reverse power strip that has cords coming out of it instead of going into it. His favorite, though, is the Quickey, “the key that opens everything but doors,” as Hawker describes it. March/April 2016 • www.trivillagemagazine.com


HEIGHTS

News & Information from the City of Grandview Heights

“Our goal is to make dreams a reality. The vision is to be a source of innovation in the world for our employees and for our clients.”

Generating more than $220,000 in crowd-funding, far surpassing its original goal of $4,000, the Quickey proved to be a product that many people could see themselves using daily. The small, key-like device serves as a bottle opener, serrated edge, file and screwdriver, among other things. Trident brings ideas like these through every step of production, from design to engineering, and from crowdfunding to marketing and licensing. Now based in Grandview on Burrell Avenue, Trident moved from its location in the Short North a little over two years ago. “We were looking for someplace more affordable, so we cast our nets wide and considered a lot of places.

Grandview is a great mix of affordability and the downtown feel,” says Hawker, who has previously lived in Grandview himself. For Hawker, the perks of being located in Grandview include having a park and coffee shops nearby. He says he favors the latte from Luck Bros’ Coffee House. “It’s a great community. Grandview offers a good pace of life for the employees. A few employees have actually made the move to Grandview since we’ve been here because they really enjoy it,” Hawker says. While the company has set its roots in Grandview and serves many Columbus-based innovators who come to Trident with bright ideas, its clientele is truly global.

March/April 2016 • www.trivillagemagazine.com

Chris Hawker holds the PowerSquid, a reverse power strip.

“We have clients all across the country, across the world – in Texas, and in Japan,” Hawker says. “Our goal is to make dreams a reality. The vision is to be a source of innovation in the world for our employees and for our clients.” Mike Rudd, Trident Design’s vice president of sales, calls Trident an incredible place. “It lets us and all of our clients invent and own our futures,” Rudd says. Jessica Williams is a contributing writer. Feedback welcome at hbealer@ cityscenecolumbus.com.

11


faces

By Hannah Bealer

Photos courtesy of Jamie Massa

Hitting the Right Note UA voice and piano teacher’s passion for music spans decades

A group of Jamie Massa’s students perform a number from the musical Pippin at the McConnell Arts Center.

Jamie Massa, the daughter of a steelworker and a Cub Scout leader, grew up in Shadyside; a tiny village along the Ohio River where the Ohio and West Virginia state borders meet. Because the steelworkers were frequently on strike, her family didn’t always have money coming in. But Massa didn’t let that hinder her love for music. “I built a keyboard from a cardboard box,” says Massa, who has lived in Upper Arlington for the past 18 years. She drew the keyboard keys and would practice “playing” different notes. Her father saw just how deeply his daughter loved music and eventually bought her a small piano – which Massa still owns. “Everyone has their passion, and mine has always been music,” Massa says. “Ever since kindergarten, when the teacher asked for volunteers (for a music-related activity), I was always right there, the first one.” Massa started taking piano lessons in third grade. In fourth grade, she started playing clarinet. By sixth grade, Massa says, she could “sight read anything.” In the music world, sight reading is playing or performing a piece the musician has never seen before. Word got around to Shadyside’s high school, and soon Massa became the accompanist for the school choirs, musicals and competitions on the piano. “My nickname was ‘Fingers Massa,’” she says.

During her sophomore year of high school, Massa picked up a guitar and discovered she loved singing, too. “I started playing popular music – like Simon & Garfunkel – and I’d be playing in the pit orchestra, but I also wanted to be on the stage.” Massa went on to study piano and music education at St. Mary’s College in Indiana, and eventually completed an assistantship at the University of Miami in Florida. She was placed in the university’s lead choir. “Everyone had perfect pitch but me,” Massa recalls. Throughout her college years, Massa toured Europe and performed at Washington, D.C.’s famed Kennedy Center; her choir even sang for the Pope. Her choir performed a mix of classics and contemporary pieces, and sometimes incorporated choreography. “I would often play piano and sing – like Carole King,” Massa says. “It helped prepare me to be a better conductor, but also realize there was more I could teach.” Massa’s first job was in Boston, where she was music director at Newton Country Day School. As a self-described “small-town girl,” Massa was excited to experience a big city. She directed the school’s musicals and toured the choirs around the east coast. She participated in regional theater herself. Eventually, Boston’s cost of living sent her back to Ohio – this time to Columbus, where she taught music at Yorktown Middle

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Two of Massa’s students practice performing in front of each other.

School. When Massa found herself drained at the end of each day, she discovered she was an introvert, and teaching large groups of students was exhausting for her. Massa didn’t want to give up music, though. Instead, she decided to get her master’s degree in vocal pedagogy at The Ohio State University, which helped her learn how to teach others how to sing. Her private vocal and piano lessons business, Massa Music Studios, celebrated 20 years in January. She teaches second grade through adulthood, her oldest student being 75 years old. “It’s been a blast,” says Massa, who previously lived in Grandview Heights for about four years. “I’ve been blessed.” March/April 2016 • www.trivillagemagazine.com


First Among the Finest Start each day with endless options. At First Community Village, you’ll find the perfect setting for your carefree senior lifestyle on our beautifully landscaped, 30-acre campus in the heart of Columbus. Come home to a secure, spacious residence with all the services, companionship and entertainment you deserve. Schedule a visit or call to speak with one of our retirement counselors at Jamie Massa, left, with her husband, Stuart Hobbs, and daughter, Sarah Hobbs

Her students have regular recitals where they perform a variety of pieces, but Massa says one of her biggest strengths is helping students prepare audition materials for school musicals, and readying high school students for performing on the college level. Meanwhile, Massa enjoys performing in her spare time. One of her favorite show tunes to perform is “Can’t Help Lovin’ Dat Man” from Show Boat. Massa and her husband also visit New York City about twice a year to see the latest Broadway shows. “The best teachers are also still performing and improving their technique,” Massa says. For students apprehensive about starting music lessons, Massa says, it all comes down to finding a good teacher. “You need someone who can encourage you to be positive, but can still gently push you,” Massa says. “You need someone who can teach you sight reading, and someone who can give you the opportunity to perform.” Massa doesn’t think her career as a voice and piano teacher happened by chance. Instead, she says her path opened up to her when she was in search of “what was best” for her. “Music feeds me spiritually, you could say,” Massa says.

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Hannah Bealer is an editor. Feedback welcome at hbealer@cityscenecolumbus.com. March/April 2016 • www.trivillagemagazine.com

13


Story by William Kosileski

Rock ‘n’ Roll Rental

Photo courtesy of Kyle Tucker

in focus

Learn at the Library

Library program allows members to rent out guitars

T

he guitar is one of the most recognized and popular musical instruments in the world, though it might not be the most accessible in terms of price. Members of the Grandview Heights Public Library are able to circumvent purchasing via its guitar rental program, which began in August. Four six-string Yamaha acoustic guitars are available to be checked out the same way one checks out a book or DVD – with a library card. “Music is collaborative, creative, educational and fun,” says Canaan Faulkner, public relations manager for the library. “It is what the library likes to do.” When a guitar is checked out, it comes with a hard shell case, guitar picks, instructional materials and starter materials. Anyone can use the guitars, but only cardholders 18 years old and older can check them out. No experience is needed to rent one, as the instructional materials will help beginners become familiar with the guitar, Faulkner says. 14

“If you never played a guitar, the instructions will teach you how to hold the guitar, how to hold a pick and more,” Faulkner says. “It provides very basic information just to get you started.” Members have a 28-day limit of use until the guitar needs to be returned or renewed. If no one else is waiting on the guitar, it can be renewed up to three times. Members with overdue guitars will be charged a daily fine of $1.25. The lending program was inspired by Licking County Library’s guitar and ukulele lending program, Faulkner says, adding the library knew it would have a broad appeal. “It supports education and arts and promotes hands-on, collaborative learning for any age,” Faulkner says. “Both the library and the Education Foundation loved the idea of bringing it to this community. It’s a perfect fit.” The program was also possible thanks to help from the Grandview Heights/Marble Cliff Education Founda-

At 7 p.m. on May 10, Kyle Tucker (above), a guitar instructor from Musicologie, will visit the library to teach members guitar basics. tion and the Guitar House Workshop. The Education Foundation, which funds projects for schools and the community, awarded $2,000 to the library. “We are thrilled with the program’s success, and we love working with the Education Foundation. It’s a win across the board,” Faulkner says. The Guitar House Workshop – located in Clinton Township, near Grandview – helped the library select the guitars and also provides routine maintenance. In addition to guitars, the library offers rentals of vinyl records, slide and negative scanners, and preloaded e-readers, and laptops are available for lab use. “These are other offerings that are outside the scope of what you would expect from a library,” Faulkner says. Proof of the program’s popularity? The guitars are almost always checked out. While there are no plans to add other instruments for patrons to check out, March/April 2016 • www.trivillagemagazine.com


Photo courtesy of Grandview Heights Public Library

Faulkner says it’s possible the library will add more Yamaha guitars to cater to demand. “We have heard nothing but positive things about the program,” says Faulkner. “It has been very popular among our members. Having guitars to check out is awesome.” Kyle Tucker, a guitar instructor with Musicologie who will visit the library in May to teach guitar basics, says the lending program is a good solution for those who want to try out the guitar before purchasing it. “It opens up music to people for whom the barrier to entry has been too high,” Tucker says. “It can be very pricey to start playing an instrument, and the library does a lot to make learning more accessible for everyone.” While the best approach to learning an instrument is through one-on-one instruction, a large quantity of information exists at the library or online for learning how to play, Tucker says. He suggests avoiding “how-to” instructional videos though, since it’s difficult to verify whether content creators are qualified. “A video like that could set a student back more than help them,” Tucker says. “Published works are more likely to have correct and meaningful information.” Most importantly, guitar students should listen to music. “The library is a great resource for finding new music and exploring generations of different guitar players and styles,” Tucker says. Guitar students using lending programs can make the most of limited access to an instrument. Teachers aware of time constraints can craft lesson plans accordingly. March/April 2016 • www.trivillagemagazine.com

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“Keep listening to music, go to shows and join a community of musicians. Find other ways to practice music, such as singing, studying theory and working on ear training or rhythmic exercises.” “I have taught students over summer break, and I have done my best to provide them with enough information and content to last them longer than our sessions,” Tucker says. Students can also pursue alternative instrument donation programs, such as Music Loves Ohio, Tucker says. Musicologie also offers monthly group classes with instruments provided. During times that they don’t have instruments, students can also study music theory via websites such as www.musictheory.net. “Keep listening to music, go to shows and join a community of musicians,” Tucker says. “Find other ways to practice music, such as singing, studying theory and working on ear training or rhythmic exercises.” William Kosileski is a contributing writer. Additional reporting by Hannah Bealer and Sarah Sole. Feedback welcome at hbealer@cityscenecolumbus.com.

RELATED READS www.trivillagemagazine.com • UAPL’s concert series • UA’s Camp Rock March/April 2016 • www.trivillagemagazine.com


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living

Story and photos by Sarah Sole

A Distinguished Dwelling 1898 home meant a fresh start for Grandview newlyweds NARI of Central Ohio’s 2016 Spring Home Improvement Showcase will be held 10 a.m.-5 p.m. April 30 and noon-5 p.m. May 1. Tickets are $10 for the full tour and $3 for a single site. To purchase tickets, visit www.trustnari.org. 18

D

uring the first night in their newlypurchased home, David and Joanie Johnson doubted their investment. Awoken by rain, they discovered three inches of water in their carpeted basement. But once the water was drained and the problem identified, the recently married couple began in earnest to start making the 1898 home on Goodale Street their own. Joanie had loved the house immediately. “I just walked in the front door, and I had to have it,” she says. As an interior designer, Joanie appreciated that the house was a clean slate. The previous owner, Bob Morrison, had undertaken a major renovation, but he hadn’t painted. The walls were left white. Since purchasing the home in 1986, David and Joanie have tackled renovations

and “freshenings” of various sizes, including a garage rebuild, a deck renovation and some serious landscaping. But much of the large-scale work had already been completed by Morrison, who embarked on a seven-year restoration project. Though Morrison essentially took the home “down to the stone,” David says, he kept many of the home’s original pieces. The hardwood floors are original, and the first and second floors feature 10-foot-high ceilings. The Johnsons are only the fourth owners of the home in more than 100 years. The first owners were the Walcutts, who built the house to use as their summer residence, David says. The home sat on 2,000 acres of farmland that stretched to the river. A garage wasn’t added until the 1930s. March/April 2016 • www.trivillagemagazine.com


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The Johnsons didn’t end up replacing that garage until around 2010. Instead, the first thing the newlyweds did in the late 1980s was landscape. They planted trees and shrubs and added fencing, paver blocks and a patio. The couple worked with Nicholson Builders to update the back porch. Though Morrison had renovated it, the Johnsons disliked the side entrance. The stair entrance was changed, and the wood was replaced. Nicholson used Ipe, Honduran mahogany, which David says has the same hardness factor and fire retardant factor of poured concrete. “It’s essentially indestructible,” he says. Other outdoor improvements included updating the front porch and the garage. For the latter, David says he March/April 2016 • www.trivillagemagazine.com

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wanted the rebuild to be done in a way that matched the home’s old architecture. Nicholson also completed the garage, replacing a lean-to garage with a coated fabric roof. The new garage is the same size as the old one, but they moved it away from the home, connecting it with a mudroom that goes into the raised basement. On the inside, the Johnson home – which includes four bedrooms and three and a half baths – has gone through various changes over the years; Joanie has updated bedrooms, bathrooms and the kitchen. About 15 or 20 years ago they renovated their basement, where the laundry room and Joanie’s home office are located. “When you buy an old house, you’re making a commitment,” David says. Sarah Sole is an editor. Feedback welcome at ssole@ cityscenemediagroup.com.

RELATED READS www.trivillagemagazine.com • Considerations for a home’s exterior design • What explains a color’s appeal? • Popular hues for interior painting 20

March/April 2016 • www.trivillagemagazine.com


on the table

Story by Sarah Sole

Better than Brown Bag A look at local school lunch menus

A

s cafeteria lunches go, you can’t get much better than breakfast. That’s the case at Grandview Heights City Schools and at Upper Arlington City School’s Windermere Elementary School.

March/April 2016 • www.trivillagemagazine.com

21


Photos courtesy of the Wellington School

At Grandview, students aren’t deterred by the whole grain waffles, toast sticks or pancakes. Director of Food Services Carol Hamilton credits the district’s manufacturers for working hard to make their products taste good while adhering to federal nutrition guidelines. Hamilton, who has worked for the district for 13 years, says the schools have provided breakfast-themed lunches for as long as she’s worked there.

Photo by Sarah Sole

Sophomore Libby White at the Wellington School cafeteria

Upper Arlington Schools cook Francie Blake 22

“When you give them breakfast for lunch, it’s the biggest seller there is,” she says. Along with breakfast foods, Hamilton includes chicken poppers and nuggets and pizza as other popular menu items. While macaroni and cheese, tacos and Bosco sticks (cheesefilled breadsticks served with marinara sauce) are popular at Windermere, breakfast for lunch reigns supreme. Sausage, hash browns and fruit are served with French toast or pancakes. Cook Francie Blake, who has worked for Upper Arlington schools for 11 years, says you can tell when a popular menu item is being served. “The (students are) lined all the way down the hall,” Blake says. Third-grader Christian Stehle’s favorite lunches are hamburgers, pizza and Bosco sticks, but he’s not shy about picking a favorite. “I gotta say, it’s the school pizza,” Stehle says. Fourth-grader Charlie Thackeray, meanwhile, can’t choose between his top three: macaroni and cheese, tacos and ravioli. At the Wellington School, students had a chance to communicate their favorite lunches through a survey that was distributed to grades 5-12. The online survey, distributed in November, asked students to evaluate 27 main dishes. Two of their most popular dishes? A taco/burrito bar and a chicken, apple and cranberry pecan salad. March/April 2016 • www.trivillagemagazine.com


Engineering imaginations. Oliver | Class of ’25

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Eighth-grader Ali Winter says salad is her favorite lunch. “I love the different textures and flavors in the salad – the crunchy pecans, the creamy cheese, the sweet apples and the tart cranberries,” she says. While students have been surveyed about the dining room in previous years, this was the first time students had a chance to provide feedback specifically about meals, says Director of Marketing Caroline Haskett. Last spring, parents were also surveyed about the lunch experience at Wellington. With results from the November student survey, Wellington dropped its three most unpopular items – ham, herb pork loin and pot roast – and replaced them with teriyaki chicken, cheese ravioli and

Wellington students Kendhyl Wilder and Olivia Vegas eat lunch.

Chicken Apple Cranberry Pecan Salad

Honey Roasted Pecans Serves 40/2 oz. servings

Apple Cider Vinegar and Honey Dressing Serves 40/1 oz. servings

Chicken Cranberry Apple Pecan Salad Serves 1

1 cup honey 2 Tbsp. ground cinnamon 5 pounds pecans

3 cups olive oil 1 cup apple cider vinegar 1 cup honey

5 oz. chopped romaine lettuce 1 oz. baked chicken breast, sliced into strips 1 Tbsp. dried cranberries 1/8 cup chopped apples (Wellington uses Gala and Golden Delicious) ½ oz. bacon pieces ½ Tbsp. blue cheese crumbles 2 oz. honey roasted pecans 1 oz. apple cider vinegar and honey dressing

Mix the pecans and honey. Sprinkle with ground cinnamon and bake 5-7 minutes at 350 degrees.

24

March/April 2016 • www.trivillagemagazine.com


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fettuccine alfredo. The ravioli and alfredo are meatless to reflect feedback from the parent survey. Rhonda Kimsey, director of dining services for Aladdin Food Management Services, says all the students enjoy seeing their food made fresh to order. Monthly menu items include wraps, specialty salads, a build-yourown submarine sandwich and a baked potato bar. “For us, there is no greater reward than a student giving a thumbs-up or a high five at the end of the lunch period,” Kimsey says. Sarah Sole is an editor. Feedback welcome at ssole@cityscenemediagroup.com.

RELATED READS www.trivillagemagazine.com • Corporate cafeterias • Biology teacher’s fast food experiment March/April 2016 • www.trivillagemagazine.com

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Around Tri-Village Want your snapshots to appear in print? Send your highresolution photos to hbealer@cityscenecolumbus.com along with your name and a caption! Upper Arlington Arts Manager Lynette Santoro-Au and Focus Group members Michael Johnson and Susan Scharenberg install photos for the Concourse Gallery’s Through the Lens exhibition in January. The show featured work by members of Focus Group, a club of amateur and professional photographers founded in 1988.

The Grandview Area Chamber of Commerce’s annual meeting at Four String Brewing Co., at which members voted to merge with the Upper Arlington Chamber of Commerce

Vocal Spotlight sings for the UA Chamber holiday luncheon at Scioto Country Club in December.

Holiday decor at the Kingsdale MCL Cafeteria for the Northwest Area Realty Association’s holiday breakfast 26

March/April 2016 • www.trivillagemagazine.com


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27


The Greater Good(will) Grandview art studio empowers those with disabilities By Bob Valasek

T

he best neighborhoods and towns are filled with hidden treasures and well-kept secrets that their residents know and love. One such gem in the Tri-Village area is the Goodwill Columbus Art Studio and Gallery. Located in Grandview Heights, the gallery opened in 2005 and has been in its current location, following a major renovation to the entire Goodwill building, since 2007. “They gave us the front window and really highlighted us, which was really exciting,” says Deborah Griffing, studio manager. Griffing has been part of the operation since it began. The studio is a space for people with disabilities or other barriers to become professional artists, says Media Relations Manager Jane Carroll. “It’s also a portal for the public to come in and experience their art and be a part of that, and know they’re supporting something completely amazing,” Carroll says. All proceeds from the art shows go back into the program. The artists who create in the studio typically find their way there through Goodwill day programs such as young adult services, the Sage Senior Services program, or work and community services.

Deborah Griffing

Minnie Casey and some of her artwork (top) 28

While some of the artists have experimented with art before, others are trying their hand at it for the first time. Each artist receives from the staff an individualized program that may include anything from simple encouragement to adaptive equipment, such as a head-pointer that was created for an artist without use of his hands. The artists take it from there, creating art on paper, canvas, scarves and even lampshades. “One of the things that I think is really rewarding about this is watching somebody find their voice,” says Kate Sturman Gorman, a resident artist staff member. The artists have been able to parlay their creativity into income. In 2015, the artists completed 337 works of art for sale and sold 251 of them for $18,444. Of that total, $9,198 went directly to the artists themselves. These numbers are even more impressive when one realizes that the average price per piece is less than $75. March/April 2016 • www.trivillagemagazine.com


their abilities. Griffing also hopes the Tri-Village area can help turn the studio into a mainstay of the central Ohio art scene. “The misconception is that this is a population that takes only,” she says. “This is a population that gives so much; they just need to be more discovered.” John Leslie and Janette Casey

Kathleen Stebbins

Pieces have also been shown at The Ohio State University Urban Arts Space and the Columbus Museum of Art. Next year, the gallery has shows planned at the Upper Arlington Concourse Gallery and Art Access Gallery in Bexley. The studio gets many of its supplies in the form of donations from Blick Art Materials and the Lamp Shade. Blick has donated flat files, a matte cutter, paper, paint and brushes, and it also allows the studio to purchase supplies at a discounted rate. The Lamp Shade not only donates the lampshades that the artists use, but they also sells the finished works of art in their store, returning all of the money to the studio. The Goodwill gallery’s goals are to continue to grow and allow for more artist participation, which will hopefully lead to greater sales, more prominent art shows and a new appreciation for the artists and

RELATED READS www.trivillagemagazine.com • Souper Heroes gives meals to those in need • PBJ Connections uses horses to heal • Therapy dogs assist with learning March/April 2016 • www.trivillagemagazine.com

A look at some of the artists John Leslie says he didn’t know he was going to be an artist until he started creating in the studio a few years ago. Now, he plans to stay until he retires. His art has been on display at the Columbus Museum of Art, but his favorite part about the gallery and studio is getting to know everyone there. Kathleen Stebbins likes coming to the studio, especially to draw, because she finds it relaxing and soothing. She’s had some notable success, too. “I made a scarf; it was silk with flowers, and I sold it,” she says. “I just love coming here.” While Janette Casey just started coming to the studio a few weeks ago, she knows it has had in impact on her life already. “I used to be a person who stayed indoors and didn’t bother anybody, but I wanted to do something, and finally they said I could do this, and I said, ‘Yes, I love drawing.’” Her main focus so far has been drawing realistic depictions of animals. “I can show what my talent is,” she says. Minnie Casey (no relation to Janette) found her way back to art through the studio. “I used to always draw, but my friend told me about the art studio, and I thought I’d give it a shot,” she says. During the past year, Minnie has found that drawing, especially cats and churches, makes her feel relaxed. Bob Valasek is a contributing writer. Feedback welcome at ssole@ cityscenemediagroup.com.

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bookmarks Youth

For more book suggestions, including adult selections, visit us online at www.trivillagemagazine.com

Compiled by the Upper Arlington Public Library, 2800 Tremont Rd., www.ualibrary.org

Freedom’s School By Lesa Cline-Ransome

Daniel Goes to School Fuzzy Mud By Becky Friedman By Louis Sachar

Class Dismissed By Allan Woodrow

When Lizzie’s parents are granted their freedom from slavery, Mama says it’s time for Lizzie and her brother, Paul, to go to a real school – a new one, built just for them. Lizzie can’t wait. The scraps of learning she has picked up here and there have made her hungry for more. (Grades 2-5)

Daniel Tiger is excited to go to school, but he’s not happy that his dad can’t stay at school with him. Daniel learns that “grownups come back,” and has lots of fun with his teacher and classmates. (Preschool)

When their long-suffering teacher quits, the mischievous students of Class 507 decide not to tell anyone and embark on a long holiday that is challenged by infighting, rivalries and unwanted fashion advice. (Grades 3-5)

Adults

Attending an elite school where enterprising students are challenged to solve a variety of clues and puzzles using computer programming, Hopper and her friend Eni resolve to crack the school founder’s most elusive mystery together. (Grades 4-8)

Compiled by the Upper Arlington Public Library, 2800 Tremont Rd., www.ualibrary.org

Tenacity By J.S. Law Lt. Danielle “Dan” Lewis is the Royal Navy’s most tenacious investigator, but when she’s assigned to investigate the suicide of a submariner, she finds herself deep in hostile territory. At sea in a nuclear submarine led by a power-mad captain, with a killer hiding among the hostile crew, she’ll have her hands full just keeping herself alive. Tense, dark and authentic, this debut novel by a British submariner will have you turning pages long past your bedtime. 30

Tamaya and Marshall have been walking to and from Woodridge Academy since elementary school. But their routine is disrupted when bully Chad challenges Marshall to a fight. To avoid the conflict, they take a shortcut home through the offlimits woods. They get lost and find trouble – bigger trouble than anyone could ever have imagined. (Grades 5-8)

Secret Coders By Gene Luen Yang and Mike Holmes

This is Your Life, Harriet Chance! By Jonathan Evison

Written in My Own Heart’s Blood By Diana Gabaldon

Jonathan Evison uses his character, Harriet Chance, to create a bittersweet tale of a woman faced with her own mortality, and coming to terms with her own choices and decisions. Evison uses flashbacks to show why and how Harriet, at 78 years old, ends up on an Alaskan cruise.

Followers of the Outlander series can breathe a sigh of relief: Book No. 8 is available and well worth the five-year wait. Claire (Randall) and Jamie Fraser continue their struggle to survive during the Revolutionary War while daughter Brianna and her family have their own problems to deal with in 20th century Scotland. Even at 800-plus pages, this book, like Gabaldon’s others, is a delicious read that ends too soon.

The Boys in the Boat By Daniel James Brown

Little Victories: Perfect Rules for Imperfect Living The Boys in the Boat is a fascinat- By Jason Gay ing adventure of eight University of Washington students coming We are a society that certainly together in the ultimate team does not lack for self-help books, sport: rowing. With the Great which makes this guide for Depression serving as the back- people who loathe life guides a drop, the story of this amateur breath of fresh air. Gay, a sports team is truly inspirational. Many columnist for the Wall Street of these men overcame countless Journal, has put together practistruggles to earn the right to row cal and poignant anecdotes that on the world’s biggest stage, the will have you laughing out loud. 1936 Olympics.

March/April 2016 • www.trivillagemagazine.com


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