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The losT arT of lisTening Sound artist Brian Harnetty wants to transform the future of Appalachian Ohio’s forests through radical acts of listening
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ColumbusAlive.com | Thursday, June 20, 2019
aLiVe wins 19 awards, goes digitaL onLY
Contents 4
The List: Ranking the best cursers
6
Alive staff
Community 8
COVER: The lost art of listening
12 Feature: O-Gee dance party celebrates 10 years 14 Crew View: A sendoff for Sigi 14 The Other Columbus: What is culture? 16 Reply All
We have some news about Columbus Alive: Columbus Alive recently won 19 awards at the Press Club of Cleveland journalism contest, including Best Public Service and Best Arts & Entertainment. That brand of relevant journalism will continue to grow online at columbusalive.com, which has become a popular vehicle for reading Alive’s unique take on community issues and entertainment options in Central Ohio. For instance, 89 percent of Alive readers visit columbusalive.com during a month and activity in key metrics at columbusalive.com have increased by 15 to 32 percent this year.
And because the audience for Columbus Alive is moving online, we will shift to digital-only next month. The last print issue will be July 3. Alive’s parent company, Dispatch Media Group, will devote digital resources to create a more robust online presence to significantly increase audience. For instance, Alive’s weekly e-newsletter will convert to at least five times a week. In addition, we are exploring other avenues to build upon the trusted Alive brand to engage with its loyal followers. Thanks for reading the print version of Columbus Alive and thanks in advance for continuing to read our award-winning journalism at columbusalive.com.
16 Things We Love: Picks from Myra Power Photo BY Chris CaseLLa
musiC 18 Feature: Courtney Barnett 20 Preview: Potty Mouth 21 Preview: Operators 22 Locals: Brat Curse 23 Previews: Outlaw Fest, Blink-182 & Lil Wayne, Juliana Hatfield
82 things to do this week PAGe 36
Arts 24 Feature: Streetlight Guild 26 Preview: The Devil’s Mirage 27 Previews: Breaststrokes Columbus, Lee A. Paul, Actors’ Theatre’s Little Women 28 Movie review: Toy Story 4
32 Behind Bars: Paddy Mac’s Pub 34 On Tap: Old Dog Alehouse & Brewery 34 Food News
on the Cover: Sound artist Brian Harnetty wants to transform the future of Appalachian Ohio’s forests through radical actsof listening. photo by Julian Foglietti
Brat Curse
PAGe 22
ColumbusAlive.com | Thursday, June 20, 2019
eAt & Drink 30 Feature: Vick’s Gourmet Pizzeria
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Photo by doug hyun
Ian McShane
Ranking the best cuRseRs by andy downing
ColumbusAlive.com | Thursday, June 20, 2019
With Brat Curse set to release its excellent self-titled album (read Andy’s interview with the local band on page 22), we thought we’d take time to rank the best cursers. Giddy-up, shitheads.
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Unranked: Bob Saget Oh, you were on a cheesy family sitcom but your standup is actually filthy. I’m so amused. 9. John McClane Bruce Willis delivers one of the classic film curses, which is even better in the cleaned-up-for-TV edit I recall from my high school years: “Yippee ki yay, melon farmer.” That’s not a slur. That’s… that’s someone’s job.
8. Bill O’Reilly Just Google, “We’ll do it live.”
7. The cast of “Veep” It’s tough to single out one person when the entire cast has a way of turning cuss-laden putdowns into high art. That said, I’ll give a shout-out to Dan Bakkedahl, who, as Rep. Roger Furlong, slings muck from the cesspool as well as anyone in TV history. 6. Jack Rebney Rebney is the “star” of “Winnebago Man,” a 2009 documentary that looks into the internet phenomenon created by the decades-old outtakes from a Winnebago sales video in which an increasingly agitated Rebney repeatedly unleashes an expletiveladen torrent of fury that led some to label him “The Angriest Man in the World.”
5. Victoria Fierce Fierce proved that Twitter’s abuse algorithm has its… let’s call them flaws. After the Trump administration rolled back transgender protections, the developer Tweet-quoted Vice President Pence, adding a few choice words and finding her account limited for 12 hours. I’m betting somebody told Mother. 4. CeeLo Green Anyone can cuss, but few make you want to belt it out alongside them as soulfully as the Atlanta singer.
3. George Carlin The legendary standup’s most famous bit was informed by his notoriously curdled tongue: “Seven Words You Can Never Say on Television” (most of which get said with a degree of regularity these days).
2. Samuel L. Jackson Jackson is so closely associated with “motherfucker” that scenes in “Snakes on a Plane” were even re-shot to work his delivery of the word into the film’s catchphrase: “I have had it with these motherfucking snakes on this motherfucking plane!”
1. Al Swearengen Ian McShane makes cursing sound downright Shakespearean starring as the aptly named Swearengen on the HBO series “Deadwood,” which recently concluded — years after its cancelation — with a long-in-the-works movie. Swearengen stands not only as the best curser of all-time, but also as the greatest character ever portrayed on television. (Also, feel free to @ me about this.)
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ColumbusAlive.com | Thursday, June 20, 2019
Keep up to date on healthcare, health policy, and health politics in Ohio with host Dan Skinner.
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o-gee turns 10 PAGE 12
crew view: a sendoff for sigi PAGE 14
The losT arT of lisTening By Joel oliphint photos By Julian Foglietti
ColumbusAlive.com | Thursday, June 20, 2019
photo credit
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A Forest Listening Room at Robinson’s Cave in Wayne National Forest in May
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mines, um, do you know how many people died? Um, do you know anybody that was in the mines? Can you tell me three people? Can you name them?” Toward the end of the recording, one interview snippet gets at the heart of why Harnetty has gathered these people, most of them strangers to each other, on a weekend morning to sit in silence together in the woods — what Harnetty calls a “Forest Listening Room.” “When you look at public land, it’s no secret that people are pretty divided today,” a man’s voice says through the speakers. “But this is something that both sides of the political spectrum agree on. This is something that everyone can use, and it’s good for everybody. And so I feel like it’s something that can unite so many different factions that otherwise may not agree.” Hydraulic fracturing, aka fracking, is a constant threat to Wayne National Forest; since 2016, the Bureau of Land Management has reportedly auctioned off more than 2,300 acres of Ohio’s only national forest to oil and gas companies. Nearby, Oxford Mining Company has submitted a permit to mine more than 500 acres of Perry State Forest, public land that has already been strip-mined. The legacy of extraction weighs heavily on this region. For decades coal brought jobs to Southeast Ohio, but most of those jobs have disappeared. The mining also changed the character and quality of the forest, and those woods mean something to everyone in the region, whether they use public lands for hunting, fishing and riding ATVs or for hiking and camping. In response to these divisive issues, for the past year, Harnetty has invited people from the Little Cities of Black Diamonds — from traditional environmentalists to lifelong drillers — to take part in a radical act of listening in hopes of finding literal common ground via their shared love of the land. The forest itself is the mediator. Maybe, Harnetty argues, if we listen to the forest together, we can alter its future.
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changer for me,” Harnetty said of the collection that critic Greil Marcus described as “Old, Weird America.” “When I heard the Harry Smith anthology, I realized what I was missing, which was the texture of the grain of the recordings. That information was getting stripped away by just dealing with the notes.” In 2006, Harnetty’s interest in archival music led him to the Berea College Appalachian Sound Archives in Kentucky. Weaving together his own instrumentation with field recordings and old radio broadcasts, he released two albums using material from Berea: 2007’s American Winter and 2009’s Silent City, which also incorporated vocals from Will Oldham, aka Bonnie “Prince” Billy. (He later released a third Berea-born album, Rawhead & Bloodybones, in 2015.) By 2010, Harnetty wanted to take what he’d learned and apply it to Ohio. But he was cautious. He didn’t want to strip-mine Appalachian culture. “I had all these ethical questions about sound archives and how to use them, and so over the past 15 years I’ve been trying to find ways to get closer to the people that are being recorded,” he said. “It’s essentially an ethnographic project — sonic ethnography — where you’re just deeply hanging out with a group of people over a long period of time. But I’m taking that out of the academic world and trying to make it an art project.”
Brian Harnetty
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H
arnetty, 46, has roots in the Southeast Ohio towns of Shawnee and Junction City, but he doesn’t identify as Appalachian. He’s from Columbus, and a 1995 graduate of Ohio State University. Armed with a music degree in theory and composition, Harnetty studied with composer Michael Finnissy at the Royal Academy of Music in London. Finnissy was known for sampling notated music, but in the classical music tradition. “He was pulling from folk musics from all around the world and then reworking them into his compositions,” Harnetty said. “But the way he did it didn’t sound quite right to me.” Then Harnetty heard Harry Smith’s Anthology of American Folk Music, a highly influential 1952 compilation of folk, country and blues songs originally recorded between 1927 and 1932 and reissued by Smithsonian Folkways on CD in 1997. “That was a game
ColumbusAlive.com | Thursday, June 20, 2019
so we’ll just listen for a few minutes.” Brian Harnetty sits in a metal folding chair in a clearing at the base of Robinson’s Cave in Wayne National Forest, which covers nearly a quarter-million acres in the Appalachian foothills of Southeast Ohio. About 20 others join Harnetty, seated in a circle on a warm, humid Saturday morning in May, their chairs slowly puncturing the soft ground. For more than 10 minutes, no one says a word. It takes a bit to settle into the quiet, to live in it comfortably, but soon the vibe becomes meditative. It feels like a ritual. Some people bow their heads. Some fold their hands and close their eyes. Others scan the woods that surround the clearing. A sycamore partially shades the circle of listeners, dappling sunlight into the middle of the ring. As the wind blows, swaying branches and quivering leaves create a kind of woodwind symphony. Someone’s stomach growls. A dog barks; it sounds enormous and menacing. The trill of a red-bellied woodpecker dominates an improvisational chorus of birdsongs. At times, motorcycle engines temporarily take over as they cruise along Main Street in New Straitsville, a town known for its Moonshine Festival that sits just below the clearing. Ever-present in the background is the sound of water falling over the top of Robinson’s Cave, a recessed outcropping of rock that once served as a secret meeting place for labor groups in the late 1800s. The meetings eventually led to the formation of the United Mine Workers, a historic labor union that represents coal miners. “It has really interesting acoustic qualities,” Harnetty told the group beforehand, “and in fact the miners took advantage of that and were able to meet and talk quietly without being overheard. … It’s also a place of rebellion, where supposedly another group of miners met later to conspire to set the mines on fire out near New Straitsville.” After the time of silence, Harnetty, a musician, plays a recording through two Bluetooth speakers. It begins with a one-note drone that sounds almost like feedback, then builds to include more instruments — bass clarinet, vibraphone, piano, strings. The free-flowing, sometimes haunting music is intercut with archival field recordings and excerpts of interviews taped more recently by Harnetty. Most tracks feature people from the historic coal-mining towns in Southeast Ohio known as the Little Cities of Black Diamonds. Parts of the recording are repurposed from Harnetty’s latest album, Shawnee, Ohio, which came out in April on Karlrecords, a German label that describes itself as “an outlet for puzzling sounds that question today’s pigeonholes of reception.” On “Sigmund,” a survivor of the 1930 Millfield Mine Disaster that killed 82 miners recounts the experience: “Almost every man in there was, of course, a friend of mine. … It was just hard to realize that they were gone.” In an excerpt from “Boy,” a child asks his grandma about “the olden days,” but in an eerie twist, only the boy’s questions are audible: “In the
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In the tiny village of Shawnee, where Harnetty’s grandfather, Mordecai Williams, went to high school, Harnetty met local historian John Winnenberg, who gave him a box of about 40 cassette tapes from the 1980s containing oral histories, which Harnetty digitized and catalogued. He then set about making a series of aural portraits set to his singular style of patiently paced, experimental Americana. Along the way, Harnetty spent as much time as he could with locals. He recorded sounds in the street and in the woods. He pulled together a group of musicians and performed the Shawnee material at Duke University, Cincinnati’s Contemporary Arts Center and Ohio State’s Wexner Center for the Arts, but he also recorded a performance at Shawnee’s Tecumseh Theater — the same place his grandfather once played basketball. “We can’t rebuild this area or make the quality of life here better without some help from new people coming in,” Winnenberg said. “But it has to be people like Brian who respect people here.” Harnetty kept returning to Shawnee and other nearby towns, and eventually he hit upon the Forest Listening Room idea and received funding for the project via a 2018 fellowship from A Blade of Grass, a Brooklyn-based organization promoting socially engaged art (Harnetty was one of eight fellowship recipients out of 571 applicants). “In the past, I could always hide behind an instru-
ment or some sort of music being made,” Harnetty said. “The challenge of this is you feel very naked.” It’s also a tough thing to explain. “It’s basically like, ‘There’s this crazy dude who’d like to go out to the forest with you and just sit and listen,’” Harnetty said. “It’s really difficult to convince people to do this.”
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n a Saturday afternoon in early April, I accompany Harnetty on the 65-mile drive from Columbus down to Perry County for a listening session in Perry State Forest. On the narrow roads leading into the woods, Harnetty pulls far over to the side to let oncoming cars go by. When we roll into the parking area, pickup trucks full of ATVs and dirt bikes dominate the lot. None of the riders look primed for silence. Eventually Harnetty finds Perry County resident Joelene Dixon. Turns out she and her husband, Tim, a former Marine who keeps his distance, are the only people who’ve showed up today. Joelene has her own agenda, in fact. She wants to show Harnetty various sites around the forest, particularly spots that are under threat of being strip-mined. If Harnetty is disappointed in the turnout, he doesn’t show it. We follow Dixon’s car to man-made Essington Lake, a beautiful, picturesque spot, though conspicuously devoid of animal or aquatic life other than a few honk-
ColumbusAlive.com | Thursday, June 20, 2019
Brian Harnetty and Joelene Dixon at Lake Essington in Perry State Forest
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“
It’s basically like, ‘There’s this crazy dude who’d like to go out to the forest with you and just sit and listen.’ It’s really difficult to convince people to do this.” Brian Harnetty
ing geese. “In the ’60s and ’70s, they ravaged this area by strip-mining,” Dixon said. “But nature is continuing to overcome what man has devastated. And now we’re going to devastate it again. … They’re going to mine right up to that lake, within 300 feet of it.” Staring out across the serene lake together, Harnetty asks Dixon what this place means to her. “For me, this is coming home. This is comfortable. This is what I know,” she said, her voice beginning to break. “My parents are gone. My mom died first, and after my dad died I wasn’t quite ready for the feeling of being an orphan. And something about being in an area that is familiar to you, that reminds you of your childhood, reminds you of carefree days... it’s comforting. I don’t know how else to say it. It’s just comforting.” Harnetty listens, prompting with soft-spoken questions only occasionally. He’s strikingly tall with a long gray beard, but he never comes across as imposing, even with a big fuzzy microphone pointed toward Dixon. Establishing trust seems to come effortlessly to him. The next time he comes back to Perry County he won’t be a stranger to the Dixons. “Oftentimes in a listening session I don’t say anything at all,” Harnetty tells me later on the drive home. “I think those experiences, and all the experiences I’ve had, inform how I’m talking to Joelene and the kind of questions that I’ll ask.” Initially, Harnetty thought he’d call this project the Fracked Forest Listening Rooms, but he quickly realized it wasn’t a good way to start a conversation. It felt too confrontational. He also realized he needed to be spending more time in the area, so he volunteered for AmeriCorps and began working with Ohio’s Hill Country Heritage Area, listening to locals and writing stories that celebrate the people and small businesses and events in the region in hopes of countering harmful stereotypes of Appalachia.
it affected them in the same way, and they brought up memories from their own childhood.” Cohen-Cruz thought back to the times she walked in the woods with her father, and with her own kids. “It’s a lovely connector,” she said. “I just felt totally comfortable.”
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D Brian Harnetty records the sound of a stream in Perry State Forest.
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uring the May listening session at Robinson’s Cave, I thought about my own history with the forest, how as a kid I used to jump from tree to tree in a row of conifers on a seminary campus near Philadelphia, which also boasted some of the biggest beech trees I’ve ever seen. The gray, carve-able trunks made for easy pars on our disc golf course. I thought about the trees on my own property in Columbus, especially the huge oak tree that turned from green to brown last August, before the smaller oaks, and the deep sadness I felt a couple of months ago when it remained brown. I’d raise my hand to my brow like a salute, squint upward and scan the decaying branches, trying in vain to find evidence of fresh, yellow-green buds — those ambassadors of spring — but they never returned. I thought about the way I often crave the woods, especially after staring intently at glowing pixels for hours on end. Even a brief walk among the trees can erase a foul mood or gently pry apart the jaw I hadn’t realized I was clenching. Harnetty is careful to think about the audience for his recent projects, making sure they’re primarily for the
This story was produced in collaboration with Pacific Standard, a social and environmental justice magazine.
Roger Blosser, seated next to wife Cheryl Blosser, during a Forest Listening Room at Robinson’s Cave in Wayne National Forest in May. Roger worked as an oil driller for more than 50 years.
ColumbusAlive.com | Thursday, June 20, 2019
In March, Harnetty led a group on a silent “sound walk” around Tecumseh Lake near Shawnee. Renee Brunton, the mayor of Shawnee, came along. After the walk, the group sat on stone benches and listened to Harnetty’s sound collage. “Once he played that, I could see the whole purpose in allowing us to listen, because we could relate to those stories that were being told. Then tons of memories just flooded us. We just shared story after story,” Brunton said. “I thought it was one of the most awesome experiences that I have ever had.” Harnetty always provides a time for people to tell their own stories to the group, and he’s noticed that after listening intently beforehand, everyone seems ready — or perhaps trained — to engage in a more enriching way. There’s an easy willingness and a reflective, vulnerable tenor to the discussions. “I can’t prove it, but it does seem like it changes the quality of the conversations and maybe opens up a space for people with differences to be able to talk about these issues,” Harnetty said. “Sometimes we don’t even bring up the mining or the fracking. Instead we’re talking about this shared common interest in the land.” Jan Cohen-Cruz, director of field research for A Blade of Grass, noticed the same thing when she participated in the March sound walk around Tecumseh Lake. “There are a number of artists that we’re working with who are putting attention to, ‘How do you set up conditions so that people will actually hear each other?’” she said. “The people he’s bringing together stand a pretty good chance of hearing each other.” “A lot of different people from different walks of life were there, but yet we all shared a common denominator,” Brunton said. “Even though they may not have related to the coal-mining stories, they still said
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people who live in the Little Cities of Black Diamonds rather than art institutions. But he acknowledges the Forest Listening Rooms are personal, too. “The project is working on me as much as it is working on other people,” he said. The May session was the final Forest Listening Room under the Blade of Grass umbrella, though Harnetty said he’ll continue the project into the fall and include it with guided experiences from other people in the region. It’s tough to know what lasting effect, if any, the listening rooms will have on the land. CohenCruz said it could take years to gauge the impact. But the sessions have undoubtedly affected the people. Brunton, for one, has adopted the sound walk practice herself and hopes to spread the word about it to others in Shawnee. Historian John Winnenberg also wants to see them continue. “I’m thinking this could become a cult, Brian,” he said near the end of the discussion at Robinson’s Cave, laughing with Harnetty. “Every time I do it, I love it.” “Thank you for coming and listening,” Harnetty told the encircled listeners. “I don’t know what it is about sitting with a group of people, but it really means something. It really feels good. It’s different than sitting by yourself. So thanks.”
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COMMUNITY // FEATURE phOtO by tim JOhnsOn
O-Gee dance party celebrates 10 years by erica thOmpsOn
ColumbusAlive.com | Thursday, June 20, 2019
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n his 23rd birthday, Kareem Jackson was partying at The Clampdown, a monthly rock dance party that went on to run for more than 12 years in Columbus. The party’s founder, Charles Erickson, noticed that Jackson had brought a ton of people to the event. “He stopped me and said, ‘Do you ever think about throwing a party?’” Jackson recalled. “And I was like, ‘No, but I will.’” The rest is history. Jackson went on to organize two long-running events of his own. Get Right, the 12-year-old commercial rap dance party, takes place monthly at Skully’s. And O-Gee, the old-school hip-hop dance party, will celebrate its 10th anniversary Saturday, June 22 at Brothers Drake. The latter was born out of frustration with the former. “I was just like, ‘I cannot take this music anymore,’” Jackson said. “It’s fun and energetic. But I was like, ‘I need [old-school] hip-hop.’”
Kareem Jackson
“It was everybody from every race, every background. It’s just that era of hip-hop that brings people that just love that sound.” KAreem JACKson
“Someone asked me to play ‘Hotline Bling’ by Drake,” Hicks recalled. “I mixed that with Ginuwine’s ‘Pony’ and people lost their shit.” After a stint in Brooklyn in 2017, Jackson and Hicks took a break, hosting O-Gee only a handful of times in 2018. Saturday will be the first 2019 installment. “It’s kind of hard when you’re older to be throwing events when you have jobs that take up all your time,” Jackson said. “I think we both have other interests and are building other parts of our lives and careers,” Hicks added. Plus, there are more dance parties in the city for attendees to choose from, and that has contributed to some of the decline. “[And] that’s fine,” Jackson said. “We’ve been doing it for long enough. Let somebody else take the reins.” “A lot of people will try to imitate, but O-Gee will never be duplicated,” Hicks said. “We hit it at the right time and had our trials and tribulations, but also some really huge wins.” But Jackson kept getting requests to bring O-Gee back. “I was surprised there were so many people that were so upset we weren’t doing it anymore,” he said. Inspired by the fans and the 10-year anniversary, Jackson and Hicks decided to host a celebratory return at Brothers Drake. “I was just like, ‘Let’s just do it someplace small and more intimate like how it started,’” Jackson said. “And if it gets busy, it gets busy.” Both Jackson and Hicks agree the future of O-Gee is unknown. “Let’s see what the 10-year [event] does,” Jackson said.
Brothers Drake MeaDery
10 p.m.-2 a.m. Saturday, June 22 26 E. Fifth Ave., Short North facebook.com/ogeeparty
ColumbusAlive.com | Thursday, June 20, 2019
Along with DJ Patrick Hicks, Jackson put on O-Gee at the Due Amici restaurant Downtown, and quickly saw a surge in attendance. “It grew really fast from the side room to taking up the whole restaurant,” Jackson said. At one point, there was so much interest a fire marshal had to be called to enforce capacity restrictions. Soon the restaurant decided it was time for a change. “I think they said the staff was having too much fun and they were showing up late,” Jackson said, laughing. “So they were like, ‘We can’t have a party that’s just not conducive to our business.’” O-Gee moved to Barrio Tapas Lounge until the restaurant closed, then landed at Strongwater Food & Spirits until the establishment decided to change its focus to weddings. “Columbus is great for live music, but if you just want to throw a party, it can be a little difficult finding a venue,” Hicks said. “If we had our ideal situation, we would have been at a warehouse.” The event eventually found another home, and even greater success, at Copious & Notes. “[It was] a gigantic, sweaty dance party,” Jackson said. “It was everybody from every race, every background. It’s just that era of hip-hop that brings people that just love that sound.” The set list featured everything from Eric B. & Rakim and MC Lyte to A Tribe Called Quest and Bobby Brown. “The O-Gee theme song is ‘Luchini AKA This Is It’ by Camp Lo, so we always play that no matter what,” Jackson said. Over the years, crowds have included regulars who have grown with Jackson and Hicks, along with younger attendees who want to experience the music and energy. There have also been some minor adjustments to the music as crowds contend with changing definitions of “nostalgia.” And sometimes Hicks will throw in a newer hit — with a twist.
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COMMUNITY // Crew vIew
COMMUNITY // The OTher COlUMbUs photo By ADAm CAirns
A senDoff for sigi
ColumbusAlive.com | Thursday, June 20, 2019
By Chris DeVille
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The Columbus Crew will add a third name to the Circle of Honor at the June 29 home game against Orlando City SC: Sigi Schmid. The Circle of Honor is the Crew’s hall of fame, a series of names displayed prominently across the upper deck on the west side of Mapfre Stadium. Per the team website, “Whether on the field, on the sidelines or behind-the-scenes, Columbus Crew Circle of Honor inductees have played an integral role in the Black & Gold’s eventful history.” The Crew created the Circle of Honor in 2011 to recognize Brian McBride. In 2014 they inducted Frankie Hejduk. Several other names belong there — Guillermo Barros Schelotto especially — but you won’t hear any dissent when Schmid’s name is added next week. Schmid is the first coach to join the Circle of Honor. Sadly, he’s also the first posthumous induction. Schmid, who coached the Crew from 2006-08 and ended his tenure with the team’s first and only MLS Cup title, died last Christmas at age 65, three weeks after being hospitalized in need of a heart transplant. He had resigned as coach of the LA Galaxy just three months earlier. Schmid’s death resonated across American soccer. He was the winningest coach in MLS history (240 regular season victories plus 26 in the playoffs), led both the Galaxy and Crew to championships, and headed up some fantastic Seattle Sounders squads. Before all that, he had a legendary run as coach of UCLA’s men’s soccer team in the ’80s and ’90s. Columbus was a small part of his story. His time here was brief compared to Seattle and especially Los Angeles, his adopted hometown after emigrating from Germany as a child. But he made his Ohio years count. Slowly but surely, Schmid built the Crew from basement-dwellers to the best and most exciting team in MLS. His
photo By Kyle roBertson
WhAt is Culture? By sCott WooDs
Sigi Schmid
’06 and ’07 teams didn’t even make the playoffs, yet there was a gradual shift underway, such that by ’08 the team had become self-evidently special. To quote the old cliche, the bounces started going the Crew’s way, but it was more than that. They ceased making the little mistakes that plague lesser teams (like, say, the 2019 Columbus Crew, but that’s another column). Self-defeating psychology gave way to confident enthusiasm. Every player found chances to step up and be the hero. It was beautiful. It was what every sports fan hopes for. Schmid’s positive influence became even clearer when the Crew declined for several years after his departure. He left to become Seattle’s first coach, partially to be closer to his family on the West Coast, though he was also frustrated with contract negotiations in Columbus. Supporter objections about him leaving so soon have long since evaporated; nowadays fans are more grateful than ever for Schmid’s contributions to the team’s finest moment. Saturday, June 29, is a chance to pay homage in front of his family. If Schmid means something to you, it’s a night not to miss.
I mention culture here a lot, but because of space constraints I never really get to dig into it as a concept. If public response is any indication, about 20 percent of you are missing the point or are simply exhausted from searching for parking in the Short North, so let’s unpack culture directly for once. At its base, culture exists wherever living things exist: human beings, octopi, bacteria. It is a natural result of natural activity. Being human beings, we’ve redefined that word many times over as suits our needs. That’s OK, since language is a part of culture, and as societies evolve, so should their words. I like the definition that we’ve more or less arrived at in the past century, which roughly goes something like this: Culture is the values, arts, customs and institutions of a particular people, place or situation. It’s why your soulless job gets to send you memos every week about your “workplace culture” even though no one in the office can run a single Rakim lyric. Culture can be created intentionally, but in the event that no one wants to open an artist enclave in your town, your town will take up the reins regardless. All artists are doing is steering culture that was going to happen anyway, so the first thing we should all be doing is stripping away the notion that culture consists of art galleries and symphonies. Those things are part of a culture, but no one lives in the Ohio Theatre.
Most debates about life in Columbus stem from an ill-realized notion of what culture is, and I mean debates about anything: politics, art, racism, cuisine and so on. All of that is part of the culture of any given community, and Columbus has culture in spades. The question is whether or not the culture that exists is productive or valuable or fair or liked. Part of the reason why Columbus debates these things so poorly is because much of our culture is pretty comfortable for most of the people who live here. Despite our crumbling schools, police abuse, drug deaths, rampant gentrification and political corruption, enough of the right people aren’t adversely affected by these things to prioritize them in the work that makes the city function. Culture is ultimately not about art, but priorities. And those who get to set the priorities get to guide the culture. Still, culture is a natural outcropping of human activity. Where there is a barrel trashcan a barbecue can be had. And where a barbecue exists, so can the exchange of ideas, values and language. And where such things exchange hands, new culture can be molded, even within the larger, normative agenda. It is how we created the blues (under slavery) and jazz (under segregation) and hip-hop (under poverty). Culture doesn’t belong to power. In fact, it is frequently drafted by an underprivileged people before it becomes a “national treasure.” Remember that the next time you see a smoking barrel in a neighbor’s backyard and are tempted to Barbecue Betty the affair and call 911.
ColumbusAlive.com | Thursday, June 20, 2019
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COMMUNITY // REPLY ALL
COMMUNITY // THINGS WE LOVE
Most PoPular at coluMBusalive.coM
Picks froM Myra Power
1. PhOTOs: A LOOK BACK AT WALL STREET 2. PriDE: THE ORAL HISTORY OF WALL STREET 3. PriDE: LAST LESBIAN BAR STANDING 4. PriDE: QUEER COLUMBUS IN 1969 5. PriDE: COLUMBUS GAY MEN’S CHORUS CHARTS A NEW COURSE
To see your pics here, tag your Instagram photos #columbusalive.
@nicthequick.pics
Pinball and arcade games I spend my time and quarters feeling electric playing my pinball games. Elvira, Mars Attacks, Batman, Dark Knight, Alice Cooper and Tales from the Crypt can be found at different Columbus locations like Sideswipe, Ace of Cups, Old North Arcade and 16-Bit. I have an imaginary Capcom bowling league where you might just find me and my best friend forever in our matching league jackets with bowling ball bag in tow. Columbus music I moved from London, England, to Columbus in order to open Double Happiness (RIP) with Yalan Papillons. This is where I met most of my friends and decided I wanted to play music again after a 20-year break. I had previously been in bands, but none felt right like our girl gang, Slant 6, until I started Thee Thee’s. I try and pop out to see weird touring bands and locals at clubs like Dirty Dungarees, Cafe Bourbon Street/The Summit and Ace of Cups, who in turn support and host my new project.
ColumbusAlive.com | Thursday, June 20, 2019
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Myra Power is a veteran musician who began her career in Washington, D.C., writing songs and playing bass in the famed Dischord Records band Slant 6. After a 20-year break from music, she resides in Columbus and has put together a new project called Thee Thee’s. A split 7-inch is to arrive on Lost Weekend Records later this year. Power is booking a series of benefit concerts for Women Have Options Ohio, which helps connect those needing abortion to financial assistance. The first Women Have Options Benefit Show is at Ace of Cups on Saturday, June 22, featuring Scrawl, Thee Thee’s, Thomas Jefferson Slave Apartments, Egon Gone and the Sun Dogs, Sex Tide, comedy MC Pat Deering and guest speakers from Women Have Options. Here are a few things Myra Power loves.
@ilanabannanna
Used goods I worked at a variety of resale clothing
Photo courtesy Myra Power
#COLUMbUSALIVE
By Myra Power
stores in New York and Los Angeles. I love digging for good trash to rehash. I shop at a variety of thrift and toy stores, including Big Fun toys in Columbus and Rebel Toys in Delaware. I also love searching through records at Lost Weekend and Used Kids. It’s great! A much better way to spend my time than at bingo or walking laps at the mall. Picnics Schiller Park in German Village is my local and favorite quick getaway. Lots of puppers, and you can occasionally catch a guy who walks around the park with a black cat riding on his shoulder. Picnics, sunshine, squirrels, flower gardens, ducks and butterflies. Vampire movies From the classics like “Nosferatu” and Bela Lugosi’s “Dracula,” to the outlandish and hilarious “Vampire in Brooklyn” (Eddie Murphy as a suave, hip vamp) and “Vampire’s Kiss” (Nick Cage screaming, “I AM A VAMPIRE!” and donning plastic teeth), I love seeking out and watching every vampire movie I can.
Disco Dancer Mother Stewart’s Brewing Co. is a small, family-owned brewery in Springfield, Ohio, and thanks to a generous dad at a recent baseball game, I got my hands on Disco Dancer, a hazy IPA that Mother Stewart’s describes as “a radiating disco ball of fruit flavors [that] drinks as smooth as Tony Manero on a Saturday night.” Travolta dance moves aside, it’s definitely smooth and delicious. Curious to try more of Mother Stewart’s offerings. –Joel Oliphint Nuthouse Peanut Butter Porter As long as brewers from small Ohio towns — i.e. places that at one time might have surprised me to find exceptional beer being made but no longer — keep making tasty brews and I keep enjoying them, I guess I’ll keep trotting them out in this space. This Millersburg Brewing Company (located in the Holmes County seat) beer smells more peanutty than it tastes, but it smells mighty peanutty. –Jim Fischer Elisabeth Moss Peggy Olson is a long way from New York in the 1960s. Just kidding, it’s wrong to reduce an actress to one role, though Elisabeth Moss was very memorable in “Mad Men.” But she reveals even more of her acting chops in “The Handmaid’s Tale,” which I just started watching. I couldn’t be kept out of the loop any longer. Three episodes in, and I’m impressed with Moss’ ability to convey a spectrum of emotions with her facial expressions alone. We will see if the series as a whole does her justice. –Erica Thompson Franklin Park Conservatory Having a kid, it’s pretty awesome living like a 5-minute drive from this place and its killer outdoor garden/play area. (This holds true even if you don’t come prepared for the expansive faux river outside and you tell your daughter she can only put her feet in and then you look away and turn back and see that she’s already managed to fully submerge herself in the water, clothes and all.) –Andy Downing
ColumbusAlive.com | Thursday, June 20, 2019
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preview: operators PAGE 21
loCals: Brat Curse PAGE 22
Courtney Barnett By andy downing
ColumbusAlive.com | Thursday, June 20, 2019
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photo By pooneh ghana
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he album art for Courtney Barnett’s 2019 single “Everybody Here Hates You” features a cartoonish drawing of a pen and notebook sitting on a table next to a mug. On the notebook, the lyrics to the song are written out longhand, as if Barnett had just finished an initial draft while sitting in a coffee shop, which could have been the case. Barnett said her songwriting process can take many forms. She’ll sketch out lyrics longhand on notepads, write on a computer and tap out lyrics at home on a typewriter, with each format subtly shading and influencing the shape a finished tune ultimately takes. “There’s a big difference. I think handwriting is slow, and I tend to think about [the song] too much. There’s too much time to stop and reflect,” said Barnett, who opens for the National at Express Live outdoors on Monday, June 24. “On the computer, everything is too perfect and pretty, and you can backspace things a little too easy and lose ideas forever. I think the typewriter is my favorite because I just let it go as a stream of ideas, and I don’t stop and read it. I just keep on going, take out the piece of paper and put it in a folder, and when I go back and read
“To be completely oblivious is probably a beautiful thing, but i can’t help but be self-aware. i’m quite an observant person.” CourTney bArneTT
Think, and Sometimes I Just Sit, Barnett wrestled with the idea that she was now speaking to a larger audience, ultimately realizing that she couldn’t let any associated fears bleed into her creative process. “It’s a weird one, because to be completely oblivious is probably a beautiful thing, but I can’t help but be self-aware. I’m quite an observant person, so I’m always going to pick up on that idea of people listening,” Barnett said. “But I think it’s dangerous if you start to write or curate ideas to what you think people want to hear. Everyone wants to hear something different, so that can become a lose-lose situation.” It helped, Barnett said, to write constantly, digging into even bad, halfformed ideas with the awareness that those discarded efforts could in some way inform the better-realized songs that emerged later. To that end, Barnett allowed herself the time and space for the songs to develop naturally, preserving the breezy, conversational style that has become her hallmark. “I think I can really tell when something’s forced and when something is natural, and when something’s natural it’s usually an accident, and it’s when I’m not thinking,” Barnett said. “I think the best stuff comes from a part of the brain that you don’t even know exists, and it comes just like another piece of the puzzle, because that’s what songwriting is. It’s like an eternal puzzle of trying to understand yourself and the world around you, and then how you fit in and what the point of it all is.”
ExprEss LivE
6:30 p.m. Monday, June 24 405 Neil Ave., Arena District promowestlive.com ALSO PLAYING: The National
drinks
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Happy hour til 8 almost every dayy* *early shows and special events excluded
summer hours: open at noon fri sat sun!
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find u
ColumbusAlive.com | Thursday, June 20, 2019
it a month later I’m usually pleasantly surprised. It’s the perfect speed. It keeps up with your brain.” Barnett wrote the bulk of her 2018 album, Tell Me How You Really Feel, at home on her typewriter, shifting slightly from the detailed character studies of past efforts to more revealing tunes that find the Australian singer, songwriter and guitarist wrestling with everything from deep-seated anxieties (one track is titled “Crippling Self-Doubt and a General Lack of Confidence”) to the anonymous online trolls that surfaced in the wake of her early success. “He said, ‘I could eat a bowl of alphabet soup and spit out better words than you,’” she sings on the shaggy rocker “Nameless, Faceless” before brushing the criticism aside with the perfect three-word response: “But you didn’t.” Throughout, songs waver between optimistic and ominous — a feeling best captured in the invented word that serves as the title of the album-opening track: “Hopefulessness.” “That’s the perfect representation, I think — the push and pull of all of these conflicting thoughts,” Barnett said. “It’s that constant up and down and back and forth. … I mean, I’m generally optimistic, I think, but it’s a see-saw between optimism and pessimism. If you’re completely pessimistic, though, what’s the point?” Even the album-closing “Sunday Roast,” which initially comes across as a hopeful closer — the narrator sings about ignoring those doubting inner voices and focuses on the promise of brighter days — is something of a mixed bag, according to Barnett, who described the song as “sarcastically optimistic.” “To me it sounds a bit like a campfire singalong,” she said, and laughed. “Let’s pretend to be happy and everything’s OK.” Going into sessions for Tell Me How You Really Feel, which followed her 2015 breakout debut, Sometimes I Sit and
music
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MUSIC // PREVIEW
Potty Mouth
ColumbusAlive.com | Thursday, June 20, 2019
By Brittany Moseley
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There’s one thing Abby Weems wants listeners to take from Potty Mouth’s new album: “That we’re sick musicians, and we write really good songs.” The vocalist/guitarist laughs after she says this, but then turns serious. “That’s all I want people to know because I feel like so often our band gets politicized because we’re all women,” Weems said. “That is part of our band, but it’s not our whole identity. If anything, I would want us to be remembered for just having really well-crafted songs because that’s what we really care about.” That care is obvious on Potty Mouth’s second album, SNAFU, which is 31 minutes of expertly made pop-rock. The infectious “22” sounds like it belongs in a ’90s teen flick, while “Fencewalker,” which was co-written with the Go-Go’s Gina Schock, is sweet but biting. It’s been seven years since Potty Mouth’s last album, 2013’s scrappy Hell Bent, and the band, which also consists of bassist Ally Einbinder and drummer Victoria Mandanas, has lots to talk about, from getting older and leaving your hometown to cutting toxic people from your life. “It’s definitely been a lot of learning experiences,” Weems said of the time between albums one and two, which involved relocating from western Massachussetts to Los Angeles in 2016. “We wanted to move out to California to take the band more seriously and get more opportunities, and it’s been a time of figuring out the whole business side with labels and management and what you actually need and what you don’t. People want to help you, but then they run out of resources, or they just don’t know what they’re doing. So we’ve been having to deal with all the complicated sides of being in a band.” SNAFU is a much more polished — but no less catchy — affair than Hell Bent. The trio went from “recording in our friend’s basement to recording in a
full-on studio in Burbank,” Weems said. In addition to the better recording space, Potty Mouth’s California move also gave the band a new perspective on its music. “I think so often what it takes is having someone from the outside seeing what you’re doing and thinking it’s cool and believing in you a lot and pushing you,” Weems said. “I think we have had some really good people through the years who have pushed us to better places. I think when you go into music without any expectations [and] you don’t have an ego about it, you open yourself up more for possibilities because you’re not thinking about things in such a linear way. You’re just doing them very naturally, and as you go along, your goals start out small, but they become bigger each time you achieve one. … You realize this is something that we can keep doing.”
ace of cuPs
7 p.m. Tuesday, June 25 2619 N High St., Old North aceofcupsbar.com ALSO PLAYING: Colleen Green, Leggy
Photo By aManda adaM
MUSIC // PREVIEW photo By shervin lAinez
operAtors By Kevin J. elliott
providing a very real heartbeat to Operators’ sound, there is a noticeable evolution on Radiant Dawn. Devojka’s oft-steely synths are warmer, more exploratory, and the sparkling neon-pop of Boeckner’s songwriting becomes more urgent, prophetic even. But among these soundtracks for the apocalypse, there is hope in the music, especially the title track, which celebrates a “golden age” that will occur after we finally break. Not all of Boeckner’s outlook is consumed with nihilism. “The way out is a new kind of socialism and a new kind of community organization that I think millennials and the generation under them are working really hard to figure out what it looks like. That’s exciting to me,” Boeckner said. “Good art is always going to be political, and adjacent to the movement. At the risk of sounding like a hippie, there’s something magical in 2019 that I can get on a stage and for 90 minutes have a free exchange of emotions and ideas with other people.”
Ace of cups
8 p.m. Wednesday, June 26 2619 N. High St., Old North aceofcupsbar.com ALSO PLAYING: Doomsquad
ColumbusAlive.com | Thursday, June 20, 2019
When I finally get Operators’ Dan Boeckner on the line, he and his partner, Devojka, are stopped at a rest area in the shadow of majestic Mount Shasta in northern California. As we talk about the heavy concepts of Operators’ recently released sophomore album, Radiant Dawn, the couple is swarmed by a colony of seagulls, despite being far from the Pacific Coast. It’s a fitting sign for the end of times that Radiant Dawn predicts. “It represents a cataclysmic event that is transformative,” Boeckner said of the album’s titular prophecy. “It could be a nuclear explosion or the absolute collapse of the ecosystem due to climate change. For this project I was interested in the apocalypse, even a political apocalypse, and the ability for new systems and new ideas to grow out of that.” As Operators, Boeckner, along with Devojka and Columbus drummer Sam Brown, has always dealt in darker hues. The band’s debut, 2016’s Blue Wave, was Boeckner’s fantasy-fulfilling, dystopian postpunk record, blending the terrordome themes of “Blade Runner” and “Mad Max” with the electronic current that sparked New Order and
Depeche Mode. In creating a follow-up, Boeckner found inspiration (or better, desperation) in certain factors that have us hurtling towards our self-imposed demise. “We are all a compilation of our memories,” Boeckner sings on “Faithless,” a nod to philosopher Mark Fisher’s “nostalgia loop” theory — a belief that our reality stopped in the ’60s and the human race is now stuck in a cycle through the same cultural signposts. In the same vein, the lyrical peaks of “In Moderan” talk about a “future in reverse,” where the systems we can’t control, like the internet and global warming, take over. While these ideas float inside a fiction of doomsday psychobabble, the warnings of societal decay jibe quite closely to reality. Likewise, the sonic reach of Radiant Dawn had to reflect the man/machine flux in the narrative. Instilling a kind of oblique strategy, the trio holed up in their Montreal base and began jamming freeform until they arrived at what Boeckner called an “organic chaos.” Though much of that session only appears on the album as instrumental interludes, it was the impetus for Boeckner’s creative awakening — a shift that “split his skull wide open.” With Brown’s rhythmic acuity
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MUSIC // LOCALS
BrAt curse
Photo By chris cAsellA
ColumbusAlive.com | Thursday, June 20, 2019
By Andy downing
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Brat Curse’s new, selftitled album is the product of both a short, intense creative burst and long months of fun, sometimes arduous experimentation. Basic tracking was done nearly two years ago in a single six-hour day at Musicol Recoding Studios with engineer Keith Hanlon (the band had scheduled eight hours but came in firing on all cylinders at the close of a tour, wrapping early as a result), and the session provided a loose framework that gives the finished tracks an immediate, recorded-in-aroom feel. This despite the lengthy mixing process, which allowed the band members — singer/guitarist Brian Baker, guitarist Joe Camerlengo, bassist Justin Baker and drummer Chris Mengerink — ample time to experiment alongside engineer Chris Young, adding alien synth tones, doubling guitars and tracking vocals, which are crisply recorded even in those moments when
Brian Baker artfully obscures his words. “I think we have like 50 versions of each song,” said the singer, who joins his bandmates for a release show at Dick’s Den on Saturday, June 22 (the album, which is being pressed to vinyl and released by Anyway Records, will be available at the show). “As far as overdubs go, Joe and Chris Young and I were just trying to do the freakiest shit possible, and [Young] had tons of strange instruments that we could never imagine using. It was like, ‘Yeah, let’s do a take with this synthesizer that you plug a guitar into.’ It was this old, outdated, outlandish, ’80s shit.” Going into sessions, the members of Brat Curse knew they wanted to do two things: The first was to record in a proper studio for the first time, and the second was to track direct to tape, owing to a sonic quality that Brian said can’t be recreated using digital means. “You can try to recreate the way tape sounds, but it’s never
quite right,” he said. “I like tape because it sounds like a band playing, and you’re watching them.” The sensation carries into the record, which careens between adrenalized guitar rumblers (“Sweat Pants Lawyer”), hazy slow burners (“Go Down”) and instrumental rockers where the guitars briefly spiral off like crackling, whirling fireworks (“Spring Break Reagan”). Throughout, Baker delivers words that frequently sound born of frustration, singing: “It doesn’t have to be this way”; “So many reasons to go crazy”; “It’s on, until it’s not.” At other times the lyrics are vulnerable and revealing, particularly since the vocals are often front and center rather than buried in the mix as on past efforts. “You didn’t think anyone was home when you cracked open and revealed your bones,” Baker sings on the short, startling “Sobriety Butcher.” “In the past I buried everything, but these [vocals] are so clear it’s frightening,” Baker said, and laughed. “I always get paranoid that I’m revealing too much. … But with this, I was like, ‘If I’m going to say something on a song you might as well be able to hear it, for better or worse.’ Also, I’m tired of people being like, ‘What are you saying?’”
dick’s den
9 p.m. Saturday, June 22 2417 N. High St., Old North whynotcolumbus.com ALSO PLAYING: Connections, Kneeling in Piss
MUSIC
| PREVIEWS
thursDAY, june 20 - sAturDAY, june 29, 2019
photo by david mcclister
sunday | june 23
outlaw Fest by joel oliphint
Willie Nelson
The Columbus stop on this touring show didn’t manage to snag Robert Plant, Bonnie Raitt, Steve Earle, Hayes Carll or Colter Wall, who are hitting up other cities. Still, the Columbus lineup of Outlaw Fest isn’t too shabby. Alison Krauss is a national treasure, Old Crow Medicine Show will please the bluegrass crowd, and Dawes will please people who like harmonies but also find Wilco too adventurous. I lost interest in the Avett Brothers around the time Rick Rubin got involved, but if you’ve got a hankerin’ for stompy folk-rock made for arenas instead of barns, I’d opt for the Avetts over Mumford any day. But there’s really only one artist on this bill who can accurately claim the “outlaw” moniker, and that’s Willie Nelson. After all, this is the guy who, alongside Waylon Jennings and others, made the 1976 album Wanted! The Outlaws. “I guess you could say I’m a loner/A cowboy
outlaw, tough and proud,” Nelson sings on “It’s Hard to Be Humble” off new album Ride Me Back Home, which comes out two days before this show and also includes a heartbreaking version of Guy Clark’s “My Favorite Picture of You.” I fell for Willie’s music the day I heard his 1975 album Red-Headed Stranger, a sparse concept album that puts Nelson’s trademark Lonestar-nasal vocals and underrated nylon-string guitar work nice and high in the mix. It’s also not far-fetched to think this may be the last opportunity to catch this country music legend in Columbus (Nelson turned 86 in April). Nelson, though, seems to take aging in stride on Ride Me back Home track “Come on Time”: “I say come on time, I’ve beat you before.” (Don’t miss it)
nationwide arena
2:30 p.m. Sunday, June 23 200 W. Nationwide Blvd., Arena District nationwidearena.com photo by jonathan stark
thursday | june 27
thursday | june 20
blink-182 & lil wayne
23 • Lucy Spraggan at Rumba Cafe • The Byrne Brothers at Scioto Park
24 • The National, Courtney Barnett at Express Live
at rumba caFe
photo courtesy live nation
THURSDAY 20 • Sinkane at the Basement
nationwide arena
• Son Step at the Summit
25 • Bloxx, Hembree at Rumba Cafe
26 • Operators at Ace of Cups
• Bad Books at Newport Music Hall • SonReal at the Basement
7:30 p.m. Thursday, June 27 200 W. Nationwide Blvd., Arena District nationwidearena.com
• Colleen Green, Potty Mouth at Ace of Cups
FRIDAY 21
• Vandoliers at Rumba Cafe
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• Lil’ Ed & the Blues Imperials at Natalie’s CoalFired Pizza
• Tijuana Hercules, Water Trash, Son of Dribble at Cafe Bourbon St.
• The Doubleclicks at Kafe Kerouac
• Fitz & the Tantrums, Young the Giant, COIN at Express Live
SATURDAY 22 • Brat Curse LP release, Connections, Kneeling in Piss at Dick’s Den • Scrawl, Thomas Jefferson Slave Apartments at Ace of Cups
29 • Twenty One Pilots at Nationwide Arena • NRBQ at Rumba Cafe • El Camino Acid, Radattack at Ace of Cups
ColumbusAlive.com | Thursday, June 20, 2019
Pop-punk icon Blink-182 (minus Tom DeLonge) is teaming up with Dwayne Michael Carter, Jr. for a co-headlining tour that kicks off here in Columbus at Nationwide Arena on Thursday, June 27. For those who would scoff at such a pairing, the two acts made a mashup of Blink’s “What’s My Age Again?” and Lil Wayne’s “A Milli.” It’s, um, not great. But as odd and kind of dumb as this concert is, it’ll likely also be a lot of fun. (Safe bet)
juliana hatField
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PReview: ‘the Devil’s MiRage’
PAGE 26
ColumbusAlive.com | Thursday, June 20, 2019
stReetlight guilD
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Movie Review: ‘toy stoRy 4’ PAGE 28
By JiM FischeR Photo By tiM Johnson
Scott Woods at Streetlight Guild with the art of Richard Duarte Brown
O
“it’s artist-owned. it’s black-owned. it’s columbus-owned. My goal is to have everybody in columbus come here at least once.” sCoTT woods [arts/event programming] full-time, and I answered, ‘A venue.’ I’d always wanted a venue — a place to create culture that was Columbus-based and Columbus-centric.” And so, Woods intends to answer the question long-asked in the city, including by himself: “What is Columbus culture?” “There is a certain question I want to go away, and there are other questions I’m going to ask and that the performers are going to be free to ask. There’s going to be a conversation within these four walls, and I’m the facilitator,” Woods said. And Streetlight Guild will be black. “Extremely black. One hundred percent. It’s the aesthetic, the value system. Those things are very clear,” Woods said. “But the space isn’t about that. It’s a celebration, and anyone is welcome as long as they understand what it is we’re celebrating.” Streetlight Guild opens Saturday, June 22, with performances by the Ogun Meji Duo of Mark Lomax and Eddie Bayard. The artwork of Richard Duarte Brown, whom Woods refers to as “the new Aminah Robinson,” will fill the second-floor gallery space. The gallery is booked already for most of the remainder of 2019, including a duo show by Lisa McLymont and Cat Sheridan, the partners’ first-ever combined show. Programming in the firstfloor performance space is also robust, including a 30-straight-days-of-Columbus-poets event in September Woods is calling “Rhapsody and Refrain.” “It’s artist-owned. It’s black-owned. It’s Columbus-owned,” Woods said. “My goal is to have everybody in Columbus come here at least once.”
RichaRd duaRte BRown/ ogun Meji duo Streetlight Guild 3-11 p.m. Saturday, June 22 1367 E. Main St., Near East Side streetlightguild.org
ColumbusAlive.com | Thursday, June 20, 2019
n the counter inside the front door of Streetlight Guild, Scott Woods’ new arts and event space on East Main Street, is what Woods refers to simply as his “idea book.” The concept is simple: Have idea. Write idea down. The ideas contained in the book, though, aren’t simple, which should be obvious to anyone who’s been paying attention to Woods’ decades-long career as a performer and presenter. On the other side of the counter is an oversized wall calendar. The challenge, both clarified and amplified by virtue of Woods’ becoming the owner of such a space, is getting everything from one side of the counter to the other. “It’s my brand, manifested,” said Woods, who’s also an Alive contributor, in an interview inside Streetlight Guild. By way of timelines, that brand existed before the name Streetlight Guild, which Woods adopted a couple of years back to give that brand a name. And now that brand has a physical home. “It’s a laboratory, and I’m the mad scientist,” Woods said, only half-joking. “Here’s a place where you’ll be able to see the things that Columbus offers. There just aren’t enough places to see it. And here I want to create a place where artists can be free. It’s everybody else’s lab, too.” It’s almost inevitable that Woods will make the occasional appearance on his own stage, but that’s not the intent of Streetlight Guild, of which Woods serves as founder and CEO. “It’s not about me in that way. I didn’t need to create bills to do what I do,” he said, referencing the need to keep the lights on at the Guild, a responsibility Woods bears happily. “I want to see what everybody else does and is going to do.” Woods will primarily book Streetlight Guild, although he said he’s willing to listen to ideas and proposals for programming. But he views the space as an institution, offering programming for the community, rather than an event space looking for pop-up tenants. It was a goal of Woods’ from way back to have his own space, and the opportunity finally came after one of Woods’ 2017 Holler programs when local attorney Glen Kizer offered to find and purchase him a venue. “It was a get-off-the-pot kind of moment,” Woods said. “Glen had asked me what it would take for me to do
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ARTS // pREVIEW Audrey Galat’s “The Devil’s Mirage” as performed by Kat Johnson, Galat and Iman Clark
Photo By Joshua scott
‘the Devil’s mirage’
ColumbusAlive.com | Thursday, June 20, 2019
By Jim Fischer
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Sculpture, painting and performance. Audrey Galat’s exhibition/installation “The Devil’s Mirage” blurs the lines between the three – with help from, interestingly enough, stripes. Inspired, in part, by the artist’s affinity for stripes in design and fashion, and by Michel Pastoureau’s book The Devil’s Cloth: A History of Stripes, “The Devil’s Mirage” invites the viewer/audience into an otherworldly space inside the main gallery at Blockfort. A closing performance, featuring movement by Galat, Kat Johnson and Chloe Napoletano, will be held Sunday afternoon. The movement, improvised by the performers based on concepts expressed by the artist, finds the dancers, clad in blue stripes, moving almost imperceptibly among blue striped paintings and 3D objects. The result is “spiritual or meditative,” Galat said, while also creating “confusion or an illusion.” “We move so slow it’s hard to tell sometimes that we’re moving. The hanging pieces are designed also to be able to move, so there’s a sense of merging with the sculptures, becoming pieces of art, and blurring the lines between what’s inanimate and what’s animate.” “It can be tricky to look at but also pleasing to look at,” she said. On one hand, the pieces, painted in the calming cerulean blue (the word also
means “heavenly,” an obvious poke at the idea of the devil in the piece’s title), are intended to call the audience out of an often chaotic existence. “I like changing the room, creating a complete environment that transforms the space. In this day and age when everything is so fast-paced, and in which we’re constantly bombarded by information, it’s rare to get that chance to just slow down,” Galat said. On the other, the piece calls for engagement with the chaos, with the bombardment, using the female body as the basis for all of the art in “The Devil’s Mirage.” “It’s a celebration of the female body,” Galat said. “Women’s bodies need to be celebrated now more than ever, given assaults on our rights to control our bodies.” Galat said the work, conceived and made over a two-year period and which meant different things at different times to the artist, was not intended to be political, but that “sometimes you have to be.” Ultimately, as with any work of art, the viewer/audience has the final say. “There are many points of view, and I think everyone perceives ‘The Devil’s Mirage’ a little differently, Galat said.
BlockFort
2:30 p.m. Sunday, June 23 162 N. 6th St., Downtown blockfortcolumbus.com
ARTS
| PREVIEWS
thursDAY, june 20 - sAturDAY, june 29, 2019 Photo courteSy oF caroline hamilton
Saturday | june 22
BreaStStrokeS columBuS By jim FiScher When Caroline Hamilton first had her chest painted at Breaststrokes Knoxville, she couldn’t have known. The event, a DIY fundraiser for local women with breast cancer, was organized by some artist friends of Hamilton’s, and she participated in support of the effort and of the women it would benefit. Fast forward five years, and Hamilton has had two bouts of breast cancer and 29 surgeries (with one more to come). Her first diagnosis came only months after relocating to Columbus from Tennessee; Hamilton figures she spent most of her first three years in Ohio in bed. Now nearly two years in remission,
through june 30
400 WeSt rich (outdoorS) Noon-7 p.m. Saturday, June 22 400 W. Rich St., Franklinton fb.me/carolinehamilton2019
“Goodale Park” by Lee A. Paul
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• The Devil’s Mirage at Blockfort
• The Poetry Forum at Bossy Grrls
glean
Through June 30 815 N. High St., Suite C shopglean.com
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• Grunge Unplugged at Up Front at Shadowbox Live
• Save Wilma’s Hips at Up Front at Shadowbox Live
• BrewArt Month Art Show at Land-Grant Brewing Company
• Writers’ Block Poetry Night at Kafe Kerouac
actorS’ theatre oF columBuS “little Women” at Schiller Park amPhitheatre Photo courteSy oF actorS’ theatre oF columBuS
THURSDAY 20
FRIDAY 21
SATURDAY 22
• BrewArt Month Art Show at North High Brewing Company
• “A… My Name is Alice” at Columbus Civic Theater
• Conversations and Coffee: Boisali Biswas at Cultural Arts Center
• Roots: An Open Expression in Identity feat. Jordan Alexander at MPACC Box Park
• Streetlight Guild Opening: Richard Duarte Brown/ Ogun Meji Duo at Streetlight Guild
27 • Ready Player Fun at Up Front at Shadowbox Live
28 • Tiffany Jenkins at the Southern Theatre • Tom Baillieul “Journey Through an Open Door” reception at Cultural Arts Center
• Charisse Harris at Second Sight Project Sign House
29 • Columbus Gay Men’s Chorus at Capital University Mees Hall • Short North Stage “Hedwig and the Angry Inch” at the Garden Theater
ColumbusAlive.com | Thursday, June 20, 2019
Short North craft and upcycle shop Glean is hosting an exhibition of new work by painter Lee A. Paul in June. A lifelong painter, Paul favors landscapes, images from nature and portraits. This exhibition includes many local landscapes. The artist has a medical condition that affects a part of his brain and benefits from the cognitive and creative stimulation he gets through art-making.
Photo courteSy oF Short north artS diStrict
through july 14
lee a. Paul
• Short North Stage “Hedwig and the Angry Inch” at the Garden Theater
Hamilton is bringing Breaststrokes to Columbus. The event, which will feature food trucks, beer, live music, drag and other performers, centers on women paying $10 to have their chest painted by one of seven local artists. Cancer patients “have enough shit to deal with. Until we can fix it, let’s at least help people get through it,” said Hamilton, who hopes to raise enough funds to support five local women via a check with no strings attached.
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ARTS // movie Review PhoTo courTeSy Pixar
Go to Dispatch.com/rewards to enter and save today.
Spider-Man: Far From Home Advance Screening Wednesday, June 26 AMC Lennox Town Center 24
WIN PASSES FOR TWO
Picnic with the Pops Patriotic Pops
Saturday, June 29 John F. Wolfe Columbus Commons
WIN TWO TICKETS
Columbus Clippers vs. Louisville Bats Thursday, July 4 Huntington Park
WIN TWO TICKETS BIA Parade of Homes, presented by Chase July 13-28 Evans Farm in Lewis Center
ColumbusAlive.com | Thursday, June 20, 2019
WIN TWO TICKETS
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Columbus Destroyers vs. Albany Empire Sunday, July 14 Nationwide Arena
WIN FOUR TICKETS AND A DESTROYERS FAN PACK
Captain Marvel
WIN A DIGITAL COPY
PATRIOTIC POPS
f eaturing “Flight One” from the US Air Force Band of Flight f
SAT June J 29
By Brad Keefe
‘Toy STory 4’
It’s been 24 years since the first “Toy Story,” so this is really a franchise that has crossed generations. As in some people who saw the first movie when they were kids may well be watching “Toy Story 4” with their own children. It’s also a “franchise” that has topped each movie with a fulfilling ending. Was “Toy Story 2” even necessary? No, but it was great. And did we need a third chapter a decade after the second one? No, but “Toy Story 3” brought both a lot of fun and possibly the most tear-jerking scene in the series. “Toy Story 3” also ended on a great note for the series … even though the script for a fourth movie was reportedly already being written before the third was released. Still, Pixar’s commitment to quality has kept this series from ever truly feeling like a play-it-safe cash grab (and we’re in the season of this kind of calculated sequel). Woody (voice of Tom Hanks) and the gang are still, um, toys, only now they belong to Bonnie, the little sister of Woody’s original person, Andy. When Bonnie begins her kindergarten orientation she literally makes a new friend in Forky (Tony Hale), whom she crafts from a plastic spork. Woody is dealing with a diminished role in Bonnie’s playtime routine, but when Forky becomes her new favorite, he takes it upon himself to make sure
Forky understands the importance of being a toy. Then a family road trip becomes a source of new adventures, new friends and new perils. “Toy Story 4” certainly doesn’t reinvent the wheel here, nor would you want it to. There’s still some creative room to play in this simple idea: that a child’s toys have lives of their own, which are most fulfilled when they are being played with. One thing that has changed over 24 years is Pixar’s envelope-pushing animation. Early in the movie is a scene set in a downpour, and it’s some of the most photo-realistic CGI you’ll see. In fact, the movie feels closer to live-action than animation at times. It’s somehow eyepopping without being distracting. In terms of heart, the warmth is still there if some of the magic has worn off. The story may be the least engaging of the series, although there’s still room there to be better than most. Still, there’s some fun, fresh blood in a motorcycle stuntman toy named Duke Caboom (Keanu Reeves) and a pair of carnival prize stuffed animals (Keegan-Michael Key and Jordan Peele). “Toy Story 4” isn’t in the running for franchise best, it may even be the “worst” of the series, but it’s still hard to imagine that anyone would be more disappointed than delighted here.
“Toy STory 4” Opens Thursday
ColumbusAlive.com | Thursday, June 20, 2019
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behind bars: paddy mac’s pub PAGE 32
on tap: old dog alehouse PAGE 34
Vick’s gourmet pizzeria by g.a. benton • photos by tim johnson
ColumbusAlive.com | Thursday, June 20, 2019
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ick’s Gourmet Pizza might be a Reynoldsburg institution, but it isn’t particularly well known outside its hometown. The pizzeria is extremely accommodating, has an interesting background drenched in history, and it offers good, scratch-cooked food. It deserves a wider audience. Some quick facts: Vick’s is a family-owned restaurant that’s been baking pizzas for about six decades. For the past few years, its ovens have been located in the space that previously housed Reynoldsburg’s longest-running business: Connell Hardware, which called it quits in 2013 after selling hammers and nails for 141 years. Before moving to the Connell spot, Vick’s was nearby, but a tiny to-go-oriented operation. To walk into Vick’s nowadays is to enter a roomy, bustling and beloved local pizza joint with one foot firmly planted in the past but most everything else situated in the present. Vintage brick walls, old photographs, corrugated aluminum segments and pinball and claw machines seamlessly merge with polished wood, TVs, padded yellow booths and a modern bar with the expected bric-a-brac and chalkboard specials. There’s also a pleasant patio out back and a small area near the front counter that functions as a beer-and-wine carryout. About a dozen beers are on tap; about half of them were brewed in Ohio. I’m more drawn to the cuts-above little wine list, which offers inexpensive bottles of Italian reds that are practically crying out to accompany Vick’s cuisine. Chief among these are the Farnese Fantini Montepulciano D’Abruzzo ($21) and the Monte Degli Angeli pinot noir ($27) and sangiovese ($22). Those beverage tabs will be even more enticing if you
Large pizza with pepperoni, sausage and banana peppers, Buffalo Chicken pizza and Meatball Sub
show up on a Wednesday, when wine bottle prices are slashed in half. Vick’s actually offers several daily deals, and smart shoppers can enjoy a Wednesday daily double of bargains by ordering wine plus a large “specialty” pizza, which will be $3 off. The eatery’s main calling card is generously topped, classic Columbusstyle pies with crunchy edges and thin-yet-sturdy, lightly sweetened crusts sliced into rectangles. Vick’s nails my three-item barometer for old-school local pizzerias with its big and lusty clumps of garlicky house sausage; grease-spouting but crisp, zippy and delicious pepperoni disks; and judiciously positioned banana peppers. House standards of brownspotted, good-quality mozzarella and provolone atop a rich, oregano-kissed long-cooked house sauce seal the deal ($18.15 for a large). Among the many specialty pizzas available — these pre-selected combos are regularly priced at $18.95 for a large (so $15.95 on Wednesdays) — is the seriously spicy Buffalo Chicken, with plenty of grilled tender meat. The hearty Bacon Cheeseburger will get the job done nicely, as well. Vick’s standout Italian Sub ($6.25), loaded with seared capicola and salami, is among the best and best-priced in the area. Ditto for the excellent Meatball Sub
($6.25), with flavorful house meatballs that are chopped into manageable pieces for easy consumption. Both hefty sandwiches arrive on puffy-yet-crusty baked hoagie rolls fortified with broiled provolone on each half. When I asked if the Lasagna ($9.50) is house made, one of the friendly, personable servers announced, “Everything here is homemade.” I then jokingly shot her a “gotcha” look and pointed to the wine bottle on my table. Her deadpan response: “They’re stomping grapes in the kitchen right now.” After ripping into a giant slab of that lasagna, I can testify that Vick’s version — served with soft, very garlicky breadsticks and an OK salad (request the sweet house vinaigrette) — definitely tastes house made. It’s an Italian-American comfort bomb with gobs of gooey cheese livened by a nice amount of ricotta, enough herb-scented sauce to put those breadsticks to good use, and enough seasoned ground beef and soft noodles to soothe you into a better day.
Vick’s Gourmet Pizzeria at connell Hardware 7345 East Main St., Reynoldsburg 614-866-7392 vicksgourmetpizza.com
ColumbusAlive.com | Thursday, June 20, 2019
Italian Sub
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EAT // bEhind bArs
paddy mac’s puB Anna Wernke
ColumbusAlive.com | Thursday, June 20, 2019
By Erica Thompson
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Local musician Saul Bleaeck walks an extra half a block past another bar to get to Paddy Mac’s Pub in Clintonville. He’s loyal to the watering hole for many reasons: the welcoming staff and clientele, the large front window he gazes at during his “billiards therapy” and the two-sided rectangular bar that stretches down the middle of the room. “Other local bars have dark corners and you’re sectioned off,” Bleaeck said. “[Here], it’s just like one melting pot.” “It’s a nice community bar,” said Anna Wernke, who took over as manager nearly a year and a half ago. “I’m so proud of the people that come in here.” Wernke has seen the patrons come together to support different charities, including Dreams on Horseback, a nonprofit offering equine-assisted therapy programs for children and adults. “In three hours, we raised $1,700 from our patrons for them,” Wernke said. “I wouldn’t be able to do that if it wasn’t for this place. … People are so giving.” The bar’s next fundraiser, taking place from 3-6 p.m. on Saturday, June 22, will benefit the Alzheimer’s Association. In addition to charitable events, Paddy Mac’s hosts open mic night and ceiling tile painting parties. And Wernke
phoTo By roB hardin
hopes to extend the festivities beyond the bar. “In the summer we’re going to plan a canoe trip,” she said. “[And] we’re going to toy around with a golf outing.” A Youngstown, Ohio, native, Wernke didn’t originally plan to work in the bar industry. “I actually wanted to go to the University of Kentucky for equine management, but I came to Ohio State and majored in math,” she said. “And now I run a bar. … Here, you meet someone new every day.” Under Wernke’s management, Paddy Mac’s will have a new name in the future. “We will still have St. Patrick’s Day,” Wernke said. “However, I’m Slovenian, one of the other owners is Slovenian and one’s Polish. … We’re going to come up with some ideas and let the customers vote on it.” Patrons may notice some aesthetic changes — Wernke plans to repaint the walls — but the low prices and weekly drink specials will remain the same. “We’re just brightening it up, making it more updated,” she said. And Wernke expects more joyous days ahead. “I’ve gotten told by people, ‘You’re just a bartender,’” Wernke said. “I am, but I’m also more than that. And your job does not define who you are. I’m happy, that’s what defines who I am.”
SHOP FRESH. SHOP LOCAL. ColumbusAlive.com | Thursday, June 20, 2019
Tuesdays & Fridays 10:30 am–2:00 pm May–October pearlmarket.org
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EAT // ON TAP
EAT // FOOD NEWS
olD Dog alehouse & Brewery
phoTo courTesy caMeroN MiTchell resTauraNTs
ColumbusAlive.com | Thursday, June 20, 2019
By Nicholas Dekker
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Old Dog Alehouse & Brewery opened last November in Delaware. It’s owned by a collective that includes Steve and Tanja Hughes (head brewer and restaurant manager, respectively); Joe and Jessica Spann (general managers); Braden Henderson (executive chef); Shawn Walker (who helped with the restaurant build-out); and Neal and Kathy Kruse. The brewery and taproom inhabits a building dating back to the late 1800s; for decades it was the Little Brown Jug Restaurant, a staple of Delaware’s dining scene. A couple of other concepts cycled through the space before the Old Dog Alehouse crew purchased it. Steve Hughes began as a casual homebrewer years ago, pre-dating current trends in brewing. “I started out … in my basement,” he said. “We didn’t have a lot of money, we liked beer and so we made beer. We didn’t know what an IPA was back then. We knew it as a hoppy beer. We put in more hops than a man could stand. And we had a ball doing it.” Hughes and his wife, Tanja, considered starting a brewery when they connected with Jessica Spann, whose family was
M at Miranova
The olD spoT opeNs iN graNDview; M aT MiraNova geTs a New look By eriN eDwarDs
Steve Hughes phoTo courTesy of olD Dog alehouse
interested in opening a restaurant. “A couple of weeks after that discussion,” Steve Hughes said, “we signed the papers and started Old Dog Alehouse & Brewery.” The name comes from the owners’ love of dogs. “The real owners are Louie, Layla, Blue and Anna,” Hughes joked. “They are the dogs that make up Old Dog, with Layla being the inspiration for our logo. Our signature beer is our hopforward pale ale, Louie’s Paw. The name is inspired by my wife’s dog, Louie.” Much of the build-out was completed by the owners and their families. Their goal is to promote craft in everything they do, from the kitchen and
the beer to supporting other breweries. Hughes said the brewpub has been well received in Delaware. “We want to be part of the community,” he said. “That was so important to what we want to do — to be charitable and support the community. That’s why we’re in this, not to be the next Boston Beer Company. Just like in ‘Cheers,’ we want a place that you want to be, to make good friends and hang out.”
olD Dog alehouse & Brewery 13 W. William St., Delaware olddogalehouse.com
The Old Spot, a new restaurant from La Tavola’s Rick Lopez and The Butcher & Grocer’s Tony Tanner, opens Friday, June 21, in Grandview. The gastropub replaces Harvest Tavern & Pizzeria at 1099 W. First Ave. The Old Spot is open Tuesday and Wednesday for dinner only, lunch and dinner Thursday through Saturday, and brunch and dinner on Sunday. Cameron Mitchell’s M at Miranova (2 Miranova Place) reopened Tuesday following a three-week renovation of the nearly 18-year-old restaurant. Chef John Paul Iacobucci, who was named executive chef of M in January, worked to overhaul about 80 percent of the menu, which combines contemporary American and Pacific Rim-influenced cuisines. M also offers a new five-course tasting menu. Nosh on High, a small plates restaurant concept, is expected to open this summer at 149 S. High St., replacing MoJoe Lounge in the heart of Downtown. Nosh’s owners are Kevin Jones and Mike Campbell, formerly of Milestone 229.
entrepreneurs, is holding its first-ever Veteran Food Truck Challenge on Saturday, June 22, at COHatch The Pub (1554 Polaris Parkway). From 11:30 a.m. to 2 p.m., four veteran-owned food trucks will battle it out for the title. Visit bunkerlabs.org/columbus for more information. The Second Annual Beards & Brews event kicks off at 6:30 p.m. on Saturday, June 22, at the Barn at Blystone Farm in Canal Winchester. The festival features a variety of craft beers, live music on the farm, raffle prizes and contests for best moustache and longest beard. Blystone is located at 8677 Oregon Rd. The Second Annual Columbus Food & Wine Festival takes place June 21-22 at Battelle Riverfront Park (25 Marconi Blvd.). The event features chef demonstrations, live performances and food and wine tastings. Visit columbusfoodwine.com for more information. Greek Express is now open at 5451 N. Hamilton Rd. in Gahanna. It’s the fifth Greek Express location in Central Ohio from owner Ferdinand Çela.
Wine Enthusiast Magazine recently named Veritas one of America’s 100 Best Wine Restaurants of 2019. The Downtown Columbus fine dining spot was the only Ohio restaurant named on this year’s list.
This fall, the Austin-based chain Chuy’s Tex-Mex is moving into the former site of Smokey Bones at 1481 Polaris Parkway. Chuy’s opened its first Columbus location at Easton Town Center in 2015.
The Columbus chapter of Bunker Labs, a national nonprofit that supports veteran
Do you have Eat & Drink news? Send tips to info@columbusalivemail.com.
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EVENTS CALENDAR THURSDAY Columbus Clippers vs. Rochester Red Wings, $7$20. 12:05 p.m. Huntington Park, 330 Huntington Park Ln., Arena District.
ColumbusAlive.com | Thursday, June 20, 2019
DJ Trivia Columbus, DJ Trivia is a fun, live, interactive trivia game involving you, your team, other teams and a live DJ host. Free. 6:30-8 p.m. Crown Sports Lounge, 511 Lazelle Rd., Westerville.
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Old North Columbus Tavern Tour, Join us to explore this historic crossroads where Civil War soldiers from Camp Thomas once drank; Welsh blacksmiths quenched their thirst; Prohibition shut down nine speakeasies; Red Men assembled for 100 years; and Pat Murnan, Columbus’ only true gangster, had a casino. This is a guided walking tavern tour with three stops where you will have the opportunity to order a drink (on you), enjoy light snacks (on us), and hear tales of stage coach drivers, Army deserters, streetcar motormen, lady undertakers, poets, flappers and captives ... all along a short stretch of interesting and wellpreserved 19th century buildings. Tour will be led by Doreen Uhas Sauer and Tom Betti, co-authors of Historic Columbus Taverns. Your ticket purchase supports the work of Columbus Landmarks as we advocate for historic preservation and design excellence. $30. 6:30-9 p.m. Hounddog’s Pizza, 2657 N. High St., Old North.
The Ark Band, The Aquaducks, & Devil’s Lettuce, $7. 7 p.m. Woodlands Tavern, 1200 W. Third Ave., Grandview. Sinkane, With Bassel & the Supernaturals. Sinkane (Ahmed Gallab) is a Sudanese-American musician who blends krautrock, prog rock, electronica, free jazz and funk rock with Sudanese pop. He is signed to City Slang Records. Born to college professors in London, he lived in Sudan, then moved to the US when he was five, and lived for some time in Kent, Ohio followed by Columbus, Ohio. Prior to embarking on his solo career, he worked with Eleanor Friedberger, Caribou, of Montreal, Born Ruffians, and Yeasayer as a session musician. $18. 7 p.m. The Basement, 391 Neil Ave., Arena District. “Political Bodies,” Regardless of their subject, the films of Barbara Hammer are driven by an urge, as she describes it, to “find the political.” The varied works in this program include her 1992 feature-debut documentary Nitrate Kisses, an exploration of hidden queer histories; Would You Like to Meet Your Neighbor? A New York Subway Tape (1985), a playful, performative video that features Hammer (outfitted in a costume made from subway maps) interviewing fellow passengers; and Snow Job: The Media Hysteria of AIDS (1986). $8. 7 p.m. Wexner Center for the Arts, 1871 N. High St., Campus. DJ Trivia Columbus, DJ Trivia is a fun, live,
ThursDAY, June 20 – WeDnesDAY, June 26, 2019
interactive trivia game involving you, your team, other teams and a live DJ host. Free. 7-8:30 p.m. Red Door Tavern, 1736 W. 5th Ave., Grandview.
team size requirements and awesome prizes for each round’s winning team. Free. 8-10 p.m. Hounddog’s Pizza, 2657 N. High St., Old North.
Excesss Trivia, Join the Quiz Whiz Father every Thursday for four rounds of fast-paced, multimedia, buzzer trivia. It’s free to play, with no team size requirements and awesome prizes for each round’s winning team. Free. 7-9 p.m. Elevator Brewing 13th Floor Taproom, 165 N. 4th St., Downtown.
Excesss Karaoke, Join Moss Rabbit every Thursday for the best karaoke party around! With stellar sound and huge, regularly-updated songbooks, Excesss Karaoke is where to let loose with song and dance. Free. 9 p.m. Park Street Cantina, 491 Park St., Arena District.
Excesss Trivia, Join Chloe Cat every Thursday for four rounds of fast-paced, multimedia, buzzer trivia. It’s free to play, with no team size requirements and awesome prizes for each round’s winning team. Free. 7-9 p.m. Flavor 91 Gourmet Burger Bistro, 5186 E. Main St., Whitehall. Randy Rainbow Live, Tickets start at $45. VIP tickets available for a postshow meet and greet. 7:30 p.m. Davidson Theatre, 77 S. High St., Downtown. Juliana Hatfield, With Bird Streets. $20. Rumba Cafe, 2507 Summit St., North Campus. DJ Trivia Columbus, DJ Trivia is a fun, live, interactive trivia game involving you, your team, other teams and a live DJ host. Free. 8-9:30 p.m. Donericks, 1137 Worthington Woods Blvd., Worthington. Excesss Trivia, Join the Mad Mentalist every Thursday for four rounds of fast-paced buzzer trivia! It’s free to play, with no
The Composition Poetry Night, Every Thursday night poetry night hosted by Stevi L. Knighton. $7. 9-11:30 p.m. Burgerim Gourmet Burgers & Bar, 121 S. High St., Downtown.
FRIDAY Microwave, With Save Face/Better Off/Bad Luck/ Overgrow. $15. 6 p.m. Big Room Bar, 1036 S. Front St., Brewery District. Father’s Day Whiskey on High, If your dad, husband or brother loves bourbon or whiskey, he’ll love this Father’s Day gift. Treat him to an experience he will long remember and join us for a special Whiskey on High dedicated to Father’s. The night will feature: Wild Turkey Master’s Keep 17 Year, Blanton’s Single Barrel, Little Book No. 2 and Booker’s 30th paired with a shared charcuterie board. Participant cost is $50 and includes a flight of four, 1 oz. pours. There are 2 tasting time slots; 6-7 p.m. and 7:30-8:30 p.m. Live Music by: Brian
Douglas Day. Soul at the Joseph, 620 N. High St., Short North. Dwight & Nicole, Free. 6 p.m. Woodlands Tavern, 1200 W. Third Ave., Grandview. The Allman Betts Band, With Stoll Vaughan. $25. Express Live, 405 Neil Ave., Arena District. Summer Solstice Celebration, Bring your family (2nd grade and under) to welcome summer at the Grange Insurance Audubon Center & in the surrounding Scioto Audubon Metro Park. Enjoy a summer hike, games, crafts, stories and songs and a special snack around the fire. 6:308:30p.m. Grange Insurance Audubon Center, 505 W. Whittier St., Brewery District. The Conspiracy Band 30th Anniversary Kickoff, We are 30 years and still going! And it’s because of all of you. There will be dancing, drinks, special guests, and a buffet from Creative Cuisine Catering. $10/$15. 7-11 p.m. Via Vecchia Winery, 2050 S. High St., Brewery District SonReal, Born in the small town of Vernon, British Columbia, SonReal’s first major video for his song “Everywhere We Go” boasted the best talent show sequence since Napoleon Dynamite and racked up over 19 million plays to date. His next EP, the Juno-nominated For The Town, continued the visual tradition, including some of the most creative music videos on the web in “Preach,” “For The Town,” and “Woah Nilly.” After
completing an American tour and signing to a US major label, SonReal locked away in the studio to work on his debut album, One Long Dream. The first single of the project “Can I Get A Witness” was an instant success, achieving platinum status and entering the Top 15 in Canadian top 40 radio. Not soon after, SonReal parted ways with his US label, and regained his independence. One Long Dream was released, and SonReal immediately hit the road on his headlining 45 date One Long Dream tour. $15/$17. 7 p.m. The Basement, 391 Neil Ave., Arena District. “Say Amen, Somebody,” One of cinema’s most acclaimed music documentaries, Say Amen, Somebody is a funny, uplifting, and deeply emotional celebration of gospel music and African American culture. When originally released, the film received an overwhelming response from critics and audiences around the world. Yet until this gorgeous new restoration (which features a powerful new 5.1 surround sound mix), the movie has been unseen in cinemas for nearly 30 years! With unforgettable performances by the father of gospel, Thomas A. Dorsey, Mother Willie Mae Ford Smith, The Barrett Sisters, and The O’Neal Twins, you’ll see why Roger Ebert ranked it among “the most joyful movies I’ve ever seen!” $8. 7 p.m. Wexner Center for the Arts, 1871 N. High St., Campus. Columbus Clippers vs. Lehigh Valley Iron Pigs, $7-$20. 7:15 p.m.
Huntington Park, 330 Huntington Park Ln., Arena District.
Erotic Poetry and Wine “Love on the Run Tour,” $25. 7:30-10:30 p.m. 2016 Minnesota Ave., Linden. Bad Books, With opener Brother Bird. $19/$23. 7:30 p.m. Newport Music Hall, 1722 N. High St., Campus.
of percussionist Kevin Garcia to the longtime lineup of Brian Dickel, Trent Wagler, Jay Lapp, and Eric Brubaker. $12. 8 p.m. Woodlands Tavern, 1200 W. Third Ave., Grandview. gnash, With Anna Clendening, Suitcase Runaway. $17/$20. 8 p.m. A&R Music Bar, 391 Neil Ave., Arena District. Excesss Karaoke, Join Dirk Dursty every Friday for the best karaoke party around! With stellar sound, massive songbooks, and new songs regularly added, this is where to let your inner star shine. Free. 9 p.m. Ledo’s Tavern, 2608 N. High St., Old North. Vandoliers, $10. 9 p.m. Rumba Café, 2507 Summit St., North Campus. Salsa Fever Fridays, Columbus’ most loved weekly Friday salsa dancing event is back! Join us at its new home in Grandview at Bar145. The night begins with a salsa dancing lesson, teaching basic-intermediate salsa, merengue and bachata steps and routines to dancers of all skill levels. No dance shoes are
required, though if you do have them, they’ll certainly be put to good use. Open dancing follows the dance lesson and infuses Bar 145 with sultry Latin flavor. 9-11:45 p.m. Bar 145, 955 W. Fifth Ave.
SATURDAY Central Ohio Walk For Wishes, Help make wishes come true by gifting strength and sparking imagination to kids battling critical illness through this powerful fundraising event. Participants will enjoy a family-friendly one-mile walk with loads of celebration, music, food and fun. Walkers will also have the opportunity to meet wish families and experience the power of a wish come true. For more information and to register your walk team, visit site. wish.org/COHWalk. 8 a.m. Columbus Zoo and Aquarium, 4850 W. Powell Rd., Powell.
city’s most interesting and misunderstood sites. Join us for a walking tour of the area that once was the winter headquarters of the Sells Circus, one of America’s largest circuses. The evolution of this neighborhood - from Weisheimer Mill to the Lennox Town Center - will be explored and you will gain an understanding of its rich tapestry that includes the township, railroads, elephant tamers, early African American-owned farms, river baptisms, football parking wars, and more. Conrade Hinds, author of the recently released Lost Circuses of Ohio and past Columbus Landmarks Trustee, will join Doreen Uhas Sauer to help lead the tour. Copies of the book will be available. $15. Meet in front of Petco, 1647 Olentangy River Rd., Grandview.
St. Philip Market Place Indoor Flea Market, 10 a.m.-6 p.m. St. Philip Episcopal Church, 166 Woodland Ave., East Side. Fetch a Friend Adopt A Thon and Made Local Marketplace, Join us for the 4th annual Fetch A Friend Adopt-aThon. This year we have partnered with Made Local Marketplace for the first ever “Adopt and Shop” event. Join us for a weekend of shopping with great local vendors, while meeting adoptable pets. We will have food trucks, kids’ activities and a book signing with Erin Merryn, author of “Bailey, No Ordinary Cat.” Please note, that for the safety of all rescues and animals, personal pets are not permitted inside the venue. 11 a.m.-4 p.m. Franklin County Fairgrounds, 4100 Columbia St., Hilliard.
Sellsville Walking Tour, Where Elephants Roamed - the culture, history and architecture of a corner of Clinton Township. Sellsville is one of our
ColumbusAlive.com | Thursday, June 20, 2019
A Cure For Love/Let Them Hear/The Manatee Room/ Supertrust, Four fantastic Ohio-based bands will entertain as part of June’s “Best of the Underground” showcase from Wild Goose Creative. Starting things off is alternative rock quartet Supertrust, who released their EP ‘Tonight’ earlier this year on various streaming platforms. Performing second is college indie pop/ rock trio The Manatee Room, who are hard at work on their debut EP due out soon. The group performs wellcrafted originals like “On Impact”, “Humorous” and “Unlucky” combined with sharp takes on well-known covers from the likes of Snow Patrol, Kings Of Leon, Katy Perry, and others. Third is Mansfield Christian rockers Let Them Hear, who established themselves slightly over a year ago. The four-piece has their fulllength record, Stories Untold: Songs Unheard Of, available online. The band’s influences range from Guns N’ Roses to Incubus. Closing out the show is A Cure For Love, one of the hardest working acts in Central Ohio. This talented quartet started in 2016 and has been playing as many shows as possible to improve themselves and demonstrate ‘can do’ and ‘will do’ attitudes. They have demos on Bandcamp, but like their friends in The Manatee Room they have an EP in the works. $5 at the door. 7:30 p.m. BOYB. Wild Goose Creative, 2491 Summit St., North Campus.
The Steel Wheels, Simultaneously familiar and fresh, The Steel Wheels bring a singular energy to every note they play and sparkling craft to each song. This potent combination, paired with a robust tour calendar, has made the veteran band hands-down favorites of fans and peers alike. From their base in Virginias Blue Ridge Mountains, The Steel Wheels have played the most prestigious festivals, listening rooms, and clubs in the world, earning a reputation as one of the top independent bands on the scene today. While 2017s stunning studio album, Wild As We Came Here, was still ringing in the air, the band shone a light on their concerts with the release of two EPs of live music; Volume 1: Live at the Station Inn, and Volume 2: Live at The Jefferson Theatre. Ever ambitious and not content to let moss grow under their feet, the Wheels returned to the studio-retreat of Sam Kassirer, producer of Wild, to record another studio album that will be released summer 2019. In keeping with their relentless growth, the quartet, has become a quintet with the permanent addition
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MEDICAL MARIJUANA
Discover how medical marijuana may be a safer option. Call us at 614-612-1240 or sign up online for our free events to learn more. www.bloomohio.com/myhealth *Medical marijuana is available under Ohio law, however, it is illegal under Federal law. Medical marijuana is not available to individuals under the age of 21. LIC.#MMD.04042
2521 W Schrock Rd, Westerville, OH 43081 (614) 890-9019 SEE OUR ALIVE & DISPATCH REVIEW!! Ghost Pepper Mac & Smoked Brisket Eggrolls
2 for $7
ColumbusAlive.com | Thursday, June 20, 2019
Open Mon-Thurs. 11-8pm • Fri. & Sat. 11-9pm • Closed Sunday www.chefrichskitchen.com
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• GREAT FOOD • HISTORIC SETTING • LARGE SELECTION OF BEERS ON TAP • WEEKDAY LUNCH & DINNER • BRUNCH SAT-SUN 11AM-3PM
Located in the historic Wonder Bread Building 697 N. Fourth Street 614-826-2348 www.citytaverncolumbus.com Sunday-Thurs: 11 a.m. to 12 a.m. Friday-Saturday: 11 a.m. to 2:30 a.m.
email your ad to: info@dispatch.com
614-888-8888
The Royal Car Show, We will be accepting Trucks, Motorcycles, Muscle cars, Classic Cars, Show cars and more. We will have a top 5 in each category also there will be a number one in each category as well as up to a $500 grand prize for our top Show vehicle. The Royal lounge will have food, a bikini contest, 50/50 raffle, and car wash around back for trucks and cars. Inside the royal we will have drink specials, live music, beer, souvenirs, and much more. $35. Noon-2 a.m. Royal Lounge, 6093 Mc Naughten Center. Far East Side. Ohio Wings & Beer Festival, We’ve assembled a collection of Ohio’s best breweries and wing joints to kick off the first ever Ohio Wings and Beer Festival. $45. Noon-6 p.m. Ohio Expo Center & State Fair - Rhodes Center, 717 E. 17th Ave., North Side. Set It Off, With Emarosa, Broadside, Selfish Things. The Los Angeles-based band -comprised of Cody Carson (vocals), Dan Clermont (guitar), Zach DeWall (guitar) and Maxx Danziger (drums)- have become known for creating their own original brand of pop music, infusing bold electronic elements that guide loud, driving rock instrumentations with guitar riffs as catchy as the choruses and an overall feel-good, danceworthy vibe. Commanding attention, Set It Off bring authenticity back to pop music in a bold and unapologetic way. The group’s 2016 full-length release, Upside Down, was noted as one of the “Most Anticipated Albums of 2016” by Alternative Press Magazine and follows the band’s sophomore album,
Duality, which debuted at No. 18 on the Billboard Independent Chart. The band’s debut full-length, Cinematics, debuted at No. 1 on the Billboard South Atlantic Heatseekers Regional Chart, No. 4 on Billboard Heatseekers Chart, No. 9 on Billboard Next Big Sound Chart, and even broke into the Billboard Top 200 chart. Now, Set It Off of come to Fearless Records for their next chapter with the dynamic new single, “Killer In The Mirror,” which affirms the band have reached a higher level of musicianship. The new track serves as a preview to some of the band’s upcoming, most edgy and pop-driven anthems to date. $19/$22. 6 p.m. Newport Music Hall, 1722 N. High St., campus. BrewDog Craft Beer School, Ever wondered how professional beer judges do what they do? This beer school will teach you all their secrets! We’re going to turn our beer museum into a massive tasting room, where our beer geek Caroline will be your beery guide. We’ll start with a brief history of BrewDog and craft beer in America, then taste our way through four BrewDog beers. With each beer, we’ll consider one of the steps that professional beer judges use when they evaluate beer: the keys to a beer’s appearance, aroma, taste, and mouthfeel. Then we’ll put your knowledge to the test with a blind beer tasting. You’ll walk away from this amplified beer school with an essential app installed on your phone, the secrets of professional judges, a Beer Geek certificate, the confidence to judge a beer blind, and plenty of ways to show off the next time you’re out drinking with friends. $20. 7-9
p.m. DogTap Columbus, 96 Gender Rd., Canal Winchester. Jim Leeke – “Howell’s Storm,” Jim Leeke is the author of From the Dugouts to the Trenches, Nine Innings for the King, and Ballplayers in the Great War. A former print journalist, he has written extensively about computing, technology, and American military history. More than half a century ago, New York City suffered from a drought that lasted through 1949 and into 1950. By February, the desperate city had to try something different. Mayor William O’Dwyer hired a municipal rainmaker. Dr. Wallace E. Howell was an inspired choice. The handsome, thirty-fiveyear-old Harvard-educated meteorologist was the ideal scientist—soft spoken, modest, and articulate. No fast-talking prairie huckster, he took credit for nothing he couldn’t prove with sound empirical data. Howell’s meticulous nature often baffled jaded New Yorkers. Over the
next year, his leadership of a small ground and air armada, and his unprecedented scientific campaign to replenish the city’s upstate reservoirs in the Catskills, captured the imagination of the world. Free. 7-10 p.m. The Book Loft of German Village, 631 S. 3rd St., German Village. Columbus Destroyers vs. Philadelphia Soul, Tickets start at $23. 7 p.m. Nationwide Arena, 200 W. Nationwide Blvd., Arena District. Columbus Clippers vs. Lehigh Valley Iron Pigs, $7-$20. 7:15 p.m. Huntington Park, 330 Huntington Park Ln., Arena District. Galactic’s OwnShamarr Allen and the Underdawgs, $12. 8 p.m. Woodlands Tavern, 1200 W. Third Ave., Grandview. Columbus Symphony Orchestra presents the Music of Pink Floyd, Tickets start at $10. 8 p.m. Columbus Commons, 160 S. High St., Downtown.
SUDOKU | ANSWER FOR 6-20-19
email your ad to:
info@dispatch.com
or call 614-888-8888
OUT AND ABOUT DIRECTORY REPURPOSED...RECLAIMED...REMARKABLE! FREE GIFT with purchase
*visit store for details
CBD RETAIL STORE 614.407.4420
14 W Pacemont Rd. Columbus OH 43202
www.cbdhemphealth.com
Since 1946 Ohio Made
The Market at Fortinironworks.com
944 West 5th Avenue Columbus, Ohio • 614.291.4342
Stop by Oakland Nursery for our 39th annual Thank You Sale. EVERYTHING IS ON SALE! Save 20-66% off the regular price all merchandise. No leftover stock with new products arriving daily and included in this sale.
Serving Breakfast All Day Featuring our Hand Breaded and Hand Cubed Country Fried Steak every Friday after 3pm
63 E. Broad Street • Pataskala, OH 43062 (740) 964-0056
www.nutcrackerpataskala.com Sun & Mon 7am-2pm • Tues-Sat 7am-8pm
Visit our web site for the Oakland locations and business hours. oaklandnursery.com
You only get one lunch per day, Make it great at Talita’s.
ANY PURCHASE OF $25 OR MORE Not valid with any other offers. Expires Expires6/30/19 5/5/19
Serving Authentic Tex-Mex Burritos, Enchiladas, Tacos, Coneys and Sandwiches! 1335 Dublin Road Columbus at RiversEdge www.talitas.com | 614-824-1354
Open Daily 11 AM Closed Sunday
501 Park Street • (614) 221-4099 • www.parkstreettavern.com
Serving Great food for over 30 Years Pizza • Pasta • Subs Appetizers • Salads Dinners
“Specializing in hearty, authentic, italian cuisine, Villa Nova stems from deep family roots building their brick and mortar in 1978. Villa Nova is currently owned by John, his wife Meghan, and his brother Frankie with Donna enjoying retirement life and socializing with all of our wonderful customers. Join us for lunch or dinner today!
Open Daily at 11:00 5545 N. High St. • Columbus
(614) 846-5777 • www.villanovacolumbus.com
Increase your exposure and let Central Ohio know about your fun spots in the Out and About Directory! Email info@dispatch.com or call 614-888-8888 today!
ColumbusAlive.com | Thursday, June 20, 2019
$5 OFF
Celebrating 50 Years.
JAZZ TUESDAYS • KARAOKE THURSDAYS
LIVE MUSIC FRI & SAT • PRIVATE BAR AVAILABLE
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New Kids On The Block: The Mixtape Tour, With Debbie Gibson, Salt-NPepa, Tiffany, Naughty By Nature. Tickets start at $17. 8 p.m. Schottenstein Center, 555 Borror Dr., Campus. Horse Feathers, With Year of the Buffalo. $15. 9 p.m. Rumba Café, 2507 Summit St., North Campus.
SUNDAY Yoga on the Roof, Yoga and brunch on the roof at BrewDog Franklinton. $25. BrewDog Franklinton, 463 W. Town St., Franklinton. BrewDog USA Brew Tour, Enjoy a BrewTour of all three unique BrewDog Brew Pubs in Columbus, in one trip. $65. 11 a.m.-3 p.m. DogHouse Hotel and Brewery, 96 Gender Rd., Canal Winchester.
ColumbusAlive.com | Thursday, June 20, 2019
Yoga On Tap, Join us on Sunday June 23rd for an all-levels yoga class and beer tasting! The class will start with a gentle warmup, followed by a fun, alllevels vinyasa flow led by 200-RYT Yoga Instructor Kim Martin. After class, we will break up into groups
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to enjoy a beer tasting during a friendly trivia match. Winning group gets a Zaftig pint glass. $26. 1-3 p.m. Zaftig Brewing Co., 7020-A Huntley Rd., Worthington. Laurel Kerr – “Wild On My Mind,” Two-time Golden Heart® Finalist Laurel Kerr spent a few weeks each summer of her childhood on family road trips. That time packed into the backseat of her grandparents’ Grand Marquis opened her imagination and exposed her to the wonders of the United States. The lessons she learned then still impact her writing today. She lives near Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania with her husband, daughter, and loyal cavalier spaniel. Love runs wild at the Sagebrush Flats Zoo, where a motley crew of big-hearted animals helps the most unlikely couples find love. Free. 1-3 p.m. The Book Loft of German Village, 631 S. 3rd St., German Village. Columbus Clippers vs. Lehigh Valley Iron Pigs, $7-$20. 2:05 p.m. Huntington Park, 330 Huntington Park Ln., Arena District.
Outlaw Music Festival, Willie Nelson & Family, The Avett Brothers, Alison Krauss, Old Crow Medicine Show, Dawes, more. Tickets start at $23. 2:30 p.m. Nationwide Arena, 200 W. Nationwide Blvd., Arena District. The Strings Of The Columbus Symphony, $10-$25. 3 p.m. Congregation Beth Tikvah, 6121 Olentangy River Rd., Worthington. Town Hall for the Green New Deal, This Town Hall will present experts on the Federal proposal and how it might work in Columbus. Dr. Fadhel Kaboub, economics professor at Denison University, will present an overview of the Resolution, including the Job Guarantee program. Cathy Cowan Becker, leader of the Sierra Club’s Ready for 100 Campaign in Columbus, will discuss on the ground movements in central Ohio. Terry Hermsen, leader of a strategic effort to create a Hub for local organizations addressing the climate crisis, will moderate the discussion. Q&A discussion will take place after the presentations. Simply Living is sponsoring
the event with the Justice Action Ministry of the First Unitarian Universalist Church. Co-sponsors include the Sierra Club, Progressive Democrats of America, Ohio Sustainable Business Council, Ohio Interfaith Power & Light, Citizens Climate Lobby, Columbus Chapter, Move To Amend, the Central Ohio Transition Hub, and more will be announced. Donations accepted. 3-5:30 p.m. First Unitarian Universalist Church, 93 W Weisheimer Rd., Clintonville.
of Indiana to entertain their fans. The boys will record a live podcast in each city with crowd interaction, interview a special guest, and Pat will be recording his 2nd standup comedy special. $35. 7 p.m. Davidson Theatre, 77 S. High St., Downtown.
Columbus Crew SC vs. Sporting Kansas City, Tickets start at $23. 5:30 p.m. Mapfre Stadium, One Black & Gold Blvd., North Side.
Excesss Trivia Multiple Choice, Join the Quiz Whiz Father every Monday for four rounds of fast-paced, multimedia, multiple choice buzzer trivia. It’s free to play, with no team size requirements and awesome prizes for each round’s winning team. Free. 6-8 p.m. India Oak Bar and Grill, 590-A Oakland Park Ave., Clintonville.
The Weak Days/The Sonder Bombs, $10. 6-11 p.m. Donatos Basement, 2084 N. High St., Campus. Lithics w/The Gotobeds, $10. 6:30-9 p.m. Ace of Cups, 2619 N. High St., Old North. Lucy Spraggan, With Ohyoholos. $15. 7 p.m. Rumba Cafe, 2507 Summit St., North Campus. The Pat McAfee Show Does America, The Pat McAfee Show Does America tour will be the first time The Pat McAfee Show 2.0 ventures outside
Columbus Clippers vs. Toledo Mudhens, $7-$20. 7:05 p.m. Huntington Park, 330 Huntington Park Ln., Arena District.
MONDAY
DJ Trivia Columbus, DJ Trivia is a fun, live, interactive trivia game involving you, your team, other teams & a Live DJ host. Free. 8-9:30 p.m. Donericks, 2222 W. Henderson Rd., Upper Arlington.
Kyle Eldridge, Free. 6 p.m. Woodlands Tavern, 1200 W. Third Ave., Grandview.
TUESDAY
DJ Trivia Columbus, DJ Trivia is a fun, live, interactive trivia game involving you, your team, other teams & a Live DJ host. Free. 6:30-8 p.m. The Crazee Mule Pub & Grill, 6188 Cleveland Ave., Northland. The National, With Courtney Barnett. $45. 6:30 p.m. Express Live, 405 Neil Ave., Arena District.
Excesss Trivia, Join Fat Mike every Tuesday for four rounds of fast-paced buzzer trivia. It’s free to play, with no team size requirements and awesome prizes for each round’s winning team. Free. 6:30-8:30 p.m. Pub Mahone, 31 E. Gay St., Downtown. Excesss Trivia, Join Que Ball every Tuesday for four rounds of fast-paced, multimedia, buzzer trivia. It’s free to play, with no team size requirements and awesome prizes for each round’s winning team. Free. 7-9 p.m. North City Tavern, 46 Dillmont Dr., Far North Side. “The Human Element,” With rare compassion and heart, “The Human Element” follows environmental photographer James Balog on his quest to highlight Americans on the front lines of climate change, inspiring us to re-evaluate our relationship with the natural world. Free, $10 donations suggested. Please RSVP through eventbrite. 7-9 p.m. Drexel Theatre, 2254 E. Main St., Bexley. Potty Mouth, w/Colleen Green + Leggy. “...artsensible power-punk
wrapped in a catchy, fistpumping package.” $12. 7 p.m. Ace of Cups, 2619 N. High St., Old North. Columbus Clippers vs. Toledo Mudhens, $7-$20. 7:05 p.m. Huntington Park, 330 Huntington Park Ln., Arena District. Advanced Placement Tour Feat. Bloxx, Hembree And Warbly Jets, $15. 9 p.m. Rumba Café, 2507 Summit St., North Campus.
WEDNESDAY Thurber House Summer Literary Picnics: Kaira Rouda, Each summer, the Thurber House lawn plays host to a series of outdoor literary picnics and readings with authors who have an Ohio connection. Join us for this
long-running tradition of good friends, good food, and great books! About the book and author: The perfect home. The perfect family. The perfect lie. Jane Harris lives in a sparkling home in an oceanfront gated community in Orange County. It’s a place that seems too beautiful to be touched by sadness. But exactly one year ago, Jane’s oldest daughter, Mary, died in a tragic accident and Jane has been grief-stricken ever since. When she emerges from her haze of anti-depressants, she discovers that her family seems to have changed. Does someone know more about Mary, and about her last day, than they’ve revealed? Kaira Rouda is an accomplished business leader, entrepreneur, national speaker, and internationally bestselling and award-winning
author. A dedicated community activist, she created the first walk-in emergency shelter for homeless families in Central Ohio. Kaira lives in Southern California with her husband, Congressman Harley Rouda. Picnicking begins at 5:30 p.m. Thurber House, 77 Jefferson Ave., Downtown. Ellementa Columbus: Cannabis and CBD for Optimizing Your Health, This is not a lecture, this is not a business networking event. This is a vibrant, exciting, dynamic and personal sharing of wisdom and experiences. This month, we’re talking about the new book, Cannabis and CBD for Health and Wellness by Ellementa CEO, Aliza Sherman, and Dr. Junella Chin, MD. Our female-forward events
are warm, comfortable and welcoming to women/ female-identified who are new to cannabis as well as the more experienced. $10-$15. 6-8 p.m. Haven Collective, 2025 Riverside Dr., Upper Arlington. DJ Trivia Columbus, DJ Trivia is a fun, live, interactive trivia game involving you, your team, other teams & a Live DJ host. 6:30-8 p.m. Eldorado’s Food & Spirits, 4968 N. High St., Clintonville. Spirits of Columbus Negroni Competition 2019, Join us for an evening of friendly competition on June 26th from 6:30PM-8:30PM for the 4th annual Negroni Competition. Discover the creativity of Columbus’ finest mixologists by sampling their variation on this classic cocktail
featuring the spirits of Columbus’ own Middle West Spirits and Campari. Imbibe afterwards with specialty cocktails at Soul at the Joseph featuring Middle West Spirits and Campari. Must be 21+ to enter. ID will be checked at the door. $15. Le Méridien Columbus, The Joseph, 620 N. High St., Short North. DJ Trivia Columbus, DJ Trivia is a Fun, Live, Interactive Trivia Game involving you, your team, other teams & a Live DJ host. Free. 7-8:30 p.m. Palle by Moretti, 1021 W. 5th Ave., Grandview. DJ Trivia Columbus, DJ Trivia is a Fun, Live, Interactive Trivia Game involving you, your team, other teams & a Live DJ host. Free. 7-9 p.m. Larry B’s Sports Lounge, 5926 Westerville Rd., Westerville.
VANS Presents: The Loyal To The Craft Tour, 7 p.m. Woodlands Tavern, 1200 W. Third Ave., Grandview. Operators w/ Doomsquad, “...the secret ingredient missing from so much of the music meant to reawaken the new wave sound of the ‘80s: paranoia, at a peppy tempo.” $12. 7-10 p.m. Ace of Cups, 2619 N. High St., Clintonville. The Craft Comedy Tour, See New York City’s #1 roast comedian Sean Finnerty, as we tour Ohio’s top breweries. $15. 8 p.m. BrewDog Short North, 1175 N. High St., Short North. The Claudettes, With The Beers. $10. 8-11 p.m. Bar Big Room Bar, 1036 S. Front St., Brewery District.
ColumbusAlive.com | Thursday, June 20, 2019
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CLASSIFIEDS TO PLACE AN AD CALL
888.8888
MERCHANDISE • ANNOUNCEMENTS • REAL ESTATE/RENTALS • FINANCIAL ADULT ENTERTAINMENT • EMPLOYMENT & EDUCATION SERVICES • PETS • TRANSPORTATION
Dated Sales
Real Estate
Real Estate
BRUNER LAND COMPANY, INC. (740)685-3003 or (740)432-5095 www.brunerland.com "Owner Financing Available"
Springfield OH - Historic Wittenberg Univ. Area Sacrifice Retirement Sale! Now a duplex, or change it back to a beautiful Single Family home. 6 Fireplaces, 4 levels including attic, private driveway and alley access. Built in 1890’s. 3 Car Detached garage (heated), Workshop, Needs easy "This Old House" FUN type work. $29,000! Clear Deed, Cash, Any Trade? or Down Payment enables a Monthly payment of 3 to $400 Call 386-547-7030 (No Texts)
ANNOUNCE⁄THAT SPECIAL CELEBRATION The Celebrations! Page runs every Sunday in the Arts/Life Section. There are three packages to choose from, Gold, Silver, and Bronze. Laminations are $5.00 each. Call 614-888-8888, Mon.-Fri., 8am5pm to request a packet or visit our web page at dispatch.com/celebrations to download the forms and view the packages and requirements. Ads must be received by NOON the Monday preceeding publication. Colonial Hills Family Neighborhood Garage Sale June 22nd from 9am-3pm. Maps at Selby Park Shelter 358 S Selby Blvd., 43085. Furniture, appliances, electronics! COMMUNITY GARAGE SALE! Fri & Sat, June 21 & 22, 9-4 Villages of Gahanna Sub Association Located South of Morse Rd. & East of Cherrybottom Rd. 43230. SOMETHING FOR EVERYONE! Garage Sale: June 21 & 22, 9-3. 661 Fleetrun Ave. Gahanna 43230. Furn., hswrs., Longaberger, home decor, collectibles, linens, bicycles & more! HERITAGE LAKES SALE 3 FAMILIES AT 6227 HERITAGE POINT CT. FRI & SAT. 8-4. Flex steel end & coffee tbl. wrought iron, Frigidaire light in stove, micro confection microwave, Kohler cast iron 3 hole sink, Dethacher (for lawn), lamps, pottery, clths, reamers. 614-771-7206. HUGE COLLECTIBLE SALE ROCK HILL RD. IN LAUREL CANYON (OFF OF MCNAUGHTEN)SAT. JUNE 22, 9-5. SIGNS WILL BE POSTED. 614-530-3720. Moving Sale Fri & Sat 6/21 & 6/22 (9-5pm) 200 Portage Ct, 43110. Amish Oak , Sm Antq.Tables, Tools, Pictures, Quilt Rack & Frame, Swing & More
LICKING CO: Location, Location! 20 acres, $99,900. Just minutes from Newark, nice high building site. MORGAN CO: 7 acres with pines and nice building sites, $28,900. PERRY CO: 20 acres, $59,900 with electric and county water available. BRUNER LAND COMPANY, INC. (740)685-3003 or (740)432-5095 www.brunerland.com "Owner Financing Available" COSHCOTON CO: 10 acres nice private home setting with woods, $59,900. Just minutes from West Lafayette. MUSKINGUM CO: Prime rugged hunting ground! Ranging from 35 to 117 acre tracts, very remote and private. Starting @ just $119,900. Near New Concord. BRUNER LAND COMPANY, INC. (614) 565-5666 www.brunerland.com "Financing Available"
FAIRFIELD CO: $5,000 off! 10 acres, now $74,900. Cable area.
Rental Living Now Accepting Applications
Skilled Trades
for our one and two bedroom apartment waiting lists. Persons who are 62 years of age or older or 18 years of age or older who have a need for a wheelchair accessible apartment are eligible to apply. Apartments are available under HUD’s subsidized program & income limits apply. Please call SETON SQUARE NORTH at 614-451-1995 between 10AM - 3PM, Mon. - Fri. for an appointment or for additional information. TTY Ohio Relay Service 1-800-750-0750.
SETON SQUARE EAST
Offers secured 2BR apt., water & electric included, community room, resource center for activities. Located on the busline. 1st & 2nd flrs. laundry fac. To apply must be 62+ years or disabled. Income base, HUDD property. Pick up applicant M-F, 10-3 or applicant box located at the entrance of the bldg. Call 614-861-4860 for information/questions.
Moving Sale June 21 & 22nd 9-6pm 622 Gleaming Dr, 43119
Multi Family/Moving Sale 6/21 9-4pm & 6/22 9-12pm 5311 Bittersweet Ct. 43230
ColumbusAlive.com | Thursday, June 20, 2019
North Orange Community Yard Sale 6/21-6/22, 8a-1p. Several moving sales! Furniture, clothing (baby to adult), kids and teen items, kitchen items and more. Receive map at 7644 Overland Trl
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WEXFORD WOODS SUBDIVISION, DUBLIN, OHIO Multi Family Sales 6/21 and 6/22; 9 am to 2 pm Something for everyone!!
Business Opportunity 40 yr. old pole barn company.Owner retiring. Contact Barnexpert@gmail.com. Low 7 figures.
Miscellaneous for Sale Beer Stein Collect., German Designer Mens Clths Sizes M-L, Shoes Size 8-8.5, Lthr. Jackets Sizes M & L, Lot of Tools, Vinyl Records, Suitcase, DVD’s, Movies, German Shoes Size 6.5, Womens Designer Clothes Size M & Shoes Size 6.5, Small Kitchen Appliances, Queen Quilts (2) and much more! Call 614-501-4696 Two Vintage Ladies Looking To Buy Vintage COSTUME JEWELRY, OLD WATCHES and SMALL ANTIQUES. Call: 614-826-3128 WANTED FREON R12. We pay CA$H. R12 R500 R11. Convenient. Certified professionals. www.refrigerantfinders.com 312-291-9169 Need More Staff? Advertise job openings in Alive
Delaware County 1846 Farm House Needs Total Remodel $192,500 an additional parcel with 4 Barns and enough space for a New Build home with mature trees $192,500 with the option of both parcels a total of 5.46 Acres for $380,000 Call 614-439-8734 NEW 5-10 ACRE HOME SITES Open & Wooded. Just North Delaware County in Morrow County. 23 miles Polaris Exit. Delaware County Schools. Seller Financing. No Closing Costs. See our website for directions and info www.hurdlelandco.com 1-800-962-0697 Ross Co. 57 acres NOW $102,500 or 25 wooded in Pike or Jackson Cos. $45,500 – many more @ www.brunerland.com or call 740-441-1492, we finance!
Sheriff Sale Of Real Estate! Attention Investors & Entrepreneurs 5,900 SF Dual-Purpose Commercial Building Office Space – Open Party Hall – Asphalt Parking City Utilities – Zanesville, OH – Muskingum Co. Sells on location: 1526 BLUFF ST., ZANESVILLE, OH 43701 ~ TUESDAY – JUNE 25, 2019 – 6:00 PM Visit www.kikoauctions.com for more details. AUCTION BY ORDER OF: Muskingum Co. Court Of Common Please Case #CE 2018-0069, JP Morgan Chase Bank NA, Plaintiff vs. Gary L. Lambert, et al, Defendants ~ AUCTIONEER/REALTOR: Eugene R. Kiko, ext. 113 or 330-495-0131 KIKO Auctioneers (330) 455-9357 www.kikoauctions.com
CONSTRUCTION PUNCH-OUT Rockford Homes is seeking an experienced new construction punch-out person. Must have prior experience to apply. Must have reliable transportation and your own tools. Leave a message for Dennis at 614-785-0015 or apply at: Rockford Homes Inc 999 Polaris Pkwy, St 200 Columbus, OH 43240 HR@rockfordhomes.net
Skilled Trades
Computers-Info
ROSEN USA, Inc. is recruiting for an Operations Advanced Diagnostics Lead - In Line Inspection in Columbus, Ohio to apply engineering theory and principles under supervision of engineering staff and Shop Manager in regards to incoming projects. Mail resumes referencing Job Code 521245 to HR, ROSEN USA, Inc., 1195 Technology Drive, Columbus, OH 43230. No calls or recruiters. EOE. ROSEN USA, Inc. is also recruiting for a Field Technicial L2 - Advanced Diagnostics in Columbus, Ohio to assist engineers to ensure advanced diagnostics for in-line inspection operations run smoothly. 40% domestic travel required. Mail resumes referencing Job Code 523906 to HR, ROSEN USA, Inc., 1195 Technology Drive, Columbus, OH 43230. No calls or recruiters. EOE
Multiple IT Related Positions (National Placement out of Franklin County, OH). Able to travel/relocate to different client sites as needed. Degree and experience may be in Computers, Engineering, IT or Business related field. Foreign educational equivalent or any suitable combination of education, training or experience is acceptable. For III position: Candidates must have a minimum of a Master’s and six (6) months of experience. Software Developer III (ColdFusion): Able to analyze, design, develop, test, administer, customize and implement IT related applications using skills in ColdFusion; JavaScript; Oracle; SQL Server; and HTML. Salary $107,765/yr. Ref# SCF-III0918 YASH. Software Developer III (SAP): Able to analyze, design, develop, test, administer, customize and implement IT related applications using skills in SAP FI/CO as well as ECC. Salary $107,765/yr. Ref# SCF-III-0918 YASH For Senior position: Candidates must have either a minimum of a Bachelor’s and five (5) years of experience or a Master’s and one (1) year of experience. Senior Software Developer (SAP): Able to analyze, design, develop, test, administer, customize and implement IT related applications using skills in SAP FI/CO as well as ECC. Salary $127,837/yr. Ref# SAP-0918 YASH. All positions are full time, permanent 9-5, 40 hrs/wk. Please reference (Ref#) when applying for job you are interested in and send resumes to Yashco Systems Inc, Park West Professional Plaza 3974 Brown Park Drive, Suite H, Hilliard, OH 43026 or E-mail usajobs@yashco.com. Yashco Systems, Inc. is an Equal Opportunity Employer M/F/V/D.
Computers-Info MeridianSoft, Inc., an Information Technology firm headquartered in Worthington, Ohio, is looking for Network Analysts, Software Developers, and Programmer Analysts to fill multiple positions ranging from entry levels to senior levels and with different experience and education levels in Worthington, Ohio. Travel and/or relocation to various unanticipated locations throughout the U.S required. Some positions require an Associate’s Degree and experience. Some positions require a Bachelor’s Degree and experience. Other positions require a Master’s Degree and experience. Please send 2 resumes and a cover letter referencing 8876.000 to MeridianSoft, Inc, ATTN: Human Resources, 100 W Old Wilson Bridge Rd., Suite 100, Worthington, Ohio 43085. No calls please.
PICK A CAR, ANY CAR Alive has hundreds- even thousands- of autos for sale.
WEST " COTTAGES Furnished " Utilities Paid. $250/week plus deposit. Call 614-879-6617.
DO YOU NEED TO BUY, SELL, TRADE, FIND, HIRE OR RENT? Go to The Classified Section
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Sales-Marketing
Sales-Marketing
Sales-Marketing
Stop Renting!
We can get u approved, we have all redone homes, East, North, etc. We give you a D/P, pay closing, pymts in the $500’s. Call now, 614-470-0395
Sr. Inside Steel Sales Representative
JOIN OUR TEAM AND MAKE IT HAPPEN!
CD-0006215370-03
Muirfield Village Neighborhood Garage Sale Saturday June 22 starting at 8am. Lots of homes participating. Come out to Dublin!
HOMES & LOTS
Specializing in Candlewood Lake Comm. Mt. Gilead Connie Beery Realtor 419-571-0786 (cell) Website & Open Houses: www.mylakehomesrealty.com
FAIRFIELD CO: $5,000 off! 10 acres, now $74,900. Cable area. BRUNER LAND COMPANY, INC. (614) 565-5666 www.brunerland.com "Financing Available"
Leisure Vac Prop-CA
If you are an exceptional sales professional, we are prepared to offer you rewarding opportunities to help you reach your short and long term goals! In this role, you would be the liaison between our company and our customers as you establish strong customer relationships and develop a flow of order inquiries. Join the sales team of Ohio’s premier steel service center and Make It Happen!
• Providing pricing quotes, close the sale and arranges for the prompt delivery of the product. • 1-3 years sales experience, preferably in steel. • Able to work independently and manage multiple tasks in a fast-paced environment • Service oriented, able to track manage and follow through on details • Tenacious approach to problem solving.
Email resume to: jobads@dispatch.com
Software Engineering – Columbus, OH. Develop and support the global accounts payable and fixed assets platform for the firm. Req’s 20% domestic/int’l travel. For reqs & to apply, visit http://careers.jpmorganchase.com & apply to job #:190054681. EOE, AAE, M/F/D/V. JPMorgan Chase & Co. All rights reserved. www.jpmorganchase.com. Sudhi Infomatics, Inc., an information technologies firm in Westerville, Ohio, is looking for Software Engineers and Computer Systems Analysts to fill multiple positions ranging from entry levels to senior levels and with different experience and education levels in Westerville, Ohio. Travel and/or Relocation to various unanticipated locations throughout the U.S. required. Some positions require a Bachelor’s Degree and experience; other positions require a Master’s Degree and experience. Please send 2 resumes and a cover letter referencing 6014.000 to Sudhi Infomatics, Inc., ATTN: Sudheer Gaddam, 470 Olde Worthington Road, Suite 325, Westerville, Ohio 43082. No calls please.
Engineering-Tech Cresttek LLC, an engineering services company headquartered in Dublin, Ohio, is looking for Product Engineers, Automotive Electronics Engineers, Software Engineers, Embedded Electronics Engineers, and Automotive Algorithm Control Engineers to fill multiple positions ranging from entry levels to senior levels and with different experience and education levels in Dublin, Ohio. Travel and/or Relocation to various unanticipated locations throughout the U.S. required. Some positions require a Bachelor’s Degree and experience. Other positions require a Master’s Degree and experience. Please send 2 resumes and a cover letter referencing #700.000 to 565 Metro Place South, Suite 420, Dublin, Ohio 43017. No calls please.
Don’t Miss A Good Deal! Read The
CLASSIFIED SECTION EVERY DAY.
Engineering-Tech
Financial-Banking
Prof and Management
Design Engineer Level I. Under supervision of the Sr. Design Engineer and Engineering Manager, plan, coordinate, and develop product designs and post-design development and analysis using product design practices and principles for a supplier of automotive interior components. Employer: Kasai North America, Inc. Location: Dublin, OH. Incidental domestic travel required. To apply, mail resume (no calls/e-mails) to Mrs. Yukiko Brace, 1225 Garrison Drive, Murfreesboro, TN 37129 and reference job code 0123.
Nationwide Insurance. Columbus, OH. Consultant, PC Actuarial. Serve as a reserving actuary applying actuarial methodologies & insurance concepts to estimate future liability & ascertain required reserves necessary to ensure payment of future benefits on insurance products. Conducts analyses that adhere to actuarial standards of practice, selects appropriate data sources & methods, makes assumptions, recognizes considerations & develops recommendations. Identifies unreasonable results/non-optimal solutions & investigates alternative resolutions. Continues to develop knowledge of more advanced actuarial methodologies through work experience & successful actuarial exam completion. Reqs: BS in actuarial science, stats, math or related field & 2 yrs of exp in the following: Actuarial or quantitative analysis & statistical modeling; Data & statistical analysis for insurance products; Utilizing SAS, Excel, MS Access, Oracle, DB2, SQL Server; & SQL & Visual Basic programming. Passage of at least 5 Casualty Actuarial Society exams. Mail resume to Kathi Repka (CPCA/DP), 1 Nationwide Plaza, 1-01-13, Columbus, OH 43215.
Application Development Manager (Multiple Positions) (Accenture LLP; Columbus, OH): Manage project execution to ensure adherence to budget, schedule, and scope. Must have willingness and ability to travel domestically approximately 80% of the time to meet client needs. For complete job description, list of requirements, and to apply, go to: www.accenture.com/us-en/careers (Job# 00717365).
Medical-Dental Richland Public Health Public Health Nursing Supervisor *Assist DON to plan, implement programs, policies & procedures. *Plan, evaluate, organize & supervise nursing/Clinic programs. *Public Health education, emergency preparedness. *Must have current Ohio RN license, BSN (or equivalent) & at least 3 years experience in public health is required. Supervision preferred. Visit our website: www.richlandhealth.org for an Employment Application & information
PICK A CAR, ANY CAR
General DevCare Solutions is looking for Microsoft Dynamics CRM Sr. Developers to work in Columbus, OH and various unanticipated locations throughout the U.S. Requires a Master’s degree or equiv. in Comp. Information Systems or related field and exp. in MS Dynamics CRM, C#, JavaScript, HTML, XML, SSRS, and SQL Server. Send resumes, REF. 1253.125 to ram@devcare.com.
Human Resource Coordinator wanted by Beauty Supply Company in Columbus, OH. Must have Master’s degree of Public Administration or equivalent & 1 year experience. Bachelor’s degree and five years of progressive experience will substitute for Master’s degree and one year of experience. Apply to: US Hair & Beauty, Inc. 4439 Crossroads Ctr, Columbus, OH 43232.
Pets
Pets
German Shepherd - German Imports at stud. Training, Obed., home protection, sch. classes, imports, young dogs, pups for sale. Learn to train dogs w/us.
GOLDEN DOODLE 13 week old Female, smooth coat, very smart, training started. UTD on shots. Ready for her forever home $600. Call 614-374-8775
LAB PUP BLACK AKC FEMALE Raised and trained, pottie & obediance, in home. Exc. confirmation, beautiful head. Med sz. UTD on all vetting. Well socialized. 35yr lab only breeder. $750 Dublin area. Lv msg/tx 6148733181.
740-756-7387 www.estatedogs.com
AKC Golden Retriever Pups. Carrollton, Oh. $750. Vet Checked, Home Raised. 330-739-4275 or 330-704-6080 GERMAN SHEPHERD PUPS AKC Shots, wormed, ready now. Black/tan, well socialized. Farm raised, $700. Call/text 567-278-0985. GERMAN SHEPHERD PUPS AKC, Shots, Wormed, $600. Some 1/2 price. CASH/ MC/ VISA 419-629-3830 or 419-235-6561 Visit: ohiohgs.com
Selling Your Home? Why not advertise in Alive?
ALL COLORS, VET CHECKED, SHOTS UTD, $500 READY TO GO, 614-400-7012 Surf the Classifieds www.columbusalive.com
Medical-Dental
Medical-Dental
Medical-Dental
Look through ads from dealers and private sellers that are categorized by makes and models, simplifying your search.
Pets
AKC German Shepherd tan and black. 2 male and 3 female, shots and wormed. Born 4/21/19, Mother, Father, male from first litter on premises. All have great dispositions. 614-582-6150 feel free to text
On Camera Talent. Serve as on-air host & commentator for live & post-produced broadcasts. Req. 2 yrs exp in job or 2 yrs exp as a Caster or in rel. occup. Any suitable combo of educ, training &/or exp is acceptable. Jobsite: Columbus, OH. Send resume ref#18093 to K. Jones, Blizzard Entertainment Inc., PO Box 18979, Irvine, CA 92623. NEED A LOW-MILEAGE CAR FOR YOUR SON OR DAUGHTER? Check out the auto section in Alive classifieds
Alive has hundreds- even thousands- of autos for sale.
Pets
AKC LABRADOR RETRIEVER PUPPIES
Don’t Miss A Good Deal! Read The Classified Section
Everyday.
Medical-Dental
GOLDEN RETRIEVER PUPS AKC Registered $650, First Shots & Wormer, Looking for Good Homes, Parents on premise Text or Call 740-604-3355
HOUSE HUNTING?
See what’s out there from right here! Our real estate classifieds list homes in all areas. Take a look before you go out and drive around!
Medical-Dental
LABRADOR PUPS
AKC, 1st shots, dewclaws, wrm’d, gd pedigree, Parents on site, 2 wht., 1 cream & blk, 2 charcoal/slvr. Hips/eyes guaranteed. Call 440-830-1015.
COLLEGE STUDENTS: Don’t have room for "don’t wants" in your dorm or apartment? Make some extra cash and unclutter your living quarters--sell them with a
ALIVE CLASSIFIED AD Medical-Dental
All applicants must apply online to be considered for employment, visit memorialohio.com Memorial Health is a drug-free workplace and requires pre-employment drug screening as a condition of employment.
CD-0006215159-03
ColumbusAlive.com | Thursday, June 20, 2019
Accountant .............................................................................Full time/1st shift Patient Financial Counselor ....................................................Full time/1st shift Central Sterile Technician .......................................................Full time/1st shift Physical Therapist...................................................................Full time/1st shift Dietary Aide / Food Service Worker.............................. Variety/1st and 2nd shift Physical Therapist Assistant ................................................. Part time/1st shift Hospitality Aide .....................................................................Full time/2nd shift Radiology Technologist ..........................................................Full time/1st shift Lab Medical Assistant ...........................................................Contingent/Variety Registered Nurse – Case Management, Emergency, Home Health, LPN ......................................................................................................... Variety ICU, MDS Coordinator, Med/Surg, Obstetrics and Surgery ........................... Variety Maintenance Technician ........................................................Full time/2nd shift Respiratory Therapist ...............................................Full and Part time/3rd shift Medical Assistant.................................................................................... Variety Medical Receptionist .................................................................Variety/1st shift Risk Management / Compliance Coordinator .........................Full time/1st shift MRI / CT Tech ............................................... Part time (benefit eligible)/3rd shift Sleep Lab Technician................................... Part time (benefit eligible)/3rd shift Medical Technologist / Medical Lab Technician ......................Full time/3rd shift Sr Account Manager of Sales and Partnerships ......................Full time/1st shift OB Technician / Surgical Scrub TechPart time (benefit eligible)/2nd and 3rd shift STNA ....................................................................................................... Variety Occupational Therapist ...........................................................Full time/1st shift Surgical Technologist.......................................................... Contingent/1st shift Patient Care Technician .......................................................................... Variety Transport / Scheduler .............................................................. Full time/Variety Please go to www.memorialohio.com to check out our full list of openings!
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Pets
Pets
Recreation
General
General
General
07 Holiday Rambler Neptune
36ft, Class A, Diesel, Sleeps 4-5, 4 Slideouts, Very nice, Must Sell 69K OBO 419-250-6496
2008 Honda Shadow VT 750 CC
Excellent shape, 4850 miles, Never down, Windshield and Bags, Seatback, Maroon/White $3100 Call 614-871-7362 Miniature Schnauzer - AKC 2 Males, Liver and Liver Parti, Small, UTD on Shots Call 740-249-7359
Shihchon Rare Black AKA Teddy Bear
Toy breed, vaccines, hlth. gtd., hypoallergenic, nonshed, AKC reg. parents on site, will deliver to Columbus. Call/text 740-412-1659.
Recreation 2018 CHEROKEE FOREST LTD. 33’, FULLY FURNISHED PLUS EXTRAS. SET UP IN PARK IN CIRCLEVILLE OH. READY TO START CAMPING. CALL 614-204-0545. Quality AKC Boston Terrier Puppies at Affordable Prices, Wormed, Shots, Vet Checked Call 330-897-0089
PICK A CAR, ANY CAR
Alive has hundreds- even thousands- of autos for sale.
2016 Evergreen IGo/Lite 20ft, 1 slide, electric awning, new tv, double axle, made to tow w/F150, first $12,000 gets it!! 614-257-9068 Grove City 2016 HARLEY TRI GLIDE Ultra Classic Trike Black Magic color, digital dash, Mustang kit, exc. condition, loaded, $22,000. Call 614-371-8300 2016 Harley Davidson V-Rod Muscle 6,000 miles, Pearl White & Black, $2000 Custom Black Toxic Darkside Pipes, Awesome sounding bike, London area $12,200 Call 740-604-1116
07 Holiday Rambler Neptune XL
Look through ads from dealers and private sellers that are categorized by makes and models, simplifying your search.
Browse our ads on the web! ww.columbusalive.com
General
General
36ft, Class A, Diesel, Sleeps 4-5, 4 Slideouts, Very nice, Must Sell 69K OBO 419-250-6496 Columbus Area
WANTED:
ALL MOTORCYCLE PRE 1980 IN ANY CONDITION Cash paid, running or not, pre-appraisals, will come to you! Call: 845-389-3239 Email cyclesndmore10@gmail.com 2006 YAMAHA ROYAL STAR DELUXE EXC. CONDITION WITH EXTRAS, LOW MILES WITH ONLY 9,200 AND LOW PRICE $4200. CALL 614-325-6176.
Wheels 2006 Audi A4 Quattro 2.0T Blk ext, tan & wood grain int, 106k miles, 4 cyl turbo, auto, ABS, nav, htd ltr seats, rain sensing wipers, full power incl moonroof, new tires. Fully loaded & clean for only $6,500. 614-562-5764
2003 BMW Convertible
Black Exterior, Tan Interior, 110,000 miles, Very Good Condition, $5900 614-271-4268 2018 BMW X5 X Drive 35I SUV Black w/black lthr., loaded, Weather Tech mats, addt’l service warranty, original sticker $63,000+, Sell $47,500. Call 614-371-8300. NEED A RIDE? Alive has hundreds-even thousands-of private and dealer autos advertised for sale. See our classifieds before you buy.
General
LONG ESTABLISHED REAL ESTATE CO.
LONG ESTABLISHED REAL ESTATE CO. Is looking to fill the following positions
• Full-Time Receptionist Strong clerical skills and customer service experience. • Experienced Painters needed • Apartment Maintenance Technician HVAC, Plumbing, Electrical, and basic Carpentry Experience. Great employee package and company van
COMPETITIVE PAY AND BENEFITS EMAIL RESUME TO KELLEYM@EBNERPROPERTIES.COM OR FAX 614-231-3645 CD-0006213689-03
Is looking to fill the following positions
Finding a job shouldn’t feel like one.
• Resident Manager Far East side of Columbus ColumbusAlive.com | Thursday, June 20, 2019
• Experienced Painters needed
44
• Apartment Maintenance Technician HVAC, Plumbing, Electrical, and basic Carpentry Experience. Great employee package and company van
COMPETITIVE PAY AND BENEFITS EMAIL RESUME TO KELLEYM@EBNERPROPERTIES.COM OR FAX 614-231-3645 CD-0006215579-03
CALL THE
email your ad to: info@dispatch.com
EXPERTS
1992 Cadillac Brougham D’Elegance
$7,500, 62,300 miles, 5.0 motor, services records, NO RUST, very good condition, call 614-219-9317
Painting
SAHR BASEMENT FINISHING www.BasementToday.com 30 Years Experience FREE ESTS. (614) 890-3940
MACHOL CONSTRUCTION-Remodel kitchens, baths, basements Int. & Ext. Painting. Call 614-873-8800 www.macholconstruction.net
JON’S PAINTING Interior/Exterior - Since 1986 Insured - FREE Ests ¶ BBB A+ 614-414-7997
GALLION CUSTOM CONCRETE LLC. Decorative concrete, remove-replace. Reputation built on quality. 41 yrs Exp Lic. & Ins., BBB 614-875-8364 Visit us on Facebook, or online at www.GallionCustomConcrete.com
Electrical Services AFFORDABLE ELECTRIC SERVICE Quit paying contractors’ overhead! Ceiling fans, switches, lighting & many more home maint. needs. 20 Yrs. Experience. Call 614-614-325-8905
Gutters-Drain CLINTONVILLE GUTTERS FREE Gutter Inspection w/Cleaning Free Est. Licensed/Insured. Box Gutters New Gutters & Repairs • BBB 614-414-7997 DAVE’S GUTTER SERVICE Clean, Repair, Install Drains & Leafproof Gutter. Yrs. of repeated customers. 614-875-9361, 614-205-9057
Hauling/Dumpster Rent A+ 614- 291-3867 Wee-Haul Senior Discount. Insured. Attics, Basements, Garages, Whole Houses. We Recyle! We Load!
Handyman Services Rannebarger Home Maintenance www.rhmaintenance.com 370-1958 General Home Repairs, Gutter Cleaning, Powerwash, Decks, Plumbing, Electric, Paint, Installs 911 HANDYMAN-Plumbing, Electric, Hardwood & Tile Floors. Specialized in Bathrm & Kit. Remodeling.Lic. & Bonded. 614-949-8362 No Job To Small F & R SERVICES COMPLETE HOME MAINTENANCE No Job Too Small. 42 Yrs. Exp. 614-237-2797/648-9192
Home Improvement µContractors µMedical Professionals µLandscapers µMechanics µBeauty Services Promote your business with the reach and frequency of appearing in The Dispatch, Alive and ThisWeek Community Newspapers. Packages Start as low as $50.00! Call Marlene or Lindy for more information (614) 888-8888
MIKE TRIPLETT Home Maintenance Home repair & remodeling. No job too small. Free est. 614-315-5962
NEED A
LOW-MILEAGE CAR
FOR YOUR SON OR DAUGHTER? Check out the auto section in Alive classifieds
ALL AROUND LANDSCAPE Bush Trim/Removal, Bed Cleanup, Clearing, Roto Tilling! 614-208-0057" Free Ests. LANDSCAPE -Flower bed clean-up, Edge, Mulch,Mow,Tree Removal & Powerwashing. Call/Text 614-434-8250 û LAWN CARE SERVICE 614-572-8888 û Taking new cust. Lot of openings. Spring Cleanup: Seasonal Mowing & Aeration. Free Est. Yr. Rd. Svcs. LAWN & GARDEN - Edge & Mulch Beds, Pruning, Cleanups, Shrub Removal & More! Free Est. Great Rates! Scott (614) 488-6762 / 517-6490 (cell)
 ALL-STAR  Custom Int./Ext. Painting • Wallpaper Removal. Visa/MC/Disc./Amex. Insured µ Angie’s List • BBB Member (614) 774-3353 • R.A. LONG PAINTING EXTERIOR 614-864-3951
Powerwashing MRS. POWERWASH Any house wash $149 + tax Single deck $69~Two tier deck $99 Over 45,000 washes completed 614 771-3892 Res. & Com. SPRING CLEANING - Home powerwashing from $99up. Spec. in pet odor treatment carpet cleaning. Super clean method $75 for 5 rooms. 614-805-1084.
Roofing RETIRED ROOFER BBB A+/ See RetiredRoofer.com Repair Work, Shingles, Flashing, Wind Damage, Rubber, Chimney, All Work Guaranteed 614-352-7057 PLASTERING, PLASTER & STUCCO NEW & REPAIR Established 1917 GEORGE F. NEFF & CO 614-274-5629
Masonry-Bricks-Stone T.J. Masonry Co. Masonry Repairs 25 Yrs Experience µ Insured www.tjmasonrycompany.com ECall 614-989-8886 F
Moving and Storage
STUCCO REPAIR - AllSeasonsWallsystems.com 30 Years Experience. Call Rob 614-436-8364 BUZZ’S SAW & Tool Sharpening-carbide, HSS, & hand saws, mower blades, chain saw chains, chisels, planer blades, routers,etc 38 yrs exp 740-369-5886
Tree Service
A COMPLETE MOVING CO. Reasonable µ Reliable µ Free Ests. PUCO#150692-HG (614) 878-1179 BBB Accredited Business No Job Too Small AARON ALLEN MOVING - Owned by Military Veteran Bonded µ Insured Puco#158-044-HG (614) 299-6683 & 263-0649
Painting JOB WELL DONE AGAIN -An insured, lic., general contractor. Experts in HOME EXTERIORS: painting, carpentry, stucco, tuck pointing chimneys & walls, gutter cleaning & underground drainage, drywall..just a few of the things we do. (NO SUB CONTRACTORS) Need something done? Just ask!Call 614-235-1819. A NEW DAWN PAINTING µ FAMILY OWNED & OPERATED Member BBB Since 1998, ZERO complaints. Firm Pricing, No Hidden Costs (614) 491-9965 - (614) 284-3917 andp5@webcomet.com MEADE PAINTING Interior and Exterior Painting, Carpentry, Faux Finishing, Power Washing, FREE ESTIMATES 614-878-8766 jeff@meadepainting.com
2002 CORVETTE CONVERTIBLE
GRANT’S TREE SERVICE Over 30 years Exp ° Insured Bucket, Climber, Stump Removal Complete LOCAL Tree Service Call (614)-753-3992 BURNS TREE SERVICE Pruning, Clean Up, Tree Removal & Stump Grinding Fully Insured, 614-584-2164 KEVIN’S TREE & SHRUB REMOVAL TRIM, SHREDS,STUMPS. 28 YRS EXP. LIC/INS. SR./VET DISC. V/MC/AMEX. CALL 614-855-5986. RICH’S 65’ BUCKET TRUCK TREE SVC. Stump Removal, Licensed & Insured. Free Estimates. Call 614-394-2367
2004 CADILLAC DEVILLE
Blue, 136,000 miles, V8 automatic, leather, A/C, runs, newer tires & battery, $2,300 obo. Call 614-204-3589.
2017 CAMRY SE
Grey/grey, almost new, 15,395 mi., Wow what a car! Toyota quality which is the best! Needs nothing. $16,995. Call 614-436-4033. 1996 CHEVY IMPALA SS-Black Cherry LT1 engine, 100% orig, always gar’d, never driven in rain or snow, one owner, N/S, new tires, exc cond, 39,000 mi.Serious Inquiries Only !! $16,000 OBO, 614-620-5591
2011 Chevy Traverse LTZ
AWD, White Diamond, Loaded, Excellent Condtion, 102K miles, $14,000 Call 614-286-3547
2011 Chevy Malibu LTZ Heated Seats, White/Blk Leather, 110,000 miles, Sharp, Runs Great, SOLD SOLD SOLD
2012 Chevy Traverse LT AWD
White/Blk Leather, Moonroof, Entertainment Ctr., Heated Seats, Clean, A/C, 3rd Row, 107K miles, $10,995 Call 614-738-5759
2005 Chevy Tahoe 4WD
88K miles, White, Automatic, Clean Title, $2600 OBO Call 740-207-2827 1973 CHRSYLER NEW YORKER BROUGHAM 103,800 miles, mostly original, All the chrome in great condition. Drives and runs great, $3,000. Call 614-372-3702.
1992 Chrysler LeBaron Convertible
6 cyl., Red with Black soft top, Automatic, Good condition, Kept covered, 49,000 miles, SOLD SOLD SOLD 1974 Corvette Stingray Red/Silver Interior, 383 Jeg’s Crate Motor, New Fuel Injection, New Exhaust, New Suspension, New Brakes, New Gas Tank, Much more $12,500 Call 614-353-7399 94 Corvette 15K Miles, Rare, Mint, Black Rose Metallic, 2 Tops, Bose Radio, Run Flats, $19,900 Call 614-278-2439 or 614-519-5336
Triple black beauty! 56,000 miles, good Carfax, great shape, auto, $17,900. 614-530-3720/614-214-5381 1997 COUGAR XR7 30TH ANNIVERSARY EDITION blue green color, in good cond. in & out, dealer serviced, low mi., 76,000, no rust. PW, air & cruise. $2,300. Call 614-889-0062. 2005 CRYSLER CROSSFIRE LTD CONVERTIBLE SILVER/BLK. LTHR., 44,500 MI, LOOKS/RUNS LIKE NEW, AUTO./ALL OPTIONS, CUSTOM WHLS. W/ORIG., ALWAYS GAR’D. N/S, CLEAN CAR FAX. MUST SEE TO APPREC. 614-296-7105, $11,995. Dodge Durango SLT V8 AWD/4WD Three row seating, Freshly Detailed, Factory Roof Rack, New Steering System, Tune Up and Full Synthetic Oil for 100,00 miles, Some rust. Daily driver, 209,000 Miles 614-886-8868 2005 FORD MUSTANG 104,000 mi, manual trnasm. Very well maint., really nice int./ext. additions; new aftermarket head/tail lights, cool air in-take system, whls., hands free bluetooth calling, JVC sound syst., 18" woofer, clean title, $6,600. Call 614-638-4404. 2016 FORD EXPLORER LTD. Black with black leather interior, excellent cond., 1 owner, fully loaded, 3rd row folded seats, 39,000 mi., $27,600. Call/text 614-582-0337.
2016 Ford Transit Connect XLT
Runs Super, Power Windows & Locks, CD/MP3 Players, $9975 Call 614-846-7826 (2) 2014 Ford Escape SE’s 4WD, Eco Boost Turbo Engines, 1.6L, 2.0L Both have backup Cameras, SYNC Connect, 99K miles, $11,900 57K miles $13,900 Both Excellent Condition 614-565-7041 1995 GMC VANDURA 250 CONVERSION VAN wht. w/aqua stripping, 1 owner, gar’d., conversion done by Golf Stream, rear gaucho,cruise. NEW air, still under warr. & batt., not rusted, GMC dealer svc’d, 86,000 mi., $5600. 614-889-0062.
1998 MUSTANG COUPE CONVT. Gd. looking red/blk top, tan int., two owners, 124,000+mi., A/C, am/fm, CD, AT, PL, PS, PB. No snow. Gar’d. New tires/batt. Runs exc. Loc: Myrtle Beach S.C. Have PHOTOS. 614-309-3902.
2017 Mustang Convertible
Premium 6SP Automatic, Candy Apple Red Metallic, Low miles, Warranty, Loaded, Like NEW, Service records, SOLD SOLD SOLD Needing Storage 63 BUICK LESABRE Nice, Clean, Classic Car Would like to Rent Dry, Secure Garage If you have extra room, please call 614-571-8577 Anytime (Call/Text)
2000 Porsche Boxster S Convertible
6 Cylinder, 6 Speed, Drives well, 134,000 miles $7900.00 Call 614-206-6344
1951 STUDENBAKER LANDCRUISER V8, 4 DR., RUNS GREAT, NEW CLUTCH, TIRES, BRAKES, UPHOLSTERY, CARPET, MUFFLER, CHROME, ORIGINAL MANUAL AND MORE! $12,500. CALL 614-332-1497. 2004 Subaru Outback Wagon AWD, 6 cyl auto, htd lthr seats, dual moon roof, LLBean edition, looks/runs excellent, freshly serviced, 166k mi, price reduced $4495. SOLD SOLD SOLD 1940’S CHEVY COUPE READY TO PAINT. 1955 WILLYS JEEP. ALSO, 2005 ROAD KING POLICE INTERCEPTOR. CALL 419-606-6987 2009 Toyota Camry LE A1 Condition, One Owner, New Battery, New Tires, New Front Brakes , New Factory Rebuilt Motor in 2016. SOLD SOLD SOLD 2006 Toyota Avalon Limited Leather, Moonroof, Heated/Cool Seats, Full Options, New Tires, 104K miles, Runs Super, $7375 Call 614-846-7826
2006 Toyota Avalon
2012 HONDA ACCORD LX-4D
Dark red, loaded, good condition, 178,000 miles, loaded, $4900. SOLD SOLD
2008 HONDA CIVIC
2014 VW JETTA TDI SPORTS WAGON BLACK ON BLACK, MANUAL, DIESEL ENGINE, 48,800 MI., LOADED, EXCELLENT CONDITION, $11,900 SOLD SOLD SOLD.
Light blue, 46,900 miles, Exc. condition, Well maintained, Runs great. $10,800. Call 614-486-9736 leave a message. 2 door white w/beige int., automatic, full power, new tires, looks/runs like new, freshly serviced 179k mi. $4495. 740-507-4213 2010 HONDA ODYSSEY EXL V6 full pwr., including mnrf., ht’d seats, factory DVD w/TV, new tires & serviced. Pearl red with cream lthr. int., 135,000 mi., EC. A must see! $8900. 740-507-4213. 2003 Honda CRV EX, 4WD, 4 cyl auto, full power, sunroof, blk w/gray cloth, freshly serviced, exc condition, 159k mi, price reduced $4995 SOLD SOLD SOLD
YOU’VE READ THE PAPER YOU’VE READ THE SPORTS PAGE AND YOU’VE READ THE COMICS THINK YOU’RE DONE WITH THE PAPER?...READ THE CLASSIFIED SECTION YOU NEVER KNOW WHAT YOU’LL FIND
THE COLUMBUS DISPATCH COLUMBUS MONTHLY ALIVE THISWEEK COLUMBUS PARENT COLUMBUS CEO
SULLIVAN TREE SERVICE Firewood/Trimming/Removal 614-638-7943 www.sullivantreeservice.com
Wallpaper Hang-Clean PAPERHANGING & PAINTING Wallpaper Removal / Repairs by Stan Hibler Very Neat, Reliable, & Fully Insured FREE Estimates 614.284.4129 WallsbyStan.com
Quality Plus Painting RESTORATIONS, Refinishing, All Finishes, Paint Removal, Carpentry, Power-washing, Residential ~ Commercial 25+ yrs Exp. 740-739-1859 Vincent You’ve read the news, you’ve read the sports page and you’ve read the comics...think you’re done with the paper? Read the Classified section, you never know what you’ll find.
COLLEGE STUDENTS Don’t have room for“don’t wants”in your dorm or apartment? Make some extra cash and unclutter your living quarters — sell them with a Classified ad in Alive.
LOOKING FOR WORK? YOU’RE IN THE RIGHT PLACE!
Alive features hundreds even thousands - of jobs EVERY WEEK!
WINNERS WANTED! To enter, register and get full details, visit
dispatch.com/rewards.
Subscriber ONLY prizes CONTESTS
FREEBIES Discount offers
ColumbusAlive.com | Thursday, June 20, 2019
Home Repairs
BRYAN’S STUMP REMOVAL We offer Tree Stump Removal at Reasonable rates! (614)531-9791 or (614)648-5600
2006 BUICK LUCERN CX
2007 Buick Lucerne CXL
Kitchen and Bath
L.A.M. LANDSCAPE Mowing and Landscaping Spring Cleanup, and many other services! Free ests. Call Larry at 614-822-1955
Wheels 1986 Monte Carlo SS with T-tops. $11,500. 350 4-barrel automatic transmission. New carburetor. New interior. New rims and tires. Very nice car. Must see. Call any time for more details. No texts please. 419-560-6894.
3800 V6, fully loaded, htd lth seats, chrome wheels, pearl white w/ beige int., new front brakes & rotors, 148k mi $4995 OBO. Call 740-507-4213
Basement Remodeling
Concrete Work
Wheels 1973 Corvette Stingray 350 L82, Automatic, Blk Int, Nice Cam, Hooker Blk Side Pipes, Body in good cond, $9,000 Call Mark 614-402-1997
Front W/D, copper tan, 4 dr sedan, good condition, 52,000 miles, $5200. Call 614-620-4198.
614-888-8888
Lawn Care Landscape
Wheels
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REAR VIEWS
SUDOKU WEEK OF 6-20-19 Like puzzles? Then you’ll love sudoku. This mind-bending puzzle will have you hooked from the moment you square off, so sharpen your pencil and put your sudoku savvy to the test!
ColumbusAlive.com | Thursday, June 20, 2019
INSTRUCTIONS: Sudoku puzzles are formatted as a 9x9 grid, broken down into nine 3x3 boxes. To solve a sudoku, the numbers 1 through 9 must fill each row, column and box. Each number can appear only once in each row, column and box. You can figure out the order in which the numbers will appear by using the numeric clues already provided in the boxes. The more numbers you name, the easier it gets to solve the puzzle! ANSWER ON PAGE 38
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ThE iNTrOVErT’S cLUB BY NOah VaN SciVEr
together unstoppable
ColumbusAlive.com | Thursday, June 20, 2019
Riders. Virtual riders. Volunteers. Researchers. Donors.
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