Columbus Alive – 11/15/2018

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Who was

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Contents 4

The List: Ranking the lists ranking Stan Lee cameos

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Alive staff

Feature: transgender day oF remembrance

PAGe 12

Community 8

COVER: Who was Donna Dalton?

12 Feature: Transgender Day of Remembrance 14 Local Politics: Are local politics dead in Central Ohio? 14 The Last Season?: Celebrating the end that’s not The End 16 Rainbow Rant: Bohemian Rhapsody proves nothing can ruin Queen 17 Reply All

musiC 18 Feature: Cloud Nothings 20 Preview: Nathan Bowles Trio 22 Locals: Trains Across the Sea 22 Preview: Yowler 23 Previews: Aaron Lee Tasjan, Esme Patterson, Beartooth

64 things to do this week PAGe 34

Arts 24 Feature: Bahirah and Nafisah Malik 26 Preview: Sadie Dupuis 27 Previews: La Cage Aux Folles, Creative Babes Coloring Book, Reflections 28 Movie Review: Fantastic Beasts: The Crimes of Grindelwald

ColumbusAlive.com | Thursday, November 15, 2018

eAt & Drink 30 Feature: Tostadalicious 32 Party Planner: JUST F.R.I.E.N.D.S 32 Food News 33 Roundup: Restaurants open on Thanksgiving

on the Cover: Recalling the South Side native whose August shooting death by an undercover cop left behind a grieving community and unanswered questions. Photos courtesy Michelle Dalton

Photo by tim Johnson

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The List

RAnking the lists RAnking eveRy stAn lee cAmeo By Andy downing Comic legend Stan Lee died earlier this week at the age of 95. In his honor, we’re taking time out to rank the lists ranking his film cameos. 13. Business Insider This is simply a list of Stan Lee cameos, with no effort to rank or analyze their content. Who would expect something so dull and colorless from Business Insider? 12. FHM FHM caps its rankings at 10, and also opens by writing, “One of the most enjoyable elements of Marvel movies is the obligatory Stan Lee cameo,” which is such an immense load of horseshit. Literally no one thinks this.

ColumbusAlive.com | Thursday, November 15, 2018

11. Looper This list is really long, and the site is laden with so many adverts that it slowed my computer to a crawl.

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10. MTV The writer describes the Stan LeeHugh Hefner pairing in “Iron Man” as “one of the best cameos in movie history” in giving it the top slot, which nearly led me to disqualify this entry completely. (The best cameo in movie history is clearly Bill Murray in “Zombieland.” Don’t @ me.) 9. Ranker I guess I just had higher expectations for a site called Ranker. 8. Screener Reads like even more of a rush job than this list. (Barely, admittedly.) 7. Ryan O’Toole (via YouTube) Ryan O’Toole gets bonus points for delivering his rankings while

(AP Photo/Reed sAxon, File)

wearing a Ryan O’Toole T-shirt. But, man, 12-plus minutes of high-energy, low-charisma dialogue can be a serious slog to get through. Best line: “I always enjoy that scene. It’s a really fun scene. But it’s not one of my favorites.”

3. CBR I wasn’t familiar with this site, but I appreciate its willingness to dock certain cameos for “a lack of substance,” as depth of character is what I’m looking for from any here-and-gone celeb appearance.

6. Uproxx The list lacks the site’s trademark wit, with most of the blurbs essentially saying the same thing: “Stan Lee deserved better.”

2. Indiewire Among the most comprehensive lists of Lee cameos, Indiewire extends its reach beyond the Marvel Universe, even including the comic maven’s appearance in director Kevin Smith’s “Mallrats” (which is great, by the way).

5. Gamespot Presented in an easy-to-navigate photo gallery, this is some A+ web #content, though the writing is brisk to the point of meaninglessness. (Again, don’t @ me.) 4. The Wrap Another thorough list, this one covering 35 appearances. I also appreciate the restraint in waiting until number 33 to write, “Here’s where the cameos start getting good.” Sorry about the half-dozen of you trash cameos that didn’t make that cut.

1. Sean Chandler Talks About (via YouTube) Sean Chandler ranks 33 Lee cameos, spending a bulk of his time on his top 10. It’s fair to say that Mr. Chandler is a little too excited about getting a two-fer when Stan Lee and Lou Ferrigno appear together in the same “Hulk” scene. The video features great production values, though, and getting to easily watch each scene in just a shade more than 10 minutes is a huge plus.


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tRansgendeR day of RemembRance

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Rainbow Rant: Queen biopic flawed

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Who was

Donna Dalton? Recalling the South Side native

whoSe auguSt Shooting death by an undeRcoveR cop left behind a gRieving community and unanSweRed queStionS

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When Michelle Dalton’s mother died

photos by Rob haRdin (3); headshot couRtesy michelle dalton

ColumbusAlive.com | Thursday, November 15, 2018

By Joel oliphint

Donna Dalton’s oldest sister, Bobbi McCalla, at the Justice for Donna rally outside police headquarters on Oct. 23

on July 8, she had to break the news to her three daughters that their grandmother was gone. But she couldn’t find her youngest daughter, Donna. Michelle and her husband, Michael, raised their daughters on Columbus’ South Side. Lately, though, Donna had been spending more and more time on the West Side, and they worried about her. She was becoming harder and harder to track down. For the past few years, things had been going downhill for 23-year-old Donna. At first, after graduating from charter school Focus Learning Academy in 2012, her partying appeared relatively harmless — drinking and late-night gatherings on Southwood Avenue while Michelle and Michael, a


Donna Dalton’s street sisters at the Oct. 23 rally

remained. Donna would frequently stay out all night. Her parents, sisters and two young daughters began seeing less and less of her. Word got out that Donna was involved in a prostitution ring along Sullivant Avenue on the West Side. But no matter her situation, Michelle and McCalla knew Donna would want to know about her grandmother’s death, so in July McCalla and cousin Amanda Norman spent six hours at a gas station on Sullivant Avenue, asking dozens of people if they knew where to find Donna. A woman finally pointed them to a house on Brehl Avenue, but McCalla was reticent to approach on her own, so she reached out to another cousin, Joel Dalton III. Joel is a big guy. He has a “Bad to the Bone” skull tattoo on his left bicep. He was not reticent. “People know me out west,” he said, lighting a cigarette in the South Side living room of Brenda Dalton, Donna’s aunt. “I’m a little hot-headed, so when they said [Donna] was in there, I just walked up to the back door and knocked on the door, and as soon as they opened it I kind of pushed my way in there.” Donna was standing in the kitchen, shocked to see her cousin. The two were less than a year apart and grew up together. She hugged him. “I told her what

happened to her grandma, and she said nobody had told her,” he said. “I asked if she was ready to go home, and she said she was ready.” Joel took Donna to her sister. “She got out of the truck, gave me a hug,” he said. “I told her I loved her, that I was proud of her, that this was the first step to getting everything back together. She said, ‘I’m gonna do it this time.’” But a couple of days later, Donna was in withdrawal. Dope sick in a truck with McCalla and Joel, she jumped out of the vehicle and took off down Morrill Avenue near Parsons Avenue. She wouldn’t stop, wouldn’t turn around. It was the last time McCalla would see her youngest sister alive — back turned, heading toward the West Side. On July 25, Columbus Police Vice Officer Eric Poliseno arrested Donna for soliciting at Sullivant and Dana avenues. On Aug. 19, Michelle’s family held a celebration of life service for her mother. Donna didn’t show, and her absence was noteworthy. “Seeing the path that Donna was on, and with her not showing up that day, there was a feeling that unless somebody intercepted and figured out how to get her on a different path, something very bad was going to happen,” said Donna’s cousin, Mary Laile.

ColumbusAlive.com | Thursday, November 15, 2018

long-haul truck driver, were on the road. In 2014, at age 19, she married Christopher Castleberry, the father of one of her daughters. Friends and family say the marriage ended almost as soon as it began, despite the lack of an official divorce. (For this story, Alive has chosen to use the surname by which Donna self-identified and was commonly known, Dalton, rather than her legal surname, Castleberry.) Another love interest — a man fresh out of prison and 10 years her senior — became the first domino that put Donna on a new, troubling path. “He introduced her to heroin, and that’s when life changed,” Michelle said. “All of a sudden she was all about this guy,” said Bobbi McCalla, Donna’s oldest sister. “She thought that this guy hung the moon and wouldn’t listen to anybody about him.” At one point Donna told her mom she got a job at Waffle House, but the new gig was actually at a strip joint, House of Babes. According to Michelle and McCalla, the boyfriend pushed her into it to have cash on hand to feed their habit. Eventually Donna got over the guy and wanted him out of her Canonby Place apartment on the Hilltop. She couldn’t get rid of the people constantly crashing there, however, so she moved back in with her parents. But the addiction

Two days later, on Tuesday, Aug. 21, Donna missed her solicitation court date, and a bench warrant was issued. Then, around 11:30 a.m. on Thursday, Aug. 23, undercover CPD Vice Officer Andrew Mitchell shot Donna three times inside his unmarked sedan parked against the side of a brick apartment building near the intersection of Bellows and South Yale avenues in Franklinton. Mitchell’s bullets hit Dalton in the leg, abdomen and chest; the chest shot pierced her heart, killing her. Police said Donna stabbed Mitchell with a knife, severely injuring his hand. An autopsy later revealed cocaine and fentanyl in her system. Donna Dalton’s life sits at the intersection of opiates and human trafficking — two scourges that often work in tandem to tear Ohio families apart. But her death is also impossible to separate from the Columbus Police Vice Unit, which Chief Kim Jacobs has “temporarily paused” while a task force consisting of the FBI, the Ohio Bureau of Criminal Investigation and the Ohio Auditor look into the unit after it made headlines in recent months, most notably with the high-profile arrest of President Donald Trump-adjacent adult film star Stormy Daniels at local strip club Sirens in July. On the day of Donna’s death, Mitchell was already under investigation by Internal Affairs due to a “criminal allegation” lodged against him on Aug. 8. (No further information was available regarding the allegation; CPD also would not make Mitchell or any officer involved in Donna’s July 25 arrest or Aug. 23 death available for interviews, citing ongoing investigations.) At a “Justice for Donna” rally held outside police headquarters on Oct. 23, the two-month anniversary of her death, some of Donna’s “street sisters” wore bright pink T-shirts with white lettering that read, “I could have been Donna Dalton.” If, indeed, all these women could have been Donna Dalton, then we ought to know who she was.

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Photo by Rob haRdin

ColumbusAlive.com | Thursday, November 15, 2018

Bobbi McCalla had 10 years

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on Donna, but only two years separated Tiffiny Dalton from her younger sister, and from an early age the two were into everything. Donna would hang onto door knobs while Tiffiny would swing her back and forth. They’d dump eggs, flour and milk onto the middle of the kitchen floor and play in it. “One time I came downstairs,” Michelle said, “and they took dish soap and squirted it all over the kitchen floor and were sliding across it, smacking against the kitchen cabinets: ‘Boom! Boom!’” A trampoline helped get the girls outside, but Donna was a fearless daredevil. She’d jump from the top of the swingset onto the trampoline, catapulting herself into the air. As Donna got older, Michelle coached her in cheerleading, and Donna was always at the top of the pyramid. In softball, she was the pitcher. “Anything I put her to, she’d get really good at,” Michelle said. Donna was part tomboy, part beauty queen. She’d ride a four-wheeler and stay in a trailer while hunting in the mountains of West Virginia, but she wasn’t one to go around in a ponytail. She cared about her appearance. “She was drop-dead gorgeous,” said family friend Jenna Gibson. Donna progressed through Columbus City Schools on the South Side: Southwood Elementary, Buckeye Middle School, Marion-Franklin High School. She kept a close group of friends, who would often come to the Daltons’ house after school. “We’d sit at the dining room table and do homework,” Michelle said. “I worked in all the schools with her and Tiff as a parent consultant, so I was on the city payroll. … I was PTO president, too.” Donna was independent and hardheaded, and she fiercely supported the people she loved. Bullies knew if they messed with Tiffiny, they’d have to mess with Donna. “She stood up for what was right,” said one of Donna’s best friends, Dean Stump. “Ten or 11 years ago, a neighborhood kid wanted to fight me for being gay or something. Donna and Tiffiny stopped him.” Donna’s cousin, Mary Laile, was 14 years her senior. “We were a lot alike,” Laile said. “She would light up a room. Cousins could be fighting, and she would walk in the room and do something silly or something stupid to make everybody laugh.”

“Donna was funny,” said Joel Dalton, who transformed from a stone-faced tough guy to a giggly kid when remembering Donna’s sense of humor. “I was a really angry person. I was always down, and it don’t matter what was going on, she’d always make me laugh. Not just like, ‘Ha, that was funny.’ Like I laughed till I pissed myself. … If there was anything dark going on with you that day, she was gonna be the light.” Joel went to school with Donna and remembered her as a popular kid at Marion-Franklin. During her junior year, though, she got into some trouble. “She had problems with the other girls,” Michelle said. “It was over boys, and I got tired of them threatening her. And she’s a fighter, too, as you can imagine. I mean, she wouldn’t back down from a gang.” Donna transferred to Focus her senior year. After high school it was often just Donna and Tiffiny at the house on Southwood, since Michelle was frequently on the road with Michael. Then came the partying, the short-lived marriage to Castleberry, two young daughters, a series of bad-news boyfriends and the throes of addiction. “Heroin grabs you and doesn’t let go. It’s like the devil with octopus tentacles — just wraps around you,” Joel Dalton said. “It takes complete control over all your functions until you get that fix. … We got her off the needle. That was hard. Smoking it, though. She couldn’t get away from smoking it.” No one grows up saying they want to

Michelle Dalton, left, and Esther Flores at the Oct. 23 rally

be a prostitute. Donna dreamed of being a cop one day — a mounted officer on a horse. “I don’t believe in classifying a police officer as [murderers] or bad people,” she wrote in a July 2016 Facebook post. “When I’m settled I WILL be attending the police academy and I want people to know that my daughter is mixed, black and white. And she’s my WORLD. Who would have thought a future police officer who is white loves a little mixed girl more than anything in this world?” Later that year, in a Facebook Live video recorded the day after Christmas, Donna hears a knock at the door, and her eyes go wide when she realizes it’s a cop. But nothing comes of it. A kid accidentally dialed 911. “All the kids say, ‘Fuck 12!’” she says into the camera, using the slang term for police, but then immediately clarifies: “I’m gonna be a police officer one day.” Heroin led Donna into a life she couldn’t leave. She told her parents stories about being locked in a basement. At one point, McCalla said her father picked Donna up from a house, and she came out running, saying, “Go, go, go, before they come out here to get me!” Michelle and McCalla said a madam — a big, older woman known on the streets as Butterball — would bully her and keep her from leaving. “She said, ‘Mom, every time I leave the house I’m on camera. They watch me,’” Michelle said. According to sources familiar with prostitution on Sullivant Avenue, the cycle often starts with free dope — a gratis

hit of heroin. Once a woman is hooked, she has a dope boy, and if she tries to buy from anyone else other than the dope boy, he’ll find out. Soon enough, women are in debt to the dope boy and have to pay him back, and there’s a threat of violence if he doesn’t get his money. With a $200 to $250 per day heroin habit, he pushes women to the streets to sell their bodies for the next fix, and all the money goes back to the drug dealers. For some women, a trap house is a safe alternative to a boarded-up property or a homeless camp. It’s a warm bed and a promise of the next hit. Home, on the other hand, can’t promise the same thing, which is why it can be so difficult for someone in Donna Dalton’s situation to truly go home. Once addicted, it’s virtually impossible to quit heroin without treatment. Joel Dalton said at one point she did detox at her Aunt Brenda’s house, but an enabler roped her back in. “I told her, ‘You know you can come back any time,’” Brenda Dalton said. “She said, ‘Aunt Brenda, I’m not ready to come home yet. But you guys will be my first call. I’m coming home soon. I promise.’” Donna knew her mom and dad would take her back in, too, and she knew her own daughters needed her, but the trap was in effect. “I’ve had to educate plenty of people,” McCalla said. “Donna was being trafficked.”

In the brief time Donna was

home in July, before she jumped out of the truck, McCalla let her use her phone, which is how McCalla ended up with the number for “Todd,” one of Donna’s johns who became the family’s lifeline. “He helped me keep tabs on Donna the end of July and early August,” McCalla said. “It’s really bad when you have to depend on a john to give you updates.” Joel Dalton tried his best to help, too. “I put my hand on a lot of people out there just to make sure she was all right,” he said. “I could pinpoint where she was, and then I would just miss her, then I wouldn’t come close for another week or two.” On Aug. 23, Michelle heard from a family friend that a young woman matching Donna’s description — dark hair, tattoo sleeve — was shot and killed on the West Side. Fearing the worst, she called CPD, but she said the police told her it wasn’t Donna. About an hour later,


investigations. Eventually, the case will be presented to a grand jury.

On Oct. 13, word spread that

Andrew Mitchell was at the Dawghouse Pizza and Bar on the South Side. Family and friends of the Daltons headed to the pizza shop, and Mitchell called for backup. (Mitchell has been relieved of duty and is without a gun and badge, but remains employed by CPD.) “We got a call as soon as he showed up at the Dawghouse,” Joel Dalton said. “This is where we grew up. I don’t know why he would think it would be OK for him to be anywhere around this area. This is where our roots are. That dude ain’t welcome over here.” In other officers’ bodycam footage of the incident, Mitchell admits as much. “I kind of figured I should have stayed off the South End because that’s where the girl’s from,” he says in the video. “You would think he would want to lay low for a while,” another officer says in the footage. With scant details coming from CPD or the FBI regarding the ongoing investigations into vice and the Aug. 23 shooting, rumors continue to swirl, fueled by street violence and public records AP Photo/Andrew welsh-huggins

A memorial near the scene of Donna Dalton’s Aug. 23 shooting

puzzle pieces involving Mitchell. On Oct. 14, the burning body of Bobbie Simpson was found in an Upper Arlington park. Simpson had been picked up for soliciting multiple times in the last year, including once by Mitchell in November of 2017. Simpson was also charged with soliciting by another vice officer on Aug. 23, the day Donna was killed. And court records show that two days prior, on Aug. 21, Mitchell picked up Donna’s cousin, Amanda Norman, on charges of loitering to engage in solicitation. Of course, it’s not unusual for a vice cop to book someone for soliciting. But with vice under investigation, the unit’s past actions are getting more scrutiny, and with Mitchell there’s plenty to scrutinize, especially considering the criminal allegation leveled against him just two weeks before Dalton’s death. Plus, Mitchell owns more than a dozen Franklin County properties, and according to the Columbus Dispatch, “37 violations have been filed with Code Enforcement regarding those properties, but all have been resolved.” 10TV also reported that police have responded to rental units owned by Mitchell more than 500 times in the last five years. Aside from the pending Aug. 8 allegation and the use-of-force investigation from Aug. 23, Mitchell’s employee report

shows several other Internal Affairs complaints, most notably a 2013 incident during which a woman named Paula Swick, who claimed to work for Mitchell and was driving his Ford F-150, was pulled over by Clinton Township Police for not stopping at a stop sign. Swick at first provided a fake name, then admitted she didn’t have a valid driver’s license. Two other people were in Mitchell’s truck with her, one of whom was holding marijuana. Meanwhile, Mitchell’s badge, hat, duty belt, baton and more were left unattended in the truck. In Swick’s witness statement to Internal Affairs, she says that Clinton Township Officer Terry Phillips stated, “Oh, that’s Andrew Mitchell’s truck. We finally got him,” then came to the window of the cruiser where Swick was sitting and said, “Your boss is fucking dirty. We got him.” According to the IA report, “Officer Mitchell stated that Clinton Township does not look at him in a good light because he has had some issues with drug dealers in the parking lot of one of his apartment complexes.” In the same report, Officer Phillips alleges that the night of the incident, Mitchell spoke to him on the phone and said, “Why are you fucking with me?” The IA investigation found that Phillips’ allegation regarding the phone call was “not sustained” (Mitchell denied saying it), and that Mitchell did not knowingly allow Swick to drive his vehicle without a driver’s license; the allegation of not properly securing his division-issued equipment in his personal vehicle was “sustained.” At the Oct. 23 rally outside Columbus Police headquarters — the building in which Donna had hoped to one day work — protesters held signs: “Justice for Donna”; “She is a mother, daughter. She is someone.”; “Release the audio.” They voiced their solidarity with other Ohioans who have died at the hands of police, shouting the names of Ty’re King, Henry Green, Jaron Thomas and others. Bobbi McCalla ascended a set of steps flanked by two stone lions and stood next to Donna’s street sisters in pink. “We still haven’t received any answers. We have no idea what happened that day,” she said into the megaphone between tears. “We are not going away until we receive the answers that we deserve.”

ColumbusAlive.com | Thursday, November 15, 2018

two detectives showed up at her door. “I just collapsed,” Michelle said. “I’d never seen Michael cry like that. Never. And I’ve known him my whole life.” Later, the Daltons called to ask about a rape kit for Donna and a drug screen for Mitchell, a former homicide detective who has been with CPD since 1987 and moved to the vice unit in 2016. But Michelle said they were told neither was necessary. “I said, ‘Who’s investigating for Donna?’ He said, “Well, I am,’” Michelle said. “It doesn’t feel like it.’” With a dearth of information, the Daltons have been trying to piece together what happened that morning, but they’re left with more questions than answers. What prompted the altercation with Mitchell? Why did he park his car against the building such that the passenger-side door would be nearly impossible to fully open? What will unreleased audio of the incident reveal? How and why would one of the bullets pass through Donna’s lower left leg and re-enter her left thigh? Why did the bullets that hit her abdomen and chest come from an above downward angle? McCalla said it’s surprising that Donna would have a knife. “She had pepper spray that my dad had given her,” she said. “I talked to another woman she knew, and she said that Donna had a Beats by Dre speaker. It’s hefty, and that’s what she had for protection. She was ready to go upside somebody’s head with it. … The way we grew up is you better defend yourself. If you don’t defend yourself, they’re going to keep walking all over you.” According to a recent Associated Press story, the woman who called 911 and wrapped Mitchell’s bleeding hand with her shirt reportedly “ran outside after her boyfriend heard [Dalton] cry for help, saying Mitchell was going to kidnap her. [She] then heard several shots, and as she arrived at the car, saw Mitchell pushing [Dalton’s] folded-over body into the rear seat.” The audio of the 911 call, though, makes no mention of Donna. Franklin County Prosecutor Ron O’Brien said a review of the shooting is underway, and the Bureau of Criminal Investigation is helping with “supplemental crime scene and forensic exams.” O’Brien also confirmed that his office is coordinating with the FBI in their overlapping

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COMMUNITY // FeaTUre phoTo By Tim Johnson

ColumbusAlive.com | Thursday, November 15, 2018

Felicia DeRosa

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TransgEndEr day of rEmEmBrancE rETurns amid fighT for civil righTs By Erica Thompson

A

ccording to the Human Rights Campaign, 29 transgender people were killed in the U.S. last year — the most ever recorded. And yet the number was likely higher. The statistics don’t account for deaths that are reported under victims’ birth names, or deaths that aren’t reported at all.

Local artist and CCAD instructor Felicia DeRosa, who identifies as a trans woman, went through the names, collecting details about where they were from, how they were killed and who they were. “It’s depressing,” DeRosa said during an early-November interview at King Avenue United Methodist Church, where she is a youth leader. “In my mind, it’s one of my [students]. It could be me. I was just destroyed for days after that, and had to get myself back together.” So far in 2018, there have been 22 transgender homicides, which DeRosa will also investigate. Her purpose for doing so is to participate in Transgender Day of Remembrance, which recognizes victims worldwide each year on Nov. 20. A Columbus ceremony will take place for the third year at King Avenue UMC. The event is organized by DeRosa and J.J. and Aubrey Glasser — all board members of nonprofit TransOhio, which provides services, education and support for trans and ally communities. “It’s almost like a memorial service, in a way, to pay homage to all those people

that had been taken from us,” J.J. said, “and make sure they aren’t forgotten.” The event is powerful. DeRosa recalled a moment last year when she asked every trans person in attendance to stand. “It was a very moving moment because everyone saw everyone else,” she said. “There was that moment of, ‘I’m not alone.’ And all the people who were sitting, I said, ‘These people are your allies. … Here is community.’” Standing in solidarity is proving even more important this year, in light of the Trump administration’s proposal to define gender “on a biological basis,” determined by genitals at birth. The suggested policy, released in a Department of Health and Human Services memo, would essentially eradicate the term “transgender,” and put legal protections for the group of 1.4 million Americans in jeopardy. “It’s a lot easier to kill us or oppress us if we don’t exist in paperwork,” said J.J., who identifies as a trans man. “It’s the first step to erasing the progress that we’ve made. … They could deny us our basic civil rights because, technically, we

don’t exist anymore.” The memo inspired national resistance through #WontBeErased social media campaigns and rallies, including one in Columbus, co-organized by DeRosa, at the Statehouse and Goodale Park on Nov. 7. “I was incensed,” DeRosa said of her reaction to the memo. “I was fuming. I could feel my blood boiling, like I was gonna just start spitting acid.” DeRosa’s mind went to multiple places. She thought of queer people who feared coming out during the AIDS epidemic due to the recurring hate crimes. She thought about trans people who were denied the medical care needed to transition. She thought of a time when proper medical care didn’t exist. But most of all, she thought of the queer youth in her life, many of whom have been bullied. “I look at them like cousins and nieces and nephews and, a few of them, like my own children,” she said. “I have that kind of love for them. … I want them to be OK.” “I don’t think people understand the severity of our situation,” she continued. “We’re a marginalized group. We still get fired from jobs. We still get evicted from homes. We get thrown out of churches. We get thrown out of our families. We can end up homeless.” To DeRosa, the memo threatens the small progresses that have been made, and could force people back into the closet. She challenges the trans community to keep sharing their stories. “We need to be louder than the people that speak against us,” she said. “We need to be smarter and we need to disprove all their misconceptions about us.” DeRosa also stressed the importance of having allies outside the queer and trans communities show up to rallies and events like the Transgender Day of Remembrance. And more self-acceptance is needed, she added. “I think it’s vitally important,” she said, “for our society as a whole to be told that who you are is OK.”

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7-9 p.m. Tuesday, Nov. 20 299 King Ave., Campus


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Columbus Monthly Restaurant Guide Giving 1 Health ColumbusAlive.com | Thursday, November 15, 2018

13


COMMUNITY // LOCaL POLITICs

COMMUNITY // LasT seasON?

photo By tyleR stABile

celeBRAting the end thAt’s not the end By Justin Mcintosh

ARe locAl politics deAd in centRAl ohio?

ColumbusAlive.com | Thursday, November 15, 2018

By RoB MooRe

14

Last week, Democratic political newcomers Mary Lightbody, Beth Liston and Allison Russo beat strong Republican candidates in traditionally Republican Franklin County suburban statehouse races. The margin of victory for these wins was 11 percent, 13 percent and 14 percent, respectively. Do these results sound familiar? If they do, you probably have been following these races closely: Hillary Clinton won these house districts by 9 percent, 14 percent and 11 percent, respectively, in her 2016 presidential run. After the results came in Tuesday night, I pulled together the results for Democratic House candidates across the state to see how close their outcomes were compared with Clinton’s 2016 outcomes. It turns out that Clinton’s 2016 outcomes explain about 80 percent of the variation among Democratic House candidates’ outcomes statewide in 2018. The relationship between the 2016 presidential election and 2018 state elections gets even closer if you throw out uncontested races. Democrats made a concerted effort this year to put someone in the ballot in every statehouse race. Republicans did not do the same, choosing not to run candidates in eight blue house races where Trump averaged only 27 percent of the vote in 2016. If you take out these uncontested races, the relationship between 2016 presidential outcomes and 2018 statehouse outcomes jumps to 90 percent! This means that statehouse races in 2018 were, at the very most, only 10 percent impacted by local factors and 90 percent

impacted by national factors very similar to the 2016 presidential race. These numbers get even crazier if you look at state Senate outcomes. Using the same technique, 2016 presidential outcomes by state Senate district explain 98 percent of the variation in 2018 state Senate outcomes. This means that state Senate votes were, at the very most, only 2 percent driven by local factors. Politics in Ohio are becoming increasingly nationalized. Rather than focusing on local issues such as how to adjust to the rapid growth Central Ohio is experiencing, or acute localized public health issues such as infant mortality rates and the opioid crisis, voters are casting their local ballots in 2018 in much the same manner as they cast their national ballots in 2016. There can be some benefits to this approach. We are, after all, the United States of America. Less geographic tribalism and more focus on the national political situation could be a good thing for national unity. On the other hand, our federal system is built on the assumption that people are more attached to their states and localities than the country as a whole. University of Pennsylvania Political Scientist Daniel Hopkins writes in his book The Increasingly United States that increased nationalization of local politics can drive local candidates to pay less attention to local issues and focus more on national ambitions. This could mean lower-quality governance at the local level right here in Central Ohio. One thing is for certain, though: Politics are becoming increasingly less local nationwide. And we’re seeing that trend play out here in Central Ohio.

Well, it had to happen eventually. The end — though not The End, thank the soccer gods — is upon us. With a season-ending 3-0 shellacking by the New York Red Bulls, the Crew has crashed out of the MLS Cup playoffs — losing the Eastern Conference semi-finals 3-1 in aggregate. The season is, sadly, over. The legend, however, remains, and the bond between club and players has only grown stronger. WOW. What a team, what a season. A year ago, did you ever think we’d have an ending like this? That we’d #SaveTheCrew? And that the team would then rally behind us and, feeling inspired, almost Goliath the Red Bulls, the greatestever MLS regular season team? Even without hardware, I’m already nostalgic for this season. I know I’m going to be talking about it for the rest of my life. As of now, these are my six favorite things from the 2018 Columbus Crew season. (Subject to change with age.) Watching a penalty shootout with Zach Steffen in goal I’ve probably never been as confident in anything as I was in watching a penalty kick shootout with Zach Steffen in goal and knowing the soon-to-be-struck ball would, most likely, not get past Zach Steffen. Realizing Jonathan Mensah is growing on me Look, I’m not saying Mensah was a reliable, rock-solid defender all year, or even for much of the season. But there was definitely a moment this season when I found myself more concerned over who was paired with Mensah than with Mensah himself being in the lineup. And that seemed like a revelation.

photo By AdAM cAiRns

The anti-climactic return of Justin Meram Few Crew returns have thrilled me like Meram’s, so, yeah, I was completely convinced he’d return to his pre-Orlando production rate in his second stint here. This, of course, didn’t happen. Meram didn’t light the league on fire, or even, really, a single net. But Meram’s black and gold through and through, and I’m still pleased as hell to have him back. Growing confidence in the back line The Crew’s defense ended the season as one of the league’s top 10 stingiest. And with everyone but, potentially, Steffen returning, I’m pretty thrilled. For once I don’t have to spend an offseason amateur-scouting obscure Scandinavian teams or scouring South American continents for the Crew’s next left back. The gloriousness of Pipa’s playoff beard Not sure what else to say about this, frankly. It is what it is. The beard speaks for itself. The least gut-punchy of losses This isn’t to say the playoff loss to the Red Bulls wasn’t devastating — especially given my hopes heading into the game, which extended even deep into the second half. (Read my texts for receipts.) In fact, I was still hungover with grief all Monday morning. But I also recalled how, at a certain point this season, I was simply happy to have another Crew game to watch. Let alone entire future seasons. And now that it’s sunk in that the season is over, I’m realizing one more reason to celebrate: All future seasons will be Anthony Precourt-less seasons. After everything we’ve gone through this year, I’ll be damned if that one doesn’t feel like the biggest win of all.


T U O E M O C

! Y A L P

WELCOME TO ADULT RECESS, COLUMBUS.

Grab your friends, get your tickets, and get ready to act like a kid again!

MAY 11, 2019

DELAWARE COUNTY FAIRGROUNDS

PRESENTED BY

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COMMUNITY // raINbOw raNT

photo By alEx BailEy/20th cEntuRy Fox

‘BohEmian Rhapsody’ pRovEs nothing can Ruin QuEEn

ColumbusAlive.com | Thursday, November 15, 2018

By Joy Ellison

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No one told the filmmakers behind “Bohemian Rhapsody,” the new film about queer icon Freddie Mercury, that this is 2018. The Motion Picture Production Code is long gone; the lives of queer people can be depicted as something beyond tragic. We no longer have to die by the end of the movie. “Bohemian Rhapsody” was disappointing, but that didn’t stop me. I still had myself such a good time. This biopic is bi-phobic. At every turn, “Bohemian Rhapsody” presents Mercury’s life as tragic because of his participation in queer culture. Instead of celebrating his queer identity, the film recycles tired tropes of queerness as a threat. First, Mercury’s bisexuality destroys his most meaningful romantic relationship, one with a woman. Then, he is manipulated and betrayed by his only queer confidant. Mercury’s hesitance to disclose his sexuality is framed as deception, rather than a rational response to a homophobic society. Finally, Mercury’s sexuality threatens his own life when he contracts HIV. Never is queer culture depicted as a positive influence on his music. The film is rather racist, too. It depicts Mercury’s Parsi family as hostile to his sexuality and gender expression because of their culture and religion. Because no other form of queer antagonism is ever presented, Parsi culture becomes a scapegoat for the hate Mercury experienced. A more accurate film might have mentioned that

Mercury would have been well aware that Elton John’s career went from untouchable to second-tier after he came out. Whatever pressures Mercury faced from his family paled in comparison to the challenge of trying to navigate a music industry that was hostile to queer artists even though it couldn’t exist without them. “Bohemian Rhapsody” even manages to be a tad transphobic by staging Mercury’s break with his band in the context of their drag music video. I’d be impressed how thoroughly this film smears the life it sets out to celebrate if I weren’t disgusted – and unsurprised. This is how queer icons have long been portrayed. Queer and trans people deserve a better film about Freddie Mercury, but I’m not sorry that I saw this one. “Bohemian Rhapsody” accidentally illustrates the deepest truth about Mercury’s career: His music was indestructible. Nothing can ruin Queen, especially not for queer and trans people. Queen’s music celebrated queer and trans life at a time when overtly queer content wasn’t commercially viable. They might play “We Are the Champions” at football games, but the song was designed to get us pumped to be ourselves in a hostile world. Freddie Mercury gave us music for exactly the times that we’re living in today. Go see “Bohemian Rhapsody,” or don’t. Whatever you decide, put on your tightest jeans, crank your stereo and remember that Freddie Mercury’s gender and sexuality were a part of his magic, not his undoing.


COMMUNITY // REPLY ALL

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NathaN Bowles trio at DirtY DuNgarees

PAGE 20

Yowler at Big room Bar PAGE 22

ColumbusAlive.com | Thursday, November 15, 2018

Photo BY DaNiel toPete

18

ClouD NothiNgs BY aNDY DowNiNg

O

n Cloud Nothings’ most recent album, Last Building Burning (Carpark Records), released earlier this year, singer and guitarist Dylan Baldi flaunts a caustic worldview, confronting everything from gentrification to those people in power who will lie, cheat and corrupt in order to advance their own needs. “Don’t care about hurting … just wanna have power,” Baldi growls on “In Shame,” delivering his words atop clawing guitars and relentless drums courtesy of rhythmic man-beast Jayson Gerycz.


has managed to maintain its character — at least for now, he cautioned. “Places lose their personality once money comes in and you just totally knock something down and put up a box that people can buy a weird space in for like $600,000. It’s a depressing fact of modern life. A lot of cool and interesting history is getting destroyed and replaced by gross buildings for rich people.” To record Last Building Burning, Cloud Nothings departed to Sonic Ranch in Tornillo, Texas, for nine days in March 2018. “It’s a pecan farm right on the border of Mexico, and there are a bunch of different buildings. I think there are three studios on the property now, so there can be like three different bands recording at any given time,” Baldi said. “It’s hard to explain that place. It’s pretty surreal.” Though Sonic Ranch might’ve seemed as geographically removed from the band’s Cleveland experience as possible, Baldi said both places offered a similar sense of seclusion. “Growing up around Cleveland there was not a whole lot for a young kid to do, and I think that isolation was kind of important,” Baldi said. “It’s not in the middle of nowhere — it’s still a big city — but like you can still feel relatively isolated from the rest of the world if you want to. … That’s important for any sort of creative thing — to have time in your own head. And Cleveland provides that, especially in the winter.” Also, on a more practical level, the city offered a multitude of dingy, affordable spaces in which the band could hone its sound. “The generosity of people with garages in Cleveland has been a lifesaver,” Baldi said, and laughed. “It’s kind of interesting to track the progression of rooms from album to album. We’ve practiced in the different garages and basements all over the city — a different small, gross room for every record.”

A&R Music BAR

7 p.m. Friday, Nov. 16 391 Neil Ave., Arena District promowestlive.com ALSO PLAYING: Nap Eyes, Rolin/Powers Duo

ColumbusAlive.com | Thursday, November 15, 2018

It’s a welcome about-face from the Cleveland quartet’s previous album, Life Without Sound, an atypically glossy, optimistic turn that felt out of step with the times, arriving the same month Donald Trump took office in early 2017. (The band actually released a playful video for single “Modern Act” in the hours after Trump won the presidential election in Nov. 2016, with Baldi later telling Spin, “If I had been fully aware, I would’ve said, ‘Let’s not do that today. That’s a little weird.”) “[Life Without Sound] definitely wasn’t received quite as warmly as our other records, but … there’s no way I’ll ever know or understand what people think or how people react to an album,” said Baldi, reached walking through a graveyard in Portland, Oregon, in the midst of the West Coast leg of the band’s current tour, which hits A&R Bar on Friday, Nov. 16. “But it wasn’t like we were purposefully changing [with Last Building Burning]. … This one is just another element of things we can do.” According to the singer, the new album’s darker tact — “I wish I could believe in your dream,” he offers in one typically downcast lyrical aside — is merely a reflection of a long-held viewpoint rather than a commentary on modern times. “I guess I kind of always just thought that the world was ending and that things are just going bad all the time — even when people are like, ‘No, things are good,’” Baldi said.” So that’s always been my worldview, and maybe now it’s finally becoming mainstream. … It just seems to me a very sensible way to look at things.” Songs such as “The Echo of the World” and “So Right So Clean” were further influenced by a development Baldi has witnessed taking place in Cleveland in recent years, with history-rich buildings being demolished and replaced by cookie-cutter retail and housing units. “I see signs of life in alleys and corners/I smell death on a crowded street,” Baldi sings on the latter. “I feel the last old building burning/I’ve got nowhere left to put my feet.” “There are certain parts of town where they’re tearing down historic buildings and putting up those same condos that are popping up all over the world,” said Baldi, who lives in an Old Brooklyn neighborhood in Cleveland that

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MUSIC // PREVIEW Photo By BrAd BunyeA

nAthAn Bowles trio

ColumbusAlive.com | Thursday, November 15, 2018

By Andy downing

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Following the 2016 release of Nathan Bowles’ solo album, Whole & Cloven, the banjoist knew he wanted to take a different musical approach, so this past winter he recruited Cave drummer Rex McMurry and double bass player Casey Toll (Mount Moriah, Jake Xerxes Fussell) in an effort to shake up his sound for new album Plainly Mistaken (Paradise of Bachelors), released earlier this year “I wanted to involve people not just playing on the record, but in helping me develop material collaboratively,” said Bowles, who will be joined by McMurry and Toll in concert at Dirty Dungarees on Thursday, Nov. 15. Initially, Bowles and Co. started by reworking compositions he’d explored previously on his own, such as the traditional “Elk River Blues,” which appeared on Bowles’ album A Bottle, a Buckeye, from 2012, eventually moving on to previously unchartered musical terrain. “Certain songs just seemed to suggest space either rhythmically or harmonically for those other instruments. So, for instance, there’s one song from Whole & Cloven,

‘Blank Range,’ and one from [2014 album] Nansemond called ‘Chuckatuck,’ that were both rhythmically interesting in a way that I could trust the players to come up with parts that would make those songs sort of fresh again for me,” Bowles said. “Then there are certain pieces that are maybe more improvisational that are starting to grow legs in cool ways, like ‘The Road Reversed,’ where we’re dialing in the drones and starting to jell more and more. It’ll be interesting to see where we are when we get to Columbus.” As a solo artist, Bowles said he has a tendency to “navel gaze,” crafting intricate, insular instrumentals as gnarled and impenetrable as ancient forests. “I sort of find a space mentally to focus on and then try to go as deep as I can,” he said of his solo work. Having McMurry and Toll at his back forces the musician to take a comparatively aggressive pose, giving the songs a natural, locomotive-like propulsion. “It’s a matter of a generating a certain head of steam,” Bowles said. “There’s more of a kinetic energy thing happening with the trio that I don’t even really try to access in my solo playing. … It sort of gets people nodding along.”

That’s not to say the compositions populating the trio’s new album are likely to bump on stereos during campus house parties. Even at his most kinetic, Bowles’ compositions maintain a woodsy, mystic vibe — a tone he establishes early on Plainly Mistaken with an albumopening cover of Julie Tippetts’ “Now If You Remember.” “Now if you remember/We were talking ’bout God and you,” Bowles sings atop ethereal instrumentation, his vocals falling somewhere between hymn and lullaby. “I think it was [musician] Jim Elkington that mentioned that Sunset Glow record [by Tippetts] … and ‘Now If You Remember’ always struck me as a really bewitching moment on that record,” Bowles said. “Her vocal style is pretty inimitable … so I had never really thought about covering it. Even now I can’t really tell what drives me to cover a song beyond thinking that I can maybe shed some new light on it.”

dirty dungArees

7 p.m. Thursday, Nov. 15 2590 N. High St., Old North ALSO PLAYING: Matthew J. Rolin, Paul Goll, DJ Cat Socks


ColumbusAlive.com | Thursday, November 15, 2018

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MUSIC // LOCALS

MUSIC // PREVIEW

yowler

photo By amy planchet

By erica thompson

trains across the sea

ColumbusAlive.com | Thursday, November 15, 2018

By Joel oliphint

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Last year, Andy Gallagher moved from Columbus to San Diego and got engaged. This year, he got married and became a father in the span of three months. And just last month, he released a new album from his long-running musical project, Trains Across the Sea. The move away from Columbus was precipitated by his partner’s new teaching gig at San Diego State University. For the first three or four months in California, Gallagher spent his mornings searching for jobs and his afternoons working on a new record, Before It Ends, which he had already begun tracking back in Ohio with drummer Keith Hanlon (Bloodthirsty Virgins), bassist Matt Gochenauer, pedal steel player Corbin Pratt (Sean Marshall), pianist Jack Doran (Keating, Hello Emerson), organist Kevin Ashba and singer Anna Sudac. “I just had a big backlog of songs that were written and recorded, so I kind of had to catch up,” Gallagher said recently by phone. Between Before It Ends and the previous Trains record, 2013’s What a Day, What a Time We Had, Gallagher co-wrote and produced the trucker musical “Semi Fame: A Truck Route to Broadway,” and the experience taught him a few things. “That was a very good lesson in learning the limits of my voice,” he said. “For this

one I was very consciously moving songs into keys that I could sing better. And I thought there were parts of side B of my last record that were the first time I really discovered what I thought I sounded good doing, so I was like, ‘If I can make a whole record just zooming in on what I did on the second half of that last one, I can get there.’” Some songs on Before It Ends date back to 2014 and were written out of the ashes of previous relationships. But songs like “Breathe in Deep” and “I Choose You” are less about ashes and more about the flame. “For the first time in a long time I’ve actually got two love songs, positive songs, on here,” Gallagher said. “That comes straight out of my relationship that I’m in now.” The title track, though, takes a stark look at the world in the wake of the 2016 election. “The earth is catching up with all those dinosaurs we’ve burned,” Gallagher sings. “It’s just something that’s on everybody’s mind, and it would feel neglectful not to mention the elephant in the room,” he said.

Garden theater

9:30 p.m. Thursday, Nov. 15 1187 N. High St., Short North shortnorthstage.org ALSO PLAYING: Keating

On “Sorrow,” singer-songwriter Maryn Jones questions the amount of influence the human emotion wields, especially in her own life. “If all we are is what we’ve felt, then I guess pain is mine,” she sings on the track, which is as lovely as it is melancholy, with rich vocal harmonies atop minimal guitar. The sentiment is a fitting theme for the whole album, Black Dog in My Path, which Jones released in October under her stage name, Yowler. “I feel like it’s such a weird struggle when you are dealing with mental illness, [with] your brain trying to defeat you in this really messed up way,” said Jones, who moved to Philadelphia from Columbus and will return on Friday, Nov. 16, for a performance at Big Room Bar. “It’s just like, ‘Well, you don’t matter. So why are you even bothering? Why would you try to do anything?’” In excavating those darker corners of her mind, Jones, who grew up in the Mormon church, also grapples with sin on “Holy Fire,” which breezes along, guided by gentle vocals before the startling crash of electric guitar near the end. “I won’t behave no more,” she sings. “Grizzly Bear II,” a sequel to a track on an older album, Gift, finds Jones acknowledging her ability to do harm to others. “The original song is written from the point of view of the person who was hurt,” Jones said. “I just realized that that perspective wasn’t really as realistic for my life anymore. I feel like, generally, I’m the person that’s perpetuating pain on other people.” Black Dog is not without its lighter moments. “Angel” is a positive, comforting opener, while “Where is My Light” offers a potential path out of darkness. “[It’s] remembering that the things that are most important to me are just having new experiences in the natural world,” Jones said. With “Aldebaran,” named for a star,

Jones gets out of her head and recognizes the vastness of the universe. “I wanted to try to write a song that had lyrics that weren’t about me,” she said. One of the most beautiful moments on the album occurs on the brief “(Holidays Reprise),” which features clarinet and references “Holidays,” from her first Yowler record, The Offer. “When I was going through some hard times when I was writing this album, I would often have the original song, ‘Holidays,’ pop into my head as this weird comfort,” she said. “I wanted to put that on this record to kind of pay homage to it and almost thank it.” Jones said she is motivated by the possibility that her music could help others in the same way. It’s a thought that occurs to her even at her lowest moments and on her darkest tracks. “If we make it through these times and more sorrow is all we find,” she sings on “Sorrow,” “I hope I can at least leave something behind.”

BiG room Bar

8 p.m. Friday, Nov. 16 1036 S. Front St., Brewery District bigroombar.com ALSO PLAYING: Natural Sway, WYD

photo By sam split

Maryn Jones


MUSIC

| PREVIEWS

thursDAY, November 15 - sAturDAY, November 24, 2018 thuRsday | novemBeR 15

aaRon lee tasJan By Joel oliphint

On his recently released album, Karma for Cheap (New West Records), New Albany native Aaron Lee Tasjan takes yet another left turn, and yet again he pulls it off. Tasjan established an expectation-busting pattern on 2016’s excellent Silver Tears. But while that album still sounds like it could have been made in Nashville, Karma for Cheap takes inspiration from Liverpool. Tasjan has cited The Beatles Anthology as one of the sonic touchstones for Karma for Cheap, and it’s apparent from first track “If Not Now When” that Tasjan is wholly

photo By CuRtis Wayne millaRd

RumBa Cafe

8 p.m. Thursday, Nov. 15 2507 Summit St., North Campus columbusrumbacafe.com photo By Joel oliphint

tuesday | novemBeR 20

satuRday, nov. 17

esme patteRson

BeaRtooth photo By daniel topete

at expRess live

THURSDAY 15 • Nathan Bowles at Dirty Dungarees

aCe of Cups

• Yung Pinch at Newport Music Hall

7 p.m. Tuesday, Nov. 20 2619 N. High St., Old North aceofcupsbar.com

FRIDAY 16 • Cloud Nothings at A&R Bar • Yowler, Natural Sway at Big Room Bar • 7Horse at Tree Bar

SATURDAY 17 • Guster at Newport Music Hall • Joe Pug, Brian Dunne at McConnell Arts Center • Beartooth at Express Live

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• O.A.R. at Express Live

• Louis the Child at the Bluestone

• Pale Waves, the Candescents at Skully’s Music-Diner

• Colin Gawel & the League Bowlers at Ace of Cups • Hands Like Houses, the Faim at Skully’s Music-Diner

22 THANKSGIVING

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• Grayhawk, Akula at Ace of Cups

• The Wrecks, Deal Casino at Skully’s Music-Diner

• G. Finesse release show at Rumba Cafe

• The Receiver, Souther, the West Ghost at Rumba Cafe

ColumbusAlive.com | Thursday, November 15, 2018

Boulder, Colorado, native Esme Patterson helped found Denver’s Paper Bird, a folk collective that found regional success about 10 year ago. But a solo career has allowed Patterson to spread her wings beyond Paper Bird’s folksy origins, as she now incorporates grittier bits of indie-rock and pop into her songwriting, which is all the better for it. Her 2016 album, We Were Wild, is proof. (Safe bet)

• Hoo Doo Soul Band at Rumba Cafe

uninterested in adhering to whatever aesthetics are commonly associated with Americana music. He’s perfectly comfortable writing songs that have more in common with John Lennon than John Prine. And just when you think Tasjan is making a Brit-pop album, he incorporates call-outs to musical hero Tom Petty on “Heart Slows Down” and does the Everly Brothers proud on “Dream Dreamer.” (Safe bet)

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sadie dupuis at two dollaR Radio PAGE 26

Movie Review: ‘CRiMes of GRindelwald’

PAGE 28

BahiRah and nafisah Malik By JiM fisCheR

ColumbusAlive.com | Thursday, November 15, 2018

photos CouRtesy BahiRah Malik

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Bahirah and Nafisah Malik

F

or the first nine years of their lives, Bahirah and Nafisah Malik lived in cities and towns across the southern United States, among them Selma, Alabama. Crossing the Edmund Pettus Bridge nearly every day, the young girls absorbed a deeper sense of the struggle and the trauma of what it’s like for people of color living in America. So perhaps it should surprise no one when, a few years later and living on Co-

lumbus’ East Side, the sisters were willing collaborators when recruited by a young activist named MarShawn McCarrel. “He was like a big brother figure to us. He was always there to make sure we were OK,” Bahirah Malik said in an interview at an Olde Towne East coffee shop. “We met him on a trip to Mississippi [in 2014] for the 50th anniversary of freedom summer. He was involved in the Ohio Student Association. We got involved with that

and from there he just took us under his wing. We were out there in the community because he was the one to put us up on the front line of our first march.” McCarrel also encouraged both young women to write poetry. Writing was something the twins had been encouraged to do from a young age by their mother, but McCarrel noticed that his friends needed a release from the pressures of activism.

“He was always big into poetry. For us, we always kept things bottled up and hidden inside. He took us to one of his poetry events and showed us that we could use it as a way to tell our stories,” Bahirah said. “My first poem was trash,” Nafisah said with a laugh. “But we both just fell in love with poetry. I feel like that is what we were meant to do, and so we work hard at it.”


all the communities they represent. Their poetry reflects that. Maroon Arts Group is dedicated to giving platforms of all kinds to these revolutionary voices,” said MAG member Otis Sharp, aka DJ O Sharp. At first apprehensive about being granted center stage with their poetry, the sisters have curated a set that will speak to what it’s like to be black in America, the strength of black women and their love of community, which includes the late rapper Nes Wordz, whose birthday the Maliks will commemorate in poem. “Our community has a lot of love and light. There is a need for a lot of love when you live in a system built to tear you down. We want to bring light to all of those relationships and to our ancestors,” Bahirah said. “Our voice is our power,” Nafisah said. “This is our chance to stand up and build the world we want to live in.”

Upper CUp Gahanna 7 p.m. Friday, Nov. 16 121 Mill St., Gahanna maroonartsgroup.com

ColumbusAlive.com | Thursday, November 15, 2018

McCarrel’s 2016 death by suicide didn’t dim the Malik sisters’ passion for either activism or poetry. Both remain active in the Black Lives Matter movement and in Pursuing Our Dreams, an organization McCarrel founded. “In a sense, activism and being there for my community and being a voice for my community has played a big part in my poetry, because my poetry is a way of kind of analyzing what’s going on and communicating what I feel should happen,” Bahirah said. “He brought us in [to Pursuing Our Dreams] and our love for helping was sparked,” Nafisah said. The sisters have shared their voice at marches, rallies and open mics throughout the city. This Friday, Nov. 16, Maroon Arts Group has given them the opportunity to be the featured performers at its recurring ROOTS: An Open Expression event at Upper Cup Coffee in Gahanna. “The sisters represent an energy that hasn’t been on a MAG stage. The youth movement itself is revolutionary in how they express their identity. Bahirah and Nafisah are going to be leaders amongst

25


ARTS // pREVIEW

sAdie dupuis

pHoTo By KATrinA BArBer

By Andy downing

ColumbusAlive.com | Thursday, November 15, 2018

Connect to the Future with

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The newest podcast series from WOSU Public Media Stories of Stepping Off the Conventional Career Path

Listen and Subscribe Today – wosu.org/rivet

Sadie Dupuis felt cut off after moving from New York City to Amherst, Massachusetts, in 2011. Absent a network of friends and family, Dupuis also struggled with a range of physical ailments that only served to further isolate her from her new surroundings. Collectively, these experiences form the pained backbone of Dupuis’ debut poetry collection, Mouthguard (Gramma Press), comprised of pieces she wrote from 2011 to 2014 while earning her master’s degree in poetry from UMass Amherst. “I had been living in New York for a long time … and I kind of moved to this place where I didn’t know anybody and then immediately got sick,” said Dupuis, perhaps best known as the singer, songwriter and guitarist in indie-rock band Speedy Ortiz, as well as for her solo work under the name Sad13. “When I started writing this book, I was mourning a couple of friends who had died. … I also had a number of new diagnoses that I didn’t know how to cope with. I was hospitalized and I just felt very distrustful of my body; I was angry at it for not being the strong thing that as a teenager I’d imagined it would be. So I think a lot of the book is not only the grief of losing friends, but also realizing that the body isn’t this permanent thing that you can forever trust.” These emotions surface in despondent poems like “I Don’t Even Like Candy,” in which Dupuis writes, “Oh there are people who survive/the tearing of their limb/on impact, I feel it.” For Dupuis, revisiting this time period felt necessary — she lamented that it has taken this long to publish the collection, pointing to a flourishing music career for much of the delay — while also reminding her how much her worldview has changed in the years since she first put pen to paper while living in Amherst. “In a way, I feel like so much of … creating art now is about engaging with

the outside world and using art as a form of protest and as a form of engagement for social issues that matter to me,” said Dupuis, who will read from Mouthguard at Two Dollar Radio Headquarters on Tuesday, Nov. 20. “Whereas this book is very much like, ‘This is me. This is my sadness. Here’s what it feels like to be sad.’ And I love reading books like that because it’s kind of an escape from reading horrifying news every day or from going to a protest. You can just kind of curl up on the couch and be like, ‘This is what sadness feels like.’ … I just can’t really make it anymore. It isn’t so much my modality at this point.” Moving forward, Dupuis anticipates that her poetry, like her music, will evolve to reflect this more outward view, though it appears comfort will continue to remain in short supply. “I’m very influenced by contemporary poets who are speaking in a much more conversational and funny and Twitteradjacent tongue, if that makes sense,” she said. “I think the more recent poetry I’ve done is less indebted to magic and witches and more indebted to, like, this horrifying world and the internet.”

Two dollAr rAdio HeAdquArTers

7:30 p.m. Tuesday, Nov. 20 1124 Parsons Ave., South Side twodollarradiohq.com ALSO PLAYING: Classical Baby


ARTS

| PREVIEWS

thursDAY, November 15 - sAturDAY, November 24, 2018 pHOTO By JOdi MiLLER

THROUGH NOVEMBER 25

“La caGE aUx FOLLEs” By JiM FiscHER Jerry Herman is one of the titans of musical theater (“Hello Dolly,” “Mame” and many more). And his work in “La Cage Aux Folles” is among his catchiest. “This is a musical comedy in the tradition of the golden era of musical theater,” said Michael Licata, who directs Short North Stage’s production of “La Cage,” in a recent interview. “This is some of [Herman’s] best music. Audiences walk out of the theater humming the tunes.” But one doesn’t have

The cast of Short North Stage’s “La Cage Aux Folles.”

THURsday | NOVEMBER 15

18 at First Unitarian Universalist Church • OSU Theatre “Legally Blonde” at Thurber Theatre

6-8 p.m. Thursday, Nov. 15 424 W. Town St., Franklinton creativebabes.com

20 • Writing Wrongs Poetry

OSU Hopkins Hall Gallery

pHOTO cOURTEsy OF cREaTiVE BaBEs

LaNd-GRaNT BREwiNG cOMpaNy

19 Sandra Feen at Bossy Grrls

aT LiNcOLN THEaTRE cOMMUNiTy ROOM

• Carpe Diem String Quartet at

• The Poetry Forum w/ • Josh Lewis/Simon Liu at

“REFLEcTiONs” aN EVENiNG OF pORTRaiT aRT THURSDAY 15

Slam at Mikey’s Late Night

Slice • Lonely Tree Comedy Showcase at Tree Bar

Columbus Museum of Art Justin Vivian Bond at CCAD • “Macbeth” at Columbus Civic

Theatre

21 Business” at Club Diversity Night at Kafe Kerouac

FRIDAY 16 • Dance Theatre of Harlem

at Palace Theatre • TBD The Improvised Musical at Up Front at

Shadowbox Live

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23 • “A Christmas Carol” at Ohio

• Puppet Queers “Fisty • Writer’s Block Poetry

Through Nov. 25 1187 N. High St., Short North shortnorthstage.org

THANKSGIVING

Theatre • “The Rocky Horror Show”

at Garden Theater

Quatric Williams’ “Portrait of Dr. Martin Luther King Jr.”

SATURDAY 17 • Lars Jan/Early Morning Opera “The White Album” by Joan Didion at Wexner

Center for the Arts • St. Lawrence String Quartet at Southern Theatre

24 • Red Herring Productions “Frankie and Johnny in the Clair de Lune” at

Franklinton Playhouse

ColumbusAlive.com | Thursday, November 15, 2018

In what’s becoming one of the cooler annual traditions in Columbus, Creative Babes will release its third annual coloring book, with 46 pages of original art from 30 women that includes games, creative prompts and other activities — including, of course, coloring. For each copy of the book sold ($10), a creative kit (coloring book, colored pencils and tote bag) will be donated to Nationwide Children’s Hospital, Community Refugee Immigration Services and Flying Horse Farms. Check out the release party Thursday, Nov. 15, at Land-Grant.

Cover by Chelsea Bunn

GaRdEN THEaTER

pHOTO cOURTEsy OF THE aRTisT

saTURday | NOVEMBER 17

cREaTiVE BaBEs cOLORiNG BOOk

• Columbus Women’s Chorus

to dig too deep to discover that “La Cage” offers some lessons that are as valuable now as they were when the play opened on Broadway 35 years ago. Based on a play by Jean Poiret and with a book by Harvey Fierstein, “La Cage” concerns Georges, the proprietor of a drag club, his partner, Albin, who also happens to be the featured performer, and the conflict that ensues when Georges’ son, Jean-Michel, returns home with his fiancee and her conservative parents. “You’ve got statements about family and about love. Here are two leading

men who truly love each other, who have a valid relationship, and who basically raised a son,” Licata said. A farce, the play careens from silliness to silliness, ultimately finding the prospective in-laws escaping the club disguised as drag performers to avoid being discovered by the press. “There are both laughs and tears,” Licata said. “There is a lot of comedy, but buried in it is an enormous amount of humanity.”

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ARTS // Movie Review Photo courtesy warner Bros.

‘fantastic Beasts: the crimes of Grindelwald’

ColumbusAlive.com | Thursday, November 15, 2018

By Brad Keefe

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The “Harry Potter” film series was generally a delight, but also reinforced some of my core beliefs about book-tofilm adaptations. The first movie was a fairly faithful, almost page-for-page adaptation of a book. It was also of reasonable length for a film. The second movie attempted the same, but felt cramped. Then the filmmakers started making decisions about what was best for the screen, which included some painful omissions. From there, the series took off, launching some truly great films. With the “Fantastic Beasts” spinoff, J.K. Rowling is now penning original stories for the screen set in the wizarding world. And two films in, we are starting to see both the good and the bad in this approach. “Fantastic Beasts: The Crimes of Grindelwald” takes place a few months after the events of “Fantastic Beasts and Where to Find Them.” Gellert Grindelwald (Johnny Depp), who is basically Wizard Hitler, has escaped prison and is amassing followers with a message that wizards take their rightful place in charge. Albus Dumbledore (Jude Law) must enlist the help of Newt Scamander (Eddie Redmayne) to stop him. “Do you know

why I admire you, Newt?” Dumbledore says. “You do not seek power. You simply ask, ‘Is a thing ... right?’” Hey, we could use more of that in the world, amirite? “The Crimes of Grindelwald” unspools a complicated web of interconnecting characters in ways that Rowling has been magnificent at on the page. For fans who really just wish there were more books, this may be a blessing. David Yates, who directed the final four Potter film, as well as the first “Fantastic Beasts,” is at the helm again, and this movie boasts similar effects that transport you to a world where you just accept magic is real. In short, fans will be pleased. But while there are moments of drama and twists worthy of a gasp or two, “Grindelwald” still feels like an appendix (the book kind, although this one also might need to be removed.) From the “who cares?” love triangles to some “who is that?” characters, the plot never feels particularly driving. Some have compared it to George Lucas’ “Star Wars” prequel trilogy, and I have to co-sign on that. It’s pretty apt. “Grindelwald” does seem to be setting up something pretty epic, and the next chapter could land this as a solid trilogy. Spoiler alert: There are at least five “Fantastic Beasts” films planned.

“fantastic Beasts: the crimes of Grindelwald” Opens Thursday


ColumbusAlive.com | Thursday, November 15, 2018

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paRty pLanneR: Just F.R.i.e.n.d.s PAGE 32

RestauRants open on thanksgiving PAGE 33

tostadaLicious

ColumbusAlive.com | Thursday, November 15, 2018

F

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Chicken burrito

By g.a. Benton • photos By RoB haRdin

olks who dine out frequently are often appreciative of an eatery that’s a bit eccentric. This certainly describes me, but I’d add that I prefer a business that’s genuinely eccentric rather than one that’s eccentric in a calculated fashion, a la, “Look how purportedly fun our menu and decor are!” At first, I assumed Tostadalicious was a fairly conventional, Chipotle-stye operation. But I soon discovered that the fast-casual establishment can’t help but be a little eccentric. Prospective diners must basically walk down a blind alley in Uptown Westerville to find the cute, tidy and friendly little restaurant. From its playful names — I use the plural because Tostadalicious was previously known as “Phatt Taco” — it’s hardly apparent that, in addition to making money like every business, this place’s raison d’etre is to offer healthful spins on quick

and inexpensive Tex-Mex dishes. This aesthetic stems from owner Jose Becerra. Becerra is a transplant from northern California whose resume includes planning nutritious meals for tech companies in Silicon Valley and, following that, doing the same sort of work for Abercrombie & Fitch in New Albany. Lately, Becerra has been applying his culinary knowledge to his own restaurants. And he’s applied an interesting sense of style to the interior of Tostadalicious. Above a smooth, blond wood floor are wooden tables that provide limited seating — nothing eccentric about that. But the room also contains what amounts to a hot sauce altar, numerous plants (some might be real) and mangocolored walls decorated with tree branches, a surfboard, mirrors, masks, framed surrealistic images, photos of Mesoamerican art and multiple allusions to the sun and moon. Largely because the


Collection of hot sauces Tostada

You will be encouraged to enjoy four featured house garnishes on this, and you should do that, too. You’ll get lime juice spritzed from what looks like a perfume bottle, plus squiggles of tangy, veganmayo-based cilantro-ranch dressing, zippy lemon-habanero sauce and a pleasant tomato condiment. For $1.25 extra, you can, and should, enrich your order with the rewarding guacamole-esque “avocado hummus.” Your cost will vary from $8.50 to about $9, depending on which generally tender and flavorful, mild-chili sauce-braised meat or other warm entree topping you request. Every option I tried — chopped pork, chopped chicken, pot roast-like beef and a supple tamale studded with corn — tasted good on its own and even better with the eccentric whole shebang.

TosTadalicious

20 S. State St., Westerville 614-404-9326 tostadalicious.com

ColumbusAlive.com | Thursday, November 15, 2018

whole is greater than the sum of its parts, this coheres into something pleasant rather than a confounding collection of disparate elements. I could make that same pronouncement about the mounds of food assembled onto paper plates here. While the menu lists burritos and the expected tostadas, that’s not actually what you’re likely to end up with. That’s because what Tostadalicious specializes in — and always served in my experiences — are tricked-out salads enhanced with various taco-style proteins or other Mexicanstyle items. For example, when I asked for a burrito, the super-friendly server behind the counter convinced me that what I really wanted was the restaurant’s veggie-heavy version of a tostada with all the fixings. He turned out to be right. I would later watch similar scenes play out with other servers and other likewise soon-to-bepleased customers. So, just order a tostada with everything. You’ll get loose rice punctuated with peas and carrots and brightened by turmeric; soupy, nicely seasoned pinto and black beans; a corn salad sweetened by apples and grapes; shredded cheeses; commercial crispy fried onions; chopped cucumbers; a blend of romaine lettuce, cabbage and kale; fresh cilantro; fresh jalapenos (get these fiery chilies on the side); and Charras brand fried tortilla discs, which will arrive on the side rather than underneath the toppings as in any traditional tostada dish.

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EAT // PArTy PlAnnEr

EAT // Food nEws

JUsT F.r.i.E.n.d.s

Black rEsTaUranT wEEk conTinUEs; swEET carroT opEns on sawmill

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“We can hook up, hang out, just chill.” That pick-up line, offered by singer Musiq Soulchild, may or may not have scored him a date, but it definitely earned him a top 10 R&B hit with “Just Friends (Sunny)” in 2001. And 17(!) years later, it has inspired the name of JUST F.R.I.E.N.D.S, a monthly event for professionals old enough to remember the song but young enough to still want to party — without drama. Founded in July, the series alternates between day parties, “Kickback & Karaoke” and holiday-themed gatherings like the forthcoming “Friendsgiving” at the Village Idiot on Saturday, Nov. 17. “We have a lot of friends that like to share experiences with us,” said Ashley McCormick, who organizes the event with her fiance, Destin Grayson. “But our [home] is not always the best space because we have so many friends combined.” Incorporating karaoke was a no-brainer for the couple, who share a love of the pastime. In fact, they had their first date at a karaoke bar four years ago. “You really can get comfortable with somebody,” McCormick said. “You let go of any fear that you have with somebody that you are going on the very first date with [and] show them parts of yourself that people typically keep in.” By contrast, the JUST F.R.I.E.N.D.S karaoke parties at Park Street Tavern are truly a group effort. In October, the room swelled with people singing ’90s and early2000s hits in unison so loud that you could barely hear the soloist. And that has become a recurring theme. “It just kind of happened organically,” Grayson said. The event also stands out due to its focus on R&B and hip-hop, catering to a diverse crowd that might not always feel comfortable in the average karaoke joint. It is the latest in a wave of similarly curated, music-based events both old (Get Right, Ogee Columbus) and new (HIPS, Orange Soda).

phoTo By JUlian FogliETTi

By Erin Edwards The Columbus Urban League of Young Professionals’ weeklong celebration of minority-owned restaurants is back. Black Restaurant Week, which offers dining deals at participating restaurants, continues through Saturday, Nov. 17. Participating restaurants include Barrel on High, J Hot Fish, Flavor 91 Bistro and more.

Ashley McCormick and Destin Grayson Both McCormick and Grayson have an entrepreneurial spirit; they manage an event-planning company and personal shopping brand, respectively, in addition to working full-time. The extra income from those ventures and JUST F.R.I.E.N.D.S will help with costs for the couple’s 2019 wedding — “Our families are not rich,” McCormick said — and working together strengthens their bond. “It’s a lot of strategy that happens on our couches before we roll things out,” McCormick said. “And that’s where the love comes in, knowing your partner and knowing that you’re keeping the best interest of both [people] and your relationship in the forefront of your mind.” The next goal for the couple will be extending the party series outside of the city, if possible. “We’ve got JUST F.R.I.E.N.D.S 614, McCormick said. “So it could be JUST F.R.I.E.N.D.S 513, 216 or 504.”

VillagE idioT

10 p.m. – 2 a.m. Saturday, Nov. 17 1439 N. High St., Campus instagram.com/justfriends614

Sweet Carrot opened its third Central Ohio location this week at 7571 Sawmill Rd. Angela Petro’s growing group of fast-casual restaurants also has locations in Grandview and Polaris. Cameron Mitchell’s new autobiography, “Yes is the Answer. What is the Question?” went on sale Wednesday, Nov. 14. The personal account shares Mitchell’s journey from high school dropout to nationally renowned restaurateur. Cameron Mitchell Restaurants celebrated 25 years in business last month.

coVEr arT coUrTEsy idEaprEss pUBlishing

ColumbusAlive.com | Thursday, November 15, 2018

By Erica Thompson

There’s a second Lindey’s opening in Ohio. Lindey’s Lake House opens Thursday, Nov. 15, in Beachwood, Ohio, in Cuyahoga County. Owner Rick Doody is the son of the late Sue Doody, who founded Lindey’s in German Village in 1981. She died in April of this year at the age of 83. According to Cleveland.com, Rick named the new restaurant Lindey’s as a tribute to the iconic Columbus restaurant where he and his brother Chris got their start in the restaurant industry. The brothers went on to launch the Bravo Brio Restaurant Group. Tickets to the first ever Columbus Donut Fest went on sale this week. The event celebrating the fried delicacy takes place Jan. 27 at Vue Columbus in the Brewery District. Visit columbusdonutfest.com for more information. Arepazo closed its flagship Downtown location at 47 N. Pearl St. The new tenant of the alley restaurant, Barroluco Argentine Comfort Food, announced its arrival this week with signage on the building’s exterior. Barroluco got its start in 2016 as a food truck serving empanadas, ribs, paella bowls, churros and more; the next year it was named best food truck at the Columbus Food Truck Festival. Stay tuned for an opening date. The Wahlburgers food truck, owned by chef Paul Wahlberg and his celebrity brothers Mark and Donnie Wahlberg, hit the Columbus streets this week. The launch took place at the Mark Wahlberg Chevrolet dealership on the West Side, which the actor purchased earlier this year. Winans Chocolates + Coffees + Wine, the family-owned chocolate confectioner and coffee roaster, will join Grandview Yard next year. The Winans shop will occupy approximately 1,600-square-feet in the mixed-use 1125 Yard Street building. The owners of Downtown’s Haveli Bistro have opened a more casual outpost called Haveli Express at 5720 Frantz Rd. in Dublin. Do you have Eat & Drink news? Send tips to info@columbusalivemail.com.


EAT // roundup

restauraNts opeN oN thaNksgiviNg Don’t feel like spending the holiday cooking this year? Make a reservation at one of the many local restaurants open on Thanksgiving! The Berwick The Berwick offers a buffet with all the traditional Thanksgiving fixings. The Boat House The Boat House at Confluence Park is serving a Thanksgiving buffet paired with plenty of mimosas. Buckeye Donuts The campus institution isn’t serving turkey, but it is open 24/7 for all your donut, coffee and gyro needs. G. Michael’s This German Village mainstay will be open 3-7 p.m. on Thanksgiving, serving a scaled-down version of its regular dinner menu, plus a traditional turkey special.

The Keep The upscale French brasserie, located on the second floor of the LeVeque Tower, will be open Thanksgiving. It’s serving the standard breakfast and lunch menu, but offering a special three-course dinner from 5-11 p.m.

Latitude 41 Latitude 41 will be serving a buffet from 11 a.m. to 4 p.m., featuring everything from brunch items to turkey and scallops, a carving station and all the fixings. Lindey’s Lindey’s goes all-out with its special Thanksgiving menu, serving dry-aged beef dumplings, lobster bisque, Australian seabass and much more. Matt the Millers All three locations of Matt the Millers will be serving a Thanksgiving buffet from 11 a.m. to 5 p.m.

Ray Ray’s Hog Pit If barbecue is your preference, Ray Ray’s is offering pre-ordered Thanksgiving meals. Orders need to be placed by Sunday, Nov. 18, and can be picked up Thanksgiving between noon and 4 p.m. at the Ace of Cups and Maxtown Road locations. Spagio Spagio is open from 1-5 p.m., serving a special globally inspired menu. Tee Jaye’s Country Place Stop by a Tee Jaye’s location for a Thanksgiving dinner, or a Barnyard Buster, if that’s more your style.

The Guild House The Guild House opens at 6:30 a.m. for breakfast, and then offers a prix-fixe Thanksgiving dinner. It’s the only Cameron Mitchell restaurant open that day, although the company is offering a “Thanksgiving in a Box,” which must be ordered by 5 p.m. on Thursday, Nov. 15.

Nicola Nicola will be serving a special menu from 11:30 a.m. to 6:30 p.m.

Tip Top Kitchen & Cocktails Tip Top is traditionally open for dinner hours on Thanksgiving, serving cocktails, pot roast, Ohio nachos and a special turkey dinner.

J. Liu J. Liu’s Worthington and Dublin locations will be serving a Thanksgiving buffet from 10 a.m. to 6 p.m.

94th Aero Squadron The Aero Squadron, located out near the airport, will offer a Thanksgiving buffet from 10 a.m. to 8 p.m.

Tucci’s This Dublin outpost is serving a special threecourse, prix-fixe Thanksgiving menu.

Valter’s at the Maennerchor The German pub will be serving up a traditional American Thanksgiving. Worthington Inn The Inn serves its traditional Thanksgiving buffet from 11 a.m. to 5 p.m. International meals Remember that many international restaurants will be open as usual on Thanksgiving, from Indian to Mediterranean to Chinese and beyond. Keep an eye on places like Cafe Istanbul, Haveli Bistro, Helen’s Asian Kitchen, New India, N.E. Chinese, Royal Ginger Bistro, Taj Palace and Tandoori Grill, among others. Chains Several different chain restaurants are open on Thanksgiving, too, including Bob Evans, Buca di Beppo, Boston Market, Columbus Fish Market, Cooper’s Hawk Winery, Cracker Barrel, J. Gilbert’s, McCormick & Schmick’s, Mitchell’s Steakhouse, Rodizio Grill, Smith & Wollensky, Ted’s Montana Grill, Texas de Brazil and Waffle House.

ColumbusAlive.com | Thursday, November 15, 2018

Nancy’s Home Cooking Nancy’s is celebrating 50 years of offering a free Thanksgiving dinner to those in need. The meal is served 11 a.m. to 5 p.m. The Clintonville diner is soliciting donations and volunteers to help feed the crowds that day.

photo By MeghaN ralstoN

By Nicholas Dekker

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EVENTS CALENDAR THURSDAY

ColumbusAlive.com | Thursday, November 15, 2018

Tosha Stimage: The self-aware subjects and spaces of Mickalene Thomas, Whether an assemblage amassing into a robust pictorial landscape or a nude in recline, the constructed spaces and figures in the work of Mickalene Thomas are loaded with a memory and imagination that call for a new type of engagement with the viewer’s own sense of identity. This gallery talk will consider the intersection of visual arts and our collective imagination in creating social change. Tosha Stimage is a multidisciplinary artist whose work focuses on the structural and disambiguous nature of language in relation to “black” identity. Her work employs coded messages that investigate the societal constructs of race and violence. She is a founder of The Black Infinity, a collective aiming to provide support to marginalized creative communities. Free with gallery admission. 6 p.m. Wexner Center for the Arts, 1871 N. High St., Campus.

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An Exclusive Evening with Jorma Kaukonen, Join the profoundly influential guitarist of the rock bands Jefferson Airplane and Hot Tuna, Jorma Kaukonen, as he shares his beautifullywritten memoir, “Been So Long: My Life and Music,” filled with tales of the road, the stage, and a life made of music. Released August 28th, Been So Long: My Life and Music is the story of how the

Rock and Roll Hall of Fame inductee found his place in the world of music and beyond. In this exclusive and intimate Gramercy Books Songwriter Spotlight program, Jorma will be interviewed by music devotee Alec Wightman. Alec’s Zeppelin Productions has promoted national act singer-songwriter concerts in Columbus since 1995 and he is a board member of the Rock and Roll Hall of Fame, where he served as Chair from 2013 to 2016. $30. 6:30-8:30 p.m. Gramercy Books, 2424 E. Main St., Bexley. Rikki Santer - Dodge Tuck Roll, Rikki Santer has worked as a journalist, a magazine and book editor, cofounder and managing editor of an alternative city newspaper in Cleveland, and a poet-in-the schools. She earned a M.A. degree in journalism from Kent State University and a M.F.A. degree in creative writing from the Ohio State University. Her work has won honors from The Poetry Forum (the William Redding Memorial Contest), Black Lawrence Press (the St. Lawrence Book Award Competition), the Ohio Poetry Association, the National Federation of State Poetry Societies, the Best of Ohio Writer Contest sponsored by the Poets’ & Writers’ League of Greater Cleveland, as well as Pushcart and Ohioana Book Award nominations, and a fellowship from the National Endowment for the Humanities. Free. 7-8 p.m. Book Loft of German Village, 631 South 3rd Street, Columbus, 43206. Who Will Write Our History?, Presented in

ThursDAY, NOV. 15 – MONDAY, NOV. 19, 2018 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.

PHoTo BY J. BRiggS coRMieR

THRUSDAY | Nov. 15

“LegALLY BLoNDe, THe MUSicAL,” AT oHio STATe THURBeR THeATRe

conjunction with the Columbus Jewish Film Festival, Who Will Write Our History? tells the story of a secret archive created in the Warsaw Ghetto as a way to defeat Nazi lies and propaganda, created in 1940 by historian Emanuel Ringelbum and a band of journalists, scholars, and community leaders. With 30,000 pages of writing, photographs, posters, and more, the archive is the most important collection of eyewitness contemporary accounts from this Holocaust. For the first time, these documents have been made available to documentarians who, along with stunning dramatizations, transport us inside the Ghetto and the lives of these courageous resistance fighters. $12. 7 p.m. Wexner Center for the Arts, 1871 N. High St., Campus.

Ty Brasel: The Greatness Tour, Ty Brasel in concert with Parris Chariz, Jarry Manna and WHATUPRG. #12-$22. 7-9:30 p.m. NBCM World Changers Center, 3475 Refugee Rd., East Side. Yung Pinch, With openers Tyla Yaweh and DAGHE. $20. 7 p.m. Newport Music Hall, 1722 N. High St., Campus. Grassinine, $10. 7 p.m. Woodlands Tavern, 1200 W. Third Ave., Grandview. Four Fists (P.O.S x Astronautalis), With openers Angel Davanport and Senseless. $18. 7 p.m. The Basement, 391 Neil Ave., Arena District. Columbus Blue Jackets vs. Florida Panthers, 7 p.m. Nationwide Arena, 200 W. Nationwide Blvd., 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. “Legally Blonde, The Musical,” Music and lyrics by Laurence O’Keefe and Nell Benjamin. Book by Heather Hach. Based on the novel by Amanda Brown. A California sorority girl shakes up Harvard Law School and explodes stereotypes while remaining true to her own sense of style in this Broadway musical based on the film starring Reese Witherspoon. Tickets start at $15. 7:30 p.m. Ohio State Thurber Theatre, Drake Center, 1849 Cannon Dr., Campus. “Crimes of the Heart” by Beth Henley, The scene is Hazlehurst, Mississippi, where the three Magrath sisters have gathered to await news of the family patriarch, their grandfather, who is living out his last hours in the local hospital. Lenny, the oldest sister, is unmarried at thirty and facing diminishing marital prospects; Meg, the middle

sister, who quickly outgrew Hazlehurst, is back after a failed singing career on the West Coast; while Babe, the youngest, is out on bail after having shot her husband in the stomach. Their troubles, grave and yet, somehow, hilarious, are highlighted by their priggish cousin, Chick, and by the awkward young lawyer who tries to keep Babe out of jail while helpless not to fall in love with her. In the end the play is the story of how its young characters escape the past to seize the future—but the telling is so true and touching and consistently hilarious that it will linger in the mind long after the curtain has descended. $15. 8 p.m. Columbus Dance Theatre, 592 E. Main St., Downtown. Mx Justin Vivian Bond, Presented By Beeler Gallery. Tickets start at $16. 8 p.m. Southern Theatre, 21 E. Main St., Downtown. Aaron Lee Tasjan w/ Brandy Zdan, $12. 8 p.m. Rumba Café, 2507 Summit St., North Campus. Ohio State Department of Dance Presents The Big 5-oh, We are already saving a place for you at our 50th anniversary celebration event during the second and third weekends. Interactive archival exhibit on display throughout the event. Barnett Theatre Concert Performances - Featuring New Works choreographed by Faculty – Space: Susan Van Pelt Petry Time: Daniel Roberts Flow: Eddie Taketa Weight: Crystal Michelle Perkins Sullivant Hall 350/Motion Lab (MOLA) Performances by


ColumbusAlive.com | Thursday, November 15, 2018

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WIN TWO TICKETS

TO SELECT SHOWS

Renegade Performance Group Artistic Director and Choreographer Andre M. Zachery. $25. 8 p.m. Ohio State Barnett Theatre, Sullivant Hall, 1813 High St., Campus. Excesss Trivia, Join the Mad Mentalist every Thursday 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. 8-10 p.m. Hounddog’s Pizza, 2657 N. High St., Old North. 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. Chris Lake, $20. 18 and up. 9 p.m.-midnight. Trism, 1636 N. High St., South Campus.

Excesss Karaoke, Join Karaoke Wan Kenobi 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. 10 p.m. Oldfield’s North Fourth Tavern, 1571 N. 4th St., Campus.

FRIDAY Culinary Capers, ProMusica Chamber Orchestra’s Sustaining Board annual event. Chef Cara Mangini shares her masterful art of butchery with the beauty of seasonal produce. Join us for a delicious lunch and a demonstration of how to feature vegetables at the center of the plate with unique and delicious dishes. Guests will receive Cara’s signed cookbook and enjoy shopping at the Ohio Artisans Marketplace. $125-$200. The Grand Event Center at Grandview Yard, 820 Goodale Blvd., Grandview.

SUDOKU | ANSWER FOR 11-15-18

How We Roll for Members, During a How We Roll course, groups of up to five cyclists enjoy a casual ride through downtown Columbus that prepares them to safely and confidently navigate urban streets. Topics include bicycle traffic law, proper lane positioning and Q&A on any additional topic of interest. Please read the information below, which covers our policies regarding registration, cancellation, inclement weather, etc. Contact with Heidi Coulter at heidi@yaybikes.com. Free. Noon-1 p.m. Grange Audubon Center, 505 W. Whittier St., Downtown. A Barolo Wine Tasting with Winemaker Simone Ortale, Cascina Adelaide specializes in Barolo (the king of wines) and Simone Ortale knows everything there is to know about Barolo. He will be pouring four different Barolo wines from the Piedmont region of Italy, and will be on hand to answer all of your questions. $25. 6-8 p.m. The Hills Market Downtown. 95 N. Grant Ave., Downtown. Monrovia, Indiana, Over the course of 50 years and 43 films, Frederick Wiseman has become our most dedicated and essential filmic chronicler of American life and institutions. For his latest project, Wiseman visits the American heartland to observe the small town of Monrovia, Indiana (population 1063), capturing the rhythms and textures of rural midwestern life as well as the small moments of life in the US as it’s lived outside of urban centers. $8. 7 p.m. Wexner Center for the Arts, 1871 N. High St., Campus.


Ohio State Buckeyes Mens Hockey vs. University of Wisconsin Badgers Mens Hockey, 7 p.m. Schottenstein Center, 555 Borror Dr., Campus. The Ohio State University Marching Band Hometown Concert, Don’t miss an exciting new show when The Ohio State University Marching Band performs its annual Hometown Concert. The Best Damn Band in the Land will entertain fans with selections from its popular halftime shows, fan favorites, and traditional Ohio State tunes. $18. 7 p.m. Celeste Center, 717 E. 17th Ave., North Side. Litz W/ Conscious Pilot & Baccano, $10. 7 p.m. Woodlands Tavern, 1200 W. Third Ave., Grandview. Ohio State Buckeyes Women’s Volleyball vs. University of Wisconsin Badgers Volleyball, 7 p.m. St John Arena Columbus, 410 Woody Hayes Dr., Campus.

witnesses the end of 1960s countercultural dream— hijacked by violence and chaos just as the Beatles’ so-called White Album (1968) was appropriated by Charles Manson and his murderous “family.” Obie Award–winning performer Mia Barron delivers the highly personal essay in its entirety while behind her the party unfolds, visually demonstrating the stark similarities in cultural dynamics between 1968 and now. Layering in projected footage from the era, the performance’s parallel visual and dramatic texts challenge us to look critically at the past in order to forge new paths ahead. As we recognize echoes of the Black Panthers in Black Lives Matter, the sit-ins of San Francisco State students in Occupy Wall Street, The White Album urges us to consider how continued racism, inequality, and violence square with our own 21st-century narratives of social progress. $24. 8 p.m. Mershon Auditorium, 1871 N. High St., Campus.

Lars Jan: The White Album, Created by director and visual artist Lars Jan, The White Album uses a modern-day house party as a visual score to Didion’s seminal essay that

Ohio State Department Of Dance Presents The Big 5-oh, See Thursday listing for information. 8 p.m. Ohio State Barnett Theatre, Sullivant Hall, 1813 High St., Campus.

The Columbus 5th Annual Tribute to The Last Waltz, $15. 7:30 p.m. Newport Music Hall, 1722 N. High St., Campus.

Folquinox + Bow Echo, Folquinox + Bow Echo return to The Rambling House for another night of folk rock madness. Free. 9 p.m.-midnight. Rambling House, 310 E. Hudson St., North Campus. 12th Annual Jimi Hendrix Tribute Night, $10. 18 and up. 9 p.m. Rumba Café, 2507 Summit St., North Campus. Excesss Karaoke, Join Que-Ball every Friday for the best karaoke party around! With stellar sound and huge, regularlyupdated songbooks, Excesss Karaoke is where to let loose with song and dance. Free. 9 p.m. Basil Short North, 1124 N. High St., Short North. 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. 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 Sassy Do Fall Conference: Happenstance Starting Where You Are & Finding Your Purpose, Join us for an improv workshop where we will introduce you to the discovery process of improvisation, engage in simple improv games to get acclimated, and conclude by exploring practical applications of your newly discovered skills. By the end of the workshop, we hope that you will realize the power of being present, mindful, and available in both “play” and daily life; learn how to build inclusion by sharing, experiencing, and creating together; and feel empowered by this ability. Be. Here. Now! Safe, welcoming, inclusive space for women! $25 advance, $30 at the door. Space limited. 8:45 a.m.-12:30 p.m. Wild Goose Creative, 2491 Summit St., North Campus.

Saturday Morning Art Classes Exhibition, Columbus College of Art & Design has one the largest and oldest youth art programs in the country. Join in the tradition at the annual Saturday Morning Art Classes Exhibition. The show features work created by students in CCAD’s Saturday Morning Art Classes, ranging from paintings, drawings, and ceramics to animation and other digital art. The exhibition, which includes work by both youth and adults, is curated by volunteers, instructors, and community education staff members. The event is free and open to the public. 11 a.m.-2 p.m. Loann Crane Center for Design, 112 Cleveland Ave., Downtown. CCBOR presents “Invisible Hand,” “Invisible Hand” is the world’s first documentary film about

the creation of ‘Rights of Nature’ from the exploitation of capitalism. The defining battle of our times between democracy and corporations. In the fall of 2014, for the first time in United States history, an ecosystem filed to defend itself in a lawsuit claiming its ‘right to exist’ in Grant Township, Pennsylvania. For attempting such a radical act, Grant’s rural community of 700 people were sued by a corporation, then by the state government, and are now locked in a battle to defend the watershed they call home, the water they drink, and enforce the local laws they enacted that gave legal Rights to Nature. Free. 2 p.m. Upper Arlington Main Library, 2800 Tremont Rd., Upper Arlington. Ohio State Department Of Dance Presents The Big 5-oh, See Thursday

ColumbusAlive.com | Thursday, November 15, 2018

“Legally Blonde, The Musical,” See Thursday listing for information. 7:30 p.m. Ohio State Thurber Theatre, Drake Center, 1849 Cannon Dr., Campus.

The Columbus Coyote Rugby Bachelor Auction, Join the Columbus Coyotes Gay & Inclusive Rugby Team in their annual Bachelor & Silent Auction. Come meet and greet all the Rugby players and bid on your favorite to win a special date package! All proceeds go to support this terrific local team, which is hosting the 2019 Capital City Rugby Cup next Memorial Day Weekend. Virginia and Nina West host. $7-$12.50. 8-10 p.m. Axis Nighclub, 775 N. High St., Short North.

Cloud Nothings, With openers Nap Eyes and Rolin/Powers Duo. $17/$20. 7 p.m. A&R Music Bar, 391 Neil Ave., Arena District.

Dance Theatre of Harlem, Tickets start at $30. 8 p.m. Palace Theatre, 34 W. Broad St., Downtown.

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listing for information. 3 and 8 p.m. Ohio State Barnett Theatre, Sullivant Hall, 1813 High St., Campus. Ohio State Buckeyes Mens Hockey vs. University of Wisconsin Badgers Mens Hockey, 5 p.m. Schottenstein Center, 555 Borror Dr., Campus. Beartooth - The Disease Tour, With Knocked Loose and Skylar. $25/$27. 6:30 p.m. Express Live, 405 Neil Ave., Arena District. 2nd Annual Columbus Somali Festival, Columbus’ exploding international population means a melting pot of cultures welcomes

visitors with unusual cuisines, arts and traditions. Underscoring the celebrated diversity of Ohio’s capital city, some 60,000 Somali people now call Columbus home, creating the secondlargest concentration of Somali immigrants in the United States. The festival is designed to celebrate the city’s openness to immigrants and allow visitors and locals alike to experience the uniqueness of Somali culture through its food, art and history. Colorful presentations of historical artifacts, Dhaanto and Goobile dances, Riwaayad skits and a fashion show will take place, alongside the artistry of two of Somalia’s most celebrated

performers, Abdiwali Sayidka and Ahmed Rasta. Wildly interesting, Somali cuisine varies regionally and is a fusion of different traditions, including East African, Arab, Turkish and Italian influences. Festival tickets are available at the door for $15. Kids under 12 are free. Seating is limited. 7 p.m.-midnight. Northland Performing Arts Center , 4411 Tamarack Blvd., Northland. Ohio State Buckeyes Women’s Volleyball vs. University of Minnesota Golden GophersVolleyball, 7 p.m. St John Arena Columbus, 410 Woody Hayes Dr., Campus.

Guster, With Satellite Mode. $26/$28. 7 p.m. Newport Music Hall, 1722 N. High St., Campus. “Legally Blonde, The Musical,” See Thursday listing for information. 7:30 p.m. Ohio State Thurber Theatre, Drake Center, 1849 Cannon Dr., Campus. Front Country, $10. 8 p.m. Woodlands Tavern, 1200 W. Third Ave., Grandview. Saint Lawrence Quartet, Sponsored by Chamber Music Columbus. Tickets start at $15. 8 p.m. Southern Theatre, 21 E. Main St., Downtown. XO Saturdays, Join us each and every Saturday for the hottest weekly party at one of Columbus’ best venues. Free. 9 p.m.2:30 a.m. XO Nightlife, 40 E. Long St., Downtown.

ColumbusAlive.com | Thursday, November 15, 2018

Saturday Night Vogue Showdown, It’s time to strut your stuff on the Axis stage for out starstudded panel of judges. Dominique Jackson and Hailie Sahar of FX’s hit show Pose will join The Slim Ninja Jason Rodriguez and Ron Lanvin, the father of ballroom in Columbus to determine the winner of three showdowns: performance, realness and runway. $10-$50. Axis Nightclub, 775 N. High St., Short North.

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SUNDAY Ohio State Buckeyes Men’s Basketball vs. South Carolina State Bulldogs Mens Basketball, 2 p.m. Schottenstein Center, 555 Borror Dr., Campus. Música y Palabras, The Ohio Hispanic Fine Arts Association and the Greater Columbus Arts Council present Música y Palabras Combining music and words Lin a single event, one afternoon featuring: Flautango Rodolfo Vazquez, flute (México) Sean Ferguson, guitar María Andrade, vocals (México) and Ani Palacios, narrative author (Peru). Celia Martínez, poetry author (España) Two extraordinary Latin American art expressions celebrating Latino culture. Free. 3-5 p.m. Covenant Presbyterian Church, 2070 Ridgecliff Rd., Upper Arlington. “Legally Blonde, The Musical,” See Thursday listing for information. 3 p.m. Ohio State Thurber Theatre, Drake Center, 1849 Cannon Dr., Campus. O.A.R. - Just Like Paradise Tour, $36/$38. 7 p.m. Express Live, 405 Neil Ave., Brewery District.

MONDAY Josh Card and the Restless Souls, Free. 6 p.m. Woodlands Tavern, 1200 W. Third Ave., Grandview. 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. Discovering the Lost Instruments of Ukraine -- Bandura, Kobza, and Torban, The evening will showcase the tradition of the wandering blind kobzar, or bard, of the 16th century, who sang epic poems of the glorious past. Jurij Fedynskyj will bring the folk bandura, kobza, and torban to life, singing and playing each in its own unique style. He is full of stories of how the original instruments were lost during the Soviet era and the research it took to recreate them. Fedynskyj has been leading the revival of these lute-like instruments in Ukraine for the past 15 years, and mentors both craftsmen and performers of this longforgotten art. Free. 7-8:30 p.m. Upper Arlington Public Library, 2800 Tremont Rd., Upper Arlington. Monday Night Trivia, Join us for a fun night of trivia with your host Cristy. Six rounds, bonus questions, anagrams, pictures, music, and more. 7-9 p.m. Three Sheets, 560 S. High St., Short North. Ohio University Presents The Marching 110, $10.50. 8 p.m. Ohio Theatre, 39 E. State St., Downtown. Louis The Child, $42. 8 p.m. The Bluestone, 583 E. Broad St., Downtown. Open Jam hosted by Matt Jones, Every Monday night, bring your gear and your friends and come out to the Open Jam! Drummers need only bring sticks, drum kit is provided for your use. Acoustic or electric, solo acts or duets. 9 p.m. Eldorado’s Food & Spirits, 4968 N, High St., Clintonville.


ColumbusAlive.com | Thursday, November 15, 2018

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CLASSIFIEDS 888.8888 Dated Sales

STATE OF OHIO, DAS ABSOLUTE AUCTION STATE OF OHIO SURPLUS INVENTORY

Sale Conducted By:

CASSEL & ASSOCIATES

(614) 433-SELL (7355) Robert S. Cassel-Auctioneer www.casselauctions.com

CD-0006183237-01

Saturday, November 17, 2018 Doors Open at 8 am - Auction Starts at 9 am 4200 Surface Rd, Columbus, Ohio 43228 (West side of Columbus, go north on Phillipi Rd. off W. Broad St., turn left on Surface Rd.) For More info contact Tom Lowery (614) 466-7636

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. Garage Sale 10877 Mill St., Pataskala, Nov 10 & 11th, 9 to 4pm. Lots of tools, saws, drills, welders, sanders engine stand, chipper/shredder, air compressor Garage Sale Sat. Nov 17 9a-5p 1395 Candlewood Dr Worthington Hills 43235. Antiques, HH treasures, Something for Everyone

ColumbusAlive.com | Thursday, November 15, 2018

ONLINE AUCTION

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Liquidation of: Claddagh Irish Pub & Restaurant Restaurant, Bar Equipment, Decorations, Beer Signs & More! Starting Nov. 16th & Ending Nov 20th @ 10:00 AM Location: 585 Front St., Columbus, OH 43215

Terms: Visa, M/C. 18% buyer’s premium added. I nspection: Friday, Nov. 16th, 10 AM to 2 PM. Visit our Website for More Info. Owner: CDG Acquisitions, LLC

825 N. Main St., Bryan, OH 43506 / 419-636-5500 Toll Free: 866-870-5500 Auctioneers: Brent J. Wilson, CAI, Bart Westfall www.WilsonAuctionLtd.com NEED A RIDE? Alive has hundreds-even thousands-of private and dealer autos advertised for sale. See our classifieds before you buy.

MERCHANDISE • ANNOUNCEMENTS • REAL ESTATE/RENTALS • FINANCIAL ADULT ENTERTAINMENT • EMPLOYMENT & EDUCATION SERVICES • PETS • TRANSPORTATION

Dated Sales

Real Estate

ûûTODAY!! ûû ’55 T-Bird, ’55 Ford 2 door, other old cars, parts, tools, @ AUCTION TODAY Nov.11 @ noon 14757 E. Broad St, Pataskala info:www.jmarkhagans.com & auctionzip.com#9655

BRUNER LAND COMPANY, INC. (614) 565-5666 www.brunerland.com "Financing Available"

Miscellaneous for Sale 1974 Free style boys bike, baby carriage, stroller, din. rm light, lamp shades, Sears gas blower & Hewitt printer. Info/prices. 614-882-4832/403-6037. BUYING ALL SPORTS CARDS PRE 1970. CALL SHANE SHOEMAKER AT 937-241-4251.

$$$$$$$$ BUYING $$$$$$$$

Private collector seeking watchmakers estates & accumulations, also buying all related items. Currently buying Pocket Watches in any cond. Buying watch parts & tools as well as anything related to the trades. Premiums paid for anything by Rolex. Recent refs. available upon request.35 yr. member NAWCC. Please call David 314-779-7380. SPECIALIZING IN LARGE COLLECTIONS AND ACCUMULATIONS. PAYING CASH!!! Eureka upright sweeper, 9 cubic foot chest freezer, 30 inch square blonde table, 3 wheel mobility scooter, cardio glide exerciser, white wicker love seat & 30 inch wicker table, maple rocker w/moss green cushions, Call 614-855-9448 or 614-214-9444 Full XL Leggett & Platt Adjustable Bed Power base is like new. $450 SOLD SOLD SOLD SOLD Moving Sale - Call to Come and Look 2 Elec. Fireplaces, One Large Oak Dining Room Table w/Chairs, Small Chest, Tall Chest w/2 Shelves & Drawers, Misc. Tools, Dyson Vacuum, Elec. Table Top Piano, Bissell Spot Bot. Call 614-423-7288 Record Show & Sale Brown Township Hall 2491 Walker Rd. Hilliard 100’ of 45 year old mint rock & country 45’s & lots of 33’s November 17th 9am-3pm Admission $1 For more info call 614-571-8578 Two Vintage Ladies looking to buy vintage costume jewelry, watches, Masonic items, old paintings and small antiques. Call: 614-826-3128

MORROW CO: New! 5 acres with woods, $65,900. Near Marengo.

ASSISTANT PROFESSOR OF MIDDLE CHILDHOOD EDUCATION TENURE-TRACK

Springfield OH - Historic Wittenberg Univ. Area.

234 & 230/232 Stanton Ave. 45503 2 adjacent historic homes, Carriage house/barn! 6 fireplaces, 3 car garage (heated), Retirement Sale! Clear Deeds. Both under $40,000!! Cash, Trade, Will Finance for little down (payments under 400 monthly?) Call 386-547-7030.

OHIO University Lancaster Campus

Comm. and Invest.

is seeking candidates for a tenure-track position of Assistant Professor of Middle Childhood Education to begin August 16, 2019.

LARGE MODULAR SCHOOL BUILDING 23,000 square foot building for sale or lease on 6.75 acres in SE Columbus. Zoned for school. Available immediately. Flexible terms By owner. Call 614-271-8694

Rental Living 1597 E. Weber Rd.

Twin Single 2BR, fully carpeted, lrg. LR, stove & refrigerator, full unfin. bsmt. with w/d hkup, C/A & heat. 614-475-2513.

For full consideration, please apply by January 3, 2019.

1928 Agler Rd 2BR flats, convenient to shopping, busline, etc. $450-$515. 614-456-7934 Alpine Village - Large 1 & 2 BR, SW School Dist. From $475-$525, 614-878-6615 Apartments Available At Sutton Square! 2 Bedrooms Start At $725 & 3 Bedrooms Start At $825! Large Two-Story Floor Plans, Furnished Appliances, W/D Connections, Playground,Pet Friendly, COTA Busline, & More! Call Today At (614)236-0518.

Applicants must complete an application at

Bexely Single Family Home 2BR, 1BA, hardwood floors, appliances, fenced yard, garage. $850/month 614-804-1982

http://www.ohiouniversityjobs.com/postings/28596

Blacklick 8737 Cicada St. 3 BR, 2.5 bath, 2 car garage. Rent $1595/mo. Call 614 507 8021

and attach required documents.

Broad Meadows Blvd - Lg 1 & 2BRS just N. of Graceland. A/C, cptd, off st pkg. $499-$549, 614-477-5559 Busch Blvd & 161 area, 2 BR TH W/Bsmt, W/D hookups $700, 614-456-7934

Bordering USA, 57 acres in Ross Co. $108,900 or 38 acres in Gallia Co. $66,900 – many more @www.brunerland.com or 740-441-1492, we finance!

Crosscreek Apts- Lg 1&2 BR, twhse w/bsmt. A/C, patio. Corner of Noe-Bixby $539-$815, 614-477-5559 û GAHANNA û 1BR, Utilities Included. Call (740)965-1799 after 4 pm.

MORROW CO: New! 5 acres with woods, $65,900. Near Marengo. Rev Up Your Car Search - Alive has hundreds even thousands of autos for sale!

Education-Instruct.

WWW.OHIO.EDU

HUNTING LAND FOR SALE 63 WOODED ACRES in Vinton Co. Cabin with elec, sellable timber, road frontage, deer, turkey, hunt ready!! 15 miles east of Chillicothe. $3300/acre O.B.O. 937-462-9242

Clintonville Area, Spacious 1 BR, 35 W. Duncan off st pkg, A/C. $589-$649, 614-477-5559

FRANKLIN CO: 1 acre, $29,900.

Education-Instruct.

FRANKLIN CO: 1 acre, $29,900.

Real Estate

BRUNER LAND COMPANY, INC. (614) 565-5666 www.brunerland.com "Financing Available"

Education-Instruct.

GAHANNA Collingwood Pointe Condo

Immac. 3BR, 2BA unit w/gas log fireplace, dining room, 1st flr. laundry, 2C. attached gar., $1600 mo. No smoking, no pets. Secluded location w/private patio. Mins. from Easton. Call Rob at 614-599-1039. Grove City! Ranch! RTO! 3BR, 1 ba, stove, frig, LR, Fireplace, shed, no bsmt. $895/month. John Hellwege, Myers Real Estate 614-272-5330

CD-0006184850-03

TO PLACE AN AD CALL

Ohio University is committed to creating a respectful and inclusive educational and workplace environment. Ohio University is an equal access/ equal opportunity and affirmative action employer with a strong commitment to building and maintaining a diverse workforce. Women, persons of color, persons with disabilities, and veterans are encouraged to apply.


Rental Living

Rental Living

Escorts-Etc.

Computers-Info

Computers-Info

Engineering-Tech

Grove City Rd. Meadow Park Apts, 2BR, fully carpeted, A/C, Laundromat.. $675. 614-878-6615

Now Accepting Applications

WHERE REAL GAY MEN MEET FOR UNCENORED FUN! 18+ BROWSE & REPLY FOR FREE! 614-369-3815

DevCare Solutions is looking for OnBase/ECM Architects to work in Columbus, OH and various unanticipated locations throughout the U.S. Requires a Bachelor’s Degree or equivalent* in Computer Information Systems or related field and six months of exp. in: (1) Identifying, defining and correcting technical impediments inhibiting sales; (2) Providing technical assistance to customers in order to deliver solutions; (3) developing workflows within an OnBase Solution; and (4) Use of OnBase software suite. *Any combination of education, experience and other credentials will be acceptable. Send resumes, REF. 1253.138 to ram@devcare.com

Sr Developer RMS (Columbus, OH) Resp for the installation, configuration, engineering, & management of complex application environments that may include multiple operating system platforms, languages, & network topologies. Complete full Software Development Lifecycle (SDLC) from design to flowcharting, development, testing, & implementation. Edu & Exp req’d. Send res & refs to D. Marrah at Express (Code: SJ-SDRMS) One Express Dr., Columbus, OH 43230

OCLC, Inc. has the following openings at its Dublin, Ohio HQ.

Grove City Spacious 1 & 2 BR Lofted ceilings, appls, C/A, patios, & carports, on Parkmead Dr $750-$850, 614-878-6615 Home for Rent 2840 Charing Rd Nature lovers rare opportunity. UA ranch on .9 acres. 3 BR, 2 BA, 2 car garage, basement laundry. New carpet & blinds. Rest of house is ceramic tile. House from the 50s with some updating such as new A/C, counters and fridge. Security deposit equal to montly rent. $2000 + deposit. Non smokers only. SORRY NO PETS. Call Mary 614-516-7099. Please no text or messages. Lauffer Ravines - Westerville Schools Lg 2 bdrs, just E of Cleveland Ave, just S of Schrock RD A?C, $675-$705, 614-423-8251 LEASE NEAR OSU - Starting end of Dec,. ’18 (neg). 838 sq.ft. 1BR w/ balcony. Walk to OSU & Olentangy Trail. Elevator; central A/C; w/d hookups; coin laundry in bldg.; large, private parking lot; walk-in closet; secured entry. $964/mo. $899 deposit & $100 app. fee. Cats OK. Avail. end Dec. Call 317-695-6208. Merion Village Area 2 Bdrm Apt. Very Clean $600 Dep. $600/month 614-833-1962

Don’t Miss A Good Deal! Read The

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.

Liaison Librarian sought by Denison University in the Granville, OH area to select and monitor library collections in all media in support of the Sciences and in consultation with the Assistant Director for Collections and Scholarly Resources. Must have relevant education & experience. Send 2 resumes & cover letter (no calls) to Jim Ables, 100 W College St, Granville, OH 43023 REF# 8918.017

Nationwide Insurance. Columbus, OH. Consultant, IT Applications Development to develop SOAP/XML & REST/Json web-based services to integrate apps supporting all Nationwide business solution areas using Agile methodology. Perform full project lifecycle development using IBM Datapower for Service Oriented Architecture enterprise services, IBM Integration Bus for enterprise svcs reqg large scale data transformation &/or orchestration, IBM Websphere Transformation Extender to deploy transformations in custom programming environments & third party app servers for enterprise app integrations b/w disparate systems & Apigee for enterprise web APIs. Serve as tech lead in IBM DataPower, Integration Bus, WTX, & Apigee & related technologies & assist users to maintain app functionality. Reqs MS in Comp Sci, Info Tech, Engg, or related field & 3 yrs of webbased integration exp using IBM DataPower & Integration Bus to develop SOAP/XML services & RESTful application APIs in Agile. Exp should incl at least 1 yr exp with web svc meta data mgmt using WSRR, IBM WTX for disparate system integration in custom programming environments, Apigee to build REST/Json APIs, Git & Apache Subversion (SVN) version control systems to track app changes & Javascript/Java to support web svcs. Alternatively, BS in above fields & 5 yrs web-based integration exp listed above, incl 1 yr exp w/web service meta data using techs noted above, is acceptable. Mail resume to Kathi Repka (CITA/AB), 1 Nationwide Plaza, 1-01-13, Columbus, OH 43215

Skilled Trades Ranch! Near Campus! RTO! 2BR, 1 ba, stove, frig, dish, LR, DR, bsmt, 2 car garage. $995/month. John Hellwege, Myers Real Estate 614-272-5330

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 Vic. Vill, 1 bedrm, Victorian Bldg, on bus line, no dogs $655-$755. 614-477-5559 West! Valleyview! Ranch! Rent to own. 2BR, 1 ba, LR, DR, 1st flr laundry, bsmt, 1 car gar. $895/mo. John Hellwege, Myers Real Estate 614-272-5330 Worthington 2BR., fully carpeted, appl. W/D hook-ups Worthington Schools, $785, 614-888-6331

ALIVE IS FULL SERVICE

CLASSIFIED SECTION

Education-Instruct.

EVERY DAY.

To easily find what you’re looking for, turn to our Service Directory at the front of the classifieds.

Transport.Drivers

Transport.Drivers

SCHOOL YEAR SCHOOL BUS DRIVERS

Work/life balance, room for advancement, competitive pay-$16.55 per hour, training, friendly staff and much more! Applicants should have an excellent driving record and must submit to a drug, alcohol, and background screening

EMI, 8220 Industrial Pkwy Plain City Ohio 43064 - 15 temp FT Landscape Laborers 2/1/19 – 11/19/19. Wrk will be performed @ mutli worksites in Columbus, OH MSA. No min edu/exp reqd. OJT prvd’d. Cut, trim, edge, water lawns/flower beds; clean up, weed beds, spread mulch, rake, blow leaves, fertilize shrubs/flowers, dig, mow, rake, prune core aerate, plant/transplant, underground lawn sprinkler installation; landscape site prep & development, debris removal, seed/sod lawns. Lift 50 lbs. Min 35 hrs/wk. M-F 7:30a-5p. Days/shift may vary w/ weather. $13.83/hr. Increased wage/addtl pay poss w/ exp, performance, tenure. OT poss/not guar at $20.75/hr. Single wrkwk used to compute wages. Biwkly pay. Emplyr makes all deductions from wrkr paychk reqd by law & deducts housing cost if wrkr elects. Opt emply only shared housing approx $50/wk. Transp prvd’d from main wrksite in Madison Co. to multi wrksites w/in Columbus, OH MSA. Emplyr provides wrkr at no charge all tools, supplies, equip reqd to perform job. Emplyr guar to offer wrk for hrs equal to at least 3/4 of wrkdays in each 12-wk period of total emplymt period. Transp costs (incl meals, lodging if nec) to place of emplymt reimb to wrkr if wrkr completes half the emplymt period. Rtrn transp prvd’d if wrkr completes emplymt period or dismissed early. Wrkr reimb visa & border fees in 1st wrkwk & apprvd trvl expns in 1st pay period. Rcpts reqd. Pre-emplymt drug test reqd, cost pd by emplyr. 5 day sched, may incl wknds/holidays. Emplymt app reqd. Apply at OhioMeansJobs-Union Co., 940 London Ave Ste 1500 Marysville, OH 43040 (937)-645-18. EOE/M/F/D/V

EXTRUSION/THERMOFORMING OPERATORS Major Food pkg. supplier has openings for Extrusion and Thermoforming Operators. Beginning rate is $18.16 to $19.52 depending on experience. Previous experience is required. Interested applicants should email their resume to: swilson@genpak.com

Do You Need To Buy, Sell, Trade, Find, Hire Or Rent? Go To The Classified Section.

Senior Business Analysts – Master Deg or for deg equiv in CS, CIS, Comp App, IT, Bus or Eng + 1 yr of experience in position or Business Analysis, Requirements Analysis or IT field (or Bach Deg + 5 yrs exp); and exp with bus analysis, Agile, JAD, RRC, RTC, source to target data mapping, bus process modeling and UAT. Travel to various unanticipated client sites req. May reside anywhere in US. Apply to (inc Ref # 10004) HR, Dedicated Tech Services, 545 Metro Place South, #100, Dublin, OH 43017 Senior Developer, Planning & Allocation (Columbus, OH) Responsible for the installation, configuration, engineering, and management of complex application environments that may include multiple operating system platforms, languages, and network topologies. Complete full Software Development Lifecycle (SDLC) from design to flowcharting, development, testing, and implementation. Edu & Exp req’d. Send res & refs to D. Marrah at Express (Code: JR-SDPA) One Express Dr., Columbus, OH 43230 Software Engineer – Columbus, OH. Participate in and drive end-to-end develop. lifecycle activities of apps. such as design, testing and deployment activities. Develop web services to expose core payment functionality to consumers. For reqs. & to apply, visit http://careers.jpmorganchase.com & apply to job #: 180111193. EOE, AAE, M/F/D/V. JPMorgan Chase & Co. All rights reserved. www.jpmorganchase.com. USE A PHOTO...MAKE A SALE Running a photo along with your Alive classified is a great way to get your ad noticed. Ads with photos stand out more and give readers a better idea of what you’re selling.

Finding a job shouldn’t feel like one.

TECHNOLOGY Deloitte Consulting LLP seeks a Specialist Master in Columbus, OH & various unanticipated Deloitte office locations & client sites nationally to oversee the provision of technology-enabled solutions to clients. Reqts: Bachelor’s degree or foreign equivalent in Engineering (any), Computer Applications, MIS, CIS or related field. 5 years progressive experience as Specialist Master, Specialist Senior or related occupation. In the alternative, employer will accept Master’s degree or foreign equivalent in stated field plus 3 years experience. Any suitable combination of training, education, or experience is acceptable. 80% travel required. To apply, E-mail resume to celeblanc@deloitte.com & incl XGGS19FC0918CLM1 in subj line. “Deloitte” means Deloitte LLP & its subsidiaries. Please see www.deloitte.com/us/about for a detailed description of the legal structure of Deloitte LLP & its subsidiaries. Deloitte LLP & its subsidiaries are equal opportunity employers.

REV UP YOUR CAR SEARCH Alive has hundreds -even thousands of autos for sale. Look through ads from dealers and private sellers that are categorized by makes and models, simplifying your search. Need More Staff? Advertise job openings in Alive

•Test Engineer: Resp. for coordinating project testing activities & monitoring progress. BS in Comp. Sci. or similar & 2 yrs. exp. as QA Analyst or similar position. Exp. must incl. creation of test scripts to achieve requirements, test execution & eval. & reporting of test results, & knowledge of testing tools incl. Ruby. Job Req. #R0001056. •Lead Software Engineer: Resp. for performing high level analysis and design of software for new and existing systems & using industry standard programming techniques to translate requirements & designs into code. MS in Computer Science or similar & 2 yrs. exp. in a software development position. Exp. must incl. Java, XML, & MapReduce. Job Req. #R0001057. •Senior Business Systems Analyst: Resp. for managing ongoing relationships w/business partner to drive satisfaction w/IT & coordinating project delivery by participating in design reviews & walkthroughs to communicate systems designs & validate proposed solutions. BS in Comp. Sci. or similar & 2 yrs. exp. as a Business Analyst or similar. Req. exp. in design reviews & walkthroughs for system design & proposed solutions, working w/cross-functional teams to gather, document, & analyze business requirements to develop process solutions, & review of user interface needs in system design. Job Req. #R0001058.

Medical-Dental Dental Hygienist Busy Grove City private practice looking for FT Hygienist to join the team. Beautiful facility, new technology and awesome doctors. We offer great pay, health Ins, free life, paid vacation/sick and 401(k). Submit resume with salary requirements to: GCFDOM@aol.com

Licensed Practical Nurse (LPN)

Parkside Village a senior living community located in Westerville is currently accepting applications for Full-Time and Part-Time Licensed Practical Nurses. This individual is responsible for administering nursing services in accordance with current applicable state, federal and licensing guidelines and regulations. This individual must be selfdirected and have strong interpersonal skills. This individual must have a current, active Practical Nursing Licensure (LPN) in the state of Ohio. Experience with the elderly is preferred. If you are customer service driven and are interested in becoming part of our growing Parkside Village team, please apply online at danburyseniorliving.com Parkside Village 730 N. Spring Road Westerville, OH 43082 614-794-9300 Opportunity to join a busy OBGYN practice serving several counties in West Central Ohio. Practice includes physicians and two midwives. Philosophy of practice is supportive of the midwife model of care. Interested? Go to: https://www.grandlakehealth.org and apply on line. 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!

ColumbusAlive.com | Thursday, November 15, 2018

APPLY TODAY! Swcsd.us and follow the employment link to “Classified & Substitute Positions”

CD-0006184860-04

HIRING FOR THE 2018-2019

I Wish I had known about this job sooner!

CNC MACHINIST Columbus Instruments is seeking an experienced CNC Machinist in Columbus, OH. Exp. with CNC milling machine setup, operation & conversational programming required. Hurco machine exp. a plus. We are an OEM shop. Family owned business. Comfortable climate-controlled shop. M - F 8:00 am to 5:00 pm with minimal OT and no weekend work. For more information go to http://www.colinst.com/employmentopportunities. Email resume to employment@colinst.com. NO agencies. EOE

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.

Apply online at www.oclc.org for a specific position as follows:

41


Medical-Dental

Medical-Dental

Medical-Dental

The heart of DHL Supply Chain is in Central Ohio!

Warehouse Careers | Central Ohio

Pataskala • Lockbourne • Groveport • Columbus • Hebron • Grove City

CD-0006185325-03

DHL Supply Chain is the leading global third-party supply chain manager specializing in a wide range of warehousing, transportation and logistics services.

Wed. 11/14 & Thurs. 11/15 • 9am – 6pm Raffling off Beats Headphones!!

Attend the Walk-In Interviews to be entered to win DHL Recruiting Center • 2829 Rohr Rd., Groveport, OH One-Stop Hiring! Walk-In & Walk-Out with an Offer*

ColumbusAlive.com | Thursday, November 15, 2018

*Offer subject to the availability of jobs, completing the interview process, background check and drug test. DHL Supply Chain is an Equal Opportunity Employer.

42

Medical-Dental

NURSING PROGRAM MANAGER

www.WorkforDHL.com in Central Ohio!

Walk-In Interviews

Medical-Dental

Columbus Public Health is seeking an experienced nursing program manager to join our Strategic Nursing Team. The Program Manager II (RN) is responsible for the supervision of three Public Health Program Manager I RN’s (Disaster Nurse Liaison, School Nurse Liaison, and Continuing Education Program Coordinator). This position is also responsible for community outreach, screenings, education and public health nursing care. Experience in management, disaster and emergency preparedness, and coordination of Nursing continuing education is necessary. BSN required. Three (3) years of experience conducting or managing public health services or educational programming. Substitution(s): Possession of a master’s degree may be substituted for one (1) year of the required experience.

Interested candidates should send their resume to Alisha Ardolino at aaardolino@columbus.gov The City of Columbus is an Equal Opportunity Employer

CD-0006185323-03

Medical-Dental

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General

Prof and Management

Hauling/Dumpster Rent

Plumbing

Tree Service

Pets

CDL Driver / Part Time

Senior Manager, Brand Management, MGF Sourcing US, LLC, Columbus, OH. Responsible for managing customer relationships to service and grow new and existing lines of business. Develop supply chain strategies to meet both the customer and internal business objectives. Ensure that the customer/brand strategic goals are met by partnering with our key global functional leaders/stakeholders throughout the organization. Understand the brand/customer requirements including product design, quality expectations, pricing, logistics, compliance and all other operational requirements of the customer in order to facilitate the successful execution of product orders from the customer. Develop relationships with factory partners in order to educate them on how to meet or exceed the customer’s expectations around product aesthetics, cost, quality and delivery timing. Drive new business development through outstanding customer service including market research and trend and competitor analysis. Counsel factory partners on line development and enhancements, as well as QA/QC standards and procedures, to produce client product to specification. Support the negotiation of product cost and delivery requirements with internal regional partners, factory partners and customers seeking to find common ground that protects both the customer and the factory, and ensures success. Facilitate problem resolution when issues arise such as production slides, production execution or quality issues, claims, etc. Accountable for the financial performance of the brand / customer, including developing a full budget (sales, margin and expenses) and responsible for forecasting sales and profitability against the approved budget. Responsible for providing leadership and oversight of the Lima Peru team. Requires a willingness to travel abroad to existing and developing production countries, primarily in Asia and South America, an average of 5 times a year, with an average trip length of 15 days. Min req include: Bachelor’s degree (or its’ educational/professional experience equivalent) in Business Administration, Commerce, Retail Management or a closely related field, and 5 yrs or relevant exp, including 5 yrs of direct or relevant sourcing exp, including 5 yrs exp working within the retail supply chain industry, and 2 yrs of direct factory exp. Exp using various industry standard financial and order management technology, such as SAP, Oracle, Microsoft Dynamics AX, Total Quality Management (TQM), Bamboo Rose, Amber Road, Flex PLM, or similar technology tools. 3 mos of apparel sourcing exp abroad, ideally in Vietnam, Indonesia, Sri Lanka, Bangladesh, or Central America, with knowledge of how the local supply chain operates and how local culture impacts the business. Strong communication skills with a demonstrated ability to navigate discussions with factory partners, customers, regional partners, executives and many for whom English is not the first language. Please send resume (NO CALLS) to: recruitus@MGFSourcing.com

291-3867 WEE-HAUL SENIOR DISCOUNT. INSURED. ATTICS, BASEMENTS, GARAGES, WHOLE HSES. WE LOAD!!

All In One Plumbing "ONE CALL DOES IT ALL" $25 off labor with ad, CC Accepted E740-363-2200F

A&M FAST TREE SERVICE Fully Insured & Free Ests. Payment Plans Available 614-837-8367 or 614-863-1522

9 week old male mini sheepadoodle. CKC registered. Health guarantee. $2000. (740) 818-5644

Handyman Services

Tree Service

911 HANDYMAN Plumbing, Electric, Hardwood & Tile Floors. Specialized in Bathroom & Kitchen Remodeling Licensed & Bonded. 614-949-8362 No Job To Small Rannebarger Home Maintenance www.rhmaintenance.com 370-1958 General Home Repairs, Gutter Cleaning, Powerwash, Decks, Plumbing, Electric, Paint, Installs F & R Services ∂ Complete Home Maintenance ∂ No Job Too Small ∂ 41 Years of Exp. Call 614-237-2797 or 614-648-9192

GRANT’S TREE SERVICE Over 30 years Exp ° Insured Bucket, Climber, Stump Removal Complete LOCAL Tree Service Call (614)-753-3992 Selling Your Home? Why not advertise in Alive?

ONCE IN A LIFETIME OPPORTUNITY! Guided Whitetail Deer hunts. (Fair Chase) in Gurnsey, Ohio. Opportunity guaranteed! Specializing in first time Youth hunts. Make memories!! Bring your video camera! Hunt from the comfort of an elevated blind. Crossbow avail. upon request. $3190 Only 10 hunts avail. For inquires call 330-601-4818

Financial-Banking

Financial-Banking

GIS Analyst City of Worthington $55,133-$69,398. Associate’s degree and two plus years work experience with GIS systems. Application materials at www.worthington.org Deadline Nov. 28, 2018. The City is an Equal Opportunity Employer. Maintenance Person/Driver Fyda Freightliner is looking for a motivated individual for shop clean up, some general building maintenance, and driving for pick up and delivery. Needs to have good driving record and CDL is a benefit. Needs to be able to pass background check and drug screen. Please email bwagoner@fydafreightliner.com call Bruce Wagoner 614-554-0797 Otterbacher Enterprises, Inc.1585 Co. Rd. 155. Cardington, OH 43315 PH: (813) 671-2021 FX: (813) 671-1228 jotterbach@aol.com hiring Amuse & Rec Attendants 20 TEMP F/T jobs 31-JAN-19 to 23-NOV19. TVL Carnival, duties include set-up, tear down, operate amusement rides, food concessions and/or games. No ED/EXP REQD, OTJT. Schedule Varies 40 H/W, W-Sun, 1p to 10p, No OT expected, any OT per APP Regs. Work starts in Morrow Co., OH, TVL to venues in: OH & FL. No cost HOUS, TSPT, work tools, supplies & EQP provided. Employer will pay each week that worker is employed, pay varies by location, range from $9.45 to $11.69, average $10.45/hr. Merit increases/bonuses possible. TSPT (including meals and, to the extent necessary, lodging) to the place of EMPL will be provided, if the worker completes half the EMPL period. Return TSPT provided if the worker completes the EMPL period or is dismissed early by the employer. Post-emp drug & background may be REQ. EOE, FLSA (13)(a)(3) exempt employer. Job Offer, incl wage & working terms and conditions, contingent upon prevailing legal interpretations of FED H-2B immigration and FLSA EMPL law, including DOL & DHS REGS. If any such prevailing law is rescinded, superseded, vacated, or substantially modified, then the employer will accordingly revise any affected term. Inquire, apply, contact nearest office Ohio Means Job Center, www.jfs.ohio.gov refer to Job Order Number 3771670 PRIME AE Group, Inc., an Architectural and Engineering Services firm headquartered in Columbus, Ohio, has an opening for a Water Resources Project Manager in Columbus, Ohio. Travel and/or relocation to various unanticipated locations throughout the U.S required. Position requires a Master’s degree and experience. Must have Professional Engineer license from any U.S. state or territory licensing board. Please send 2 resumes and a cover letter referencing 3500.010 to: PRIME AE Group, Inc., Attn: HR, 8415 Pulsar Place, Suite 300, Columbus, Ohio 43240. No calls please. Sr. Business Analysts, State Auto P&C, Columbus, OH. Apply to job req. R-000575 at http://www.stateauto.com.

ALIVE IS FULL SERVICE

Electrical Services Affordable Electric Service Quit paying contractors’ overhead! Ceiling fans, switches, lighting & many more home maint. needs. 20 Years Experience, 614.325.8905

LOOKING FOR WORK? YOU’RE IN THE RIGHT PLACE!

Alive features hundreds even thousands - of jobs EVERY WEEK!

Financial-Banking

CHUCK VAGT Remodeling, Kitchens, Baths,Bsmts. & Flooring - Ext. work.45 Yrs. Exp. Free Estimates 614-525-0173

Lawn Care Landscape FALL CLEAN UP! Beds, leaves, gutters, mulch, weeds, trimming, removal of English Ivy and Honeysuckle, installing dry rock beds Patio/Deck Repair & Paint. Let us help you! Yard Helpers BBB (614) 571-1451 BBB Leaf Cleanup & Pest Control Bush Trim & Removal, Renovation F ALL AROUND LANDSCAPE E F614-208-0057 Free Ests. E

WESBANCO BANK, INC.

PERSONAL BANKERS

LANDSCAPE Fall Clean Up, Leaf & Tree Removal and Mulching. Call/Text 614-434-8250.

Moving and Storage AARON ALLEN MOVING Owned by Military Veteran Bonded µ Insured Puco#158-044-HG (614) 299-6683 & 263-0649

Painting  ALL-STAR  Custom Int./Ext. Painting • Wallpaper Removal. Visa/MC/Disc./Amex. Insured µ Angie’s List • BBB Member (614) 774-3353 • (614) 860-9481 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 R.A. LONG PAINTING EXTERIOR/INTERIOR 614-864-3951

Plumbing

To easily find what you’re looking for, turn to our Service Directory at the front of the classifieds.

Browse our ads on the web! ww.columbusalive.com

Financial-Banking

Financial-Banking

Financial-Banking

Qualified candidates must possess two five years retail banking sales experience,

superior sales and persuasion skills and demonstrated sales achievement. Bachelor’s degree or equivalent work experience and strong business development skills preferred. Strong candidates must be selfmotivated, possess strong listening skills and understand how to present products and services to customers with differing needs. Candidates must be willing to register with the Nationwide Mortgage Licensing System and Registry (NMLS) and comply with SAFE Act requirements. Ability to work evenings and Saturday mornings as needed. WesBanco offers a great environment, competitive salary & incentives, attractive benefits including 401(k), paid holidays, vacation and absence days, medical, dental and vision benefits.

WesBanco is an Equal Opportunity, Affirmative Action Employer | EOE/Minority/Female/Disabled/Veteran

General

General

General

RESIDENT MANAGER COUPLE

CPA

CD-0006185356-03

with an outstanding opportunity to transition into possible ownership. Minimum of 5 years’ experience.

Perfect for retirees of any age. We are recruiting for apt. communities in Mid-Ohio. Compensation includes SALARY, performance program & year-end bonuses, 2 BR apartment with washer and dryer and all utilities paid, plus 3 weeks paid vacation & holidays. Pleasant working environment. Duties include apartment renting and light maintenance.

614-863-2727 Ext. 6# or Fax: 614-863-3006

or email qualifications to alitz@cmc-apts.com EECO

ColumbusAlive.com | Thursday, November 15, 2018

APARTMENT MANAGEMENT

A North Central Ohio public accounting firm with offices in Bucyrus and Upper Sandusky is looking for a

EMAIL RESUME TO info@mizickmiller.com or send resume to Mizick Miller & Company, Inc., PO Box 248, Bucyrus, Ohio 44820.

We’re seeking enthusiastic, experienced team players to join our Columbus Square (NE Columbus), Reynoldsburg and New Albany offices. You’ll play a vital, lead role by creating an exceptional customer experience by building strong relationships with customers and providing them with products and services that fit their needs. You’ll also partner with Banking Center Manager on sales strategies and lead promotions and campaigns. You will have the opportunity to assist customers by accurately handling transactions. You may also have an opportunity to become the primary provider of investment services for your banking center.

Interested candidates should apply online at www.wesbanco.com You may attach a cover letter and resume to our application.

STEVE’S BASEMENT DRAIN CENTRAL OHIO’S OLDEST DRAINAGE & FOUNDATION COMPANY Downspout Drain Lines (Free Camera Inspection) Sump Pump Free Est. 48 YRS. EXP. (614) 352-1075

DO YOU NEED TO BUY, SELL, TRADE, FIND, HIRE OR RENT? GO TO THE CLASSIFIED SECTION

CD-0006185048-03

Rich’s 65’ Bucket Truck Tree Service- Stump Removal, Lic. & Ins. Free Estimates 614-394-2367

Home Improvement

CD-0006184619-03

FYDA Frieghtliner is looking for part time CDL driver, Requires Class B CDL, need to pass background check and drug screen. bwagoner@fydafreightliner.com Bruce Wagoner – 614-851-0002

43


Pets

Pets

Pets

Pets

Pets

Recreation 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 AKC Labrador Puppies Vet Checked, Current on Vaccines, Wonderful Companions, Chocolates, Yellows and 1 Black. $600 Call 614-400-7012

Cocker Spaniel Pups - AKC, looking for good home(s) Born 9-14-18. Vet checked, 1st shots, wormed, $575. Call 740-427-2593 or 740-427-2255. friendlymeadows@plainemails.com

Wheels MORKIE PUPS VET CHECKED, CURRENT ON VACCINES, NON SHEDDING, VERY INTELLIGENT, EASY TO TRAIN $600 CALL 614-400-7012 You’ve Read The Paper, You’ve Read The Sports Page And You’ve Read The Comics... Think You’re Done With The Paper?

Puppy Blitz AKC German Shepherd Pups Pure Snow White 3M/3F, Blk 1F, Blk/tan 3F Regularly $600 NOW $500 419-629-3830 www.ohiohgs.com

Scottish Terrier Puppies Born 9/16, 8 wks old, ready for a good home, 4 F $500/ea, 2M $450/ea, UTD shots/worm, text or call 614-589-3324

Wheaton Terrier Pups

You’ve Read The Paper, You’ve Read The Sports Page And You’ve Read The Comics... Think You’re Done With The Paper?

COLLEGE STUDENTS:

Reg., teacups, shots, etc. Housebreaking going well! Parents on premises, family project. 740-644-5656.

Read The CLASSIFIED SECTION

Read The CLASSIFIED SECTION

You Never Know What You’ll Find! General

You Never Know What You’ll Find! General

Don’t have room for "don’t wants" in your dorm or apartment? Make some extra cash & unclutter your living quarters-sell them with an Alive classified ad

General

Free to Good Home 11 month old Sebrian Husky Call 614-321-4780

740-756-7387 www.estatedogs.com

GERMAN SHEPHERD PUPS

AKC, M’s & F’s, sables, blk/tan, imported lines, vet checked & shots, $1,000. 1-937-788-2171.

GERMAN SHEPHERD PUPPIES

German Bloodlines, AKC reg., 3 males, black/tan, 12 weeks, $400. Call 614-940-8126.

ColumbusAlive.com | Thursday, November 15, 2018

Labradoodle Puppies For Sale 5 months old Very friendly and playful. Call or email (no text) 740-688-1830 andrealynnk98@gmail.com No Sunday business!

44

MALTESE LHASA (IHASATESE) PUPPIES Small toy, non- shedding, shots, wormed, health gtd., ready now - payment plan avail. Rat Terriers, $400 ea. Call 740-332-8362;call/text 740-412-9570.

encourages all interested veterans to apply to the

Franklin County Engineer’s Office. We accept applications at any time and applications are kept on file for two years from date of receipt. We offer a variety of employment opportunities in both engineering and nonengineering fields to include: Construction, Highway and Bridge Design, Survey, Auto Mechanics, Bridge Maintenance, Utilities, Traffic Maintenance, and Road Maintenance as well as internal support such as Information Systems, Human Resources, and Communications.

TO APPLY:

MALTESE LHASA SHIH TZU PUPPY Small toy, non- shedding, shots, wormed, health gtd., ready now - payment plan available. Call 740-332-8362;call/text 740-412-9570.

WE SUPPORT OUR TROOPS!

Recreation CAMPING IN STYLE 2008 KEYSTONE CHALLENGER 5th Wheel Camper. Very clean, well cared for, lg. dbl. dr. fridge, elec. awning, all in one BA, K-Bed, 4 slide outs. Will accept reas. offer. Photos available. Call 614-206-5494. For Sale 2012 36ft Monte Carlo LE bumper pull camper superslide W&D full size refrigerator and stove 2 ACs garden tub w/shower smoke and pet free great condition $14,500 OBO (614)264-9987 1992 HONDA GOLDWING 68,000 MILES, $2650. EXCELLENT CONDITIONS, INCLUDES HELMETS, COVER & EXTRA SEAT & ACCESSORIES. CALL 614-329-7790 OR EMAIL TVLINDZ@YAHOO.COM !! NEW UNIT CLEARANCE SALE!! 2017 SANDPIPER 3350 BH FIFTH WHEEL MSRP$45,484 CLEARANCE $31,995 2017 HERITAGE GLEN 24RKHL TRAVEL TRAILER MSRP $35,289 CLEARANCE $19,995 2018 WILDWOOD X-LITE 263BHXL TRAVEL TRAILER MSRP $29,233 CLEARANCE $16,995 2018 HERITAGE GLEN 269RL TRAVEL TRAILER MSRP $42,505 CLEARANCE $27,995 2018 HERITAGE GLEN 272RL TRAVEL TRAILER MSRP $47,042 CLEARANCE $29,995 CHECK OUT MORE GREAT DEALS ONLINE AT midohiocamper.com MID OHIO CAMPER SALES 413 NATIONAL RD HEBRON, OH 740-928-7555 midohiocamper.com WALNECK’S MOTORCYCLE - SWAP MEET Sunday, Nov. 25, 2018, 8AM-2PM Clark County Fairgrounds, Springfield, OH. $9 Admission $40 Booth. Call 630-985-2097. Selling Your Home? Why not advertise in Alive?

2005 CHEVROLET EQUINOX

Silver with matching clothe int., V6 automatic, front wheel drive, fully loaded, extra clean, 35,000 miles, $5995. SOLD SOLD SOLD

2007 CHEVROLET Express Spartan Box Truck LADDER RACKS, 63,500 MILES, $8,000. CALL 614-882-8734.

WINNERS WA NTED! To enter, register and get full details, visit

Our application is available on our website http://www.franklincountyengineer.org/employment/

The Franklin County Engineer’s Office is an Equal Opportunity employer.

Yorkies

2006 Honda EX, garaged both at home & at work, black with tan interior, nice original condition, no rust , Ziebarted when new, well cared for, all options, automatic transmission, sunroof, wife car from new. 122,000 miles, recent brake job. Priced under dealer cost. SOLD 2006 Beige Buick La Crosse CXL 70K miles, On Star, Duo A/C, Heat, Duo Pwr Seats, Clean, $5400 Call 614-459-6724 2012 Blue Yamaha VX Cruiser Jet Ski Only 82 hours, Scratches on left side, Trailer included $6500 will negotiate Call 614-519-4481 leave a message 2012 Blue Honda Accord LX Sedan Less than 47K Miles, Garaged, Excellent condition, $11,500 Firm Call 614-302-7882 1998 BMW 750 IL Absolute Clean, 39,000 miles, 1 owner, 4 door, $19,500 $92,000 New Call 937-210-0263 2012 Buick Lacrosse V6 auto w/gold mist ext, tan lthr int, dual power heated seats, many options, newer tires & brakes, exc condition, 94k miles $9850 Call 614-203-6727 1990 Cadillac coupe Deville White/red leather, with landau, low miles, practially new, super clean, Runs Super, cold A/C, No rust, $3,895 Call 614-846-7826 1990 Cadillac Seville looks good inside and out, 162k mi. runs good, good tires $1500 firm 614-333-3140 1997 Camaro Z28 Conv Black with Gray leather, V8 AT, PS, PB, A/C, CC, 97K miles $12,000 740-755-6202 no texts please

THE COLUMBUS DISPATCH COLUMBUS MONTHLY ALIVE THISWEEK COLUMBUS PARENT COLUMBUS CEO

CD-0006184625-03

German Shepherd - German Imports at stud. Training, Obed., home protection, sch. classes, imports, young dogs, pups for sale. Learn to train dogs w/us.

Franklin County Engineer, Cornell R. Robertson,

AKC, shots, friendly, healthy. No Sunday calls. 937-464-2148

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Wheels

Wheels

Wheels

Wheels

Wheels

Wheels

07 CHEVY IMPALA WHITE EXT., LOW MILES 128,000 MI., GREAT CAR, NO ISSUES, GOOD TIRES, NO RUST OR ACCIDENTS, 2 OWNERS, $3700 OBO. CALL 614-632-0032. 2012 Chevy Traverse LT AWD, Good miles, 3rd row, clean, runs great, white/black, $12,675 Call 614-738-5759

2009 Equinox LT AWD Clean, Leather, Heated seats, moon roof, good miles 109,000, EC, $7,650 Call 614-846-7826

1998 Ford Explorer LTD 5 litter, V8, 2WD, sunroof, black with aluminum wheels, looks good runs great, 163,000 Miles $2,000 Call 614-940-5479

2007 Honda CRV 4 door, 4 cyl, Automatic, red exterior, grey cloth interior, Sunroof, power everything, no rust well maintained, 132k miles $6,300 Call 614-390-5170

AUTO AUCTIONS

û INSURANCE û

2010 Kia Forte EX White, grey cloth interior, 4 cyl, auto air, 2 door with tinted windows, 114k miles, Good Condition, $2850 SOLD SOLD SOLD SOLD

2016 Ford Escape SE Back Up camera, power lift gate, 4WD, Tow package, 18 inch chrome wheels, 40k miles, like new condition, $17,500 Call 614-619-3459

2008 Honda Civic silver ext, gray int, 102k miles,1 owner, good condition $5995 614-565-3029

At 10:00 AM PUBLIC AUCTON

LOW MILES, RUNS SUPER, CLEAN, EXC. CONDITION, $9975. CALL 614-846-7826.

2008 CHRYSLER TOWN & COUNTRY

WHEEL CHAIR ACCESSIBLE VAN BRAUN ENTERVAN EXCELLENT CONDITION, 44K MILES, ASKING $22,500 CALL 614-302-0121. Columbus Fair Auto Auction is adding the following to the Public Sale on Wed, Nov 21st, 2018 to be viewed on Tuesday Nov 20th, 2018

GM FINANCIAL - REPO

325755 223247 125217 004575 299938 175093

2013 2017 2015 2013 2014 2014

DODGE DART SXT CHEVRO CRUZE LS Auto CHEVRO CORVETTE 1LT Coupe HONDA ODYSSEY EX CHEVRO EQUINOX 2LT 2WD FORD FUSION SE Surf the Classifieds www.columbusalive.com

Warehouse/Mfg

1947 FORD COUPE

Dynamic maroon, grey interior, flathead, V-8, 3 speed transmission, fender shirts, $15,000 obo. SOLD SOLD SOLD 2014 Ford F-150 4x4 Super Crew 1 owner, Great Condition, Luxury FX package, New brakes & tires, this truck has everything, New 60k Price to sell quick 26k Call 614-537-1751

1966 Ford Mustang Convertible

Automatic, red with white top & interior, $12,500. As is where it sits. Call 740-601-1322. 2002 FORD EXPLORER Eddie Bauer Edition. Lthr., full power, moonrf., auto trans., tilt whl, cruise, 6 CD plyr. & radio, well maint. w/full synthetic oil, battery 1 yr., Michelin tires, must see to apprec. 116K mi., $4,000. sold sold sold

2006 FORD PICK UP TRUCK MODEL F150 XLT

160,000 miles, 5.4 V8, title is clear, 4 W/D, $3500. Good condition. Call 937-817-0783.

HOUSE HUNTING?

2008 GMC Yukon SLT

2008 HONDA ACCORD EXL

V6 4 door, pearl white w/ivory heated lthr. seats, dual climate control, full pwr. opts., 80,575 mi., looks/runs L/N. A must see! $9,995. sold sold

REPLACING YOUR PLACE?

If you’re house or apartment hunting, start your search here and visit our real estate classifieds!

Warehouse/Mfg

Warehouse/Mfg

13.50- 20.75

$

$

For registration information 614-875-7484

2013 Honda Pilot Touring

43,000 miles, black/black, NAV + Rear Entertainment. Running Boards + Roof rails, cross bars. Like New. $26,000. 214-676-3178

Pearl red, black heated lthr., mnrf., factory tv, 4 W/D, nav., full power options, 167,000 miles, rust free, looks & runs like new, $11,995. SOLD SOLD

DON’T FORGET To Advertise Your Garage Sale In Classified.

1601 Thrailkill Rd., Grove City, OH. Wednesday, November 21, 2018

û 2014 CHEVROLET CRUZE û û JEEP WRANGLER UNL û û 2009 DODGE CHALLENGER û û 2009 CHEVROLET IMPALA û û 2014 FORD SUPER DUTY F û û 2011 HYUNDAI SONATA û

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!

2011 Jeep Grand Cherokee Laredo 4WD, Rear wheel drive, Nav, Leather, moon roof, heated seats, 6 cyl engine, runs like a top, clean, 103,000 miles, well maintained $12,995 Call 614-738-5759 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.

Warehouse/Mfg

Warehouse/Mfg

**

EXECUTIVE SERIES 81,000 ACTUAL MI., $5,000. CALL 740-601-1322.

1999 MAZDA MAITA CONVT. Dark green, 5 speed, 65,445 miles, 2nd owner, A/C, PW, cruise, car cover, JVC stereo, bluetooth & pandora, 16" wheels, high preformation tires, always gar. & covered, SOLD SOLD SOLD 2006 Mercedes Benz E350 AWD, 63K Miles, O. Owner. Excellent Condition, $5900 SOLD SOLD SOLD SOLD

2009 Toyota Camry excellent condition, 57k miles, 1 owner, silver/gray lthr int., SOLD SOLD SOLD 2010 Volvo XC 70 AWD Wagon Like new, Low miles, EC, $11,475, SOLD SOLD SOLD

ALL SHIFTS — ALL DAYS

Equipment Operators • Merchandise Processors Merchandise Handlers

Finding a job shouldn’t feel like one.

ENJOY Increased pay for off shift differentials • Paid holidays after 30 days 40% store discount • Ask us about our Peak Season Meal Program!

PICK A CAR, ANY CAR

Alive has hundreds- even thousands- of autos for sale. Look through ads from dealers and private sellers that are categorized by makes and models, simplifying your search.

APPLY RIGHT NOW!

MGJOBS TO 97211 ONLINE dcjobs.lb.com

TEXT

Warehouse/Mfg The Niedax Group is a well-established and highly respected company in the market of Cable Management Systems and world’s leading manufacturer of steel cable trays.

CD-0006185017-02

Accounting Manager Responsible for all areas relating to financial reporting, developing and maintaining accounting principles, practices and procedures to ensure accurate and timely financial statements. In addition, the Accounting Manager supervises two administrative assistants and is responsible for managing the team to ensure that work is properly allocated and completed in a timely and accurate manner. This position addresses tight deadlines and a multitude of accounting activities including general ledger preparation, financial reporting, year-end audit preparation and the support of budget and forecast activities. The Accounting Manager will have contact with senior-level Management and reports directly to the President of the Company which requires strong interpersonal communication skills both written and verbal.

Qualifications:

• 4 Yr. College Degree preferred. Accounting background a must and HR background a plus • Ability to organize and manage multiple priorities efficiently while meeting deadlines • Computer proficiency in MS Office Suites, particularly Excel, knowledge of Sage 100 a plus We offer a competitive benefits package including medical, dental, vision and life insurance; 401 k savings plan; 11 holidays and generous paid time off.

Please submit your resume by email to our H/R Manager debbie.miller@niedaxusa.com

ColumbusAlive.com | Thursday, November 15, 2018

*Base rate + fall season premium pay, effective Sept. 30 – Dec. 29, 2018 **Speak with an L Brands Staffing associate for details. An equal opportunity employer.

1997 LINCOLN TOWNCAR

2004 Silver/Gray Toyota Camry Extremely Clean, 64K miles, New Exhaust, Newer Tires $5200. SOLD SOLD SOLD

600 BONUS

CD-0006158702-01

2015 Lexus RX350 SUV

Fully equip. with leather & heated seats, in excellent condition, reduced to $28,495. Call 614-723-9977.

2001 Mitsubishi Eclipse Spyder GT Convertible only 68k miles, 5 speed manual transmission, a/c blows cold, lthr int., 27 mpg, 2 owners, cd player & brand new tires. Asking $5800 OBO. If interested call/text 740-222-8649 SACRIFICE SALE 2007 Subaru Outback LTD Fully loaded, AWD, Ideal Winter Car, $3K Firm. Must drive to appreciate. Call 614-512-1969

Equipment Operators receive increased pay* and

OR APPLY IN PERSON Two Limited Parkway, Columbus Mon-Fri 9am-5pm or 8455 E. Broad Street, Reynoldsburg Mon, Tues, Thurs, Fri 9am-5pm Wed - 9am-7pm and Sat 9am-1pm

2007 Lexus ES350 Original Owner, All maintenance records, 105,000 miles, loaded, $8,000 Call 614-599-1517

1996 Miati Convertible Black/Black 5 Speed Manual, 39K, Always Garaged, Excellent SOLD SOLD SOLD SOLD

*

PER HOUR

$

2009 LEXUS ES350

45


REAR VIEWS

SUDOKU BY NOah VaN SciVEr

WEEK OF 11-15-18

@NOahVaNSciVEr

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!

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 36

POEt’S cOrNEr |

CURATEd by HANIf AbdURRAqIb

Black Messiah, Played Backwards Doors swinging open moments before

Choked so far down his throat

He walked backwards into the studio,

It sizzled

D’Angelo pored over his project,

Against stomach acid, and a man’s cries for help

14 years of his image twisted in endless mirrors

ColumbusAlive.com | Thursday, November 15, 2018

Snapping back into place

46

Were pushed back Into his mouth by the air moving

As his vocals resonated

Smoothly into his lungs,

Through the grime of drum and bass

As a cop’s arm slid from around his neck

Into a nation of ears that started With its concluding seconds fresh in mind, Listening until they had no memory of it, fingers Hovering over the play button.

As my mother played Voodoo over The old speakers in the living room, Shaking and rattling in wooden cages While I grinned and snapped along to

As the past shrugged backwards

Playa Playa, swaying in the vague shadow

The judge’s gavel cracked, grew bark; his verdict

Of a dance cast by a brilliant display of life. —TOmáS mIRITI PACHECO


THU NOV 15 2018

A ghostly guided tour exploring the mysterious realms within the Fort Hayes campus.Tours begin at 6:00pm. Tickets $15 @wcbe.org.

WCBE EVENTS

NOW THRU NOV 30

Help children keep warm this season. Drop off gently used winter outerwear at WCBE for donation. Located at 540 Jack Gibbs Blvd Columbus, OH 43215

BROADCAST & BREWS AT ENDEAVOR BREWERY Every Wednesday, $1 of every craft beer sale goes toward supporting WCBE. You, Inc. live show with Ria Greiff, and Greg Moebius spins vinyl.

909 W 5th Ave, Columbus, OH 43212

TUES NOV 27 2018

LET'S TALK SPACE BOOK SIGNING EVENT Space Radio host Paul Sutter welcomes listeners to a Q&A session for the release of his new book, Your Place In the Universe. 7pm CA Backspace 1266 Virginia Avenue Columbus, OH 43212

ColumbusAlive.com | Thursday, November 15, 2018

COLUMBUS COAT DRIVE

NOVEMBER 2018

47


48 ColumbusAlive.com | Thursday, November 15, 2018


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