Connect Savannah Fall Arts Preview-2012-09-19

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'Tis the season... to hunt squirrels! 10 | dead yet? still alive, 42 | fall film preview, 49 Sep 19-25, 2012 news, arts & Entertainment weekly free

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week at a glance SEPT 19-SEPT 25, 2012 | WWW.CONNECTSAVANNAH.COM

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Looking ahead @ Film screening: Joe Papp in Five Acts. Sept. 13. Lucas Theatre. @ Elton John. Sept. 15. Martin Luther King Arena. @ Ruben Studdard. Sept. 15. Tybee Island North Beach. @ Film screening: Citizen Kane. Sept. 15. Trustees Theater. @ Film screening: Gone With the Wind. Sept. 21. Lucas Theatre. @ Unchained Tour w/Neil Gaiman. Sept. 22. Knights of Columbus. @ Savannah Jazz Festival. Sept. 23–30. @ Film screening: Vertigo. Sept. 28. Lucas Theatre. @ Film screening: Notorious. Sept. 29. Lucas Theatre (followed by a mystery Hitchcock screening). @ Ron White. Sept. 30. Johnny Mercer Theatre. @ New Edition. Sept. 30. Johnny Mercer Theatre. @ Suddenly Last Summer. The Collective Face. Oct. 5–20. @ Tybee Island Pirate Fest. Oct. 5 and 6. Vince Neil concert Oct. 6. @ Film screening: Rebel Without a Cause. Trustees Theater. @ Anthony Hamilton. Oct. 7. Johnny Mercer Theatre. @ Picnic in the Park. Oct. 7. Forsyth Park. @ Savannah Greek Festival. Oct. 11–13. @ Savannah Philharmonic Chamber Concert. Oct. 11. Telfair Academy. @ Savannah Folk Music Festival. Oct. 12–14. @ Bonnie Raitt. Oct. 13. Johnny Mercer Theatre. @ Louis C.K. Oct. 17. Johnny Mercer Theatre. @ Ingrid Michaelson. Oct. 18. Trustees Theatre. @ SCAD: The Last Days of Judas Iscariot. Oct. 18–21. Mondanaro Theatre. @ Savannah Philharmonic. Oct. 19. Lucas Theatre. @ The Rocky Horror Show. Bay Street Theatre. Oct. 19–31. @ Great Ogeechee Seafood Festival. Oct. 19–22. Richmond Hill. @ Film screening: Clue. Oct. 20. Lucas Theatre. @ Graveface Fest. Oct. 27. Southern Pine Co. @ Savannah Film Festival. Oct. 27–Nov. 3. @ Rock ‘n’ Roll Marathon. Nov. 3. @ Madea Gets a Job. Nov. 4. Savannah Civic Center. @ Geekend. Nov. 8–10. @ Needtobreathe. Nov. 8. Johnny Mercer Theatre. @ Asbury Memorial Theatre: God’s Favorite. Nov. 9–18. @ Film screening: The Shining. Nov. 10. Trustees Theater. @ Children’s Book Festival. Nov. 10. Forsyth Park. @ Opera: Carmina Burana. Nov. 17. Johnny Mercer Theatre. @ The Collective Face: Salome. Nov. 30–Dec. 9.

this week | compiled by robin wright gunn | happenings@connectsavannah.com

WEEK AT A GLANCE Week At A Glance is Connect Savannah’s listing of various events over the coming week. If you would like an event listed, please email WAG@connectsavannah.com. Include specific dates, time, locations with addresses, cost and a contact number. Deadline for inclusion is 5pm Friday, to appear in next Wednesday’s edition.

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Thursday Music: Jan Spillane

What: The “Third Thursdays on Tybee” series kicks off its 2012 run with this popular Savannah-born singer songwriter. Bring-your-own-chair and enjoy a breezy Tybee evening. Presented by Tybee Island Better Hometown. When: Thu. Sept. 20, 5:30 p.m. Where: Tybrisa/Strand Roundabout, Tybee Island Cost: Free and open to the public

Pup Crawl

What: Bring your pooch, purchase a souvenir cup good for one free designated adult beverage at each participating pub, plus entry to the “After Bark Party” at the end of the Crawl. Benefiting the Humane Society for Greater Savannah. Participating pubs: Congress Street Social Club, Corleone’s, Flip Flop Tiki Bar & Grill, Moon River Brewing Company, Taco Abajo, The Rail Pub, The Salt Table, and Wild Wing Café. When: Thu. Sept. 20, 6 p.m. Where: Cups avail. for purchase at The Rail Pub, 405 W. Congress St., Cost: $10 for souvenir cup Info: www.humanesocietysav.org/

Film: American Autumn

What: The first feature length documentary of the Occupy movement. Presented by Occupy Savannah. When: Thu. Sept. 20, 7 p.m. Where: Sentient Bean, 13 E. Park Ave. Cost: Free and open to the public. Info: sentientbean.com/

Meeting: Discussion of County-Wide Recycling

What: Learn the facts and talk trash at the Coastal Sierra Club meeting on the status of a Chatham County-wide Recycling and Waste Management program, including volunteers collecting signatures on petitions and the status of programs in other coastal counties.

Gray’s Reef Film Festival Opening Night

When: Thu. Sept. 20, 6:30 p.m. Where: Jepson Center for the Arts, 207 W. York St. Cost: Free and open to the public. Info: 912-598-2345. graysreef.noaa.gov When: Thu. Sept. 20, 7 p.m. Where: First Presbyterian Church, 520

Washington Ave.

Cost: Free and open to the public Info: 912-341-0718.

Music: Bachaco in Concert and Dance Party

What: Latino Heritage Week begins at Armstrong Atlantic State University with the Miami-based world-class fusion band of reggae, dancehall and cumbia. When: Thu. Sept. 20, 8 p.m. Where: Armstrong’s Fine Arts Hall Auditorium, 11935 Abercorn St. Cost: Free and open to the public. Info: armstrong.edu/

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Friday Film: Silent Souls (Russia, 2010)

What: CinemaSavannah presents Alexei Fedorchenko’s film that won multiple awards at the 2010 Venice Film Festival. The journey of two men (Miron and Aist)

Turtle Power!

What: A film about sea turtles, “Turtle: The Incredible Journey,’’ a discussion about the future of Georgia’s iconic loggerhead sea turtles, and a book signing. Kris Williams, of Caretta Caretta Sea Turtle Research Project, will discuss the fate of loggerheads in the southeast.

on a mission to say goodbye to Miron’s deceased wife in accordance with ancient ethnic rituals of Western Russia. Screenings at 5pm and 8pm. In Russian with English subtitles. When: Fri. Sept. 21 Where: Muse Arts Warehouse, 703 Louisville Rd., Cost: $8 Cash only. Info: musesavannah.org/

Gray’s Reef Film Festival — National Geographic in Savannah

What: Films about Gray’s Reef National Marine Sanctuary, the National Marine Sanctuary Program and wonders, mysteries and issues facing the wider ocean. Book signing by Kevin McCarey “Islands Under Fire” 4pm at Gutstein Gallery. When: Fri. Sept. 21, 4 p.m.-10 p.m. Where: Trustees Theater and SCAD’s Gutstein Gallery, 201 and 216 E. Broughton St., Cost: Free and open to the public. Info: 912-598-2345. graysreef.noaa.gov/

cont’d on page 6


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week at a glance | continued from page 4

Film: Gone With the Wind (1939, USA)

What: On the big screen--Rhett Butler, Scarlett O’Hara, Ashley Wilkes and the rest in Technicolor. 3 hours, 44 minutes, with a 15 minute intermission. When: Fri. Sept. 21, 6 p.m. Where: Lucas Theatre for the Arts, 32 Abercorn St. Cost: $8 Info: 912-525-5050.

SavOceanX: Solutions Exchange Gala

What: Reception and Awards Banquet announcing the winners of this year’s Solutions Exchange competition. When: Fri. Sept. 21, 6:30 p.m. Where: Savannah International Trade Center Ballroom, 1 International Dr Cost: $120 Info: savannahoceanexchange.org/

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Saturday Forsyth Farmers’ Market

What: Watch Summer turn to Fall

Jan. 28, 2013

Mar. 13, 2013

with the autumn harvest of locally grown and produced fruits, veggies, baked goods and more every Saturday under the shade of Forsyth Park’s oak tree alle’. When: Sat. Sept. 22, 9 a.m.-1 p.m. Where: South End of Forsyth Park, Cost: Free to hang out and visit. Info: www.forsythfarmersmarket.org/

Record Store Day @ Audio Video Warehouse

What: Used vinyl will be on sale for “Buy 2, Get 1 Free.” DJ Kenny Watkins. Food from Coach’s Corner. Car Wash to benefit American Cancer Society. Get your vinyl ON! When: Sat. Sept. 22, 10 a.m.-9 p.m. Where: Audio Video Warehouse, 7700 Abercorn Street., Info: 912- 354-5398.

Gray’s Reef Film Festival — Celebrating the Cousteau Legacy

What: Gutstein Gallery: Jean-Michel Cousteau will sign copies of his book, “Explore the Southeast National Marine Sanctuaries with Jean-Michel Cousteau.’’ Films at Trustees and Gutstein, including a bio film by Jean-Michel Cousteau about his father, Jacques Cousteau. See website for schedule. When: Sat. Sept. 22, 4-10 p.m. Where: Trustees Theater and SCAD’s Gutstein Gallery, 201 & 216 East Broughton St. Cost: Free and open to the public. Info: graysreef.noaa.gov/

Dinner Theatre: “Murder Ahoy!”

What: A pirate-themed whodunit set in Olde Savannah. Solve the mystery and win a prize, or just watch. Presented by Savannah Murder Mystery Dinner Theatre. When: Sat. Sept. 22, 7 p.m. Where: Double Tree by Hilton, 411 W. Bay St. Cost: $44.95 adults, $32.95 children Info: 912-247-4644 . www.savannahcommunitytheater.com/

Film: The Price of Sugar (2007, USA)

What: Latino Heritage Week at Armstrong Atlantic State University presents this documentary narrated by the late Paul Newman about the lives of Haitian workers on Dominican Republic sugar plantations. When: Sat. Sept. 22, 7 p.m. Where: Armstrong’s Student Union Building, 11935 Abercorn St., Cost: Free and open to the public. Info: armstrong.edu/

Twist: Dance Performances

What: “A contemporary twist on fairytales” --dance works by ten renowned area choreographers: Karen Burns, Vincent Brosseau, April McGehee Roe, Nora Clark, Darrell Davis, Trina Dodd, Muriel Miller, Mary Ann Duffy, Elissa Edwards and Christine Shawl. A rare opportunity to see Savannah’s dancers unite in a one-time production. An event of the

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Unchained Tour: Heart-Shaped Tour of the South

Monday Odd Lot Improv Comedy Troupe

What: Another Monday of impromptu theatre. Watch or participate. When: Mon. Sept. 24, 8 p.m. Where: Muse Arts Warehouse, 703 Louisville Rd. Cost: $5 or what you can pay. Info: musesavannah.org/

What: “Promoting the Art of the Raconteur” --a storytelling tour across the south that wraps up right here in the SAV. Featured storytellers: Neil Gaiman, George Dawes Green, Edgar Oliver, and Peter Aguero. When: Sat. Sept. 22, 8 p.m. Where: Knights of Columbus Hall , 3 West Liberty Street, Cost: $20 (Sold Out) Info: theunchainedtour.org/

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Sunday

you buy your next car. Registration encouraged. When: Tue. Sept. 25, 2 p.m.-3:30 p.m. Where: Southwest Chatham Public Library, 14097 Abercorn Ext. Cost: Free and open to the public. Info: liveoakpl.org/

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Film: Pina (2011, Germany)

What: Director Wim Wenders eulogizes the renowned choreographer Pina Bausch. Co-sponsored by the Savannah Dance Festival, Connect Savannah and Psychtronic Film Society’s Movies Savannah Missed. Screenings at 2pm, 5pm, 8pm. When: Sun. Sept. 23 Where: Muse Arts Warehouse, 703 Louisville Rd. Cost: $8 cash Info: musesavannah.org/

Gray’s Reef Film Festival — Our Oceans’ Future What: To close out the festival, local

emerging filmmakers give us their views on the future for our oceans and coasts. When: Sun. Sept. 23, 12 p.m.-5 p.m. Where: SCAD Museum of Art, 601 Turner Blvd. Cost: Free and open to the public. Info: graysreef.noaa.gov/

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Green Scene Happy Hour/Networking

What: Monthly networking event of the local chapter of the US Green Building Council. Drink specials, heavy hors d’oeuvres, and networking with local professionals. When: Tue. Sept. 25, 5:30 p.m.-7 p.m. Where: SEED Eco Lounge, 39 Montgomery St Cost: No cover charge. Info: www.usgbcga.org/

‘Become a Teacher’ Info Session

What: Armstrong Atlantic State University’s College of Education session for people with bachelor’s degrees in

News & Opinion

7

Tongue Open Mic Night

What: A poetry and music open mic

with an emphasis on sharing new, original, thoughtful work. Sign up at 7:30 for a 4-minute spot at the mic. When: Tue. Sept. 25, 8 p.m. Where: Sentient Bean, 13 E. Park Ave. Cost: Free and open to the public Info: sentientbean.com/

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Wednesday Film: The Weight of the Nation

What: The second segment of this four-part documentary series, produced by HBO, that looks at America’s obesity epidemic. When: Wed. Sept. 26, 5 p.m. Where: Hoskins Center at Memorial Health University Campus, 4700 Waters Ave. Cost: Free and open to the public.

Film: Cockfighter (1974, USA)

What: Produced by exploitation king Roger Corman’s organization, it’s a haunting portrait of a man who has vowed not to speak a word until he is able to win the coveted medal for Cockfighter of The Year. Featuring Harry Dean Stanton. WARNING: Included footage of actual cockfights. When: Wed. Sept. 26, 8 p.m. Where: Sentient Bean, E. Park Ave. Cost: $6 cash only Info: sentientbean.com cs

week at a glance

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any major who want to become certified teachers. When: Tue. Sept. 25, 6 p.m.-7 p.m. Where: Armstrong Center, 13040 Abercorn St. Cost: Free and open to the public. Info: 912-344-2568.

In this issue

10 The (Civil) Society Column:

Call all squirrel hunters

by jessica leigh lebos

Fall Arts Preview 12 Festival story 14 festival listings 16 music story 18 concert listings 20 performance arts 22 performance listings 24 visual arts 28 visual arts listings 30 film 34 film listings 36 Blotter 38 News of the Weird 37 Straight Dope

MUSIC

42 Feature: Dead Yet? is alive. by bill deyoung

40 the music column 44 Soundboard

culture

49 Fall film Preview: To see or

not to see

by Matt Brunson

46 Food & Drink 48 Art patrol 51 SCREENSHOTS 54 happenings

SEPT 19-SEPT 25, 2012 | WWW.CONNECTSAVANNAH.COM

Savannah Dance Festival. When: Sat. Sept. 22, 7 p.m. Where: Savannah Arts Academy, 500 Washington Avenue Cost: $15 Adults/$10 Students at the door Info: www.savannahdancefestival.org/

WRIGHTSQUAREANTIQUEMALL.C0M

WRIGHTSQUAREANTIQUEMALL.C0M

week at a glance | continued from page 6


news & opinion SEPT 19-SEPT 25, 2012 | WWW.CONNECTSAVANNAH.COM

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by Jim Morekis | jim@connectsavannah.com

As I often tell people these days — stop me if you’ve heard this one before — while the growth of Savannah itself over the past decade hasn’t been all that remarkable, the growth of the local arts and cultural scene has skyrocketed exponentially. (A cynic might say it’s too bad that our staff and budget haven’t also skyrocketed exponentially to keep up! But I’m not a cynic so of course I’d never dream of saying that.) A cynic might also say that Savannah’s clear and sincere devotion to the arts is one of the major reasons to stay here at all, considering the staggering poverty, ridiculous violent crime rate and the poor state of the school system. And there’s some truth to that — if you’re going to literally risk life and limb to live somewhere, that place better offer something that most other places don’t. And Savannah does. I challenge anyone to find a market of comparable size in the U.S. that offers as wide a variety of high– quality, affordable arts and culture. What’s more: Savannah offers a remarkable assortment of free cultural events. As much as I bash the City of Savannah government in this space, I have to give credit where it’s due: This is thanks primarily to our Mayor and City Council (current Mayor Edna Jackson as well as former Mayor Otis Johnson) deliberately making the arts a priority for funding. Cities always have a choice whether or not to invest in the arts. Thankfully, our city leaders have so far seen the wisdom in opting to do just that. Savannah offers so many high-quality free events, in fact, that sometimes arts groups in town who sell tickets will occasionally grumble that it’s hard to sell culture when the city gives so much of it away for free. I suppose they may have a point, but that’s a subject for a different column. We celebrate Savannah’s cultural scene this week with our annual Fall Arts Preview special issue. Yup, if you’re counting, that’s our second special issue in a row, along

with last week’s College Student Guide. What can I say? We’re productive as all get–out over here. Gracing our cover this week is a specially commissioned design by local artist and all-around righteous dude Jose Ray, who I think you’ll agree captures the essence of Savannah’s cultural ethos — as we had every faith that he would. While like most of you I thoroughly enjoy attending concerts and shows around town, the only disconcerting part of the experience is the fact that I typically see so few school–age people in attendance. I get the fact that parents need a grown– up night out every now and then, believe me I do. But it’s part of parenting to expose your children to arts and culture. This is true whether you can afford a ticket or must limit yourself to the many free offerings that Savannahians are fortunate enough to have available. And the argument about the extra ticket or two for the kids costing too much doesn’t wash either, because, you know, babysitters. To be clear, I’m not talking about bringing your babies or toddlers to shows — please don’t, and leave those ginormous double-wide strollers at home too! — I’m talking about that wonderful, crucial, impressionable (and generally well– behaved) age range between about 8–14. Call it middle school age, give or take. Whatever the label, it’s an extremely important time in a young person’s moral, emotional and spiritual development, and I think it’s no coincidence that most behavioral problems tend to manifest at that age, if they’re going to manifest at all. For example, when I take my daughter to the Savannah Music Festival — which regularly brings in some of the best musicians

in the world, generally at reasonable prices — she’s often the only person remotely in her age group in attendance. I worry about the overall mental and spiritual education of the many more children who are not afforded these opportunities, often by parents who can clearly afford to take advantage of them. These are often literally once–in–a–lifetime opportunities which have the power to literally change lives. Why not invest in the most precious person in your life by taking them to see such a thing? I interviewed local dancer and choreographer Karen Burns for a story this issue about a Savannah Dance Festival event. One of her quotes which didn’t make it into the story — but which I think illustrates my point well — is this: “Nothing against sports, but parents take their kids to sports events all the time, and then they’ll talk about them afterwards,” says Burns. “Why not do that with the arts?” Indeed. One might be tempted to respond, well all this is easy for you to say, Jim, since you get all those free tickets to things. It’s true that one of the perks of this job is occasionally getting to attend the occasional show for free. But that’s not always the case, and as I said in any case it’s a parent’s job to expose their children to the personal development that the arts offer. Rant over. So this week please enjoy our Fall Arts Preview to mark the more–or–less official start of the autumn festival season. We’ve done our level best to provide a complete, accurate listing of upcoming events on stage, on screen, and in the galleries. There’s no doubt in my mind that there are some things we missed! The remedy for that is to simply make sure and check out each weekly issue of Connect Savannah as it comes out, either in print or online. Like us on Facebook and find us on Twitter at @ConnectSavannah for regular updates and new developments as they happen. cs


2 0 - 2 3 S e p t e m b e r 2 0 1 2 • T h e J e p s o n C e n t e r f o r t h e A r t s • Tr u s t e e s T h e a t e r • S a v a n n a h • G e o r g i a

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Gray’s Reef Ocean Film Festival|2012

SEPT 19-SEPT 25, 2012 | WWW.CONNECTSAVANNAH.COM

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Artwork: 2012 SCAD Sidewalk Art Festival, Gray’s Reef Award winner, by Chen Wei-Hsuan and Amidon Gordon.

Thursday, September 20, 6:30 p.m. Opening Night at the Jepson Center for the Arts with the film

Turtle: The Incredible Journey and Live From Gray’s Reef: Underwater Photographs by Greg McFall

Friday, September 21, 4:00 - 6:30 p.m. SCAD'S Trustees Theater

Films produced about Gray's Reef and other National Marine Sanctuaries around the nation.

4:00 - 6:30 p.m. SCAD's Gutstein Gallery (Book signing)

National Geographic film producer and SCAD professor Kevin McCarey will sign copies of his new book, Islands Under Fire, The Improbable Quest to Save the Corals of Puerto Rico, Published by Ocean Publishing.

GRAY ’S R E E F OCEAN F I L M F E S T I VA L

7:00 - 10:00 p.m. SCAD'S Trustees Theater

Mission of Mermaids A short film celebrating our relationship with the ocean. It's both a poetic ode to the seas and a plea for their protection. Wild Americas National Geographic producer and film maker Andy Mitchell. Mitchell will screen his latest film from the National Geographic series about sea life along the coastlines of North and South America.

Saturday, September 22, 4:00 - 6:30 p.m. SCAD'S Trustees Theater

Films produced about Gray's Reef and other National Marine Sanctuaries around the nation.

4:00 - 6:30 p.m. SCAD's Gutstein Gallery (Book signing)

Jean-Michel Cousteau will sign copies of his book, Explore the Southeast National Marine Sanctuaries with Jean-Michel Cousteau, Published by Ocean Publishing.

The National Oceanic Atmospheric Administration (NOAA) The Office of National Marine Sanctuaries Southeast, Caribbean, Gulf of Mexico Region of the National Marine Sanctuary System Telfair Museums Savannah College of Art & Design

National Geographic Skidaway Institute of Oceanography Skidaway Marine Science Foundation National Marine Sanctuary Foundation The Savannah Presbytery The Jolly Foundation Mrs. Robert O. Levitt (Kathryn)

The book features Gray's Reef National Marine Sanctuary. Cousteau will also sign other available books in the National Marine Sanctuary series.

7:00 - 10:00 p.m. SCAD'S Trustees Theater

Mission of Mermaids A short film celebrating our relationship with the ocean. It's both a poetic ode to the seas and a plea for their protection. My Father, The Captain: Jacques-Yves Cousteau Drawing from more than 40 years of experience exploring the world, designing, and studying the ocean realm, Cousteau will bring a wealth of stories, knowledge and film from his adventurous life to Savannah.

Sunday, September 23 Noon - 5:00 p.m. SCAD'S Museum of Art

Films from local and national emerging film makers. Schedules are subject to change without notice. Please check our web site for the most up to date film schedule at

http://graysreef.noaa.gov The Savannah Community Foundation Café Zeum at the Jepson Center for the Arts Largo Beverage Superstore Mr. & Mrs. William Rousseau Connect Savannah Morning News WRHQ


news & opinion SEPT 19-SEPT 25, 2012 | WWW.CONNECTSAVANNAH.COM

10

The (Civil) Society Column

by Jessica Leigh Lebos | jll@connectsavannah.com

Please don’t (breast)feed the squirrels There it goes again, that skreeky garbled chatter. Two squirrels are noising it up in the water oak in my front yard, bickering over who left the top of the acorn open, or whatever it is squirrels argue over. From the ground it sounds like Charlie Brown’s teacher and her friends downed too many Red Bulls. Since I already have two human children nattering at me, I throw a pinecone into the canopy and watch them scatter. Usually, I go gaga over Savannah wildlife—I almost crashed my bike yesterday following a massive hawk through Daffin Park—yet I tend towards the apathetic about squirrels. My spirit droops every time I see one of them flattened in the street,

Squirrel-hunting season in Georgia ends Feb. 28

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(912) 354-1500 www.portmansmusic.com

but there’s no denying they look like big–eyed, bushy–tailed rats. And rats simply don’t count—there’s the whole bubonic plague thing, plus the fetid little f@#*rs snarfed all the peppers in our garden this summer. Squirrels fall into the same nebulous category of urban wildlife as pigeons: Cute critters that will eat out of your hand or disease–ridden pests? A wholly unscientific inquiry conducted on Facebook last week revealed that it can go either way, depending on how many of them are breeding in the fiberglass insulation in your attic. There’s also another role these beguiling rodents can play that many of us haven’t considered, since we are soft and spoiled and like our meat already skinned: Apparently, squirrels make pretty good eatin’.


Many of you adore squirrels and find their ubiquitous chatter delightful. You may have even, so help me, touched one. But there is a line: A few weeks ago, my daughter and I were sitting in front of Brighter Day enjoying some tempeh salad when a couple and their son came out of the store and sat down. The mother cuddled a tiny squirrel while the father shmushed what looked like peanut butter into an eyedropper. We watched with eyebrow–raised interest as the mom, wearing a strapless maxidress, made a nest of paper towels on the ample shelf of her bosom and nestled the animal into her cleavage. My daughter looked at me in horror. A baby anything is pretty darn cute, but this was getting weird. Over the next 10 minutes, several people stopped to coo over the mother’s breasts, sharing their squirrel rescue stories while we tried to finish our lunch. A lady came out with her groceries and squealed. “Oh, wonderful! Have you raised squirrels before?” The family admitted they hadn’t. The lady commenced an informative lesson for the new squirrel parents, explaining that the most important thing was to keep it hydrated. She then relayed that the last squirrel she raised after it fell onto her porch seemed to really enjoy breastmilk. At this, kombucha sputtered out my nose. “Excuse me, ma’am, but did you just say you BREASTFED A BABY SQUIRREL?” All of them looked at me. The woman sniffed as the other squirrel mother shifted her chest nest around to protect it from such rudeness. “Well, no. I pumped it first.” My daughter exploded into a hacking cough designed to cover up an acute case of the giggles. The woman turned back to her squirrel–raising proteges and continued her lecture on imprinting, pouring a slosh of her $4 coconut water into their eyedropper. I could take no more. We tossed our recycling and got on our bikes. I may never be able to hunt a squirrel—no matter how dire the circumstances—now that I cannot shake the image of the lady breastfeeding a baby squirrel. What’s worse, someone just told me that Hilton Head has squirrels the size of small dogs. cs

11 SEPT 19-SEPT 25, 2012 | WWW.CONNECTSAVANNAH.COM

I wasn’t aware that Georgia’s official squirrel hunting season opened up a month ago, but Dept. of Natural Resources regional supervisor David Mixon assured me that it’s a venerated fall pastime across the state. “It used to be more popular, and in certain areas it still is,” says the Brunswick–based regional supervisor. “It’s a good way to introduce young people into sport hunting.” To legally hunt squirrels until the season closes on Feb. 28, you must first obtain a license, use a registered firearm and observe the maximum daily limit of 12 dead ‘uns. Before y’all go around shooting up the neighborhood, please note that discharging a gun anywhere in the city limits will bring a SWAT team down upon you and get you permanently disinvited to block parties. If I need to tell you that hunting squirrels in parks and other public property is a no–no then you may need a short vacation somewhere with straightjackets. These are the legalities for small game, but Mixon told me that the game warden isn’t going to cause you any issues if you off a squirrel with a BB gun or air rifle in your backyard for eating the birdseed. Though I’m not sure I want to come over for a BBQ anytime soon. Then again, I’ll eat pretty much anything as long as someone else cooks. Speaking of which: According to Mixon, squirrel does not, as the old adage goes, taste like chicken, but rather has a taste all its own. His recipe? “I wrap it in bacon and bake it. It turns out great.” Our family has been watching episodes of Man, Woman, Wild on Netflix lately so it’s heartening to know there’s a plentiful food source should our minivan break down on the Truman Parkway and we must survive off the land while waiting for AAA, which in our experience can take upwards of three days. I’m pretty sure my husband can start a fire with a Styrofoam cup and marsh gas. Please know that I am NOT advocating the death of any squirrels here; I am simply providing information to the subset of the population that has a special revulsion for them. I personally have nothing against squirrels and think fondly back to when my son would only wear a white shirt to Forsyth Park so his furry friend Rico—distinguishable by a notched right ear—could recognize him.

news & opinion

the (civil) society column | continued from previous page


news & opinion

Fall Arts Preview: Festivals

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Tony Monaco’s jazz adventure A master of the B3 organ headlines the Savannah Jazz Festival by Bill DeYoung | bill@connectsavannah.com

Said Critical Jazz Review: “Tony Monaco may be the best organ player you have yet to hear of flying stealth while playing arguably some of the hottest B-3 around.”

For the 31st annual Savannah Jazz Festival, the Coastal Jazz Association has assembled a particularly smokin’ array of musicians both young and veteran. With such a fine and venerable track record, there’d be no reason to expect anything less from the CJA, which has been the banner–carrier for jazz in Savannah since the 1980s. The festival begins Sept. 23 and runs a week. And everything is free. For that, you get concerts and jams with all or most of Savannah’s finest players, in various configurations, plus appearances by Lil’ Ed and the Blues Imperials — a smoldering electric Chicago–blues band — and Columbia’s gypsy jazz outfit Swing 42, plus a documentary film about jazz piano legend Marian McPartland and loads of other cool stuff. This year’s headliner is Hammond B3 organ great Tony Monaco, whose work with guitarist Pat Martino (last year’s headliner) is the stuff of legend. Monaco is a world–renowned jazz player who’s toured the world numerous times


For me, the B3 sound is such a silky sound, inextricably bound with jazz. How did it find you? Tony Monaco: I started playing accordion when I was 8 years old. When I was 12, I was given a Jimmy Smith record to listen to. And that hooked me, man. I had a little record player that I used to play the Beatles 45s on, like “I Want to Hold Your Hand.” I put this LP on, and the whole side of the album was one song, “The Sermon.” Twenty–two minutes. And probably two seconds in, I was glued. I kept staring at the record. The album cover had these long black fingers, you know? And I listened to this velvet sound coming out of this little record player, and it was just like “Man, I want to do that!” I was hooked. That was it.

It’s not like playing the piano, is it? Tony Monaco: Quite opposite. I think the organ’s closer to the accordion in terms of its capabilities. It’s difficult to learn music, and most people who begin the journey as a musician end their journey still trying to learn it. It’s a lifelong thing just to be a musician, anyhow. Yeah, it’s a difficult instrument to learn. You’re playing left–hand bass, and you’re coupling it with your foot. If you really ever get to that point — a lot of organ players bang on the pedals, but they don’t know what they’re doing. I’m actually playing real, coordinated left–hand basslines, and the feet are coordinated as well, whether it’s a choice to tap as percussion, or to double the notes, or play octaves. That takes a long time to coordinate that. Then you’re right hand has to be a soloist and a guitar player while comping, and you have to learn textures and sounds. So the comparison to the piano would be the fact that it has a keyboard. The difference is, the organ you can sustain forever, and you change the volume with a pedal. And the piano, you have to constantly re–strike and you change the volume

by how hard you hit the keyboard. So the harder you hit the organ, the more it goes against you. You want to develop a touch that’s light and use your foot for expression. It’s a total immersion into the instrument. I’ve developed this technique for teaching online, and I find the more I teach, the more I need to learn. I love that part of the journey as a musician. I love learning. Running into Joey DeFrancisco was a major turning point for you, wasn’t it? Tony Monaco: I had kind of put away the dream of travelling around the world playing jazz organ. I was divorced and raising three daughters, and working hard running a construction business. So I just played on the weekends to make extra money and have fun. I met Joey, and he said to me point–blank “Why aren’t you doing this for real?” it sort of re– sparked my belief that I could. I have not stopped. I’m trying to constantly develop new ways to make a living as a full–time musician. Because it’s not like a job, it’s an adventure, you know? CS

“I find the more I teach, the more I need to learn,” Tony Monaco says. “I love that part of the journey as a musician.”

Savannah

Jazz

Festival

All events are free Sunday, Sept. 23 5 p.m. at Blowin’ Smoke: Teddy Adams’ Opening Night Jam Session Monday, Sept. 24 8 p.m. at Blowin’ Smoke: Film “In Good Time: The Piano Jazz of Marian McPartland” (with producer/director James “Huey” Coleman Jr.). Tuesday, Sept. 25 7 p.m. at Blowin’ Smoke: The Jody Espina Quartet with Claire Fraiser Wednesday, Sept. 26 At Blowin’ Smoke: 7 p.m.: Bob Mastellar & The Jazz Corner All Stars 8:30 p.m.: Swing ’42 Thursday, Sept. 27 Blues Night at Forsyth Park 6:30 p.m.: Amburgey & Hanson 7:10 p.m.: SSU Gospel Choir 8:15 p.m.: Eric Culberson Band 9:30 p.m.: Li’l Ed and the Blues Imperials Late night jam at Blowin’ Smoke at 11 p.m. Friday, Sept. 28 Forsyth Park 7 p.m.: Doc Handy Band 8:15 p.m.: Jay Stewart Band 9:30 p.m.: University of North Florida Jazz Ensemble w/vibraphonist Warren Chiasson Late night jam at Blowin’ Smoke at 11 p.m Saturday, Sept. 29 Forsyth Park 4 p.m.: US Navy Band Southeast Dixieland Band “TGIF” 5:45 p.m.: Jazz Hall Of Fame w/Ben Tucker, Teddy Adams, Huxie Scott, and Howard Paul. With Warren Chiasson & Quentin Baxter 7 p.m.: Andreas Varady Quartet 8:15 p.m.: Tony Monaco B3 Trio 9:30 p.m.: Savannah Jazz Orchestra with Ed Calle & Sam Skelton, saxophone Late night jam at Blowin’ Smoke at 11 p.m. Sunday, Sept. 30 Children’s Jazz Fest at Forsyth Park 4 p.m.: Savannah Arts Academy Skylite Orchestra 5 p.m.: Savannah County Day School Jazz Band 6 p.m.: Coastal Jazz Association All Stars

13 SEPT 19-SEPT 25, 2012 | WWW.CONNECTSAVANNAH.COM

and has released eight CDs, including Burnin’ Grooves, a collaboration with yet another all–star organist, Joey DeFrancisco. At his Forsyth Park concert, Monaco will play with two old pals — Savannah–based guitarist Howard Paul and Charleston drummer Quentin Baxter.

news & opinion

fall arts preview | continued from previous page


news & opinion

Fall Arts Preview: Festivals

Festival calendar Great Ogeechee Seafood Festival

Oct. 19–22. At J.F. Gregory Park in Richmond Hill, they always get some cool bands for this annual family fun fest. This year it’s the Gin Blossoms, still justifiably proud of their one and only major hit “Found Out About You.” Arts and crafts, carnival rides, and (yes) seafood. See goseafoodfestival.com

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Graveface Fest

Lily Tomlin at the 2011 Savannah Film Festival

Oktoberfest

Oct. 5–7 on River Street. Oompah bands, fun for the kids, brewskis and all the bratwurst you can stand. Ja wohl!

Tybee Island Pirate Fest

Oct. 5 and 6 in the South Beach parking lot. Motley Crue vocalist Vince Neil, who knows a thing or two about pillage and plunder, was the perfect choice as entertainment headliner for the 2012 arrgh–fest. Neil and his band perform Oct. 6; the rest of the weekend is taken over by a pirate– themed marketplace, gun ‘n’ games, more live music and a lot of folks wandering around puffy shirts and eye patches. See tybeepiratefest.com

McLeod, Curley Maple, Al Petteway & Amy White, and Diedre McCalla. Also: A “Noteworthy Arts Auction” and a performance from this year’s winner of the Youth Songwriting contest. See savannahfolk.org

Savannah Greek Festival

Oct. 11–13 at the Hellenic Community Center, 14 W. Anderson St. St. Paul’s Greek Orthodox Church celebrates the 61th year of its tasty celebration of all things Greek – food, dancing, music, food, arts and culture, food and more food. See stpaulsgreekorthodox.org.

Picnic in the Park

At 7 p.m. Oct. 7 in Forsyth Park. The park’s the place to be on this Sunday afternoon, and many thousands will be there with elaborate, eccentric and eclectic themed picnic setups to the theme of “Some Enchanted Evening.” It all starts with a pet costume contest at 2 p.m., and the enchanted evening itself kicks off at 7:30 p.m. the Strings of the South Orchestra, pianist Eddie Wilson’s annual musical potpourri. See savannahga.gov

Savannah Film Festival

Oct. 27–Nov. 3, downtown. Curated by SCAD and endorsed by Hollywood, this is the biggest red– carpet event of all. A full week of screenings including major movies that haven’t even opened yet, independent features and shorts, and celebrity–attended events and award ceremonies. The 2012 schedule hasn’t been announced – expect it soon.

Pirates are coming back to Tybee in October

Shalom Y’all Jewish Food Festival

Oct. 28 in Forsyth Park. The folks at Congregation Mickve Israel never disappoint with a day full of blintzes, latkes, strudel, challah and other delicacies.

Tybee Beach Brew Fest

Nov. 2 and 3. Starts Friday with live music, beers and bratwurst at Marlon Monroe’s; Saturday pairs craft beers with local fare at a gala at the Tybee Lighthouse, and music by the Sons of Bluegrass. A fundraiser for the Tybee Post Theater. See tybeeposttheater.org

Geekend

Nov. 8–10. Charles Adler, founder of Kickstarter, is the keynote speaker at this year’s celebration of all things technological. Location is still TBA. It’s three days of talks, workshops and demonstrations on 21st Century creativity. See geek–end.com

Telfair Art Fair

Nov. 10–11. Following an opening night preview on the 9th, the Telfair Museums’ delightful open–air art fair features approximately 120 artists, in all media, showing and selling their wares. There are $10,000 in prizes.

Savannah Children’s Book Festival

Savannah Folk Music Festival

Events from October 12th (music in Ellis Square) to the 14th (a concert in Grayson Stadium with Doug

Oct. 27. Southern Pine Co. It’s a Halloween festival, complete with haunted house, hosted and mosted by Savannah’s spookiest resident, Ryan Graveface. Music by Black Moth Super Rainbow, Casket Girls, Marshmallow Ghosts and others. Plus three horror films.

The 2011 Shalom Y’all Jewish Food Festival

Nov 10. in Forsyth Park. More than 60 local and regional authors and illustrators, food, live entertainment, arts and crafts and fun stuff for the younger set. The event is little brother to the Savannah Book Festival, Feb. 14–17, 2013. CS


news & opinion

dan winters’s america: icons and ingenuity September 14– November 11, 2012

Blown, assembled and cast: a celebration of contemporary glass July 7–October 28

working South: watercolor portraits by mary whyte

October 5, 2012 – February 10, 2013

Dale Chihuly, Untitled (from Persian series) Blown glass, on loan from Betty Melaver

Mary Whyte; Lovers, Quilter, Berea, KY, 2008; watercolor on paper.

Dan Winters; Michael Jordan; New York, 2003; Archival pigment print

TELFAIR.ORG

art + history + architecture telfair.org/learN

912.790.8823-act Now, limited Space!

Adult clAsses

Sketch-Booking is Hip!

September 26 –October 24, Wednesdays 12-2 pm

Hipster Sketch time September 26 –October 24, Wednesdays 12-2 pm

the Best of watercolor October 6, Saturday 10 am–5 pm

collection currents: modern and contemporary art from telfair museums June 29–

November 18, 2012

Betsy Cain; in situ; oil on canvas; 60 x 60 in.; 2011.

painting the portrait in watercolor from photographs October 9 –November 13, Tuesdays 10 am-1 pm

figure drawing and painting October 12 - November 16, Fridays 10:30 am–1:30 pm

teen & Adult clAsses

the Blown glass class Saturday, October 20, 10 am–2 pm/

Slump glass workshop September 22 & 29, Saturdays 10 am–1 pm

SEPT 19-SEPT 25, 2012 | WWW.CONNECTSAVANNAH.COM

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news & opinion

Paint Your Own “Moonlight Serenade”

Fall Arts: the season begins!

Saturday night’s all right for Elton Nearly three hours of classics from rock ‘n’ roll’s original Rocket Man

SEPT 19-SEPT 25, 2012 | WWW.CONNECTSAVANNAH.COM

16 photos by christina m. bunn

Sept.28 @ 6:30pm The PERFECT way to unwind after a long week! All art parties are guided by a local artist. Go to website calendar/register for info. artbashstudio.com

FAIRLY PRICED

Bull & 32nd St • 912.484.3438

Great Savannah Races Museum A Micro-Museum dedicated to the Great Savannah Races: The First American Grand Prix, The Vanderbilt Cup, Tiedeman Trophy and Savannah Challenge of 1908-1911. Come visit us and see our racing and early automobile collection or indulge in some shopping for automobile prints, books, gift items and antique toys.

$3.00 Admission - All Ages! Same price as a Grandstand seat in 1908!

www.greatsavannahraces.com

411 Abercorn Street

(at Taylor) tanya@greatsavannahraces.com 912.398.4785

Sir Elton spend quite awhile granting autographs to an adoring crowd


news & opinion

fall arts | continued from previous page

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A capacity crowd of 7,500 filled the Martin Luther King Arena last Saturday to hear Sir Elton John and his band - the largest Savannah audience since the 65-year-old British legend’s last show here, in 2008. Opening with “Saturday Night’s Alright (For Fighting)” and “Bennie and the Jets,” John performed for 2 1/2 energetic hours. The set list included one massive hit after another - “Rocket Man,” “Philadelphia Freedom,” “Daniel,” “I’m Still Standing,” “Your Song,” “Crocodile Rock” and even deep-cut favorites like “Mona Lisas and Mad Hatters” and “Grey Seal.” The band included guitarist Davey Johnstone and drummer Nigel Olsson, Elton’s longtime musical collaborators.


news & opinion

Fall Arts Preview

concerts & comedy

SEPT 19-SEPT 25, 2012 | WWW.CONNECTSAVANNAH.COM

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Bonnie Raitt

Ron White

Ron White

Sept. 30, Johnny Mercer Theatre. With a wit as dry as the flat prairies of his Texas home, White’s a veteran of the semi–legendary Blue Collar Comedy tours. But his humor – pithy and sarcastic – has grown exponentially, and he’s many miles ahead of Larry the Cable Guy. Expect 90 minutes of hilarity as White puffs on a cigar and drinks from his ever–present glass of onstage Scotch.

Bonnie Raitt

Oct. 13, Johnny Mercer Theatre. The raven–hair blues rocker makes her second Savannah appearance in two years; she’s got a fine new album out called Slipstream, which NPR’s Ken Tucker called her best work since the mid 1970s: “Raitt has always possessed a gift for taking a familiar phrase and rendering it in a manner that compels a listener to think anew about what the words really mean.”

Louis C.K.

Oct. 17. Johnny Mercer Theatre. Daniel Tosh has already been to Savannah this year (two sold–out performances in April), so it’s only logical that another of America’s hottest and most cutting–edge comics pays us a visit. The bitterly angry and perpetually perplexed Louis (Emmy–nominated for Louie on the FX Network) has mellowed a bit, according a recent review in Entertainment Weekly: “It was a fresh mix of the I–hate–myself–and–want–to–kill–you–while– making–you–all–cringe Louis that made him famous, with the a–little–more–okay–with–himself–and–the– world Louis.”

Quicksilver and others. Just too good.

Needtobreathe

Louis C.K.

Ingrid Michaelson

Oct. 18, Trustees Theatre. Singer/songwriter Michaelson’s music was used extensively in the TV series Grey’s Anatomy during its peak years. Hey, “The Way I Am” was ubiquitous, as were the Old Navy commercials that used it as a hook. On this tour, she’s joined by Sugar + The Hi Lows.

Savannah Philharmonic

Oct. 19, Lucas Theatre. For the second Lucas concert of the season, artistic director Peter Shannon conducts a “Celebrate America!” program, with music from Gershwin’s Porgy and Bess and An American in Paris, plus Leonard Bernstein’s uber–dramatic (and oh–so–American) West Side Story and On the Town, film music by Elmer Bernstein and more. Vocal soloists: Ann Marie McPhail (soprano) and Joshua Carswell (tenor), co–winners of the 2012 American Traditions Competition.

The Boxcars

Oct. 26, Randy Wood Guitars, Bloomingdale. Mandolin master Adam Steffey and fidder Ron Stewart front this high–energy bluegrass outfit. Between them and the other guys, the band’s pedigree is a mile wide, with stints with Alison Krauss & Union Station, JD Crowe & the New South, Doyle Lawson &

Nov. 8, Johnny Mercer Theatre. This South Carolina Christian rock band reached the (secular) Top 20 with the 2009 album The Outsiders, and last year’s The Reckoning did even better, peaking at No. 6. The Dove Award–winning Needtobreathe opened Taylor Swift’s 2011 tour; “The type of people we’re looking for are people who dig what we do,” says guitarist Bo Rhinehart. “And that’s it. So we welcome any type of fan.”

Jake Owen

Nov. 10, Johnny Mercer Theatre. A native of Vero Beach, Fla., Owen sometimes gets lost among the cookie–cutter country singers being churned out by the Nashville machine. But don’t the radio–friendly party anthems (“Yee Haw,” “Barefoot Blue Jean Night”) turn you off; he is a great singer with a barrel–chested, Haggard–esque baritone (see “Don’t Think I Don’t Love You” and “Alone With You”), and his stage shows are celebratory affairs.

Savannah Philharmonic

Nov. 17, Lucas Theatre. Soprano Rebecca Flaherty, tenor Cooper Nolan and bass Keith Harris join Peter Shannon and the Phil, plus the Savannah Children’s Choir, for selections from Carmina Burana, Peer Gynt and Finlandia.

Holiday Pops: The Festive Season

Dec. 14 and 15, Cathedral of John the Baptist. The Savannah Philharmonic Orchestra and Chorus’ annual Yuletide concert and sing–along. CS


news & opinion SEPT 19-SEPT 25, 2012 | WWW.CONNECTSAVANNAH.COM

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2013 SeaSon announcement

November 8, 2012 Festival dates

march 21  – april 6, 2013

s ava n n a h m u s i c f e s t i va l www.savannahmusicfestival.org Find us on facebook.com/SavannahMusicFestival and twitter.com/savmusicfest for ticket promotions and up-to-date news.


news & opinion

Fall Arts Preview: performing arts Karen Burns, center, shows dancers a move

SAA dancers in poodle shirts on stage at the school’s auditorium

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This is festival season in Savannah. One of the newest and most long–awaited entrants into that already–crowded field is the Savannah Dance Festival, which makes its inaugural debut next year. An important event leading up to the Dance Festival is a combo funds–and–awareness-raising performance this weekend. “Pina with a Twist” actually comprises two nights of dance–related entertainment: The multi–genre show Twist at Savannah Arts Academy Saturday night, and the acclaimed dance documentary Pina in three screenings Sunday at Muse Arts Warehouse. You can go see one or the other or both, and combo tickets are available at savannahdancefestival.org. Contributing choreography and performance to the show is a who’s– who of local creative dance talent, including Christine Shawl, Vincent Brousseau, Muriel Miller, Darrell Davis, Elizabeth Newkirk, Trina Dodd and Nora Clark. Karen Burns, one of the choreographers and dancers in the production — who’s also directing the show

— explains the idea behind it. “The idea of the choreography is that everyone was supposed to be inspired, if even in the tiniest way, by a fairy tale. That’s why it’s called with a ‘Twist’ — it’s a twist on a fairy tale.” But there’s a larger goal as well. “We’re hoping to get more people aware of the different types of dance there are in town. We’re not touching on everything. There’s no ballroom and we’re not doing Highlands, or things like that. Those seem to have their own followings,” Burns says. “But modern, ballet, jazz — the followings for those here seem to be the parents and friends of the people in the shows. We’re trying to change that so that people will come to a program because they’re interested in it, not just because they know someone in the show.” The Twist show at SAA involves a diverse cast including not only SAA

dance majors, but several adult pro dancers as well, including Serguei Chtyrkov, who many local aficionados will recognize from his annual Nutcracker performances. Burns, who contributes choreography, dances as well. “I’m dancing a little bit, doing some semi–serious dancing and some silly dancing,” she says. “We’re using a huge mix of different techniques, but also we just want to show what you can do with dance. It doesn’t all have to be serious.” The film Sunday, Pina, is by Academy Award–winning director Wim Wenders and is a loving eulogy to the choreographer Pina Bausch. While the immediate object of the two events of “Pina with a Twist” is to raise funds to help bring in high–profile dance companies to the Savannah Dance Festival itself, Burns says event organizers share a larger mission of building the dance scene in Savannah at the grassroots level. “We hope to bring more professional dance to town, in order to create more professional dance in town,” she says. “A lot of times great dance

performances will come to town and they’re barely attended. The hope is to change that and it will sort of circle around, and people will go to see things out of town and love that, and then see performances in Savannah.” While technically this isn’t a Savannah Arts Academy production, the high school is contributing the space and some cast members. “They’ve been unbelievably supportive by giving us this space, otherwise the show wouldn’t be happening,” says Burns, who teaches classes in conjunction with the SAA dance program. “I’ve seen the dance program here grow so much, and it would be awesome if some day the people who graduate from here can then go into a company that’s also here,” she says. “So they won’t necessarily have to leave town to get a job.” cs Twist When: Sat. Sept. 22, 7 p.m. Where: Savannah Arts Academy, 500 Washington Ave. Cost: $15 adult, $10 student Info: savannahdancefestival.org Pina When: Sun. Sept. 23, at 2, 5 & 8 p.m. Where: Muse Arts Warehouse, 703 Louisville Rd. Cost: $8 cash Info: musesavannah.org


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news & opinion


news & opinion

Fall Arts Preview

Welcome Back SCAD!

22 SEPT 19-SEPT 25, 2012 | WWW.CONNECTSAVANNAH.COM

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Oct. 5–20, Muse Arts Warehouse. The Collective Face returns with one of Tennessee Williams’ most unusual and controversial plays, the story of a wealthy New Orleans woman, Violet Venable, whose relationship with her late son was slightly less than healthy. Into the mix comes Catharine, who had the last encounter with young Sebastian.

Madea Gets a Job

Nov. 4, Martin Luther King Arena. Tyler Perry returns to Savannah with two performances of his latest Madea play, in which the irascible grandmother goes to work in a nursing home. The cast also includes Patrice Lovely, Cheryl Pepsii Riley, Chandra Currelly, Tony Grant, Danny Clay and Melonie Daniels. There are two performances on this day.

The Last Days of Judas Iscariot

$2 PB

F F O

words, 44 Plays For 44 Presidents is being performed, at the same time, by theter groups all across the country.

232-2525 119 MLK Blvd. (Next to Bergen Hall) (Must be 21 or older to purchase alcohol)

Call 354-3663 for delivery!

Oct. 18–21, Mondanaro Theatre. SCAD’s theater season opens with Stephen Adly Guirgis’ dramatic imagining of a court case in which Judas is tried for his crime, with testimony from the likes of Pontius Pilate, Mother Theresa, Sigmund Freud and the ultimate bad guy, Satan himself.

God’s Favorite

Nov. 9–18, Asbury United Methodist Church. Asbury Theatre brings us Neil Simon’s 1974 re–imagining of the biblical story of Job, set in the Long Island mansion of tycoon Joe Benjamin. AASU’s Pam Sears directs an eight–member cast.

The Weird

Oct. 18–21, Jenkins Hall Black Box. Robert Aguirre–Sacasa’s Halloween anthology opens the Armstrong Atlantic State University season. Six short macabre plays narrated by one M.T. Grave. Need more? The titles include “Insect Love” and “The Ten– Minute Play About Rosemary’s Baby.”

The Nutcracker

The Rocky Horror Show

Oct. 19–21, Bay Street Theatre. Riff, Rocky, Eddie, Magenta, Columbia and the gang make their annual Bay Street appearance in the ultimate rock ‘n’ roll Halloween musical.

Dracula

Oct. 20, Johnny Mercer Theatre. The’re more to the Columbia City Ballet than “The Nutcracker,” as you’ll see when our favorite professional South Carolina company returns with William Starrett’s seductive salute to the Transylvanian tyrant and the mortals who foolishly enter his domain.

MacBeth

Nov. 1–11, Jenkins Hall mainstage. The AASU Masquers have another modernization of Shakespeare up

Recently onstage: Bay Street Theatre’s Avenue Q (top) and the Collective Face’s What the Butler Saw.

their collective thespian sleeves, as classic tragedy meet the Rat Pack. It’s set in Vegas in the ‘60s: “A ring– a–ding interpretation of Macbeth’s bloody ascent to the landmark Copa Room throne.”

44 Plays for 44 Presidents

Nov. 1–4, Mondanaro Theater. Using comedy, drama, dance and music, SCAD participates in the National Plays for Presidents Festival, the largest election–year theater project in American history. In other

Nov. 24, Johnny Mercer Theatre. Just like Rocky Horror, St. Patrick’s Day and Paula Deen’s butter, Columbia City Ballet’s Nutcracker is something Savannah can depend on. It’s a Christmas perennial the world over; the sound of Tchaikovsky’s “Dance of the Sugar Plum Fairy” is synonymous with the holiday season. And oh, those dancing mice!

Dramarama

Nov. 27–Dec. 2, Jenkins Hall mainstage. Comic and dramatic songs, scenes, and one–act plays produced by the fall semester directing class at AASU.

Salome

Nov. 30–Dec. 9, Muse Arts Warehouse. A “parlor play freely adapted from Oscar Wilde’s Salome.” The Collective Face with a staged reading of Wilde’s interpretation of the biblical story of the Dance of the Seven Veils, and its unfortunate consequences for one John The Baptist. CS


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Fall Arts Preview: Visual arts

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Call them “the usual suspects” of Savannah’s cultural change movement. Around a table at the Sentient Bean are Molly Lieberman, the director of Loop It Up at the West Broad YMCA, Citizens Advocacy director Tom Kohler, and artist/activist Jerome Meadows. And though none of them would wear a sash denoting them as such, they are all indeed part of a recurring cabal that relentlessly works to cross boundaries and demolish old perceptions. Specifically, along with many others, these three have helped organize Journey to the Beloved Community, a series of art shows and events

inspired by Martin Luther King, Jr.’s vision of an all–inclusive, compassionate society. The journey began in July with Beth Mount’s vibrant story quilts and Lyn Bonham’s provocative photographs at the Jepson Center for the Arts; the show’s opening reception was a joyous affair that brought together people from all corners of the community. Mount returns next week with the three–day Art of Social Change conference, featuring a gallery talk with Bonham. The end of September also brings continues on p. 26


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fall arts preview: Visual arts | from page 24

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‘Team Ronald & Chris’: part of the concurrent ‘Eye to Eye’ show at Indigo Sky Community Gallery

forth the work of the folks now sitting at the table. On Thursday, Sept. 27, the kids of Loop It Up take center stage at the reception of I Am the Beloved Community: Story Quilts of Our Savannah, an unlikely fibers collaboration between Lieberman’s young charges from the YMCA and the Kayton Homes Boys & Girls Club, seniors at the Hudson Hill Golden Age Center and a group of English as a Second Language (ESL) SCAD students. Considering the disparate ages and backgrounds of the participants, the project’s quilting format was at once a practical technique and a telling metaphor. “With quilting, you have all of these pieces, and you never know how they’re going to appear, just a hunch that they’ll work well together,” says Lieberman. “As we were getting everyone together from these different places, it seemed like a clear artistic reference to the Beloved Community.” While the intent behind the project was to provide a space to explore the differences in the participants’ lives, she was surprised how their similarities quickly became the focus. “It was especially a big deal when we brought in the international students. Most of them had just come to Savannah the week before for their first quarter at SCAD from China and Mexico and Bosnia. And our Savannah is not the Savannah that someone who moves here for SCAD sees right away,” confides Lieberman, referring to the housing projects surrounding the West Broad YMCA. “Initially, their role was to just come document and take photos, but the kids were talking, the seniors were talking, and they wanted to tell how they related to this stuff, too.” The result of many afternoons of drawing and cutting and storytelling are 11 dynamic, multi–hued quilts, as well as several framed drawings depicting the brainstorming sessions. The ESL students also kept a blog of photos and writings throughout the process, compiled into a book that will be available at the reception. The quilts will hang until Dec. 16. For Lieberman, the showing of the quilts at the Jepson—a place where many of the project’s artists have never set foot—validates the uniting effect of programs like Loop It Up on Savannah’s cultural landscape. Back in 2008, as a fiber studies student at SCAD, she had no idea she’d become so invested in fostering change when she heard about what was then a volunteer opportunity to keep little hands busy after school at the West Broad YMCA. “It sounded like something I wanted continues on p. 28


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28

to do,” says the native Northeasterner. “It turned out to be exactly what I wanted to do.” After the 5 p.m. reception at the Jepson, authors Tom Kohler and Susan Earl will stage a reading of their paean to social change, Waddie Welcome and the Beloved Community. The story of Waddie Welcome, an adored Savannah citizen who made grand strides as a disabled rights activist despite being confined to a wheelchair his entire life, exemplifies

what a person can achieve when support, non–judgment and everyday love abound. Welcome’s legacy lives on in the pairs of people put together by Kohler through Citizens Advocacy as well as what Kohler calls “the continuing conversation about the art of social change.” The celebration of Beloved Community continues the following evening, Friday, Sept. 28, at Indigo Sky Gallery on the east end of the city. Eye to Eye: The Making of We marshals

the work of five heralded local artists, each who spent time observing a Citizen Advocacy relationship and interpreted their impressions through a variety of media. “This is not your standard works on the wall–type of show,” says Indigo Sky director and collage artist Jerome Meadows, who has steadfastly advocated for the revitalization of Waters Avenue. “This is an installation of a mixture of artistic methods—in some cases

things will be suspended from the ceiling, some will be audio/visual, there’s a slideshow—it’s going to give a holistic sense of what the artists have discovered about the dynamics between these teams of advocates and proteges.” Included in Eye to Eye are works by encaustic painter Christine Sajecki, photographer Jerry Harris, poet and painter Suzanne Jackson, sculptor Veronica Cabrera and Meadows’ own mixed media. While the nature of the


of the needle. The teams for the most part have not seen what the artists have been creating. Once we’re in the gallery together, that’s a rite of passage. This is the culmination. We’ll be standing there wondering, how do we move forward?” That’s the big question for these movers and shakers of community activism. Lieberman will continue her work with Loop It Up, allying with other community centers and inviting others to go through the collaborative art process, and Meadows and Kohler will keep on with their partnerships and projects. All three agree that the advancement of a local and global Beloved

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Community must be “organic, spontaneous and natural,” a balm for the political divisiveness that’s raging in the atmosphere these days. “Cultural change doesn’t happen at that level anyway,” declares Kohler. “Most of it happens inside people’s hearts. If you can get something happening inside people’s hearts, then you begin to see it in people’s minds and actions.” As that happens, expect to see many more join the line–up of Savannah’s “usual suspects.” CS

“I Am The Beloved Community: Story Quilts of Our Savannah” and the reading of Waddie Welcome and the Beloved Community by Tom Kohler and Susan Earl When: Thursday, Sept. 27, 5 p.m. reception, 6 p.m. reading Where: Jepson Center for the Arts, 207 York St. Cost: Free Eye–to–Eye: The Making of We artists’ reception When: Friday, Sept. 28, 7 p.m. Where: Indigo Sky Gallery, 915 Waters Ave. Cost: Free

29 SEPT 19-SEPT 25, 2012 | WWW.CONNECTSAVANNAH.COM

artistic process is to create alone in a studio, Meadows admits that emotional attachments were formed as the artists spent time with their subjects. “This was all very hands–on and intimate, we ate lunches together, putt–putt golf… it was in–depth, involved,” he says. “We as artists became so connected to a team, and in some cases the team so enthralled by the artist. It’s gotten personal as we’ve observed the connections within the beloved community that make it beloved.” Meadows alludes a possible “separation anxiety” now that the project is almost over. “We’re about to go through the eye

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Fall Arts Preview

visual arts calendar Through Oct. 7

Art. The gallery hop and reception are free and open to the public.

Live from Gray’s Reef: Underwater Photographs by Greg McFall. Jepson Center

October

“i” – Recent mixed media pieces by Xavier Robles de Medina. Exhibit runs through Nov. 5, reception for the artist will be Oct. 12, 6–9 pm. Gallery Espresso, 234 Bull St.

Through Oct. 7

The Total Look: The Creative Collaboration between Rudi Gernreich, Peggy Moffitt, and William Claxton. SCAD Museum of Art, 601 Turner Blvd.

Oct. 5–Feb. 10

Working South: Watercolor Portraits by Mary Whyte, through February 10, 2013. Telfair Academy

Through Oct. 14

Ivan Navarro: Heaven or Las Vegas, SCAD Museum of Art: Chilean artist’s series of floor pieces and wall sculptures formed from mirrors and neon lights with designs based on floor plans of 12 of the world’s most important skyscrapers. SCAD Museum of Art, 601 Turner Blvd.

Oct. 8–15

Free Week at the Telfair Academy

Oct. 12

Jonathan Horowitz: Your Land/ My Land: Election ’12 — Multimedia exhibit highlights political polarization in the U.S. during election season. Jepson Center

Through Nov. 2

Studio Visit: Portraits by Mark Mahaney. Pinnacle Gallery, 320 E. Liberty St.

Oct. 18

Lectures by glass artists Charlie Miner and Therman Statom, 6 pm. Jepson Center

Through Nov. 3

Jose Parla and Wendy White: Performing Painting — Artist Talk: Sept. 27, 6 p.m. Gutstein Gallery, 201 E. Broughton St.

Oct. 27 – Jan. 27

Yinka Shonibare: Addio del Passato— New works by British–born Nigerian artist. SCAD Museum of Art, 601 Turner Blvd.

Through Nov. 4

Bharti Kher — Installation explores themes of transformation and alternative realities and male and female energies in flux. SCAD Museum of Art, 601 Turner Blvd.

Through Nov. 11

Dan Winters’s America: Icons and Ingenuity — Retrospective of one of America’s most sought–after editorial photographers, his first–ever solo museum show. Jepson Center

Through Nov. 16

Wayne Gonzalez. Pei Ling Chan Gallery, 322 MLK Jr. Blvd.

Oct. 27–April 28

Work by David Miley will be at Gallery Espresso

American artists who utilize the body as primary focus. SCAD Museum of Art, 601 Turner Blvd.

texturizing techniques to give the viewer insight into his creation process. The Butcher Gallery, 19 E. Bay St.

Sept. 27

Sept. 28 – Dec. 16

Through Jan. 2

I Am The Beloved Community: Story Quilts of Our Savannah, 5 pm. Jepson Center

Through Nov. 18

Waddie Welcome and the Beloved Community Reception, 6 pm. Jepson Center

Little Black Dress — Curated by Vogue Contributing Editor Andr Leon Talley, the exhibition focuses on historic and contemporary examples of the fashion icon “the little black dress.” SCAD Museum of Art, 601 Turner Blvd

Sept. 28–Oct. 28

Sept. 28

Lynda Benglis: Figures — Four new large–scale wall hangings. SCAD Museum of Art, 601 Turner Blvd. Pose/Re–Pose: — Dialogue between works from the Walter O. Evans Collection of African American Art and contemporary African

Roque — Inspired by the graffiti– laden walls of New York, Roque uses multiple layers of paint and different

SCAD Gallery Hop — 7–8:30 p.m., various locations. Shuttles leave from reception at SCAD Museum of

Varnedoe Collection­— Extensive works collected by Savannah native and former MoMA curator. Jepson Center

Oct. 28

Reframing the Renaissance­ — 5:30 pm. Jepson Center

November

Sing Over the Bones ­— New paintings by local artist and SCAD graduate Melinda Borysevicz. Gallery Espresso, 234 Bull St.

Nov. 2–Dec. 11

Adolfo — The Butcher Gallery, 19 E. Bay St.

Nov. 3–April 28

Mary Telfair and the Grand Tour, Jepson Center


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Nov. 5

Friends of Telfair Fall Lecture: English Porcelain and Pottery, 10 am. Jepson Center

Nov. 9

Telfair Art Fair Arty Party, 6 pm. Telfair Square

Nov. 10 –11

Telfair Art Fair, Sat. 10 am–5 pm/ Sun. 12–4 pm — Local and regional artists display their works; juried art show, entertainment. Telfair Square

December

Bold Strokes — recent work by local illustrator David Miley. Gallery Espresso, 234 Bull St.

Dec. 1

Greening of the Telfair — Telfair Academy

Dec. 2

I Have Marks to Make Opening Reception, 2 pm. Jepson Center

Dec. 2–Jan. 6

I Have Marks to Make — Annual exhibition highlights therapeutic

‘Roque’ will be up at The Butcher

value of art in the community. Jepson Center

Dec. 6

Offerings of the Angels — Members’ Opening Lecture and Reception, 6 pm. Jepson Center

Dec. 7–March 30

Offerings of the Angels: Paintings and Tapestries from the Uffizi Gallery — Highlight of Telfair’s season and one of a handful of U.S. museums hosting this extremely rare opportunity to see these masterworks outside of Italy. Jepson Center

Dec. 8

Cool Yule Holiday Celebration– Italian Style! 10 am–4 pm. All Telfair Museums sites cs

Dec. 14

Feast Your Eyes — Benefit with various artists. 100 percent of The Butcher’s profits will be donated to a local food bank. Currently accepting food related pieces which will be juried for exhibition in this show. The Butcher Gallery, 19 E. Bay St. cs

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Fall Arts Preview: film

photoS: OCEAN FUTURES SOCIETY

SEPT 19-SEPT 25, 2012 | WWW.CONNECTSAVANNAH.COM

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Jean-Michel Cousteau is the eldest son of pioneering oceanographer Jacques-Yves Cousteau

special guest at this year’s Gray’s Reef Ocean Film Festival, Sept. 20–23. The four days include screenings, lectures and environmental panel discussions, all focused on the marine environment — what’s great about it, and what’s wrong with it (hint: Humans are responsible). Cousteau, who was a co–producer of the Undersea World of Jacques–Yves Cousteau series more than 40 years ago, will talk and show a selection of his films, including a just–finished biography of his father. If you had one minute to speak to the world right now, what would your message be?

Not so long ago, Jean–Michel Cousteau came to Savannah to film at Gray’s Reef National Marine Sanctuary, which is about 17 miles off the coast of Sapelo Island. “We were unpacking our truck, our diving equipment and cinematography equipment,” says the legendary underwater documentary–maker, the eldest son of pioneering ecologist Jacques–Yves Cousteau. “And one gentleman walked by and asked my team, what are you doing? We told him, ‘We are doing a show on the marine sanctuary.’

“And the guy looked at us and said ‘I didn’t know that the Marines had a sanctuary.’” At that moment, Cousteau says, it became crystal clear that education must be a major component of whatever it takes to get the hurting oceans saved. “That,” he explains, “was a kick in the butt.” The native Frenchman, 74, is the

Jean–Michel Cousteau: If you protect the ocean, you protect yourself. It’s very simple: No water, no life. Every human being, every animal, every plant, whether it’s above water or below water, is completely dependent on water. And the quality of that water is linked to the quality of life. Including our lives. And if you live anywhere along a coastline, people have a tendency to take it for granted. If you live away from the coastline, way inland, most people do not make the connection between the glass of water they drink, which comes from the ocean, or that when they go skiing, they’re skiing on the ocean. All that water is part of a one–water cycle. Ice and snow melts, it makes

little streams, which go into rivers which go to the ocean. It evaporates, and creates clouds. Those clouds are being moved with weather, with the wind, and it goes right back on top of that mountain, perfectly clean. And people? Jean–Michel Cousteau: Where we come into the picture is in between. We use that water system as a universal sewer, and as a garbage can. And garbage is something we’re very sensitive to because we can see it. But what we don’t see, we don’t relate to. Which are chemicals and heavy metals, and those are now affecting a lot of the marine life, including the marine life that we capture and put on our plates, to feed ourselves. As a result of that, we’re finding out a lot of people are being affected. To the point where you have problems with attention spans in children, thyroid problems, cancer rates, the sperm count of males is going way down. Young mothers wanting to be pregnant having much difficult time. All of that comes from mis–management of the water system. We didn’t know before. I didn’t know when I was a kid. Today, we know. So now we know what needs to be done, and we can do it, and that’s why I think this country and other countries have a very important role to play. And the fact that


Is the process reversible? Jean–Michel Cousteau: Well, if I didn’t believe that we can do something about it, I wouldn’t be speaking to you today. Sometimes I feel a little bit discouraged, but I look at it through the eyes of a 5–year–old, 10–year–old, and am I gonna let them down? No. Absolutely not. And that re–charges my batteries and I go back to work. We need to reach the young people, the future decision–makers. They will make better decisions. I’m not talking about the climate change which has happened long before we showed up on the planet. Today, our responsibility is that we are accelerating the process, and that has dramatic consequences because many species cannot adapt to the fast change. But if we can slow our impact, we can go back to the natural process. And it’s a big job. How do you do that through filmmaking? Are we just talking about education? Jean–Michel Cousteau: Ocean Futures Society, which I created after my father passed away, to honor his philosophy, we are doing three things which are all having to do with communication. We continue doing television programs, which is now spreading gigantically over the Internet. That’s mass exposure, which is what my dad was doing — and in those days, the choices were pretty limited. You had five, 10 television channels. It is pretty superficial, but at least it shows you the beauty of the ocean. It shows you some of the problems, and how we are connected to it. The second thing is education. We have programs called Ambassador of the Environment, which are reaching younger people. We have it in more and more places, in hotels, on an island, on a cruise ship and so on. We also have, as part of the education program, sustainable coral reefs. In other words, we provide different countries with the educational material that can be put in the hands of teachers and children. All of French Polynesia, the British Virgin Islands, American Samoa, all of these places are now sharing that information.

The third communication system that we use in Ocean Futures Society is diplomacy. Never point a finger, always try to have a dialogue, whether it’s with industrial representatives or government representatives. Let’s not get into politics, it doesn’t matter. As long as you can sit down with those people and have a chance to express yourself and reach the heart. And when you reach the heart, all the defense mechanism goes away. I can tell you, I would have given up a long time ago if I didn’t believe it worked. CS

Gray’s Reef Ocean Film Festival

All events are free, unless indicated Info: graysreef.noa.gov Thursday, Sept. 20 Opening Night 6:30 p.m.: Jepson Center, 207 W. York St. Film: “Turtle, the Incredible Journey” Following the film, publisher and author Frank Gromling, and Kris Williams, director of the Savannah–based Caretta Caretta Sea Turtle Research Project, discuss the fate of loggerhead turtles in the southeast and answer questions. Friday, Sept. 21, 4–10 p.m. “National Geographic in Savannah” 4–6 p.m. at Trustees Theater, 216 E. Broughton St.: A selection of short films about marine sanctuaries, ocean life and conservation. 4– 6:30 p.m. at SCAD’s Gutstein Gallery, 201 E. Broughton St.: National Geographic film producer and SCAD professor Kevin McCarey will sign copies of his new book, “Islands Under Fire, The Improbable Quest to Save the Corals of Puerto Rico” 7–10 p.m. at Trustees Theater: National Geographic producer and filmmaker Andy Mitchell screens his film “Wild Americas,” about sealife along the coastlines of North and South America. Saturday, Sept. 22 “The Cousteau Legacy” 4–6:30 p.m. at Trustees Theater: A selection of short films produced about Gray’s Reef and other National Marine Sanctuaries around the nation. Includes “Take Me to the Water, the Story of Pin Point” 4–6:30 p.m. at Gutstein Gallery Jean–Michel Cousteau will sign copies of his book, “Explore the Southeast National Marine Sanctuaries” 7–10 p.m. at Trustees Theater Cousteau will bring a wealth of stories, knowledge and film from his adventurous life to Savannah, and a selection of his films Sunday, Sept. 23 “Our Ocean’s Future” Noon – 5 p.m. at SCAD Museum of Art, 601 Turner Blvd. Local emerging filmmakers on the future for our oceans and coasts

33 SEPT 19-SEPT 25, 2012 | WWW.CONNECTSAVANNAH.COM

marine sanctuaries are being created is great, but it’s not enough. We’ve only protected maybe five percent of the ocean, which is 70 percent of the planet. We need to do better. And we are. And we will.

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Fall Arts Preview

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Sept. 21, Muse Arts Warehouse. A multiple award winner of the 2010 Venice Film Festival, this 2010 Russian drama follows two men on a mission: When Miron’s beloved wife Tanya passes away, he asks his best friend Aist to help him say goodbye to her according to the rituals of the Merja culture; they set out on a road trip thousands of miles across the boundless land, to the banks of the sacred lake where they will forever part with the body. Subtitled.

Pina

Sept. 23, Muse Arts Warehouse. Director Wim Wenders’ dance documentary/performance about avant– garde choreographer Pina Bausch, described by Psychotronic Film Society head Jim Reed (who’s sponsoring the film) as a “visually stunning movie (that) finds some of the top modern dancers in the world today performing some of her most famous works.”

Vertigo

Sept. 28, Lucas Theatre. Alfred Hitchcock’s multi–tiered 1958 masterpiece with James Stewart as private eye Scotty Ferguson, smitten with his mysterious subject, the mysterious Kim “Carlotta” Novak. Trivia: It was shot under the title From Among the Dead.

Night of the Living Dead

Sept. 28, Muse Arts Warehouse. The Psychotronic Film Society deals many hands in Savannah; under its auspices, there are periodic midnight

Above: George Romero’s zombie classic Night of the Living Dead. Below: James Stewart in a climactic scene from Alfred Hitchcock’s Vertigo.


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fall arts preview | continued from previous page

SEPT 19-SEPT 25, 2012 | WWW.CONNECTSAVANNAH.COM

35

James Dean doesn’t have suburbia on his mind in Rebel Without a Cause

horror screenings on Friday nights. Here’s George Romero’s pioneering zombie apocalypse classic in all its bloody glory.

Compliance

Oct. 7, Muse Arts Warehouse . Based on true events, Compliance is a disturbing drama about a prank caller (Pat Healy) who convinces a fast– food manager (Ann Dowd) that one of her employees is a thief, with disastrous results. The controversial film premiered at Sundance last January.

Notorious

Sept. 29. Lucas Theatre. Alfred Hitchcock’s World War II espionage tale re–teams two of the stars of Casablanca – Ingrid Bergman and Claude Rains – and the leading men to end all leading men, Cary Grant. It’s a combination of intrigue, romance and subterfuge amongst government agents and ex–Nazis in Rio de Janeiro. (To be followed by a mystery Hitchcock screening).

Rebel Without a Cause

Oct. 6, Trustees Theater. Nicholas Ray’s great 1955 melodrama stars James Dean (in the second of this three films), playing rebellious middle–class teen Jim Stark, whose dalliances with the dark side of his nature have unfortunate consequences. With Natalie Wood, Sal Mineo and Jim (Gilligan’s Island) Backus.

Clue

Oct. 20. Lucas Theatre. It’s Professor Mustard in the drawing room! This 1985 mystery/comedy, which waws not a box office hit but has achieved some sort of cult status, is based on the board game of the same name. Tim Curry leads what was, at the time anyway, an all–star cast.

Savannah Film Festival

Oct. 27–Nov. 3, downtown. A full week of screenings including major movies that haven’t even opened yet, independent features and shorts, and celebrities events and award ceremonies. The 2012 schedule hasn’t been announced – expect it soon.

The Shining

Nov. 10, Trustees Theater. Director Stanley Kubrick’s bizarre–but–classic 1980 interpretation of the Stephen King horror novel, with Jack Nicholson and Shelley Duvall. It all takes places in a remote, snowed–in Colorado hotel during the off–season ... ah, you know the story. All work and no play makes Jack a dull boy.

V/H/S

Nov. 23, Muse Arts Warehouse. From Psychotronic mastermind Jim Reed: “When a group of petty criminals is hired by a mysterious party to retrieve a rare piece of found footage from a rundown house in the middle of nowhere, they soon realize that the job isn’t going to be as easy as they thought. In the living room, a lifeless body holds court before a hub of old television sets, surrounded by stacks upon stacks of VHS tapes. As they search for the right one, they are treated to a seemingly endless number of horrifying videos, each stranger than the last.” We’re sold!

In the Family

Dec. 2, Muse Arts Warehouse. Writer, director and lead actor Patrick Wang will be in attendance for this Psychotronic–sponsored screening of his independently–released adoption drama, which the New York Times called one of the most accomplished and undersold directorial debuts this year. CS

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Blotter All cases from recent Savannah/ Chatham Police Dept. incident reports

Meth makes it to Ardsley Six people have been arrested in connection with a meth lab at 730 E. 50th St. in Ardsley Park.

A citizen called police after observing suspicious activity. Police responded to the possible burglary in progress and surrounded the residence. Within minutes, three people were in custody. Police entered the house to check for any additional persons at which time police observed what they believed to be a methamphetamine lab inside. Police maintained a perimeter around the residence and contacted the Chatham–Savannah Counter Narcotics Team (CNT). CNT agents identified the three persons found inside the house as 30–year–old Robert Trichie, 31–year–old Zefani Moss and 32–year–old Darien Pringle, all of Savannah. Based on the initial meth

lab finding, CNT Agents charged all three persons with Manufacturing Methamphetamine and Possession of a Controlled Substance within 1,000 feet of a School. CNT Agents applied for a subsequent search warrant. A week earlier CNT agents had already become acquainted with the same house residence following complaints from neighbors concerning possible drug sales there. On Friday, September 7, 2012 CNT Agents made contact with the homeowner, 30– year–old Eric Strong and a roommate, 35–year–old Christopher Hewitt, both of Savannah. Agents conducted a search of the residence resulting in the seizure of a non–active methamphetamine lab. At the time of this incident, both Strong and Hewitt were wanted by the Chatham County Sheriff ’s Office on Probation Violation charges. Both Strong and Hewitt were arrested on the outstanding warrants and not charged with any drug related charges at that time. Strong was expect to be charged

with multiple drug related fired a weapon and felonies to include Manudemanded one of facturing Methamphetthe roommates, amine and Possession of Michael Akins, 47, Controlled Substances leave the residence. within 1,000 feet of a LaRochelle– School. Funk and the secPolice also obtained ond roommate, Eric Strong, owner of house warrants for the arrest Andrew Jones, where meth lab was found of 28–year–old Candace 23, stayed in the Bazemore of Savannah in house after Akins connection with the lab. left. Police along with SWAT, Violent She was arrested at 730 East 50th Crimes Detectives, Board Of EducaStreet on Sept. 12 and charged with tion Police and the Hostage NegoManufacturing Methamphetamine tiations Team responded. The HNT and Manufacturing Methamphetbegan talking the subjects out of the amine near 1,000 Feet of a School house, while the BOE worked to get Zone. the students safely out of the area. Around 10 a.m., the SWAT team • A peaceful ending was reached made entry into the house and they after an early morning stand–off near were able to take both LaRochelle– Shuman Elementary on the Eastside. Funk and Jones into custody. Just after 5 a.m., police were disStudents from Shuman Elementary patched to 428 Goebel Avenue, in were re–routed to Savannah High reference to a disorderly person. School and never in any danger. cs There was a dispute between the three roommates living in the house. Give anonymous crime tips to Around 6:30 a.m., Kristen LaRoCrimestoppers at 234-2020 chelle–Funk, 41, brandished and


How many ice cubes would it take to put out the sun? I am five, and have been wondering about this for almost half my life now. —Rei Mordue You’re one articulate five-year-old, Rei, and plainly your mum is also no dummy. Let’s clear up some misconceptions. First, and you’ll excuse me if this seems picky, ice cubes have never been the firefighting methodology of choice. Second and more important, technically the sun isn’t on fire. What you’ve got up there is a nuclear furnace. Having started out as a huge cloud of gas and dust, the sun was condensed by gravity into a ball, its temperature rising steadily in the process. After the summer we just had, you may think you know hot. You don’t. When a gas-and-dust ball gets up to about 10 million degrees Celsius, nuclear fusion begins. That’s hot. During fusion, hydrogen atoms combine under enormous pressure and temperature to make helium and release energy in the form of heat, light, high-energy radiation, neutrinos— always with the neutrinos, the crumbs of the universe— and other miscellaneous particles. Long story short, there’s no fire in the usual sense. In fact, if you were somehow to throw an ice cube into the sun, the effect would be the opposite of what

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twice the volume of the sun’s core. Its size alone might be enough to tear the sun apart—but again, only temporarily. Gravity would consolidate the solar fragments, the temperature would rise, and the thing would re-ignite like one of those trick birthday candles. OK, so how might one permanently extinguish the sun? A nearby black hole could tear the sun apart and swallow it, as was witnessed recently by astronomers in a cataclysm so powerful it was detected 2.7 billion light-years away. It’s also possible that collision with enough non-fusible material, such as a mass of nickel-iron asteroids, could dissipate the nuclear fire and almost certainly lead to formation of a black hole. One last thing. The cosmic ice cube posited above would have one-third the mass of the sun. Given enough time to compact itself, it would eventually heat to the point of fusion and become its own little sun. A mere 0.08 solar masses is required for this purpose. So, Rei, when you’re packing snowballs this winter? Don’t make ‘em too big. cs By cecil adams

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you’re hoping. First the ice would quickly melt and turn to steam. After heating to over 5,000 degrees Celsius the steam would turn into plasma, meaning the hydrogen and oxygen atoms would fly apart and shed their electrons. The hydrogen would serve as more fuel for the nuclear reaction, and given the right conditions so would the oxygen. Another nontrivial problem is how you’d get the ice to the sun without having it melt. Comets, composed of ice, plunge sunward once in a while, but rarely arrive intact. Last summer, for example, comet C/2011 N3, fairly hefty at 132 million pounds, got within about 60,000 miles of the solar surface and vaporized completely. That’s not to say you couldn’t theoretically douse the sun with ice cubes. Suppose you could teleport a monumental quantity of ice into the heart of the sun. The sun’s core provides almost all the nuclear fusion that powers it, and bubbles along at about 15.7 million degrees Celsius. Bringing that temperature down below 10 million degrees might halt fusion briefly. Gravity pulling everything together is what led to all that heat in the first place, and that’s not going away. So after the initial temperature drop and a period of reorganization, fusion would start up again—this time with even more hydrogen to burn. But we’ll ignore that for now. How much ice would you need? It’s tricky, since the laws of Newtonian physics don’t apply in the heart of a star. Making certain bold assumptions, my assistant Una determined that chilling the sun’s core to below 10 million degrees would require an ice cube 562,000 miles on a side. If you were planning on using standard-sized cubes from your kitchen freezer, you’d need about 45 nonillion of them. That’s 45 followed by 30 zeroes. Anyway, it’s a lot of ice, more than

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news of the weird Lead Story And What Were Y-o-u Doing at Age 14? Among the students featured in Popular Science’s September list of young inventors was Fabian Fernandez-Han, 14, of Conroe, Texas, who invented a bicycle that, when pedaled, also desalinates seawater (via reverse osmosis) from replaceable 15-gallon canisters. One hour of pedaling produces 20 gallons of drinkable water. Jack Andraka, 15, from Maryland, created a test for pancreatic cancer that is demonstrably much faster and more accurate than current diagnostics (using carbon nanotubes that can be specially activated by applications of the signature pancreatic-cancer protein, Mesothelin).

Can’t Possibly Be True • School officials in Grand Island, Neb., told Hunter Spanjer that the way he signs his name violates the schools’ anti-weapons policy and that he’ll have to abandon it. Hunter is 3 1/2 years old, deaf, fluent in the language Signing Exact English, and uses a hand flourish as his unique signature (registered with SEE), except that officials say the flourish looks like Hunter is threatening with a weapon. At press time, Hunter’s parents were still negotiating with officials. • An unidentified mother of twins was photographed at the Thanksgiving Point Deli in Lehi, Utah, in September apparently toilet-training her toddlers at a table. Another patron witnessed

the mother’s bringing in what at first messages over the capital of Belarus. glance looked like booster seats, but The country’s strongman president, then the mom undid the kids’ jumpAleksandr Lukashenko, later fired two suits and placed them on the potties. A generals for their inability to prevent spokesperson for the deli (located 10 the breach of the country’s airspace. miles south of Salt Lake City) said the Perspective incident was over by the time it was reported to her, but the witness put a • Many Americans are still outraged photo on the Internet (picked up by TV that no major banking officials were stations) so that millions of punished for the malpeople could disapprove of practices that produced the mother’s parenting. the 2008 financial col• Police in Seneca Falls, lapse. However, in July, N.Y., arrested Dawn Planty Richard Eggers, age 68 in August and charged her and with an otherwiseHas SCAD with statutory rape. Planty unblemished record, started yet? came to officers’ attention was fired by Wells Fargo when she called 911 to -- only because of a ask if the dispatcher knew 49-year-old conviction the age of consent in the for attempting to rig a state because she had had laundromat machine by sex with a 15-year-old boy making a “dime” out of recently and wanted to cardboard. Wells Fargo clear her conscience. said its hands were tied by a new federal law Cuddly Geopolitics requiring dismissal of anyone with past con• (1) The Washington victions for “transacPost, reporting in August tional crimes” (aimed at the existence of a newly identity theft and money-laundering). declassified communication between a (Federal Deposit Insurance Corporacooperating Guantanamo Bay detainee tion, which administers the law, has a and his lawyer, revealed that the “highwaiver procedure, but the process is value” prisoner had, without explanacomplicated, and Wells Fargo said it tion, been rewarded with a pet kitty feared being fined if it did not termicat. (2) On July 4, two peace activists nate Eggers promptly.) who own a small advertising agency in Malmo, Sweden, pulled off their most audacious stunt yet by hiring a small plane to drop 800 teddy bears emblaThe District of Calamity II zoned with democracy-promoting

• Overtaking Washington, D.C., in Dysfunction: (1) Ever since Detroit prosecutor Kym Worthy found 11,000 “rape kits” lying idle on police shelves in 2009, she has been seeking funding to test them. In a progress report in August 2012, of the 400 kits deemed most likely to yield results, 21 “serial rapists” were identified. (Manpower to find the men is unavailable, and yet to be learned is whether any have committed additional rapes since 2009.) (2) Two hours after an early morning multiple-shooting in Detroit on Sept. 1, a 36-year-old man reported to a fire station to turn himself in. However, firefighters were unable to persuade police to come arrest him, and eventually, reported WXYZ-TV, the firefighters put the man in a taxi and sent him to a police station.

Unclear on the Concept • A 30-year-old man told Providence, R.I., told police in August that he was the victim of a sexual assault, and police are investigating. The man said he had gone to the North Main Street Spa for a professional massage and was unable to avoid a sex act administered by his “masseuse,” “Yo Yo.” (The Providence Journal did not publish his name because he claims to be the victim of a sex crime.) • In July, Labor Party councillors in the Netherlands demanded that weather forecasters be punished for incorrect predictions -- since poor weather drives down resort business, resulting in slower hiring. One hotelier


Park in East Sussex, England, began piping in music at night, including songs by the human seduction machine, Barry White (“Can’t Get Enough of Your Love, Babe”).

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Least Competent Criminals (1) The two robbers who walked into the 7-Eleven in Arlington, Va., in August neglected to coordinate in advance and thus left empty-handed. As the first man pulled a gun and demanded money, the second, tossed a firecracker on the floor, apparently to intimidate the clerk. However, it mainly scared the gunman, who dropped his pistol and ran. (2) A 40-year-old man swiped a cellphone while visiting a patient at the Kagadi Hospital in Uganda. The facility is treating the country’s Ebola virus outbreak, and the phone was in the room of an Ebola patient. Doctors urged the thief to return to the hospital for treatment. cs

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in Hoek van Holland lamented that the forecasters, ironically, were getting worse “(d)espite having more forecasting tools than ever before.” (A week before that, tourist managers in Belgium called for “less pessimistic forecasts.”) • In a Norwegian soccer match in May, player Talat Abunima was ejected for arguing with a referee who had just given him the benefit of a penalty. He was not fouled, he insisted. “(I) tripped over my own feet,” he said later. “It was unbelievably clumsy of me and ... I felt I had to speak out.” The referee first warned Abunima (a yellow card) for complaining and finally red-carded him, telling a newspaper afterward, “It was a clear penalty. The player got it all wrong.” • Sounds Like a Joke: (1) The Chattanooga Times Free Press reported in July that vandals had wrecked the pen that reptile farmer David Driver employed to confine his herd of 1,600 turtles -- and that they had all fled. (2) Apparently at their wits’ end trying to get their rare Chilean flamingos to mate, handlers at the Drusillas Zoo

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Road warriors:

Miss Shevaughn and Yuma Wray The title of Miss Shevaughn and Yuma Wray’s just–released first album is misleading. We’re From Here weaves influences from all over the place, and the album’s soulful take on traditional and non–traditional acoustic music is the result of a vagabond lifestyle, having spent a year on the road together, just the two of them and their instruments, in a little car. They’re from everywhere. “We went to 29 different states, we played 125 shows, and we met a ton of different people,” explains Erin Frisby, whose middle name happens to be Shevaughn. “We noticed that

people really responded to our music in a way ... it was new music they’d never heard before, but there was something really familiar about it.” Yuma Wray is Chris Stelloh. Both musicians are proficient on several instruments, and the Wormhole bandstand at this week’s show will be covered with guitars, mandolins, banjos and the like. An a piano. And a guest drummer (his name is Ben Tufts). Think back on the material Daniel Lanois produced for Emmylou Harris — this music is by turns ethereal, haunting, lonely, ferocious and bluesy,

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painting American landscapes in pure black and white. The harmonies are smooth and go places you wouldn’t normally expect. Frisby, born into an Arkansan musical family, started singing the high stuff, folk and gospel, as a child. She grew up in New Orleans, studied opera and sang with rock ‘n’ roll bands, and the resulting seasoned alto has a world– weary and strongly emotional feel. She is, to be sure, a great singer. We’re From Here, recorded in the couple’s Chicago basement, would have been a markedly different record had Frisby and Stelloh not embarked


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on that lengthy Kerouac journey last year. The songs, she explains, changed a lot as they road–tested them in each new town. “It’s a complex feeling, and I think that had a lot to do with the intensity of travel,” Frisby says. “It’s kind of lonely, but it’s exciting at the same time.” The music, she adds, “also has sort of a long–distance element of mine and Chris’ musical journey, throughout our entire life, tied into it. A lot of the music we grew up with, a lot of the influences that we pull from, are types of American music that are inextricably linked to our identity.” Miss Shevaughn and Yuma Wray perform at the Wormhole Wednesday, Sept. 19.

News and stuff

• The “Third Thursdays on Tybee” series picks up with a performance by the wonderful Jan Spillane, at 5 p.m. Sept. 20 at the Tybrisa/Strand roundabout. • Friday, Sept. 28 at the Sentient Bean, say hello once again to Asheville’s River Whyless. This acoustic band includes classically trained

violinist Halli Anderson and comes armed with a grab–bag of introspective, pseudo–ambient original tunes and should work out splendidly for fans of Fleet Foxes, Bon Iver and other like–minded artists. The band used to be called Do it to Julia. • General Oglethorpe and the Panhandlers, which I’m sad to report is soon to be no more, will play at “The Ancient Predators Ball,” Oct. 4 at the Jinx, with Dinosaur Feathers and Shark. “Costumes and masks encouraged.” • In conjunction with the (sold

out) Unchained Tour, Creative Coast will be open to the public from 3 to 6 p.m. Saturday, Sept. 22 with booths from various book stores, Graveface Records, Soda Shop, Foxy Loxy and others. Musicians include Anna and Chrystina (from General O & the P’s), Kellen Gray and others. @ As promised, more news about the Oct. 6 No Control Fall Festival: Confirmed bands include Triathalon, Whaleboat, Roland, Odist, Cement Stars, Cloudeater, Heyrocco and Deep Search. Start time is 5 p.m., but a venue has not been announced. cs

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Dead Yet? clockwise from top left: Hagemes, Adams, Disanza and Maher

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Savannah label, and even the guy who we play out,” Maher reports. “We’ve did the artwork lived in Savannah for got new faces showing up, and new over 10 years.” people coming up to us afterwards. The artist, Jeremy “Hush” Clark, So we’re very appreciative of all that. is known for his cover art for Kylesa New fans are always appreciated. (also based here in Savannah), Deso“That’s really what we want to do lation, and the punk ‘zine is play music, and hopeSlug and Lettuce. He lives fully somebody out there in Pennsylvania. appreciates it, and gets it, Black Tusk contriband it motivates them to utes a new original, “Iron do something.” Giants” (you can hear “We wanted to include it on the Connect Playlthem on a record so that ist, released last week on people outside of the our website), and covers southeast would get to “Fearing Your Mind,” a discover Dead Yet? and Dead Yet? song. enjoy it for themselves,” Dead Yet? does Black Jeremy “Hush” Clark did says Black Tusk’s Andrew Tusk’s “Face Driver,” and the single’s cover art Fidler. “We decided to keep a new one of their own, it all local at that point. “Blood and Oil.” Savannah is a thriving art and music Maher and vocalist Kyle Hagemes community, so let’s put something out are Savannahians; drummer Mike that is Savannah-bred.” Disanza and guitarist Chris Adams, Like so many others, music, and aka Scary, have been part of the punk/ music–making, elevates these guys metal scene for a few years. In 2010, from the day–to–day. they released Dissent the End. “We all have day jobs; this is a “Scary and Mike and I all played really fun thing to do on the side,” in a Minor Threat cover band, and says Maher. “And we take it fairly seriwe started writing our own music,” ously, and try to play out as much as Maher says. “Kyle had just moved possible. But, you know, it’s a workback here, so we asked him if he was ingman kind of band. interested. And he was! That’s kind of “Everybody seems to have dug how we started off.” Dissent the End, so we’re gonna keep There’s a record release show, feagoing until I guess people don’t like us turing both bands and the Atlanta any more. Or it’s not fun.” CS stoner sludge band Halmos, Sept. 22 at the Jinx. Black Tusk and Dead Yet? For Dead Yet?, it’s another step in With: Halmos the desired direction. “It’s definitely Where: The Jinx, 127 W. Congress St. getting better and better the more When: At 10 p.m. Saturday, Sept. 22


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19

WEDNESDAY

Bay Street Blues The Hitman (Live Music) Driftaway Cafe Chuck Courtenay (Live Music) Jazz’d Tapas Bar Ricardo & Sasha (Live Music) Kevin Barry’s Irish Pub Frank Emerson (Live Music) Live Wire Music Hall Open Jam (Live Music) Molly Maguire’s Jason Courtenay (Live Music) Rock House (Tybee) Chet (Live Music) Savannah Smiles Dueling Pianos (Live Music) Screamin’ Mimi’s Open Mic Night w/Brian Bazemore (Live Music) Warehouse Jon Lee’s Apparitions (Live Music) Sparetime Blackrune, Mumbledust (Live Music) Wild Wing Cafe Jeff Beasley (Live Music) 6 p.m. Wormhole Miss Shevaughn and Yuma Wray (Live Music)

SAT. SEPT 29 | 8 PM | $3

“A haven for indie film, live music and literary readings.”-NYT

21

Bay Street Blues The Hitman (Live Music) Blue Turtle Bistro Jackson Evans (Live Music) Jazz’d Tapas Bar Trae Gurley (Live Music) Kevin Barry’s Irish Pub Frank Emerson (Live Music) Live Wire Music Hall General Patton and the Heads of State (Live Music) Molly MacPherson’s Scottish Pub Velvet Caravan (Live Music) Molly Maguire’s Jon Lee’s Apparitions (Live Music) North Beach Grill B-Town Projects (Live Music) Rock House (Tybee) Chet (Live Music) Rocks on the Roof Jason Bible (Live Music) Ruth’s Chris Steak House Eddie Wilson (Live Music) Savannah Smiles Dueling Pianos (Live Music) Screamin’ Mimi’s Souls Harbor (Live Music) Third Thirsdays on Tybee Jan Spillane (Live Music) 5 p.m. Trader Louie’s Jude Michaels (Live Music) Tubby’s (River Street) Chuck Courtenay (Live Music) Tubby’s (Thunderbolt) Georgia Kyle & the Magical Flying Machine (Live Music) Warehouse Stan Ray (Live Music) Wild Wing Cafe Josh Wade & Friends (Live Music) Your Pie in Sandfly Lauren Lapointe (Live Music) DJ Club 51 Degrees Live DJ Congress St. Social Club DJ Blackout Crypt Pub Live DJ Foxy Loxy Cafe Vinyl Appreciation (DJ) 8 p.m. Jinx Metal Rob Pour Larry’s Live DJ Seed Eco-Lounge Live DJ SubZero Bar Salsa (DJ) Taco Abajo Live DJ

69 East Tapas Bar Gary Byrd Band (Live Music) Augie’s Pub Jon Lee & the Canebrakes (Live Music) Bayou Cafe The Magic Rocks (Live Music) Blowin’ Smoke Annie Allman (Live Music) Blue Turtle Bistro Velvet Caravan (Live Music) Coco’s (Tybee) Eric Britt (Live Music) Congress St. Social Club Bachao (Live Music) Driftaway Cafe The Accomplices (Live Music) Fat Daddy’s/Mercer’s Georgia Kyle & the Magical Flying Machine (Live Music) Island Grill Chuck Courtenay (Live Music) Jazz’d Tapas Bar Hear and Now (Live Music) Joyful Noise Cafe Ben Tucker Trio (Live Music) 8 p.m. Kevin Barry’s Irish Pub Frank Emerson (Live Music) Live Wire Music Hall Archnemesis (Live Music) Molly MacPherson’s Scottish Pub Dave Berry (Live Music) Molly Maguire’s High Velocity (Live Music) North Beach Grill Train Wrecks (Live Music) Rancho Alegre Jody Espina Trio (Live Music) Rock House (Tybee) Rock-aLicious (Live Music) Rocks on the Roof Bottles & Cans (Live Music) Ruth’s Chris Steak House Kim Polote Trio (Live Music) Savannah Smiles Dueling Pianos (Live Music) Screamin’ Mimi’s Brand 11 (Live Music) Taco Abajo TBA (Live Music) Trader Louie’s Jude Michaels (Live Music) Warehouse The Hitman (Live Music) Wild Wing Cafe Barry Johnson, Dave Landeo Band (Live Music) World of Beer Blair Crimmins (Live Music)

KARAOKE Hang Fire Karaoke McDonough’s Karaoke Rail Pub Karaoke Robin’s Nest Karaoke

DJ Club 51 Degrees Live DJ Crypt Pub Live DJ Hang Fire Bear-Like Strong Pour Larry’s Live DJ

THURSDAY

TRIVIA Hang Fire Trivia Jinx Rock & Roll Bingo Rachael’s 1190 Trivia Rail Pub Trivia Tailgate Trivia

Old TIRE SWINGERS

20

KARAOKE King’s Inn Karaoke McDonough’s Karaoke Taco Abajo Karaoke DJ Crypt Pub Live DJ Dosha Live DJ Seed Eco-Lounge Live DJ SubZero Bar Live DJ

FRIDAY

Seed Eco-Lounge Live DJ SubZero Bar Dance floor classics (DJ) KARAOKE Applebee’s (Garden City) Karaoke Bay Street Blues Karaoke Jinx Karaoke McDonough’s Karaoke Tailgate Karaoke

22

SATURDAY

17 Hundred 90 Gail Thurmond (Live Music) Piano and vocal 69 East Tapas Bar Bucky & Barry (Live Music) Blowin’ Smoke Sincerely, Iris (Live Music) Blue Turtle Bistro Ricardo & Sasha (Live Music) Congress St. Social Club Jubal Kane (Live Music) Jazz’d Tapas Bar Jon Lee & the Canebrakes (Live Music) Jinx Black Tusk, Dead Yet?, Halmos (Live Music) Kevin Barry’s Irish Pub Frank Emerson (Live Music) Live Wire Music Hall Sumilan (Live Music) Mansion on Forsyth Hear and Now (Live Music) Molly Maguire’s Blue Horizon (Live Music) North Beach Grill Wormsloew (Live Music) Overtime Sports Bar A Nickel Bag of Funk (Live Music) Randy Wood Guitars Frances Mooney & Fontanna Sunset (Live Music) Bluegrass 8 p.m. Rocks on the Roof The Magic Rocks (Live Music) Ruth’s Chris Steak House Eddie Wilson & Trae Gurley (Live Music) Savannah Smiles Dueling Pianos (Live Music) Taco Abajo TBA (Live Music) Trader Louie’s Jude Michaels (Live Music) Uncle Bubba’s 0yster House Georgia Kyle & the Magical Flying Machine (Live Music) 6:30 p.m. Warehouse Damon and The Shitkickers (Live Music) Wild Wing Cafe Mark Carter, Benton Blount (Live Music) World of Beer The Hitman (Live Music) DJ Club 51 Degrees Live DJ Crypt Pub Live DJ


SUNDAY

continues from p.44 Dosha DJ BLXXDS Electronica Hang Fire Bear-Like Strong Pour Larry’s Live DJ Rogue Water Live DJ Seed Eco-Lounge Live DJ SubZero Bar Top 40 (DJ) COMEDY Screamin’ Mimi’s The Screamin’ Comedy Revue with Phil Keeling, Steven Mayes, Brooke Cochran and others KARAOKE Bay Street Blues Karaoke McDonough’s Karaoke Tailgate Karaoke

17 Hundred 90 Gail Thurmond (Live Music) Billy’s Place Baggage Open Mic Spitfire Poetry Group w/ DJ 7 p.m. Congress St. Social Club Voodoo Soup (Live Music) Flying Fish Andrew Gill Band (Live Music) Jazz’d Tapas Bar Eric Britt (Live Music) Johnny Harris Savannah Songwriters Series (Live Music) Lauren Lapointe, Stewart Marshall, Tom Cooler, Jefferson Ross 6 p.m. Kevin Barry’s Irish Pub Frank Emerson (Live Music) Lulu’s Chocolate Bar Bill Smith & Ellen Gross (Live Music) McDonough’s Karaoke North Beach Grill The Accomplices (Live Music) Rocks on the Roof Savannah Avenue (Live Music) Warehouse Sincerely, Iris (Live Music)

24

MONDAY

Bay Street Blues Open Mic Night w/Brian Bazemore (Live Music) Island Grill Andrew James (Live Music) Kevin Barry’s Irish Pub J.J. Smith (Live Music) Live Wire Music Hall Acoustic Jam (Live Music) McDonough’s Karaoke (Mon) Molly MacPherson’s Scottish Pub Bingo Night Seed Eco-Lounge Live DJ Tailgate Open Mic Night (Live Music) Trader Louie’s Jude Michaels (Live Music)

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Dosha Latino Tuesdays (DJ) Foxy Loxy Cafe Clouds & Satellites (Live Music) Jazz’d Tapas Bar Sincerely, Iris (Live Music) Jinx Live DJ/Hip hop night Kevin Barry’s Irish Pub J.J. Smith (Live Music) Lulu’s Chocolate Bar Kevin Church (Live Music) McDonough’s Karaoke Molly MacPherson’s Scottish Pub Open Mic Night (Live Music) Rock House (Tybee) Chet (Live Music) Seed Eco-Lounge Live DJ. Sentient Bean Tongue Open Mic Night SubZero Bar Latin/salsa (DJ) Taco Abajo Lynn Ave. (Live Music) Wormhole The Ataris, Flatfoot 56, Red City Radio (Live Music)

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23

Wild Wing Cafe Thomas Claxton Band (Live Music)

45 SEPT 19-SEPT 25, 2012 | WWW.CONNECTSAVANNAH.COM

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Savannah foodie by tim rutherford | savannahfoodie@comcast.net

Good time at Sparetime

My first step into Sparetime left me somewhat taken aback by the austerity of the place. Considering its rep as the city’s premiere craft cocktail establishment, my expectations ran to walls of art and comfy chairs. Instead, I found myself pondering the vibe perched on the edge of a notthat-comfortable bar stool. Then it hit me like a 106–proof whiskey. It’s the perfect blank canvas to encourage conversation. The right style in which to enjoy the handcrafted and labor intensive drinks. The zone where music matters — without fluff and facade. Well into my first drink — a concoction of cantaloupe, Boyd & Blair vodka and a hint of mint — I realized the house tunes come from a turntable and a vinyl collection that requires more storage than the bar’s glassware. Well–played nuance, Sparetime. Well–played. My bartender Andy plays oboe with the symphony. Besides choosing great tunes for the small Monday night crowd, he also knows his liquor. He quickly discerned my lust for small-batch whiskey and poured a couple of tastes. Tonight however, was a clear liquor night for me. I groove on gins the way I relish a long B.B. King riff. I was drawn to the Ka–Kaw — featuring a housemade flavored gin, homemade tonic and lemon bitters that were, yes, made in–house. Purists would find nothing in this cocktail resembling gin and tonic. Again, I was shocked – but that’s the nature of Sparetime. I settled in and rode this Collins glass to the bottom – refreshing, fresh and courageous for breaking out of the Tanqueray box. The sight of a Neapolitan–style pizza caught my eye and I ordered one topped with marinara, fontina, Spanish chorizo, red chiles. This may well be the best little pie in town. The small menu allows dishes to be crafted and cooked to order, meaning mine arrived ridiculously hot from the oven and brimming with fresh flavors. Originally, I planned on taking half of it home. I didn’t – I ate the whole thing. Aah, but don’t fret for me. I washed

Did someone say marinara, fontina, chorizo and red chile Neapolitan pizza?

it down with yet another cocktail: a gin sling dosed with lovingly made St. George gin. This very small California distiller is known for extracting made flavors for its family of gin, vodka and absinthe. Mango and other ingredients made for a remarkably smooth companion to my spicy little pizza. Happy hour prices for these specialty cocktails are great values. Non– drinker in your party? No sweat, there are plenty of fresh mocktails to enjoy. The mood is relaxed and easy. Upstairs is often home to live music or DJs — all of which you can find info on at sparetimesavannah.com. 36 MLK Jr. Blvd.

Coffee, grapes and hops

Landmark coffeehouse The Sentient Bean on the south end of Forsyth Park is a mecca for Fair Trade and organic coffees, music and art. Now, the popular gathering spot is offering a hand–selected menu of craft beers and wines. Count on an evolving list that is off the beaten path relative to other beer bars. I am a bit put off by the wine descriptions on the website, especially saying that Viognier is “comparable to a Riesling.” Still, I applaud the new options. 13 E. Park St.

More on Leoci at Bonna Bella

Chef Roberto Leoci has set hours and penned his first menu for marshside Bonna Bella Yacht Club. Among the menu items is this tempting dish: A choice of wood–roasted Hunter Cattle pork or shredded free range chicken accompanied by Southern rice – a blend of corn, black–eyed peas and Jasmine rice. Hours will be 4 p.m. –‘til Tuesday– Friday and noon–‘til Saturday and Sunday. 2740 Livingston Ave.


Buccaneer ball is back! Where the Elite Eat (& Plunder) in Their Bare Feet Thursday • October 4 • 6-10pm

Join us for an evening of dancing, frivolity & food! Come one, come all, to the Buccaneer Ball! The Crab Shack hosts the kick off to the 8th Annual Pirate Fest, a weekend full of swashbuckling fun for all! The Buccaneer Ball boasts costume contests, grub and grog as only the Crab Shack can provide, and, of course, a bounty of pirates and wenches! This event is open to pirates and wenches over the age of 18. King and Queen will be crowned at 7:30 and will reign over the Ball and the rest of the Pirate Fest weekend festivities.

Costume prizes for Best Buccaneer & Best Wench awarded at 9pm. A bountiful feast featuring Roast Suckling Pig, Crab Doubloons, CaribBEANS, Peg Leg Chicken, Bahamian Mac & Cheese, Drunken Fruit, swords of shrimp and more. Food will be promptly presented from 6:30-8:30. Tickets are $25 in advance or $30 at the door

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Journey to the Beloved Community — Story quilts By Beth Mount, who partners with the Telfair Museum and sculptor and artist Jerome Meadows to bring this celebration of Citizen Advocacy relationship-building to town. July 19 - October 14. Jepson Center for the Arts, 207 W. York St.

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A Matched Pair — Works by Karen-Sam Norgard and Eliot Joanna Angell, artists who explore and create through sculpture, gesture, design and texture. September 14–October 12. Gallery S.P.A.C.E., 9 W. Henry St.

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Dan Winters’ America: Icons & Ingenuity — Known for his iconic photographs of celebrities, Dan Winters has won more than 100 national and international awards for his work, including the Alfred Eisenstadt Award for Magazine Photography and the First Place World Press Photo Award. He has photographed Barack Obama, Al Gore, Willie Nelson, Kate Winslet, and Sandra Bullock, among others. A fully illustrated hardbound catalogue, sponsored in part by the Telfair Academy Guild, will accompany the exhibition. Jepson Center for the Arts, Telfair Square Doing Their Part: Girl Scouts in WWII — The Mighty Eighth Air Force Museum hosts this exhibit in honor of their outstanding wartime contributions on the homefront. This temporary exhibit will be in place throughout 2012 in celebration of the Girl Scout’s 100th Anniversary. Mighty Eighth Air Force Museum, 175 Bourne Ave. , Pooler

First Friday Art Walks — First Friday Art Walks on the North End of Tybee Island continue through November. Next editions are Sept. 7, Oct. 5 and Nov. 2 from 5-8pm. Ten participating businesses will feature new art, demonstrations, refreshments and entertainment. Free and open to the public. Dragonfly Studio, 1204 Highway 80 Imagine — Art by Crisley McCarson, presented by Slate Grey Studio, is on display at Southpoint Media and features an eclectic collection of 16 pieces. Slate Grey Studio teamed up with Southpoint Media, a web development and marketing company that specializes in WordPress websites, to provide artwork that enhances the work environment. A reception will be held at Southpoint Media, free and open to the public. July 17–October 19, Monday–Friday, 9 a.m. – 5 p.m. Reception October 11, 5:30–8 p.m. Southpoint Media, 220 W. Broughton St. Suite 200 Jerome Lawrence — The artist was diagnosed in 1982 as paranoid schizophrenic, but continued to paint. Jerome literally painted himself out of the corner his illness had driven him to. His commissioned works are featured in collections around the Southeast, and he has exhibited at the High Museum of Art and

Kingdom — Recent paintings by Kelley Hagemes, who incorporates a darker side of nature with a soft and subtle sensitivity. September 1, 2012- October 1. Gallery Espresso, 234 Bull St. Let There Be Light — Lesley Manning and Melissa Schneider have combined forces to create the exhibit “Let There Be Light: Artful Incandescence” at the Jewish Educational Alliance Gallery. More than thirty works of art, all celebrating the illumination of flora, fauna and landscape, will be on view and for sale through September 30. JEA, 5111 Abercorn St., Life and Times: Contemporary Notions of Place — Painting exhibition that highlights three emerging/established artists who all deal w/ ’place and identity’. August 20–September 27. Contemporary Gallery , Betty Foy Sanders Department of Art/ Georgia Southern University, Statesboro Little Black Dress — Curated by SCAD trustee and Vogue Contributing Editor Andre Leon Talley, this exhibit opens Sept. 28 and charts the historic and contemporary significance of a singular sartorial phenomenon. Featuring approximately 80 garments from a canon of modern fashion designers, the exhibition includes contributions from

veteran designers and those of the International Best-Dressed List such as Marc Jacobs, Miuccia Prada and Renee Zellwegger. Through January 27, 2013 in Savannah at the SCAD Museum of Art. SCAD Museum of Art, 601 Turner Blvd., Miniature masterpieces — The Hospice Savannah Art Gallery is displaying miniature masterpieces during its 4th annual 5 by 7 show. Work will hang through October 18 and silent bids are being accepted now. Local artists have donated over 150 paintings, ceramics and photographs. Bids start at $33 in honor of not for profit Hospice Savannah’s 33rd year. Final bids taken during closing reception on Thursday, October 18, 2012. The public is invited. Hospice Savannah Art Gallery, 1352 Eisenhower Dr. Patch Whisky & Rodney Duran — Two artists who work with bright colors, but with very different styles. The Butcher, 19 E. Bay St. The Silent Voice: Light from the Shadows — A look into the lives of forgotten humanity taken from the book of the same name. Oct. 1 – Oct. 31. Opening reception and book signing by the author, Christopher. Thursday Oct. 4, 6–8 pmSentient Bean, 13 E. Park Ave., Widows and Orphans, the FireAunt Story — FireAunt is an Augusta-based design collective with little to no training. Except for this one guy and a girl named Hannah Banana. Now through Oct. 6. Closing reception during next Art March, October 5 from 6-9 pm Foxy Loxy Print Gallery and Cafe, 1919 Bull St. cs


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Trouble with the Curve; The Master

Fall films worth falling for Ten notable movie releases between now and the holiday season

by Matt Brunson | myeahmatt@gmail.com

I’ll go ahead and say it: More great movies are being released this fall than perhaps during any other period in film history. That’s a bold statement, but I’m prepared to back it up. To wit: Raiders of the Lost Ark is being released Sept. 18. Goldfinger and other James Bond titles come out Sept. 25, as do numerous Alfred Hitchcock classics (including Psycho and Vertigo). A slew of horror staples (Frankenstein, Dracula, The Wolf Man, etc.) on Oct. 2; E.T. The Extra– Terrestrial on Oct. 9; more Hitchcock that same day; Blade Runner on Oct. 23; the list goes on and on. To clarify, these are all Blu–ray releases. Hey, I never specified theatrical releases in my grandiloquent opening. But since you asked, let’s take a look, shall we? As is often the case this time of year – that roughly two–month

window between summer blockbusters and year–end holiday fare – the pickings are mighty slim. September offers a fifth Resident Evil flick (Resident Evil: Retribution, Sept. 14) and a Nicolas Cage thriller (Stolen, Sept. 14) that looks so similar (even in title) to Taken that Liam Neeson should beat down Cage. Speaking of Taken, October opens with that exciting film’s dubious sequel (Taken 2, Oct. 5) and ends with two even more dubious sequels (Paranormal Activity 4, Oct. 19; Silent Hill: Revelation 3D, Oct. 26). So is there anything worth a damn? Sure thing. Admittedly, I had to struggle to fill out the list, but here

are 10 films (listed chronologically) that might prove to be winners. Trouble with the Curve. Clint Eastwood stated that Gran Torino would be his last on–screen appearance and that he would solely focus on directing, yet his new film finds him once again in front of the camera while somebody else (his frequent producer, Robert Lorenz) is sitting in the director’s chair. That’s fine with me: He should excel in the role of an Atlanta Braves scout who’s about to be out to pasture by the home office. Before that happens, he and his estranged daughter (Amy Adams) head to North Carolina for what might be his final assignment. If nothing else, being out publicizing this film should keep Clint from talking to empty chairs for a while. (Sept. 21) The Master. Writer–director Paul continues on p. 50

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fall film preview | from page 49

SEPT 19-SEPT 25, 2012 | WWW.CONNECTSAVANNAH.COM

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to improving the conditions at an inner–city school. It’s tough to read this one, as the quality of inspirational films set at learning institutions tends t be all over the

Thomas Anderson’s first film since 2007’s There Will Be Blood has already been labeled “The Scientology Movie” by industry wags. It centers on a young man named Freddie Sutton (played by Tom Cruise – just kidding; Joaquin Phoenix) who gets

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involved with a vague religion (called “The Cause”) and its creator, Lancaster Dodd (Philip Seymour Hoffman). (National release Sept. 21) Looper. Joseph Gordon– Levitt has

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map. But with Gyllenhaal, Davis and the always wonderful Holly Hunter heading the cast, I’m willing to give it the benefit of the doubt. (Sept. 28) Frankenweenie. Prior to making his feature–film debut with Pee–wee’s Big Adventure, Tim Burton directed a handful of shorts, the most famous being 1982’s Vincent and 1984’s Frankenweenie. While I prefer the ode to Vincent

directs and adapts (with author Peter Dexter) this tale that’s set in Florida in 1969,

about two brothers (Efron and Matthew McConaughey) who get involved with a rube (John Cusack) sitting on death row and the nymph (Kidman) who pines away for him. (Oct. 5) Argo. Just six years ago, who could have predicted that Ben Affleck would end up transforming into one of our most exciting directors? After two knockouts (2007’s Gone Baby Gone and 2010’s The Town), he returns with this fact–based drama set during the 1979 Iranian hostage crisis when militants held 52 Americans captive in Tehran. Six people managed to escape, and it’s up to

and Christopher Walken) kidnap dogs for the reward money. But they mess with the wrong dog when they snatch a Shih Tzu belonging to a mob boss (Woody Harrelson). (Oct. 12) Killing Them Softly. Director Andrew Dominik, whose revisionist Western The Assassination of Jesse James by the Coward Robert Ford was rightly adored by critics but wrongly ignored by audiences, hopes for more universal acceptance with this drama in which a mob enforcer (Jesse James star Brad Pitt) investigates the robbery of a high–stakes poker game. (Oct. 19) Cloud Atlas. Andy and Lana (formerly Larry) Wachowski, the sibling team behind The Matrix, and Run Lola Run helmer Tom Tykwer pool their talents for this adaptation of David Mitchell’s novel about soul-

S

oftly; C already loud Atl as appeared in two exciting movies this year (The Dark Price, it Knight Rises and Premium Rush), so should be fun seeing the let’s see if he can pull off the triple live–action Frankenweenie remade play with this sci–fi yarn in which a as a stop motion–animated feature. hit man (Gordon–Levitt) learns that As before, the plot centers around a he’s been targeted for termination by boy who, with the help of elaborate his older self (Bruce Willis), who’s lab equipment, brings his dead dog been sent back 30 years to execute back to life. (Oct. 5) the rubout. This is written and The Paperboy. This has already directed by Rian Johnson, who made earned a measure of notoriety after the critical fave Brick with Gordon– film festival audiences reported on Levitt back in 2005. (Sept. 28) a scene in which Nicole Kidman Won’t Back Down. Inspired by urinates on Zac Efron. Director Lee actual events, this stars Maggie Daniels, who scored a sizable hit a Gyllenhaal and Viola Davis as two few years ago with Precious, now mothers who commit themselves

a CIA agent (Affleck) to get them safely out of the country. (Oct. 12) Seven Psychopaths. Writer–director Martin McDonagh is behind this dark comedy that will doubtless be as profane and violent as his acclaimed previous effort, In Bruges. Colin Farrell (who won a Golden Globe for In Bruges) stars as a scriptwriter whose friends (Sam Rockwell

ful connections that stretch from the 19th century through an apocalyptic future. The gargantuan cast includes Tom Hanks, Halle Berry, Susan Sarandon, Hugo Weaving, Hugh Grant and Jim Broadbent. (Oct. 26) cs


Screenshots |

by matt brunson | myeahmatt@gmail.com

CARMIKE 10

511 Stephenson Ave.

movies

353-8683

After, Finding Nemo, Last Ounce of Courage, Resident Evil, The Words, Lawless, Possesion, ParaNorman, Bourne Legacy, 2016 Obama’s America

SEPT 19-SEPT 25, 2012 | WWW.CONNECTSAVANNAH.COM

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The Intouchables, Beasts of the Southern Wild, Moonrise Kingdom, Celeste and Jesse Forever, The Words, Timothy Green

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Sparkle, Lawless, Posession, Apparition, Premium Rush, Celeste and Jesse Forever, Total Recall, Dark Knight Rises, Ted, 2016 Obama’s America

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Lawless, Posession, The Words, Finding Nemo, Resident Evil, Expendables 2, Timothy Green

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Cold Light of Day, After, Finding Nemo, Last Ounce of Courage, Resident Evil, The Words, Expendables 2, ParaNorman, Timothy Green, The Campaign, Hope Springs

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Cold Light of Day, Finding Nemo, After, Last Ounce of Courage, Resident Evil, The Words, Posession, Lawless, Expendables 2, ParaNorman, Timothy Green, The Campaign, 2016 Obama’s America

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Finding Nemo, Last Ounce of Courage, Resident Evil, Cold Light of Day, The Words, Posession, Lawless, Expendables 2, ParaNorman, Sparkle, Timothy Green, Bourne Legacy, The Campaign, Dark Knight Rises

OPENING SEPT. 21: Dredd End of Watch House at the End of the Street Trouble With the Curve Unconditional

THE INTOUCHABLES OOP

In these United States of America, it may be all about The Avengers and Avatar and Armageddon, but in the rest of the world, where subtitles aren’t viewed as a national threat but as a fact of life, there’s also been room for The Intouchables on the all–time box office champs list. A global word–of–mouth smash, this French seriocomedy has earned an astonishing $350 million, a hefty figure that has allowed it to become the highest grossing non–English–language film in history. That such a slender but admittedly agreeable movie would be the one to hold such a distinguished title seems a tad disheartening, considering all of the truly great foreign flicks that have come before it. Then again, Americans spent that same amount to go see Transformers: Dark of the Moon, so who am I – or any other stateside citizen – to criticize? It’s easy to see the feel–good appeal of The Intouchables (simply Intouchables in France), which currently ranks #80 on IMDb’s Top 250 list (just above, uh, Kurosawa’s landmark Rashomon). Based on a true story, it centers on the relationship between Philippe (Francois Cluzet), a millionaire who’s been a quadriplegic ever since a

paragliding accident, and his caretaker Driss (Omar Sy), an ex–con from the projects who reluctantly accepts the position even though he had planned on continuing to collect those welfare checks. Philippe is cultured, reserved, but not without a sense of humor; Driss is boisterous, crude, and willing to joke about anything. Philippe appreciates that Driss doesn’t pity him – if anything, Driss goes out of his way to mock his employer’s immobile condition, his love for the arts, and his taste in music (he asserts that Bach was an “18th century Barry White”) – and it’s not long before the men come to genuinely care for each other. There’s been some criticism regarding the decision of writer– directors Olivier Nakache and Eric Toledano to turn Driss into a black man (something he wasn’t in real life), but I’m inclined to think that choice was made in order to cast the popular comedian Omar Sy in the role. Still, the film’s examination of class differences is often

heavy–handed and condescending – when Driss, who shares a tiny bathroom in his slum home with a half–dozen family members, first spots the luxurious bathroom that will be his and his alone in Philippe’s house, did we really need to hear Franz Schubert’s “Ave Maria” playing in the background? Some plotting issues also threaten to undermine the goodwill generated by both the film and its characters. At one point, Philippe elects to send Driss back to the projects to tend to his family, a decision that makes no sense considering Philippe’s enormous wealth (he couldn’t have helped the family himself?) and the dead–end options available to Driss there. (If this vignette was based on fact, the real–life Philippe suddenly becomes a lot less appealing, though of course here his decision is framed as a noble one.) Thankfully, the superb lead performances hold everything together. Initially, Cluzet (known to U.S. art–house audiences for continues on p. 52


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the hit thriller Tell No One) seems to have the more difficult role, since he can only move from the neck up – his stillness requires as much attention to detail as would, say, a performer essaying the role of an ice skater. But over the course of the picture, it’s Sy who snags MVP honors (indeed, he beat Cluzet for France’s Best Actor Cesar Award). He’s strong in the dramatic moments, but he’s even better when his character is allowed to cut loose and display a skewered joie de vivre. He rises to the top even when the script tries to hold him down.

THE COLD LIGHT OF DAY

OP

It’s difficult to feel sorry for pampered Hollywood stars who make more money in an hour than most of us make in our lifetimes, but there is a pang of pity whenever a formidable talent is reduced to appearing in dreck like this. Sigourney Weaver, who last year suffered the indignity of backing up Taylor Lautner, for God’s sake, in the daft Abduction, now finds herself essaying the role of the villain in another action flick that’s nearly as dopey. As the duplicitous CIA agent Jean Carrack, she squares off against Will Shaw (Henry Cavill), who’s after a briefcase that Carrack swiped from Middle Eastern spies (we never learn the contents of the briefcase, but don’t expect a denouement worthy of Kiss Me Deadly or Pulp Fiction). The ruffians are holding Will’s family hostage, and they’ll kill the clan unless the briefcase is returned to them. Carrack isn’t about to let that happen, and with the help of her weaponry and her vehicle, she seemingly destroys half of Madrid to achieve her goal. It’s hard to tell whether Weaver is patterning her performance after Schwarzenegger’s taciturn turn in The Terminator or if she’s merely embarrassed by the whole thing, but either way, she’s woefully ineffectual. Cavill will be playing Superman in the upcoming Man of Steel, but based on his charisma–free work here, he appears to be no Christopher Reeve – or Brandon Routh, for that matter. As for the film itself, its dialogue is dull, its characters even more so, and its action sequences pack all the excitement of a Tide commercial. It seeks to emulate the Bourne films but merely ends up stillborn.

FINDING NEMO

OOO

For approximately a quarter–century, we’ve been witnessing a remarkable renaissance in the animation field, blessed with a number of toon flicks that have constantly tried to up the ante in regard to more complex storylines, richer character development and, of course, revolutionary graphics: Who Framed Roger Rabbit, Beauty and the Beast, Toy Story, Chicken Run and Spirited Away all managed to introduce viewers to something they hadn’t quite experienced before. Pixar/Disney’s Oscar– winning Finding Nemo, which has been theatrically re–released in 3–D on the eve of its Blu–ray debut, comes close to such touchstone status only in one respect: Its animation is truly stunning, awash (pun intended) in a dazzling array of colors and creating the impression of a living, breathing sea. For all its visual splendor and adult–oriented gags (nods to Psycho, Jaws and The Shining are included), Finding Nemo falls short of most Pixar films primarily because many of its characters lack depth. Unlike, say, Toy Story, where each player is beautifully delineated, too many here seem more like “types” than unique individuals. Still, it’s downright curmudgeonly to remain focused on the negatives when the rest of the picture is saturated with invention and wit. With Pixar’s hot streak ending with Cars 2, this critical and commercial smash serves as a reminder that things have generally gone swimmingly for a company that continues to set the high watermark in animated entertainment.

BEASTS OF THE SOUTHERN WILD

OOOP

Fully aware of the blasphemous nature of this statement, I nevertheless will go on record as acknowledging that I’ve always felt John Carpenter was better as a composer than as either a writer or director. His excellent scores for (among others) Assault on Precinct 13, Halloween and Escape from New York are highly effective in their relative simplicity, and it’s impossible not to respond to their hypnotic rhythms. With writer– director–composer Benh Zeitlin, it’s too early to make such a call, given that Beasts of the Southern Wild

marks his feature–film debut in all three capacities. Admittedly, I left the screening raving about the score he co–crafted with Dan Romer, but that’s not meant to take away from the lyrical script he penned with Lucy Alibar or his masterful direction of this unique movie. Belonging under the same umbrella of “magical realism” that also informed works as diverse as Amelie, Like Water for Chocolate and The Tin Drum, this new picture centers on 6– year–old Hushpuppy (Quvenzhane Wallis), a headstrong girl from the Louisiana bayou. With her mother long absent from the scene, she lives in a ramshackle home next to that of her father Wink (Dwight Henry), a man whose often harsh manner with his daughter isn’t child abuse as much as an extreme – and, given the surroundings, usually necessary – form of tough love. The poor people who populate this community are rich in spirit, so after a brutal storm (obviously Katrina) decimates the area, the survivors elect to engage in a celebration replete with booze and seafood. But Wink, who has already been succumbing to a mysterious ailment, shows no signs of getting better, and Hushpuppy’s angst over his condition is compounded by the fact that the melting polar ice caps have released an army of long–extinct aurochs (presented by this film as killer cattle) which is inexorably marching toward Hushpuppy’s terrain. This is a story of survival, of recognizing and respecting the rules of the natural world. It’s also highly imaginative, doubtless able to charge young minds more than any assembly–line Hasbro adaptation.

Premium Rush

OOOP

A movie built around a bicycle messenger is a risky venture – as an adrenaline–pumper, it sounds about as promising as Driving Miss Daisy – but writer–director David Koepp invests in our need for speed right from the first frame. Employing stylish graphics and a muscular shooting style, he immediately thrusts us into the story of Wilee (Joseph Gordon–Levitt), a New York City bike messenger who gets high off his breakneck job. Enter Bobby Monday (Michael Shannon), a corrupt cop who simply must obtain what’s inside the envelope that Wilee is presently

carrying to an unassuming shop in Chinatown. Since most of Bobby’s actions are illegal, he’s forced to provide a fake name whenever anybody asks him to identify himself. So he goes with Forrest J Ackerman. The late, great Ackerman – a childhood hero, it should be stated – was the editor of the influential magazine Famous Monsters of Filmland, and it’s just the sort of pop–culture factoid one can expect from Koepp, whose previous credits as a screenwriter include such exciting franchise–starters as Jurassic Park, Spider–Man and Mission: Impossible. But Koepp (sharing scripting duties here with John Kamps) has more on his mind than in–joke asides. Despite its A–list credentials, Premium Rush feels like a B–movie beauty, smaller in scale than its summer brethren yet outclassing most of them with giddy irreverence. Gordon–Levitt again demonstrates that he’s one of Young Hollywood’s best hopes, Shannon is terrific as a dirty cop whose quirky sense of humor remains intact even as his desperation mounts, and rising actresses Dania Ramirez and Jamie Chung excel.

THE EXPENDABLES 2

OO

A marginal improvement over the first Expendables romp, this sequel offers expanded roles for Bruce Willis and Arnold Schwarzenegger (whose appearances in the first film amounted to nothing more than cameos), casts another ‘80s action star as the villain (Jean–Claude Van Damme as ... groan ... Jean Vilain), and, perhaps in a dubious attempt to expand the audience beyond action–crazed young males, adds group newcomers in the form of a pinup heartthrob (The Hunger Games’ Liam Hemsworth) and a kick–ass woman (Nan Yu). The team’s mission is twofold: Stop Vilain from using his plutonium supply to conquer the world and exact their revenge on said villain for murdering one of their own. As the team leader and his right– hand man, Stallone and Jason Statham awkwardly exchange male– bonding barbs. One of the franchise stars appears only at the beginning, leaving audiences to wonder if he was downed by pneumonia for the rest of the shoot.


OOO

The stop–motion animated feature ParaNorman arrives courtesy of the same production company responsible for Coraline and Corpse Bride, so parents had best not take their small fry to the theater expecting to see talking cars or dancing penguins or anything else that would send the wee ones off to Dreamland with a smile on their face and a teddy bear in their arms. Instead, this PG–rated attraction is open season on any child who’s still afraid of the dark. Everyone else, though, can expect a good time from this imaginatively designed and sharply scripted tale about young Norman (voiced by The Road’s Kodi Smit–McPhee), a sensitive boy who, like Haley Joel Osment, sees dead people. This ability makes him the freak of his town, and only the equally lonely Neil (Tucker Albrizzi), the butt of endless fat jokes, wants to be his friend. But when Norman’s estranged uncle (John Goodman) warns him that Blithe Hollow will soon be destroyed by a centuries–old witch’s curse, it’s up to Norman and Neil to uncover the witch’s secret, fend off shuffling zombies, and prevent the panicky townspeople from obliterating their own community.

The Campaign

OOO

Set entirely in North Carolina but filmed entirely in Louisiana, this comedy casts Will Ferrell as Democratic congressman Cam Brady, a four–term incumbent who expects to waltz unopposed to a fifth term. But an adulterous fling has left him vulnerable, leading the powerful kingmakers the Motch brothers (John Lithgow and Dan Aykroyd) to back a challenger who could potentially win the district and thereby allow the Motches to build a Chinese sweat shop on U.S. soil. They choose Marty Huggins (Zach Galifianakis), a naive and mincing nobody. The Republican Marty hopes to win so he can genuinely serve his constituents, but it’s an uphill battle considering Cam’s experience on the campaign trail. As the dapper yet duplicitous Cam Brady, Ferrell is allowed one or two of his patented freak–out scenes but for the most part keeps his over–the–top shtick in check. Yet the real surprise

is Galifianakis, who allows us to also see the man behind the public front: a sweet, soft–spoken simpleton with a penchant for loud, tacky shirts and calendars featuring animals dressed like humans.

THE BOURNE LEGACY

OOP

Its sole, cynical purpose is to keep a franchise on life support so as to generate a few more box office dollars before the inevitable flatline. Fortunately, Tony Gilroy, who scripted the Matt Damon Bournes, has remained with the project – he’s now writer and director – and his continued involvement at least insures some sort of narrative cohesion. In between scenes introducing us to the character of covert operative Aaron Cross (Jeremy Renner), there’s much talk regarding the concurrent actions of Bourne himself. The action sequences, a vivid draw in the earlier Bourne films, run hot and cold.

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OOOP

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SEPT 19-SEPT 25, 2012 | WWW.CONNECTSAVANNAH.COM

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happenings

submit your event | email: happenings@connectsavannah.com | fax: (912) 231-9932 | 1800 E. Victory Dr., Suite 7, Savannah, GA 31404

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Happenings www.connectsavannah.com/happenings

We reserve the right to edit or cut listings because of space limitations.

Activism & Politics 13th Colony Patriots

A group of conservative political activists that meets the 13th of each month at Tubby’s restaurant, 2909 River Drive in Thunderbolt, 6:30pm to 8:30pm. We are dedicated to the preservation of the U. S. Constitution and life, liberty, and the pursuit of happiness for all Americans. See our Facebook page or call Michael or Elizabeth at 912.604.4048. All are welcome. [062712]

Drinking Liberally

An informal, left-leaning group of folks who meet to talk about politics, the economy, sports, entertainment, and anything else that pops up. Every first and third Thursday, around 7:30 p.m. at Loco’s, 301 W. Broughton St., upstairs. Come join us! DrinkingLiberally.org [062712]

Savannah Area Young Republicans

For information, visit www.savannahyoungrepublican.com or call Allison Quinn at 912-3083020. [062712]

Savannah Tea Party Monthly Meetings

First Monday of each month at B&B Burgers, 11108 Abercorn St. Social at 5:30pm. September meeting is September 10 since first Monday is Labor Day. Business meeting at 6pm. All are welcome. Please join us to make a difference concerning local, state and federal policies that affect our way of life. Contact Marolyn Overton at 912-598-7358 or Jeanne Seaver at 912-663-8728f or additional info. [070112]

Veterans for Peace Monthly Meeting

The Savannah chapter of Veterans for Peace meets upstairs at Loco’s, 301 Broughton St. at 7p.m. on the last Monday of each month. VFP is a national organization of men and women of all eras, branches of service, and duty stations that works to expose the true costs of war and to support veterans and civilian victims. 303550-1158 for more info. [072912]

Benefits Armstrong’s Office of Career Services Holds Professional Clothing Drive

Armstrong’s Office of Career Services is accepting donations for its Clothing Closet 2012 program, a campus and community-wide professional clothing drive that seeks donations of gently used professional attire—button-down shirts, men’s and women’s suits, slacks, blouses, etc. Donations are being accepted until Oct. 1. Students will be given individual career advice, resume writing instruction and a professional outfit to wear at job interviews, career fairs, internships and/or jobs. Drop off clothing at Armstrong’s alumni office, Burnett Hall, on Armstrong’s campus, OR at Grand Lake Lodge & Spa at Southbridge, 815 Southbridge Blvd., Savannah, Ga. 31405. Information: Armstrong Office of Career Services, 912.344.2563 or careers@armstrong.edu.

“Kickin’ It For Kathy” Leukemia Benefit for Kathy Burkart

Congress Street Social Club, 411 West Congress Street, hosts a benefit for Kathy Burkart, who’s been diagnosed with Acute Lymphoblastic Leukemia. Saturday, September 29, 3pm-8pm. Live music by Eric Culberson and The Train Wrecks. Rafffles, door prizes, food,

drink specials. Funds collected will help defray Kathy’s medical expenses, treatment and recovery, including an upcoming bone marrow transplant in Atlanta. Sponsored by The Soda Shop, Creepy Crawl Haunted Pub Tours of Savannah, Miller Lite, Social Club on Congress, Coastal Bank, and Six Pence Pub. Information: Katina Herrin 912-228-2434 or katinaherrin@ hotmail.com or www.facebook.com/kickinitforkathy.

11th Annual “Patrick’s Ride” Registration Now Open

Bicyclists can now register for the 11th annual Harvest of Hope Double Metric Century Bike Ride, to be held Saturday, October 6, 2012. Depart from the Curtis and Elizabeth Anderson Cancer Institute (ACI) at Memorial University Medical Center in Savannah at 6:45 a.m. and cycle 135 miles to the Augusta Marriott Convention Center in Augusta, Ga. Also known as “Patrick’s Ride,” the Harvest of Hope Double Metric Century is a fundraising bicycle ride which raises money for the annual Harvest of Hope weekend retreat for children and adults with cancer and their families. Registration: www.harvestofhoperide.com. Deadline to register and get a guaranteed jersey is July 27. Registrations after that day will be accepted, but riders are not guaranteed a jersey. The cost to register is $100 and riders are to raise a minimum of $100 by the day of the ride. Information: Lauren Grant at 912-350-1524 or grantla1@memorialhealth.com. [072212]

15th Annual Trick or Trot 5k & 10k Run

Saturday, October 27 at May Howard School on Wilmington Island. Presented by the Savannah Sunrise Rotary Club, proceeds from the event benefit four local charities and the Georgia Rotary Scholarship Program. Participants are encouraged to run in costume. Fees are $30 and $35 with an early registration discount of $5. Register online at www.active.com. Event website is www.TrickorTrot.net.

Carnival for a Cause

A benefit for Telfair Mammography Fund, at St. Joseph’s/Candler, hosted by The Olde Pink House, Sun. Sept. 23. The Fund provides free mammograms and other breast health services to local women who may not be able to afford them otherwise.Tickets may be purchased at the Olde Pink House Restaurant, 23 Abercorn Street or www.sjchs.org/foundations. Adult Tickets (ages 16+)—$100 Child Tickets (ages 4 -15)—$35 Space is limited so please purchase by September 17.

Coastal Empire Montessori Charter School Fall Celebration

Games, face painting, inflatables, rock climbing, contests, raffle, Karate Demonstration, music, food court and much more, to benefit the school. Sat. Nov 17, 11am to 4pm at the Bamboo Farms on Canebreak Road off Hwy 17 in Savannah. Cost: $10 for wrist band to jump all day, $2 admission for Adults & babies. Additional charges for raffles, food and drinks.

Dine Out to Benefit Savannah Care Center

Monday, July 9th, The Melting Pot restaurant will donate 10% of their proceeds to the Savannah Care Center when you come for dinner. Savannah Care Center is a local pregnancy resource center that provides support to women in unplanned and crisis pregnancies. For further details “like” the Savannah Care Center on Facebook or call 236-0916.

Forsyth Farmers’ Market Seeks Sponsors

Forsyth Farmers’ Market sponsors invest in a healthy community and show consideration for

the local economy. Sponsorship opportunities start at $350. Help keep food fresh and local. www.forsythfarmersmarket.com or email Kristin@forsythfarmersmarket.com for information. [091512]

ymcaofcoastalga.org or www.fleetfeetsavannah.com/heart-of-savannah. Benefiting the YMCA of Coastal Georgia.

Step Up Savannah is hosting its Third Annual College Fans Golf Tournament, Mon. Sept. 24 at Southbridge Golf Club. Lunch at 11:30am catered by Outback Steakhouse for all registered players. Shotgun start at 12:30 p.m. $400/team. Hole sponsors $100. Contact Step Up Savannah by phone at (912) 232-6747 or www.stepupsavannah.org/golfblog.

DJ’s Wanted

Golf Tournament for Step Up Savannah

Help the Hoo-Hahs 5K Walk/Run

Second annual fundraiser for this local organization raising funds for education, testing and comfort care items for women with gynecological cancers. Sat. Sept. 22 at the Savannah Trade & Convention Center, Hutchinson Island. Register or make a tax deductible donation at www.helpthehoohahs.com or through Active. com, keyword “Hoo-Hahs”.

Karma Yoga Class for Local Charities

Bikram Yoga Savannah has added a new weekly Karma Class to raise money for local charities. The Karma Class is held each Monday night during the regular 6:30 p.m. class. Students pay $5 to participate in the class, and all proceeds are donated to a local charity. A different charity is selected each month. Information: bikramyogasavannah.com or 912344-1278/912-356-8280. [072212]

Pool Players Wanted for Benefit Tournament

Amateur and experienced pool players wanted to play in the 1st Annual Pool Tournament for Literacy, benefiting the Adult Literacy Program at Royce Learning Center. Teams consist of 2 players. Team registration fee is $30. Maximum of 40 teams. Register at http://roycelearningcenter.eventbrite.com Tournament format: scotch doubles, round-robin. Includes a grand prize drawing and award to the winning team. Open to the public. Southside Billiard Club, Saturday, September 29th from 6:30pm to 10:00pm. Information: (912) 354-4047.

Raise a Racquet for the Cause Tennis Tournament

October 7, Women’s, Men’s and Mixed Doubles, Senior Men, Women and Mixed Doubles.Bacon Park and Daffin Park (seniors).$60 per player and additional $25 for additional event. Fee includes lunch, drinks, t-shirt and prizes. Proceeds from the tournament benefit the Telfair Mammography Fund at St. Joseph’s/Candler. The Fund provides free mammograms and other breast health services to LOCAL women who may not be able to afford them otherwise. To register for tournament, www.savannahtennis. com, tennislink, tournament, enter 700073812 or Raise a Raquet for the Cause.

Sage Restaurant Dinner benefiting Savannah Children’s Choir

An evening of fine food and wine pairings, a short performance by the Savannah Children’s Choir, and a silent auction. All proceeds benefit SCC. Monday, Oct. 1, 6pm at Sage Restaurant, 41 Whitaker Street. $65 per person. Tickets must be purchased in advance. www.savannahchoir.org or call Cuffy Sullivan, (912) 412-2833 or Roger Moss, (912)667-1700

YMCA Heart of Savannah 5K

Saturday, Sept. 22, 8am in Forsyth Park, Gwinnett Street and Drayton Street. Join the YMCA of Coastal Georgia for a day in the park. Come for the race and stay for the big YMCA party! Registration: $35 from Sept. 19 to Race Day; 1/4 Mile Kiddie Run FREE Website: www.

Call for Entries Audition to be a DJ for BANG! (http://www. facebook.com/bangdosha) every Saturday. See the Facebook page for BangDosha for details.

Effingham Battle of The Bands

The Effingham Chamber of Commerce is holding their Second Annual Battle of The Bands at the Third Annual Effingham Oktoberfest on Friday, Sept. 28. Bands interested in entering should send a copy of 2-3 songs along with information on the band to ricklott@effinghamcounty.com or call 912-754-3301 for more information. Top Prize is $500.

Keep Chatham Beautiful Seeks Applications for Board Members

Keep Chatham Beautiful, a newly established citizen’s beautification program for Chatham County, seeks board members who “believe in our mission and are willing to be active in their governance roles.” Representatives are sought from each of the municipalities in Chatham County. Information: David A. Nash Environmental Program Coordinator. Phone: 912-6526856. www.chathamcountyrecycles.com OR recycling.chathamcounty.org. [072212]

Savannah Beach Film Festival

Aspiring film makers, send in your short film today! Call for entries to the Savannah Beach Film Festival. Festival date: October 20. Contact sawbeth@bellsouth.net Check us out on Facebook for more information under “Savannah Beach Film Festival 2012.”

Classes, Camps & Workshops Creative Photography

Go in-depth into photography principles, aperture and shutter combinations, bracketing and composition. Spend time in the field and the classroom. You’ll need a DSLR camera, changeable lenses and a tripod, and must be able to write files to a USB drive for critiques. Tuesdays, Oct 2 - 16, and Saturdays Oct 6 and 13. To register by phone please call 912-4785551. For more information call (912)651-0942 or email christinataylor@georgiasouthern. edu Fee: $100 http://ceps.georgiasouthern. edu/conted/digital.html. Offered in Savannah by Georgia Southern’s Continuing Education program at The Coastal Georgia Center, 305 Fahm St.

Drawing I

Start your drawing practice with a clear understanding of how you see things. Explore perception and how it relates to what you put down on paper. Focus on using line, shadow and one point perspective. Thursdays, 9/20/2012 to 10/11/2012 6:30-8:30 p.m. Registration: 912-478-5551. Information: 912-651-0942 or email christinataylor@georgiasouthern.edu. Fee: $125. Offered in Savannah by Georgia Southern’s Continuing Education program at the Coastal Georgia Center, 305 Fahm St.

Photography Classes

From beginner photography to advanced post-production classes for all levels, amateur to professional. $20 per person for a two hour session with at least 5 students per class. Contact 410-251-4421 or chris@chrismorrisphotography.com. A complete list of classes and class descriptions are available at http://www.


Art Classes at the Studio School.

Learn to draw and paint under the mentorship of a working artist. Learn more at melindaborysevicz.com/the_studio_school or email: melindaborysevicz@gmail.com, 1319-B Bull Street. 912-484-6415 Fall 2012 classes begin mid-September. Youth Oil Painting and Drawing; Adult Oil Painting and Drawing; Painting, A Creative Exploration. [091012]

Art,-Music, Piano and Voice-coaching

For all age groups, beginners through advanced, classic, modern, jazz improvisation and theory. Serious inquiries only. 961-7021 or 667-1056. [062812]

Avatar® Info Hour

Are you interested in improving the world? Do you want to foster community locally and abroad? Join us every 3rd Tuesday of the month to explore the Avatar tools and learn how to live your life deliberately. Call Brie at 912-429-9981 to RSVP and for location details. http://www. theavatarcourse.com. [062812]

Beading Classes at Bead Dreamer Studio Learn jewelry-making techniques from beginner to advanced at Bead Dreamer Studio, 407A E. Montgomery Cross Rd. Call 920-6659. [062812]

Champions Training Center

Offers a variety of classes and training opportunities in mixed martial arts, jui-jitsu, judo and other disciplines for youth and adults at all levels of expertise. 525 Windsor Rd. Call 912-349-4582 or visit http://www.ctcsavannah. com/ [062812]

Coast Guard Auxiliary Boating Classes

Regular classes on boat handling, boating safety & navigation offered by the U.S. Coast Guard Auxiliary. Learn from the experts. For dates & more information, visit our web site: www.savannahaux.com or telephone Kent Shockey at 912-897-7656. [062812]

Drawing Instruction

Private and group drawing lessons by artist and former SCAD professor Karen Bradley. Call or email for details, (912)507-7138. kbillustration@mac.com [062812]

DUI Prevention Group

Offers victim impact panels for intoxicated drivers, DUI, DWI, offenders, and anyone seeking to gain knowledge about the dangers of driving impaired. A must see for teenage drivers seeking a drivers license or who have already received a license. Group meets monthly. $40/ session. Information: 912-443-0410. [062812]

English for Second Language Classes

Students of all ages are invited to learn conversational English, comprehension, vocabulary and life communication skills. Free. Thursdays at 7:30 p.m. Island Christian Church, 4601 US Highway 80 E Savannah. 912-897-3604. Contact: James Lavin or Minister John LaMaison www.islandschristian.org. [062812]

Family Law Workshop

The Mediation Center has three workshops a month to assist citizens who do not have legal representation in a family matter: divorce, legitimation, modifications of child support and/or visitation and contempt. Schedule: 1st Tuesday, 4:30-7:30pm. 2nd Monday, 2-5pm. 4th Thursday 10am-1pm. Fee:$30 to cover all documents needed to file. Register at mediationsavannah.com or 912-354-6686. [082612]

Fany’s Spanish/English Institute

Spanish is fun. Classes for adults and children are held at 15 E. Montgomery Cross Rd. Call 921-4646 or 220-6570 to register. [062812]

Feldenkrais Classes

Tuesdays 9:30 am and Wednesdays 6:00 pm at the Park South complex, 7505 Waters Ave, Bldg B Suite 8, near Waters and Eisenhower. $15 drop-in, $12 - 6 classes. For more info contact Elaine Alexander, GCFP at 912-223-7049 or elaine.alexander@ymail.com. [062812]

Group Guitar Lessons

Join us for a fun time, for group guitar lessons, at the YMCA on Whitemarsh and Tybee Islands (adults and teens only). Hands-on instruction, music theory, ear training, sight reading, ensemble playing, technique, and rhythm drills, by teacher Tim Daniel (BS in Music). 912-8979559. $20/week. [062812]

Guitar, Electric Bass & Double Bass Lessons

Instruction for all ages of beginner/intermediate students. Technique, chords, note reading, and theory. Learn songs and improvisation. Studio located 2 blocks from Daffin Park. Housecalls available. Call 401-255-6921 or email a.teixeira472@gmail.com to schedule a 1/2 price first lesson! [062812]

Guitar, Mandolin or bass guitar Lessons

Guitar, mandolin or bass guitar lessons. emphasis on theory, reading music and improvisation. Located in Ardsley Park. 912-232-5987 [062812]

Homeschool Music Classes

Music classes for homeschool students ages 8 through 18 and their parents. Classes start in August with registration in July. Classes offered in Guyton and Savannah. Go to www.CoastalEmpireMusic.com for more details. [062812]

Housing Authority Neighborhood Resource Center

The Housing Authority of Savannah hosts a series of regular classes at the Neighborhood Resource Center. 1407 Wheaton Street. Adult literacy/GED prep: Mon-Thurs, 9am-12pm & 1pm-4pm. Financial education: 4th Fri of month, 9-11am. Basic Computer training: Tues & Thurs, 1-3pm. Community Computer lab: Mon-Fri, 3-4:30pm. For more info: 912-2324232 x115 or www.savannahpha.com [062812]

Kayak Building Workshop

Build your own “skin” kayak in 7 days. November 3 - 10. Savannah Canoe & Kayak, 414 Bonaventure Rd. 912-341-9502. savannahcanoeandkayak.com

Learn to Speak Spanish

Spanish Instruction for Individuals or Groups and Spanish-English Translation and Interpretation. Classes held at The Sentient Bean, 13 E. Park Ave. An eclectic range of tools used in each session, including: hand-outs, music, visual recognition, conversation, and interactive web media. Instruction tailored to student needs. Flexible scheduling. Information and pricing: 912-541-1337. [062412]

Microsoft Excel II

Move up to an intermediate knowledge of Microsoft Excel. Formulas; functions; SUMIF Function; sorting data; applying shading through conditional formatting or Excel table style; creating macros and more. Tuesday, 9/25/2012 and Thursday, 9/27/2012 6:30-9:30 p.m. Registration: 912-478-5551. Information: 912-651-0942 or email christinataylor@georgiasouthern.edu Fee: $75. Offered in Savannah by Georgia Southern’s Continuing Education program at the Coastal Georgia Center, 305 Fahm St.

Music Lessons for All Instruments

Rody’s Music is now offering music lessons for all ages on all instruments, beginners through advanced. 7700 Abercorn St. For more information call 912-352-4666 or email kristi@ awsav.com. [051912]

Music Lessons--Multiple Instruments

Savannah Musicians Institute offers private instruction for all ages in guitar, drums, piano, bass, voice, banjo, mandolin, ukulele, flute, and woodwinds. 7041 Hodgson Memorial Dr. Info: 912-692-8055 or smisavannah@gmail.com. [062812]

New Horizons Adult Band Program

A music program for adults who played a band instrument in high school or college and would like to have the opportunity to begin playing again. Dust off your instrument every Monday night at Portman’s Music Store (Abercorn) at

6:30p.m. The cost is $30.00 per month. All ages and ability levels are welcome. Contact Pamela Kidd at 912-354-1500 for more info. [062812]

Novel Writing

Write a novel, finish the one you’ve started, revise it or pursue publishing your work. Awardwinning Savannah author offers one-on-one or small group classes and mentoring, as well as manuscript critique, ebook formatting and more. Send an email to pmasoninsavannah@ gmail.com for pricing and scheduling information. [062812]

Open Pottery Studio at Savannah’s Clay Spot

For potters with experience who want time in the studio, Choose from 4 hour time slots. Registrations are based on a monthly, bi monthly, and quarterly time commitment. Savannah’s Clay Spot, 1305 Barnard St. Information: 912-509-4647 or www.savannahsclayspot.com [062812]

Russian Language Classes

Learn to speak Russian. All experience levels welcome, beginner to expert. Call 912-7132718 for more information. [062812]

S.P.A.C.E. presents Fall Visual Arts Classes and Workshops

Savannah’s Place for Art, Culture and Education (S.P.A.C.E.) is registering students for Fall visual arts classes and workshops. Day and evening sessions are offered for children, teens and adults in all skill levels. Sessions run September 17 - October 27 & October 19 – December 14. Both sessions are held at the Department of Cultural Affairs S.P.A.C.E. studios, 9 W. Henry St. Sessions include ceramics, metals, glass, painting and drawing, children’s cartooning, a cartooning class, lapidary stone cutting for jewelry design, expanded drawing and painting classes, beginning watercolor and Raku firings. Fees include materials, studio space and more. Information and fees: www.savannahga.gov/arts or by calling (912) 651-6783.

Savannah Charlesfunders Investment Discussion Group

The Savannah Charlesfunders meet every Saturday at 8:30am to discuss stocks, bonds, and better investing. Meetings take place at Panera Bread on Bull and Broughton. Contact us at charlesfund@gmail.com for more information. [062812]

Savannah Sacred Harp Singers

Everyone that loves to sing is invited to join the Savannah Sacred Harp Singers at Faith Primitive Baptist Church, 3212 Bee Road in Savannah. All are welcome to participate or listen in on one of America’s most revered musical traditions. For more information call 912-655-0994 or visit savannahsacredharp. com. [062812]

Savannah School of Drawing and Painting

Fall classes begin in mid-September. Maximum number of students per class is 7. Private instruction available, $50/per hour. Instructor is an award-winning Portrait Artist and Medical Illustrator with a passion for creating and teaching art. See website or call for classes, times, and fees. Karen Bradley at 912-507-7138 or kbillustration@mac.com. Website: www. kbillustration.com.

Sign Language

Learn receptive and expressive skills -- fingerspelling, and basic questions, statements, and negations. Plus an introduction to the culture of the United States Deaf Community. Date: Tuesdays and Thursdays, 9/25/2012 to 10/11/2012 Registration: 912-478-5551. Information: 912-651-0942 or email christinataylor@ georgiasouthern.edu Fee: $150. Offered by Georgia Southern’s Dept of Continuing Education at the Coastal Georgia Center, 305 Fahm St., Savannah.

Singing Lessons with Anitra Opera Diva

Anitra is currently teaching the Vaccai Bel Canto technique for those interested in improv-

ing their vocal range and breathing capacity. Bel Canto carries over well as a foundation technique for different styles including opera, pop, rock and cabaret. Fridays 5.30-8-30pm, Institute of Cinematic Arts, 12 1/2 W State St Savannah, 3rd floor. 786-247-9923 www. anitraoperadiva.com [062512]

Spanish Classes

Learn Spanish for life and grow your business. Spanish courses to professionals in the Savannah area offered by Conquistador Spanish Language Institute, LLC. Classes offered in series. “Beginner Spanish for Professionals” course. Introductory price $155 + Textbook ($12.95) Instructor: Bertha E. Hernandez, M.Ed & Native Speaker. Registration: www. conquistador-spanish.com Fee: $155.00 Meets in the Keller Williams Realty Meeting Room, 329 Commercial Drive.

The Artist’s Way

A shared journey into personal creative growth through the international bestseller, The Artist’s Way by Julia Cameron. Discover or regain creative self-confidence in an atmosphere of mutual support. Utilize the Artist’s Way tools of The Morning Pages (daily journaling) and The Artist Date (a weekly excursion) plus exercises and group discussion. Fee: $150. Students must provide their own book. Mondays, 9/24/2012 to 11/12/2012 6:30-8:30pm. Registration: 912-478-5551. Information: 912-6510942 or email christinataylor@georgiasouthern. edu. Offered in Savannah by Georgia Southern’s dept of Continuing Education at the Coastal Georgia Center, 305 Fahm St.

Yoga for Couples: Toolbox for Labor & Delivery

Participants will learn a “toolbox” full of hands-on comfort measures including breathing, massage, positioning, pressure points and much more from two labor doulas. For moms and their birth companions, to prepare for labor and delivery. The class is held the last Wednesday of each month at 100 Riverview Drive, 6pm-8pm. $100 per couple. Call Ann Carroll (912) 704-7650 or e-mail her at carroll3620@ bellsouth.net. Reservations are required and space is limited. [070812]

Clubs & Organizations Avegost LARP

Live action role playing group that exists in a medieval fantasy realm. Generally meets on the second weekend of the month. Free for your first event or if you’re a non-player character. $35 fee for returning characters. Email: Kaza Ayersman, godzillaunknown@gmail.com or visit www.avegost.com [062912]

Buccaneer Region SCCA

The local chapter of the Sports Car Club of America, hosting monthly solo/autocross driving events in the Savannah area. Anyone with a safe car, insurance and a valid driver’s license is eligible to participate. Visit http://buccaneerregion.org. [062912]

Business Networking on the Islands

Small Business Professionals Islands Networking Group Meets 1st Thursday each month from 9:30-10:30 AM. Tradewinds Ice Cream & Coffee, 107 Charlotte Rd. Savannah (912) 3086768 for more info. [062912]

Chatham Sailing Club

Meets the first Friday of every month at 6:30 p.m. at Young’s Marina, 218 Wilmington Island Rd., Savannah (across fom N. Cromwell Rd.) If first Friday falls on a holiday weekend, meeting is second Friday. No boat? No sailing experience? No problem! Information: http://www. chathamsailing.org. [051912]

Drop N Circle Craft Night (formerly Stitch-N Group)

Sponsored by The Frayed Knot and Perlina. Join us every Tuesday evening 5pm-8pm for crafting. Located at 6 West State Street (behind

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chrismorrisphotography.com/photographyclasses. [082612]

| Submit your event | email: happenings@connectsavannah.com | fax: (912) 231-9932 | 1800 E. Victory Dr., Suite 7, Savannah, GA 31404

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the CVS off of Wright Square in the historic district.) Enjoy the sharing of creativity with other knitters, crocheters, beaders, spinners, felters, needle pointers. All levels of experience welcome. Come and be inspired! For more info please call 912-233-1240 or 912-441-2656. [072812]

Energy Healers

Energy Healers Meets every Monday at 6pm. Meditation and healing with energy. Discuss aromatherapy, chakra systems and more. Call 912-695-2305 for more info. http://www.meetup.com/SavannahEnergyHealers/ [062912]

Exploring The American Revolution in Savannah

Interested in exploring the role Savannah played in the American Revolution? Join likeminded people including artists, writers, teachers and historians for discussion, site exploration and creative collaboration. Meets the 1st & 3rd Thursdays at 6pm at Gallery Espresso. Email, Kathleen Thomas: exploretherevolution@gmail.com for more info. [062912]

Historic Savannah Chapter of ABWA

Meets the second Thursday of every month from 6-7:30 p.m. The cost is the price of the meal. RSVP to 660-8257. Tubby’s Tank House, 2909 River Dr., Thunderbolt. [062912]

Honor Flight Savannah

A non-profit organization dedicated to sending our area Korean War and World War II veterans to Washington DC to visit the new WWII Memorial. All expenses are paid by Honor Flight Savannah, which is not a government-supported program. They depend on donations from the community to fund their efforts. Honor Flight is seeking veterans interested in making a trip to Washington. For more info: (912) 596-1962 or www.honorflightsavannah.org [062912]

| Submit your event | email: happenings@connectsavannah.com | fax: (912) 231-9932 | 1800 E. Victory Dr., Suite 7, Savannah, GA 31404 Islands MOMSnext

For mothers of school-aged children, kindergarten through high school. Authentic community, mothering support, personal growth, practical help, and spiritual hope. Meets first & third Monday of the month, excluding holidays. Childcare is available upon request. A ministry of MOPS International. Information or registration: call 912-898-4344 or kymmccarty@ hotmail.com. http://www.mops.org/ [062912]

Islands MOPS

A Mothers of Preschoolers group that meets at the First Baptist Church of the Islands on two Wednesdays a month from 9:15-11:30am. Website/information: https://sites.google.com/ site/islandsmops/ [062912]

Knitters, Needlepoint and Crochet

Meets every Wednesday. Different locations downtown. Contact (912) 308-6768 for info. No fees. Wanna learn? Come join us! [062912]

Knittin’ Night

Knit and crochet gathering held each Tuesday evening, 5pm-8pm All skill levels welcome. Wild Fibre, 6 East Liberty Street (near Bull St.) Call for info: 912-238-0514 [063012]

Language Club--French, Spanish, German or English

Parle toi le francais? Hablas espanol? Sprechen Sie Deutsch? Speak English? Practice your French, Spanish , German or English at Cafe’ Florie’ Restaurant, 1715 Barnard St (Between 33rd and 34th. Every Sunday from 4:00 to 5:30pm. Meet people and practice your favorite language. There is a small fee for coordinator. If interested contact srn104anto@aol.com or 912-541-1337. [072712]

Low Country Turners

A club for wood-turning enthusiasts. Contact Steve Cook, 912-313-2230. [062912]

PSYCHO SUDOKU!

answers on page 61

PSYCHO SUDOKU! “Celebrity Sudoku” Solve this as you would a regular sudoku, except using the nine given letters instead of numbers. When you’re done, each row, column, and 3x3 box will contain each of the nine given letters exactly one time. In addition, one row or column will reveal, either backward or forward, the name of a celebrity. psychosudoku@ hotmail.com

Michigan State University Football! MSU Coastal Alumni Club

Gather with other MSU alums to watch football at B&D Burgers on Abercorn Street. The MSU Coastal Alumni Club meets four times to watch games during fall 2012: Sept. 15 vs. Notre Dame; Sept. 29 vs Ohio State; Oct. 20 vs. Ann Arbor; Nov. 3 vs. Nebraska. Information: www. msucoastalalumniclub.com or 248-345-4434.

Military Order of the Purple Heart Ladies Auxiliary Meets the first Saturday of the month at 1 p.m. American Legion Post 184, 1 Legion Dr. Call 786-4508. [062912]

Peacock Guild-For Writers and Book Lovers

A literary society for bibliophiles and writers. Writer’s Salon meetings held on first Tuesday and third Wednesday. Book Club meets on the third Tuesday. All meetings start at 7:30 p.m. and meet at Flannery O’Connor Childhood Home (207 E. Charlton St.). Call 233-6014 or visit Facebook group “Peacock Guild” for more info. [062912]

Philo Cafe

A weekly discussion group that meets from 7:30pm-9pm at various locations each Monday. Anyone craving some good conversation is invited to drop by. No cost. For more info, email athenapluto@yahoo.com or look up The Philo Cafe on Facebook. [063012]

Queen of Spades Card Playing Club

A new club formed to bring lovers of card games together to play games such as Spades, Hearts, Rummy, etc. We will meet every other Thursday from 7:30 to 9 p.m. at The Sentient Bean, 13. E. Park Ave. Next meeting is July 19. Children are welcome. No fee. Information: 912-660-8585. [071512]

Richmond Hill Roadies Running Club

A chartered running club of the Road Runners Association of America. Monthly training sessions and seminars. Weekly runs. Kathy Ackerman,756-5865 or Billy Tomlinson 5965965. [062912]

Rogue Phoenix Sci-Fi Fantasy Club

Members of Starfleet International and The Klingon Assault Group meet the first Sunday at 4 pm. at 5429 LaRoche Ave and the third Tuesday at Super King Buffet, 10201 Abercorn Street at 7:30 p.m. Call 308-2094, email kasak@ comcast.net or visit www.roguephoenix.org. [062912]

Safe Kids Savannah

A coalition dedicated to preventing childhood injuries, holds a meeting on the second Tuesday of every month from 11:30am-1pm. Visit www.safekidssavannah.org or call 912-3533148 for more info. [062912]

Savannah Art Association

The non-profit art association, the Southeast’s oldest, is taking applications for membership. Workshops, community programs, exhibition opportunities, and an artistic community of diverse and creative people from all ages, mediums, and skill levels. Information: 912232-7731 [062912]

Savannah Authors Autonomous Writing Group

Meets the second and fourth Tuesdays of each month, 6-8 p.m. Encourage first-class prose writing, fiction or non-fiction, through discussion, constructive criticism, instruction, exercises and examples. Location: Savannah Baptist Center, 704 Wheaton St. All are welcome, including beginners. No charge. Contact: Alice Vantrease (alicevantrease@live.com) or 912-308-3208. [091512]

Savannah Brewers’ League

Meets the first Wednesday of the month at 7:30 p.m. Call 447-0943 or visit www.hdb.org and click on Clubs, then Savannah Brewers League. Meet at Moon River Brewing Company, 21 W. Bay St. [062912]

Savannah Clemson Club

Savannah Area Clemson alumni and sup-

porters meet at various times and locations throughout the year. Saturday, September 1 at 7:00pm – Clemson vs Auburn viewing party at Satisfied (formerly Loco’s Downtown), 301 W. Broughton Street. Information: Gareth Avant at garethavant@gmail.com or 336-339-3970. [082712]

Savannah Council, Navy League of the United States

A dinner meeting the fourth Tuesday of each month (except December) at 6 p.m. at the Hunter Club. Call John Findeis at 748-7020. [062912]

Savannah Fencing Club

Beginner classes Tuesday and Thursday evenings for six weeks. $60. Some equipment provided. After completing the class, you may join the Savannah Fencing Club for $5 per month. Experienced fencers welcome. Call 429-6918 or email savannahfencing@aol.com. [062912]

Savannah Go Green

Meets most Saturdays. Green events and places. Share ways to Go Green each day! Call (912) 308-6768 to learn more. [062912]

Savannah Jaycees

Meeting/info session held the 1st Tuesday of every month at 6pm to discuss upcoming events and provide an opportunity for those interested in joining the Jaycees to learn more. Must be 21-40 years old to join. 101 Atlas St. 912-353-7700 or www.savannahjaycees.com [062912]

Savannah Kennel Club

Monthly meetings are open to the public and visitors. Meetings are held at Logan’s Roadhouse Restaurant, 11301 Abercorn St. the fourth Monday of each month, September through May. Dinner starts at 6 pm and meeting starts at 7:30pm. Guest Speakers at every meeting. For more info, call 912-238-3170 or visit www.savannahkennelclub.org [062912]

Savannah Newcomers Club

Open to women who have lived in the Savannah area for less than two years. Membership includes a monthly luncheon and program. The club hosts activities, tours and events to assist in learning about Savannah and making new friends. www.savannahnewcomers.com [062912]

Savannah Parrot Head Club

Love a laid-back lifestyle? Beach, Buffet and no dress code. Check out savannahphc.com for the events calendar or e-mail beachnit13@yahoo. com. [080312]

Savannah Sci-Fi/Fantasy Roleplaying and Gaming

Meets at Savannah State University Student Union Room 206 every Tuesday, starting September 25. The gaming will be open to Dungeon and Dragons, Star Wars, and other roleplaying games, such as Magic the Gathering. Gaming from 4:00 PM to 10:00 PM. Information: Rogue_mailto:Rogue_gothic@yahoo.com or call (912) 344-5442.

Savannah Storytellers

Meets 6-7pm every other Wednesday at Tubby’s on River Drive in Thunderbolt. The aim of Savannah Storytellers is to “talk to tell” a story or stories. We will help, encourage and instruct you in audio-recording and/or presenting your own story. Limited seating. Must have reservation. Call 912-349-4059. [091012]

Savannah Sunrise Rotary Club

Meets Thursdays from 7:30-8:30 a.m. at the Mulberry Inn. http://www.savannahsunriserotary.org. [062912]

Savannah Toastmasters

Helps improve speaking and leadership skills in a friendly and supportive environment on Mondays at 6:15 p.m. at Memorial Health University Medical Center, Conference Room C. 484-6710. [062912]

Savannah Writers Group

A gathering of writers of all levels for networking, hearing published guest speaker authors,


happenings | continued from page 56

A no-agenda gathering of the Savannah area writing community, held on the first Thursday of every month from 5:30-7:30pm. Free and open to all writers, aspiring writers, and anyone interested in writing. 21+ with valid I.D. Usually held at Abe’s on Lincoln, 17 Lincoln Street. For specifics, visit SeersuckerLive.com. [063012]

The Freedom Network

An international, leaderless network of individuals interested in finding more freedom in a less and less free world. For individualists, anarcholibertarians, social misfits, agorists, voluntarists, “permanent tourists” etc. Savannah meetings twice monthly on Thursdays at 8.30 pm. at announced location. No dues, no fees. For next meeting details email: onebornfree@yahoo.com [063012]

The Freedom Network

An international, leaderless network of individuals seeking practical methods for achieving more freedom in an unfree world, via non-political methods. For individualists, nonconformists, anarcho-libertarians, social misfits, voluntarists, conspiracy theorists, “permanent tourists” etc. Savannah meetings/discussions twice monthly on Thursdays at 8.30 pm. Discussion subjects and meeting locations will vary. No politics, no religious affiliation, no dues, no fees. For next meeting details email: onebornfree@ yahoo.com. [072212]

U.S. Coast Guard Auxiliary Flotilla

Join the volunteer organization that assists the U.S. Coast Guard. Meets the 4th Wednesday every month at 6pm at Barnes Restaurant, 5320 Waters Avenue. All ages welcomed. Prior experience and/or boat ownership not required. Information: www.savannahaux.com or telephone 912-598-7387. [063012]

Vietnam Veterans of America Chapter 671 Meets monthly at the American Legion Post 135, 1108 Bull St. Call James Crauswell at 9273356. [063012]

Woodville-Tompkins Scholarship Foundation

Meets the second Tuesday of every month (except October), 6:00 pm at Woodville-Tompkins, 151 Coach Joe Turner Street. Call 912-232-3549 or email chesteraellis@comcast.net for more information. [063012]

Dance Abeni Cultural Arts Dance Classes

Classes for multiple ages in the art of performance dance and Adult fitness dance. Styles include African, Modern, Ballet, Jazz, Tap, Contemporary, & Gospel. Classes held in the new Abeni Cultural Arts dance studio, 8400-B Abercorn St. For more information call 912-6313452 or 912-272-2797. Ask for Muriel or Darowe. E-mail: abeniculturalarts@gmail.com [062812]

Adult Ballet Class

Maxine Patterson School of Dance, 2212 Lincoln St., at 39th, is offering an Adult Ballet Class on Thursdays from 6:30-7:30. Cost is $12 per class. Join us for learning and fun. Call 234-8745 for more info. [062812]

Adult Dance and Fitness Classes

Beginner & Intermediate Ballet, Modern Dance, Barre Fusion, BarreCore Body Sculpt, and Gentle Stretch & Tone. No experience necessary for beginner ballet, barre, or stretch/tone. The Ballet School, Piccadilly Square, 10010 Abercorn. Registration/fees/information: 912-925-0903. Or www.theballetschoolsav.com [062812]

Adult Intermediate Ballet

Mondays & Wednesdays, 7 - 8pm, $12 per class or 8 classes for $90. Class meets year round.

happenings

Seersucker Live’s Happy Hour for Writers

(912) 921-2190. The Academy of Dance, 74 West Montgomery Crossroads. [062812]

Argentine Tango

Lessons Sundays 1:30-3:30pm. Doris Martin Dance Studio, 8511-h Ferguson Ave. Open to the public. Cost $3.00 per person. Wear closed toe leather soled shoes if available. For more information call 912-925-7416 or email savh_tango@ yahoo.com. [052812]

Beginners Belly Dance Classes

57

Instructed by Nicole Edge. All ages/skill levels welcome. Every Sunday, Noon-1PM, Fitness Body and Balance Studio 2127 1/2 E. Victory Dr. $15/class or $48/four. 912-596-0889 or www. cairoonthecoast.com [062812]

Beginners Belly Dancing with Cybelle

The perfect class for those with little to no dance background. Cybelle has been formally trained and has been performing for over a decade. $15/class. Tues: 7-8pm. Visit www. cybelle3.com. For info: cybelle@cybelle3.com or call 912-414-1091 Private classes are also available. Walk-ins are welcome. Synergistic Bodies, 7724 Waters Ave. [062812]

C.C. Express Dance Team

Meets every Wednesday from 6-8 p.m. at the Windsor Forest Recreation Building. Clogging or tap dance experience is necessary for this group. Call Claudia Collier at 748-0731. [062812]

Home Cookin’ Cloggers

Meet every Thursday from 6-8 p.m. at Nassau Woods Recreation Building on Dean Forest Road. No beginner classes are being held at this time, however help will be available for those interested in learning. Call Claudia Collier at 748-0731. [122911]

Irish Dance Classes

Glor na h’Eireann cultural arts studio is offering beginner to champion Irish Dance classes for ages 5 and up, Adult Step & Ceili, Strength & Flexibility, non-competitive and competition programs, workshops and camps. TCRG certified. For more info contact PrideofIrelandGA@gmail. com or 912-704-2052. [062812]

Mahogany Shades of Beauty Inc.

offers dance classes, including hip hop, modern, jazz, West African, ballet, lyrical and step, as well as modeling and acting classes. All ages and all levels are welcome. Call Mahogany at 272-8329. [062812]

Modern Dance Class

Classes for beginner and intermediate levels. Fridays 10-11:15am. Doris Martin Studio, 7360 Skidaway Rd. For more info, call Elizabeth 912354-5586. [062812]

Pole Dancing Classes

Beginners pole dance offered Wednesdays 8pm, Level II Pole Dance offered Monday 8pm, $22/1 class, $70/4 classes, pre-registration required. Learn pole dance moves and spins while getting a full body workout. Also offering Pole Fitness Classes Monday & Wednesday 11am. For more info: www.fitnessbodybalance.com or 912-3984776. Nothing comes off but your shoes. Fitness Body & Balance Studio, 2127 1/2 Victory Dr. [062812]

Salsa Savannah Dance & Lessons

Lessons Tue. & Thur. at SubZero Lounge, 109 W. Broughton St., from 7-10pm. (Free intro class at 7pm). Dancing 10-close. Drink specials during happy hours. Lessons on Sat at Salon de Baile at Noon. Visit salsasavannah.com / 912-704-8726 for info. [062812]

Savannah Dance Club

Savannah Dance Club. Shag, Swing, Cha-Cha and Line dancing. Everyone invited. Call for details on location, days and times. 912-3988784. [082912]

Savannah Shag Club

music every Wednesday, 7pm, at Doubles Lounge, 7100 Abercorn St. and every Friday, 7 pm, at American Legion Post 36, 2309 E. Victory Dr. [062812]

continues on p. 58

“Two-Card Studs”--pretty pathetic poker pairs. by matt Jones | Answers on page 61 ©2012 Jonesin’ Crosswords (editor@jonesincrosswords.com)

Across

1 Words before “friends” or “careful out there” 7 “___ Carter” (Lil Wayne album series) 10 “Don’t let your boss catch you watching this” acronym 14 Common baseball situation 15 Hua ___ (Thai beach resort) 16 Glow 17 Categorize 18 Summer hrs. in South Carolina 19 Air quality problem 20 A pair of cards reduced to a fine powder? 23 Six, to Italians 24 Make ___ of (write down) 25 Sphere in a scepter 28 A pair of cards, a few hours from now? 33 Tic-tac-toe line 34 Chinese restaurant general 35 “Video Games” singer ___ Del Rey 36 GI’s stint peeling potatoes, for example 39 Hauled in 41 Idle who performed in the 2012 Olympic closing ceremonies 42 ___ in “Oscar” 45 Wall St. worker 46 Pair of cards with unreasonable aspirations? 51 Lucy of “Elementary” 52 Singer Guthrie and street skater Eisenberg 53 “Weetzie Bat” author Francesca ___ Block 55 Pair of cards that are...a pair of cards? 60 Tara in the tabloids 62 “My Big Fat Greek Wedding” star Vardalos 63 Like many modern-day pirates 64 Start the pot 65 “Srsly?!?!” 66 Assent to the captain 67 “Naked Maja” painter 68 Prop for a ball 69 Malaria-carrying fly

Down

1 A bunch 2 Follows 3 Boston Red Sox song covered by the Dropkick Murphys 4 Chimney sweep’s grime 5 ___ Khalifa (world’s tallest building) 6 “I’d Rather Go Blind” singer ___ James 7 Popular wedding website, or what’s tied at a wedding 8 Grotesque 9 Like some security software 10 Poet Ogden ___ 11 Redundant count 12 Round ‘do 13 Move like a happy hound’s tail 21 Half-___ (coffee mix) 22 Toothpaste variety 26 Actress Russo 27 Singer Paisley 29 Certify, with “for” 30 Abbr. on a business card 31 Reply to a liar 32 Excuse 36 Totally awesome 37 Toyota hybrids, jokingly 38 Lack of cohesiveness 40 Boat with two elephants 43 Ever 44 Room for carry-ons 47 Item held by Karl Lagerfeld 48 That, in Tijuana 49 It includes the Braves and Phillies 50 Old sitcom character Dobie ___ 54 Engulfed in flames 56 Mental concoction 57 “The City ___ War” (Cobra Starship song) 58 They may get moved to the attic 59 Captain Hook’s mate 60 Disreputable newspaper 61 “Achtung Baby” co-producer Brian

SEPT 19-SEPT 25, 2012 | WWW.CONNECTSAVANNAH.COM

and writing critique in a friendly, supportive environment. Meets the second and fourth Tuesdays of the month at 7:00 PM at the Atlanta Bread Company in Twelve Oaks Shopping Center, 5500 Abercorn Street. Free and open to the public. Information: www.savannahwritersgroup.blogspot. com/group or 912-572-6251. [082612].


happenings

happenings | continued from page 57

SEPT 19-SEPT 25, 2012 | WWW.CONNECTSAVANNAH.COM

58

Events Black Creek School Museum Annual Meeting

Preserve the history of schooling in Bryan County, GA and the founding of Black Creek Elementary School. Seeking artifacts, photographs, and stories that depict the history of all schools in Bryan County/Black Creek. Meeting is September 20, 7-8 p.m. in the Bryan Country Board of Education Administration offices, 8810 U.S. Highway 280 East, Black Creek, GA 31308. Contact Vernon Sims at 912-858-2707, or Glenda Carter at ghcarter@comcast.net. www. blackcreekschoolmuseum.weebly.com

117th Air Control Squadron’s Fall Family Event Savannah River dinner cruise for past and present members of 117th Air Control Squadron. Saturday, Oct. 13, 7 pm. Arrangements have been made to accommodate members with mobility challenges. For more information, call SMSgt Bobby Tice at 912-963-6114.

Armstrong Participates in National Drug Take Back Initiative During September

Clean out cupboards and medicine cabinets of unused expired prescription drugs. Drop off prescription medication Sept. 1 - 30, 24 hours a day inside the Police Department on the Armstrong campus, 11935 Abercorn Street (corner of Arts and Library drives). Part of the National Take Back Initiative sponsored by the U.S. Department of Justice and the Drug Enforcement Administration (DEA). All drugs collected will be destroyed by the DEA. Drugs may be in or out of containers. Needles not accepted. Information: Armstrong Police 912-344-3333.

Farm a la Carte: A Mobile Farmers Market

Find them at various spots around town including Wednesdays 2:30-6:30pm at Green Truck on Habersham, Thursdays 3-5:30pm at Bethesda Farmers’ Market and Saturdays 9-1 at Forsyth Farmers Market. Sustainable meats, organic produce, local dairy and more. revivalfoods. com. [062812]

Farmer’s Market and Fleatique on Wilmington Island

Local vendors of regionally grown produce, antiques, flea market finds. Outdoor market or indoor booths. Vendors please contact us to participate! A portion of this month’s booth rental fees will be donated to the Marc Cordray Fund.. Free to attend. Booths available to rent for a fee. Cents and $ensibility, 6703 Johnny Mercer Blvd., Wilmington Island. In the parking lot or indoors. 912-659-2900. Every Saturday, 9am-1pm.

Guided Tours of the Lucas Theatre for the Arts

Learn the history of the historic Lucas Theatre, 32 Abercorn Street, on this 20-30 minute tour,

| Submit your event | email: happenings@connectsavannah.com | fax: (912) 231-9932 | 1800 E. Victory Dr., Suite 7, Savannah, GA 31404 its restoration, architectural notes and touch on the history of theatre and early cinema. $4 per person, cash or check only. Group rates for 10 or more. School trips available. Times: No reservations needed for 10:30am, 1:30pm and 2:30pm daily. Reservations available for other times. Information: 912-525-5023 or emuller@ lucastheatre.com. [062412]

Lecture/Workshop: The Elements of Change

Carolyn Guilford, nutritionist, author, wellness consultant and health advocate, understands that many barriers exist to making steps toward a better life. In this workshop Guilford will outline the steps to successful change. Monday, September 24,6pm at the Bull Street Library, first floor auditorium. Guilford works primarily with clients with heart disease, diabetes and cancer, and can be contacted at Health Restoration Consulting - Post Office Box 2814, Savannah, GA 31402. www.Healthrestoration101.com

Musicians Avaliable

We are doing 1 1/2 shows for free right now. If you need an opening musical act, please consider us. We are located on Wilmington Island. www.facebook.com/pages/The-Edgeof-Red/415364065167234?ref=hl

Prescription Drug Take-Back in September at Armstrong

September 1-30, the Armstrong Atlantic State University Police Department will participate in the National Take Back Initiative sponsored by the U.S. Department of Justice and the Drug Enforcement Administration (DEA). Drop off unwanted prescription medication 24 hours a day at the Police Department on the Armstrong campus, 11935 Abercorn Street (corner of Arts and Library drives.) This is a safe way to dispose of unused or expired prescription drugs and addresses a vital public safety and public health issue. All drugs collected will be destroyed by the DEA. Drugs may be in or out of containers. Needles not be accepted. Information: call 912-344-3222.

September is Hunger Action Month

Join America’s Second Harvest of Coastal Georgia in honoring the month of September as Hunger Action Month. Speak Out Against Hunger in September. In Coastal Georgia, one in four people are at-risk of going hungry; nearly 80,000 of those living with food insecurity are school-aged children. Suggested activties: Tour the food bank; Write a letter to the editor about local hunger; Dedicate your Facebook status to hunger issues; Share hunger facts; Conduct a food drive; Volunteer at the food bank. To learn more about local hunger relief, please call 912.236.6750 or visit www.helpendhunger.org.

Shire of Forth Castle Fighter Practice

The local chapter of the Society for Creative

Anachronism meets every Saturday at Forsyth Park for fighter practice and general hanging out. If you’re interested in re-creating the Middle Ages and Renaissance, come join us! South end of Forsyth Park, just past the Farmer’s Market. Free. www.savannahsca.org [072212]

WildLife Refuge Sightseeing and/or Lunch Cruise

Join River Street Riverboat and TR “Teddy” Roosevelt on Sunday, October 14, in conjunction with Savannah National Wildlife refuge, for an old fashioned paddleboat ride up the Savannah River to the Refuge lands. Southern style buffet lunch on board the riverboat, plus narration of the various points of interest along the River. Teddy Roosevelt will discuss his love for the outdoors and what the Refuges mean to him. Once at the Refuge lands, the Refuge staff will discuss the current Refuge management activities and answer questions. Boarding at 12:30 pm - Sailing 1-4 pm Lunch Cruise Tickets: $42.95 per Adult $21.95 per Child (ages 4-12) Children 3 & Under are free. Sightseeing Cruise Tickets: $22.95 per Adult $12.95 per Child (ages 4-12) Children 3 & Under are free. Tax and port fee will be added to ticket prices. River Street Riverboat Company, 9 East River Street. www. savannahriverboat.com

Film & Video CinemaSavannah

A film series that seeks to bring new, first-run films to Savannah including critically acclaimed foreign films and documentaries, among others. To subscribe to information about the series, including screening dates and times, email: cinesavannah@att.net [072812]

Psychotronic Film Society

Hosts weekly screenings every Wednesday, 8pm, at the Sentient Bean. Offering up a selection of films so bad they are good, cult classics and other rarities. Upcoming schedule: www. sentientbean.com and on weekends at The Muse Arts Warehouse www.musesavannah. org [062812]

October and November

Meetings in Oct. & Nov. at various fitness stores and gyms around Savannah and Chatham County. Learn how you can participate in one of the following events with Team In Training: Critz Tybee Run Fest (five different distances), Publix Georgia Marathon & Half, Inaugural Nike Women’s Half Marathon in DC, St. Anthony’s Triathlon, Rev3 Knoxville Triathlon, Spartan Adventure Race and America’s Most Beautiful Bike Ride. For more info, visit www. teamintraining.org/ga or call 912-484-2582.

Basic Zumba & Zumba Toning Classes with Mai

Mondays, Lake Mayer in the Community Center from 8:30am - 9:30am. Zumba Toning at the JEA (Jewish Educational Alliance, 5111 Abercorn St) Mondays @ 6 pm. Free for members, $5.00 for nonmembers. Basic Zumba Tues & Thurs 10-10:45am, Curves in Sav’h Mall, $3/ members, $5/Gen. Adm. Tuesdays 5:306:30pm, St. Paul CME Social Hall, 123 Brady St. $3 Per class. Weds 9:30-10:15am, Frank Murray Community Center, Wilmington Island, $3. Bring water, proper shoes and attire. Contact Mai @ 912-604-9890. [081912]

Bellydance Fusion Classes

Fusion bellydance mixes ballet, jazz and hip hop into a unique, high energy style of dance. Classes include drills and choreographies for all levels. Small classes held several days a week in downtown Savannah, and upon request. $10 per person. Contact Christa at 678-799-4772 or see [063012]

Blue Water Yoga

Community donation based classes held at the Talahi Island Community Center. Tue. & Thur. 5:45 -7:00p.m. Fri. 9:30-10:30a For info email egs5719@aol.com or find Blue Water Yoga on Facebook. [063012]

Fitness Classes at the JEA

Spin, firm it up, yoga, Pilates, water aerobics, Aquasize, senior fitness, and Zumba. Prices vary. Call for days and times. 355-8111. Jewish Educational Alliance, 5111 Abercorn St., http:// www.savj.org. [063012]

Kung Fu School: Ving Tsun

Fitness Go Green 5K Run/Walk

The Chatham County Resource Protection Commission hosts the third annual Go Green 5K Trail Run/Walk, Saturday, Oct. 13, 8:30am. Benefiting land conservation activities. Diaper Dash, Kid K, dog costume contest, music and food. Information: Debbie Burke at 651-1456 or register at fleetfeetsavannah.com/go-green.

Tai Chi Lessons in Forsyth Park

Tuesdays from 9-10am. $10 per session. North End of Forsyth Park. Contact relaxsavannah@ gmail.com with questions.

Team In Training Info Meetings in

get on to get off

Ving Tsun (Wing Chun) is the world’s fastest growing martial arts style. Uses angles and leverage to turn an attacker’s strength against them. Call Sifu Michael Sampson to learn about free trial classes 912-429-9241. 11202 White Bluff Road. Drop ins welcome. [063012]

Mommy and Baby Yoga Classes

Mondays at the Savannah Yoga Center, 1321 Bull St. Call for times and fees. 912-232-2994 or visit www.savannahyoga.com. [063012]

Pilates Classes

Daily classes for all skill levels including beginners. Private and Semi-Private classes by appointment. Momentum Pilates Studio, 8413 Suite-A Ferguson Ave. Carol Daly-Wilder, Certified Pilates Instructor. 912.238-0018. http:// savannahpilates.com. [063012]

Pregnancy Yoga

Ongoing series of 6-week sessions are held on Thursdays from 6-7:15pm at 100 Riverview Dr. Pre-natal yoga helps mothers-to-be prepare for a more mindful approach to the challenges of pregnancy, labor & delivery. Course fee: $100. Contact Ann Carroll at 912-704-7650 or ann@aikyayoga.com. [063012]

Savannah Climbing CoOp Ladies Night

Every Wednesday women climb for half price from 6pm - 10pm. $5. 302 W Victory Drive, Suite D. savannahclimbingcoop.com [091012]

Savannah Disc Golf Club

www.livelinks.com

912.544.0026 More local numbers: 1.800.777.8000 / 18+ Ahora en Español / www.interactivemale.com

Weekly events (Entry $5): Friday 5 pm - Friday Night Flights. Sat. 10am-Luck of the draw Doubles. Sat. 1pm-Handicapped League. Tom Triplett Park, Hwy 80 W, Pooler. Sun. 10 amSingles at the Sarge in Hardeeville, SC. Info: savannahdiscgolf.com or savannahdiscgolf@ gmail.com All skill levels welcome. Instruction available. [063012]


Stand-up paddleboarding lessons and tours. A great way get out on the water and to stay fit. East Coast Paddleboarding, Savannah/Tybee Island. Eastcoastpaddleboarding.com or 781267-1810 [063012]

The Yoga Room

Visit www.thesavannahyogaroom.com or call 898-0361 for a schedule of classes, times and fees. Savannah Yoga Room, 115 Charlotte Dr. [063012]

Yoga for Cancer Patients and Survivors

Free for people with cancer and cancer survivors. 6.30 p.m., Tuesdays and 12:45 p.m., Thursdays, FitnessOne, 3rd floor of the Center for Advanced Medicine, Memorial University Medical Center. Call 912-350-9031. [072912]

Zumba Fitness (R) Classes with April

Mondays @ 5:30 and Thursdays @ 6:30. Nonstop Fitness in Sandfly, 8511 Ferguson Ave. Just $5 for nonmembers. Call 912-349-4902 for more info. [063012]

Zumba Fitness and Toning Classes with Anne

Lake Mayer Community Center, 1850 E Montgomery Crossroads. Toning class is Tuesdays, 7-8 pm. Bring 1 or 2 lb. weights. Standard Zumba is Wednesdays, 7pm-8pm. Both classes are $5 per session, Free if you bring a friend. (912) 596-1952. [8-3-12]

Gay AA Meeting

True Colors AA Group, a gay and lesbian AA meeting that welcomes all alcoholics, meets Sundays at 7:30pm, Wednesdays at 7:30pm and Thursdays at 7:00 pm at 307 E Harris St, top floor. [062812]

Georgia Equality Savannah

The local chapter of Georgia’s largest gay rights group. 104 W. 38th St. 912-547-6263. [062812]

Savannah Pride, Inc.

Meets second Tuesday of every month at 7 p.m. at the FCN office located at 307 E. Harris St., 2nd floor. SPs mission of unity through diversity, and social awareness has helped promote the well-being of the LGBT community in the South, and organizes the annual Savannah Pride Festival. Call 912-288-7863 or email heather@savpride.com. [062812]

Stand Out Youth

A Gay, Lesbian, Bisexual, Transgender and Questioning youth organization. Meets every Friday at 7 p.m. at the FCN building located at 307 E. Harris St. Call 657-1966, email info@ standoutyouth.org or visit www.standoutyouth. org. [062812]

What Makes A Family

A children’s therapy group for children of GLBT parents. Groups range in age from 10 to 18 and are held twice a month. Call 352-2611. [062812]

Health

First City Network Board Meeting

Free hearing & speech screening

the new

King’s inn

Hearing: Every Thurs. 9-11 a.m. Speech: 1st Thurs. of each month. Savannah Speech & Hearing Center, 1206 E. 66th Street. Call 355-4601. www.savannahspeechandhearing. org [062812]

Ladies exotic

entertainers tueS, thuRS & Sat 9pM-3aM

karaoke

Mon, wed, FRi Mon-Sat 1pM-3aM

2729 Skidaway Rd 354-9161 (next to aMF VictoRy LaneS)

Alcoholics Anonymous

If you want or need to stop drinking, AA can help. Meetings daily throughout the Savannah area. Check www.SavannahAA.com for meeting locations and times, or call 24 hrs 912-3563688 for information. [062812]

Childbirth course for Expecting Parents with Busy Schedules

St. Joseph’s/Candler offers a special childbirth course, The Weekender, on September 29 & 30. For expectant parents with busy schedules or time constraints. Classes will be held at Candler Hospital. A $70 fee is charged. For more information and to register, call CareCall at 912-819-3368 or 800-501-4054 or online, www. sjchs.org. There are also online classes available at http://www.sjchs.org/telfairbirthplace. Community Health Mission offers free healthcare classes in conjunction with a Free/Low cost medical home. Call Michelle @ 692-1451 ext.109 for times, dates & more info.

Health Care for Uninsured People

The center, located at 1302 Drayton, is open Monday through Friday from 8:30 AM to 3:30 PM. For information or to make an appointment, call 912-443-9409. [062812]

Hypnobirthing

Teaches the mom and her birth partner to use her natural instincts, trust her body, release emotions and facilitate relaxation during labor and delivery. The series of five classes are held on Monday evenings starting at 6 PM at 100 Riverview Drive. Reservations are required. Private classesavailable. Call Ann Carroll at (912) 704-7650 to verify dates and space availability or e-mail her at carroll3620@bellsouth. net. [070812]

La Leche League of Savannah

Mothers wishing to find out more about breastfeeding are invited to attend a meeting on the first Thursday of every month at 10am. La Leche League of Savannah is a breastfeeding support group for new and expectant mothers. 897-9544, www.lllusa.org/web/SavannahGA. html. [062812]

Living Smart Fitness Club

An exercise program to encourage healthy lifestyle changes offered by St. Joseph’s/ Candler African-American Health Information and Resource Center. Mondays, Tuesdays, and Wednesdays. On Mondays and Wednesdays the classes are held at the John. S. Delaware Center from 6:00 PM to 7:15 PM. On Tuesdays from 5:30 PM to 7:00 PM, the classes are held at the center on 1910 Abercorn Street. Zumba (Tuesdays). Hip-Hop low impact aerobics with cardio and strengthening exercises. (Mondays & Wednesdays). Information: 912-447-6605. [062812]

St. Mary’s Health Center is open for primary health for the uninsured of Chatham County.

continues on p. 60

savannah’s premier adult playground! always hiring!

Savannah’s

Sexiest

Savannah Yoga Center presents “Celebrating the Equinox: Balancing the Light and Dark through the practice of yoga with a Yin Yang Yoga Workshop.” 1pm Sat,, Sept. 22, 1319 Bull Street. Autumnal Equionx signifies a shift in emphasis from outward expression and achievement to inner reflection and contemplation. Restore balance to the body and mind through a yin and yang practice of asana, pranayama, and meditation. Fee: $25.Registration: savannahyoga.com/events/yin-yang-yogaworkshop-with-dawn-tanis/.

Free Healthcare Classes

Gay & Lesbian Meets the first Monday at 6:30 p.m. at FCN’s office, 307 E. Harris St., 2nd floor. 236-CITY or www.firstcitynetwork.org. [0622812]

“Celebrating the Equinox” Yin Yang Yoga Workshop

no cover with this ad

$3 domestics & $4 coronas daily

mon-Fri 2-4-1 wells (4-7) new laser light show! ladies free all day, every day mon & thurs - no cover For military tues - 2-4-1 wells (4-12) wed - $1 draFts (8-12) $1 draFts For military all day!

savgentlemensclub.com the savannah gentlemen’s club 325 e. montgomery cross rd

912-920-9800 4pm-3am 6 days a week!

MON NIGHT FOOTBALL 2 for 1 appetizers; 5 for 15 Bud/ Bud Light buckets TUES NIGHT: 2 for 1 VIPs; 5 for $15 Miller Light buckets WED NIGHT $8 top shelf margaritas THURS NIGHT 5 for $15 Bud/Bud Light buckets FRI NIGHT $8 Jager bombs $6.95 10 wingsSATURDAY and a pitcher $12 LUNCH SAT NIGHT SPECIAL 5 for $15 Miller Light buckets SUNDAY NIGHT 10 wings and a pitcher $15 12 N. LATHROP AVE. | 233-6930 | NOW HIRING CLASSY ENTERTAINERS Turn right @ the Great Dane statue on Bay St.

happenings

Stand-Up Paddleboarding

| Submit your event | email: happenings@connectsavannah.com | fax: (912) 231-9932 | 1800 E. Victory Dr., Suite 7, Savannah, GA 31404

59 SEPT 19-SEPT 25, 2012 | WWW.CONNECTSAVANNAH.COM

happenings | continued from page 58


happenings SEPT 19-SEPT 25, 2012 | WWW.CONNECTSAVANNAH.COM

60

Free will astrology

happenings | continued from page 59

by Rob brezsny | beautyandtruth@freewillastrology.com

Osteoarthritis Educational Seminar

ARIES

(March 21–April 19) For every trillion dollars the U.S. government spends on the military, it creates about 11,000 jobs. That same expenditure, if directed toward education, creates 27,000 jobs. Personally, I’d rather have the taxes I pay go to teachers than soldiers –– especially in light of the fact that the U.S. spends almost as much money on its military as all the other nations in the world combined spend on theirs. I suggest that in the coming months you make a metaphorically similar move, Aries. Devote more of your time and energy and resources to learning, and less to fighting. Ironically, doing that will ultimately diminish the fighting you have to do. As you get more training and wisdom, you’ll become more skilled at avoiding unnecessary conflicts.

TAURUS

(April 20–May 20) Now is an excellent time to cull, prune, and winnow. I urge you to look for opportunities to pare down and refine. On the other hand, don’t go too far. Be careful that you don’t truncate, desecrate, or annihilate. It’s not an easy assignment, Taurus. You will have to be skeptical about any temptation you might have to go overboard with your skepticism. You will have to be cautious not to allow your judicious discernment to devolve into destructive distrust.

GEMINI

(May 21–June 20) Why did people start drinking coffee? Who figured out that roasting and boiling the bitter beans of a certain shrub produced a stimulating beverage? Historians don’t know for sure. One old tale proposes that a ninth–century Ethiopian shepherd discovered the secret. After his goats nibbled on the beans of the coffee bush, they danced and cavorted with unnatural vigor. I urge you to be as alert and watchful as that shepherd, Gemini. A new source of vibrant energy may soon be revealed to you, perhaps in an unexpected way.

CANCER

(June 21–July 22) “Hello Dear One: My name is Lorita. I am a beautiful heartfelt woman from Libya. I was browsing online through the long night when I came across your shiny

dark power, and now I must tell you that I am quite sure you and I can circle together like sun and moon. It would give me great bliss for us to link up and make a tender story together. I await your reply so I can give you my secret sweetness. – Your Surprise Soulmate.” Dear Soulmate: Thank you for your warm inquiry. However, I must turn you down. Because I was born under the sign of Cancer the Crab, I have to be very careful to maintain proper boundaries; I can’t allow myself to be wide open to every extravagant invitation I get, especially from people I don’t know well. That’s especially true these days. We Crabs need to be extra discriminating about what influences we allow into our spheres.

and can lead to depression and malaise. But medical researchers in the West have come to the exact opposite conclusion: The more climaxes men have, the better. According to them, frequent sex even promotes youthfulness and longevity. So who to believe? Here’s what I think: Every man should find out for himself by conducting his own experiments. As a general rule, I recommend the empirical approach for many other questions as well –– and especially right now for Libran people of all genders. Rather than trusting anyone’s theories about anything, find out for yourself.

SCORPIO

(Oct. 23–Nov. 21)

Questions and more questions! Will the monkey on your back jump off, at least for a while? Will the sign of the zodiac that you understand least become an X–factor in the unfolding plot? Will a cute distraction launch you on what seems to be a wild goose chase –– until it leads you to a clue you didn’t even know you were looking for? Will a tryst in an unsacred space result in an odd boost to your long–term fortunes? The answers to riddles like these will be headed your way in the coming weeks. You’re at the beginning of a phase that will specialize in alluring twists and brain–teasing turns.

The 19th–century Norwegian playwright Henrik Ibsen was an iconoclast who relished exposing the hypocrisy and shallowness of conventional morality. While working on one of his plays, he kept a pet scorpion in an empty beer glass on his desk. “Now and again,” he testified, “when the creature was wilting, I would drop into the glass a piece of fruit, which it would seize upon in a frenzy and inject with its poison. It would then revive. Are not we poets like that?” Keep these details in mind during the coming weeks, Scorpio. You will probably have some venom that needs to be expelled. I hope you’ll do it like Ibsen writing his brilliantly scathing plays or the scorpion stinging some fruit.

VIRGO

SAGITTARIUS

Want to submit a letter to the editor of a major newspaper? The odds of you getting published in the influential Washington Post are almost three times as great as in the super–influential New York Times. The Post has a much smaller circulation, so your thoughts there won’t have as wide an impact. But you will still be read by many people. According to my reading of the astrological omens, you’re in a phase when you should be quite content to shoot for a spot in the Post. Please apply that same principle to everything you do.

“There is nothing more difficult for a truly creative painter than to paint a rose,” said French artist Henri Matisse, “because before he can do so he has first to forget all the roses that were ever painted.” I’d love to expand this principle so that it applies to everything you do in the coming week. Whatever adventures you seek, Sagittarius, prepare for them by forgetting all the adventures you have ever had. That way you will unleash the fullness of the fun and excitement you deserve.

LEO

(July 23–Aug. 22)

(Aug. 23–Sept. 22)

LIBRA

(Sept. 23–Oct. 22) According to the Asian spiritual traditions of Tantra and Taoism, it’s unhealthy for a man to have too many ejaculatory orgasms. Doing so depletes his vital energy,

(Nov. 22–Dec. 21)

CAPRICORN (Dec. 22–Jan. 19)

Where do you belong? Not where you used to belong and not where you will belong in the future, but where do you belong right now? The answer to that question might have been murky lately, but the time is ripe to get clear. To identify

your right and proper power spot, do these things: First, decide what experiences you will need in order to feel loved and nurtured between now and your birthday. Second, determine the two goals that are most important for you to accomplish between now and your birthday. And third, summon a specific vision of how you can best express your generosity between now and your birthday.

AQUARIUS

(Jan. 20–Feb. 18) Are you excited about your new detachable set of invisible wings? They’re ready. To get the full benefit of the freedom they make available, study these tips: 1. Don’t attach them to your feet or butt; they belong on your shoulders. 2. To preserve their sheen and functionality, avoid rolling in the muddy gutter while you’re wearing them. 3. Don’t use them just to show off. 4. It’s OK to fly around for sheer joy, though. 5. Never take them off in mid–flight.

PISCES

(Feb. 19–March 20) You know that leap of faith you’re considering? Now would be a good time to rehearse it, but not do it. How about that big experiment you’ve been mulling over? Imagine in detail what it would be like to go ahead, but don’t actually go ahead. Here’s my third question, Pisces: Have you been thinking of making a major commitment? My advice is similar to the first two issues: Research all of its ramifications. Think deeply about how it would change your life. Maybe even formulate a prenuptial agreement or the equivalent. But don’t make a dramatic dive into foreverness. Not yet, at least. This is your time to practice, play, and pretend.

“Know Your Knees: Managing Osteoarthritis & the Latest Treatment Options” Local practitioner Mary Vacala, M.S., A.T.C., PA-C, MSPAS, leads an educational seminar on common osteoarthritis misconceptions, signs and symptoms of OA, and the latest treatment options. Lunch will be served. Wed. Sept. 26, 12-1pm. Islands YMCA, Aerobics Room. 66 Johnny Mercer Boulevard. RSVP to Melissa Wood at (912) 547-3928

Planned Parenthood Hotline

First Line is a statewide hotline for women who want information on health services. Open every night from 7-11p.m. 1-800-264-7154. [062812]

SmokeStoppers Intensive Course

St. Joseph’s/Candler’s group-facilitated smoking cessation program, offers an intensive class (7 sessions over 3 weeks, beginning Monday, Sept. 24). Features a wide range of proveneffective strategies to help smokers control their smoking urges, manage nicotine withdrawal and stress, and avoid weight gain. Orientation is Monday, September 24 at 6pm. Orientation and class attendance is mandatory. The dates are 9/24 (Orientation Session), 10/8, 10/9, 10/10, 10/11, 10/15, 10/18, and 10/23. Cost is $100. All sessions will be held in the Diabetes Management Center classroom at Candler Hospital, 5353 Reynolds St. Info/registration: (912) 8193368 or 800-501-4054. Or online at www.sjchs. org.

Yoga on the Beach at Tybee

Held on Wednesdays and Fridays, at Tybee’s North End, weather permitting, from 7am-8am. Come to the North Beach Public Parking area, Gulick Street walkover (next to lifeguard stand #2). Drop-ins encouraged! The class is by donation and is a multi-level class, Hatha I & II, IntegralÃ’ Yoga style. Instructor: Ann Carroll, RYT, 500 hour level. Bring yoga mat or beach towel. Call or e-mail Ann for more information at (912) 704~7650 or ann@aikyayoga.com. [070812]

Nature and Environment Recycling Fundraiser for Economic Opportunity Authority

Programs of EOA have been earning free financial support by participating in the FundingFactory Recycling Program. Bring empty cartridges, cell phones, small electronics, and laptops to EOA for recycling through FundingFactory, in exchange for their choice of technology recreation products, or even cash. Business Support Program of Funding Factory will give benefit to EOA for materials recycled through them by business registered with them. Drop off recyclables at 618 West Anderson Street, Rm. 202, Savannah, GA 31415 To learn more about supporting EOA, including the Business Support Program (recycling) call Debbie Walker at 238-2960 ext.126, or dwproperty@aol.com or at www.FundingFactory. com. [053112]

The Dolphin Project

The Dolphin Project’s Education Outreach Program is available to speak at your school, club or organization. We offer a fascinating powerpoint with sound and video about our estuarine dolphins and their environment. Age-appropriate programs and related handouts. www.thedolphinproject.org [062712]

Tybee Island Marine Science Center

Offering a variety of fun educational programs including Beach Discovery Walks, Marsh Treks, Turtle Talks and the Coastal Georgia Gallery, which features an up close look at dozens of local species. Open daily, 10am-5pm. For more info, call 912-786-5917 or visit www.tybeemarinescience.org. [062712]

Walk on the Wild Side

The Oatland Island Wildlife Center , 711 Sandtown Rd., offers a 2-mile Native Animal Nature Trail that winds through maritime forest, freshwater wetland and salt marsh habitats, and features live native animal exhibits. Open daily from 10-4 except Thanksgiving, Christmas and New Years. 898-3980, www.oatlandisland.org.


fax: (912) 231-9932 | 1800 E. Victory Dr., Suite 7, Savannah, GA 31404

Wilderness Southeast

Offers a variety of programs every month including guided trips with naturalists, canoe rides and more. Their mission is to develop appreciation, understanding, stewardship, and enjoyment of the natural world. For more information: 912-236-8115 or www.wilderness-southeast. org. [062712]

Pets & Animals Humane Society Pets for Adoption

This summer, the Humane Society of Greater Savannah is experiencing an unprecedented increase in surrendered dogs available to be adopted. See dogs available for adoption at www. HumaneSocietySAV.org or contact: Erin Fontes, Volunteer & Special Programs Coordinator, 912-354-9515 Extension 112. Or email Erin at EFontes@HumaneSocietySAV.org. Visit in person at 7215 Sallie Mood Drive, every day from 11am6pm. [062412]

Low Cost Pet Clinic

Tails Spin and Dr. Stanley Lester, DVM, host lowcost pet vaccine clinics for students, military and seniors on the second and fourth Wednesdays of each month from 5-6pm. Vaccinations: $12.00, with $2.00 per vaccination donated to Savannah Pet Rescue Agencies. Habersham Village Shopping Center. www.tailsspin.com [062712]

St. Almo’s

Savannah True Animal Lovers Meeting Others. Informal dog walks on Sundays at 5pm (weather permitting). Meet at the Canine Palace, 612 Abercorn St. For info, call 912-234-3336. [062712]

Readings & Signings Circle of Sister/Brotherhood Book Club

Meets the last Sunday of the month at 4 p.m. at the African-American Health Information & Resource Center, 1910 Abercorn St. Call 4476605. [062712]

Tea Time at Ola’s (Book Club)

A book discussion group that meets the fourth Tuesday at 1 p.m. at the Ola Wyeth Branch Library, 4 E. Bay St. Bring a book you’ve read this month and tell all about it. Treats to share are always welcomed. Tea will be provided. 232-5488 or 652-3660. [062712]

Religious & Spiritual A New Church in the City, For the City.

We gather on Sunday mornings at Bryson Hall (5 East Perry St.) on Chippewa Square at 10:30 am. Like us on Facebook: Savannah Church Plant. [062712]

Change Beyond the Pain Workshop Series

Based on the book by Monifa Robinson Groover. Topics covered: Surrender, God’s Perfect Will, God’s Perfect Timing. God’s Glory, The Power & Purpose of Pain. Faith. Transformation. Location: New Covenant Holiness Church #3, 905 East Duffy Street. Tuesdays through September 25. 7:00-8:30pm. Workshop is free. Book purchase is required. Softcover books will be available for purchase.

Day of Discernment for Women

Have y u ever wondered what it might be like to “enter the convent” in the 21“t century? On Saturday September 22, 2012, from 9AM - 3 PM,a vocation discernment day,” Fiat in Faith” will be held for single Catholic women, 18 - 35 years of age. lt will be held in the Parish Center at Blessed Sacrament Catholic Church, 1003 E. Victory Dr. Savannah GA. For more information or to RSVP contact Sister Donna Loeper, SJ email: donnaloeper@coincast.net or 912-4847860. No charge.

Guided Silent Prayer

A couple of songs done acoustically, about 30 minutes of guided silent prayer, and a few minutes to receive prayer if you want (or remain in silence). A mid-week rest and re-focus. 6:45-

8pm on Wednesdays at the Vineyard Church. 615 Montgomery St. (behind Blowin’ Smoke BBQ). www.vineyardsavannah.org [062712]

Savannah Healing Ministries

Join Savannah Healing Ministries teaching and prayer on Blocks to Spiritual Healing. Sept 22, 9am-11am. Chick-Fil-A in Pooler, 180 Pooler Parkway. Free to attend.

Savannah Zen Center

Meditation, Classes & Events are held at 111 E. 34th St., Savannah, Ga 31401. For schedule: savannahzencenter.com or visit us on Facebook. {062712]

Service of Compline

The Service of Compline at Christ Church has moved: same music, same service, same choir, same preacher--different location. Service of chanted Compline by candlelight will be held at historic Independent Presbyterian Church (corner of Bull Street and Oglethorpe) every Sunday night at 9:00p.m. “Come, say good night to God.” [062712]

Theology on Tap

Meets at The Distillery every month on the third Monday night from 8:30 - 10:30pm. Like us on Facebook: Theology on Tap Downtown Savannah. [062712]

Unitarian Universalist Beloved Community Church

Services begin Sunday at 11 a.m. at 1001 E. Gwinnett St. Coffee and discussion follow each service. Religious education for grades 1-8 is offered. For information, call 786-6075, e-mail UUBC2@aol.com. Celebrating diversity. Working for justice. [062712]

Unitarian Universalist Church of Savannah

Liberal religious community where different people with different beliefs gather as one faith. Sunday, 11 am, Troup Square Sanctuary. 2340980, admin@uusavannah.org or www.uusavannah.org. [062712]

Unity Church of Savannah

Two Sunday morning Celebration Services 9:15 and 11:00. (Children’s Church and childcare at 11:00.) Noon prayer service every Thurs. To find out about classes, workshops and more visit, www.unityofsavannah.org or call 912-3554704. 2320 Sunset Blvd. [062712]

Sports & Games Adult Kickball is Back

Adult Coed Fall Kickball League begins Sunday September 9 at Paulson Softball Complex. To find out more about Savannah Adult Recreation Club and its adult social sports leagues, contact Andrew Jones at 912 220 3474 or email SavAdultRec@aol.com or visit www.SavAdultRec. com. [082612]

Savannah Bike Polo

Like regular polo, but with bikes instead of horses. Meets weekly. Check out www.facebook. com/savannahbikepolo for more information. [062712]

Support Groups Free Caregiver Support Group

For anyone caring for senior citizens with any affliction. Meetings are the second Saturday of each month from 10:00am to 11:00am, at Savannah Commons, 1 Peachtree Drive. Refreshments and conversation after each meeting. Participation is free and open to anyone with a need of support for the care giving they provide. www.savannahcommons.com [082612]

Al-Anon Family Groups

An anonymous fellowship of relatives and friends of alcoholics. The message of the AlAnon Family Groups is one of strength and hope for friends and families of problem drinkers. Al-Anon is for adults, and Alateen is for young people ages 13-19. Meetings daily throughout Savannah and the surrounding area. Check www.savannahalanon.com for meeting informa-

tion and times, or call 912-598-9860. [062512]

happenings

[062712]

Crossword Answers

Alcoholics Anonymous

If you want or need to stop drinking, AA can help. Meetings daily throughout the Savannah area. Check www.SavannahAA.com for meeting locations and times, or call 24 hrs 912-356-3688 for information. [062512]

Alzheimer’s Caregivers and Families Support Group

61

Senior Citizens, Inc. hosts caregivers and families support groups for individuals caring for Alzheimer’s and dementia family members. Locations and days: Every 2nd Monday at Wilmington Island United Methodist Church, 195 Wilmington Island Road. Every 2nd Thursday, 5:30pm, at Ruth Byck Adult Day Care facility, 64 Jasper St. For more info, call 236-0363, ext. 143. [062512]

Amputee Support Group

Open to all patients who have had a limb amputated and their families or caregivers. Call 355-7778 or 353-9635. [062512]

Psycho sudoku Answers

Brain Injury Support Group

For traumatic brain injury survivors and their caregivers. Meets the third Thursday at 5 p.m. in the gym at The Rehabilitation Institute at Memorial University Medical Center. http://www. memorialhealth.com [122911]

Breast Cancer Survivors Group

Meets Tuesdays at 5:20pm, at First Presbyterian Church on Washington Avenue and Paulsen Street. Survivor’s and care providers welcome. Enter via Washington Ave. Contact Melissa at 912-844-4524 or Krista at 912-819-7053. [062512]

SEPT 19-SEPT 25, 2012 | WWW.CONNECTSAVANNAH.COM

happenings | continued from page 60 | Submit your event | email: happenings@connectsavannah.com

Cancer Support Group

Meets the first Wednesday of the month from 11am-12pm. at the Nancy N. and J.C. Lewis Cancer & Research Pavilion, 225 Candler Drive (at Reynolds Street across from Candler Hospital.) For anyone living with, through or beyond a diagnosis of cancer. Call 819-5704. [062512]

Citizens With Retarded Citizens

Open to families of children or adults with autism, mental retardation, and other developmental disabilities. Meets monthly at 1211 Eisenhower Drive. 355-7633. [062512]

Coastal Empire Polio Survivors Association

Meets Sat., Sept. 22, 10:30am at Barnes Restaurant at 5320 Waters Ave. in Savannah, at 10:30 a.m. Polio survivors and guests are invited. For information and location, call 912-927-8332 or go to www.coastalempirepoliosurvivors.org. (There is no charge for this meeting.) [062512]

Couples Struggling with Fertility Challenges

Meets every Saturday at 6:45 p.m. at Savannah Christian Church, 55 Al Henderson Blvd. Room 250. A group for couples dealing with primary or secondary infertility, whether on this journey for one year or many years. Call Kelly at 596-0852 or email emptycradle_savannah@hotmail.com. [062512]

Essential Tremor Support Group

Open to everyone (especially those with the disease, care partners or family, and healthcare givers), this group discusses issues of managing the disease, new treatments and therapies, and maintaining quality of life. Meets the first Thursday of the month from 3:00-4:30pm in the conference room located on the 2nd floor of the Nancy N. and J. C. Lewis Cancer & Research Pavilion, 225 Candler Drive (across from Candler Hospital). Information: 912-819-2224. [072812]

Families Anonymous

A world wide twelve-step self-help support program for relatives and friends of people with substance abuse or behavioral problems. Savannah meeting on Thursdays, 6:30-8:30pm. New location as of June 21. Memorial Health University Medical Center, first floor-Main Bldg, conference room D. Information: 912-660-6845 or email sandyjtyler@comcast.net. [062412] CS

AreAre you ofthe the many youone one of many OEF,or OIF, or OND Are you one of the ma OEF, OIF, OND veterans veterans experiencing difficulties OEF, OIF, or OND experiencing difficulties related to your combat experiences? veterans experiencing dif related to your combat If so, you may be eligible to participate in a related to your combat exp experiences? research study designed to provide first-line medication and talk therapy interventions with

If so,effectiveness. you may eligible proven Thisbe study is conductedto at If so, you may be eligible to parti the Savannah VA Clinic. participateresearch in a research study study designed to provid medication and talk therapy designed to provide first-line For more information, please contact Christi interve proven effectiveness. This study is Oates, PROGrESS coordinator: medication andstudy talk therapy the Savannah VA Clinic interventions with proven Christi.Oates@va.gov, effectiveness. This study is 912-920-0214 Ext.2229 For more information, please co conductedOates, at thePROGrESS Savannahstudy coo Compensation is provided. VA Clinic.

Christi.Oates

912-920-0214 Compensation

For more information, please contact Christi Oates, PROGrESS study coordinator: Christi.Oates@va.gov, 912-920-0214 Ext.2229 Compensation is provided.


classifieds

buy . sell . connect | Call call231-0250 238-2040 for business Businessrates rates| place your classified ad online for free at connectsavannahexchange.com

SEPT 19-SEPT 25, 2012 | WWW.CONNECTSAVANNAH.COM

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exchange Happenings: All the info about clubs, groups and events. Only at www.connectsavannah.com

Widow Seeking Private Home improvement Loan in amount of $13,600.00 for 6 months, for purpose of selling residence in very nice neighborhood. Owe less than $ 15,000.00 on original mortgage. Offering attractive APR rates., with possibility of one 6 month renewal at same terms. 912-233-1500 Announcements

want to buy 390

Diabetic Test Strips Wanted Most types, Most brands. Will pay up to $10/box. Call Clifton 912-596-2275. ServiceS 500

Real estate

business services 501

100

For your inFormation 120 FINE ART NUDES Savannah photographer Jack Wegener introduced artistic nude photography regionally in 1975. Mr. Wegener creates handcolored and black-and-white photographs using film. Women wanted as models. www.jackwegener.com personals 140

HOT GUYS! HOT CHAT! HOT FUN! Try FREE! Call 912-544-0026 or 800-777-8000 www.interactivemale.com Real People, Real Chat, Real Discreet Try FREE! Call 404-214-5141 or call 800-210-1010 www.livelinks.com GaraGe SaleS 200

Flea Markets 210

NOT YA MAMA’S TYPICAL TAG SALE A TRENDY IN+OUT DOORS FLEA MARKET / CONSIGNMENT STORE STYLE - EVERY WEEKEND IN SEPTEMBER @ DOG HOUSE STUDIO’S 210 W. 37TH ST. (Between Barnard+Jefferson). FRI-SUN 8:30am-? Items for sale 300

Sporting goodS 382

REMINGTON 700 BDL Varmit 222Cal, 24” heavy barrel, 8X scope, comes with unused RCBS reloading supplies $700.00 (912)312-2803 Happenings: All the info about clubs, groups and events. Only at www.connectsavannah.com

MEET HOT LOCAL SINGLES Listen to Ads and Reply FREE! Straight 912-344-9500 Gay or Bi 912-344-9494 Use FREE Code 7821, 18+

Business OppOrtunity 690 COME JOIN the fastest growing business in North America. Looking for individuals who would like to make $2000-$6000/month working from home. One-on-one training. 912-210-0144

ARE YOU FINDING IT HARD TO KICK YOUR LAZY SUMMER HABITS?

CustomFit’s Kickstart Challenge is your answer...you have NEVER seen a program like this to tone & firm places you didn’t know you had. 4-weeks of workouts and nutritional info to kick you into shape for your Fall skinny jeans AND, a free Functional Movement Screen, to boot! KICKOFF: Saturday, Sept. 29th, 9:00-10am. DATES: Sept. 29-Oct. 27, 2012 COST: $150 STUFF YOU CAN WIN: personal training, detox sauna sessions, gift certificates, and more! MORE INFO and to sign up contact: Nancy 912-441-4891 nancy@customfitcenter.com www.customfitcenter.com

EmploymEnt 600

General 630

BUS DRIVER NEEDED, Clean DMV, Criminal Background Check 912-228-1890 CLIFTON’S DRY CLEANERS needs Experienced, Dependable Shirt and Dry clean Pressers. Apply in person: 8401 Ferguson Avenue. No phone calls.

COME JOIN OUR TEAM !

The Savannah Pennysaver is expanding their Outside Sales Team. This creates an immediate opening for an experienced sales and marketing professional. We are the largest homedelivered publication in Chatham County and one of the largest shopper publications in Georgia. Excellent compensation and benefit plans. Email cover letter and resume to: sales@savannahpennysaver.com

HAIRSTYLIST

Classic Hair Salon, close to Walmart & Publix, now hiring for Experienced Hair stylist. We have walk-in clientele. 912-484-8761

ads received by 5pm friday will appear in the Wednesday issue of the next week

Land/Lots for saLe 840 LAND - HWY 17 - 9.5 ac . $315k

LAND - BUCKHALTER ROAD 17+ ac $395k Linda Hadwin-Soliman, 912-663-9685 lsoliman@cbcworldwide.com

800

HOmes fOr sale 815 (2) 2BR/2BA PRICED TO SELL 678 SQFT 29,900; 873 SQFT 39,900. CALL TODAY! THESE WON’T LAST. 912-318-5215

WINDSOR FOREST REALLY NICE INSIDE & OUT!

Available For Sale for $74,900! 3BR/1.5BA, LR, DR, utility room, carport. New wood floors, New paint interior & exterior, and New vinyl floors in bathrooms, New ceiling fans and New high efficiency windows & sliding glass door. Owner financing maybe available. Owner is licensed Georgia real estate agent. Call Preferred Realty’s Cindy Osborne or Scott Berry, 912-489-4529 or 920-1936 for an appt. today!

What Are You Waiting For?!

Call 912-721-4350 and Gain New Customers!

for rent 855

1011 EAST 39TH STREET: 2nd floor apt. $625/monthly plus $625/deposit. All utilities paid. Call 912-398-4424

Buy. Sell. For Free! www.connectsavannah.com

*1106 E. 31st: 3BR/1BA $650 *1905 E. Gwinnett: 3BR/1BA $750 *808 E. Waldburg: 4BR/2BA $875 Several Rental & Rent-to-Own Properties Guaranteed Financing. STAY MANAGEMENT 352-7829

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classifieds Reach Over 45,000 Readers Every Week! • Real Estate • Vehicles

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Basic RatEs Real Estate Employment services announcements Garage sales Miscellaneous

$12 per week $14 per week $12 per week $10 per week $10 per week $10 per week

HOW tO PlacE an ad • call our classifieds department at 912-231-0250 • ads Must Be Placed By 11am On Monday Prior to Publication • all ads Must be PrePaid (credit cards accepted) • Basic rate includes up to 25 words.

for rent 855

for rent 855

11515 White Bluff Rd. 1BR/1BA, all electric, equipped kitchen, W/D connection. SPECIAL! 1301 E.66th: 2BR/2 Bath, W/D connection, near Memorial Hosp. $725/month, $400/dep Southside: 127 Edgewater Rd. 2BR/2BA, washer/dryer connection, near Oglethorpe Mall $775/month, $400/deposit. SPECIAL! 1812 N.Avalon Dr. 2BR/1.5BA $675/mo, $400/dep. DAVIS RENTALS 310 E. MONTGOMERY XROADS 912-354-4011 OR 656-5372

Search For And Find Local Events 24/7/365

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120 FOX CHASE RD. Isle Of Hope School District. 3 BR/ 2 BA, New Floors, and Paint $935. 912-507-6262 1/2-OFF 1ST MONTH’S RENT! Rent A Manufactured home,14x70,on high/wooded lot. 3BR/2BA,save $$$, Gas, heat and stove, central air, refrigerator,full mini-blinds, carpeting and draperies, washer/dryer hookups, 48sqft. deck w/hand rails and steps, double-car cement parking pad. Swimming pool, recreational areas, on-site garbage service(twice weekly) and fire protection included, cable TV available, guest parking. Starting at $500/month,including lot rent. 800 Quacco Road. 925-9673.

2345 Ogeechee Road Hardwood Floors, 3BR/1BA, LR, DR, Kitchen w/range & refrigerator, CH&A, (gas water heater & heat),W/D Connections. OffStreet Parking. $695/Rent, $650/Deposit 411 Emmit Street Total Electric, 3BR/2BA, Living/Dining combo, kitchen w/Appliances, W/D connections, CH&A, ceiling fans, carpet & ceramic tile floors. $895/Rent, $850/Deposit. 1009 Richards Street Total Electric, 4BR/2BA, kitchen w/appliances, W/D connections, CH&A, ceiling fans, carpet & ceramic tile floors. $875/Rent, $850/Deposit. REF. & CREDIT CHECK REQUIRED

898-4135

2 & 3 Bed Room Houses And Apartments For Rent. Garden City & Savannah. $ 650-$950 mo, Will work with deposit. 912-659-2415 Call 912-721-4350 and Place Your Classified Ad Today!

2BR/1 BATH APT. OAK FOREST DRIVE $500/month, $550/deposit.

Call 927-4383 Zeno Moore Realty

800 Block of West 44th, near Beach High. Kitchen, DR, fenced backyard $650/month. 4900 Meding, near Fairgrounds. Cozy 3BR, LR, DR, laundry room $550/month. 912-224-4167

Search For And Find Local Events

SKIDAWAY & SHELL ROAD 2BR/1 Bath $535/month, $535/deposit.

ConneCtSavannah.Com

LARGO TIBET AREA *2BR/1 Bath $600/month, $600/deposit. *2BR/2 Bath $665/month, $600/deposit.

24/7/365

1BR/1BA APARTMENT

$600/month, $600/Deposit ($975 w/pet). 1210 East 70th St. Within walking distance of Memorial Hospital. Available immediately. Contact Greg or Shirley, 912-756-6726.

2204 LOUISIANA AVE. 2BR/1BA, furnished kitchen, Duplex. $525. Frank Moore & Co. 920-8560 FrankMooreCo.com

APTS. FOR RENT

*All require 1yr. lease. No pets. Call 912-704-3662 BEE ROAD: 2BR/1BA $625. CAROLINE DRIVE: 2BR/1BA, living room, kitchen furnished, total electric $675/month. VARNEDOE DRIVE: 2BR/1BA, LR, kitchen $650. 912-897-6789 or 912-344-4164


MOVE-IN SPECIALS AVAILABLE 160 Laurelwood Drive: Southside off Quacco Rd. 3BR/2BA house, LR, DR, carpet, laundry room, kitchen w/appliances, fenced yard $895/month. 32 Liberty Heights Drive: 3BR/2BA,LR,DR with a DEN, Central heat/air, laundry room, fenced yard, $970/month. 718 West 38th Street: 3BR/2BA, LR, DR, Central Heat/AIR, laundry room, fenced yard, $685/month. 2BR/1BA Apts. Newly Renovated, hardwood floors,carpet, paint, appliances, central heat/air, washer/dryer hookups. $625-$650/month, utilities may be added to rent if requested. 912-844-3974 SECTION 8 WELCOME

BNET MANAGEMENT INC.

MOVE-IN SPECIALS AVAILABLE 160 Laurelwood Drive: Southside off Quacco Rd. 3BR/2BA house, LR, DR, carpet, laundry room, kitchen w/appliances, fenced yard $895/month. 32 Liberty Heights Drive: 3BR/2BA,LR,DR with a DEN, Central heat/air, laundry room, fenced yard, $970/month. 718 West 38th Street: 3BR/2BA, LR, DR, Central Heat/AIR, laundry room, fenced yard, $685/month. 2BR/1BA Apts. Newly Renovated, hardwood floors,carpet, paint, appliances, central heat/air, washer/dryer hookups. $625-$650/month, utilities may be added to rent if requested. 912-844-3974 SECTION 8 WELCOME Call 912-721-4350 and Place Your Classified Ad Today!

By Daffin Park: 2BR/1BA APARTMENT: Refrigerator, stove, washer/dryer hookup, central heat/air, $625/month + $625 deposit. No pets. 912-657-4583

Buy. Sell. For Free! www.connectsavannah.com

FOR RENT

2 remodeled mobile homes in Garden City mobile home park. Double/Singlewide. Low down affordable payments. Credit check approval. Special ending soon. Speak directly to Community Managers, Gwen or Della, 912-964-7675 FOR RENT: NICE 3BR/2BA Home in Georgetown, nice neighborhood. Living room, family room, garage. $975 per month. 912-920-3240 Good Music Is Food For The Soul. Find it online in Soundboard at connectsavannah.com

FULL APTS. (1BR, LR, kitchen, bath)Paid Weekly, Furnished, No sharing. Quiet area,on busline. Utilities included. $150-$200/week $100/dep. 821 Amaranth. *1715 Dunn Street: Newly built 3BR/2BA, CH&A, total electric. $800/month, $800/dep. Special: 1/2 Off 1st month’s rent. 912-441-5468

HIGHLAND WOODS 800 QUACCO ROAD 925-9673

Mobile Home lots for rent. First month rent free! Wooden deck, curbside garbage collection twice weekly, swimming pool and playground included. Cable TV available. House For Rent, 623 W. 48th St 3 BR, Kitchen Unfurnished. $450 Mo. Call After 4 Pm 912-232-3355/ 912-224-1876 HOUSES 3 Bedrooms 412 Sharondale Rd. $995 5 Arthur Cir. $895 2 Soling Ave $875 HINESVILLE: 415 Rogers Rd. $795 2 Bedrooms 1203 Ohio Ave. $795 APARTMENTS 3 Bedroom 8107 Walden Park $1400 139 Cypress Pt. $1100 2 Bedroom Condo 35 Vernon River $995 Military Special 2 Bedrooms 733 E.53rd St. $775 1234-A E.55th St. $495 One Bedroom 315-B East 57th St. $625 FOR DETAILS & PICTURES VISIT OUR WEB PAGE WWW.PAMTPROPERTY.COM Pam T Property 692-0038

Week at a Glance FOR RENT

•2201 Walz Dr: 2BR upstairs apt., central heat, window AC $600 + sec. •1202 E.37th: Large 3BR ground floor apt. $600 + sec. •109 West 41st: Lower 1BR Apt., 1.5BA, central heat/air $500 + sec. Call Lester @ 912-313-8261 or 912-234-5650

Looking to plan to fill your week with fun stuff? Then read Week At A Glance to find out about the most interesting events occurring in Savannah. ConnectSavannah.com

for rent 855

for rent 855

LARGE 5 ROOM Sunny Apartment. 2BR, 1-1/2BA, kitchen, den, LR, hardwood floors, AC. Midtown, 5 min. from Hunter/Montgomery gate. $675/month plus $675/deposit. Call Jacqui, 912-351-9129

•1BR Apts, washer/dryer included. $25 for water, trash included, $625/month. •2BR/1.5BA Townhouse Apt, total electric, w/washer & dryer $675. 912-927-3278 or 912-356-5656

LEWIS PROPERTIES

897-1984, 8am-7pm WESTSIDE-NEAR LAMARVILLE **1921A, 1926 & 1930 Fenwick: 3BR Duplexes $650. **1925 Cowan: 3BR/1BA $700 **1922 Fenwick: 3BR/2BA house, den, appliances furnished $775. *All above have carpet, kitchen appliances furnished, A/C/heat, washer/dryer hookup, fenced yard. References, application. One-year lease minimum. Deposit same as rent. None total electric, No smoking, pets negotiable.

LOWCOUNTRY RENTALS 912-665-0592 NOTTINGHAM

114 Marian Circle: 3BR/1.5BA, new carpet, new paint, single car garage, fenced yard. Military Discount. $950/month. Midtown Area, Very nice furnished efficiency apartment, suitable for one person, utilities included, $235 week plus dep. No smoking. No pets. 91-236-1952 OFF LAROCHE: Lovely brick 2BR Apt. kitchen furnished, washer/dryer connections, CH&A, all electric. $575. No pets. 912-355-6077 ORCHARD 2BR/1BA, kitchen furnished, fenced yard, carport, extra storage $625 + dep.

No Section 8. 912-234-0548

PARADISE PARK: 3BR/1.5 Baths, large kitchen, formal DR, LR, family room, garage & fenced-in yard. $975/month plus $975/deposit. Call 912-313-2432

PARADISE PARK

Available now. 3BR/2 full baths, LR, DR, new A/C, new windows, new interior paint throughout. No pets/smoking. No Section 8 Accepted. $969/month + security deposit. 912-920-1936 POOLER: Brick 3BR/2BA, CH&A, very nice neighborhood. LR/DR combo, eat in kitchen, fenced backyard, covered patio, storage bldg. No pets, No smoking. No Section 8. $950/month + $950/deposit. 912-844-1825 or 912-844-1812 RENTALS FOR EVERY BUDGET

One, Two & Three Bedrooms. Call for viewing, 912-349-4899 SALE/RENT: TEMPLE STREET, off Staley Avenue, by Fairgrounds,all brick on 3 lots. 3BR/1BA, LR, kitchen, heat/air, laminate throughout, laundry room. $650/month. 912-224-4167

SECTION 8 WELCOME

ONE, TWO & THREE BR Apts. & Houses for rent. Stove, refrigerator, washer/dryer. 1/2 month OffGood for this month only. 912-844-5996 OR 912-272-6820

SOUTHSIDE

SPACIOUS & CUTE 1BR Apt. in Ardsley Park w/laundry facility. $800/month plus deposit. No smoking, no pets. 912-236-1952

SUNRISE VILLAS - Eastside A place that you can call home! Large eat-in kitchen, central heat/air, W/D connections, carpet, mini blinds, total electric. $650/Rent, $300/Deposit. Call 912-234-3043 WILMINGTON ISLAND: Johnny Mercer duplex, 2BR/1BA, LR, dining area, kitchen, newly renovated $795/month. 912-897-6789 or 912-344-4164 WINDSOR FOREST: 3BR/1.5BA, family room has been used as 4th BR, new CH&A, new interior paint, new windows and sliding doors. Conveniently located. No smoking. No Section 8 accepted. $959/month + security deposit. 912-920-1936 rooms for rent 895

ROOMS FOR RENT Completely furnished. Central heat and air. Conveniently located on busline. $130 per week. Call 912-844-5995. SPACIOUS ROOMS FOR RENT Newly renovated on busline.2 blocks from Downtown Kroger,3 blocks from Historic Forsyth Park. $150/week w/No deposit. 844-5995 EFFICIENCY ROOMS Includes stove, refrigerator, private bath. Furnished! $180/week. Call 912-844-5995.

APARTMENTS FOR RENT

2BR/1BA Apartments, LV Room, Dining, Kitchen w/appliances, washer/dryer hookup. UTILITIES INCLUDED! NO CREDIT REQUIRED! $225 & Up weekly, $895/monthly, Call 912-319-4182, M-Sat 9AM-6PM

ROOMS FOR RENT

$75 Move-In Special Today!! Clean, furnished, large. Busline, central heat/air, utilities. $100-$130 weekly. Rooms w/bathroom $145. Call 912-289-0410.

AVAILABLE ROOMS: CLEAN, comfortable rooms. Washer/dryer, air, cable, HBO, ceiling fans. $110-$140 weekly. No deposit. Call Ike @ 844-7065 CLEAN, QUIET, Room & Efficiencies for Rent.On Busline, Stove, Refrigerator, Washer/Dryer. Rates from $85-$165/week. Call 912-272-4378 or 912-631-2909

rooms for rent 895

FURNISHED APTS. $165/WK.

Private bath and kitchen, cable, utilities, washer furnished. AC & heat, bus stop on property. No deposit required. Completely safe, manager on property. Contact Cody, 695-7889 or Jack, 342-3840. FURNISHED EFFICIENCY: 1510 Lincoln Street. $165/week plus deposit. Includes microwave, refrigerator, central heat & air & utilities! Call Charles, 912.655.7653

rooms for rent 895

ROOMS FOR RENT

Clean, safe, drama-free rooms available, Ceiling fans, Comcast cable, internet, central heat/air furnished. Walking distance to buslineRooms $140/week, small dep. 912-228-1242

WEST SAVANNAH

$100. Furnished, includes utilities, central heat/air, Comcast cable, washer/dryer. Ceramic tile in kitchen. Shared Kitchen & Shared bath. Call 912-210-0144.

ROOMMATE WANTED: Large bedroom available in Midtown Savannah. $500 per month. 912-398-4301 LARGE VICTORIAN with windows on two sides, across from library, nicely furnished, all utilities. TV/cable/internet, washer/dryer, $140/week. $504/month. 912-231-9464 Other apts. avail.

transportation 900

cars 910

LOOK THIS WAY FOR A PLACE TO STAY

Furnished, affordable room available includes utility, cable,refrigerator, central heat/air. $115-$140/weekly, no deposit.Call 912-844-3609 NEED A ROOM? STOP LOOKING! Great rooms available ranging from $115-$140/weekly. Includes refrigerators, cable w/HBO, central heat/air. No deposit. Call 912-398-7507. ROOM FOR RENT: Safe Environment. Central heat/air, cable, telephone service. $450-$550 monthly, $125/security deposit, No lease. Immediate occupancy. Call Mr. Brown:912-663-2574 or 912-234-9177. ROOMMATES WANTED East Savannah: Very clean. Stove, refrigerator, cable, washer/dryer included. On bus line. Starting at $125/week. Call 912-961-2842 ROOMS FOR RENT California Avenue. Weekly rental $120 & up. Cable,central air,Furnished kitchen, washer/dryer. On busline. No smoking inside. 912-447-1933.

BMW 740IL, 1998- Alpine white, power windows, clean interior, good engine. $4500 OBO. 912-484-0719

FENDER BENDER?

Paint & Body Work. Reasonably Priced. Insurance Claims. We buy wrecks. Call 912-355-5932. FOR SALE: KIA Sportage, 19955-speed, aqua with pink stripes. 70,000 miles on engine, 4WD. $2700 OBO. Call 912-596-7370 FOR SALE: ONE OWNER. HONDA CIVIC LX, 2009: 4-door, blue w/grey upholstery, 8900 miles. All records from Grainger Honda. Immaculate condition. No sales tax.$15,000. 912-222-1355 WE PAY CASH for junk cars & trucks! Call 964-0515

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BNET MANAGEMENT INC.

for rent 855

63 SEPT 19-SEPT 25, 2012 | WWW.CONNECTSAVANNAH.COM

for rent 855


SAVANNAH | 318 E. BROUGHTON ST. | 912-234-0456 MON-FRI 8AM TO 8PM SAT 10AM TO 7PM

SUN 11AM TO 6PM

OV ER 5 ,0 0 0 PA I NTS • 1 5 0 S IZ ES OF C AN VAS • 4, 800 D R AWIN G TO O LS• 1 ,5 0 0 BR US HES • 1 ,0 0 0 T YP E S O F PAPE R 450 FR AME S • 600 SCULPTING SUPPLIES• 2,000 PASTELS CUSTOM FRAMING & PRINTING

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*GUESTS MUST PRESENT RAFFLE TICKET AFTER 3:30PM ON SEPTEMBER 13TH TO CLAIM GIFT TOTE. NO EXCEPTIONS WILL BE MADE. NOT RESPONSIBLE FOR LOST OR STOLEN RAFFLE TICKETS.

*Ao08442*

VALID 9/19/12 TO 9/27/12

Blick Art Materials, Retail Inc., coupon must be surrendered at time of purchase; no copies will be honored. Limit one coupon per visit. Valid only on non-sale, in-stock items. Not valid with any other discounts or promotion, phone/mail/internet orders, custom framing and printing and purchases of gift cards.

CUSTOM FRAMING

50

% off

VALID 9/19/12 TO 9/27/12

ENTIRE FRAMING PACKAGE CODE #08443

Offer good only towards purchase of complete custom framing package, which must include mounting and fitting of artwork. Offer not valid towards purchase of individual frame mouldings not part of a complete custom framing package. Limit 3 custom frame packages per coupon. Offer not valid towards ready-made frames. Coupon must be surrendered at time of purchase; no copies will be honored. Limit one coupon per visit. Not valid with any other discounts or previously placed orders.

FINE ART PRINTING

20

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PRINT ORDER

VALID 9/19/12 TO 9/27/12 CODE #08444

Offer good only towards purchase of complete printing order. Coupon must be surrendered at time of purchase; no copies will be honored. Limit one coupon per visit. Not valid with any other discounts or previously placed orders.


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