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AUGUST 7, 2013 · VOL. 27 · NO. 31 · FREE

Play it - eat it How to Make It in Athens Music and Where to Eat After It’s Over  pp. 17 & 22

Find Your Way

The Flagpole Guide to Athens Is Ready for You to Pick Up p. 18

The Athens of Georgia

Our New Novel about Local Characters Begins in this Issue p. 35

Coal on Campus p. 7 · Beer in Town p. 13 · Bread All Over p. 15 · Lieske & Brannen p. 23


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pub notes

p. 7

Film, Stage and Fiction The Devil in Mr. Johnson The next fundraiser at CinÊ for its Kickstarter campaign for vital new digital projection equipment is a showing of winners from the recent Atlanta 48-Hour Film Project, including the big winner from Athens, Last Fair Deal Gone Down. This is a short film dramatizing the legend of blues master guitarist Robert Johnson bargaining his soul to the Devil at a Mississippi crossroad in return for his talent. This is a flawless gem of a short film, and you’ll see why it won best film and several other honors, and why Myron Dietrich Tucker won best actor. Local musician Wilma produced, and local actor/director Allen Rowell assembled the all-star cast, many of whom you’ll recognize. A Q&A follows the film, and if the other winners are in the same league with Last Fair Deal Gone Down, this should be a good night of film. CinÊ’s Kickstarter deadline is Aug. 18, so there’s not much time left. Get down to CinÊ on Tuesday Aug. 13 at 6:45 p.m. to see how good a film can be made in 48 hours.

p. 15

Tuesday, August 13th • 6pm

6 Wines, $15

Old World vs. New World Whites

KickOff Party

Don’t miss the beginning episode of our new serialized novel, The Athens of Georgia, by local writer C.J. Bartunek, on p. 35 in this issue. This is the familiar tale of boy follows girl to Athens. Girl gets involved with somebody else. Boy gets involved in the music scene. Lots of people get involved with each other in lots of familiar places around town, and we believe you’ll get involved with The Athens of Georgia in Flagpole each week.

for my athens instagram contest Wednesday, August 14th 8:30-10:30pm

p. 23

Swear!

The Little Mermaid in Oconee In more theater news, the talented troupe out at Oconee Youth Playhouse is putting on Disney’s The Little Mermaid, Jr., running this week Aug. 9-11 and next week Aug. 16-18 in the nice facility at the Oconee County Civic Center. More info at www.oypoysp.com/playhouse.

The Flagpole Guide to Athens The 2013-14 Flagpole Guide to Athens has been distributed all over Athens, the campus and Watkinsville, and as usual it is chock full of helpful, interesting and entertaining information to help you find what you want and need in the Athens area. The Guide is designed to be kept around all year for consultation as needed. And it will be needed. It’s a good idea to keep one around the house and in the car and in the backpack. It’s also available online, of course, and on your phone, iPad, etc. This is the only comprehensive guide to everything Athens, and it will be available all year at over 300 locations. Pete McCommons editor@flagpole.com

Local Food Still Lives in Athens

Second Tuesday Tasting

The Athens of Georgia

Okay, get ready. Mike Smith, one of the Town & Gown stalwarts, is directing Hamlet with a great cast, including Patrick Najjar as the prince, Jayne Lockhart as Ophelia, Derek Adams as Claudius (and the ghost), Beth Kozinsky as Gertrude, Tim Dowse as Horatio, Adam Shirley as Laertes (and Gildenstern), Briton Dean as Rosencrantz (et. al.), Skip Hulett as Barnado Patrick Najjar is Hamlet, and Jayne (etc.) and John Olive as Lockhart is Ophelia. Polonius (“Neither a borrower nor a lender be‌â€? and so forth.) and more. A great play, a great cast, a great director, a great night at the theater: romance, madness, murder, incest, swordplay, poison, humor, blood—with the absorbing unpredictability of live performance. Coming Aug. 16-18 and 22-25. Get details at www.townandgownplayers.org.

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VOLUME 27 ISSUE NUMBER 31

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city dope Welcome Back, Everybody Summer is almost over, and this sleepy little college town is about to awaken. Allow us to re-introduce ourselves. For the uninitiated (freshmen), Flagpole is an alternative weekly that covers local and state politics and what’s happening on campus, generally from a left-of-center perspective, although we try to be fair and factual and welcome all points of views. (For example, see our story on p. 7 about efforts to shut down UGA’s polluting coal-fired boiler.) This column, City Dope, is your source for information about the doings of the Athens-Clarke County government, which often affect students. Further inside, you’ll find the latest on Athens’ worldfamous music scene, as well as food, drinks, movies, books, theater and a calendar that lists everything that’s going on in our fair city. In addition to the paper you’re holding in your hands, we’re online, too. Visit Flagpole.com, like Facebook. com/FlagpoleMagazine and follow @BlakeAued (for news), @FlagpoleMusic and @FlagpoleMag (for a little bit of everything). And now, on with the festivities.

Chait was writing about. Collins, who represents part of Athens, had a surprising reaction: He said he was an “anarchist and proud of it.� No, Collins is not what we in Athens would consider an anarchist (and there are any number of Athens residents who would describe themselves that way). He hasn’t grown dreadlocks, turned vegan or started listening to Propagandhi, at least as far as I know. (Yeah, those are all stereotypes. Please direct hate mail to news@flagpole.com.) The word “anarchist� has always been associated with left-wing politics, but it looks like anti-government conservatives are reclaiming it. Chait compared the tea partiers on Congress to the radical left in the 1960s, except with actual power—a comparison Collins embraced. In fact, he used the article as the basis for a fundraising email. “Increasingly, American voters are sending individuals to Congress who are more committed to conservative principles than earning favor with leadership—members like me who are more concerned about what the folks back home think about their voting record than what Republican leadership thinks,� he wrote.

Anarchy in the GA: Last month, New York magazine ran an article accusing tea party conservatives in the U.S. Five Points Parking: The I am an anti-Christ! I am an anarchist! House of Representatives of parking situation in Five intentionally sabotaging the Points isn’t going to improve federal government. anytime soon, thanks to Judge Penn McWhorter. “The hard right’s extremism has bent back upon itself, McWhorter recently ruled in favor of property owner Barry leaving an inscrutable void of paranoia and formless rage Stiles and against Athens-Clarke County in a lawsuit over who and twisting the Republican Party into a band of anarchists,� controls about 20 parking spaces off Lumpkin Street in front of Jonathan Chait wrote. what used to be Five Points Deli and will soon become another U.S. Reps. Paul Broun (R-Athens), Tom Graves (R-Ranger) restaurant, J. Christopher. During the day, only patrons of the and Doug Collins (R-Gainesville) were among the lawmakers businesses in Stiles’ building can use the spaces; at night,

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parking will cost $5. Other nearby businesses have followed suit in restricting parking to their own customers, making it difficult to find a space in Five Points. It will be up to the Mayor and Commission to decide whether to appeal, county Attorney Bill Berryman said. Slingshot: The inaugural Athens Slingshot festival last March was a terrific idea, bringing together an international cast of visual artists and local musicians to draw road-trippers on their way to South by Southwest in Austin, TX. Its execution left something to be desired—there was little to indicate it was a coherent event, not just a random collection of art installations and bands—but I’m more than willing to give organizers Kai Riedl and Eric Marty the benefit of the doubt. Marty and Riedl recently applied for a $15,000 state economic development grant through the Athens Downtown Development Authority to match $15,000 they’ve already raised from the University of Georgia and other sources, and they hope to use that money to expand the festival into a miniSXSW. “We want to draw arts entrepreneurs, tech entrepreneurs, draw them to Athens,â€? Marty said. In addition to raising Athens’ international profile, the festival could be a shot in the arm for what’s traditionally been a slow month. “I do know the clubs had an excellent night‌ better than they’ve ever had during spring break,â€? he said. One smart move Riedl and Marty are planning is to move the festival ahead to March 21-22, 2014, the weekend after SXSW and the weekend after UGA’s spring break. “We want to capitalize on the student population and people being in town,â€? Riedl said. Sic ‘Em: You may know me as Flagpole’s resident political junkie and Gabe Vodicka as our insufferable hipster music editor. But in our spare time, we’re also football fans. We think there are a lot of folks like us who wouldn’t be caught dead on North Campus in khakis and red golf shirts but still follow the Dawgs. (Or, in my case, the Ole Miss Land Sharks Black Bears Rebels.) To that end, Flagpole is going to be experimenting with a little football coverage this fall. (Take a deep breath. It’ll be OK. Think Deadspin except safe for work.) To kick things off, Gabe and I spoke to wide receiver Chris Conley, one of the team’s rising stars, about his collection of guitars and love for John Mayer. Check it out on our music blog, Homedrone. ICYMI: For those who’ve been out of town, the big stories of the summer are posted at Flagpole.com/news. They include the building boom on campus during former UGA President Michael Adams’ tenure, university officials’ reluctance to extend health insurance to unmarried employees’ domestic partners, an investigation into the ouster of former Athens Downtown Development Authority Executive Director Kathryn Lookofsky and county Auditor John Wolfe, and the Athens-Clarke Commission’s decision to approve the massive Selig Enteprises development, which will change downtown forever. Blake Aued news@flagpole.com


capitol impact Handel Attacks Early The calendar tells us there are still several months remaining in 2013, but Karen Handel is acting as if 2014 were already here and we were in the middle of a full-bore Senate race. Handel, one of the Republican contenders for the Senate seat Saxby Chambliss is vacating, went on the offensive last week against three of the male candidates opposing her in the GOP primary. She launched a website under the mocking title of “Only in Washington� and said she would use the online venue to publicize 42 examples of the “ridiculous things� that Jack Kingston, Phil Gingrey and Paul Broun have been part of during their careers in the U.S. House. “We are where we are in this country not just because of the Democrats, but also because of Republicans not having the will and the resolve and the courage to make hard decisions that needed to be made,� Handel contends. Some of the things she is criticizing typically occur when you have a federal government that spends more than $3.5 trillion a year: the congressional barbershop that runs a deficit of $340,000 or the expenditure of $744,000 to build a soccer field for the prisoners at Guantanamo Bay. These items are chump change that Kingston, Gingrey and Broun could not have eliminated anyway, and even if they had, it would have made no real difference in solving the federal government’s fiscal woes. Handel is on firmer ground when she criticizes the congressional trio for not doing more to rein in the national debt, which was at the $4 trillion level when Kingston first entered Congress 20 years ago and is now approaching $17 trillion. “Only in Washington could that happen and absolutely nothing be done about it,� Handel says. Back in 2001 when Bill Clinton was turning over the White House to George W. Bush, the federal government was actually running

a modest budget surplus and was able to pay down at least a small portion of the national debt. That surplus disappeared quickly, and the national debt began climbing again largely because of two major initiatives undertaken by Bush and a willing congressional majority: tax cuts for the wealthiest Americans and the Medicare Part D prescription drug benefit. In criticizing her opponents for being part of a Congress that would enact such deficitballooning measures, she is definitely on the right track. It is noteworthy that Handel is already going negative on her opponents in a primary campaign that has a long way to go: it’s nearly 10 months before election day. She used the same approach in 2010 when she lambasted the “good ol’ boys� network that runs state politics. One of the defining moments of the 2010 race occurred when Handel taunted Deal to put on “his big-boy pants� and get to work. That cutting remark backfired, making Handel appear a little too mean-spirited to many undecided voters. After leading in the first round of Republican primary voting, she lost a close runoff to Deal. Why would Handel employ such a risky campaign strategy again? The recent disclosure reports filed with the Federal Election Commission provide the answer. As of June 30, Handel had raised just over $150,000 for her campaign bank account. By contrast, Gingrey had $2.56 million in available cash, Kingston had $2.35 million and even Broun, never an overly successful solicitor of contributions, had accumulated $401,000. When you face that kind of disadvantage, you have to use the techniques that will attract free media coverage where the opposition can swamp you with attack ads. Handel evidently believes that what failed her in 2010 could work in 2014. Maybe this time, she’ll be right. Tom Crawford tcrawford@gareport.com

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Fuel for the Fire Can UGA Ever Get Beyond Coal? O

ne by one, University of Georgia students and other Athens residents got up and explained why they think UGA should ditch its polluting coal-fired boiler on campus. UGA is seeking to renew a permit for the boiler, and environmental activists are pressuring the administration to replace it with something cleaner, like natural gas, biomass, solar, geothermal or some combination. At a public hearing Tuesday, July 30 at the Athens-Clarke County Library, members of Beyond Coal and the Sierra Club Student Coalition, two related student groups, asked the Georgia Environmental Protection Division to force UGA to set a timetable for replacing the coal boiler within the next five years, when the permit will be up for renewal again. “We’re just pressuring them to make this a top priority for the school,� said Laura Toulme, a Beyond Coal executive board member.

emissions significantly, especially acidic gases, said Anna Aponte, an EPD permitting engineer. To put it in perspective, a coal-fired power plant puts out hundreds of times as much pollution as UGA’s coal boiler, and all the cars in Athens combined are a much bigger culprit when it comes to local air quality.

also questioned whether anyone is testing pollution levels at the top floors of tall buildings on campus, where emission plumes can remain concentrated, rather than spreading out as they fall. Administrators took Kemmerick’s comments to heart, said Kevin Kirsche, director of the

What’s at Stake Unfortunately, it’s not quite that simple. EPD has no authority to force UGA to replace the boiler as long as it meets federal emissions standards (which it does) and no matter how unpopular it is, according to Eric Cornwell, the program manager for EPD’s Stationary Source Permitting Program. “I think everybody wants clean air, but as far as the authority to force them to change, we do not have the authority,� he said. The coal boiler is more than 50 years old, on its last legs and mainly operates during the winter, according to administrators. It’s one of 12 UGA facilities that require an environmental permit to operate. The others are three incinerators for animal carcasses and medical waste, a repair shop’s paint booth and seven newer boilers powered by natural gas. The coal-fired boiler is classified as a “major source� of pollution according to U.S. Environmental Protection Agency standards, and it’s the single biggest source in Clarke County. According to testing done by a third party for UGA and EPD, the boiler emits 60 tons of poisonous carbon monoxide per year, 144 tons of smog-causing nitrogen oxide, 71 tons of particulate matter that causes heart and lung disease and 229 tons of sulfur dioxide, an ingredient in acid rain. A scrubber and baghouse installed several years ago reduced

Laura Toulme, David Littman (right) and other Beyond Coal members rally outside a Georgia Environmental Protection Division hearing at the Athens-Clarke County Library July 30. Still, to Beyond Coal and Sierra Club members, the issue is symbolic. “I think it’s strange UGA still has a coal boiler,� David Littman said. “Colleges all over the world have alternative energy systems, and we don’t.� And there may be other health effects beyond what’s measured as part of the permit application. Dale Kemmerick, a retired EPD air pollution meteorologist who lives in Duluth, called the testing “incomplete.� As a school, UGA should be held to a higher standard, Kemmerick said at the public hearing. For example, the coal boiler emits about 20 pounds of lead per year—a number that might have been higher before new technology was installed—so the soil surrounding it could contain 1,000 pounds of lead or more. Yet testing the soil or the blood of people who work near the boiler for lead isn’t required. He

DAVID W. GRIFFETH ATTORNEY

UGA Office of Sustainability. “UGA has been very proactive in testing and ensuring compliance,� Kirsche said. “Since [those tests are] not required, I don’t think they’ve been done, but the general consensus is that’s a good idea and something we should look into.�

What’s Next UGA administrators have given mixed signals about what they intend to replace the coal boiler with—something cleaner, or just another coal boiler. Last August, a North Carolina State University study commissioned by the U.S. Department of Energy found several fuel alternatives, including timber scraps known as biomass. It called natural gas the best option.

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Now-retired UGA President Michael Adams, though, threw cold water on alternative fuels in April, during one of his last press conferences. He said he didn’t want to rely on natural gas as the university’s sole source of heat and hot water. “Everybody is against coal until all the lights and heat go out,â€? he said. “You have to think these things through.â€? Former Senior Vice President for Finance and Administration Tim Burgess added that a biomass boiler would bring two dozen tractortrailers through campus each day, as opposed to the occasional coal-filled train, because it’s much less dense in energy. After the NC State study was released, UGA issued a request for proposals for consultants to drill down in more detail. Kirsche said last week that the university was close to signing a contract with Jacobs Engineering. “They’ve got a ton of experience with innovative steam plant design and construction,â€? he said. Assuming the contract is finalized, Jacobs will have six months to give UGA up to five options. Reliability and cost will be factors along with the environmental impact. “We have to have a reliable system, and it has to be cost-effective,â€? Kirsche said. There is no timetable for replacing the coal boiler, because there is no funding for it yet, and Adams pegged the price tag at $80 million to $120 million. But Kirsche called Beyond Coal’s proposed five-year deadline feasible, if optimistic. “Things always happen very slowly because it’s a very significant infrastructure decision we’re making,â€? he said. Much will depend on whether new President Jere Morehead puts his weight behind alternative fuels. He hasn’t said anything publicly, but Toulme believes he will support them. “I definitely think President Adams was under a lot of political pressure,â€? she said. â€œâ€Ś We’ve heard through various sources that President Morehead is open and sympathetic to environmental causes.â€?

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This Injection May Not Be Lethal A Death Row Inmate Fights State Secrecy C

Georgia Department of Corrections

onvicted murderer Warren Hill’s last chance to avoid execution now lies with the U.S. Supreme Court. Hill received a temporary stay of execution on July 15—a few hours before he was scheduled to be put to death—when his lawyer filed a motion challenging a new Georgia law known as the Lethal Injection Secrecy Act. The law keeps the public, as well as the state’s judiciary, from knowing where the drugs used in executions come from by classifying them as a state secret. Hill’s attorney, Brian Kammer, argued that Hill has no way of knowing if the chemicals are contaminated or will even work, so they could violate Hill’s Eighth Amendment right against cruel and unusual punishment. Hill’s execution was rescheduled for July 19, the day after Fulton County Superior Court Judge Gail Tusan was to rule on the motion. Larry Sasich, a doctor who testified for Hill, said during a hearing that he would “bet his life� that the drug was not compounded with acceptable U.S. standards, and there was a great possibility of cross-contamination, putting Hill at risk of Warren Hill the drugs not working effectively. The state offered up Jacqueline Martin, deputy chief medical examiner for the Georgia Bureau of Investigation, to refute these claims. She said that, even if the plaintiff’s claims were true and the drugs were contaminated, Hill would not feel any pain. However, Judge Tusan indefinitely extended Hill’s stay of execution on July 18 and ruled that the new secrecy act was “unconstitutionally broad.� Hill’s death warrant expired before the state could file its appeal. “It’s not even necessarily about pentobarbital; it’s about where the ingredients are coming from,� Kammer said after the ruling. “Because we were prevented from knowing exactly what compounding pharmacy is manufacturing the drug, where the active ingredients were manufactured, we were basically in the dark and disarmed in terms of

making out a claim for relief under the Eighth Amendment.� Knowing only that the drugs are coming from an out-of-state pharmacy without knowing where they’re coming from “does not inspire confidence� he added. “Most laws that classify certain information as a state secret allow for declassification and for judicial scrutiny of that information to decide whether, in certain circumstance, it can be disclosed,� he said. “What [the judge] is saying is that these claims deserve time to think about more, to have, perhaps, some more argument or briefing.� The state’s appeal of Judge Tusan’s ruling—filed with the Georgia Supreme Court on July 26 —will do just that. The drugs the state obtained from anonymous out-of-state compounding pharmacies to use in Hill’s execution will expire in early August, according to Kammer. He doesn’t think it is likely that the state will issue a new death warrant before his pending appeal to the U.S. Supreme Court to admit new evidence of Hill’s mental retardation in evidence, which is on the docket for Sept. 30. Hill, who was serving a life sentence for killing his girlfriend, ended up on death row for the murder of a fellow inmate in 1990. At the time of his conviction, three state psychologists who examined Hill all said he did not meet the requirement for mental retardation. All three have since recanted. The U.S. Supreme Court ruled in 2002 that it was unconstitutional for states to execute the mentally retarded. The state Attorney General’s appeal also notes: “The State does not yet know if, and where, it will acquire the next supply of pentobarbital for use in this execution. Thus, the State must secure another execution order from the sentencing court and obtain a new supply of pentobarbital in order to reschedule Hill’s execution. Hill is under no threat of immediate execution.� David Schick @reportschick

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One year, four stays of execution July 23, 2012—Warren Hill is given a stay of execution by the U.S. Supreme Court hours before his execution after attorney Brian Kammer argues that Georgia violated state law by not following proper protocol and switching the drugs it uses for lethal injections. Feb. 19, 2013—A federal appeals court puts a stop to Hill’s execution moments before he was set to be killed after all three state psychologists who had previously examined Hill recanted their claims that he was not mentally disabled. July 15, 2013—A Fulton County judge grants a temporary stay. The Georgia Department of Corrections reschedules Hill’s execution for 7 p.m. July 19. July 18, 2013—Hill is granted an indefinite stay of execution after Judge Gail Tusan rules that the Lethal Injection Secrecy Act is “unconstitutionally broad.�

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movie dope Some releases may not be showing locally this week. • indicates new review • 2 GUNS (R) After a summer of superheroes, giant robots and giant-er special FX, these two guns loaded with humor-piercing banter, accurately shot by two dead-eyes like Denzel Washington and Mark Wahlberg, are a welcome change of pace. DEA Agent Bobby “Beans” Trench and Navy Intelligence Officer Michael “Stig” Stigman are two unlikely partners. Both believe the other to be a law breaker. When they unwittingly steal $43.125 million from a shadowy organization, represented by Earl (Bill Paxton), they must trust one another again to clear both their names. 2 Guns is loaded and hits the bull’s eye with every shot. 20 FEET FROM STARDOM (PG-13) Award winning filmmaker Morgan Neville shines a light on the backup singers that made some of the greatest musical icons of the 20th century sound so good. Interviewees include Bruce Springsteen, Mick Jagger, Stevie Wonder, Sting, Sheryl Crow and Bette Midler. (Ciné) BEFORE MIDNIGHT (R) Jesse and Celine (Ethan Hawke and Julie Delpy) have come a long ways from 1995’s Before Sunrise. Our third glimpse into Jesse and Celine’s lives paints a realistic landscape of adult relationships founded upon love. Many viewing pairs will see themselves, arguing and rearguing their own alternatingly petty and weighty complaints. (Ciné) BREATHLESS 1960. Ciné continues its Summer Classic Movie Series with the French New Wave hit that made Jean-Luc Godard a worldwide sensation and uncrowned Citizen Kane as many a critic’s best film ever. Jean-Paul Belmondo and Jean Seberg star as a low-rent French criminal and his American girlfriend. UGA Film Studies Professor Richard Neupert will provide the introduction. (Ciné) THE CONJURING (R) Ed and Lorraine Warren (Patrick Wilson and Vera Farmiga) investigate the things that go bump in the night. Most times, a rational explanation solves the case; sometimes, it’s something paranormal. The occurrences in the Perron family’s new house are not just paranormal; they’re malevolent. James Wan (Saw, Insidious) stages the Perron’s haunting with utmost care. From the font in the opening credits, the film harkens back to the ‘70s and places itself not as a wannabe, but as a peer next to such

modern classics as The Amityville Horror and (dare I type it) The Exorcist. DESPICABLE ME 2 (PG) When a new super villain steals a dangerous, experimental serum, the Anti Villain League enlists former master criminal Gru’s (v. Steve Carell) assistance. Despicable Me 2 has no shot at surpassing expectations like its underdog predecessor, and its appeal to anyone over ten probably depends on one’s tolerance for the Minions, whose roles have been enlarged with their own spinoff in the works for 2014. k ELYSIUM Matt Damon stars as a factory worker who is bonded with an exoskeleton so he can sneak onto the manmade space habitat housing humanity’s remaining rich and famous. Jodie Foster is the government official keeping the regular folk on icky old Earth. All the toys in Director Neil Blomkamp’s badass universes look like prototypes from his aborted Halo movie, which will hopefully someday get a new green light. EPIC (PG) Unbeknownst to humanity, the forests are protected by the Leafmen, who constantly do battle with the Boggans, led by Mandrake (v. Christoph Waltz). When M.K. (v. Amanda Seyfried) is magically transported to their world, she must ensure the survival of the forest. The movie, based on William Joyce’s book, The Leafmen, does far too little to avoid Star Wars comparisons; it practically invites them. See bird racing (pod racing) and the two slugs who give off a distinct R2D2/C3PO sidekick vibe. FAST & FURIOUS 6 (PG-13) Furious 6 puts Dominic “Dom” Toretta (Vin Diesel), Brian O’Conner (Paul Walker) and the rest on the heels of big bad Shaw (Luke Evans), as they seek to recover Letty (Michele Rodriguez) and attain pardons all around from Hobbs (Dwayne Johnson). FRUITVALE STATION (R) Fruitvale Station enters theaters having established quite a pedigree, picking up Sundance’s prestigious Grand Jury Prize (and Audience Award) plus the Best First Film Award at Cannes. Writer-director Ryan Coogler based his feature debut on the real life events that occurred to Oscar Grant, played by “Friday Night Lights”’ Michael B. Jordan, on the last day of 2008. GIRL MOST LIKELY (PG-13) Once the next big thing, playwright Imogene

C I N E M AS Movie showtimes are not available by our deadline. Please check cinema websites for accurate information. CINÉ • 234 W. Hancock Ave. • 706-353-3343 • www.athenscine.com GEORGIA MUSEUM OF ART • (UGA Campus) 90 Carlton St. • 706-542-GMOA • www.uga.edu/gamuseum/calendar/films.html TATE STUDENT CENTER • (UGA Campus) 45 Baxter St. • 706-542-6396 • www.union.uga.edu/movies Beechwood Stadium cinemas 11 • 196 Alps Rd. • 706-546-1011 • www.georgiatheatrecompany.com Carmike 12 • 1570 Lexington Rd. • 706-354-0016 • www.carmike.com Georgia Square value cinemas 5 • 3710 Atlanta Hwy. • 706-548-3426 • www.georgiatheatrecompany.com UNIVERSITY 16 cinemas • 1793 Oconee Connector • 706-355-9122 • www.georgiatheatrecompany.com

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(Kristen Wiig) resorts to faking a suicide attempt to get her ex’s attention. As a result, Imogene is placed in the care of her gambling addict mother, Zelda (Annette Bening). Imogene’s childhood house is already pretty full, what with her mother’s compulsive liar boyfriend (Matt Dillon), Imogene’s reclusive brother (Christopher Fitzgerald) and a young singing stranger (Darren Criss) now sleeping in her old bedroom. Girl Most Likely is populated with characters far too cartoonishly quirky to generate more than a chuckle. Wiig shouldn’t have hurt her rising stardom too much; she just didn’t help it. THE GREAT GATSBY (PG-13) A creative, stylistic tour de force, the film starts off kinetic to the point of claustrophobia. The constant moving and zooming camera and non-stop edits choke the air out of the first act. The film doesn’t stop its constant

doomed the flight, leaving the pilots and crew to attempt everything in their power to make their passengers last moments as pleasant as possible. Don’t be surprised when Almodovar muses Antonio Banderas and Penelope Cruz pop by. (Ciné) THE INTERNSHIP (PG-13) As a follow-up to stars Vince Vaughn and Owen Wilson’s Wedding Crashers, this movie would have killed in 2007. Of course, the economy hadn’t quite tanked at that point, so the tale of two down-on-their-luck salesmen forced to tackle a Google internship wouldn’t quite have had much relevance. The movie made me feel as if I’d stumbled upon a big budget training video for new Google employees. Sadly, most training videos are unintentionally funnier. Do with this movie what the movie folks at Google should have done: say no.

Yep. It’s a deer tick. Charlestoning until Nick Carroway (Tobey Maguire) meets reclusive millionaire Jay Gatsby (Leonardo DiCaprio) at one of the latter’s renowned parties. Baz Luhrmann’s always favored style over substance, and the Roaring ‘20s are a great place to indulge his whims. GROWN UPS 2 (PG-13) With nary a grown-up in it, this sequel to Adam Sandler’s second biggest box office hit of all time is worse than its subpar predecessor. Former Hollywood bigshot Lenny Feder (Sandler) moves his family back to his tiny hometown, but rather than spend time with them, he mostly hangs out with his childhood besties. Grown Ups 2’s biggest accomplishment is how worthless it is. Argue all you want about what a great guy Sandler is, because at this point in his career you’ll find it impossible to convince someone he’s still funny, or better yet, relevant. THE HEAT (R) Uptight FBI agent Sarah Ashburn (Sandra Bullock) needs the help of foulmouthed, unpopular Boston cop Shannon Mullins (Melissa McCarthy) to take down a dangerous drug lord. Bullock and McCarthy don’t have Fey/Pohler chemistry. Nevertheless, enough cannot be said about how refreshing it is to watch a buddy cop comedy starring two women. The Heat may not be smoking, but after a barren first act, it’s pretty darn funny. I’M SO EXCITED (R) Almodovar is back! The trailer for I’m So Excited doesn’t explain much, but it certainly is Almodovarian. Three flight attendants lip sync and dance to The Pointer Sisters’ titular hit, and that’s about it. Apparently, a technical failure has

KEVIN HART: LET ME EXPLAIN (R) Kevin Hart is one of the more entertaining and, more importantly, least disappointing stand-up comics turned actor. If you missed his return to the stage for the 2012 “Let Me Explain” world tour, you can now catch his sold-out show at Madison Square Garden in this concert film which may or may not have been directed by the Tim Story of Fantastic Four and Barbershop fame. LOVELACE (R) Amanda Seyfried stars as the titular porn star, whose turn in the infamous Deep Throat made her a household name. The rest of the impressive cast includes Peter Sarsgaard, Juno Temple, Adam Brody, Hank Azaria and James Franco as Hugh Hefner! Two-time Oscar winner Rob Epstein and his documentary directing partner Thomas Friedman must have decided they liked fictional features after helming Howl with Franco. (Ciné) MONSTERS UNIVERSITY (G) Monsters University lacks the Pixar pop of their undeniably great features (Up, Wall-E, Toy Story 3). In this prequel to Monsters, Inc., we learn how Mike (v. Billy Crystal) and Sully (v. John Goodman) met. Apparently, the two scarers didn’t start as best buds. First, they were scaring rivals at Monsters University. This Revenge of the Monster Nerds doesn’t creatively bend college life for monsters as one would expect. Fortunately, the animation, especially the creature design, is as lush and lifelike as ever. MUCH ADO ABOUT NOTHING (PG-13) Alexis Denisof and Amy Acker wittily bicker as Benedick and Beatrice, the pair of lovers who cannot stand one another. Decide for yourself which is more lush, the gorgeous

black and white cinematography or the Elizabethan language. Joss Whedon plus Shakespeare is a match made in heaven. Prithee, do thine own self a favor and get thy butt to Ciné before the party’s over. (Ciné) MUD (PG-13) A coming of age tale set in the disappearing wilds of the small town south, Mud aims high, as Nichols attempts to channel Mark Twain, and hits the target square in the bull’s eye. Two teens—Ellis (Tye Sheridan) and Neckbone (Jacob Lofland)—discover a boat in a tree. They also discover Matthew McConaughey’s Mud, a fugitive living in the boat in the tree, while he waits to escape with the love of his life, Juniper (Reese Witherspoon). Mud watches like a work of modern literature, capturing the last gasps of a dying culture as one boy becomes a man. PACIFIC RIM (PG-13) A portal to another dimension opens in the Pacific, unleashing giant monsters called Kaiju on humanity, who builds giant robots called Jaegers to counter them. Years into a losing war, the Jaeger program leader, Stacker Pentecost (Idris Elba), takes one last chance, sending the last surviving robots and pilots to close the portal for good. The most wellrealized blockbuster of its kind, Pacific Rim delivers the childlike robot action missing from all three misguided Transformers flicks. Writer-director Guillermo del Toro’s smartest move was leaving the snark and the cynicism to lesser movies. PERCY JACKSON: SEA OF MONSTERS (PG) The not terrible but certainly underwhelming Percy Jackson: The Lightning Thief finally gets a sequel, and the most exciting thing about it isn’t an excuse to ogle Alexandra Daddario. This time it’s Nathan Fillion, as Hermes in a suit. “Buffy”’s Anthony (Stewart) Head replacing Pierce Brosnan doesn’t bother me a bit either. Percy and pals’ newest adventure has them seeking the Golden Fleece to save Camp HalfBlood. Diary of a Wimpy Kid’s Thor Freudenthal directs. PLANES (PG) Remember Disney owns Pixar, and the House of Mouse is solely responsible for this expansion of the Cars universe that pleases kids as much as it bores adults. Dusty (voiced by Dane Cook, another slap in the Pixar face), a crop duster, dreams of competing in an aerial race. Unfortunately, he’s afraid of heights. Waa-waa. The trailer should depress any adult that knows a screening is in their near future. Will it be worse than Cars 2? RED 2 (PG-13) Retired Extremely Dangerous CIA operative Frank Moses (Bruce Willis) is trying to live a quiet life with his girlfriend, Sarah (MaryLouise Parker). But then his paranoid pal, Martin (John Malkovich), shows up, and another caper begins. This time, the boys (and girl) are being hunted by everyone, including an old pal, Victoria Winters (Helen Mirren), and an old enemy, Han Cho Bai (Byung-hun Lee). The quips fly as fast as the bullets. Red 2 won’t set the world on fire, but if your old 80s action VHS tapes have worn thin, this new movie will fit the bill quite nicely. R.I.P.D. (PG-13) Summer’s biggest bomb absolutely deserves its box office failure. This misguided adaptation of Peter M. Lenkov’s comic, Rest in Peace Department, stars Ryan Reynolds and Jeff Bridges as deceased cops—former

Boston PD detective Nick Walker and Old West lawman Roy Pulsipher— tasked with bringing in rogue spirits. If you think this flick is a Men in Black rip off, it pretty much is. • THE SMURFS 2 (PG) Even the Smurfs seem less “smurfed” up about their sequel. Gargamel (Hank Azaria, still ruining a great cartoon villain) creates some fake Smurfs—he calls them Naughties. Vexy (v. Christina Ricci) and Hackus (v. J.B. Smoove) are an un-Smurf-like gray, so Gargamel kidnaps Smurfette (v. Katy Perry), who holds the secret to turning the Naughties blue. Sadly, Smurfette is an easier target than usual as the birthday girl feels forgotten by Papa Smurf (v. the late Jonathan Winters) and the rest of her blue brethren. (She’s the only girl; no blue-blooded Smurf ever forgets Smurfette.) Maybe the kids will be entertained again, but the illogical trip to Paris, where Gargamel has become a big celebrity magician, will flummox adults. Neil Patrick Harris, Jayma Mays and franchise newbie Brendan Gleeson don’t add that much to the movie. Kudos to the voice work by Anton Yelchin, Winters and “The Daily Show”’s John Oliver. THE TO DO LIST (R) I really want this teen comedy to be good, mostly so that Aubrey Plaza can become a bigger star, a la Emma Stone in Easy A. Before heading off to college, a sexually inexperienced, straight A student (Plaza) makes a to do list of experiences she needs to have before setting foot on campus. Maggie Carey, a “Funny or Die Presents…” alum, directs from her own screenplay. TURBO (PG) After a first act highlighted by endearing animation and stellar voice work from Ryan Reynolds and Paul Giamatti, Turbo gets stupid, as the main mollusk is imbued with the abilities of a car (not just speed but alarm, radio and headlights) after a freak accident involving a street racer and some nitrous. Turbo and his other racing snail pals—including Whiplash (v. Samuel L. Jackson) and Smoove Move (v. Snoop Dogg)—head to the Indy 500, where they will face off against defending champion and the world’s greatest racecar driver, Guy Gagne (v. Bill Hader). Turbo will mostly appeal to those kiddies for whom Cars has run out of gas. I never imagined animated snails could be so appealing. THE WAY, WAY BACK (PG-13) This coming of age comedy stars Liam James as Duncan, who negotiates a summer with his mom (Toni Collette) and her boyfriend (Steve Carell) by getting a job at a local water park, where he is befriended by its odd owner (Sam Rockwell). This Sundance favorite looks appealing enough to be summer’s indie breakout hit. WE’RE THE MILLERS (R) Jason Sudeikis, Jennifer Aniston, Emma Roberts and Will Poulter (Son of Rambow’s Lee Carter) star as a fake family being paid $100,000 to bring a load of pot across the Mexican border. Director Rawson Marshall Thurber made us want to play Dodgeball, but his Mysteries of Pittsburgh remains largely unsolved. THE WOLVERINE (PG-13) A darker, more complicated hero than Marvel’s Iron Man and Spider-Man, Wolvie poses a narrative difficulty, much like The Punisher. The Wolverine comes closest to nailing this popular, mysterious icon. After the events of X-Men: The Last Stand, Logan has shed his Wolverine persona to live a solitary life in the woods. However, the last request of a dying friend whisks the clawed one off to Japan. Director James Mangold and writers Mark Bomback and Scott Frank chose smartly in adapting Frank Miller and Chris Claremont’s seminal 1982 limited series. Drew Wheeler


movie pick Just a Shot Away TWENTY FEET FROM STARDOM (2013) Their names will be unfamiliar to most of us, but their voices will trigger memories of love lost and found, of songs that have become part of the cultural fabric of our country. But the women profiled in Morgan Neville’s latest music documentary, Twenty Feet from Stardom, were not performers who took center stage. Darlene Love, Merry Clayton, Lisa Fischer and others stood in the shadows of bigger stars performing as backup singers. Music documentaries—with some major exceptions—tend to be pedestrian affairs. They chart the rise and fall and hopefully fiery rebirth of the performer’s career, offering up tantalizing gossip and anecdotes along the way, as well as plenty Jo Lawry, Judith Hill, of memorable live performance clips. What Neville has a knack for is how he conveys intimacy with his subjects, some of whom are larger-than-life people like Hank Williams, Johnny Cash and Sam Phillips. His subjects and the people who were influenced by them—such as Bruce Springsteen, Mick Jagger and Sting in this movie—remain vulnerably human regardless of how exceptionally talented they are. The women focused on in this movie also happen to be African American, a significant detail considering that backup singers were

primarily white up until the rise of Motown in the 1960s. The center of the movie is Love and her contentious relationship with the troubled “Wall of Sound� genius/madman, producer Phil Spector. Love was a member of the girl group The Blossoms and rose to relative fame singing backup for Sam Cooke and others. In his interview, Springsteen glowingly talks about his appreciation for her vocal skills, enthusiastically admitting that it was her voice that artists like him were always trying to capture in their own songs. Unfortunately, Spector also sidelined her career by holding her contractually hostage working for him. Love never reached the heights of stardom as, say, Diana Ross, but her work nevertheless and Lisa Fischer stands on its own. Another great focus here is the career of Clayton, who most notably sang backup on “Gimme Shelter� but also got her start singing for Ray Charles. That neither Love nor Clayton achieved solo success reminds us of how unfair the business can be. Twenty Feet from Stardom has its fair share of heartbreak and disappointment. It’s a showbiz documentary after all. But it’s an uplifting tribute to these great performers and one of the better music documentaries in years.

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The label on Southern Tier Live Pale Ale Genesee Cream Ale costs about the same as a reminds me of TV graphics in the early ‘90s: sixer of Blue Point Summer Ale and tastes virbright, colorful and confusing. It’s disjointed tually the same. Avoiding this beer is an easy and overly busy—a mosaic of tickets to live decision. events, in case the title of the beer was too Where to begin with Dragon Lady, a monsubtle. The beer is slightly darker than your strosity of a beer? Adorning the label is a standard fizzwater but lighter than many other 1980s barbarian warrior queen, complete with American pale ales. Live has a malty aroma the obligatory armor bikini, broadsword, kneetinged with fruit—think of mango combined high, ass-kicking boots and horned crown. She in a fruit salad with looks like the offspring pineapple and oranges. of Conan the Barbarian However, the fruity and a brewery. This The primary flavor of this scent doesn’t overpower Dragon Lady wants to beer is neither hop character crush your taste buds, the malts and hops. This is not a super nor maltiness, but the flavor and see them driven fruity wheat beer, before her, and hear the of rubbing alcohol wrapped lamentations of your though. The tropical flavor plays second sobriety. Behind our in a thin veneer of beer. fiddle to the malt and heroine stands a sad hop symphony swimdragon with tiny T-Rex ming in the glass. The unexpected fruit flavor arms and a blank expression. Above the label sets it apart from other American pale ales. is a red warning flag explaining that this beer Give it to your friends who enjoy Blue Moon contains 9.7% ABV. and Shocktop; they’ll enjoy the flavor of this Dragon Lady describes itself as a “Premium beer, and they will have a chance to try a difEuropean Lager,� as well as a doppelbock (a ferent style of beer besides wheat. The flavor dark lager). Alas, poor Dragon Lady, you are is complex and satisfying. At 5.5% ABV, this neither. Dragon Lady assaults its unsuspectbeer is great for summer days. ing drinker with the scent of a skunky malt liquor spiked with a shot of cheap vodka. The color of the beer is a distinct copper and in no way could be mistaken for the dopplebock that the label claims is within. The primary flavor of this beer is neither hop character nor maltiness, but the flavor of rubbing alcohol wrapped in a thin veneer of beer. Should you decide to tackle the Dragon Lady, drink it straight from the bottle to minimize the attack on your nose. For less than $3 a pint, this beer is what you should drink shortly before taking on Thulsa Doom. The India pale ale is a style that divides beer drinkers. Some love the aromatic hop assault of a West Coast IPA, while others prefer drinks that don’t leave their palates like the Miami Marlins: crushed and broken. Building a bridge between the two extremes is 21st Amendment Brew Free or Die! IPA. Despite a strong hop aroma, the beer itself tastes surprisingly malty and is well balanced. In fact, this beer is so balanced that it would probably self-identify as an undecided voter on Election Day. It’s also extremely tasty. If you’re unsure about IPAs, give this one a try. Much like Napoleon Dynamite’s favorite animal, Dogfish Head SixtyOne Minute IPA is a hybrid: an IPA provides part of its genetic code, and an unfinished Syrah wine makes up the other. Unlike the majestic liger, though, it has no magical powers beyond being delicious. The addiBlue Point Summer Ale comes packaged in tion of the grapes causes the beer to look a bright blue can with sandy yellow lettering, like Cheerwine, which is suddenly something I like some kind of strangely shaped alphabet wish would happen more often with beer. The beach. If someone were to set this beer in a aroma is more tart than bitter, thanks to the glass next to a High Life, PBR or Bud Light in grape must. The flavor is complex. The grapes, a glass, I wouldn’t be able to tell the differhops and malts are all fighting for dominance, ence. The similarities to American macrobrews and picking apart the depth of taste is a continue beyond the straw yellow coloration. fun experience. This beer is unique, and you At 4.4% ABV, this session ale is light and should definitely try it if you think you can refreshing on a hot day. Unfortunately, this throw a football right over those mountains. beer is so similar to a typical macrobrew that there’s no reason to buy it. A 12-pack of Jacob Yarbrough

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In Search of the Perfect Loaf

Artisanal Bakers Share a Passion for Bread For

C.J. Bartunek

Richard Saunders, bread-making is both an art and famous bakers. He learned to work with starter cultures native to each grain and explored new ingredients. and a science. The quest for bread perfection is a collaborative project of Every Thursday and Friday during the bakers around the world. When Saunders was learning his craft, farmers-market season, he presides over the kitchen built onto he found other artisans more than willing to share their knowlthe back of his house. He and his assistant, Austin Heykoop, edge with him. mix, proof and shape the loaves of naturally leavened artiAround the time he was interested in building a woodsanal bread that he will sell on Saturday, entering data into fired oven, he visited his daughter in Vermont, where she the grid on a giant whiteboard on the back wall to make sure was attending college, and a worker at the local food co-op that each batch enters the wood-burning retained-heat oven directed him to a professional baker in New Hampshire who at the proper time, in order to maximize the deliciousness and lived in an idyllic enclave of organic farmers and food artisans. appearance of his breads and pastries. That baker shared some tips, introduced Saunders to another Cooking with this kind of oven requires precision. After baker in Freeport, ME, who had the specific kind of oven that Saunders fires it up each Thursday, it builds up heat over a interested Saunders and invited Saunders to come back for a long period. The loaves will be baked as it gradually cools, so the order they go in is important. “Imagine a graph of heat and time,” Saunders says as he explains the process, which bakers call “managing the curve.” He begins baking when the oven is around 550 degrees, starting with light and open breads like the semolina and working his way toward the loaves with seeds, nuts or fruits. By Sunday, the oven will be down to 350 degrees, and by the next Thursday it will still be at 180 degrees when he fires it up again. “I know I’m a long way from making the perfect loaf of bread,” Saunders says. “Sometimes they come out really good, sometimes they’re horrible. This is all part of the art. There’s a science to all this, but there’s also all this art, in terms of what does the bread look like, feel like, how is it rising. Every day you have all of these variables in terms of humidity and temperature and heat of the oven: is the oven 20 degrees too hot, 20 degrees too cold, or is it the perfect temperature, or did I get distracted talking and leave the bread in too long? There are all sorts of pitfalls possible.” Richard Saunders (left) gets ready to bake with assistant Austin Keyhoop. Miche, Saunders’ business (“miche” is French “country bread” or sourvisit. In the winter of 2009, Saunders returned to New England dough), has become an Athens Farmers Market favorite since he began participating in 2010. (He is skipping the market this for a week and baked with both men. “Virtually everybody in this activity is incredibly generous weekend to attend a family reunion, but Miche will be back on of time and knowledge,” Saunders says. “Any recipe I wanted Aug. 17.) from him, any information he could give me, he was perfectly “Miche bread is a special treat,” says Dylan Payne of Cedar willing to give. There are no secrets. So I don’t have secrets Grove Farm, who often makes a point to pick up a loaf of either.” Saunders’ “super seeded” bread during a free moment between helping his own customers. “The time he spends baking, the ingredients he uses, and his methods all result in a highquality product.”

Passing It On

From COSMIC to the Kitchen Baking is a departure from Saunders’ previous work. Before retiring in 2008, Saunders worked for the University of Georgia selling NASA-developed software through COSMIC, the Computer Software Management and Information Center. Many of his jobs have reflected his love of science and nature. He holds a master’s degree from UGA in plant protection, which combined entomology, plant pathology and horticulture. He has taught math on the college level and briefly worked as a ninth-grade science teacher. He and his wife, Carol Myers, met in Arizona in the early 1980s while working in Arcosanti, an experimental town in the desert dedicated to exploring environmentally-sound architectural and city planning practices. Baking has afforded Saunders plenty of opportunity for scientific inquiry. When he became interested in making naturally leavened bread a few years ago, the problem of breaking down the precise steps to achieve the perfect loaf led to a research program. Saunders immersed himself in books by food chemists

In fact, Saunders’ success in his own baking endeavors allowed him to pay forward some of his expertise to another scientifically-minded baker in the area. His former assistant, Angel Cooper—now proprietor of her own artisanal bakery, The Comerian—hadn’t planned on a career in croissants. She holds a degree from UGA in cognitive science with a minor in math but found it difficult after graduation to find a job in Athens that would utilize these skills. As a hobby, she began selling pastries at the Comer farmers market while she considered her next move, since she loved to cook and bake. Saunders and Myers attended a birthday party Cooper threw for her partner, Uwe Happek, who is a physics professor at UGA. For the brunch, Cooper decided to try her hand at croissants for the first time. Though croissants are difficult to make, they were a hit with her guests, and Saunders asked Cooper if she’d be interested in working as his assistant. Cooper worked with Saunders for a year and sold her pastries alongside his bread. As she and Saunders both increased their production and sales, they contemplated whether a double tent would be more appropriate, since they were

outgrowing their space. But Cooper decided that she was ready to make the leap to a career of baking. Her scientific background is not irrelevant to her work. “It’s very important to have an analytical mind if you want to be a baker,” she says. “It seems to be very common.” Cooper works out of the kitchen in an old restaurant building in Comer, which she and Happek are renovating to become a bakery. Though the bakery isn’t ready yet as a retail space, customers in Comer often drop by to place orders and chat. Cooper makes all kinds of pastries, cakes and breads, but she is perhaps most famous for her croissants. Croissantmaking is a delicate art. The dough is mixed on Thursday and chilled until the next day. On Friday, she makes butter blocks and undertakes a complicated sequence of folding before chilling the dough again and rolling it into a long sheet. Then she wakes up at 2 a.m. on Saturdays to begin baking the croissants for the market. That schedule may sound extreme, but Cooper feels the sleepless nights are justified by the loveliness of a freshly baked croissant. “People really get it. It makes it worth it to me.” Like Saunders, Cooper is meticulous about her ingredients. Everything used in her pastries is organic. “It’s hard to make an organic sticky bun,” she says, but farmers market patrons have responded enthusiastically. “They might not have the time to grow their own food or make their own croissants, but they know that if they were to do it themselves, this is what it would be.”

The Bread Boom Bread is becoming something of a specialty in Athens, a town full of artisans of all stripes. In addition to Miche and The Comerian, patrons of the Athens Farmers Market can also enjoy Backyard Bread. Beyond that, there’s also Luna Bread and Big City Bread. Within the next few weeks, Athenians will have another option for artisanal pastries and European-style crusty breads when the Independent Baking Co. opens in Five Points. Like Saunders and Cooper, owner Thom Leonard did not set out to be a baker. But in his case, bread has been his occupation for much of his adult life. In 1971, while majoring in anthropology at Fairhaven College in Washington state, he took an elective in “the science of cottage industries,” which explored various homestead arts. A neighbor in his building baked bread every Thursday. Leonard decided to try it himself for a class project, and he became fascinated. After that, he worked in bakeries for several years and later owned his own bakery, WheatFields, in Lawrence, KS, which was included on a USA Today list of the top 10 U.S. artisinal bakeries. One of Leonard’s recipes was featured in the book Artisan Baking Across America by Maggie Glezer. Many of the Independent Baking Co.’s ingredients will be organic. Leonard also plans to use some heirloom varieties of wheat and hopes to move toward relying on local wheat. He hopes to explore the possibility of using green energy to power his equipment, as well. While the field is becoming more crowded, Saunders’ description of the warmth of the baking community rings true. Cooper, Saunders and Leonard now order their organic flour together, and their passion for baking is a basis for friendship. “We’re more colleagues than competitors,” Leonard says. With all the delicious options available around Athens, locally made bread is surely worth your hard-earned dough. C.J. Bartunek

AUGUST 7, 2013 · FLAGPOLE.COM

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Drunk Eats

Let Flagpole’s Food Writer Be Your Late-Night Spirit Guide

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uch as we continue to grow in other ways, the T-shirt that reads “Athens, GA: A Drinking Town with a Football Problem” is not inaccurate. Even if you choose not to imbibe, if you’re young and you like to go out and socialize or see music, you’re going to end up with a lot of late nights downtown. No matter how much people complain about shows starting too late, it’s not a very solvable problem. That said, the saying “nothing good happens after midnight” doesn’t have to apply to food. I’m not saying I’ve never been to Krystal or Taco Bell at 2:30 a.m., digging through the change drawer in my car to scrape up enough for a snack, but my function here is to point you to some better options. There are many chains and franchises that do late-night eats—foremost among them Waffle House, which even has a branch downtown—but they’re less interesting to talk about. This list is by no means comprehensive, but it does seek to be catholic in its tastes and point you, perhaps, to some more exciting options than McDonald’s. Once upon a time, there was a perfect solution at the very end of the night, and its name was J.B. the Original Polish Sausage Man. Set up directly outside of the 40 Watt Club, he grilled his sausages, stuffed them into a soft bun, topped them copiously with sautéed peppers and onions, plus yellow mustard and the infamous “comeback sauce” (a salty-sweet-spicy-sour combo punch) and handed them over with a fair bit of banter. But the restrictions on food trucks are tough, so a J.B. sighting is much rarer these days. Now, you have to cast your net wider to find the perfect comestibles to soak up a few too many PBR tallboys. Still, the offerings have improved and expanded. The best late-night meal is clearly still a fried-egg sandwich on well-toasted bread with grain mustard and some sharp cheddar, made by you in your own kitchen, but the following are some decent substitutes. (See flagpole.com for some reader-submitted photos of local folks’ late-night eats.)

Classics

sets up at Max Thursday through Saturday nights from 9 p.m. until at least 2 a.m., as well as at Terrapin Beer Co. in the late afternoon. Chef/owner Ryan Morgan likes to play with cross-cultural flavors, cooking up Korean BBQ tacos, a Koreanaccented deep-fried hot dog (topped with pickled cucumbers and radish), takoyaki (fried octopus dumplings) and lovely little pork sliders with chipotle sauce. His menu is often in flux, depending on his current interests. Facebook is the best way to keep up with his whereabouts and specials (facebook. com/streetscafe). The World Famous David Eduardo and Bain Mattox’s tiny music venue/drinkery also features a muscular menu of gourmet bar food served until 2 a.m. by Jarad Blanton, whose cherubic, bearded face can be seen through the little window that looks into the kitchen. The waffle iron is broken too often for

The Grill Open 24 hours, since 1981, The Grill is not only great for burgers, fries (with feta dressing) and shakes late at night, when even other late-night eateries have closed, but also a fine option for vegetarians who want to go beyond pizza, with veggie burgers and a great grilled cheese on multigrain bread with honey mustard and sprouts. Starting at midnight, you can also order from the breakfast menu. The Grill’s staff has seen it all. Someone should really write a book. 171 College Ave., 706-543-4770 Taco Stand This list is short on Mexican eats, and although Taco Stand is in no way authentic anything (other than authentically Athens), who wouldn’t want to eat a Herschel Burrito (BBQ pork, black beans, jalapeño coleslaw) or opt for the fantastic simplicity of T-Stand’s basic cheese quesadillas with peppers and onions? 247 E. Broad St., 706-549-1446

Something Different Streets Cafe The only food truck currently working downtown Athens that attempts anything beyond hot dogs, Streets

The Rooftop at the Georgia Theatre Run by the folks downstairs at The Branded Butcher, the Georgia Theatre’s rooftop has fantastic views, a lovely, almost beachy atmosphere and a great little kitchen doing creative eats until relatively late (hours vary). You don’t have to have a ticket to the show downstairs to participate in the fun up top, or to eat Matt Palmerlee’s awesome deviled eggs with sriracha, veggie banh mi or charcuterie platter (usually a couple of nice cheeses, salami, housemade jam, olives and bread). Looking for more traditional drunk food? They also make a nice little burger, a chili cheese and slaw dog, pork or tofu tacos, cheese fries and a BBQ sandwich. Yum. 215 N. Lumpkin St., 706-850-7670

Sweets Always Baked Our local late-night cookie delivery service/retail store is about to get some competition from a cookie franchise opening nearby, but the local joint’s offerings—with Georgia music-inspired names like the “Almond Brothers” and the “SpotieOttieDopedelicious”—really hit the spot if you’re jonesing for sweets past midnight. (They’re open until 2:30 a.m. or later on the weekend.) Plus, the owners give all profits to charity. 268 N. Jackson St., 706850-5478

Chili dog at The Rooftop at the Georgia Theatre. Photo by Paul Reavis.

Little Italy Little Italy is a classic for a reason. Its NYC-style slices and gigantic sandwiches are available until as late as 3 a.m. It’s fast, cheap and consistent, a perennial favorite for sobering up at the end of the night—not to mention you could theoretically come home with leftovers for the next morning. Its no-nonsense staff does a great job keeping unruly customers in line (literally). 125 N. Lumpkin St., 706-613-7100

of leftovers (a large bowl of rice topped with veggies, grilled meat, fried egg, etc.)? Korean pancakes, bulgogi (BBQ beef), jobchae (sweet potato noodles with meat and veggies) and more await those with interesting tastes. It’s open until 3 a.m. Thursday through Saturday. 131 E. Broad St., Suite A, 706548-7441

my liking, but when it’s not, you can get a marvelous chickenand-waffle sandwich with bourbon-maple butter and homemade hot sauce. The pork steamed buns might be the single best late-night option on this list: sort of like soft, thick little tacos, they enfold a small pile of shredded slow-cooked pork, hoisin, excellent red miso pickles and sweet chili mayo. The poutine (French-Canadian cheese fries with gravy) is equally delicious as a gut-bomb. 351 N. Hull St., 706-543-4002 Lay-Z Shopper Downtown Athens’ sole bodega, Lay-Z Shopper offers a full array of convenience store food until 4 a.m., plus smokes, poker chips, nonalcoholic drinks and awesome made-to-order deli sandwiches. Boar’s Head meats and cheese are sliced on the spot and assembled into well-balanced creations that can seem healthy in comparison to most other options at that hour. 361 E. Clayton St., 706-356-1115 Dawg Gone Good BBQ Open until 2 a.m. Thursdays and 3 a.m. Fridays and Saturdays, this tiny space across from Little Kings Shuffle Club attracts a sizable crowd for its ribs, pork, chicken and sausages with classic sides including mac and cheese, potato salad, yams and slaw. If you want a meal, not just a helping of fat and salt, Dawg Gone Good is your place. 224 W. Hancock Ave., 706-613-9799 Eat Hibachi Despite seeming merely like a place to get a boring rice bowl (which you certainly can order), Eat Hibachi also is Athens’ only Korean restaurant. Why not be adventurous and go get a big bowl of steaming-hot kimchi soup after a night out? Or bibimbap, the Korean method of getting rid

Pauley’s More than just a daytime crêperie, Pauley’s has built a following through remaining open until 2 or 3 a.m. most nights, with a big selection of beer. If you want to pretend to sophistication, you can go for the crêpes, either building your own or picking a predefined combination of ingredients both savory and sweet. Slices of Cecilia cakes are available as well, should your tastes run to sugar rather than salt. 134 E. Clayton St., 706-549-0034

Off the Beaten Path Pulaski Heights BBQ It’s not exactly downtown, and it’s not exactly the wee small hours of the morning, but those who define late-night a little earlier shouldn’t miss the $5 deal Chuck Ramsey’s restaurant runs. From 10 p.m. until he runs out, you can get a BBQ pork sandwich and a Miller High Life for that minute amount. Plus, the bar is open until at least 11 p.m. 675 Pulaski St., 706-583-9600 Inoko Sushi Express This branch of Inoko is out on the Eastside, in the Kroger shopping center, but it’s a hidden resource if you want late-night sushi. Fast and cheap but clean and well-executed, its offerings aren’t super high-end, but they’re a great choice for something different, especially if you’re in the area. Open until 1 a.m. Friday and Saturday. 2301 College Station Rd., 706-546-5662 The Varsity It’s a bit of a hike from downtown, but there’s something charming about the Atlanta-based home of “What’llyou-have?” and not just during football season. Chili dogs, slaw dogs, onion rings and a Frosted Orange could be a perfect way to round out your night. The Varsity is open ‘til midnight Friday and Saturday. 1000 W. Broad St., 706-548-6325 Hillary Brown food@flagpole.com

AUGUST 7, 2013 · FLAGPOLE.COM

17


“ Grab Yourself a Guide! Yes,

it’s available at flagpole.com in two different configurations and in a mobile and tablet iteration, but you’ll also want one you can hold in your hand and keep in your bookbag or your car, your briefcase or your desk. It’s the 2013–14 Flagpole Guide to Athens, and it’s full of helpful information for those who want to know their way around. The Guide has the lowdown on every bar and restaurant in Athens that was open by press time, and it has the essential information you need to help you navigate when you’re out and about and to help you get the lay of the land when you want to get a better grasp on Athens. Our staff and writers have put a lot of energy into assembling this compendium and arranging it to make it as user-friendly as possible. If you keep a Guide handy, you will be surprised at how often you consult it, because it is designed with you in mind, trying to anticipate what you want to know about Athens and how best to present the information to make it as helpful as possible. In the Guide you’ll find a potpourri of facts about Athens, a schedule of annual events, stuff for kids, where to see art, theater and movies, where to buy books and where to go to the park. There are listings of activities you can participate in and classes you and your kids can take; there’s a complete rundown of all the music venues in town and a handy key to lodging in the area. You can also see all the local businesses voted as Favorites by Flagpole readers, not to mention the restaurant and bar guide, other options for food and a special section on local farms that sell to the public and give tours. We’ve got very helpful maps of Athens, downtown and UGA, too. The Guide is available at over 300 locations around Athens and Watkinsville. As usual, it is free of charge—brought to you by all our advertisers. We keep it in stores and bars and restaurants and boxes and racks all year, restocking when the supply gets low, so that the Guide is always there for you when you need it. We make it available, because we don’t want you to live without it, which would be a pretty grim existence. Know your town. Find your way around. Discover the new, and enjoy the familiar. The Guide can help. That’s why it’s here.

Pete McCommons

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Q&A with James Ponsoldt

The Director of The Spectacular Now Brings His Film Home

T

he Spectacular Now, which opened Friday in L.A. and New York, is Athens native James Ponsoldt’s third feature-length film, following 2006’s Off the Black and last year’s Smashed, but it’s by far his most personal. Set in Ponsoldt’s hometown, and shot here last summer, the movie documents a budding high-school relationship. But it’s no breezy teen rom-com, having already earned rave reviews from The New Yorker, Slate, New York and practically every other outlet in the land. Ponsoldt admits to an intense autobiographical connection with the story, and tells Flagpole that shooting in Athens was “a dream that I’d had since I was a teenager.” Read below the rest of our conversation with the director, who hosted two sold-out screenings of The Spectacular Now as fundraisers for Ciné on Tuesday, Aug. 6. A longer version of this interview is online at flagpole.com. Flagpole: Congratulations on all the great feedback. Can you tell us what it was specifically that drew you to Tim Tharpe’s book? Also, were there any other coming-of-age books or films that you leaned on while making The Spectacular Now? James Ponsoldt: What really drew me to the material was, it was one of the most honest depictions of adolescent life I’d ever read in my life. It reminded me a lot of my own adolescence, growing up in Athens. Sutter, the main character, and some of the secondary characters, reminded me of myself at that point of my life, and some of the people I knew. It resonated with me on a very personal level. Every film I make, I want to make it as hyper-personal and specific as possible. It was really important to me to bring it to Athens and shoot at a lot of the places where I’d grown up. As far as the second part, I really love Last Picture Show, I really love Splendor in the Grass, I really love 400 Blows. I really love Say Anything, but I also really love Manhattan, and A Woman Under the Influence and Minnie and Moskowitz, which are two John Cassavettes movies. Punch-Drunk Love. There were a lot of films that were frames of reference. FP: Your last two films have explored the subject of alcoholism, but through different lenses. Was that an accident, or was there something that drew you to that theme? JP: In the case of The Spectacular Now, I never really thought of the movie as being about alcoholism. Some people have written about it, and thought about it as such, but it’s not that. It’s a portrait of a complicated young man, and it’s a love story about two complicated people. The kid drinks, but he drinks a hell of a lot less than most of the people I grew up with in Athens. I think it’s part of who Sutter is. The story never names it as alcoholism, never comments on it, never judges it. I think some people project that on it—and I think our understanding of the character shifts a bit as you get to know him. FP: Tell us a little bit about the experience of filming in Athens, on a personal level and on a wider scale. JP: Shooting a movie in Athens was a dream that I’d had since I was a teenager. With The Spectacular Now, the story seemed so perfect for Athens. I worked hard to sort of sell the people around me on the idea of going to Athens. Athens is where I was born; it’s where I was raised; it’s where my parents

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(3,)+ ,b1 " 3%&2#0b1 0-2&#0 still live. In every nook and cranny of Athens, I have some memory. My dad taught at the University for over 30 years, so I grew up in and around the UGA campus. It really is a film that showcases Athens on a very local level, and not a very touristy way. Every now and then, people come through and do something about music in Athens, and they show the R.E.M. steeple, or they show the railroad trestle, or the arch. But that wasn’t what I was interested in. The main characters are still in high school—they’re not 21, they don’t have fake IDs yet. More importantly, it’s not that they proactively decided to move to Athens because of the music scene, or for college. They just happened to grow up there. In some people’s eyes, you might call them townies. So there’s a proximity—they have the awareness of all those kids that are a few years older, but they don’t get to take part in all the crazy freeness of being in college. And that was kind of my experience growing up in Athens. FP: How did you go about setting things up in Athens? JP: The first phone call I made when I knew I wanted to direct this movie was to Danielle Robarge [Rusk], who’s the head of Film Athens. I called and said, “Hey, it looks like this coming summer, I really wanna try to take this movie down there. How can we do this?” She really laid the groundwork, because I wasn’t in Athens at the time. She could take photos [of locations] and I could share them with people in Los Angeles, and really give them the sense of how Athens is so unique. Our production office was downtown, in R.E.M.’s former office, which they had vacated the fall before. And it was very surreal, because growing up in Athens in the ‘80s and ‘90s, R.E.M. were the patron saints of everything cool. It meant a lot to me—emotionally, psychically, spiritually, in every single way. On a very practical level, I was getting to commit [Athens] to film, but I was also getting to give jobs and opportunities to Athens. A lot of the people on the film fell in love with Athens. It was really awesome to have people I knew from Los Angeles and New York talking about the Manhattan, talking about the Globe. It was really cool for me. And Ciné was so profoundly helpful in every way. Ciné let us have local auditions there, they let me and my cinematographer screen movies there before we started shooting, as frames of reference. People were so laid-back and supportive and so nice. FP: There’s a scene in the trailer, the actor who plays Sutter, Miles Teller, is wearing a Transmetropolitan t-shirt. Are there any other Athens Easter eggs local audiences can look for? JP: Yeah, but I don’t wanna give too much away [laughs]… Yes, people who are from Athens and see the movie will see tons of stuff they know. It’s on a very local level. It’s from the point of view of someone who’s growing up in Athens, and not as someone who’s a tourist. For me [laughs], the biggest existential crisis was a lot of the story takes place in a high school, and we wound up shooting at Clarke Central. Which was a great place to shoot, but I went to Cedar Shoals, and Clarke Central was our rival. I had to sort of swallow that. Gabe Vodicka

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music DOs and DON’Ts

How to Get Ahead in Athens, or Not

E

ven in a music town like Athens, where strapping on a guitar is not only encouraged but practically mandated, it can be hard for a band to break on through to the other side. Counterintuitively, the Classic City’s glut of creative energy often works against it; with so many voices struggling to be heard, a lot gets lost in the din. But don’t worry, kids. Flagpole’s not here to dash your hopes and dreams. (That’s a job for your professors.) If you just moved to town and find yourself jazzed by the prospect of playing music in Athens, there are steps you can take to all but guarantee success. We recently polled a selection of music-scene movers and shakers—club owners, sound engineers, musicians and journalists—to get their advice on making it between the Oconees. Together, their responses provide a healthy dose of moral encouragement, coated with just the slightest bit of caution. Read on below. DO have a good Bandcamp, Facebook page and/or website that lists the names of your band members, what you play and other basic information that writers need to tell people about you.

DON’T pick a name that’s impossible to Google. —Rachel Bailey, Flagpole

DON’T busk around College Square expecting captive audiences to care about your cover of “Wagon Wheel.” —Dan Mistich, Flagpole DO get a calendar if you plan on being in five bands, because you’ll be the only one crazy enough to keep up with your schedule.

If you DON’T plan on being in five bands, get ready: you’re gonna be in eight! —Jim Wilson, TaxiCab Verses DO volunteer at Nuçi’s Space. DO limit demos to two or three songs.

DO support other local bands! —David Barbe, Chase Park Transduction DO start as many subtly different side projects as you can, but don’t let any one of them overplay.

DON’T think practicing is lame. Hone your sound in the practice space, not at a show. DO have patience.

—Nate Nelson, White Violet

DON’T send print press kits.

DON’T send iPhone footage of your last club play. DO keep track of your box office scores. —Scott Orvold, Georgia Theatre When emailing a booking agent, DO include pic, bio and a link to music right off the bat. DO feel free to lock down a date with a local band rather than putting the bill on the agent. DON’T drink too much and act like a rock star. You won’t be asked back. DON’T give up on a venue if you don’t hear back immediately.

DON’T play for free. —Bain Mattox, The World Famous DON’T base your timeline on anyone else. If you want to release your project on a certain date, don’t let anyone stop you from making that happen. Even if that person would add another element to your project, the show must go on! DO reach out to artists in other areas. Social networking has made it so indie artists can come together without even leaving our houses. This will help you when you’re trying to expand your audience.

DO ask people other than your friends their opinion on your music. Play a song for someone without telling them that it’s you. —Cassie Chantel, rapper

22

FLAGPOLE.COM ∙ AUGUST 7, 2013

DON’T put on your own music when you have people over. DON’T engage in extended conversation at Guitar Center. DON’T be afraid of weird shit. DO recognize how lucky you are to be a rock star. DO appreciate those who care. DO evaluate what matters to you about music, and act based on your values.

DO it all for the nookie. —Phelan Lavelle, Shade DO put your earned money from shows straight into a bandfund account. You’d be surprised how quickly it adds up. DO get involved in the community of artists and musicians.

DO play benefit shows.

DON’T let the nightlife swallow you up—it will spit you out. DO stay true to your versatility. —McKenna Mackie, TaterZandra DO be a professional. DO be honest. DO listen and learn from veterans in the business. DO give 100 percent. DON’T just show up to play and leave. DON’T think you know it all.

DON’T burn bridges. DON’T ever give up.

—Louis Phillip Pelot, Leaving Countries

DO contact out-of-town bands you like. Help them set up shows in Athens. One: it will make your town a better place. Two: you will need their help when you want to play in other towns. DO remember that music is supposed to be fun.

DON’T play more than once a month. DON’T make a habit of playing for free.

—Jay Steele, Athens Provisions DO show up on time to the venue. DO buy a tuner before you start buying all those wicked fuzzes, flangers and delays.

If you’re having a bad day, DO leave it outside. The last person you wanna piss off is the sound guy.

DON’T be the “cool guy” that smashes the club’s stands and microphones. If you’re a rowdy frontman/woman, I’d recommend getting your own mics, cables and stands to destroy. In that case, DO smash away! DON’T ever ask your audience how it sounds “out there.” This is insulting and rude to your engineer. —Gene Woolfolk, Caledonia Lounge DON’T just make a Facebook event.

DO make actual flyers for your shows.

DO write the venue and the date, draw something goofy and then head to Bel-Jean. DO have them make a few copies on colored construction paper. DO hang them around town in bars, in coffee shops and outside in legal places that won’t get you ticketed. The effect might not be immediate, but at least you’ll get to know your way around town. And one day at a show, you might be approached by a cute barista who will ask you, “Hey, aren’t you that dork who wanted to hang a flyer in my shop?” And then you are in. —Marshall Yarbrough, Flagpole DO use Flagpole as a quick-start guide to places and local acts that you may find aesthetically compatible. DO attend as many shows as you can pack into your schedule, especially those played by people that you’re not already friends with. DO introduce yourself to people with whom you identify artistically.

DO find cool house shows (and host your own), which is where the real magic happens in Athens and new scenes begin. DON’T play longer than half an hour, unless the person who booked the show tells you they want you to in advance. DON’T forget that you can try again another night.

—Jace Bartet, Reptar


Last Call: Craig Lieske’s Final Recording

Gabe Vodicka

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Lieske’s playing on the three-song Last Call is restrained, for him, even spiritual in nature. The 11-minute “Movement 1â€? is an airy, circuitous trip, a Hang-centric jam wherein Lieske drops out for large chunks at a time, content to let Brannen’s percussive exploration lead the way. The second tune, “Monkey Needs Acupuncture,â€? is a “little goofy piece,â€? Brannen says, where he sings meditatively of a beach-bum monkey with a drinking problem. Lieske riffs noisily over the song like it’s a bona fide rock and roll hit. The halfcocked song demonstrates the curious sense of humor that bound the two musicians as much as their shared influences. “Craig had an oddball, kind of goofy sense of humor,â€? says Brannen. “I talked to him the day before he died, and he was his usual, wisecracking self.â€? The disc’s eight-minute finale, “Movement 2,â€? features Lieske at his improvisational best. Like Crazy Horse on some furtive spirit quest, Lieske’s playing here is psychedelic and emotive, raging but preternaturally controlled. Listening closely, you can almost picture him hunched over his beloved instrument, white mane shaking faintly with each explosive note. This is the impression left by Craig Lieske’s final recording: underdeveloped though it is, Last Call paints a picture of a man passionate about his work and seemingly contented in some deepseated creative way. “We could play, and he would go somewhere, or I’d go somewhere, and together we’d just fall in, right behind,â€? says Brannen. “It was almost spooky, because we just seemed to know where the other was about to go‌ We never knew exactly where it was going, but it was always going someplace good.â€?

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the liner notes for Live at the 40 Watt: Last Call, the wait. “February third,� Brannen recalls saying. “Lock the date new CD from Brannen & Lieske, there sits a single, down—we’ll hit Studio Z and knock this out.� simple attribution: “Playing a bad note ain’t a big deal. Those sessions would never happen. “February second,� Playing without passion is.� says Brannen, “where is everybody? They’re at the 40 Watt for Those who knew the owner of the quote might recognize [Craig’s] memorial service.� the sentiment and smile. When Craig Lieske, a constant scene Like everyone else, Brannen was blindsided by Lieske’s presence who played guitar in the bands Garbage Island and sudden passing. “I was stunned,� he says. “Nobody saw this Diet Rock Star and was a fixture on the Drive-By Truckers’ road coming.� crew, died this past January at the age of 48, he left behind a particular void. Though rock and roll was Lieske’s first language, his commitment to what most people deem “experimental� music was unparalleled by anyone else in town. It was this appreciation of leftfield music that first intrigued Serson Brannen, an Atlanta-based improv artist who has performed for several years under the Subliminator moniker, using voice and electronics to create intense, looping compositions. Brannen recalls his first meeting with Lieske, in Atlanta at the now-defunct Edgewood venue 11:11 Teahouse. “There was this white-haired guy there that was a really good guitarist,� he says. “I struck up a conversation with him, and within five minutes, we were really, really good friends.� The two eventually became collaborators. When Lieske set up shop at Flicker Serson Brannen and Craig Lieske last August for a weekly residency, he invited Brannen to perform alongside him. The grizzled, longBrannen lost not only a friend, but a creative partner. haired Atlanta musician arrived with a new toy in hand: the Propelled by the Hang, “we were kind of breaking new ground,� Hang, a steelpan-like percussion instrument developed by two he says. “That was very exciting. Just about any instrument Swiss inventors in 2000 and of which there exist only a handin the world, someone can walk up to you and say, ‘I’ve got ful in the entire world. a master’s degree in that.’ It didn’t happen with what we Lieske was drawn to the sound of the strange instrument, were doing, because it was something that hadn’t been done but also, presumably, its idiosyncratic nature. Either way, the before.� improvised show was a success. (Says Brannen: “It just sort of Desiring to preserve his friend’s memory and to find closure clicked.�) Energized by the newfound collaboration, the two for himself and others, Brannen sought to document what he made plans to travel and record. A brief Southeastern tour, and Lieske had been working on. Local recording enthusiast where they played art galleries and other nontraditional venSloan Simpson, who runs the archival website Southern Shelter, ues, was well received. “The response was really, really good,� had been on hand at the pair’s final 40 Watt gig in January Brannen recalls. and had gotten a decent field recording of the show. At Studio The new group planned to hit Atlanta’s Studio Z in Z, Brannen and engineer Allen Welty-Green fine-tuned the tape December 2012 to record a proper album, but scheduling and sent it to Scared Records, the record label run by Atlanta conflicts forced a delay. Though the pair managed to coalesce scene vet Stan Satin (Vietnam, The Method Actors). Satin, for a January gig, the rest of that month was no good; Lieske whom Brannen describes as an “old, old friend,� agreed to put would be on tour with the Truckers. The studio would have to it out.

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AUGUST 7, 2013 ¡ FLAGPOLE.COM

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threats & promises calendar picks Music News And Gossip

Hello, all. While we’ll save our most formal welcome back greetings for the first full week of UGA classes, I do want to give a heads-up to you overachievers out there who came back to Athens early. Check out this week’s news below, and get a jump on your compatriots. And for all you Athens lifers, townies and other loyal readers: yeah, summer is over. Sorry. Hello Muddah, Hello Faddah: As previously reported in this column, the band formerly known as Grim Pickins & The Bastard Congregation has disintegrated and reintegrated as Bastard Congregation. Branded as a new project entirely, the band now consists of Zack Hembree (Music Hates You, Stone Mountain Freeway), Dave Slocum (Artimus Pyledriver, Red River Revival), Chris Parry (Utah, Damad, Guzik), John Macbeth (Angel Fist, The Fallow) and Parker Bradshaw (Burns Like Fire). The new news is that Bastard Congregation will be making its live debut this week, with a pair of shows Friday, Aug. 9 in Savannah at The Jinx and Saturday, Aug. 10 at Max here in Athens. The Athens show also features Rachel Kate, Gather to Burn and Providence, RI bluegrasspunks Filthy Still. Hembree describes this group as “Straight-up heavy metal/ burly punk rock.” And, really, I wouldn’t expect any less. Grab on with both hands at facebook. com/pages/BastardCongregation. Gather ‘Round: The Melting Point will host Rabbit Box Storytelling on Wednesday, Aug. 14. The semi-regular event is billed as “storytell- Tony Tidwell ing for adults,” and this particular night’s theme is “I’m With The Band: Tour Stories.” The lineup of scheduled speakers is impressive, and features multitalented singer-songwriter Jim White, Chris Sugiuchi (Vic Chesnutt), Laura Carter (Elf Power, Nana Grizol), Killick Hinds (Crazy Hoarse, Pocket Full Of Claptonite), Linda DePascale (Jack Williams Trio, Crossover), Alfred Cooper (Otis Redding, Percy Sledge & The Sledgehammers), Joan Prittie and John Lyndon, the brother of late road manager Twiggs Lyndon, Jr. (Allman Brothers, Dixie Dregs). The show starts at 7 p.m., costs $5 and is open to everyone 18 and older. You Say Tomato: Athens music enthusiasts Daniel Peiken and Baylor Keese had their sights set on producing a full-fledged music festival this month, but after a couple of venue shifts, they decided to simply host two nights of music at The World Famous. So, Friday and Saturday, Aug. 9 and 10, there will be two nights of Americana, singer-songwriter and roots-type acts playing an event that is, Peiken says, “sponsored by the Athens Tomato Festival.” Friday’s lineup features Joe Cat, Ken Will Morton, Jack Logan & Scott Baxendale and Greco. Saturday features Sweet Knievel, The Welfare

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FLAGPOLE.COM ∙ AUGUST 7, 2013

Liners, Holy Liars and Efren. For more information, keep checking facebook.com/ theworldfamousathens. Worth Your Time: The official CD release show for Brannen & Lieske’s album Live at the 40 Watt: Last Call will happen Friday, Aug. 9 at the 40 Watt. The album documents a performance collaboration between Serson Brannen and Craig Lieske, and was recorded live at the club this past January, only a couple weeks before Lieske passed away. Performing this night in celebration of the album and in remembrance of Craig are Crazy Hoarse, Spirits and the Melchizedek Children, In Sonitus Lux and Revien. For more information on the show and album, see this week’s story on p. 23. Also, see facebook.com/ BrannenLieske and click on all those bands’

MUSIC | Wednesday, August 7

Speedy Ortiz, Androcles and the Lion, Monsoon, Velocirapture, Mans Trash Go Bar · 10 p.m. · $5 Anyone who misses ‘90s greats like Dinosaur Jr. and Pavement should be thanking their lucky stars for Sadie Dupuis. The rare revivalist with originality, Dupuis’ four-piece band Speedy Ortiz writes smart, sludgy rock in a similarly downbeat vein. Get thee to Go Bar to see the group on Wednesday; Speedy Ortiz’s latest LP, Major Arcana, dropped in mid-July, and by now it’s been your favorite music writer’s favorite album for weeks. Anchored by Dupuis’ sharp writing, guitarist Matt Robidoux’s nimble playing, Darl Ferm’s plump bass and punchy drums from Mike Falcone, Speedy Ortiz is a rare treasure these days: a real rock band. You don’t have to be a Malkmus devotee to appreciate these guys—just someone with ears. [Rachel Bailey]

Brought together by their time creating works at R. Wood Studio Ceramics, the three women have all found a common desire to capture shots of everyday beauty through photography. A 10-year daydream come true, the book provides a total of 365 photographs that include images of native flora and landscapes discovered in and around Athens. The book provides one photo per day and a page marker to follow along, but viewers can naturally flip through all at once to observe the seasons transform. If you can’t make it out to the reception, Beauty Everyday can be preordered online at www.beautyeveryday.com/ book. [Brittany Joyce] MUSIC | Friday, August 9

Greco, Jack Logan and Scott Baxendale, Ken Will Morton, Joe Cat The World Famous · 7 p.m. · $5

The first night of The World Famous’ “Sponsored by the Athens Tomato Festival” two-night run (see Threats & Promises on this page) features a can’t-miss set from MUSIC | Thursday, August 8 locals Jack Logan and Scott Baxendale. Logan hit on some moderate indie success with his 1994 album Bulk—which collected 42 of the literally hundreds of tunes the songwriter had recorded to that point— but he’s been relatively quiet for the better part of a decade. That is, until now. Bones The World Famous · 9 p.m. · $5 in the Desert, Logan’s new collaborative Members of Timmy and the Tumblers LP with luthier and musician Baxendale, and The HUMMS comprise new local instruis a swampy, sprawling thing. Logan’s sly, mental surf-rock outfit The Cryptides, so laconic vocal delivery and Baxendale’s fiery you can rest easy knowing that incredible riffage combine to moniker is in capable create an instant hands. Early demos “cranky guitar point towards a Scott Baxendale rock” classic. [Gabe shockingly developed and Jack Logan Vodicka] sound—a slinky, sexy swirl with just the MUSIC | right smear of dirt. Tuesday, The newly formed August 13 Jones Maintenance All-Stars is a hybrid group of sorts featuring members of Nate and the Nightmares and Free Associates; the Nightmares’ Nate Mitchell tells Flagpole the band will be Caledonia Lounge · “playing a mix of 9:30 p.m. · $6 originals and classic “Yeah, packrock and roll cover age me, baby/ Try songs.” The Rodney to put me in a Kings will be on hand bottle or a can,” to provide a jolt of Ian Svenonius sings in falsetto on “We punk power, and appropriately capping off Can’t Be Contained,” a 1997 song by his a night of throwback jams is a DJ set from gospel-tinged former band The Make-Up. local vinyl guru Kurt Wood. [Gabe Vodicka] Svenonius is now the charismatic, impeccably dressed, impossibly coifed frontman LECTURES & LIT | Friday, for Washington, D.C. garage-rockers Chain August 9 & the Gang. Once named Sassy magazine’s sassiest boy in America, he’s spent the past 25 years subverting rock and roll tropes while at the same time celebrating them. But it’s not all deconstructionist R. Wood Studio Ceramics · 6-8 p.m. · FREE! gimmicks: the music’s pretty great, too. As After years of running “Beauty an added bonus, Muuy Biien opens in what Everyday” as a source of inspiration, refmight be one of the band’s last local shows uge and reference online, Kristen Bach, before two members decamp to Atlanta. Rebecca Wood and Rinne Allen are put[Blake Aued] ting their collection of pictures into print.

The Cryptides, The Rodney Kings, Jones Maintenance All-Stars, DJ Kurt Wood

links to further familiarize yourself. A few performers have reportedly written pieces specifically as tributes to Craig, and that’s just about the sweetest thing ever. Two Tune Preview: Longtime songwriter Tony Tidwell, known best in town for his former outfit Tony Tidwell & The Scalded Dogs, has a new single coming out Aug. 20. It has two tracks, “Two Angels” and “Hits Me Tender.” The former is taken from his upcoming album Love is Not a Word, and the second is available exclusively on this release. The single can be preordered from iTunes, Amazon and other major digital retailers, and the full-length album comes out Oct. 1. Both come courtesy of Ghostmeat Records. The single was recorded at the Ghostmeat Studio with John Neff, William Tonks, Jason Slatton, Rob Keller, Neil Golden, Dean Johnston, Chris Ellenburg, Glenn Cannon and Ghostmeat founder Russ Hallauer. It was mastered by Andy LeMaster at Chase Park Transduction, and features cover design by Flagpole’s own Larry Tenner. Stream the low-slung ‘n’ lonesome “Two Angels” over at soundcloud.com/ghostmeat-records.

m

Gordon Lamb threatsandpromises@flagpole.com

Chain & the Gang, Muuy Biien, Tunabunny

Beauty Everyday Book Signing Reception


the calendar! WHAT’S HAPPENING THIS WEEK

Deadline for getting listed in The Calendar is every FRIDAY at 5 p.m. for the print issue that comes out the following Wednesday. Online listings are updated daily. Email calendar@flagpole.com.

Tuesday 6 ART: Opening Reception (Gallery @ Hotel Indigo–Athens) For the launch of “Contrition,” Thom Houser’s new installation work in the GlassCube@Hotel Indigo. 8 p.m. FREE! www.indigoathens.com CLASSES: Stampmaking (Double Dutch Press) Learn image transfer, carving and printing techniques for making stamps. 6–8 p.m. $35. www. doubledutchpress.com COMEDY: OpenTOAD Comedy Open Mic (Flicker Theatre & Bar) Voted by Flagpole’s readers as Athens’ “favorite comedy night” in 2011 and 2012, this comedy show allows locals to watch quality comedy or perform themselves. Email to perform. First and third Tuesday of every month! 9 p.m. FREE! (performers), $5. calebsynan@yahoo.com, www.flickertheatreandbar.com EVENTS: Oconee Farmers Market (First Christian Church, Watkinsville) Locally grown produce, meats, grains, flowers, soaps, birdhouses, gourds and more. 4–7 p.m. www.oconeefarmersmarket.org EVENTS: Tuesday Farmers Market (West Broad Market Garden) Fresh produce, cooking demonstrations and children’s activities. Offers double dollars for EBT shoppers. Held every Tuesday. 4–7 p.m. 706613-0122, www.athenslandtrust.org FILM: A Spectacular Fundraiser (Ciné Barcafé) Filmmaker and Athens native James Ponsoldt offers a sneak preview of his new film, The Spectacular Now, which was shot in Athens. The evening begins with a reception catered by The National, and a Q&A with Ponsoldt (moderated by Flagpole’s Derek Hill) will follow the screenings. A prom party features a photo booth, live DJ and punch. Proceeds benefit Ciné’s Digital Evolution Campaign. 6 p.m. (reception), 7 p.m. & 9:30 p.m. (screenings), 8 p.m. (prom). SOLD OUT! www.athenscine.com GAMES: Trivia (Fuzzy’s Taco Shop) Compete for prizes and giveaways. Every Tuesday. 8–10 p.m. 706353-0305 GAMES: Locos Trivia (Locos Grill & Pub) Westside and Eastside locations of Locos Grill and Pub feature trivia night every Tuesday. 8 p.m. FREE! www.locosgrill.com GAMES: Movie Quotes Trivia (Max) With host Cora Jane every Tuesday. Everyone’s a winner. 9:30 p.m. FREE! 706-254-3392 GAMES: Trivia with a Twist (Johnny’s New York Style Pizza) Throw a lime in your Coors Light and compete! Tuesdays, 7:30 p.m. & Thursdays, 8 p.m. 706-354-1515 KIDSTUFF: Percy Jackson: Sea of Monsters Movie Release Party (ACC Library) Dress as your favorite character from Greek mythology and celebrate the movie’s release.

Games, crafts and more! Open to ages 9 & up. 4 p.m.–5:30 p.m. FREE! www.athenslibrary.org LECTURES & LIT: OLLI Presents Wilf Nicholls (State Botanical Garden of Georgia) Osher Life Long Learning Institute at UGA hosts an information session on services it offers for ages 50 & up. Garden director Wilf Nicholls will speak on “The State Botanical Garden: More than a Pretty Place.” Refreshments included. 5:30 p.m.–7 p.m. FREE! 706–542–7715, olli@uga.edu MEETINGS: Fall Usher Training (The Classic Center) Volunteers interested in joining The Classic Center Theatre’s STARS usher program are invited to attend a training session in the theatre lobby. Training will consist of an orientation of the theatre, seating policies and emergency measures. RSVP. 6–8 p.m. stars@classiccenter.com

Wednesday 7 ART: Tour at Two (Georgia Museum of Art) Meet docents in the lobby for a tour of highlights from the museum’s collection. 2 p.m. FREE! www.georgiamuseum.org CLASSES: SALSAthens (Little Kings Shuffle Club) Cuban-style salsa classes with SALSAthens. Wednesdays 6:30-7:30 p.m. (intermediate), 7:30-8:30 p.m. (beginners). $8 (incl. drink). 706338-6613 CLASSES: Beer Academy (Trappeze Pub) Meet beer experts and discuss different kinds of beer. First Wednesday of the month. 7 p.m. 706-543-8997 EVENTS: Canine Cocktail Hour (Madison Bar & Bistro, Hotel Indigo) Drink and food specials for you and your (well-behaved, non-aggressive, vaccinated) dog! Wednesdays. 5–7 p.m. FREE! www.indigoathens.com EVENTS: Athens Farmers Market (Athens City Hall) Local and sustainable produce, meats, eggs, dairy, baked goods, prepared foods and crafts. Live music at every market. 4–7 p.m. www.athensfarmersmarket. net GAMES: Trivia (Copper Creek Brewing Company) Test your trivia chops for prizes! Every Wednesday. 9 p.m. FREE! 706-546-1102 GAMES: Sports Trivia (Beef ‘O’ Brady’s) Test your sports knowledge every Wednesday night. 8:30 p.m. FREE! 706-850-1916 GAMES: Movie Trivia (Little Kings Shuffle Club) Hosted by Jeremy Dyson. 9 p.m. www.facebook.com/ lkshuffleclub GAMES: Trivia (Choo Choo Japanese Korean Grill Express) Jump on the trivia train! Every Wednesday. 7:30 p.m. www.choochoorestaurants.com GAMES: Full Contact Trivia (Blind Pig Tavern) Think you know it all? Test your knowledge every

Wednesday night. 8 p.m. Both locations. 706-548-3442 GAMES: Trivia (Willy’s Mexicana Grill) Trivia with a DJ! Every Wednesday. 8–10 p.m. FREE! 706548-1920 KIDSTUFF: Preschool & Toddler Storytime (Madison County Library) Includes stories, fingerpuppet plays, songs and crafts for literacy-based fun. For ages 2–5. Every Wednesday. 10:30 a.m. FREE! 706-795-5597 KIDSTUFF: Storytime (Barnes & Noble) For all ages. Children receive a free treat from the cafe. 11 a.m. FREE! 706-354-1195 LECTURES & LIT: Buddha Book Study (Body, Mind & Spirit) A discussion group that supports applying Buddha’s teachings to end suffering in all areas of life. Every Wednesday. 6 p.m. Donations accepted. 706-351-6024 LECTURES & LIT: People’s Law School (The Classic Center) The Georgia Civil Justice Foundation hosts a program covering various aspects of the legal system as they relate and affect the rights of citizens. Volunteer attorneys, judges, law professors and others from the legal community discuss topics like tort law, criminal law, employment law, divorce and child custody. 6–8 p.m. FREE! 706-548-8122, www. peopleslawschool2013.com

Thursday 8 COMEDY: James Gregory (The Melting Point) Veteran comedian James Gregory has been performing for over two decades. 7:30 p.m. $22.50 (adv.). www.meltingpointathens.com EVENTS: Line Dancing (Bootleggers Country & Western Bar) Countrywestern-style line dance lessons. Come ride Pandemonium, the mechanical bull! Every Thursday and Friday. 8 p.m. www.bootleggersathens.com GAMES: Trivia with a Twist (Johnny’s New York Style Pizza) Throw a lime in your Coors Light and compete! Tuesdays, 7:30 p.m. & Thursdays, 8 p.m. 706-354-1515 GAMES: Trivia (The Volstead) Every Thursday! 7:30-9:30 p.m. FREE! 706-354-5300 KIDSTUFF: Thursday Storytime (Avid Bookshop) Join Avid for books and games. 10:30 a.m. FREE! www. avidbookshop.com KIDSTUFF: Book Jammers (ACC Library) This month’s theme is “Tall Tales.” Activities include stories, trivia and crafts. For ages 8–11. 4:30 p.m. FREE! www.athenslibrary.org MEETINGS: Athens Area Newcomers Club (Central Presbyterian Church) Tim and Diane Quigley of Dahlonega share their experiences in regards to restoring the Holly Theatre, owning Lone

“Throwdown at Funzo’s Knuckleroom” by Jim Stacy is on display in the group show, “Creative Maladjustment,” at Visionary Growth Gallery in Danielsville. Mountain Lodge, running restaurants and owning retail shops. 9:30– 11:30 a.m. FREE! 706-850-7463

Friday 9 EVENTS: JUNK-Palooza (Blackbriar Farms, Crawford) A fundraiser barn and yard sale featuring tools, books, antiques, furniture, art, vintage clothes, junk, etc. Proceeds go towards creating a Blackbriar Art and Homesteading School. Aug. 9–10, 8:30 a.m.–3 p.m. www.blackbriarfarms.com EVENTS: Line Dancing (Bootleggers Country & Western Bar) Countrywestern-style line dance lessons, plus Pandemonium, the mechanical bull! Every Thursday and Friday. 8 p.m. www.bootleggersathens.com EVENTS: Recreation (Terrapin Beer Co.) In celebration of Terrapin’s first canned ale, representatives from Georgia River Network, Southern Off-Road Bicycling Assn, BikeAthens and The Broad River Outpost will be on site to share information. Live music by Ryan Boss. 5:30–7:30 p.m. $10 (incl. tour and pint glass). www.terrapinbeer.com EVENTS: Date & Dessert Night (Jittery Joe’s Coffee, Five Points) Enjoy an after-dinner cup of coffee and a special pastry created by master baker Heather Kool. Includes live music and an open mic session. 8 p.m. www.jitteryjoescoffee.com LECTURES & LIT: Book Signing Party (R. Wood Studio) Kristen Bach, Rebecca Wood and Rinne Allen release their new book, Beauty Everyday, a collection of 365 photographs taken around Athens. See Calendar Pick on p. 24. 6–8 p.m. FREE! www.beautyeveryday.com/ book MEETINGS: Athens Creative Collective (Jittery Joe’s Coffee, Five Points) A conversation on how to help each other on creative endeavors. 6:30–8 p.m. FREE! Find them on Facebook. PERFORMANCE: The Classic City Kings (Go Bar) Local drag kings perform gender-bending performances in “The Chronicles of Sex, Sorrow and Sin.” Followed by DJ

Blowpop. 10 p.m. $5. www.theclassiccitykings.com THEATRE: Disney’s Cinderella Kids (Athens Little Playhouse) Athens Little Playhouse presents the classic tale of a girl who escapes her cruel stepmother and stepsisters to meet Prince Charming with the help of a Fairy Godmother. Aug. 9, 7:30 p.m. Aug. 10, 10 a.m. & 3 p.m. Aug. 11, 3 p.m. $5–10. www.athenslittleplayhouse.net THEATRE: The Little Mermaid Jr. (Oconee Youth Playhouse) Catch up under the sea with Ariel, Ursula, Sebastian, stingrays, jellyfish and other sea creatures. Aug. 9–10 & 16–17, 7 p.m. Aug. 11 & 18, 2 p.m. $12–16. www.oypoysp.com

Saturday 10 ART: Live Glassblowing (Bendzunas Glass, Comer) The family-run gallery demonstrates live glassblowing. 9 a.m.–1 p.m. FREE! bendzunas@windstream.net, www. bendzunasglass.com EVENTS: “Dog Days of Summer” (Memorial Park) Bring a dog to the park for activities and learn about animal behavior, animal nutrition and first aid. 10 a.m.–1 p.m. FREE! 706-613-3580 EVENTS: Oconee Farmers Market (Oconee County Courthouse, Watkinsville) Locally grown produce, meats, grains, flowers, soaps, birdhouses, gourds and more. 8 a.m.–1 p.m. www.oconeefarmersmarket.org EVENTS: Really Really Free Market (Reese & Pope Park) Bring what you can; take what you need. No bartering, trading or paying. Second Saturday of every month. 12–2 p.m. FREE! reallyreallyfreemarketathens@gmail.com EVENTS: Teacher Reuse Store (ACC Solid Waste Department) The Reuse store will provide a variety of items to local educators for free. Items donated by local businesses include binders, file folders, paper, art supplies and more. 9 a.m.–12 p.m. FREE! 706–613–3512 EVENTS: Salsa Under the Stars (Georgia Theatre Rooftop) Dance away to Latin rhythms up on the

rooftop. 9–10 p.m. (lesson), 10 p.m.–2 a.m. $10. www.georgiatheatre.com EVENTS: First Saturday Contra Dance (Lay Park) Beginner instruction at 7:15 p.m. Emerald Isle Band performs. With caller Deena Kushner. No experience or partner necessary. 7:30–10:30 p.m. $4–8. www.contradanceathens.com EVENTS: JUNK-Palooza (Blackbriar Farms) See Friday listing for full description Aug. 9–10, 8:30 a.m.–3 p.m. www.blackbriarfarms.com EVENTS: Athens Farmers Market (Bishop Park) Local and sustainable produce, meats, eggs, dairy, baked goods, prepared foods and crafts. Live music by Dixieland 5 and Kiss Your Darling. This week features a demo from 10 a.m.–12 p.m. with chef Hugh Acheson (5&10, The National, “Top Chef” judge) and a pepper car race activity for kids. 8 a.m.–12 p.m. www.athensfarmersmarket.net EVENTS: Car, Truck & Bike Show (Bootleggers Country & Western Bar) Trophies awarded for best Ford, Mopar, lifted and show trucks, Chevy and bikes. Registration fee includes entry to the Jawga Boyz show. 50/50 drawing for door prizes and BBQ. 3–7 p.m. $15 (registration fee). www.bootleggersathens.com EVENTS: Athens Area Democrats Breakfast (Brett’s Casual American Restaurant) Caterpillar Plant Manager Todd Henry will be discussing the upcoming legislative session. RSVP. 9 a.m. $11. 706248-7455, athensareademocrats@ gmail.com EVENTS: Comer Farmers Market (Comer Farmers Market, Comer) Locally grown produce, honey, baked goods, flower bouquets, soap, crafts and more. Every Saturday. 9 a.m.–1 p.m. comerfama@gmail. com, www.facebook.com/comerfm KIDSTUFF: Storytime (Barnes & Noble) For all ages. Children receive a free treat from the cafe. 11 a.m. FREE! 706-354-1195 KIDSTUFF: Watercolors from Apples to Zebras (Madison County Library, Danielsville) GMOA offers a watercolor class for kids k continued on next page

AUGUST 7, 2013 · FLAGPOLE.COM

25


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FLAGPOLE.COM ∙ AUGUST 7, 2013

THE CALENDAR! ages 6–14. Registration required. 1–3 p.m. FREE! 706–795–5597 KIDSTUFF: Second Saturday Storytime (Sandy Creek Nature Center) Hear a nature story and learn about the woods and animals. 2:30–3 p.m. FREE! 706-613-3615 KIDSTUFF: Saturday Storytime (Avid Bookshop) Join Avid for books and games. 1 p.m. FREE! www.avidbookshop.com MEETINGS: Athens Transgender Solidarity Group (Little Kings Shuffle Club) A meeting for gender non-conforming people. Drinks at Little Kings then pizza at Transmet. Every second Saturday of the month. 7 p.m. undulatedtinamou@gmail. com THEATRE: Disney’s Cinderella Kids (Athens Little Playhouse) See Friday listing for full description Aug. 9, 7:30 p.m. Aug. 10, 10 a.m. & 3 p.m. Aug. 11, 3 p.m. $5–10. www.athenslittleplayhouse.net THEATRE: The Little Mermaid Jr. (Oconee Youth Playhouse) See Friday listing for full description Aug. 9–10 & 16–17, 7 p.m. Aug. 11 & 18, 2 p.m. $12–16. www.oypoysp. com

Sunday 11 GAMES: Trivia (Amici) Test your skills. 9 p.m. 706-353-0000 GAMES: Trivia (Buffalo’s CafĂŠ) “Brewer’s Inquisition,â€? trivia hosted by Chris Brewer every Sunday. 7 p.m. FREE! 706-354-6655, www. buffaloscafe.com/athens GAMES: Trivia (The Capital Room) Every Sunday! Hosted by Evan Delany. First place wins $50 and second place wins $25. 8 p.m. FREE! www.thecapitalroom.com KIDSTUFF: Read to Rover (ACC Library) Meet Star, Comet and Penny, volunteer certified therapy dogs. Beginning readers can practice by reading aloud to a furry friend. All dogs are insured and in the company of their trainers. First come, first served. 3–4 p.m. FREE! 706-613-3650 LECTURES & LIT: “Stories from Childhood: From a Tiny Acornâ€? (Piedmont College) Piedmont College professor Barbara Benson interviews theologian and bestselling author Barbara Brown Taylor about her childhood as part of the Sunday series. Refreshments include a favorite snack from Taylor’s childhood. Donations benefit Children First, Inc. 3 p.m. FREE! (children), $10 (suggested donation). patricia. priest@yahoo.com THEATRE: The Little Mermaid Jr. (Oconee Youth Playhouse) See Friday listing for full description Aug. 9–10 & 16–17, 7 p.m. Aug. 11 & 18, 2 p.m. $12–16. www.oypoysp. com THEATRE: Disney’s Cinderella Kids (Athens Little Playhouse) See Friday listing for full description Aug. 9, 7:30 p.m. Aug. 10, 10 a.m. & 3 p.m. Aug. 11, 3 p.m. $5–10. www.athenslittleplayhouse.net

Monday 12 COMEDY: Shameless Comedy Presents (The World Famous) An evening with Myq Kaplan, Zach Sherwin and host Walker Smith. Kaplan has appeared on “The Tonight Show,� “Conan� and the “Late Show with David Letterman.� 10:30 p.m. $10 (adv.), $12. www. theworldfamousathens.com FILM: Now You See Me (Legion Field) The 2013 crime thriller will be

Saturday, Aug. 10 continued from p. 25

shown on a 32-foot outdoor screen. Popcorn and cotton candy included. Lawn chairs and blankets encouraged. Part of UGA Union’s Big Dawg Welcome Week. 8:30 p.m. FREE! (w/ student ID), $5. www.union.uga.edu GAMES: Trivia (Highwire Lounge) Athens’ toughest trivia. $100 grand prize every week! All ages. 8 p.m. FREE! 706-543-8997 GAMES: Team Trivia (Beef ‘O’ Brady’s) Win house cash and prizes! Every Monday night. 8:30 p.m. FREE! 706-850-1916 GAMES: Rock and Roll Trivia (Little Kings Shuffle Club) Get a team together and show off your extensive music knowledge! Hosted by Jonathan Thompson. 9 p.m. FREE! www.facebook.com/lkshuffleclub MEETINGS: Public Forum (Barnett Shoals Fire Station #7) Design staff and the ACC Transportation and Public Works staff will be on hand with proposed designs, handouts and information regarding upcoming bike lane improvements alone College Station Road, between Research Drive and Barnett Shoals Road. 6–8 p.m. FREE! www.athensclarkecounty.com

Tuesday 13 EVENTS: Oconee Farmers Market (First Christian Church, Watkinsville) Locally grown produce, meats, grains, flowers, soaps, birdhouses, gourds and more. 4–7 p.m. www.oconeefarmersmarket.org

FILM: Last Fair Deal Gone Down (CinÊ BarcafÊ) A fil about the mytical, tempestuous birth of the blues, telling the legendary tale of Robert Johnson, whose otherworldly ability was believed to be a gift from the devil himself. Includes a prescreening reception catered by 5&10 and Cecilia’s Cakes, and a postscreening Q&A with creative team Standoff Studios. 6:45 p.m. $12.48. www.athenscine.com GAMES: Trivia with a Twist (Johnny’s New York Style Pizza) Throw a lime in your Coors Light and compete! Tuesdays, 7:30 p.m. & Thursdays, 8 p.m. 706-354-1515 GAMES: Trivia (Fuzzy’s Taco Shop) Compete for prizes and giveaways. Every Tuesday. 8–10 p.m. 706353-0305 GAMES: Movie Quotes Trivia (Max) With host Cora Jane every Tuesday. Everyone’s a winner. 9:30 p.m. FREE! 706-254-3392 GAMES: Locos Trivia (Locos Grill & Pub) Westside and Eastside locations of Locos Grill and Pub feature trivia night every Tuesday. 8 p.m. FREE! www.locosgrill.com KIDSTUFF: National LeftHanders’ Day (Rocksprings Community Center) Challenge ambidextrous skills such as writing, tying shoes, throwing and more. For ages 6–13. 4 p.m. FREE! 706-613-3603

Wednesday 14 CLASSES: SALSAthens (Little Kings Shuffle Club) Cuban-style salsa dance classes with SALSAthens. Every Wednesday. 6:30-7:30 p.m. (intermediate), 7:30-8:30 p.m.

brewery’s seasonal beverage. 6 p.m. 706-353-9800 EVENTS: Kickoff Party (Heirloom Cafe and Fresh Market) For My Athens’ Instagram contest. Includes snacks, drink specials, dancing and prizes. 8:30–10:30 p.m. www.heirloomathens.com, www.myathensis. com EVENTS: Canine Cocktail Hour (Madison Bar & Bistro, Hotel Indigo) Drink and food specials for you and your (well-behaved, non-aggressive, vaccinated) dog! Every Wednesday. 5–7 p.m. FREE! www.indigoathens. com EVENTS: Athens Farmers Market (Athens City Hall) Local and sustainable produce, meats, eggs, dairy, baked goods, prepared foods and crafts. Live music at every market. 4–7 p.m. www.athensfarmersmarket. net GAMES: Trivia (Crow’s Nest) Every Wednesday. 8 p.m. www.facebook. com/dirtybirdsathens GAMES: Sports Trivia (Beef ‘O’ Brady’s) Test your sports knowledge every Wednesday night. 8:30 p.m. FREE! 706-850-1916 GAMES: Trivia (Copper Creek Brewing Company) Test your trivia chops for prizes! Every Wednesday. 9 p.m. FREE! 706-546-1102 GAMES: Trivia (Choo Choo Japanese Korean Grill Express) Jump on the trivia train! Every Wednesday. 7:30 p.m. www.choochoorestaurants.com GAMES: Trivia (Willy’s Mexicana Grill) Trivia with a DJ! Every Wednesday. 8–10 p.m. FREE! 706548-1920 GAMES: Full Contact Trivia (Blind Pig Tavern) Think you know it all? Test your knowledge every

“Bodhisattva� and other works by Sanithna Phansavanh are currently on display at The Branded Butcher. EVENTS: 2nd Tuesday Tasting (Heirloom Cafe and Fresh Market) This month’s theme is “Old World vs. New World Whites.� Includes samples of six wines and snacks. RSVP. 6–7:30 p.m. $15. 706-3547901, www.heirloomathens.com EVENTS: Magician Derek Hughes (UGA Tate Student Center, Grand Hall) Magician, actor and comedian Derek Hughes performs a one-man show. Hughes can appeared in independent films Ground Rules, Cut Glass and Second Story Man. Part of UGA Union’s Big Dawg Welcome Week. 8 p.m. FREE! (w/ student ID), $5. www.union.uga.edu EVENTS: Tuesday Farmers Market (West Broad Market Garden) Fresh produce, cooking demonstrations and children’s activities. Offers double dollars for EBT shoppers. Held every Tuesday. 4–7 p.m. 706613-0122, www.athenslandtrust.org

(beginners). $8 (incl. drink). 706338-6613 CLASSES: Basics of Digital Photo Editing (Oconee County Library) Learn how to resize, crop, take out red eye, combine photos, touch up old photographs and more. Registration required. 3–4:30 p.m. FREE! www.athenslibrary.org EVENTS: Rabbit Box: “I’m With the Band: Tour Stories� (The Melting Point) Storytelling for adult ears. Guest speakers include singer-songwriter Jim White, Chris Sugiuchi, Laura Carter (Elf Power), Killick Hinds (Crazy Hoarse), Linda DePascale (Jack Williams Trio), Alfred Cooper (Otis Redding), Joan Prittie and John Lyndon (brother of late road manager Twiggs Lyndon, Jr.). 7 p.m. $5. www.rabbitbox.org EVENTS: Terrapin Pumpkinfest Release Party (Cutters Pub) Get a head start on celebrating fall with the

Wednesday night. 8 p.m. Both locations. 706-548-3442 KIDSTUFF: Preschool & Toddler Storytime (Madison County Library) Includes stories, fingerpuppet plays, songs and crafts for literacy-based fun. For ages 2–5. Every Wednesday. 10:30 a.m. FREE! 706-795-5597 KIDSTUFF: Storytime (Barnes & Noble) For all ages. Children receive a free treat from the cafe. 11 a.m. FREE! 706-354-1195 KIDSTUFF: Anime Club (Oconee County Library) Watch some anime and manga, listen to J-Pop music eat Japanese snacks and share fan art. Ages 13–18. 6–8 p.m. FREE! 706-769-3950 LECTURES & LIT: Buddha Book Study (Body, Mind & Spirit) A discussion group that supports applying Buddha’s teachings to end suffering in all areas of life.


Every Wednesday. 6 p.m. Donations accepted. 706-351-6024 MEETINGS: MS on the Move (Holiday Inn) The local chapter of the National MS Society hosts a meeting for individuals and families living with multiple sclerosis. Topics include diagnosis, treatment options, common emotional issues, impact on employment, mobility and wellness. 7–8:30 p.m. FREE! www. MSgeorgia.org

Down the Line EVENTS: Fourth Annual Afternoon Tea with Friends 8/17 (Camp

Sundown Saloon 8 p.m. FREE! 706-850-1180 AVERY DYLAN’S OPEN MIC NIGHT All musicians, singers, songwriters and/or bands, etc. welcome! The Volstead 9 p.m.–1:30 a.m. 706-354-5300 KARAOKE Every Tuesday!

Wednesday 7 Boar’s Head Lounge 11 p.m. FREE! 706-369-3040 OPEN MIC NIGHT Showcase your talent. Every Wednesday!

MANS TRASH Solo project from Mercer West (Bubbly Mommy Gun). Green Room 9 p.m. FREE! www.greenroomathens. com THE HEAP Funky indie-soul band based here in Athens with a killer horn section and fronted by Bryan Howard’s low, bass growl. The Melting Point 8 p.m. $6 (adv.), $8 (door). www.meltingpointathens.com DIRTY BOURBON RIVER SHOW Vaudevillian rock and roll act from New Orleans, showcasing their “Gypsy Brass Circus Rock.�

Caledonia Lounge 9:30 p.m. $5 (21+), $7 (18-20). www. caledonialounge.com ALCHEMY No info available. STONE KIDS Local rock band. Go Bar 11 p.m. 706-546-5609 KARAOKE Hosted by karaoke fanatic John “Dr. Fred� Bowers and featuring a large assortment of pop, rock, indie and more. Green Room 9 p.m. FREE! www.greenroomathens. com JUSTIN BROGDON Southern rocker. Hendershot’s Coffee Bar 8 p.m. www.hendershotscoffee.com LINDBERG, ROBERTS, WILES Local jazz trio led by bassist Carl Lindberg (Old Skool Trio) and featuring guitarist Jeremy Roberts and drummer Nicholas Wiles.

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New Earth Music Hall 9 p.m. FREE! www.newearthmusichall. com TECROPOLIS Athens’ longestrunning electronic dance music monthly, with special guests SPNKBNK, GunFingaZZ and Robbie Dude. The Office Lounge Blues Night. 9 p.m. FREE! 706-5460840 THE ORIGINAL SCREWTOPS Crankin’ the blues since 1962. Open jam and guests are welcome! The Omega Bar 7 p.m. FREE! ($5 after 9 p.m.). www. theomegabar.com THE SEGAR JAZZ AFFAIR Local smooth jazz group led by DJ and musician Dwain Segar.

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Terrapin Beer Co. 5:30 p.m. FREE! www.terrapinbeer.com THE HALEM ALBRIGHT BAND Local jam band.

Justin Brogdon plays Green Room on Thursday, Aug. 8. Kiwanis) 11 a.m. $12–20. 706-3896789, ext. 1306. www.friendsofadvantage.org EVENTS: Evening in the Garden 8/22 (Ashford Manor) 6:30 p.m. 706-546-5910

LIVE MUSIC Tuesday 6 Georgia Theatre On the Rooftop. 10 p.m. FREE! www. georgiatheatre.com HANK & CUPCAKES Brooklyn-based electro/disco-pop band. See story on p. 13. Green Room 9 p.m. FREE! www.greenroomathens. com ANDY BRUH Local DJ spins a set of tunes. The Melting Point Terrapin Tuesday. 7 p.m. $5. www. meltingpointathens.com ROXIE WATSON Five-piece “alternagrass� string band from Decatur, GA. Nowhere Bar 9 p.m. FREE! 706-546-4742 TUESDAY NIGHT CONFESSIONAL Host Fester Hagood presents this week’s showcase of singersongwriter talent, featuring Ron Kimble, The Jeb Stuart Band and Jason Davis.

Caledonia Lounge 9:30 p.m. $3. www.caledonialounge. com FUTURE APE TAPES Local group creating psychedelic, experimental music driven by loops, beats, guitars and synths. 100 WATT HORSE Experimental folk group from Atlanta. SHOOK FOIL Atlanta-based band that plays melodic, textured indie-pop and all. CULT OF RIGGONIA Experimental soundscapes with tribal, world music beats and ornate instrumentation. Flicker Theatre & Bar 9 p.m. www.flickertheatreandbar.com ANTIQUE ANIMALS Six-piece folkrock group from Jacksonville, FL. THE PALACE WOLVES Atlantabased indie rock band that flirts with electronic instrumentation. Go Bar 10 p.m. $5. 706-546-5609 SPEEDY ORTIZ Buzzworthy Massachusetts-based band that draws from the herky jangle of ‘90s indie rock. ANDROCLES AND THE LION Local alt-folk band with a lush, rolling, slowcore-inspired sound. VELOCIRAPTURE Brash local experimental rock group that names Velvet Underground and Stooges among its influences. MONSOON Local post-punk band powered by the energetic vocals of guitarist Sienna Chandler.

The Office Lounge 9 p.m. FREE! 706-549-0840 KARAOKE With your host Lynn, the Queen of Karaoke! Porterhouse Grill 7 p.m. FREE! 706-369-0990 JAZZ NIGHT The longest standing weekly music gig in Athens! Join drummer Nicholas Wiles with bassist Drew Hart and pianist Steve Key for an evening of original music, improv and standards. Tapped 9 p.m. FREE! 706-850-6277 KARAOKE Every Wednesday! The Volstead 6 p.m. FREE! 706-354-5300 TRE POWELL Bluesy acoustic tunes with soulful vocals.

Thursday 8 Boar’s Head Lounge 10 p.m. 706-369-3040 LEAVING COUNTRIES Local singersongwriter Louis Phillip Pelot performs folk and country with the help of some friends. IN LIMBO Local grunge-rock group. Bootleggers Country & Western Bar 8 p.m. FREE! www.bootleggersathens. com KARAOKE Channel your inner Hank. Sing your favorite country classics every Thursday!

The World Famous 9 p.m. $5. www.theworldfamousathens. com THE RODNEY KINGS Scuzzed-out local garage-punk trio. THE CRYPTIDES New surf-rock band featuring members of The HUMMS and Timmy and the Tumblers. JONES MAINTENANCE ALLSTARS Hybrid of Nate & the Nightmares and The Free Associates plus a rotating cast of special guests maying a mix of originals and classic rock-n-roll cover songs. DJ KURT WOOD DJing ‘50s and ‘60s soul and garage among the bands.

Friday 9 40 Watt Club Brannen & Lieske CD Release. 9 p.m. $5. www.40watt.com IN SONITUS LUX Free improv group from Atlanta fronted by E. Serson Brannen. See story on p. 23. SPIRITS AND THE MELCHIZEDEK CHILDREN Psychedelic, Atlantabased band that uses acoustic instruments and electronics to create a haunting, ambient-folk sound. CRAZY HOARSE New local band featuring Killick Hinds and John Norris. REVIEN Members of the Georgia Guitar Quartet perform. Buffalo’s CafÊ 8 p.m. $8. www.buffaloscafe.com/ athens BRUSH FIRE Formed in 1977, this Georgia-based bluegrass band is known for its onstage energy and superb vocal harmony. k continued on next page

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AUGUST 7, 2013 ¡ FLAGPOLE.COM

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The Coffee Shop of Athens 9 p.m. FREE! 706-542-8990 BEN SIMPSON Local singer playing a mix of acoustic covers and originals. Flicker Theatre & Bar 9 p.m. www.flickertheatreandbar.com ANTLERED AUNTLORD Fuzz-pop guitar/drums duo featuring local producer and songwriter Jesse Stinnard. XTRA COLOURS Local producer Keith Beaver creates textural, sample-based electronica. TAY0 Noisy electronica from Atlanta.

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The Melting Point 8 p.m. $5. www.meltingpointathens. com GROGUS This long-running local ensemble plays jazz and salsa accentuated with reggae, hip hop and Afro-Cuban styles. Featuring multi-instrumentalist Tino Garrido. Nowhere Bar 10 p.m. FREE! 706-546-4742 LAZY LOCOMOTIVE Local group featuring members of Fuzzbucket, Juice Box and High Strung String Band. The Office Lounge 9:30 p.m. 706-546-0840 ERIK NEIL BAND Local trio playing blues/rock covers and originals. Terrapin Beer Co. 5:30 p.m. FREE! www.terrapinbeer.com RYAN BOSS Atlanta-based singersongwriter. WUOG 90.5 FM 8 p.m. FREE! www.wuog.org COLLISION COURSE 8.5 HHHS presents an evening of music. Listen

KISS YOUR DARLIN’ Playing Celtic and old-time music. (10 a.m.) Bootleggers Country & Western Bar 8 p.m. www.bootleggersathens.com JAWGA BOYZ Local country band celebrates the redneck lifestyle through music. JUSTIN GEE Southern rock singersongwriter with an attitude. DAVID ADAM GARDNER Atlantabased country artist. Caledonia Lounge 9:30 p.m. $5 (21+), $7 (18-21). www. caledonialounge.com FIVE EIGHT Legendary Athens rock trio that consistently pumps out boisterous rock and roll. Their energetic live show has warmed the stage for such bands as R.E.M., Cheap Trick, The Ramones and more. CASPER AND THE COOKIES Local legends playing eccentric and energetic pop-rock. THE REASONABLE MEN Before Five Eight became Five Eight, they were The Reasonable Men. FARNZ Songwriter Dan Schwartz returns to showcase his piano-based pop tunes.

CHARLIE AND THE FOXTROTS Folk-pop band from Nashville, TN. KYSHONA ARMSTRONG Soulful singer-songwriter with a rootsy, bluesy sound. Hendershot’s Coffee Bar 8 p.m. www.hendershotscoffee.com KIMBERLY MORGAN Local acoustic singer-songwriter embracing the rootsy, twangy appeal of traditional country music. THE BAXENDALES Local songwriter and luthier Scott Baxendale and his wife, Pamela, team up for a night of music. Little Kings Shuffle Club 10 p.m. FREE! www.facebook.com/ lkshuffleclub DJ MAHOGANY Popular local DJ spins freaky funk, sultry soul, righteous R&B and a whole lotta unexpected faves. Max 10 p.m. 706-254-3392 BASTARD CONGREGATION Thrash/ punk meets angry, dark Southern blues. FILTHY STILL Bluegrass from Providence, RI.

Green Room 9 p.m. FREE! www.greenroomathens. com THE WELFARE LINERS This fivepiece bluegrass unit blends classic tunes with originals while focusing on brother harmonies for that authentic high lonesome sound. Hendershot’s Coffee Bar 8 p.m. www.hendershotscoffee.com BIG C AND THE VELVET DELTA A modern take on traditional blues, rock and R&B from this local group. Jittery Joe’s Coffee 8 p.m. FREE! 706-208-1979 (Five Points location) OPEN MIC NIGHT Showcase your talent. Featured guests will also perform. Little Kings Shuffle Club 10 p.m. FREE! www.facebook.com/ lkshuffleclub DJ Z-DOGG Loveable local DJ spins top-40 hits, old-school hip-hop, high-energy rock and other danceable favorites. IMMUZIKATION Celebrated local DJ Alfredo Lapuz, Jr. hosts a dance party featuring high-energy electro and rock. TWIN POWERS DJ Dan Geller and friends spin late-night glam rock, new wave, Top 40, punk and even Britpop. Max 9 p.m. $3. 706-254-3392 THUNDERCHIEF Raw Southern rock band with punk and garage influences. AFTER THE FACT Pop-punk band from Fort Myers, FL. THE FACT Local punk band. IN THE LURCH Local three-piece that cranks out crunchy guitar riffs and sinister basslines, citing Primus and Tool as influences.

28

Friday, Aug. 9 continued from p. 27

Mike White ¡ deadlydesigns.com

THE CALENDAR!

Five Eight plays Caledonia Lounge on Saturday, Aug. 10. live or visit the station. Featuring Charley Moon, Maul Brown, Hoofingly, Hannah Washington, Zazu Times Two, Chrismis and The HOTC. The World Famous Tomato Fest. 6:30 p.m. $5. www.theworldfamousathens.com LOGAN & BAXENDALE Local musicians Jack Logan and Scott Baxendale team up to celebrate the release of a new collaborative album. See Calendar Pick on p. 24. GRECO Rock band featuring four local brothers. KEN WILL MORTON With his gritty, soulful rasp, Morton trudges through Americana’s roots with rock and roll swagger and a folksinger’s heart. JOE CAT Local singer-songwriter tells stories about his life.

Saturday 10 40 Watt Club Bulldog Takeover. 8 p.m. $7 (21+), $10 (18-20). DJ GOLDEN Atlanta DJ spins dubstep, hip hop and electro. DJ TASTE TESTER Atlanta DJ spins southern hip hop and dance music. Bishop Park Athens Farmers Market. 8 a.m. FREE! www.athensfarmersmarket.net DIXIELAND 5 No info. (8 a.m.)

Flicker Theatre & Bar 9 p.m. www.flickertheatreandbar.com THE SALT FLATS Melodic and lively local guitar-rock band. STEVEN TRIMMER The guitarist and driving force behind Glasscrafts, Trimmer’s songwriting falls in line with Athens’ psych-pop history. Front Porch Book Store 6 p.m. FREE! 706-372-1236 THE WELFARE LINERS This fivepiece bluegrass unit blends classic tunes with originals while focusing on brother harmonies. Go Bar 10 p.m. 706-546-5609 GRAPE SODA This duo (sometimes trio) plays spastic, psychedelic synthpop driven by organ and drums. EUREKA CALIFORNIA Melodic, guitar-driven indie rock influenced by bands like Guided by Voices. TWIN POWERS DJ Dan Geller (The Gold Party, The Agenda) and friends spin late-night glam rock, new wave, Top 40, punk and Britpop. Green Room 9 p.m. FREE! www.greenroomathens. com KATE MORRISSEY BAND Best known for her dark velvet voice, Morrissey’s songwriting is literate and sincere, and her conversational live shows come punctuated with an offbeat sense of humor.

RACHEL KATE Fiesty power folk from Charleston, SC. GATHER TO BURN Founded by former members of The Letters Organize, Another Broken Vehicle and Thunderbolt 5. The Melting Point 8 p.m. $12 (adv.), $15 (door). www. meltingpointathens.com PHIL AND THE BLANKS This local band, a luminary on Athens’ 1970s scene, returns once again for a night of rock and roll. Nowhere Bar 10 p.m. FREE! 706-546-4742 CRAIG WATERS & THE FLOOD Local blues guitarist and songwriter. The Office Lounge 9:30 p.m. FREE! 706-549-0840 THE RAYS FEATURING CARLA LEFEVER This band, led by Athenian LeFever, is back with a new lineup and a, more rocking sound. Terrapin Beer Co. 5:30 p.m. FREE! www.terrapinbeer.com ERIK NEIL BAND Local trio playing blues/rock covers and originals. The World Famous Tomato Fest. 7:30 p.m. $5. www.theworldfamousathens.com EFREN The local roots-rock band returned recently with new tunes and new members.


HOLY LIARS Dark, in your face Southern rock from this local trio. THE WELFARE LINERS This fivepiece bluegrass unit blends classic tunes with originals while focusing on brother harmonies for that authentic high lonesome sound. SWEET KNIEVEL This four-piece jam band plays a variety of musical styles ranging from melodic, psychedelic rock to funk and beyond.

Sunday 11 The Coffee Shop of Athens 5 p.m. FREE! www.facebook.com/ TheCoffeeShopofAthens SACRED SUNDAY HOUR An hour of gospel music courtesy of Eric C. Johnson and his backup choir. The World Famous 7 p.m. $5. www.theworldfamousathens. com VALLEY YOUNG “Fringe folk� duo from Denver, CO. The World Famous 8 p.m. www.theworldfamousathens. com HOT CORNER TRIO New blues group, led by longtime Athenian Odell “Mickey� Gilmore, which made its debut at the 2013 Hot Corner Festival. Playing every Sunday in August!

Monday 12 Caledonia Lounge On the Patio. 9:30 p.m. FREE! www. caledonialounge.com TEDO STONE Rootsy Atlanta-based Americana and folk singer-songwriter with a touch of psychedelic fuzziness. PROGRAMS No info available. Flicker Theatre & Bar 9 p.m. www.flickertheatreandbar.com IMPOSSIBLE VACATION Wistful and melodic Asheville, NC-based indiepop band. Georgia Theatre On the Rooftop. 6 p.m. FREE! www. georgiatheatre.com KINKY WAIKIKI Relaxing, steel guitar-driven band following the traditions of Hawaiian music. Hendershot’s Coffee Bar 8 p.m. FREE! www.hendershotscoffee. com OPEN MIC Local singer-songwriter Kyshona Armstrong hosts this open mic night every Monday. The Melting Point 8 p.m. FREE! www.meltingpointathens. com THE HOOT Monthly showcase put on by the Athens Folk Music & Dance Society. This month’s Hoot features folk group Whisper Kiss, singer-songwriter Amy Andrews and blues band The Screwtops featuring Maggie Hunter. Susan Staley opens and hosts, as is her wont. Nowhere Bar 10 p.m. FREE! 706-546-4742 OL’ TIME MEDICINE SHOW A night of roots music hosted by fiddler Adam Poulin.

Tuesday 13 Caledonia Lounge 9:30 p.m. $6 (21+), $8 (18-20). www. caledonialounge.com CHAIN & THE GANG With his new group, Ian Sevonius (formerly

of seminal D.C. bands Nation of Ulysses and The Make-Up) puts a funky, minimalist spin on what you might call post-punk. MUUY BIIEN Local band plays ‘80sstyle punk rock that’s equal parts Minor Threat and The Fall. TUNABUNNY Local act featuring a hazy and warped brand of experimental psychedelia.

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Little Kings Shuffle Club 10 p.m. www.facebook.com/lkshuffleclub NATO COLES Punk rock band hailing from Minnesota’s Twin Cities. DAFFODIL This local trio plays hardhitting, noisy rock. The Melting Point Terrapin Tuesday. 7:30 p.m. $5. www. meltingpointathens.com EMERALD ROAD An eclectic mix of traditional Irish music and Celtic folk. Nowhere Bar 9 p.m. FREE! 706-546-4742 TUESDAY NIGHT CONFESSIONAL Host Fester Hagood presents this week’s showcase of singer-songwriter talent, featuring dangfly!, The Woodgrains and the Charlie Garrett Band. Sundown Saloon 8 p.m. FREE! 706-850-1180 AVERY DYLAN’S OPEN MIC NIGHT All musicians, singers, songwriters, harmonica players and/or bands welcome! The Volstead 9 p.m.–1:30 a.m. 706-354-5300 KARAOKE Every Tuesday!

Wednesday 14 Boar’s Head Lounge 11 p.m. FREE! 706-369-3040 OPEN MIC NIGHT Showcase your talent. Every Wednesday! Caledonia Lounge American Music Wednesday. 7 p.m. FREE! www.caledonialounge.com OPEN MIC Hosted by local singer/ songwriter Mark Cunningham. Flicker Theatre & Bar 7 p.m. FREE! www.flickertheatreandbar. com JOE CAT Local singer-songwriter tells stories about his life. Come get to know him! SCOTT BAXENDALE Guitar dynamism from the owner of Baxendale Guitars. Classic bluesy riffs and a lot of soul. Georgia Theatre On the Rooftop. 10 p.m. FREE! www. georgiatheatre.com THE ELECTRIC SONS Indie/electronic duo from Atlanta. CASUAL CURIOUS Greensboro, NC band playing quirky, pop dance gems in a style not dissimilar to Reptar.

285 W. Washington St. Athens, GA • Call 706-549-7871 for Show Updates

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The Office Lounge 9 p.m. FREE! 706-549-0840 KARAOKE With your host Lynn, the Queen of Karaoke! Porterhouse Grill 7 p.m. FREE! 706-369-0990 JAZZ NIGHT The longest standing weekly music gig in Athens! Join drummer Nicholas Wiles with bassist Drew Hart and pianist Steve Key for an evening of original music, improv and best-loved among the standards.

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AUGUST 7, 2013 ¡ FLAGPOLE.COM

29


bulletin board DO SOMETHING; GET INVOLVED! Deadline for getting listed in Bulletin Board is every THURSDAY at 12 p.m. for the print issue that comes out the following Wednesday. Online listings are updated daily. Email calendar@flagpole.com.

ART

CLASSES

Call for Artists (Amici) Currently accepting artists for the fall lineup. Email samples of work to ryan.myers@amici-cafe.com Calling Fine Artists (Georgia Piedmont Arts Center, Statham) Seeking 2D and 3D artists for “Piedmont Art,� a juried exhibition running Sept. 6–28. Visit website for application details. $25. 404-2023044, www.georgiapiedmontarts center.com Gallery Artists (ARTini’s Open Art Studio, Gallery & Lounge) Seeking artists for monthly exhibits beginning in September. Email images and information to kate@ artinisartlounge.com. www.artinisart lounge.com Lickskillet Artists Market (Lyndon House Arts Center) Accepting artist vendor applications for a market Oct. 26. Deadline Oct. 12. $20–30. lhartsfoundation@ gmail.com, www.lyndonhousearts foundation.wordpress.com

Bikram Yoga (Bikram Yoga Athens) Classes in hot yoga seven days a week. Beginners welcome. 706-3539642, www.bikramathens.com Clay Classes (Good Dirt) Weekly “Try Clay� classes ($20/person) introduce participants to the potter’s wheel every Friday from 7–9 p.m. “Family Try Clay� classes show children and adults hand-building methods every Sunday from 2–4 p.m. $20. 706-355-3161, www.gooddirt.net Craft Classes (Treehouse Kid and Craft) Mama/Papa & Me craft class for ages 1–3 (Saturdays, 10 a.m.), Craft Club for ages 6–10 (Wednesdays, 4 p.m.) and ages 3–5 (Thursdays, 4 p.m.), Family Crafterdays (Saturdays, 11 a.m.) and Adult Craft Night (second Tuesday of the month, 7:30–9:30 p.m.). $10/ class, $25/adult class, $30/4 kid classes. 706-850-8226, www.tree housekidandcraft.com Early Morning Yoga (Healing Arts Centre, Sangha Yoga Studio) With an Iyengar influence and emphasis on quality of postures. All levels welcome. Tuesdays & Thursdays, 7:15–8:30 a.m. www.healingartscentre.net Fall Art Classes (Lyndon House Arts Center) An array of classes for all ages and skill levels. View website for course descriptions and dates. www.athensclarkecounty.com/ leisure Fall Free Week (Floorspace) Try a class for free during the week of Aug. 12. Classes include bellydance, theatrical bellyesque, burlesque and more. floorspacestudio@gmail.com, www.floorspaceathens.com Gymnastics (Bishop Park) Now registering. For ages 10 months

AUDITIONS Disney’s Aladdin, Jr. (Athens Creative Theatre–ACT) Many roles available for adults and children. Auditioners should bring 2 copies of prepared sheet music. Auditions on Aug. 12–14, 6–9 p.m. Performances on Nov. 14–17. Call to schedule an appointment. 706-613-3628. www.athensclarkecounty.com/act Evil Dead the Musical (Town and Gown Players) Come prepared with a piece of a capella music no longer than one minute and active wear. Auditions on Aug. 19 & 20, 7 p.m. Performance on Oct. 4–13. www.townandgownplayers.com

ACC ANIMAL CONTROL

old through adults. 706-613-3589, www.athensclarkecounty.com/ gymnastics Mac Workshops (PeachMac) Frequent introductionary courses to Mac, iPad, iPhoto and iCloud. Check website for dates. FREE! 706208-9990, www.peachmac.com/ training/workshops.php Mama’s Relaxing Yoga (By Your Leave Family Resource Center) Classes designed for mothers in mind. Child care provided. Aug. 6, 13 & 20, 2 p.m. $30/3 weeks, $12 drop-in. 706-338-2001 New Earth Yoga Experience (New Earth Athens) Donation-based yoga for all experience levels. Monday–Friday, 9 a.m. & 11 a.m. Tuesdays–Thursdays, 6:30 p.m. Check website for details and updates. 706-543-8283, www.face book.com/newearthyoga On-Going Yoga (Yogaful Day) Deepen your practice through ongoing classes in Hatha and Ashtanga yoga. A RYS200 yoga teacher training program is available. Tuesdays– Saturdays. $10/class. yogafulday@ gmail.com, www.yogafulday.com Printmaking Workshops (Double Dutch Press) “Zine/Journal Making.� Aug. 13 & 20, 6–8 p.m. $65. “Two-Part One Color Linocut.� Aug. 10 & 17, 2–4 p.m. $85. “Stationery.� Aug. 21, 6–8 p.m. $50. “Multicolor Screenprinting.� Aug. 24 & 31, 2–5 p.m. $75. “One Color Screenprint.� Aug. 28, 6–8 p.m. $50. Check website to register. www.doubledutchpress.com Sprouting into Wellness Series (Jackson Eco Farm) A three-week series of yoga and health workshops. Register by Aug. 27. Sept. 5, 12 & 19, 6:30–7:45 p.m. $60/adult. $5/child (ages 7 & above, w/ paying adult). www.jackson ecofarm.org

Major is an owner surrender which means he is )\KK` *OYPZ[PHU >H` ŕ Ž guaranteed no 6WLU L]LY` KH` L_JLW[ >LKULZKH` HT WT holding time. He is a CHAMP of a dog, He feels like he’s a small Joyful, bouncy loving and fun and he knows and very social guy in a big, loud and basic obedience commands. Fox Terrier/Pointer Handsome brown and white scary place. Nervous mix puppy will but he really wants to Pitbull mix. make you smile. trust someone. Sweet Smart young girl Terrier mix with a cute and quiet, too. underbite.

7/25 to 7/31

39730

30

39722

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ACC ANIMAL CONTROL 38 Dogs Received, 5 Adopted, 3 Reclaimed, 19 to Rescue Groups 15 Cats Received, 8 Adopted, 0 Reclaimed, 1 to Rescue Group ATHENS AREA HUMANE SOCIETY 0 Animals Received, 3 Cats Adopted, 1 Dog Adopted 0 Healthy Adoptable Animals Euthanized

FLAGPOLE.COM ∙ AUGUST 7, 2013

He looks goofy here but he’s actually a gorgeous Great Dane/ mix PUPPY. He’s gonna be big, folks. His ears do some funny things but usually stand up. He has some energy and will need an exercise partner.

39725 more local adoptable cats and dogs at

athenspets.net

“The Delicate Flower of Womanhood� and other oil paintings by Manda McKay are on display in the group show “ATHICA EMERGES 6.� Yoga & Meditation (Rubber Soul Yoga) Classes in Kundalini, Hatha and restorative yoga as well as guided meditation. The Athens Zen Group, which includes Dharma talks concerning Zen Buddhism, meets every Sunday morning. Check website: calclements@gmail.com, www.rubbersoulyoga.com Yoga Classes (Healing Arts Centre) Several types of ongoing classes are offered for all levels, including Ashtanga, therapeutic, Vinyasa and power lunch yoga. Pilates and yoga teacher training, too. Visit website for details. www.healingartscentre.net Yoga Classes and Teacher Training (Yogaful Day) Various yoga classes and year-round RYT200 teacher training. yogafulday@gmail.com, www.yogafulday. com Yoga Gives (Athens Five Points Yoga Studio) All levels of flow yoga taught by Claire Coenen. Donations benefit Nancy Travis, a non-profit that provides daycare to local children. Every Wednesday through summer. 8–9 p.m. $10 (suggested donation). clairecoenen@gmail.com, www.athensfivepointsyoga.com Zumba in the Garden (State Botanical Garden of Georgia) A dynamic fitness program infused with Latin rhythms. Every Wednesday, 5:30–7:30 p.m. $7. www.botgarden.uga.edu

HELP OUT Athens AIDS Walk Team (UGA Tate Student Center) GLOBES and Athens PRIDE have created a team (GLOBES-PRIDE) for the AIDS Athens AIDS Walk. Help the team reach its goal of having 25 team members and raising $500 by joining or donating. Race on Oct. 19. Book Donations Accepted (Oconee County Civic Center) The Oconee County Library is accepting donations of books, DVDs and CDs to be sold at their annual book sale on Sept. 12–15. Proceeds benefit the library. suley1@sules.com, www.oconeelibraryfriends.org HandsOn Northeast Georgia (Athens, GA) HandsOn NEGA is a project of Community Connection of Northeast Georgia that assists volunteers in finding flexible service opportunities at various organizations. Over 130 local agencies seek help with on-going projects and special short-term events. Visit the

website for a calendar and to register. www.handsonnorthestgeorgia. com Seeking Volunteers (Casa de Amistad) Casa de Amistad provides social services, translation, education and advocacy for the local Hispanic immigrant population. Volunteers are needed for a carpentry project, computer classes, ESOL, administrative tasks and special events. www.athensamistad.org

KIDSTUFF Babies and Beasties (Sandy Creek Nature Center) Toddlers ages 18 months–2 years and their parents are invited to discover nature with activities, hikes and crafts. Thursdays or Saturdays in August. 10–10:45 a.m. $12–18. 706-6133615, www.athensclarkecounty.com/ sandycreeknaturecenter Knee-High Naturalists (Sandy Creek Nature Center) A program of nature exploration, animal encounters, hikes and crafts. For children ages 3–5 and their parents. Every other Wednesday through Aug. 14, 3:30–4:30 p.m. $24–36. 706-6133515, www.athensclarkecounty.com/ sandycreeknaturecenter Miss Future Star Fashion & Talent Competition (ACC Library) Compete for the title of Miss Future Star 2013 by singing, dancing or rocking the runway. Parents can learn how to launch their child’s modeling career. For ages 4–17. Aug. 31, $25–75. www.jasmine johnsonedu.net/missfuturestar Sportstime (Bishop Park) Children ages 3–4 learn games, drills and relay races to introduce them to basketball, football, golf, kickball, lacrosse, soccer and more. $65–98. 706-613-3589, www.athensclarke county.com/sports Weekday Play Group (By Your Leave Family Resource Center) Playtime for children ages 4 & under. Weekdays. 10:30 a.m.–12:30 p.m. FREE! 706-255-1136, www.facebook.com/byyourleave Yoga Sprouts (Thrive) Yoga Sprouts for ages 3 & up improves body awareness and self-confidence. Massage and community style or private acupuncture available for waiting caregivers. Wednesdays, 2:15–3:15 p.m. or 3:30–4:30 p.m. $10. www.thrivespace.net Yoga Sprouts (Memorial Park, Recreation Hall) Yoga and creative movement can increase coordina-

tion, balance, body awareness and self-confidence. Two sessions available for kids ages 3–6. Tuesdays, 3:45–4:45 p.m., Aug. 20–Oct. 8 or Oct. 15–Dec. 17. $50–75. 706-613-3596 Youth Dance Classes (Dancefx, 396 Foundry St.) Classes offered in creative movement, ballet, tap, jazz, hip hop, breakdance, acrobatics, cheer dance and more. Scholarships available. New location. Register online. 706-355-3078, www.dancefx.org Youth Soccer (Bishop Park) Now registering. Co-ed teams for ages 4–12. Season runs Sept. 3–Oct. 24, with practices on Tuesdays and Wednesdays and games on Thursday evenings. $65–98. 706613-3589, www.athensclarkecounty. com/sports

SUPPORT Alcoholics Anonymous (Athens, GA) If you want to drink, that’s your business. If you want to stop, we can help. 706-389-4164, www.athensaa.com Athens Mothers’ Group (Athens Mothers Center) A support and social group for mothers to find out about upcoming events, community resources and more. Children welcome. Meets every Tuesday & Friday, 9:30–11:30 a.m. www.athens ga.motherscenter.org Camp I Believe (Camp Twin Lakes, Rutledge) This grief support camp is for kids ages 7–14 who have suffered a trauma due to loss of a loved one. Activities include swimming, archery and canoeing, as well as counseling and specialized activities focused on identifying feelings of grief and finding healthy ways of coping. Aug. 16–18. FREE! www.gentiva.com/hopsice/camps Domestic Violence Support Group (Athens, GA) Support, healing and dinner for survivors of domestic violence. Tuesdays, 6–8 p.m., in Clarke County. First and Third Mondays, 6:30–8 p.m., in Madison County. Childcare provided. 706-543-3331 (hotline), 706-613-3357, ext. 771 Emotional Abuse Support Group Demeaning behavior and hateful words can be just as harmful as punches and kicks. Childcare provided. Call for location. Every Wednesday. 6:30–8 p.m. FREE! 706543-3331 (hotline), 706-613-3357, ext. 771


Emotions Anonymous (Unitarian Universalist Fellowship of Athens) A 12-step program open to anyone with a desire to become well emotionally. Sundays, 4–5 p.m. 706-202-7463, www.emotions anonymous.org Life After Diagnosis (Oasis Counseling Center) A support group for chronic or life-threatening diseases is now taking applicants for the next six-week session. $15/session. 706-543-3522, www.oasis counselingcenter.com Women’s Empowerment Group (Oasis Counseling Center) A therapeutic group for women to work on vulnerability, setting boundaries, assertiveness, self-care and more. $15/session. 706-543-3522, www.oasiscounselingcenter.com

ON THE STREET AthHalf Registration Open Registration is now open and continues until Oct. 18, with discounts for early registration. Race on Oct. 20,

7:30 a.m. info@athhalf.com, www.athhalf.com Call for Artists and Musicians (The Coffee Shop of Athens) Seeking artists for rotating exhibits, as well as acoustic/ unplugged musicians to play indoors and garage bands to play in the garage. 706-542-8990, shedancesbarefoot@gmail.com Classic City BBQ (The Classic Center) Now accepting vendor booth applications for a Tailgate Tradeshow on Aug. 17. Show off your vehicles, grills, clothing and recipes. The BBQ festival includes contests, a classic car show, outdoor music stage, kids’ activities and more. $250–350. 706-357-4428, lindsay@classic center.com Fall Adult Softball (Bishop Park & Southeast Clarke Park) Now registering. The eight-game season begins Aug. 19. $400. 706-2080185, www.athensclarkecounty.com/ sports Moonlight Gypsy Market (Little Kings Shuffle Club) Seeking outsider, strange, erotic, macabre,

ART AROUND TOWN A LA FERA (2440 W. Broad St.) Paintings by Perry McCrackin. Through mid-August. AMICI (233 E. Clayton St.) Whimsical drip paintings with bright colors and narrative themes by Sophie Howell. Through August. ANTIQUES & JEWELS ART GALLERY (290 N. Milledge Ave.) Paintings by Mary Porter, Christine Shockley, Dortha Jacobson and others. Art quilts by Elizabeth Barton and handmade jewelry by various artists. ARKIVE. ART & FRAME (160-2C Tracy St.) “Dealt & Framedâ€? presents ATHICARDS, a deck of playing cards designed by local artists. ART ON THE SIDE GALLERY AND GIFTS (1011B Industrial Blvd., Watkinsville) A gallery featuring works by various artists in media including ceramics, paintings and fused glass. ARTINI’S ART LOUNGE (296 W. Broad St.) “Virtual Landscapes,â€? by Brian Macbeth, are iridescent paintings influenced by cosplay, street art and graphics imaging. ATHENS FORD (4260 Atlanta Hwy., Bogart) Colorful paintings by June Ball and Jim Stipemaas. ATHENS INSTITUTE FOR CONTEMPORARY ART (ATHICA) (160 Tracy St.) “ATHICA Emerges 6â€? features works by Andy Giannakakis, Susan Hable, Manda McKay, Eric Simmons, Spirit Cat (Ciara and JT Bringardner), Aja Steele and Tinker Lab Collective. Through Aug. 25. THE BRANDED BUTCHER (225 N. Lumpkin St.) Paintings and drawings by Sanithna Phansavanh. BROAD STREET COFFEE (1660 W. Broad St.) Photography by Jeremy Ayers. Through August. CINÉ BARCAFÉ (234 W. Hancock Ave.) The UGA Center for Continuing Education sponsors a show of works by students in a photography certificate program. Through Aug. 14. CIRCLE GALLERY (285 S. Jackson St.) “Breaking Dormancy: The Sapelo Island Greenhouse Showâ€? features works by Karekin Goekjian, Caroline Montague, Sue Goldstein and Ginger Goekjian. Opening reception Aug. 15. On display Aug. 12–Sept. 20. COFFEE SHOP OF ATHENS (2950 Atlanta Hwy.) “Grayscaleâ€? includes black and white oil paintings by Chrissy Clouse and works by multiple other artists. Through Sept. 27. THE CLASSIC CENTER (300 N. Thomas St.) “Here & Thereâ€? includes photography by Thom Houser, Michael Marshall, Jim Fiscus and Chris Bilheimer, Rinne Allen, Michael Lachowski and Michael Oliveri. • “Inhabitâ€? features paintings by Jennifer Hartley, Hooper Turner, Claire Dunphy and Art Rosenbaum. EARTH FARE (1689 S. Lumpkin St.) Nature watercolor paintings by Donna England. Through August. FARMINGTON DEPOT GALLERY (1011 Salem Rd., Farmington) Owned and staffed by 14 artists, the gallery exhibits paintings, sculpture, folk art, ceramics and fine furniture. Permanent collection artists include Cheri Wranosky, John Weber, Suzanna Antonez-Edens, Diane Perry and more. 5 POINTS ACUPUNCTURE (2027 S. Milledge Ave.) Colorful oil paintings by Mark Hodges. Through August.

dark and odd crafters, artists and junk dealers for a gypsy themed event held on Sept. 21. Deadline for submissions is Aug. 31. $30. moon lightgypsymarket@gmail.com, www.facebook.com/moonlight gypsymarket Social Co-Ed Adult Kickball League (Athens) Now registering for the fall season. Registration ends Aug. 14 at midnight. To play, create or join a team visit www.gokickball. com/athens Special Olympics Bowling (Showtime Bowling Center) Individuals with cognitive disabilities can compete in a bowling tournament. Ages 21 & above. Thursdays through Aug. 22. Competition in Warner-Robbins, Aug. 23–25. $3.75/game. 706-613-3580 Summer Reading Program (ACC Library, Oconee Co. Library & Madison Co. Library) This year’s theme is “Dig into Reading,� and includes activities and prizes for children, teens and adults. Visit website to register. www.athens library.org f

FLASHBACK GAMES (162 W. Clayton St.) An exhibit of over 40 video game inspired works by local artists. FLICKER THEATRE & BAR (263 W. Washington St.) New paintings by Matt Blanks. Through August. GALLERY@HOTEL INDIGO (500 College Ave.) “Make Paper & Print Worksâ€? is curated by Didi Dunphy and features pieces created by Double Dutch Press and a dozen paper and printmaking artists. Through Aug. 20. GEORGIA MUSEUM OF ART (90 Carlton St.) “Pick of the Kiln: The Work of Michael Simon.â€? Reception Aug. 25. Through Sept. 8. • “Fashion Independent: The Original Style of Ann Bonfoey Taylor.â€? Through Sept. 15. THE GRIT (199 Prince Ave.) Paintings by Lisa Freeman. Through Aug. 11. HEIRLOOM CAFE AND FRESH MARKET (815 N. Chase St.) Watercolor and plein air paintings by Susie Burch. Through August. JITTERY JOE’S DOWNTOWN (297 E. Broad St.) Video game drawings and paintings by Noah McCarthy. • Acrylic portraits by Lea Purvis. JITTERY JOE’S FIVE POINTS (1230 S. Milledge Ave.) Silkworks by RenĂŠ Shoemaker. Through August. JUST PHO (1063 Baxter St.) Animal paintings by Leslie Moody. Through August. LAST RESORT GRILL (174 Clayton St.) Paintings by Ainhoa Bilbao Canup. Through August. LOFT GALLERY AT CHOPS & HOPS (2 S. Main St., Watkinsville) Colorful abstract oil and acrylic paintings by Maria Nissan. LYNDON HOUSE ARTS CENTER (293 Hoyt St.) “BIGâ€? includes large scale works in printmaking, sculpture and mixed media by Duane Paxson, Scott Stephens, Judy Majoe-Girardin and Briana Palmer. Through Sept. 27. • An exhibition of recent jewelry and metal works by artists of the Athens Metal Arts Guild. Through Oct. 12. • “Period Decorative Arts Collection (1840–1890)â€? includes artifacts related to the historic house. OCONEE COUNTY LIBRARY (1080 Experiment Station Rd.) UGA-themed paintings by Jim Hamilton. Through August. SEWCIAL STUDIO (160 Tracy St.) Hand-dyed art quilts by Anita Heady and rust and over-dyed fabric on canvas by Bill Heady. STATE BOTANICAL GARDEN OF GEORGIA (2450 Milledge Ave.) “2Hot!,â€? inspired by the summer months of Georgia, features oil paintings by Joan Terrell and Patricia Fabian. Through Aug. 25. SURGERY CENTER OF ATHENS (2142 W. Broad St.) Photography by Sally Ross, an international traveler. Through Aug. 16. TECH STOP COMPUTERS (390 Atlanta Hwy.) Abstract expressionist acrylic paintings by Frances Jemini. Through September. TOWN 220 (220 W. Washington St., Madison) “Art Marksâ€? features paintings and drawings by husband and wife duo Art Rosenbaum and Margo Newmark Rosenbaum. Through Nov. 3. VISIONARY GROWTH GALLERY (2400 Booger Hill Rd., Daniesville) “Creative Maladjustmentâ€? is a collective show featuring some of the hundreds of artists whose work has been acquired by the gallery over the past two decades. WHITE TIGER (217 Hiawassee Ave.) Artwork by Cap Man. Through August.

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31


classifieds

Buy It, Sell It, Rent It, Use It! Place an ad anytime at flagpole.com ď‚ľ Indicates images available at flagpole.com

Real Estate Apartments for Rent $575/mo. 2BR/2 private BA. 3 mins. to campus. Lg. LR w/ FP, kitchen w/ DW, W/D, deck, lots of storage. Water & garbage incl. in rent, Agent/Owner, 145D Sandburg St. Available Now. Call Robin (770) 265-6509.

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1BR & studio apts. avail. for rent. Located off S. Milledge Ave., on both UGA & Athens Transit bus lines. Furnished & unfurnished options avail. Call (706) 3531111 or visit www.Argo-Athens. com. 1BR/1BA. Walk to campus. Hillside Apartments in Five Points. $550 w/ W/D, water & pest control incl. Call Joiner Management (706) 353-6868 for leasing specials. 1BR apar tment upstairs w/ private entrance. On Hill St., 1 mi. to UGA. Utilities incl. in $685/mo. Pets OK! Call (706) 255-0726.

1BR starting at $450, 2BR $550 & 3BR $710/mo. Pet-friendly. 24 hr. fitness center/swimming pool & off leash dog park avail. Immediate move-ins avail. Call us today, (706) 549-6254. 2-3BR/2BA upstairs apartment in Blvd. area. Spacious kitchen, W/D, DW, back deck, CHAC, ceiling fans, lots of space! One block walk to town. $830/ mo. (706) 548-9797, www. boulevardpropertymanagement. com. 2BR apts. Completely remodeled. W/D furnished, air. Dwntn. & bus route. $525/mo. Call Louis, (706) 338-3126. Eastside quadraplex, 2BR/2BA, $500/mo. & 2BR/1BA, $475/ mo. Eastside duplex, 2BR/1BA & FP, $525/mo. 3BR/2BA & FP, $700/mo. 2BR/2BA condo, Westside, 1200 sf., $600/mo. Call McWaters Realty, (706) 3532700 or cell, (706) 540-1529. Mature student for fully furnished 1BR/1BA, LR, kitchen. Private drive, entrance. Incl. everything: utils., cable. Quiet, safe, near Dwntn./UGA. No smoking, drinking or pets. (706) 2966957.

flagpole classifieds Reach Over 30,000 Readers Every Week! Business Services Real Estate Music For Sale

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PLACE AN AD • At flagpole.com, pay with credit card or PayPal account • Call our Classifieds Dept. (706) 549-0301 • Email us at class@flagpole.com

S. Milledge duplex. Venita Dr. 4BR/2BA, W/D, DW, fenced back yd.! Close to everything yet private. $999/mo., negotiable. (404) 558-3218, or bagley_w@ bellsouth.net. Electronic flyers avail.

Commercial Property Beautiful retail space for lease in Dwntn. Athens on Washington St. 1750 sf. Introductory rent re d u c e d t o $ 1 9 7 5 / m o . f o r qualified tenant. Call Drew, (706) 202-2712.

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FLAGPOLE.COM ∙ AUGUST 7, 2013

Condos for Rent $450/mo. to share a 2BR/2.5BA. Tamara Court off Old Epps Bridge Rd. Incl. utils. Need only fur nish own BR. Grad student preferred. Call (706) 207-9750. 2BR/2BA, The Courtyard Condominiums. 935 Baxter St. UGA bus & Athens. Walk to campus. Totally redecorated. Appls., carpet, Pergo, ceiling fans. $800/mo. (706) 4011259.

Brand new commercial space on South Milledge Avenue in 5 Points! 1,000-2,000 sf. w/ incredible windows & convenient parking. This upscale new retail/office space o p e n s A u g u s t 2 0 1 3 & is ready for your business. Tons of upgrades, huge visability, low monthly rent & short term lease available. Call (706) 850-7740 or email Info@College TownProperties.com.

2BR/2BA Condo at Summit. $800/mo., swimming pool, gym, club house, 3 mi. from UGA. Pets are OK. Contact (910) 8761030, michael.leinwand@gmail. com.

Eastside offices for lease. 1060 Gaines School Rd. 750 sf., $900/mo. 400 sf., $600/ mo. (706) 546-1615 or www. athenstownproperties.com.

Awesome condo. Aug. half price. $600/mo. Quiet 1BR/1BA, LR, study, modern kitchen, pool, gym, gated, ground floor cor ner unit. Stadium Village close to UGA. Ideal for single/couple. Mary, (706) 540-2887, wimberlyme@ bellsouth.net. Just reduced! Investor’s Westside condo. 2BR/2BA, FP, 1500 sf., great investment, lease 12 mos. at $575/mo. Price in $40s. For more info, call McWaters Realty at (706) 353-2700 or (706) 540-1529.

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3 BR/3 BA Pre-Leasing for August 2013

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Bloomfield Terrace • Deadline to place ads is 11:00 a.m. every Monday for the following Wednesday issue • All ads must be prepaid • Set up an account to review your placement history or replace old ads at flagpole.com

Commercial space, 1500 sf., close to Dwntn. Office, studio, retail, art, commercial. 305 Old Commerce Rd., next to Sandy Creek Nature Center. Avail. July. Garage doors & glass front. Heated & cooled. $1400/mo. Lease, dep. references req’d. Call (706) 540-4752.

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Tanyard Condos. 2BR/2.5BA. Incl. W/D. Off Baxter St. near campus & Dwntn. Walk to class. $815. Joiner Management, ( 7 0 6 ) 3 5 3 - 6 8 6 8 . w w w. joinermanagement.com.

Duplexes For Rent Half off rent 1st 2 months when you mention this ad! 2BR/2BA & 3BR/2BA duplexes off HWY 441. Pet friendly! Dep. only $250. Rent from $650-$750/ mo. (706) 548-2522.

Houses for Rent $600/mo. 3BR/1BA. 121 E. Carver Dr. Fenced-in yd. Tile & HWflrs. CHAC, W/D hookups, DW. Pets welcome. Avail. now! (706) 614-8335.

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1BR cottage. 1/4 mi. from campus. 100 yrs. old. HWflrs. Big kitchen. All appls incl. Front/back porch. No pets, N/S. $600/mo. Avail. now. (770) 995-6788.

3BR/3BA, 107 First St. Great location, walk to UGA & Dwntn.! 2 living areas, bar area, covered porch, pet friendly. $1200/ mo. (706) 713-0626, www. newagepropertiesathens. com. 3BR/2BA, 2077 S. Lumpkin, $1200/mo. W/D, DW, sec. sys. & ceiling fans. 3BR/2BA, 2071 Lumpkin, $1000/mo. incl. water, lawn maint. & garbage. W/D, DW. (706) 546-0300. 3BR/3BA, 470 Atlanta Ave., great location. Fenced yd., huge LR, open kitchen, pet friendly. $1050/mo. 1st mo. rent free. (706) 713-0626. www. newagepropertiesathens. com. Find the perfect house with Flagpole Classifieds! There’s tons of awesome choices here!

175 Valleywood Dr. 4BR/2BA. CHAC. Some hardwood floors. Deck overlooks small creek! Fenced yard. Pets OK, no pet fees! Other homes available. $950/mo. (706) 254-2569.

4BR/2BA. LR, DR, laundr y r m., bonus r ms. Screened back porch overlooking creek. Covered parking. 1500 sf. Near Athens Tech. Newly renovated, new appls., lawn care. $800/mo. Avail. Aug. 1. (706) 424-1571.

140 Janice Dr. 3BR/1.5BA. CHAC, HWflrs., fenced yd., pets OK, no pet fees! Other homes avail. $795/mo. (706) 372-6813.

4BR/3BA ranch style home. Avail. now! Pet friendly. 2.5 mi. from UGA campus. W/D, DW, CHAC. $1000/mo. 1glennbaker@ gmail.com.

2 & 3BR houses pre-leasing for fall. Close to campus & Dwntn. All modern upgrades. Call (706) 255-0066.

4BR/3BA Dwntn. off Oconee St. Newly renovated throughout. 2 LRs, huge yd., W/D incl., pets welcome. Avail. now. Only $1000/mo. Aaron, Arch Properties, (706) 207-2957.

Read Flagpole Classifieds online 24/7 at classifieds. flagpole.com 2BR/1BA. Near UGA, LR, DR, den, HWflrs., all appls., fenced yd., garage p/u, carport, elec. AC, gas heat, no pets. $550/mo. 117 Johnson Dr. Owner/Agent, Stan, (706) 543-5352.

RIVERS EDGE

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Some units include ďŹ replaces and Washer & Dryers. $550-$600/mo. Call Today to view.

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+ ' 3 + + 2 BR/1BA IN 5 POINTS ON-SITE LAUNDRY Pre-Leasing for >Â?Â?ĂŠĂ“ä£ĂŽĂŠUĂŠ œ˜½ĂŒĂŠ ÂˆĂƒĂƒĂŠ"Ă•ĂŒt C. Hamilton & Associates

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Large 1/BR at Tall Oaks off Baxter St. Enjoy Your Private Outdoor Patio Close to UGA. Rent Includes Water, Garbage, Pest Control & Parking.

Call Today to Come See This Special Location.

C. Hamilton & Associates 706-613-9001

5 Pts. off Baxter St. 4BR/2BA, $ 1 2 0 0 / m o . C a l l M c Wa t e r s Realty, (706) 353-2700, (706) 540-1529. Bungalow in the woods. 5 mi. north of Dwntn. Athens Tech area. 1000 sf. 2BR/1BA, W/D hookups, all elec., fenced area. $550/mo. & dep. Avail. now! (706) 424-1571. Charming 2BR/1BA house for rent. 1 Block to 5 Pts. Walk/ bike everywhere! CHAC, DW, W/D, HWflrs. Call Brian at (706) 338-7364. See pics at www. fivepointsrental.tripod.com. $1050/mo. Looking for a new home? You’re in the right place! Tons of great houses, apartments and condos are right here. Half house to share. $400/mo., $200 sec. dep., 1/2 utils. Fully furnished, W/D, carport, deck, private BA, no pets. Near GA Square Mall. (706) 612-4862. New craftsman style 4BR/4BA house ready for fall. Close to campus on Oconee St. HWflrs., stainless appls., W/D, sec. sys., surround sound, $1800/mo. (706) 540-6482.


Parking & Storage Parking places for rent across from UGA. $30/mo. (706) 3544261. Private parking. S. Thomas St. between UGA NO3 & Thomas St. Ar t Complex. $200 per semester, game days excluded. (706) 548-9137, 9 a.m.–2 p.m.

Roommates Roommate needed in Woodlands. $500/mo., 2BR/2.5BA furnished condo w/ cable & utils. incl. Clubhouse, huge pool & fitness center. No pets. gardengirlpage@bellsouth. net, (404) 909-9857.

Rooms for Rent Room for rent w/ single adult in 4BR ranch-style home. W/D, fenced yard. $395/mo. + utils. 1 mi. from restaurants & grocery. (706) 353-3815. tes_is_paula@ yahoo.com. R e n t re d u c e d ! 4 B R / 4 . 5 B A home, sought after Blackmon Shoals. Luxurious interiors, minutes to the Athens Perimeter & UGA. $400/room. Hot area for students! Do not miss the opportunity to have a new place to live while in school. Call Richard! (678) 410-7512. Retired F in Hull area looking for tenant. Private entrance. Private 1BR/1BA. No pets or smoking. $350/mo. Refs req’d. Call (706) 543-9273 for details. Room open in 3BR/2BA for $250/mo. + 1/3 utils. Off Gaines School Rd. in East Athens. Yard, back deck, W/D, DW, heat/air, storage space, pets OK. Call/ text Nate, (706) 247-1749.

For Sale Businesses Dwntn. Athens nightclub for sale. $189K. Serious inquiries only. Partial financing available. (706) 254–4343.

Miscellaneous G o t o A g o r a ! Aw e s o m e ! Affordable! The ultimate store! Specializing in retro everything: antiques, furniture, clothes, bikes, records & players! 260 W. Clayton St., (706) 316-0130. Instant cash is now being paid for good vinyl records & CDs in fine condition. Wuxtry Records, at corner of Clayton & College Dwntn. (706) 3699428.

Music Equipment Fender ‘59 Bassman amp. ‘91 reissue, good condition, 3-way bright switch added, custom speakers & tubes. Photos: www.tinyurl.com/59-bassmanphotos. Video: www.tinyurl.com/ bassman-demo. $800. Call or text (706) 207-3858.

RENOVATED LOFT-STYLE

STUDIO

Hardwood Floors, Granite Countertops & New Appliances. 6th Floor of University Towers.

725 AVAILABLE NOW!

$

C. Hamilton & Associates 706-613-9001

Nuçi’s Space needs your old instruments & music gear! All donations are tax-deductible. Call (706) 227-1515 or come by Nuçi’s Space, 396 Oconee St.

Instruction Athens School of Music. Instruction in guitar, bass, drums, piano, voice, brass, woodwinds, strings, banjo, mandolin, fiddle & more. From beginner to expert. Instrument re p a i r s a v a i l . Vi s i t w w w. AthensSchoolofMusic. com, (706) 543-5800.

Music Services Fret Shop. Professional guitar repairs & modifications, setups, electronics, precision fretwork. Previous clients incl. R.E.M., Widespread Panic, Cracker, Bob Mould, John Berry, Abbey Road Live!, Squat. (706) 549-1567. Wedding bands. Quality, professional bands. Weddings, parties. Rock, jazz, etc. Call Classic City Entertainment. ( 7 0 6 ) 5 4 9 - 1 5 6 7 . w w w. classiccityentertainment.com. Featuring The Magictones Athens’ premiere wedding & party band. www.themagictones. com.

Musicians Wanted Cotton South Ar ts Festival seeks performances for 2-day festival w/ national coverage in Madison, 9/28 & 9/29. Genres: classical, folk, bluegrass & acoustic preferred for outdoor stage between 10 am & 5 pm, Sat/Sun. Email time(s) &day(s) avail. + music sample to Sara@ Vi v i d - E v e n t . c o m w / “ C S A F Music� as subject, or call (706) 296-7066 for information. www. CottonSouthArts.com.

Services Cleaning Move-out/move-in cleaning s e r v i c e . P ro f e s s i o n a l & independent. Pet & earth friendly. Check me out on Tw i t t e r : @ h o m e a t h e n s . Always budget friendly. Text/ call Nick, (706) 851-9087.

Jobs

Opportunities Administrative assistant. Appt. coordination, event & meeting planning, making travel arrangements, running errands, setting appts., monitoring expenses, raising monthly invoice. Send your resume & salary expectations to aelky9@ gmail.com. I heart Flagpole Classifieds! Seeking women ages 30–65 for an 8–week study examining the effects of a protein carbohydrate diet and/or an interval training exercise program on metabolic syndrome risk factors. Participants can earn up to $100 and a free 3 mo. membership at the UGA Fitness Center w/ successful completion of all testing. Contact Rachelle Acitelli at (706) 389–0272, or ephitstudy@ gmail.com. The UGA Department of Kinesiology is seeking nonsmoking, overweight women ages 65-80 for a 7-month weight loss study examining the effects of a protein or carbohydrate diet and/or exercise training program on physical function and feelings of fatigue. Participants can earn up to $100 w/ successful completion of all testing. Contact Rachelle at (706) 395-5167 or ugadivasproject@ gmail.com

Part-time Dondero’s Kitchen. Counter help/barista. Multiple shifts available. Email resume to donderoskitchen@bellsouth.net or call (706) 389-7955. Fantasy World! Hiring private lingerie models. No exp. necessary. We train. Flexible scheduling. Call (706) 6138986 or visit 1050 Baxter St., Athens. Need to hire some new employees? Flagpole Classifieds can help you find some great applicants! Place your ad online at classifieds. flagpole.com or call 706-5490301.

Wanted: 29 serious people to work from home using a computer. Up to $1500–$5000 PT/FT. www.Income2Profits. com.

Autos

HOUSES FOR LEASE IN OCONEE AND CLARKE COUNTY

ARMC and Five Points. Call for Location and Availability.

C. Hamilton & Associates 706-613-9001

POSITION AVAILABLE FOR FALL Advertising or Marketing Majors Preferred. Must have car and be available WEDNESDAYS & FRIDAYS 2–5 P.M. or TUESDAYS & THURSDAYS 2–5 P.M.

Notices Messages The new 2013-1014 Flagpole Guide to Athens is out now! The Guide includes descriptions and contact info for all bars, restaurants, shops and public parks in Athens, and it’s totally FREE. Find one in businesses around town! MEOW!

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Pets 1 yr. old domestic cat for adoption. Kitkat is v. affectionate & playful. She is also a good hunter & would make a good barn cat or house cat in a large area where she would have room to explore. She has all her shots and is spayed. Call Josh at (706) 247-5177 or email at: joshua.caleb. neuman@gmail.com.

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DOWNTOWN BAR FOR LEASE Broad Street bar with approximately 4800 sq. ft. Perfect dance club across from UGA

Email resumĂŠ or letter to Alicia at ads@flagpole.com Week of 8/5/13 - 8/11/13

The Weekly Crossword 1

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with Parking and Amenities

706-613-9001

INTERN

Sell Your Car, Bike, Van, Truck, Bus, Motorcycle, Boat, Camper, Scooter, etc. Call 706-5490301 or go online: classifieds. flagpole.com to place your ad!

Live ln-Town C. Hamilton & Associates

ADVERTISING

1999 Dodge Town & Country red caravan. 7 passangers (1 DD + 6 drunks), removable rear seats, bench seats fold down flat (great for camping, large item transport, etc). Most mechanical records avail., new battery. $1,500 Negotiable. (706) 7427888.

Modern Age is hiring again! PT/FT positions avail. Bring resumes into Modern Age. No phone calls.

Full-time Call center representative. Join established Athens company calling CEOs & CFOs of major corporations generating sales leads for tech companies. $9/hr. BOS Staffing, www.bostemps.com, (706) 3533030.

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Copyright 2013 by The Puzzle Syndicate

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12 13 21 23 25 27 28 29 30 32 33 34 37 40 42 45 47 50 52 54 56 57 58 59 61 62 63 66

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Crossword puzzle answers are available at www.flagpole.com/crossword

AUGUST 7, 2013 ¡ FLAGPOLE.COM

33


THE GRIT vegetarian restaurant 199 prince avenue 706-543-6592 • theg rit.com open 7 days ÊL Ài > v >ÃÌÊ U Ê q v À Ê Ê L À Õ V Ê UÊ Ã > Ì q ÃÕ Ê Ê Õ V Ê UÊ q v À Ê Ê ` i ÀÊU Ê ÃÕ q Üi ` Ê Ê ` i ÀÊ UÊ Ì q à > ÌÊ

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Vegetarian Restaurant & Uniquely Athens Restaurant 3 Years in a Row!

ADVERTISING

INTERN POSITIONS AVAILABLE FOR FALL

WEDNESDAYS & FRIDAYS 2–5 P.M. or TUESDAYS & THURSDAYS 2–5 P.M. * MUST HAVE CAR * * ADVERTISING OR MARKETING MAJORS PREFERRED* SEND RESUMÉ TO ALICIA NICKLES AT

ADS@FLAGPOLE.COM

CRAZY RAY’S

CAR WASH & LUBE

FREE FULL CLEAN CAR WASH WITH AN OIL CHANGE OIL CHANGE PRICE

REGULARLY A $38.95 VALUE

YOU SAVE $16.00

OIL CHANGE INCLUDES: UP TO 5 QTS. OF OIL, OIL FILTER AND 15-POINT INSPECTION. CAR WASH INCLUDES: EXTERIOR WASH, CAR VACUUMED AND WE CLEAN THE WINDOWS.

Gift Certificates Available LEXINGTON RD. ACROSS FROM WAL-MART 706-316-2222 • OPEN 8:30-6:00 TUES.-SAT.

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FLAGPOLE.COM ∙ AUGUST 7, 2013

comics


Flagpole and writer C.J. Bartunek with this chapter begin publication of a novel about the Athens scene in weekly installments. We’ve never done this before, although the precedent was well established by newspapers in the 19th Century with writers like Dickens and Dostoyevsky. C.J. is a doctoral student in the UGA creative writing program and has contributed several articles to Flagpole, including this week’s piece on artisan breadmaking. We hope that The Athens of Georgia captures your interest and that you’ll look forward to each chapter as it appears in the paper. As each new chapter is published in the paper, the last week’s chapter will be posted online at www.flagpole.com.

T

Chapter 1. Goodbye to All That

here were a lot of reasons that Casey Kozol moved to Athens, despite the fact that he’d never even visited the South in his life, but mostly—and secretly—it was because of a girl. During his last month of college, at Northwestern, after his rejection letters had all come in from graduate programs at Harvard and Yale and Stanford and Columbia, and a few acceptances had trickled in from places he didn’t really want to go, he was faced with the terrible and wonderful realization that his future really was wide open. “I guess I’ll just go move somewhere and see what it’s like,” he told his friends during their late-night porch-sitting sessions and at the parties that increasingly consumed every weeknight on their street in Evanston. “Maybe San Francisco or Portland,” he said one night, strumming a chord on his guitar. “Possibly Austin. Anywhere cool that there’s a music scene, I guess.”

Hall at the blossoming trees on the last day of the semester. “I’m glad I did.” Reese still wore the uniform of his days as a hip grad student in the early ‘90s, a black tee shirt tucked into faded black Levi’s; a small diamond stud glinted from one ear in the gray light of his office. The Smiths played softly from his computer speakers. A mountain of books by French theorists towered at Reese’s left side and a sheaf of handwritten notes fluttered in the breeze on his right. Casey was filled with sadness; he couldn’t believe college was almost over for him. He’d been a friendless nerd in a small Nebraska town, with only his books and music to connect him to the wider world. Coming to Northwestern had changed everything. “How old are you? About 22, 23?” “Twenty-two,” Casey said. “God, what an exciting time. Everything that happens to you at that age seems so epic. So… fraught. Well, whatever you do,” Reese said, “you should write about it. And keep me posted.” “I will,” Casey said. They shook hands awkwardly, and Casey walked through the empty corridor feeling both excited and sad.

T

hat evening, just before dark, Genevieve Farrell appeared at the door of his bedroom, holding The Sun Also Rises, which he’d loaned her for a class two years before. “Your roommate let me in,” she said. “I just came to return this.” Her short dark hair looked freshly cut, and with her red lipstick and mod dress and combat boots it was unclear as usual whether she was off to play at a show in the city or to the library to study—she was always off to somewhere, and she always looked awesome. “So, have you decided yet where you’re moving?” she asked, shifting her weight and looking at the mountain of cardboard boxes he’d been hoarding for the past few months and at the books that littered every surface. He was trying to sort through and get rid of some of them, but hadn’t made much headway. “No,” he said. “Honestly, I have no idea what I’m going to do.” He smiled at her. “I’m going home for a couple months first, so I guess I’ll have time to ponder on it.” “You should try Athens,” she said. “There’s an awesome music scene there. You’d dig it.” “Are you going back?” He’d always been surprised to think that she was from Georgia—she was so unlike how he’d imagined Southerners to be. “Yeah. Some dudes I went to high school with got a band together and they need a drummer. They’ve lined up some other people for me to play with too.” “That’s way cool.” His heart hammered in his chest as the events of the last weekend replayed in his mind. He and Genevieve had a history together, so to speak. “Anyway, you should think about it—it’s a pretty rad place.” “Huh, Athens hadn’t occurred to me. Maybe I’ll check it out as a possibility.” He leaned back in his desk chair nonchalantly, though inside he felt anything but. “You totally should. I could show you around and introduce you to everyone. Anyway, there’d be a lot for you to write about.” Her smile was dazzling. “I’ve got to run, but hopefully I’ll see you at graduation,” she said, setting the book on his bureau. “Move to Athens!” she called as she skipped out of his room and down the stairs.

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C.J. Bartunek

AUGUST 7, 2013 · FLAGPOLE.COM

35


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