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::NEWS&VIEWS FEATURES | POLLS | TAKING LIBERTIES | ISSUE OF THE WEEK
A Bill of Rights for Nature?
HO-CHUNK NATION AND OTHERS MOVE TO PROTECT THE EARTH ::BY MARY SUSSMAN
magine a world where nature has rights. A lake or waterway would have the right to remain clean and could assert that right against industrial polluters. Wetlands could stand up for themselves to push back against builders who wanted to fill them in with concrete and build 40-story towers on them. An endangered ecosystem could assert the right to restore itself and prevent future degradation. Imagine no more. The rights of nature movement is gaining steam. Across the country, communities and tribal nations are signing on to it. In Wisconsin, the HoChunk Nation took a first vote for a rights of nature tribal constitutional amendment in 2016. It was the first tribal nation in the U.S. to do so. In 2018, the White Earth band of the Chippewa Nation in Minnesota adopted the Rights of the Manoomin law, which secured legal rights of manoomin (wild rice); it was the first law to secure legal rights of a particular plant species. In 2010, the City of Pittsburgh enacted rights of nature legislation to keep fracking out of the city. In February 2019, the City of Toledo, Ohio, passed the Lake Erie Bill of Rights, which allows individuals to sue on behalf of the lake. “When we think about nature today, it is treated like property or a commodity under the law,” says Mari Margil, associate director of the Community Environmental Legal Defense Fund, an environmental group based in Pennsylvania that assists communities in developing environmental and rights of nature laws. “In workshops, we teach that other people’s movements, such as the abolitionist movement, the movement for women’s and LGBTQ rights, have faced similar legal structures. The abolitionists, for example, were facing a structure of law that treated certain people as property. They had to transform enslaved people from being property to rights-bearing individuals. Today, nature is treated as property. Just like during slavery, there are laws regulating literally how slaves could be used. Today, that’s what environmental laws do.” Margil says current environmental laws legalize and authorize certain uses of nature, and that communities that are interested in enacting rights of nature laws recognize that current laws do not actually
4 | APRIL 18, 2019
protect the environment but authorize the very things these communities are trying to stop, such as fracking. “As long as we are treating nature in this way with environmental laws that regulate the abuse of nature rather than its protection, then we can’t protect nature,” she says. “We have to really shift how nature is treated under the law, so we can protect it. In a very practical sense, environmental laws today have led us to this place. When we talk about ‘environmental law’, we think that it’s protecting the environment, but oftentimes it’s doing something else entirely.”
Rights of Nature Gains Ground in Wisconsin
Bill Greendeer, a Ho-Chunk tribal member, has been a long-time advocate for rights of nature legislation to become an amendment to the Ho-Chunk constitution. Greendeer of La Farge, Wis., was a leader in proposing that rights of nature legislation be taken up by the Ho-Chunk Nation general council, which, in 2016, took a first vote for a rights of nature tribal constitutional amendment. It was the first tribal nation in the U.S. to do so. “The Ho-Chunk believe we are brothers and sisters of everything on Earth,” Greendeer says. “Corporations are destroying the Earth at an alarming rate these days.” As a member of the Deer Clan, he accepts a special responsibility for protecting nature. When Greendeer watched the sand mines coming into Wisconsin, he was motivated to act. “For me, it was just a matter of introducing legislation to put rights of nature into our constitution.” Greendeer says he is involved with a work group comprised of representatives from tribal culture, history departments and environmental groups that support a secretarial election, in which tribal members vote for or against a rights of nature constitutional amendment. The secretarial election would be the next step in advancing the amendment. “It hasn’t been put into the Ho-Chunk constitution, because it has to be passed by paper ballot to get
into the constitution,” says Forest Jahnke, program coordinator for the Crawford Stewardship Project in Crawford County. “Updates by paper ballot almost never happen. When the paper ballots went out [last year], it didn’t make it, because so few people responded. There’s now a movement to move it forward by raising awareness of it. The support is there. It just hasn’t gotten through the final procedural step. There’s still work to be done there.” Greendeer knows it may be an uphill fight to win approval in a secretarial election. “It’s going to be a process,” he says. “You have to jump through hoops to protect what we have left.” In addition to the Ho-Chunk Nation, Jahnke says a number of communities around Wisconsin have shown interest in rights of nature legislation as a strategy, but none has yet drafted community rights ordinances. There have been numerous workshops and educational meetings around the state. “We’ve been working for a long time in a very restricted framework of regulatory ordinances that does not truly allow our communities to decide for themselves how they want to develop going forward,” Jahnke says. “This is critical for taking back our democracy... to recognize the rights of nature. We [humans] are part of [nature] and not separate. Our right to clean water doesn’t mean much if our rivers and aquifers are polluted. We have to be recognizing rights for ecosystems and non-human species.”
‘This is Critical for Taking Back Our Democracy’
Despite obstacles and, in some instances, lawsuits, rights of nature advocates seem to be gaining ground. For example, in a March 2019 article in Science magazine, Spanish and Swedish contributors argue for the advancement of rights of nature as a means to oppose further environmental degradation. As they wrote: “Adjudicating conflicts between rights of nature and human activities will be controversial, but no more so than conflicts between, for example, human rights to free expression and nondiscrimination. Conflicts between nature and human activities happen on a massive and systematic scale. When people and corporations have rights and nature does not, nature frequently loses, as evidenced by the continuing deterioration of the environment. Rights of nature may help to prevent this one-sided outcome.” Rights of nature laws have sometimes faced legal challenges. Not long after the citizens of Toledo passed the Lake Erie Bill of Rights, the law was immediately challenged by agriculturalists. Concurrently, the environmental group Toledoans for Safe Water asked a federal district court to let them and the “Lake Erie Ecosystem” defend the law from challenges.
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All shows start at 8 pm unless otherwise indicated Rights of nature laws also face formidable ideological opposition. For example, in response to the recent Science article, Wesley J. Smith, senior fellow at the Discovery Institute, opposed the rights of nature movement in the politically conservative American Spectator: “We had better put a cork in this movement quickly,” Smith wrote. “If we wait too long, ‘nature rights’ will inevitably be adopted into the Green New Deal and/or otherwise become part of the Democrat (sic) Party environmental platform. If that happens, common sense environmentalism will go the way of the dodo.” The fledgling rights of nature movement is slowly gaining adherents and momentum in the U.S. and around the world. In Pennsylvania, 63 communities have adopted rights of nature laws; in New Hampshire, 12 communities have done the same. Ecuador was the first country to adopt rights of nature laws in its constitution (2008). Bolivia has also adopted rights of nature legislation. Rights of nature laws are currently being proposed in India, Nepal, Australia, Cameroon and Colombia, among other places. (A timeline of the movement around the world can be found at celdf.org.) The rights of nature movement traces its
roots to Roderick Frazier Nash’s book The Rights of Nature: A History of Environmental Ethics, first published in 1989 by The University of Wisconsin Press. Nash earned his doctorate from UW-Madison, and his dissertation was the foundation for another seminal book, Wilderness and the American Mind. Tressie Kamp, staff attorney at Midwest Environmental Advocates, says when communities use rights of nature or other arguments to uphold their rights, they are taking on the burden of enforcing those rights, often in the face of state laws that have not significantly evolved in recent years to address changes in certain industries, such as Concentrated Animal Feeding Operations. “I think that’s a lot to ask of a group or a community,” Kamp says. “I would hope that in the long term—when you’re talking about upholding the rights of nature and protecting the environment—it not just be left on the shoulders of an individual, a group or a community, but that it’s something we all need to buy into. I also hope that in the longer term, this falls onto our government at all levels working harder to uphold conservation and the environment.” Comment at shepherdexpress.com. n
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NEWS&VIEWS::FEATURE
What Are Milwaukee’s Environmental Groups Doing for Earth Day? ::BY MARY SUSSMAN
Jennifer Bolger Breceda: Executive Director of Milwaukee Riverkeeper
W
hat is Milwaukee Riverkeeper doing on Earth Day? Every day is Earth Day around here! For the month of April, we will kick off our Adopt-a-River Program and organize one of the largest volunteer events in the state, our annual Spring Cleanup. On Saturday, April 27, more than 4,000 volunteers will come out to the rivers throughout the entire Milwaukee area (seven counties) and remove trash and debris from the waterways, parks and rivers. Our amazing volunteers remove more than 100,000 pounds of trash from the environment and make our community cleaner and healthier. The event runs from 9 a.m. to noon, and afterwards, we host a cleanup party in partnership with Rock the Green. The Rock the Green Earth Day event is great and includes a pedal-powered stage, local musical artists, sustainable/local food vendors, an “eco-village,” and best of all no trash is created by the event; everything is recycled, composted or biodegrades. Each spring cleanup volunteer will also receive a free beer from Good City for their hard work. Our monitoring season begins this month, too, with trainings and preparations. We have many volunteer opportunities. The month of April and, in particular, Earth Day, signifies the launch of our busy river season where our winter planning turns into action, restoration and a better community. It is a busy time, and we are excited to get back on the river.
What are the most pressing issues for Milwaukee Riverkeeper? Water quality issues are the most press6 | APRIL 18, 2019
ing, including phosphorus, bacteria, chloride and sediment. Many sections of streams and waterways do not meet legal standards for these and other parameters at different times of the year. Milwaukee and more than 40 million people elsewhere rely on the Great Lakes for drinking water. Our rivers are part of that resource. What goes in our rivers and Lake Michigan must be treated before we drink it. Additionally, wildlife and aquatic life need clean waterways to survive. There are many sources and factors that impact our waterways and lower the water quality. We identify and monitor those impacts, and we also work really hard to help decision-makers think about water when making decisions. Since the rivers cannot speak, and we cannot always see impacts, we collect basin-wide information and publish the data, so people know what is happening in their neighboring waterways. We want to see a Milwaukee River Basin that is swimmable, fishable and active. A clean, healthy waterway equals a thriving, healthy community, which is what we are working for every day.
Mark Redsten: President & CEO of Clean Wisconsin
What is Clean Wisconsin doing on Earth Day? Clean Wisconsin staff will be attending and promoting the Nelson Institute event for Earth Day this year. We will be promoting other Earth Day efforts by partnership organizations as well.
What are the most pressing issues for Clean Wisconsin? For the past 49 years, Clean Wisconsin has worked primarily in two broad program areas: water and energy/climate change. To-
day, within those two broad program areas, we emphasize access to clean, safe drinking water for all, the reduction of climate-change pollution and the promotion of clean energy solutions in Wisconsin. Drinking water is a huge issue in Wisconsin right now due to increased awareness about pollution issues—from lead pipes in cities to rural drinking water wells contaminated with nitrogen, pathogens and pesticides, to other toxins like PFAS emerging at an alarming level; drinking water concerns are everywhere in Wisconsin. We are pleased that Gov. Tony Evers declared 2019 the Year of Clean Drinking Water in part because of all of these concerns. Climate change is probably the most important issue of our generation. Solutions to climate change seem even more important after the IPCC report saying we have only 12 years to reduce carbon emissions before we see irreversible environmental damage. Fortunately, younger voters are especially motivated by this issue, and economics and technology are adding to the fast pace of change from fossil fuels to clean energy. Again, we are pleased Gov. Evers set an important goal that all electricity produced within the state should be 100% carbon-free by 2050. Clean Wisconsin is leading many policy and legal initiatives to help Wisconsin residents have access to clean drinking water and to promote climate change solutions. Every day should be Earth Day, but there have been annual Earth Day celebrations each year since April 22, 1970, thanks to former Wisconsin Gov. Gaylord Nelson, who brought special attention to the environmental challenges we face. This year, our local groups will again lead or participate in various Earth Day activities, so please join in.
Glenna Holstein: Branch Manager of the Urban Ecology Center
What is the Urban Ecology Center doing on Earth Day? At all three of our branches [East Side, North Side and South Side], we are partnering with Milwaukee Riverkeeper for their 24th Annual Milwaukee Riverkeeper Spring Cleanup. We provide the bags and gloves, and our wonderful volunteers provide the energy to pick up trash and other things that find their way into our river system. After the event, we are inviting people to join in a community lunch or celebration at or near each of our branches.
What are the most pressing issues for the Urban Ecology Center? We always like to remind people that “every day is Earth Day!” We love to see the swell of support that happens in April, and we also like to encourage people to think about what they can do every day—at home, work and in their communities—to be good stewards of our Earth.
Tyler Huebner: Executive Director of RENEW Wisconsin
What is RENEW Wisconsin doing on Earth Day? On Monday and Tuesday, April 22 and 23, our program director, Heather Allen, will be participating in UW-Stevens Point’s Earth Day programming on clean and renewable energy. The following weekend (April 26 and 27), Jane McCurry, a program manager, will be speaking on electric vehicles and solar energy at the Egg Harbor “Every Day is Earth Day” festival in Door County.
What are the most pressing issues for RENEW Wisconsin? Wind and solar electricity have become very cost effective, and we are working to ensure new projects can gain local and state approval to generate a lot more renewable energy in Wisconsin. We’re also working to expand opportunities for families, businesses and nonprofits to add solar energy to their homes, buildings and properties. We continue to support bioenergy, local hydropower and geothermal technologies that can further reduce Wisconsin’s dependence on energy from other states. And in our newest initiative, we are working to kickstart the market for clean electric vehicles in Wisconsin, as we envision a SHEPHERD EXPRESS
NEWS&VIEWS::FEATURE future where we can both power our lives and move people around with clean renewable energy.
litigation and electing environmental champions to local, state and federal office.
Cassie Steiner: Public Relations and Outreach Associate of the Sierra Club—John Muir Chapter
Erick Shambarger: Environmental Sustainability Director of the City of Milwaukee Environmental Collaboration Office (ECO)
What is the Sierra Club doing on Earth Day? The Sierra Club is partnering with other groups throughout Southeastern Wisconsin. This year, the Great Waters Group will again be celebrating Earth Day on two fronts, showcasing our service to our Mother Earth with a focus on water and community as part of the Milwaukee Riverkeeper’s 24th Annual River Cleanup on Saturday, April 27. Volunteers will also cleanup trash along a wild stretch of Lincoln Creek from 35th and Congress streets to 34th Street and Hampton Avenue. The Earth Day Nearby Nature Community Celebration, Washington Park Urban Ecology Center, celebrates the grassroots environmental movement in the community. There will be service work in Washington Park from 9 a.m.noon and a lunch for volunteers at noon. The keynote speaker will be August Ball, founder and CEO of Cream City Conservation, and there will be information tables. These are examples of the many events our groups regularly hold or participate in to highlight and bring attention to our love of nature and support for our environmental heritage. Don’t miss out on many more opportunities on Saturday, May 11, when we’ll have events around the state to show our support for restoring the funding our state parks need.
What are the most pressing issues for the Sierra Club? In Wisconsin, the Sierra Club has five priority-issue campaigns: moving beyond coal to clean energy; moving beyond oil by fighting tar sands, oil pipeline expansions and advocating for clean and equitable transportation priorities in the state; stopping destructive mining; protecting water quality and quantity; and protecting wildlife, forests and public lands. We accomplish our goals through direct and grassroots legislative and administrative lobbying, education, outings, SHEPHERD EXPRESS
What is the Environmental Collaboration Office (ECO) doing on Earth Day? Every day is Earth Day for the ECO. We’ll be doing what we always do: working to make Milwaukee a world-class eco-city with practical programs in energy efficiency, renewable energy, water and urban land restoration. As for events, on Saturday, April 27, we’ll celebrate by supporting Milwaukee Riverkeeper’s Annual Spring Cleanup followed by the Rock the Green concert.
What are the most pressing issues for ECO? The most pressing issues for the ECO are to hasten the transition to renewable energy in Wisconsin while helping the government of the City of Milwaukee and the private sector use energy more efficiently. We are also finalizing our Green Infrastructure Plan and working to green up our neighborhood commercial corridors. Comment at shepherdexpress.com.
Transit Riders Union Seeks to Restore Milwaukee as an Outstanding City for Mass Transit ::BY A.J. MACDONALD
“I
think increasing public transit usage is often a missing piece of the conversation around climate change,” says Nick DeMarsh, member of the Milwaukee County Transit Riders Union (MTRU). With transportation on par with electricity as the United States’ greatest culprit of greenhouse gas emissions—both at 28%—DeMarsh emphasizes the necessity to optimize opportunities for public transit improvement. While drastic changes to transit infrastructure might be a longer-term vision, the consequences of greenhouse gas emissions and impact on climate change are anything but far-off. Milwaukee sees the implications of global warming in myriad ways, from extreme weather like the recent polar vortex, to endangered species like the rusty patched bumble bees that pollinate our plants and whose prosperity we rely on for food. “We’re seeing the recent flooding as one example,” DeMarsh says, “This is an opportunity for us as an entire region to say that we take climate change seriously and we see that transportation is one of the easiest things you can do to dramatically reduce emissions.” Though Milwaukee once laid claim to the nation’s best public transit system, earning the American Public Transportation Association’s Outstanding Achievement Award in 1987 and 1999, demise set in around 2001, coinciding with Scott Walker entering office as county executive. Frustrations with subpar transit experiences as a result of funding cuts, whether fare increases or reduced service, inspired a group of riders to form the Milwaukee Transit Riders Union in 2007. Often working in concert with fellow transit-concerned organizations, successful collaborations have included working with Citizen Action to increase voter turnout by helping transit riders understand how policymakers’ decisions translate to daily experiences such as wait times at the bus stop, and by working with MICAH (Milwaukee Inner-city Congregations Allied for Hope) to mobilize Milwaukeeans to call on our elected representatives to prioritize public transit in the proposed state budget. Currently, the MTRU’s major focuses include securing dedicated traffic lanes for public transit use only (DeMarsh offers MLK Drive and Wisconsin Avenue as viable options), as well as a Regional Transit Authority, which would be an entity overseeing—and in theory, streamlining—inter-county public transit. They also propose a Regional Transit Authority. An all-volunteer-run organization, the MTRU welcomes community members to not only engage through already-defined campaigns, but to offer fresh ideas. Monthly meetings are open to the public, taking place the first Saturday of the month at 10 a.m. at the Milwaukee Environmental Consortium, located at 1845 North Farwell Ave., Suite 100. Learn more about the MTRU at transitridersunion.org. APRIL 18, 2019 | 7
::SAVINGOURDEMOCRACY ( APRIL 18 - APRIL 24, 2019 ) The Shepherd Express serves as a clearinghouse for all activities in the Greater Milwaukee area that peacefully push back against discriminatory, reactionary or authoritarian actions and policies of the Trump administration and other activities that seek to thwart social justice.
Monday, April 22
Thursday, April 18
Families will engage in hands-on activities at various stations that will introduce seed planting, composting with Compost Crusaders and recycling. Afterward, families are encouraged to participate in a short neighborhood cleanup (gloves and bags provided). Stay for lunch provided by Milwaukee Parkside’s Agriculture Program and enjoy board games.
‘Occupation of the American Mind’ @ Peace Action Wisconsin (1001 E. Keefe Ave.), 7 p.m. Presented by Progressive Democrats of America and Peace Action Wisconsin, the film Occupation of the American Mind challenges viewers to understand that, as organizers put it, “disagreeing with the actions of the Israeli government is not anti-Semitic.” The film concerns media bias around the Israeli-Palestinian conflict and will be followed by a community discussion. “All are welcome, and no bigoted or hate-related actions or words will be tolerated.”
SWAN Day MKE Mini Film Fest @ Urban Ecology Center, Menomonee Valley (3700 W. Pierce St.), 5 p.m. As part of the SWAN (Support Women Artists Now) Day MKE exhibition, “Water: Reflection, Resource and Ritual,” the Urban Ecology Center presents a screening of three films by Milwaukee women filmmakers. These are The Water Will Carry Us Home by Gabrielle Tesfaye; Alice’s Garden by Jenny Plevin; and On Hands by Laj P. Waghray.
Saturday, April 20
Seek the Good Saturday @ Victory Garden Initiative (249 E. Concordia Ave.), 9 a.m. Victory Garden Initiative builds communities that grow their own food, creating a socially just, environmentally sustainable, nutritious food system for all. Volunteers can expect to help prepare beds for planting by spreading compost, turning the soil and putting wood chips down for weed suppression. Be prepared to get a little dirty.
The Transformative Power of Food with Alice Waters, Ron Finley, Will Allen and Local Partners @ N Studios (1037 W. McKinley Ave.), 4 p.m. Join three world-renowned food activists for a community conversation on farming, food equity and social justice. The event is presented by Groundwork Milwaukee in partnership with Civic Leadership Center, Fondy Food Center, NŌ Studios and Slow Food WISE. The conversation will focus on the power of food equity and farming in economic and social development in Milwaukee and across the nation. The community conversation will be followed by an intimate cocktail reception with Waters, Finley and Allen at the NŌ Studios rooftop lounge beginning at 6 p.m.
Peace Action of Wisconsin: Stand for Peace @ the corner of Humboldt Blvd. and Locust Street, noon-1 p.m.
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Every Saturday from noon-1 p.m., concerned citizens join with Peace Action of Wisconsin to protest war and literally “Stand for Peace.” Signs will be provided for those who need them. Protesters are encouraged to stick around for conversation and coffee afterward.
Sunday, April 21
Challenging White Supremacy After Christchurch @ Milwaukee Muslim Women’s Coalition (5235 S. 27th St.), 10 a.m.
8 | APRIL 18, 2019
Wednesday, April 24
UNCOM’s Third-Annual Neighborhood Summit @ Ascension-St. Joseph Hospital (5000 W. Chambers St.), 9 a.m. Hosted by United Neighborhood Centers of Milwaukee, explore how to strengthen neighborhood assets by empowering and engaging communities and their members, being exposed to best practices and guiding resources and resolving organizational and systematic barriers that impact our ability to strengthen our Milwaukee neighborhoods.
The Big Impact @ Sherman Phoenix (3536 W. Fond Du Lac Ave.), 6 p.m. The Big Impact is a program meant to change the way people engage with philanthropy by creating an engaging, crowdfunded pitch event. This is a micro-granting event supporting community and entrepreneurial projects that shape our city. The featured neighborhoods of this project are Mitchell Street, Avenues West and Granville.
‘The Great Lakes Water Wars’ Author Peter Annin @ Carthage College (2001 Alford Park Drive—Todd Wehr Center), 7 p.m. To help cut through the confusion surrounding the Great Lakes water diversion debate, award-winning author Peter Annin will speak at Carthage College as part of the Gunderson Lecture Series, with a talk titled “Great Lakes Water Tension in the 21st Century.” To submit to this column, please send a brief description of your action, including date and time, to savingourdemocracy@shepex.com. Comment at shepherdexpress.com. n
Discuss the challenges of stopping white supremacy after the attacks in Christchurch, New Zealand, with guest speaker Salam Al-Marayati.
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NEWS&VIEWS::POLL
You Doubt We’ll See Mueller’s Complete Conclusions Under Trump Last week, we asked if you believe the public will ever see a complete account of Special Counsel Robert Mueller’s conclusions while Donald Trump is still in office. You said: n Yes: 31% n No: 69%
What Do You Say With Tax Day now in the rearview mirror, do you feel that you were a winner or a loser under Donald Trump’s massive $1.5 trillion tax cut? n Yes n No Vote online at shepherdexpress.com. We’ll publish the results of this poll in next week’s issue.
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Walker’s Fight to Save Corrupt Gerrymandering ::BY JOEL MCNALLY
E
very so often these days, a political headline literally takes your breath away. The latest stunner was that former Republican Gov. Scott Walker was joining the fight over corrupt political gerrymandering. We know politicians can undergo some pretty radical transformations after they’re thrown out of office, but was Walker really joining the growing national movement fighting against the brazenly dishonest Republican tactics he used in Wisconsin to make it one of the most politically gerrymandered states in the nation? No, of course not. Anyone who read the story quickly realized Walker had no intention of fighting the corrupt gerrymandering that jammed Wisconsin’s Democratic voters into the fewest possible voting districts statewide so they could never elect a majority of state legislators or congressional representatives. He’s fighting to protect corrupt political gerrymandering. Walker is becoming the fundraising chairman for something called the National Republican Redistricting Trust, a rightwing organization created to finance Republican resistance to a national citizens’ movement to take redistricting out of the self-serving hands of professional politicians, either Republican or Democrat. That’s because politicians have proven they can’t be trusted to draw voting districts fairly to reflect the will of the voters. Instead, they manipulate lines shamelessly to keep as many members of their own party as possible in the Legislature and in Congress. Exhibit A is Wisconsin in every election under Walker as governor, including last November’s midterms. But wait a minute. Democratic Gov. Tony Evers beat Walker in that election. In fact, enthusiasm for Democrats was so high they swept every statewide election. That’s because it’s impossible to gerrymander statewide elections. The candidates who receive the most votes win. That’s the way democracy is supposed to work.
Thwarting the Voters of Wisconsin
But that’s not how it works in dishonestly gerrymandered legislative and congressional districts. Here’s how district lines were manipulated to destroy the actual intentions of Wisconsin’s voters. Because anti-Trump and anti-Walker sentiment energized Democrats and independents in the midterms, Democrats won 53% of Assembly votes statewide, but what the majority of voters wanted didn’t matter. Many of those votes for Democrats were rendered totally meaningless through “packing and cracking.” Democratic voters were either packed into the fewest possible
10 | A P R I L 1 8 , 2 0 1 9
overwhelmingly Democratic districts or scattered into so many majority Republican districts they literally had no effect. Through this sleight of hand, a 53% statewide majority of Democratic votes produced an absurdly lopsided Republican Assembly majority of 63 Republican seats and only 36 seats for Democrats. A similar Democratic majority of congressional voters statewide maintained the state congressional delegation’s fiveto-three Republican majority. Republicans don’t even have to be legislative geniuses to accomplish such upside-down outcomes. Sophisticated computer programs now exist to automatically draw the most dishonest possible voting districts at the touch of a button. Wisconsin Republicans hired a private law firm to do that dirty deed behind closed doors. Political redistricting is required to reflect population changes after each new census at the beginning of every decade. The racist 2010 tea party backlash that elected Walker and other rightwing extremists around the country after the 2008 election of President Barack Obama was perfectly timed for Republican gerrymandering to reduce the chances of Democrats winning elections for the next 10 years.
GOP Afraid to Lose
But Republicans are still embarrassed to admit publicly they’re afraid of holding fair elections in a democracy. So, how in the world was Walker going to explain away his support for corrupt political gerrymandering? No problem. Walker simply adopted the official Republican strategy perfected by their leader: just lie your head off on Twitter. Walker tweeted it was his honor to lead the Republican defense “as we counter the efforts of the far Left to try and gerrymander their way into permanent control of the Congress and state legislative bodies across the country. Republicans win if we have fair maps!” He even ended the tweet with one of Donald Trump’s exciting exclamation points. Not a single word was true. Republicans have no interest in fair maps. The extreme gerrymandering by Wisconsin Republicans was cited before the U.S. Supreme Court as one of the worst examples in American history of distorting the intentions of a state’s voters. The Supreme Court made no decision in that case. Now, the current court is unlikely to ever outlaw corrupt gerrymandering with the addition of former Republican political operative Brett Kavanaugh as Trump’s long-lasting insult to the nation. The best news for Wisconsin is that Evers now will have veto power over any corrupt redistricting map created by Republican legislators after the 2020 census. In his budget, Evers proposed creation of an independent, non-partisan commission to draw legislative and congressional voting districts after the new census. Non-partisan citizen commissions are the solution being demanded by Americans appalled by corrupt political gerrymandering. In November, voters in Michigan, Missouri, Colorado and Utah approved independent commissions, joining California, Arizona and Ohio. Out-of-work, corrupt former Republican governors with gerrymandering experience need not apply. Comment at shepherdexpress.com. n
NEWS&VIEWS::HEROOFTHEWEEK ERIN BLOODGOOD
NEWS&VIEWS::TAKINGLIBERTIES
Angela Lang
Angela Lang:
Working for Community Engagement in Politics ::BY ERIN BLOODGOOD
“M
ilwaukee inspires me and breaks my heart every day,” says Angela Lang, the executive director of Black Leaders Organizing for Communities (BLOC). “It is such a beautifully complex city and it’s full of potential.” Interacting with people in her community almost every day, Lang sees immense hardships but also uplifting resilience. She is the kind of person who witnesses struggles in her neighborhood and feels moved to take action. In her eyes, there is a path for change and a way to achieve a better future. “All we have to do is tap in and engage folks in a really meaningful way,” she says. By organizing her community and encouraging participation in the political process, she gives others the power to fight for their rights. Lang grew up on 32nd and Wisconsin, well aware of the dichotomy of the neighborhood’s low-income housing in the shadow of Marquette High School, a school most of her friends would never be able to afford. She also watched as her single mother struggled with breast cancer while working multiple jobs. These early experiences made her aware of the inequality, but at the time, she didn’t know the term “racial justice.” It wasn’t until she got to college that she started to truly understand the political system and what she could do to fix the problems she grew up with. Fast forward to 2017, when Lang and five elected officials (Sen. LaTonya Johnson, Rep. David Bowen, Ald. Chantia Lewis, County Supervisor Supreme Moore Omokunde and County Supervisor Sequanna Taylor) founded BLOC, an organization aimed at getting the black community involved in the political system. The BLOC leaders felt they needed more people in their community to vote, or if they couldn’t vote, engage in some way. Their first step was to ask folks what they wanted to improve in their neighborhoods. After hearing the concerns of everyday people and taking time to understand their hardships, BLOC began training canvassers (or ambassadors, as BLOC calls them) to educate citizens about the political system. “Sometimes, people just see the effects of policy but don’t know how to interject and make their voices heard in such a complicated system, so we’re trying to break some of that down and do some of that education,” Lang explains. BLOC is helping to put power in the hands of the people to create a thriving place to live. The African American community has been left out of the political agenda, especially on Milwaukee’s North Side, which is why Lang explains that BLOC is “targeting black folks in a very bold and unapologetic way.” BLOC is changing that narrative and listening to the stories being told by their community. As of the election on April 2, they made 51,587 door attempts since Feb. 26. “How are we uplifting each other?” Lang asks. “How are we talking about the issues? How are we putting pressure on elected officials?” For Angela Lang, sitting back and waiting for society to change is not an option. There is power in numbers, she explains, and to build a thriving city, we have to get involved. Learn more at blocbybloc.org For more of Erin Bloodgood’s work, visit bloodgoodfoto. com. Comment at shepherdexpress.com. n SHEPHERD EXPRESS
::OUTOFMYMIND
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ETER WAS A HEALTH NUT WHO WAS NOT VERY HEALTHY. His Spartan diet followed the latest nutritional science. The exercise routine he followed every morning was rigorous and addressed all the primary elements—strength, aerobic capacity, flexibility and balance. He practiced excellent oral hygiene. He consumed several well-researched nutritional supplements. Neither wine, nor nicotine, nor any other psychoactive drug entered his body. “So, why do I keep getting sick?” he asked me. While I’m a psychotherapist, not a physician, I’ve heard this question a time or two, so I inquired about his medical status. He suffered no chronic ailments, was very fit, and had undergone a comprehensive physical evaluation in search of the answer to his question. None proved forthcoming. Yet, he suffered from frequent ailments, like colds, earaches, sore throat and sinus infections, and when these maladies did occur, his recovery was slow and frustrating.
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“How can someone this fit be so unhealthy?” he pondered. “What’s wrong with my immune system?” “Your head,” I replied. “There’s a vital element to well-being that you have overlooked, and that’s the health of your brain.” The influences of mind on matter are well-established. From the cryptic placebo effect, wherein one responds positively to a treatment devoid of biological impact (think sugar pill), to the capacity of a particular attitude to offset the deleterious impacts of stress, the psyche’s power to influence the body is immense. Fundamentally, the concept of mind as distinct from body is spurious. A classic study from the University of Wisconsin made this clear. Researchers wanted to know if folks suffering high levels of stress were more likely to die prematurely. So, they obtained stress levels from more than 30,000 subjects and followed them for eight years to ascertain if being wigged out translated to being dead. Frequently, it did. Those subjects reporting high stress levels were 43 percent more likely to die before their time. However, that was only true fo r those subjects who also believed that stress was harmful to their health. Those who reported high stress but didn’t believe it would damage their health had the lowest rates of early death in the study. Belief proved the determining factor. “The only part of you that isn’t in shape is your mind,” I told Peter. “Sadly, that’s arguably the most important part.” I’ve met more than a few health nuts (I am one) who did all the right things for their physiology while simultaneously ignoring their mental well-being. But the body is no fool. It knows. So, when things are amiss in the brain (depression, worry, anxiety, agitation, etc.), the body feels it, and, in its own fashion, makes that apparent, often through sickness. As the master control center in the body, the brain lords over almost all physiological processes, including the immune response. One of Peter’s regrettable habits was his propensity for angry outbursts, which are known to damp down immunity for hours after the eruption subsides. Another was the chronic stress brought on by his distracted, helter-skelter thinking. “If you fail to become more in charge of your feelings and thoughts, instead of the other way around, your body will pay the price,” I told him. Over time and with a bit of coaching, Peter learned to exercise his brain as well as his brawn. Mindfulness meditation was his ticket, and true to his meticulous nature, he incorporated it into his routine religiously. I recommended starting with five minutes a day, and he did fifteen. Instead of once a day, he went for twice, sometimes thrice. Regardless, the proven benefits arrived on schedule in about six weeks. His emotional reactivity diminished, the nattering self-talk inside his skull abated, he spent more time in the present, and sure enough, the pesky illnesses ebbed. So, remember to “exercise” above your neck. Otherwise, an unhealthy mind begets an unhealthy body.
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::CANNABISCONNECTION THE GO-TO SITE FOR EVERYTHING CANNABIS IN WISCONSIN We will keep you informed each week about the growing availability of legal cannabis products in Milwaukee and what’s happening at the state level with respect to Wisconsin’s movement towards legalization, what’s happening in other states and in the rest of the world.
1840 Brewing Company Experiments with Hemp-Infused Beer ::BY SHEILA JULSON
I
n just more than a year, Kyle Vetter of 1840 Brewing Company (342 E. Ward St.) has built a reputation as a brewing alchemist, experimenting with extraordinary flavors and even colors (he just released an eyecatching “Caribbean Sea Foam Fruited Sour”). When industrial hemp was legalized in Wisconsin, Vetter was immediately intrigued as to how it would work in beer. “We’re constantly trying to experiment and do different things to achieve fun flavors and colors, so when hemp became something we could play around with, of course we wanted to do that,” says Vetter. His team and he are currently doing small five-gallon test batches of hemp-infused beer. So far, they’ve experimented with Wisconsin-grown hemp seeds and cannabidiol (CBD) isolate; they’re also trying to acquire honey from hives that were raised on a hemp farm. They’ve also played around with THC-free hemp extract. “We’ve been using a lot of different products to see which flavors and aromas and other things we can get into the beer by using those products,” he says. While CBD is currently the hot cannabinoid best known for its health and wellness properties, Vetter also wants to experiment with other parts of the plant and use different aspects of it to make beers. Once they discover a hemp-infused formula that’s just right, Vetter notes they will have to have those formulas approved by the Alcohol and Tobacco Tax and Trade Bureau. Vetter recalls not having too many challenges in brewing with hemp for the first time, other than some uncertainty about how the hemp seeds and the grain would create sugars and, thus, the final alcohol content of the beer. “That was something kind of fun to play around with,” he explains. “We’re still dialing in to what proportion of seeds we could actually use and still taste them.”
‘We’re Way Behind Other States’
At this point, Vetter is unsure when the first batch of his hemp-infused beer will be ready for release, but when it is, 1840 Brewing Company’s VIP members will have first crack at it. Vetter started the brewery with a model similar to crowdsourced investing, in which people pay a yearly membership fee and receive access to private release parties and other perks. Vetter now offers two tiers of annual memberships. In September, he expanded tasting room hours from only one day per month to three. The brewery has 10 draft lines with nine beers on tap. Beer in 500- and 750 milliliters are also available. Vetter had lived in Colorado, where he worked in the craft brewing industry and also saw first-hand how cannabis legalization can benefit everyone. “I saw the system work,” he affirms. “Forty million dollars went to schools in the state in just that first year of legalization alone. It’s hard to deny the power that responsible regulation can have on an economy. We’re way behind other states, and my fear is if we don’t move actively toward full legalization, when we finally do, we’ll be giving all the money to well-established, out-of-state companies that got their start in earlier-adopting states, and they’ll come in here and snap up all the licenses. So, if we can make hemp products and draw attention to the fact that this is a helpful plant that has health benefits—as well as positive financial implications for the people of our state—we’ll be doing our part.” For more information visit 1840brewing.com. Comment at shepherdexpress.com. n 12 | A P R I L 1 8 , 2 0 1 9
Cannabidiol
Tetrahydrocannabinol
CBD vs. THC: What is the Difference? ::BY JEAN-GABRIEL FERNANDEZ
T
wo of the main components of the cannabis plant, both of which are at the center of debates surrounding the drug, are cannabidiol (CBD) and tetrahydrocannabinol (THC). While CBD is legal in Wisconsin, THC is strictly illegal. So, what exactly is the difference between the two? The obvious and best-known answer is that THC makes you “high” while CBD does not. Chemically speaking, both molecules are virtually identical with only a minor variation, and both share the same chemical formula: C21H30O2. Both interact with the endocannabinoid system—a vast network of specialized receptors found throughout the human body and which participates in the regulation of physiological processes such as pain, appetite, sex drive, mood and memory. Despite being very similar, CBD and THC have opposites effects, as they interact very differently with the Type One cannabinoid receptors (CB1) in the body. THC is able to bind directly with the CB1 receptors, affecting the brain and causing psychoactive effects, while CBD does not bond with the receptors. As such, CBD has been found to be calming and relaxing, while THC causes a lot of marijuana’s negative effects, such as memory loss or increased psychosis. Since both components are present simultaneously in cannabis, they tend to cancel each
other out to some degree, which is why many different strains of the plant have different effects. Typically, as we can see in Colorado for instance, cannabis sellers will list the THC and CBD percentages of each product. A strain with high THC and low CBD will cause a powerful high, while a strain with low THC and high CBD will have more therapeutic qualities without psychoactive sideeffects. The latter is preferred for cannabinoid supplements and medicine. Unlike THC, which worsens existing psychosis and schizophrenic symptoms, CBD has been found to have antipsychotic properties by the World Health Organization. The same study also concluded that CBD can have positive effects on Alzheimer’s, Parkinson’s, Huntington’s and Crohn’s diseases, sclerosis, pain, anxiety, depression, cancer, nausea, inflammations, arthritis, infections, diabetes and cardiovascular problems. “CBD has been touted for a wide variety of health issues, but the strongest scientific evidence is for its effectiveness in treating some of the cruelest childhood epilepsy syndromes,” explains Peter Grinspoon, doctor of medicine at Harvard Medical School. One of the most widely known strands of low-THC and high-CBD cannabis is Charlotte’s Web, named after Charlotte Figi, a little girl whose seizures could only be controlled by CBD. Comment at shepherdexpress.com. n
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::DININGOUT LAUREN MILLER
FEATURE | SHORT ORDER | EAT/DRINK
St. Paul Fish Company
Fresh Seafood in the Milwaukee Public Market
Almost as popular and equally impressive is the live Maine lobster dinner ($16.95). A one-pound lobster is steamed as opposed to boiled, so you don’t end up with water-logged meat. The tail is split in half to make accessing the meat easier but digging out the rest is on you. If you’d rather not wait for a table, you can always snag a seat at the indoor oyster bar or the outdoor, year-round tropical palapa bar. (In the winter, the outdoor bar transforms into an ice bar.) Both spots are great for single diners or those wanting to attack the substantial appetizer menu. Freshly shucked oysters are served on crushed ice, but you can get one floating in a little glass of Bloody Mary mix as a shooter ($3). They also come fried ($8.95) or baked ($2.95 each). Fresh fish dinners ($12.95-$24.95) include grilled or blackened fish, a mound of ::BY LACEY MUSZYNSKI jasmine rice, either fruit salsa or creamy beurre blanc, as well as sautéed vegetables that includes zucchini, onions and (vexingly) whole baby carrots. Get your fish t. Paul Fish Company has the unique advantage of being grilled and it will be delivered with perfect crosshatch grill marks. Mako shark, red the only full-table-service restaurant inside the Milwaugrouper and swordfish are great options for grilling. kee Public Market. There are others with bar service—and St. Since the Public Market is commonly used as a lunch spot, there are a large Paul has that too—but the little dining area next to the east number of sandwiches offered. Shrimp salad ($9.95) is served on a buttery croisentrance is the only place you can get a full restaurant sant, but at that price you’re better off springing for the lobster roll. A po’ boy with experience. fried shrimp ($11.95), fresh veggies and remoulade is a better option for shrimp The dining alcove can be cramped and a little chaotic, eslovers. Clam chowder, lobster bisque and shrimp and sausage gumbo are one pecially on weekends when there’s almost always a wait and of the best deals in the Market: grab a pint for $5.95. Smoked salmon on a stick people are milling about trying their best not to get in each ($3.95) is moist and makes a great snack if you’re just passing through. other’s way. But once you do get settled, the fresh seafood is Fish fry is available every day here, not just on Fridays. Cod ($11.95) is coated in a well worth any hassle. Schlitz beer batter, which stays crisp until you eat it. There’s no rye bread or potato Looking around at other tables and at photos online, it’s pancake option, but with fish this fresh, I’m not missing it. clear that the most popular item on the menu is the lobster Another Milwaukee tradition, over-the-top Bloody Marys, is embraced here. The roll ($14.95). There aren’t that many places to lobster Bloody Mary ($9.95) is topped with a cocktail shrimp, piece get one in this city, and St. Paul’s version is the of candied salmon “crack” and a lobster claw. Other cocktails, like a St. Paul most traditional of the bunch. It’s a mayo-based lobster salad vastrawberry banana daiquiri ($7.50) and Waikiki Beachcomber, go Fish Company riety, and purists would argue that there’s too much mayonnaise, with the bar theme outside. but I don’t mind. There’s a mix of larger chunks of meat and finer St. Paul’s is a fishmonger, too, and one of the busiest and most 400 N. Water St. shreds, so the mayo keeps the significant portion of the salad in reliable in the city. So, if you’d rather prepare your seafood at 414-220-8383 place nicely. The New England-style top-cut roll is toasted on both home, there’s plenty to choose from. But this is a frenetic, casual stpaulfish.com sides in copious amounts of butter. Fries that come with it are and inexpensive seafood restaurant, and you’d be missing out if CC. OD. • $-$$$ you didn’t eat here at least once. A second location is coming to thick-cut batons with the skin on, while the coleslaw is crunchy Handicap access: Yes Mequon in May. but might lead to mayo overload with the roll.
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DININGOUT::EATDRINK
Raw Bar MKE to Open at Crossroads Collective
C
::BY SHEILA JULSON
hef Jonathan Manyo had worked with seafood in restaurants on the West Coast for many years before returning to Milwaukee and opening his successful Walker’s Point restaurant, Morel. His new venture, Raw Bar MKE, set to open in early April, rounds out the array of food vendors at Crossroads Collective Food Hall, 2238 N. Farwell Ave. Jonathan Manyo—who co-owns Raw Bar with his brother, David, and Joe Elmergreen (manager of Morel)—says he’s looking forward to playing with seafood again and is eager to experience a setting like Crossroads Collective. “It’s going to be fun and interesting to be in a food hall,” he says. “It’s a concept that’s been doing very well on the West Coast and in other cities, and it’s kind of fun that a group of people can go in there and have eight restaurants to choose from that are all local. It’s not like going to a food court at a mall; everybody here is really passionate about their menus.” Crossroads Collective operators had planned to do their own small raw bar upon opening, Manyo notes, but instead, they added coffee in that section of the bar due to customer requests for java drinks. Manyo began thinking about other concepts for Crossroads, but he really liked the idea of a raw bar. The Raw Bar stall will feature four or five different types of raw oysters, peel-and-eat shrimp cocktails, king crab legs served cold with butter or cocktail sauce and seasonal crab claws. “Right now, stone crabs are in season. When stone crabs are caught, fishermen remove the claw, throw the crab back in the water, and the crab regenerates the claw,” he explains. In addition, seafood lovers can find crab cakes, lobster roll and a ceviche of the day. Many items will fluctuate on seasonal availability. Manyo complimented Crossroads Collective’s wine program, which features white wines that pair well with seafood. He also wanted diners to have a fun experience while eating, so his partners and he are decorating the Raw Bar stall with playful themes based loosely on the films The Life Aquatic with Steve Zissou and Jaws(!). Their sign mimics the Jaws theme, and the back wall is painted blue and graced with fishing nets. They commissioned a local artist to paint actor Bill Murray (who played Steve Zissou in Life Aquatic) and incorporated Jonathan, David and Joe’s faces into the painting to resemble the main picture from the movie. Although diving into a second restaurant endeavor has been daunting at times, Manyo says having two dedicated business partners, along with finding very good staff, has made the journey much easier. For more information, visit facebook.com/raw-bar-mke.
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Waukesha County Expo Center Rare Earth
Rare Earth Farm’s CommunitySupported Agriculture and More ::BY SHEILA JULSON
F
or many years, Steve Young had worked as a mechanical engineer, but he eventually became dismayed by the corporate culture and yearned to get out from behind a desk to work outdoors. He comes from a family of gardeners, and growing food has been part of his lifestyle since childhood. In 1990, he rented some land and started Rare Earth Farm with a community-supported agriculture (CSA) model. Two years later, he purchased the 20-acre property in Ozaukee County where Rare Earth Farm operates today: 6806 Highway KW, Belgium, Wis. Young grows and sells his produce through CSA, online and to restaurants throughout Milwaukee. He has a degree in industrial education and applies those talents and work skills to farm operations. He makes his own compost and grows cover crops to increase the microbial diversity in soil. The farm itself isn’t certified organic, but Young uses certified organic fertilizers and pest management materials. Many of Young’s diverse crops require different growing conditions, and he said it’s a juggling act to maintain the 30-plus items on his harvest chart—everything from apples and arugula to sweet corn and tomatoes. Produce is delivered to customers within one to two days of harvest. Customers particularly enjoy his greens. SHEPHERD EXPRESS
“Our spinach and lettuce varieties do really well; probably because we’re close to Lake Michigan, so the weather here has challenges but also good benefits. Compared to inland, it’s a little cooler here, so it enables us to do a good job with our greens, which like cooler weather,” he said. Bees are kept on the farm to help with pollination, and they also provide an added bonus: honey. Young puts honey in the CSA shares and also sells it online to non-CSA members. (He also noted that non-CSA members can buy whatever is listed available on the website.) Young also obtains maple syrup from a small producer in Dorchester, Wis., for the CSA boxes. While many farmers today are retooling their CSA models to boost declining memberships, Young is leaving Rare Earth Farm’s CSA program as a full-share model. “Offering a half-share costs just as much as a full-share to produce, and that just adds more complexity to the whole operation,” he explained. But he does let customers tailor their CSA boxes by adding extra items. For those who enjoy canning or pickling, they can buy extra tomatoes or pickling cucumbers and have those added their CSA share. Young is also working to balance CSA income with selling to Milwaukee area restaurants such as Pizza Man. Young expressed hope that more people would pursue farming as a career to help increase domestic production of organic and regionally grown foods. High consumer demand has flooded large supermarkets and big-box stores with organic produce sourced offshore and with products labeled “local,” a term that’s often used loosely by large chains. “Some places consider anything grown on this side of the equator to be ‘local’,” he said wryly. The people who come to work at Rare Earth Farm range from those curious about farm work to folks looking to make extra money and take home some great food. “That’s one of the benefits of my work program here: Employees take home a lot of food. I always love sharing my food with my employees.” For more information, visit rareearthfarm.com.
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::THISWEEKINMILWAUKEE THURSDAY, APRIL 18 Wicked Hop 15th Anniversary @ Wicked Hop, 4 p.m.
The Wicked Hop in the Third Ward celebrates its 15th anniversary with a weekend of events and specials. The festivities kick off Thursday with a 4 p.m. “Margarita Social,” featuring a complimentary pig roast with side dishes starting at 5 p.m., followed by music from Wicked Hop mainstays E.Rich, DJ Why B and DJ Madhatter in the Jackalope Lounj at 8 p.m. The celebration continues Friday with a giant, custom ice sculpture and specialty drinks and specials, then with Saturday and Sunday brunch services where the restaurant will be giving away free mimosas every 15 minutes.
FRIDAY, APRIL 19
Deerhoof w/ Fox Face and L’Resorts @ The Cooperage, 8 p.m.
Lead by singer Satomi Matsuzaki’s disarmingly sweet schoolgirl voice, Deerhoof have cranked out some of the most skewed, noisy art-rock of the last couple decades. Through they began to mellow on a string of poppier, more accessible albums that began with 2003’s Apple O, earning in the process successively bigger audiences, recent albums have returned them to the rawer, heavier sound that made them cult heroes. Their most recent record, 2017’s Mountain Moves, was especially wide ranging, touching on jazz, hip-hop and chamber music, and featuring guests like Juana Molina, Jenn Wasner, Awkwafina and Lætitia Sadier. They’ll share this bill with the Milwaukee punk ensemble Fox Face, and L’Resorts, the new tropical-pop project fronted by Jaill’s Vincent Kircher and Lady Cannon’s Martha Cannon.
The Mother Hips w/ Brian Wurch Band @ Shank Hall, 8 p.m.
After generating buzz by playing jammy shows at college parties on the California State University Chico campus in the early ’90s, The Mother Hips were signed by Rick Rubins’ American Recordings label while they were still students. Though the breezy rock band’s stint on the label was short, gigs with kindred spirits The Black Crowes and on Blues Travelers’ H.O.R.D.E. festival helped them secure their fanbase, and a quarter century later they continue to tour. Last year the group released its 10th record, Chorus.
Cactus Blossoms
The Cactus Blossoms w/ Jack Klatt @ The Back Room at Colectivo, 8 p.m.
As their band name suggests, Minneapolis’s Cactus Blossoms are infatuated by the sounds of the old west, particularly the easy country and western swing music of the 1950s and ’60s. After years cutting their teeth on stages around the Midwest, brothers Jack Torrey and Page Burkum channel the spirit of that era on the duo’s lovely 2016 debut album, You’re Dreaming, which they recorded with another artist who shares their love of mid-century Americana, JD McPherson. Their new sophomore album, Easy Way, updates that sound ever so slightly, while staying true to the retro spirit of the pre-color TV days.
Eric Andersen ft. Scarlet Rivera and Cheryl Prashker w/ Matthew Davies @ Anodyne Coffee, 8 p.m.
Gov’t Mule
THURSDAY, APRIL 18 Gov’t Mule @ The Pabst Theater, 8 p.m.
In a jam scene filled with prolific musicians, few are more ubiquitous than guitarist Warren Haynes. He began his career in the late ’80s as the fresh blood in a reunited Allman Brothers Band, he expanded his profile in the ’90s with his more overtly jammy and eclectic Southernrock group Gov’t Mule, and he made his presence further felt on the Bonnaroo circuit with his many solo performances and his long tenure with Phil Lesh and Friends. No matter how many outside commitments he’s taken on, though, Haynes always returns to Gov’t Mule; in 2017, the band released its 11th album, Revolution Come… Revolution Go. 20 | A P R I L 1 8 , 2 0 1 9
A quintessential songwriter’s songwriter, Eric Andersen cut his teeth performing in Greenwich Village in the early ’60s, where he became a fixture of the folk scene. Over the years, his songs have been covered by Johnny Cash, Linda Ronstadt, The Grateful Dead, Gillian Welch, The Blues Project and Bob Dylan, who released his version of Andersen’s “Thirsty Boots” as a Record Store Day single. Along the way, Andersen has also co-written songs with greats like Lou Reed, Bob Weir and Townes Van Zandt. Though he continues to record frequently, he rarely tours far beyond his home in the Netherlands.
SATURDAY, APRIL 20 Alice in Chains w/ City and Colour @ The Rave, 8 p.m.
Though some fans found it inherently distasteful that metal-leaning grunge rockers Alice in Chains carried on after the 2002 death of Layne Staley, replacing him with soundalike William DuVall, the bulk don’t seem to mind. Guitarist Jerry Cantrell, after all, had been one of the band’s core songwriters, and 2009’s Black Gives Way to Blue found him in fine form, providing 11 moody, convincingly bleak songs in the spirit of the band’s heyday output. They followed it up in 2013 with The Devil Put Dinosaurs Here, which featured some big, catchy songs from Cantrell. Their most recent effort, 2018’s Rainier Fog, debuted at number one on Billboard’s rock charts and was nominated for a Grammy for Best Rock Album. SHEPHERD EXPRESS
::OFFTHECUFF
Read our daily events guide, Today in Milwaukee, on shepherdexpress.com
Becoming ‘Unboxed’
Off the Cuff with Cedric Gardner
MONDAY, APRIL 22 David Dondero w/ Shoot Down the Moon and Ian Olvera
::BY JOHN SCHNEIDER
“
@ Cactus Club, 8 p.m.
A musician whose reach far exceeded his sales, David Dondero has inspired plenty of political songwriters over the last 15 years, first as a member of the political folk-punk band This Bike is a Pipe Bomb, then as a solo folk songwriter. Among those who were moved by Dondero’s shambolic, lo-fi folk was Bright Eyes’ Conor Oberst, who signed Dondero to his Team Love label in 2005. Since leaving Team Love, Dondero has scaled back the relative bells and whistles of his three records for that label, returning to the allacoustic, live-from-a-cardboard-box sound of his early recordings. In 2013, he released the career retrospective Golden Hits Vol. 1 and an album of elegant new material, This Guitar, which he funded through Kickstarter. He released his latest album Inside the Cat’s Eye in 2017.
TUESDAY, APRIL 23 Delvon Lamarr Organ Trio w/ The Michael Arnold Three @ Shank Hall, 8 p.m.
The Seattle-based Delvon Lamarr Organ Trio have slowly expanded their circle since forming in 2015. After a year holding down a residency at Seattle’s Royal Room, they began branching out with short tours around the Pacific Northwest and West Coast, while drawing more than three million views for their soulful, funky set broadcast by KEXP at the Upstream Music Festival. They re-released their 2016 debut album last year to a wider audience on Colemine Records. The band will share this show with a homegrown organ trio: Milwaukee’s The Michael Arnold Three, which features guitarist Michael Arnold, organist Dan Schneck and drummer Jeremy Kuzniar.
N
obody could classify me,” Milwaukee dance artist Cedric Gardner offers as the reason he was chosen as a finalist on the TV show “So You Think You Can Dance.”“They didn’t know if it was ballet, if it was jazz; it was just me being raw on TV to the point of sometimes tears, sometimes joy, because that’s what I had used my art form for during my entire life.” He didn’t win, but the great Debbie Allen of “Fame” immediately took him under her wing and had him teaching in her schools and choreographing for television. But he chose to return to Milwaukee and now, at 35, he’s made a major dance theatre work with his nationally awarded student dance company from the Davis Boys & Girls Club, a kind of manifesto titled Unboxed. How did you learn to dance? The part that was personal to me was the freestyling late at night, using light from the bathroom to see my shadow; no mirrors, just me having space to create, to move, voluntarily and involuntarily. It was my way to get through traumatic experiences, to express joy, to emote, to dive into my imagination, to create different characters, to have a place to escape to. In middle school and high school, I was introduced to actual techniques of dance. That’s how my style that people know today started to form. I would take different things from ballet, from African, from modern—especially the thought process of modern, it’s wonderful, it has no limitations. I would put them together and look at my shadow, and whatever felt good, I’d stick with. Then I started my formal training at Peck School of the Arts. I was a maverick. I learned what I thought was beneficial to me, taking only the bits and pieces that I liked. From there, I auditioned for “So You Think You Can Dance.” That was the first time I was held accountable to meet the standards of “societal dance.” The consistency of me guiding myself was challenged by the societal expectations of dance. It kind of shook me. How so? Every artist goes through tribulations. If not, then you’re not humble, and you’re not serving the greater cause of the community. When you die, your body that you’re the steward of becomes nothing. The only way you can be impactful is through how you live your life. So I started asking, did I do it right? Should I have stayed at UW-Milwaukee? With societal dance, it’s encouraging when you get an A+, meaning you got the step 100% right. It’s discouraging when you’re an innovator, because then you’re against the grain until somebody realizes you’re important. So you came back to Milwaukee. And I see the same expressions of doubt in children’s faces. So, how do you serve the community with something that’s only been for you? You take your knowledge and use it to encourage other people. My friend Johnny Harkey and I started hosting $9 master classes on Saturdays for adults and kids, free if they couldn’t afford it. And we started to see the greater need: Milwaukee was lacking the financial fortitude to support the arts. We needed money. But then, the Boys & Girls Club had an opening as a youth mentor. A match made in heaven. This is my fourth year. Some kids I’ve been with for seven. I took them to L.A. to Monsters of Hip Hop. We took second place nationally, and last year we took first. They choreographed a dance and went up against me. They beat the brakes off me. Hopefully, whatever they do, they’ll inspire people to live a good life. That’s the biggest thing. That’s what’s needed.
Eels
WEDNESDAY, APRIL 24
Eels w/ Inspector Cluzo @ Turner Hall Ballroom, 7:30 p.m. In the years since their grungy 1996 breakout album Beautiful Freak and its moving, death-obsessed follow-up Electro-Shock Blues in 1998, Eels abandoned any pretenses of being a normal band and instead became an outlet for singer/songwriter Mark Oliver Everett to do basically whatever he wanted. The band’s lone constant, he’s bounced between blistering alternative rock, odd psychedelic rock and regal orchestral pop on the band’s recent albums, and he touches on a little bit of all of that on his most recent effort, 2018’s The Deconstruction, which followed an uncharacteristic four-year hiatus. SHEPHERD EXPRESS
And Unboxed? Our main character is Isaac, a student that most people would coin as ADHD, a “problem child” with an abundant imagination, looking to live in that space that’s not tangible. He’s bullied not only by classmates but by educators who don’t know they’re bullying him, because they’re just following policy. Another character is Yumi, a representation of creativity—Isaac’s imaginary friend, which is a balloon. Yumi is destroyed by our teacher, Mr. Nero. The whole point is that as we become adults, we become boxed in. Our imaginations become constructs to be used by organizations. I’ve learned that societal dance can only exist in one aspect; movement can exist in all aspects. That’s how all of this ties together in my story of Isaac becoming unboxed. The performance is 7:30 p.m. Friday, April 26, at South Milwaukee Performing Arts Center, 901 15th Ave. For tickets, call 414-766-5049 or visit southmilwaukeepac.org.
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::A&E
Brought to you by The Milwaukee Art Museum
DAVE ZYLSTRA
FEATURE | FILM | THEATRE | ART | BOOKS | CLASSICAL MUSIC | DANCE
David Barnett
David Barnett, Milwaukee’s Oldest Art Gallery, Opens ‘Wisconsin Artists of the WPA’ ::BY DAVID LUHRSSEN
n 2016, David Barnett reached an unusual bench mark. Fifty years earlier, he established the art gallery that bears his name in a humble basement on Wisconsin Avenue. In 1985, he moved to his present location, a much grander venue: the 19th-century Button Mansion in East Town. Through the decades, Barnett has followed a parallel set of missions: selling work by world-renowned artists while exposing the work of often unknown Milwaukeeans. The lines intersect in the Barnett Gallery’s upcoming exhibition, “Wisconsin Artists of the WPA,” a collection of prints (and a few paintings) from the 1930s by area artists with high profiles within their genre, including Robert von Neumann and Schomer Lichtner, alongside others who have been forgotten. Barnett is a talkative, almost gregarious elder statesman of the Milwaukee art market. It takes creativity and perhaps a touch of artistic license to imagine the introverted teenager of 1966, remembered by some patrons as an almost furtive presence in the already inconspicuous setting of a gallery tucked into the basement of an apartment building. “I had $186 in working capital,” Barnett recalls. “When I started, I wanted to show the work of my fellow students at UW-Milwaukee—and also Cardinal Stritch, Mount Mary and other colleges. My first sale was a $2 piece of pottery by a UWM student.” In the late ’60s, Barnett borrowed $4,000 from his father and went art shopping in New York. He recalls the Pablo Picasso print he bought for $250 and sold in Milwaukee for $350. Giants still walked the Earth in those years, and bargains could be found. Nowadays, the Barnett Gallery occupies a three-story mansion (the top floor is unfinished), with eight fireplaces and 26 rooms spread across 10,000 square feet. The walls are crowded with framed paintings and prints, along with sculpted pieces. Barnett’s collection includes many objects of African origin—an inspiration for Barnett and the modern artists that rose up a century ago in Europe—as well as many local pieces. Among the latter is a large 1948 self-portrait by the talented Milwaukee painter Francesco Spicuzza, posing pipe in hand before a portrait of Ludwig van Beethoven.
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A Meeting of Modern Art and Old-World Draughtsmanship “Wisconsin Artists of the WPA” displays what happened when the abstraction of modern art met Old-World draughtsmanship in the American heartland. The WPA (Works Progress Administration) was a federal program that employed artists during the Great Depression and favored work in the style of the artists included in Barnett’s exhibit. The bold face dominating Schomer Lichtner’s Farmer is drawn in white lines of Henri Matisse simplicity against a black backdrop. Gerrit Sinclair’s etching, Jones Island, depicts an artist at work with his easel, painting the lean-to fisher shanties that once occupied part of Milwaukee’s Harbor District. In Lowell M. Lee’s The Long White Road, a thin, white ribbon of highway snakes past bleak bare trees and disappears into a dark horizon. Some of the Wisconsin artists who emerged during the WPA era and its aftermath taught art to Barnett from his Shorewood Public School days through UWM. Remarkably humble and low-key about his own visual work, Barnett is primarily a watercolorist producing paintings in series on particular places and people. However, he has lately been executing visual art with a message in the “Target Series.” These works comment on gun violence and are composed against the backdrop of the targetshooting certificate Barnett received at summer camp when he was 14. Painting those surfaces by hand or with rubber stamps, Barnett also pasts on Native American motifs in birchbark, Wisconsin triggering associations with the U.S. wars against Artists of American Indians. The the WPA “Target Series” is at once David childlike in its imagery and Barnett sophisticated in its use of Gallery materials. “I’d buy what I really April 26 July 13 loved,” Barnett says of his art-shopping trips and the collection he amassed. “I’d try to go into areas that were being neglected—Picasso ceramics in the ’60s; Thomas Hart Benton and the WPA artists when they were unfashionable.” The Barnett Gallery is an artcrowded place where discoveries await around every corner. Wisconsin Artists of the WPA opens on Gallery Night, Friday, April 26, and runs through Saturday, July 13, at David Barnett Gallery, 1024 E. State St. For more information, call 414-271-5058 or visit davidbarnettgallery.com.
SHEPHERD EXPRESS
A&E::INREVIEW
::PERFORMINGARTSWEEK
PAUL RUFFOLO
For More to Do, visit shepherdexpress.com
THEATRE
INVADER! I Hardly Know Her
The story opens with a young couple, Jack and Jennifer, on their wedding day. The nuptials don’t quite go as planned, however, as Jennifer turns out to be from another planet, and her bridesmaids are genetically engineered spies for the U.S. government! This is the stuff of UW-Milwaukee Peck School of the Arts’ production of INVADER! I Hardly Know Her, with book, music and lyrics by Jason Powell, direction by Katie Cummings, choreography by Darci Wutz and music direction by Vanessa Weber. Take one clueless groom, add an alien disguised as his bride, mix in a few secret agents, throw in more aliens, and you end up with a humorous musical romp. Powell’s comic space pop opera had its world premiere in Milwaukee nine years ago and subsequently had a successful run at the New York Fringe Festival. (John Jahn) April 24-28 at the Kenilworth Five-0-Eight Theatre, 2155 N. Prospect Ave. For tickets, call 414-229-4308, email psoatix@uwm.edu or visit uwm.edu/arts. ‘Ben Butler’
CLASSICALMUSIC
Black Violin: “Impossible Tour”
Black Violin is led by classically trained instrumentalists Wil B. (viola) and Kev Marcus (violin), who will be joined in this live concert by DJ SPS and drummer Nat Stokes. The band uses its unique blend of classical and hip-hop music to overcome stereotypes and encourages people of all ages, races and economic backgrounds to join together and break down cultural barriers. In the past year, Black Violin has performed for more than 100,000 students in the U.S. and Europe and is currently on its “Impossible Tour.” The band has performed alongside Yo-Yo Ma and Sir Elton John, has been on “The Tonight Show,” “Ellen,” “The Wendy Williams Show” and other TV shows and has collaborated creatively with Kanye West, Aerosmith, Tom Petty, Wu-Tang Clan, Wyclef Jean and Alicia Keys. Black Violin’s most recent album, Stereotypes, hit number one on Billboard’s Classical Crossover chart and number four on Billboard’s R&B chart. Its members are currently writing and recording their next studio album, which is expected to be released this summer. (John Jahn) Saturday, April 20, at 7:30 p.m. in Uihlein Hall, 929 N. Water St. For tickets, call 414273-7206 or visit marcuscenter.org.
Schubert, Ravel, Martinů, Schoenfield
Works on this Prometheus Trio concert are, for the most part, reasonably modern and rather obscure—all the better to hear some “new” music! Compositions range from the late-19th century to just a few decades ago. The Prometheus Trio is the resident chamber music ensemble at the Wisconsin Conservatory of Music, where it’s been ensconced for almost two decades now. Works on the trio’s April concert program are the one-movement Fantasie for Violin and Piano, D. 934 (1827, by far the oldest piece being played) by Franz Schubert; the Cello Sonata No. 2, H. 286 (1941) by Czech composer Bohuslav Martinů; the Sonate pour Violon et Violoncelle, Op. 73 (1922) by Maurice Ravel; and American composer Paul Schoenfield’s Café Music (1986). The latter work was inspired by Schoenfield’s stint as the “resident pianist” at a Minneapolis steakhouse! (John Jahn) April 22 and 23 at 7:30 p.m. in the Helen Bader Recital Hall at the McIntosh/Goodrich Mansion, 1584 N. Prospect Ave. For tickets, visit wcmusic.org.
SHEPHERD EXPRESS
Milwaukee Chamber Theatre Teaches Untold History in ‘Ben Butler’
B
::BY JEAN-GABRIEL FERNANDEZ
enjamin Franklin Butler is a historical figure who is often kept out of history books. As the major general in charge of Fort Monroe, Va., he was not an outstanding military leader, nor was he a very good soldier. He was, in fact, a lawyer and a businessman who found himself in a precarious position when fugitive slaves came to his fort to ask for asylum. As per the Fugitive Slave Law of 1850, he was obligated to return them to their southern masters, but morals went against the word of the law; the decision he took that day shaped much of U.S. history, as Ben Butler established a legal precedent that was later made standard in the entire Union. His actions, which playwright Richard Strand transcribed in his play Ben Butler, saved countless slaves. Milwaukee Chamber Theatre staged Ben Butler in the Cabot Theatre—an ideal setting for the beautifully rendered office of one Benjamin Butler. The play is minimalist in many ways—everything takes place within the same two walls, with only four actors— but the script is what gives it all its qualities. We are introduced to the major general during what is arguably one of the most difficult moral dilemmas anyone could face, and the script masterfully develops Butler’s psyche, turning him from a figure of authority to an amiable man we can only root for. While remaining a historical drama, the play allows itself moments of frank hilarity, delving into the realms of comedy and biography for the sake of a well-rounded story. If history was not kind to him, Butler will be fondly remembered by anyone who sees the play named after him. As Butler, Drew Brhel incarnates a deeply human character who is riddled with worries, hesitations and obsessions; he is also the source of much of the show’s comedy, along with Chase Stoeger as Lieutenant Kelly. Brhel delivers a stunning performance, enhanced by the ease with which he interacts with his fellow actors. Marques Causey as Shepard Mallory, a brash and educated escaped slave, offers some of the best moments on stage. The two characters are very similar while also being polar opposites. “If you were black and I were white, you’d be a slave, and I would be a major general,” Mallory says, driving home the commonalities between the two men. David Sapiro rounds out the cast as a deeply antagonistic Confederate major who pushes Butler to take his most radical decisions. Thanks to excellent costumes and décor, which support even better actors, Ben Butler does a wonderful job of immersing audiences in 1861 Virginia. The whole play is a lesson in humanity, morals and history. If you never heard Benjamin Franklin Butler’s name before, you have a lot to learn from it. It certainly is a good time, both fun and educational for all. A P R I L 1 8 , 2 0 1 9 | 25
‘Every Brilliant Thing’
The Rep’s ‘Every Brilliant Thing’ is a List Illuminating the Darkness
Sacred Songs and Dance at Early Music Now’s Tibetan Concert ::BY RICK WALTERS
T
he earliest music ever heard on an Early Music Now concert came around on Saturday evening with Tibetan chants dating back more than 2,000 years. Nine representatives of the Drepung Loseling monks from South India—reestablished there in exile after the 1959 Chinese invasion of Tibet—presented “The Mystical Arts of Tibet: Sacred Music/Sacred Dance for World Healing” at the Tripoli Shrine Center to a large and curious audience. This was as much a cultural exchange as it was a concert. The monks, or lamas, appeared before a backdrop of the Potala Palace, the historical Tibetan residence of the Dalai Lama, and a photo of the current Dalai Lama. The lamas wore a tall headdress while mostly dressed in garments of
yellow, red and orange. Drums, cymbals and a few other handheld instruments accompanied chants and dances. The booming low blast of a long horn was startling and hair-raising. The lamas are renowned for multiphonic chanting called zokkay, which is founded in one long, low note that produces overtones, resulting in one singer able to make a chord. Other times, the chants were more melodic, sounding like modal folksongs. The tunes which most delighted my ears were the gentle “Melody to Sever the Ego Syndrome” and the finale, “Auspicious Song for World Healing,” which progressed to a dramatic high note sung in unison. Various sacred dances were performed in elaborate and colorful costumes: “Dance of the Black Hat Masters,” symbolizing the transcendence of ego-identification; “The Snow Lion Dance,” with two lamas in a white and green lion suit with a smiling open mouth; “Dance of the Skeleton Lords,” about the transitory nature of life; and the “Dance of the Celestial Travelers,” representing the five elements and five wisdoms. (There were only four, since one monk could not obtain his travel visa.) The lamas are not professional performers, but rather tour to make a contribution to world peace and then return to their lives in the monastery. They certainly conjured an air of humility and reverence in this fascinating program. I only wish it had been in a more acoustically friendly room and without amplification. BRIAN MOREHEAD
COURTESY OF THE MILWAKEE REPERTORY THEATER
A&E::INREVIEW
::BY BAINE SCHULTZ
I
n the Milwaukee Repertory Theater’s Every Brilliant Thing, when a boy’s mother attempts suicide, he does not understand why. In his youthful naiveté, he believes creating a list of things that make life brilliant will offer her solace. Little does he know the wisdom of that list. Starting the list: “#1: Ice Cream.” Scott Greer’s one-man performance includes as much showing as telling, including drafting audience participation in tracing the boy’s relationship with his mother and father. As the list grows, he leaves it for her to read. Without any comment, he knows she has read it, because she has corrected his spelling. “#517: Knowing someone well enough to get them to check your teeth for broccoli.” Growing into a shy, sensitive college student, he experiences love’s first blush. An encounter at the library with his future bride slyly allows her to add more reasons to the list. Directed by Terrence J. Nolen, music is the trigger in Duncan Macmillan and Jonny Donahoe’s story. Sharing his parents’ love of music, he adds dancing to the list—inviting an audience member to center stage to join him on James Brown’s “I Feel Good.” In fact, Greer was often in motion addressing all four sections of the audience and ranging into the seats to engage participants, including a writer who was reviewing the performance. “#999.999: Completing a task.” He could read his dad’s moods based on the music coming from his study. When he brings his fiancée home to meet his parents, the evening ends with his parents and fiancée taking turns singing songs. (Greer does a very good impression of cult artist Daniel Johnston.) As the cloud of his mother’s disease weighs heavily, it comes to affect his relationship with his wife. Eventually taking action and entering therapy, he resurrects the list which is now housed in four boxes. “#1,000,000: Playing a record for the first time and reading the liner notes.” When the house lights remain up during a performance, it is fair warning that all the cards are on the on table. Greer successfully removes the wall between actor and audience to turn a performance into an experience. How mental illness is dealt with by individuals and families is a complex subject. A community engagement program offers talkbacks and group discussions following each performance. 26 | A P R I L 1 8 , 2 0 1 9
The Drepung Loseling monks SHEPHERD EXPRESS
‘The King and I’ Still Meaningful (and Melodic) After So Many Years ::BY HARRY CHERKINIAN
W
atching the splendid production of Rodgers and Hammerstein’s The King and I come to life at Uihlein Hall last week was like listening to many memorable—and hummable—tunes from the ’50s: “I Whistle a Happy Tune,” “Hello Young Lovers,” “We Kiss in a Shadow” and “Shall We Dance?” among others. Songs so uplifting with gorgeous melodies that we are quickly transported to 1860s Siam, where Welsh governess Anna Leonowens comes to teach English and “Westernize” the 67 (and counting) royal children of the King of Siam. Based on Leonowens’ memoirs, The King and I has been a success from its very start: memoir to
MATTHEW MURPHY
A&E::INREVIEW novel, film, theater, back to film and with numerous stage revivals. This current tour is based on the 2015 Broadway revival, and Marcus Center audiences saw a first-rate production, start to finish, with a top-notch ensemble of actors who can sing, dance and do just about anything else, like fall to the floor and bow to the king as if it’s an easy yoga move. Rodgers and Hammerstein wrote uplifting musicals with memorable scores, but the duo was always ahead of its time in its underlying social commentary. The King and I becomes very timely once again with the current immigration issues and the clash of cultures—in this case, East meets West. The culture clash is mirrored in the proper governess and her attempts to transform the thinking of the sexist, traditional king. In the highly capable hands and vocals of Angela Baumgartner (Anna) and Pedro Ka’awaloa (the King of Siam), The King and I fully capitalizes on the talents of this duo, highlighting an increasingly intimate friendship and how two worlds collaborate rather than collide. A crowning achievement of this touring production is the second-act ballet, “The Small House of Uncle Thomas,” (based on Harriet Beecher Stowe’s Uncle Tom’s Cabin), which mirrors the actions of the king regarding slavery and submission within his own palace. Beautifully danced in stunning costumes, we are reminded once again of the sacrifices made—and the prices paid—for freedom. The King and I poignantly captures that spirit and sets it free, aloft on the wings of those wonderfully memorable songs.
‘The King and I’
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A P R I L 1 8 , 2 0 1 9 | 27
A&E::FILM
Helpful to Everyone Else, ‘Diane’ Can’t Help Herself ::BY DAVID LUHRSSEN
‘Diane’
D
iane lives in a dog-eared New England town where it’s always winter, even when the sun occasionally shines through the overcast. She’s a relentless caregiver, driving
Cascade, 2015, Oil and alkyd on wood panel, 72 × 144 inches. Commissioned by Grand Rapids Art Museum with funds provided by Peter Wege, Jim and Mary Nelson, John and Muriel Halick, Mary B. Loupee, and Karl and Patricia Betz. Grand Rapids Art Museum, 2015.19
Alexis Rockman
The Great Lakes Cycle February 8 - May 19, 2019 Free Admission | Open Daily | mu.edu/haggerty Alexis Rockman: The Great Lakes Cycle is organized by the Grand Rapids Art Museum, with support generously provided by the Wege Foundation, the National Endowment for the Arts, the Frey Foundation, and LaFontsee Galleries and Framing. 28 | A P R I L 1 8 , 2 0 1 9
the two-lane roads that separate her terminally ill cousin (Deirdre O’Connell) from her convalescing neighbors and the soup kitchen where she serves mac’n’cheese. Probably Diane (Mary Kay Place) has crossed the threshold for Social Security and Medicare, explaining her lack of a paying job (well into the film, I thought she was a professional “visiting angel”). She lives amidst the beeping monitors and beige monotony of hospital rooms. She’s caring at heart but careworn, burning out while trying to keep everyone else’s flame alive. Diane, the feature debut by writer-director Kent Jones, is a drama set amidst life’s tragedies, chief among them, the physical deterioration of aging, the inevitability of death and the powerful hold of addiction. The Diane latter problem Mary Kay Place is manifested in Diane’s adult son, Jake Lacy Brian (Jake Lacy), Directed by whose angry slapKent Jones back to mom’s Not Rated helping hand is a snarling “Leave me alone!” Diane benefits from a cast comfortable inside their everyperson roles, playing it low-key through the banal small talk. Much of the dialogue wanders among memories of life’s unimportant details (“What was this place before it was Country Buffet?”), even if more hurtful recollections gradually give substance to the protagonist’s past. Andrea Martin is solid and unostentatious as Diane’s best friend, Bobbie. The two women share their complaints—about their lives as well as their health. Christmas is coming for much of the film and the dull ornaments and dim-colored lights only underscore the protagonist’s quiet despair. Diane is an austere story of devotion without joy, a thoughtful meditation on the gray border where nagging, selfishness and guilt converge with love, as well as the many forms addiction can assume, physically, emotionally and spiritually. SHEPHERD EXPRESS
[ FILM CLIPS ]
[ HOME MOVIES / NOW STREAMING ] A Silent Voice: The Movie The thumbs of the middle-school students in this anime are sometimes glued to their devices, but some things are true across eras: the horseplay and cruelty of children, the in-groups and their putdowns of the outsiders, the monotony of school. The arrival of Shoko, the new deaf girl in class, is the engine that moves this endearing, animated and agreeably paced adaptation by director Naoko Yamada (Tamako Love Story) of a popular Japanese manga.
Master of Dark Shadows According to Dan Curtis, it came to him in a dream—a young woman arriving at a remote, spooky mansion. He pitched his small-screen Jane Eyre to ABC, where it became a daytime soap opera. “Dark Shadows” floundered until Curtis’ daughters demanded: “Make it scary!” The cult series finally found its path by introducing Barnabas, the vampire, as the romantic, inwardly tortured hero. The revealing documentary includes interviews with Curtis, cast members and colleagues.
Shooting Stars The movie industry loves to spoof itself. An interesting British example is this 1928 silent film by Anthony Asquith, which makes good-natured fun from the foibles of the stars, including a temperamental heroine in a fake tree rescued by a cowboy on a fake horse. Shooting Stars is technically sophisticated with fluid camera movements, multiple perspectives and excellent use of lighting. The story is visually amusing and revealing of the cinematic methods of its time.
Rich Girl A rich young woman and her bodyguard fall in love—and then they are seized by kidnappers. How will it end? Rich Girl is a low-budget, apartheid-era movie produced in South Africa for black audiences with blacks in the leading screen roles. It has imaginative moments along with Ed Wood-worthy stretches, but its depiction of a black upper class (with white servants) is interesting. The DVD is part of the ambitious Retro Afrika release series. —David Luhrssen
Breakthrough PG
Adapted from the autobiographical book co-written by Joyce Smith, this film chronicles her efforts to heal her adoptive son, John, through prayer. At 14, John falls through the ice of a frozen lake. Despite being dead for one hour, John’s heartbeat returns when Joyce prays over him. Chrissy Metz’s portrayal is heartfelt as Joyce refuses to lose her son and makes moving pleas to God. Dennis Haysbert portrays John’s doctor, cautioning that he may never return to normal. Topher Grace appears as Joyce’s steadfast pastor, while Josh Lucas plays her supportive, yet skeptical husband. Depending upon your perspective, Joyce’s certainty that God will fulfill her wish is either her story’s strength or its weakness. (Lisa Miller)
The
Curse of La Llorona R
James Wan’s formulaic shocker is inspired by a centuries-old Mexican legend. La Llorona first drowned her children, then herself, to punish her unfaithful husband. Myth holds that La Llorona’s ghost returns seeking children to replace her own. Anna Garcia (Linda Cardellini) is a well-meaning social worker and widowed mom when she is cursed by a woman claiming her children were stalked and killed by La Llorona. Within days, Anna and her kids meet the menacing apparition. Helped and advised by former priest Rafael Olvera (Raymond Cruz), Anna’s family fights back. (L.M.)
Penguins G
Much like March of the Penguins, this Disney nature doc follows the breeding cycle and parental duties of penguins. In this film, a plucky penguin (named Steve) is voiced by Ed Helms, who also narrates. While the emperor penguins from March stand about three feet tall and weighs about 50 pounds, Steve and fellow adelie penguins are just two feet tall and weigh only about 15 pounds. When we meet Steve, he is late arriving for his first breeding season. Awkward but unbearably cute, Steve’s lighthearted struggles only become tense when he is stalked by killer whales or leopard seals. Disney timed the release of this breathtaking film to coincide with Earth Day. (L.M.)
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A P R I L 1 8 , 2 0 1 9 | 29
COURTESY OF THE ALICE WILDS GALLERY
A&E::VISUALART
SPONSORED BY
OPENINGS: Weekly Art Drop-Ins for Kids April 18 and 25 Lynden Sculpture Garden 2145 W. Brown Deer Road
Quixotic Wandering Surrealism AT THE ALICE WILDS GALLERY
A
::BY SHANE MCADAMS
rgentina-born local fixture Santiago Cucullu’s first exhibition with the Alice Wilds, “Alta Por Fuga” (through April 20) offers vestiges of past work that may be familiar to fans, but like a goldfish, it’s grown to the size of its larger gallery setting in both scale and presence. The narratives, however, are equally complex, drawing from personal, material and social stimuli, all based in a dogged pursuit of the random connections between things and thoughts. The installations at Wilds build from an eccentric and impressionistic mix of monumental drawings on paper climbing the high, white walls of the ample space, embedded with quirky, jewel-like ceramic works, as well as more traditional watercolors on paper. The large cut-paper wall works set the pace and mood for the exhibition. Size obviously matters here, but measurements alone can’t explain a throbbing strangeness one feels when entering the space at Alice Wilds. We don’t know initially whether we as viewers are to feel like inert bystanders or selfconscious intruders. Like Easter Island monuments, they smack as both stupidly simple and eerily sophisticated. Even if one chooses to appreciate wall-size pieces like the Hypnotist Collector, which is derived from smaller gestural drawings, for their linear fluidity, they can’t deny a nagging feeling that those marks describe organisms struggling to free themselves. In the large cut prints, we encounter everything from (maybe) a she-wolf-like beast, a headless Pablo Picasso-esque knot of appendages and a tangled couple in full clumsy stride—all anxiously searching for literal and metaphorical emancipation. If these ambiguous lifeforms are in fact trapped, we wonder, then, whether they are caught between abstraction and figuration, between imagination and objective reality, between his and our psychological worlds or between the vibrating space between thought and action. The recognition of small ceramic panels in the faces of the drawings frees our expectations as we re30 | A P R I L 1 8 , 2 0 1 9
alize that these somewhat beguiling images are part of a carefully composed compositional program. At this point, they turn securely into art objects, which makes them less feral but doesn’t necessarily detract from the larger discussion. The recognition of artfulness, in fact, reinforces the point, with the forced shift in perspective emphasizing the intentions of Cucullu the artist over the phantom power of the rune-like images. This was an inevitable revelation, of course, but better that he initiated it. A large wall drawing along the west wall punctuates the transition between states of cognition and representation by offering an illusionistic alleyway, finally blocked by more of the strange and colorful bursts of affixed ceramic works, which are individually remarkable but ultimately engulfed by the installations. When our headspace is interrupted, we turn back to the artist’s relationship to his subject matter and the stumbling difficulty in trying to image mental impressions slipping between states of seeing and thinking. Cucullu’s vibrant watercolors, which many will immediately identify as being by his hand, make the case for cognitive ambiguity more bluntly. As prismatically fragmented snapshots of the flickering interstices between thought and sight, they are slightly more overt. Even so, the visual stream-ofconsciousness montages function almost like a key to the map of the more esoteric mental landscapes in the show. “Alta Por Fuga” is a lot to take in in a single gulp, but so is most of the space we inhabit in the glitchy, in-between realm of mental and physical reality. We willingly gulp more reality than we can process all the time without thinking about it. If we were better at this sort of metaphysical syncing, we could dispense with all the philosophy and get on with world peace already. Cucullu sets out to trace the impossible contours of that elusive interstitial space and to somehow find a bridge between his and our versions of it. It’s a quixotic and wandering surrealism, but one that is staggering in the right direction.
Drop into Lynden Sculpture Garden’s studio for an informal art exploration. Parents and their children (ages 6-11) can join in the activity for 30 or for the entire 2 ½ hours. These “DropIns” occur every month at Lynden and are great for parents looking for a creative after-school activity for their youngsters. Each week, Lyndon artists introduce different materials, processes and themes and the kids started on a project. A main focus is on three-dimensional artmaking, though they still do plenty of painting, drawing and collaging—making use of Lynden’s special resources: the collection of monumental sculpture and 40 acres of park, lake and woodland. Lynden also offers these activities for those ages 11 and up on a different schedule. For more information and to register, call 414446-8794 or visit lyndensculpturegarden.org.
“Out of the Woods” April 19-June 1 Tory Folliard Gallery 233 N. Milwaukee St.
Wisconsin artist Charles Munch creates vividly imagined paintings that explore the complex relationship between humans, our fellow animals and the rest of our natural world. Eliminating extraneous details, Munch expresses emotion through colors, lines and shapes. His paintings of simplified forms, pulsing with life and color, create dramatic scenes of many members of the animal kingdom—friend and foe to homo sapiens, alike. For more information, call 414-273-7311 or visit toryfolliard.com.
Collaborative Embroidery with Mindy Wittock and Jenna Freimuth Tuesday, April 23, 1-4 p.m. Cedarburg Cultural Center W62 N546 Washington Ave.
Embroidery is essentially drawing with thread. In this workshop, students work in pairs to create an original piece of art using various embroidery methods. Each participant will start with their own hoop and put down a layer of intuitive stitches. Then, they will switch hoops with their partners and respond to the composition by adding more stitches. Each hoop will be passed back and forth at least four times within the span of the workshop. The Wondermakers Collective will guide students with ideas, composition and embroidery techniques. Your skill level should be, as CCC puts it, that of a “confident beginner who has some stitching experience.” Supplies included. For more information or to register, call 262-375-3676 or visit cedarburgculturalcenter.org.
SHEPHERD EXPRESS
A&E::BOOKS
BOOK|REVIEW
BOOK|PREVIEW
The Cosmic Mystery Tour: A High-Speed Journey Through Space & Time
GETTING AWAY WITH MURDER in ‘MY LOVELY WIFE’
(OXFORD UNIVERSITY PRESS), BY NICHOLAS MEE Was Isaac Newton really inspired by a falling apple? At least that’s the story he told about his “discovery” of gravity. It’s just one story in Nicholas Mee’s The Cosmic Mystery Tour, a compact, speed-reader’s journey through the history and current conclusions of science as it developed in the West. The British science writer picks out key figures (Albert Einstein, Michael Faraday), makes a point to include women (astronomers Cecilia Payne, Jocelyn Bell) and races through key concepts (relativity, quantum mechanics) in understandable form. Mee steers away from controversy, holds to consensus whenever possible and glances sideways at science and pop culture. One example: The cover of Joy Division’s album Unknown Pleasures (1979) was based on the periodic signal of a pulsar. (David Luhrssen)
Infinity in the Palm of Your Hand: Fifty Wonders That Reveal an Extraordinary Universe (DIVERSION BOOKS), BY MARCUS CHOWN
Here’s an idea to warm a carnivore’s heart: The unusually large human brain (when compared to other species) “is probably related to our switch to a diet that contains meat.” So writes Marcus Chown in his entertaining Infinity in the Palm of Your Hand. The short chapters are intended to startle readers. Did you know that slime molds have 13 sexes? Or that we share one-third of our DNA with fungi (make it shitake, please!). A radio astronomer by trade, Chown has the making of a good stand-up comedian, aiming to draw laughter from the facts of nature—at least the knowable facts. As Chown writes, the “how” behind the leap (4 billion years back) from non-life to life is one great unanswered question—likewise, the invisible dark matter and energy that constitute 95% of the universe. Well, how about that human brain: it does its computing with roughly 20 watts of power—a dim bulb, indeed. (David Luhrssen) SHEPHERD EXPRESS
N
o one knows what happens behind closed doors. We naively assume that we understand our neighbors, but New Orleanian Samantha Downing has crafted an enthralling tale of a seemingly upstanding and proper marriage with a stunning murderous twist that proves otherwise. My Lovely Wife tells a familiar tale of a quintessential couple who fell in love, started a family and moved to the suburbs. Like many couples, after 15 years of marriage, their relationship needed a spark. However, the horrific secret that reignited their marriage— getting away with murder—is Samantha Downing anything but conventional. The couple’s decision to flame their passion by becoming serial killers is no doubt disturbing and intriguing. It also makes for a highly compelling read. The story that unfolds in My Lovely Wife is a well-crafted, wicked tale of relationships, marriage, family and the dark secrets we (try to) keep from the world. In response to reading her debut suspense thriller My Lovely Wife, Milwaukee writer Nick Petrie said “Truly horrifying in the most delicious way. Samantha Downing sucks you in with a great story, pitchperfect prose and disturbingly dead-on insights into the dark side of human nature. I hope I never meet her in a dark alley...” Well, a dark alley it is not, but the pair will appear in conversation at Boswell Book Co. at 7 p.m. on Thursday, April 18, to discuss this delicious and disturbing psychological pageturner. Downing’s passion for reading has led her on a circuitous route to becoming an author, and My Lovely Wife is her first publication. Nick Petrie is the author of the Peter Ash series, including The Drifter, which was nominated for an Edgar Award.
JACQUELINE KAY PHOTOGRAPHY
::BY JENNI HERRICK
A P R I L 1 8 , 2 0 1 9 | 31
::HEARMEOUT
®
ASK RUTHIE | UPCOMING EVENTS | PAUL MASTERSON
EIGHTH ANNUAL
EARTH DAY Celebration
::ASKRUTHIE SPONSORED BY
April 18—“There’s Always Time for a Cocktail” with Mrs. Kasha Davis at This Is It! (418 E. Wells St.): The darling of the seventh season of “RuPaul’s Drag Race” brings her one-woman show to this popular LGBTQ bar. Part autobiographical, part touching and completely hilarious, the cabaret starts at 9 p.m. (Doors open at 8 p.m.) Tickets range in price from $8 to $66 for a table and show, and they can be found at thisisitbar.ticketleap.com.
Presented by:
April 19—MAM After Dark: Local Talent at Milwaukee Art Museum (700 N. Art Museum Drive): Show your hometown pride when this popular party celebrates 414 Day in Brew City. Local bands, vendors and breweries make the 7-11 p.m. event a night to remember. Tickets are $14 at the door but free for Art Museum members.
SATURDAY APRIL 27, 2019 12-2PM • MILWAUKEE, WI
April 19—A Night of Crowns at LVL UP (801 S. Second St.): Head upstairs into the second story of Milwaukee’s Death Star of LGBTQ bars—because the shows are back! After taking a bit of break, LVL is bringing back the glitz and glamour with this 10:30 p.m. drag show featuring Cream City pageant winners.
ESTABROOK PARK PICNIC AREA 8 Featuring the musical stylings of:
CHICKEN WIRE EMPIRE
LEX ALLEN
Who You Callin’ a Hoarder? Dear Ruthie, I think I’m a hoarder. I’m not sure. My guest room is uninhabitable, and a second room (what was a makeshift den) is filing up fast. When friends come over, I just close the doors to these rooms and no one is the wiser. I’m starting to get worried, however, about my emotional state when it comes to letting go of things or my lack of ability to do so. Do you think I should see a therapist?
Thanks, Joe Hoarder
Dear Joe, It’s never a bad idea to check in with a professional therapist if you think you need some help. That said, the odds are in your favor that you’re likely not a hoarder, but again... get it checked it out if it’s bothering you. In the meantime, try going through one corner or small space in your guest room. Straighten it up a bit, see what you can organize, give to charity or toss. Scale things down a bit. Once that small area is done, stop for a day or two and explore your feelings. Has this exercise caused stress or relief? Happiness or a sense of loss? If you’re experiencing negative feelings, contact a therapist and share those concerns with him or her. 32 | A P R I L 1 8 , 2 0 1 9
::RUTHIE’SSOCIALCALENDAR
April 20—Midwest Vegan Fest at Nicolet High School (6701 N. Jean Nicolet Road): Whether you’re a vegan, enjoying animal-free foods occasionally or have a daughter going through a phrase, don’t miss this free, family friendly event. The 11 a.m. to 6 p.m. fest includes samplings, demos, music, kids’ activities and more. Swing by midwestveganfest.com for a list of vendors, early access options and how to enter the mac ’n’ cheese contest. April 20—Beards, Brews and BBQs at Beard MKE (1812 E. North Ave.): Celebrate the grand opening of the city’s shop for the hairy gent. Got a beard? Stock up on conditioners, oils and so much more while you enjoy a barbecue and beer from 4:30-8 p.m. You’ll also discover plenty of unique finds in this one-of-a-kind shop—whether you have a beard or not! April 21—Easter Buffet & Bonnet Contest at Hamburger Mary’s (730 S. Fifth St.): Spend Easter Sunday with the infamous Hamburger Mary’s Brunchettes. Doors open at 11 a.m. with an extra-special all-you-can-eat brunch buffet and bottomless mimosa. The Brunchettes hit the stage for a fast, family friendly show at noon. Don’t forget the Easter Bonnet Contest during the show! Enter to win or sit back and watch the craziness. Call 414-488-2555 for reservations. April 21—Easter Brunch at Woody’s (1579 S. Second St.): This year, celebrate spring at Milwaukee’s favorite LGBTQ sports bar. Bring a dish to pass and enjoy this 1:30 p.m. potluck. Food, friendship and festive Easter fun... you’ll find it all at Woody’s! April 21—Easter Bonnet Bingo at Fluid Bar (819 S. Second St.): Give the family a goodbye hug and spend the rest of Easter Sunday with your chosen fam. Dita Von hosts a 4 p.m. Sunday Funday, featuring kooky rounds of bingo, prizes, drink specials, a beer bust and Fluid’s infamous Easter Bonnet contest. April 23—Lunch & Learn: Brand Purpose—Simplify, Sell & Serve at Ogletree Deakins (1243 N. 10th St.): The Wisconsin LGBT Chamber of Commerce and Wells Fargo Bank host this one-hour seminar on purpose-driven companies, leadership and brand identity. Lyssa Schmidt reviews the intriguing concept at noon for $10 (free for Chamber members). Register at eventbrite.com. April 24—Buddies Viewing at UWM Union Cinema (2200 E. Kenwood Blvd./ Student Union Room 363): Take in the restoration of the groundbreaking 1985 film Buddies. The first feature full-length movie to address the AIDS epidemic, Buddies is a piece of LGBTQ cinematic history that’s not to be missed. Film historian Jenni Olson hosts the 7 p.m. viewing. Ask Ruthie a question or share your events with her at dearruthie@shepex.com. Follow her on Instagram @ruthiekeester and Facebook at Dear Ruthie. Don’t miss season 1 of her drag reality show on YouTube, “Camp Wannakiki!” SHEPHERD EXPRESS
::MYLGBTQPoint of View
Erasing Weakland’s Legacy Isn’t Absolution ::BY PAUL MASTERSON
P
ope Benedict XVI came out of hiding last week. No, it wasn’t the Milwaukee Art Museum’s pontifical Eggs Benedict portrait rendered in condoms, it was the 91-year-old pope emeritus himself, who issued an essay blaming the Roman Catholic Church’s sex abuse scandal on the 1960s sexual revolution with its loose morals, tight clothing and, of course, embrace of homosexuals. In other words, don’t blame us guys in brocade. Never mind the scandal was well underway long before the Age of Aquarius; Benedict’s regurgitation of “homosexual” scapegoating conveniently disregards the large percentage of little girls abused by priests that included pregnancies and, yes, abortions. But casting the abusers as solely homosexual allows the
PERHAPS THE THOUGHT IS THAT BY ERASING AN INFAMOUS NAME, THE REST OF THE GUILTY ARE ABSOLVED. IF THERE IS NO PERPETRATOR, THERE ARE NO VICTIMS. OUT OF SIGHT, OUT OF MIND SHEPHERD EXPRESS
(presumably) heterosexual accuser to avoid association. Besides, that focus distracts from other culprits like the church hierarchy that hid the crimes, the police who failed to enforce the law and last, but certainly not least, the lawyers who, at astounding cost, defended church leaders and helped their efforts to avoid compensation for the victims. Then, there are the parishioners along the way who just couldn’t believe their dear priests were capable of such crimes. There are also the victims’ own parents, who, intimidated into silence, wanted to avoid scandal or simply wouldn’t believe the obvious. Benedict’s diatribe resurrects the blame game at a time when the Milwaukee Archdiocese is trying to forget its chapter in the Catholic Church’s sordid past. If you’ve driven up Van Buren Avenue these days, you’ll have noticed the absence of the “Archbishop Weakland Center” plaque that once adorned St. John Cathedral’s backside. (I gave it an ironic tribute in this column back in 2015.) A year later, a Catholic newspaper published a vitriolic editorial calling for the plaque’s removal and, in fact, a complete erasure of Rembert Weakland’s legacy, including a total re-renovation of the Cathedral Weakland had modernized to the tune of millions of dollars. It sounded like they were more upset about that (and, of course, his hush money payment to a former male lover) than of his role in the sex abuse scandal. Well, the sign just came down a month ago. One wonders why it took so long. But apparently, it finally dawned on the Archdiocese that the sign’s presence (as well as the Cousins Catholic Center’s in St. Francis) might rub people the wrong way. Deweaklandization should provide some emotional relief for the victims. However, another victim demand—the release of the names of perpetrator priests—remains unfulfilled. Perhaps the thought is that by erasing an infamous name, the rest of the guilty are absolved. If there is no perpetrator, there are no victims. Out of sight, out of mind, I suppose. The brand is rehabilitated, and we can all go back to business as usual. It’s sort of that “we didn’t know” excuse of the Holocaust. But at least the Germans have memorialized their collective guilt and built monuments to the victims. Perhaps the Milwaukee Archdiocese should as well. Perhaps it can melt down all the bronze Weakland scraps and recast them as a Mea Culpa sculpture and place it prominently in the cathedral nave. His life-sized bronze bust (if it still exists) should be placed there as well, facing a wall in perpetual shame.
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A P R I L 1 8 , 2 0 1 9 | 33
::MUSIC
FEATURE | ALBUM REVIEWS | CONCERT REVIEWS | LOCAL MUSIC
LADY LAMB FINDS PEACE AMID THE CHAOS ::BY JOSHUA MILLER inger/songwriter Aly Spaltro often finds inspiration whenever she walks through her home city of New York City and neighborhood in Queens. One such walk inspired “Deep Love,” a song that immediately gave clarity and vindication to the songs she had written in prior weeks and months. Spaltro was deep into the writing process for her latest album Even in the Tremor when she set out for a walk one day, feeling sad and lonely. She didn’t feel like connecting with anyone and everyone seemed as if “they were also off in their own heads.”
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“It just felt gloomy, me walking around Manhattan, around all the big office buildings,” she says. “When I got off the train, I walked by my neighbors and they were out sharing a really beautiful moment, a really simple, beautiful moment. It was so inspiring to me. It made me feel better… I just started thinking about the people that I love and the things I’m grateful for. “So, when I got home, I just picked up my guitar and started strumming a few chords and the song kind of fell out of me,” she continues. “It felt a little like it wrote itself. I’m really grateful that it came to me because it really felt to me like it was the closure I needed to know that I had expressed all that I had set out to in the writing of the record. Then I knew that it was ready.” In the past two years, Spaltro has grown up considerably as a songwriter and an individual, and Even in the Tremor finds her Lady writing more freely and honestly about Lamb herself and her feelings. As she enters the Back Room final months of her 20s, Spaltro is more reat Colectivo alistic and direct with how she approaches Saturday, her emotions. The kid gloves are off. April 20, “I started writing songs when I was 18. I 7:30 p.m. have obviously grown so much in the last 12 years that I think I have become more introspective, a little just more observant as opposed to maybe obsessive musically, lyrically,” she says. “So, I think there’s more of a maturity and evolution in the music. And a directness as well.” This directness was inspired partly by authors such as Raymond Carver and Lucia Berlin. And, even more personally, by her girlfriend, who is a fiction writer. “She has a really beautiful way of being very direct in her language, nothing flowery or trying to be lush and beautiful,” Spaltro says. “It ends up being beautiful just in its simplicity.” She’s used this newfound directness to pull herself out of negative feelings and become more present when they came. “If there’s a song that begins with anxiety, I try to resolve that in real time,” she says. “So, if the song began with chaos or stress, for the most part within this record, those feelings resolve toward more peace and clarity by the end of the song lyrically.” That approach can be heard on the album’s title track. In the song, she repeats the line “the past kills the present if I let it.” “I’ve learned more recently that it’s my own choice whether I decide I want to spin out into obsessing over the past, or anything I regret or mistakes I’ve made,” Spaltro says. She also has realized the importance of cherishing the small moments and details in life, even as seemingly insignificant as getting knots out of her girlfriend’s wet hair on “Deep Love.” “I think it’s really easy to walk through life and not really notice all the love and the beauty and hope that’s happening in really small doses everywhere, whether it’s two strangers sharing a moment or two people who love each other, or a parent and their child or whatever,” she says. “These little moments of inspiration and creativity and love are all around. “I think they’re everywhere, but I especially love them in New York City… There are so many moments in the city and on the subway where people actually acknowledge each other for a minute and stop with their bustle. I love seeing that. Just moments of humanity I find really inspiring no matter how small.” Lady Lamb plays the Back Room at Colectivo on Saturday, April 20, at 7:30 p.m. with Renata Zeiguer and Alex Schaaf.
SHEPHERD EXPRESS
::CONCERTREVIEW
Branford Marsalis’ Quartet Generated Heat at the Pabst Theater ::BY JAMIE LEE RAKE
B
8 ANNUAL POTTERY
CAMBRIDGE • LAKE MILLS • JOHNSON CREEK
EVERYONE
WELCOME
DAN OJEDA
ranford Marsalis worked as hard as any other member of the quartet he fronted at the Pabst Theater Thursday night. Yet, if he broke a sweat, one would be hard pressed to tell. Of the three members of the combo who arrived on the stage wearing sport coats, he was the only one to keep his on through an often-frenzied evening of post-bop jazz. That’s cool. Marsalis’ cool attire and casual demeanor, grousing about the wintry weather on the trip from Wausau to Milwaukee and remarking on how his daughters and wife watch Bucks games because they think Giannis Antetokounmpo is a looker, contrasted with the disciplined fire they brought to a rousing set largely dedicated to their latest long-player, this year’s The Secret Between the Shadow and the Soul. Marsalis’ bandmates are no less cool, but a couple play their instruments with more physicality than their boss. Drummer Justin Faulkner was first to divest himself of his coat, doubtless to stave off the heat he was generating. No surprise, considering that the energy he brought. “Dance of the Evil Toys,” one of a couple of the
night’s numbers composed by quartet double bassist Eric Revis, was roughly commensurate to that of a machine gun bolstered by multiple bumper stocks. When Faulkner would later give slower numbers such as “Nilaste,” another Revis contribution, a soft friction resembling the hiss of old vinyl playing under a turntable needle, it looked as if he was nervously holding back another bout of bashing his kit. Contrasting with Faulkner’s penchant for maximalism, pianist Joey Calderazzo’s more economic playing was equally emotive, though often more melancholy. His “Conversation Among The Ruins” made the cut for Secret and the night’s set list, being but one showcase for impressionistic pianism. Calderazzo didn’t doff his jacket until well into the set, not long before playing his only arpeggio of the evening. Revis, smartly sporting only a vest over his dress shirt, was given the least solo space among the foursome. But his occasional percussive working of the neck and body of his instrument added to the copious musical invention about him, just as his upright position in the middle of the floor centered the band visually when Marsalis would hang further back to take in the interplay of his accomplices. Though Marsalis’ playful boldness blowing his reeds anchored the proceedings throughout the night, he especially drove his ensemble to frenzied heights toward the end, on Keith Jarrett’s “The Windup” and another Revis number, “Brews,” the latter of which juxtaposed hard swinging with what sounded like minor key Eastern European touches akin to klezmer. Taking on the gently drifting bossa nova of Carlos Antonio Jobim’s “If You Never Come to Me” served to contrast the spasms of contained chaos bookending it. Marsalis admitted that his foursome’s exploratory run through Jimmy McHugh’s “Sunny Side of the Street” about halfway through the show was a way of giving the audience something they already knew. Wonderful though it was, he need not have made the concession to familiarity. His Quartet’s muses already lead them places worth staying a while.
TOUR
MAY 4 & MAY 5 10 AM–5 PM
Our twelve studios and galleries in South Central Wisconsin will be open with our newest pots on display plus the work of eighteen guest potters that have been specially invited to show with us this year.
Yard signs will be posted May 4 & 5. Look for this sign indicating tour locations. Branford Marsalis Quartet
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A P R I L 1 8 , 2 0 1 9 | 35
::LOCALMUSIC
Caley Conway Lets Her Guitar Take the Lead on ‘Surrounded Middle’ ::BY MICHAEL CARRIERE
Caley Conway
C
4/18 Alex Ballard & Sugarfoot 4/25 Fellow Kinsman
Based on the works of Sir J. M. Barrie, 1st Baronet, OM Adapted for the stage by Patrick Flynn
Tickets starting at...
$15
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April 26–June 2, 2019
SUGGESTED FOR FAMILIES WITH YOUNG PEOPLE AGES 6 – 17+
F I R S T S TA G E . O R G / T I N K E R B E L L SPONSORED BY:
aley Conway’s excellent new EP, Surrounded Middle, begins with the singer/songwriter informing a potential lover that it “looks like you won’t be getting to know me.” And throughout the record’s six tracks, Conway explores this sense of unknowing as she sings of secrets kept and feelings guarded. In the hands of a less accomplished vocalist, such lyrical content could come off as a bit formulaic. Yet Conway’s plaintive voice, along with her understated approach to lyric writing, strip these themes of any unnecessary adornment as it hones in on the emotional truth of reluctant love. Conway may keep her guard up throughout Surrounded Middle, but by the end of the record we really do want to know more about her. Adding to the appeal of Surrounded Middle is Conway’s guitar playing. Record opener “Silent Snow Secret Snow” begins as a way for Conway to show off her traditional singer-songwriter chops. Yet halfway through the song the track opens up, as Conway begins playing a riff that sounds like it was pulled from a ’90s-era Built to Spill album. It is an unexpected twist, one that makes an in initially insular song into something quite sonically expansive. This willingness to let the guitar drive the material is repeated on “Cold Hymn,” Surrounded Middle’s stellar second track. Here, Conway creates what sounds like a loving homage to the Deal sisters and their breakthrough act, The Breeders. The guitar-playing on this track is upfront and confident, evidence of Conway’s willingness to use the instrument “to take more of a leadership role” in terms of songwriting for this recording session. More importantly, as Conway explains, the emphasis on guitar highlights the performer “claiming a little more responsibility for the sound of the music,” particularly in light of the misguided beCaley lief that the guitar is a “male” instrument. “I knew,” Conway notes, Conway “that I was striving for independence from male players as much Anodyne as possible” during the songwriting process for Surrounded Middle. Coffee What you hear then is a performer fully finding her voice. All these aspects of Surrounded Middle come to a head on “Open Thursday, Your Mouth,” the record’s standout fifth track. Expressive guitar playApril 18, ing—what Conway calls the repeated playing of a “mantra-like riff”— 7 p.m. plays off Conway stretching her voice to its near breaking point as she turns the song’s title into a demand, perhaps both for her partner and for herself. The song, Conway notes, “is more of an indulgence in vocal melody rather than story. I wanted to see if I could take it there vocally.” Helping Conway achieve such results was engineer Lawton Hall, who recorded Surrounded Middle at The Chair Company recording studio. The equipment at The Chair Company, according to Conway, was “beyond anything I would have imagined,” while Hall’s assistance proved vital to the success of the recording session—particularly when it came to finding the right guitar sounds. “Lawton really helped me to bring out what I was hearing with my guitar parts,” concludes Conway. “He really helped me dial in those tones.” There is little doubt that Conway’s confidence as a player improved during the recording of Surrounded Middle, and she is excited for the upcoming release of the record, along with the chance to bring these dynamic songs to the Anodyne stage. Caley Conway plays an EP release show Thursday, April 18, at Anodyne Coffee at 7 p.m. with Gauss and SistaStrings. SHEPHERD EXPRESS
Illustration by Scott Radke
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MUSIC::LISTINGS
::ALBUMS Tom & Barb Webber Fragile
(FAIR WEBBER) If siblings are said to make the sweetest of harmonies, might married couples not be far behind? Milwaukee-area folkies Tom & Barb Webber’s latest album, Fragile, doesn’t find them singing together quite enough. Here, one partner is more apt to sing background vocals on choruses and bridges for the other’s lead vocals. Barb’s more plaintive tone joining her other half’s gruffer approach number among Fragile’s finest moments, but there’s plenty else to commend the project. Intended as a conceptual piece, each song represents a step in a journey toward emotional healing and wholeness, including acknowledgement of one’s brokenness, emotional support from a loving friend, rejection of material pursuits, honesty with oneself, generosity and gratitude for life’s small pleasures and the graces others provide. The Webbers imbue their concept with memorable melodies and the occasional electrified instrumentation—a smidgen of grinding guitar and a hypnotically jazzy bass complement their largely acoustic approach. —Jamie Lee Rake
Karin Plato
This Could Be The One
Vancouver vocalist Karin Plato is ably assisted by a suave, straightahead jazz quartet on her eighth studio album. This Could Be The One showcases her warm, sunny voice on a set of mostly original numbers, the best of them worthy of consideration for the jazz-singer canon. Plato also tackles a few familiar songs, only one of them from the Great American Songbook, Hoagy Carmichael’s “Heart and Soul.” She also sings an almost evanescent version of Hank Williams’“I’m So Lonesome I Could Cry” and gives a tropical lilt to The Beatles’“I’ve Just Seen a Face.” —Morton Shlabotnik
Frederico7 Exótico Americano
Born in Brazil, coming of age in Mexico and now living in the U.S., guitarist-vocalist Frederico7’s music echoes his migratory life. His bilingual song collection, Exótico Americano, features wiry funk bass lines, warm tropical tones, dreamy rock guitar and vocals that shift easily between rap and cool balladry. A hint of psychedelia wafts through the album, which manages to flow coherently in the face of myriad influences. —Morton Shlabotnik 38 | A P R I L 1 8 , 2 0 1 9
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THURSDAY, APRIL 18 Anodyne Coffee, Caley Conway EP release w/Gauss & SistaStrings Cactus Club, Acme Records Presents: Steve Gunn (Matador), Gun Outfit & Soda Road Cafe Carpe (Fort Atkinson), John Statz w/Kyle Cox Caroline's Jazz Club, Gaines & Wagoner Clarke Hotel (Waukesha), Ginni & JoAnna Marie (6pm) Club Garibaldi, 2019 NYDM Spring Bash County Clare Irish Inn & Pub, Acoustic Irish Folk w/Barry Dodd Jazz Estate, Blues Night Misha Siegfried Kelly's Bleachers (Big Bend), Michael Sean Kochanski's Concertina Beer Hall, Open Jam: Roadhouse Rave Up Mason Street Grill, Mark Thierfelder Jazz Trio (5:30pm) Mezcalero Restaurant, Open Jam w/host Abracadabra Jam Band Miramar Theatre, Kung Fu (all-ages, 9pm) O'Donoghues Irish Pub (Elm Grove), The All-Star SUPERband (6pm) On the Bayou, Open Mic Comedy w/host The Original Darryl Hill Pabst Theater, Gov’t Mule Potawatomi Hotel & Casino, In Bar 360: Al White Duo Rave / Eagles Club, MISSIO w/Blackillac & Swells (all-ages, 7:30pm) Rounding Third Bar and Grill, World's Funniest Free Comedy Show Shank Hall, The Mother Hips w/Brian Wurch Band Stella Van Buren, CP & Stoll w/Chris Peppas & Jeff Stoll (5pm) The Back Room at Colectivo, Wishbone Ash The Bay Restaurant, Pat McCurdy The Cooperage, The Yawpers w/Wood Chicken & In The Whale The Packing House Restaurant, Barbara Stephan & Peter Mac (6pm) Transfer Pizzeria Cafe, Martini Jazz Lounge: Neil Davis Trio Up & Under Pub, A No Vacancy Comedy Open Mic Woodland Pattern Book Center, Formations Series for New & Improvised Music
FRIDAY, APRIL 19 Alley Cat Lounge (Five O'Clock Steakhouse), Brian Dale Group American Legion Post #399 (Okauchee), Danny Moore & The Boogie Woogie Flu American Legion Post #449 (Brookfield), Oh Yeah Angelo's Piano Lounge, Julie's Piano Karaoke Anodyne Coffee, Eric Andersen w/Scarlet Rivera & Cheryl Prashker Art*Bar, Art Show Opening: Horses, music w/The Beautiful Collide Cactus Club, 2019 NYDM Spring Bash (5pm) Cafe Carpe (Fort Atkinson), Bobby Long Caroline's Jazz Club, The Paul Spencer Band w/James Sodke, Michael Ritter, Aaron Gardner & Victor Campbell Circle-A Cafe, Alive at Eight: T-Tops w/Curbsitter (8pm); DJ: DJ Dolls (10pm) ComedySportz Milwaukee, ComedySportz Milwaukee! Company Brewing, Hughes Family Band w/Cairns & Redshift Headlights County Clare Irish Inn & Pub, Traditional Irish Ceilidh Session Crush Wine Bar (Waukesha), Dave Miller Trio w/Mike Cascio & Hal Miller Fire On Water, Cactii w/Earthmother Iron Mike's (Franklin), Open Jam Session w/Steve Nitros & Friends Jazz Estate, The Sam Belton Group (8pm), Late Night Session: The Jack Reed Group (11:30pm) Kim's Lakeside (Pewaukee), Andrew Gelles Lakefront Brewery, Brewhaus Polka Kings (5:30pm) Lepanto Banquet Hall (Port Washington), Frank Bang & Cook County Kings w/Altered Five Blues Band Linneman's Riverwest Inn, Stephen Cooper & the Nobody Famous Mamie's, Robert Allen Jr. Band Mason Street Grill, Phil Seed Trio (6pm) Metro Market (Shorewood), Anthony Deutsch Piano Blues & Vocal w/Matt Liban & Kurt Koenig (4pm) Miramar Theatre, Midnight Tyrannosaurus w/Cromatik (all-ages, 9pm) Mo's Irish Pub (Wauwatosa), Detour Pabst Theater, The Magic of Adam Trent Paulie's Pub and Eatery, Shut the Front Door Potawatomi Hotel & Casino, In Bar 360: Rudy ’N Vee Rave / Eagles Club, Mike Stud (all-ages, 9pm), Paul Cauthen w/ Carl Anderson (all-ages, 9pm), Grupo Firme w/Banda La Escuelona &
Banda Nuestra Tierra (all-ages, 8pm) Reefpoint Brew House (Racine), Sammy Marshall Revere's Wells Street Tavern (Delafield), The Jonny T-Bird Trio Riverside Theater, Steve Martin & Martin Short w/Della Mae & Jeff Babko Riverwest Jazz Gallery Center for the Arts, Matt Blair Solo Piano w/The Tontine Ensemble Saloon on Calhoun with Bacon, The Sensations Shank Hall, Pundamonium: The Milwaukee Pun Slam The Back Room at Colectivo, The Cactus Blossoms w/Jack Klatt The Lakeside Supper Club & Lounge (Oconomowoc), Tallan & Friends The Packing House Restaurant, Carmen Nickerson & The Carmen Sutra Trio (6:30pm) The Underground Collaborative, Insult & Battery: Comedy Roast Battle Up & Under Pub, Jesse James Gang Velobahn Coffee and Cycle, Ex Fabula StorySlam: "G.O.A.T"
SATURDAY, APRIL 20 American Legion Post #449 (Brookfield), Our House Anodyne Coffee, Nineteen Thirteen Art*Bar, John Gay Best Place @ the Historic Pabst Brewery, Ben Harold album release w/Althea Bremen Cafe, Texas Dave Cactus Club, 2019 NYDM Spring Bash (5pm) Cafe Carpe (Fort Atkinson), Eric Andersen w/Scarlet Rivera & Cheryl Prashker Caroline's Jazz Club, The Paul Spencer Band w/James Sodke, Andy Spadafora, Michael Ritter & Victor Campbell Circle-A Cafe, Alive at Eight: Tin Foil w/Double Truck (8pm); DJ: WarLock (10pm) ComedySportz Milwaukee, ComedySportz Milwaukee! Fiserv Forum, Godsmack w/Volbeat Five O'Clock Steakhouse, Rafael Mendez Fixture Pizza Pub, Matt MF Tyner (2pm) Hilton Milwaukee City Center, Vocals & Keys Jazz Estate, Nancy Wilson Night w/Marcya (8pm), Late Night Session: Nathan Pflugoeft Quartet (11:30pm) Kelly's Bleachers (Big Bend), Koltrane Kochanski's Concertina Beer Hall, Blues in the Night: Pierre “Mr. Untouchable” Lee & The Bluesers w/Paul Kaye Linneman's Riverwest Inn, Luke Cerny album release w/Craig Baumann & the Story, and Ethan Keller Mason Street Grill, Jonathan Wade Trio (6pm) Mezcalero Restaurant, Drive With Horns Miramar Theatre, Laughing Grass Hemp Fest: Meso, Angelic Root, UNKNWN, Rilathon & Seth Campbell Live Motor Bar & Restaurant, Bulleit Bourbon Presents BBQ & Blues (5pm) No Studios, Sleepersound Video Premiere w/Mark Borchardt & Flat Teeth Pabst Theater, The Underwater Bubble Show (2pm) Pabst Theater, Joey Diaz Paulie's Pub and Eatery, Up All Night Potawatomi Hotel & Casino, In Bar 360: Tinker Boys Racine Theatre Guild, Jean's Jazz Series: De La Buena Rave / Eagles Club, Alice In Chains w/City and Colour (all-ages, 8pm), SWMRS w/Beach Goons & Destroy Boys (all-ages, 8pm) Red, White and Brews, Jonny T-Bird & Big Dad Riverside Theater, Brit Floyd – The Wall Riverwest Public House, The Falderals and Barry Osborne Route 20 Outhouse (Sturtevant), Rock For Vets 2019: Black Stone Cherry, and Tyler Bryant & The Shakedown (ages 18-plus, 4:30pm) Shank Hall, Mike & Friends (Grateful Dead Tribute) Smith Bros. Coffee House (Port Washington), Francesca & Night of Cups The Back Room at Colectivo, Lady Lamb w/Renata Zeiguer & Alex Schaaf The Cheel (Thiensville), The Tritronics The Coffee House, The Earth Poets & Musicians w/The Spirals The Lakeside Supper Club & Lounge (Oconomowoc), Gimme Skynyrd
The Packing House Restaurant, Lem Banks, Jeff Stoll, Alvin Turner & Omar (6:30pm) The Underground Collaborative, Body Language: Comedy & Burlesque Up & Under Pub, Video Dead Walker's Point Music Hall, When Particles Collide w/Bubbles Erotica Westallion Brewing Company, The MilBillies (4:20pm), Brewtown Brewgrass (7pm) X-Ray Arcade, Cactus Club Presents: CC Presents: Blessed w/Tunic (all-ages, 8pm)
SUNDAY, APRIL 21 Angelo's Piano Lounge, Live Karaoke w/Julie Brandenburg Cactus Club, Lavender Country w/Paisley Fields, Nat Harvie & Nickel&Rose Circle-A Cafe, Alive at Eight: Primitive Broadcast Service w/Nutritious & Delicious (8pm); DJ: John Riepenhoff & Sara Caron (10pm) J&B's Blue Ribbon Bar and Grill, The Players Jam Rounding Third Bar and Grill, The Dangerously Strong Comedy Open Mic The Back Room at Colectivo, SASAMI w/Savila
MONDAY, APRIL 22 Cactus Club, David Dondero w/Shoot Down the Moon & Ian Olvera (Daydream Retrievers) Crimson Club, Metal Mondays Jazz Estate, WCM Adult Combos “Blue Note Ensemble” Kochanski's Concertina Beer Hall, Dyngus Day: Joe Kielbasa and The Missing Links Linneman's Riverwest Inn, Poet's Monday w/host Timothy Kloss & featured reader Colleen Nehmer (sign-up 7:30pm, 8-11pm) Mason Street Grill, Joel Burt Duo (5:30pm) Paulie's Pub and Eatery, Open Jam: Christopher John & Friends w/ featured band Up & Under Pub, Open Mic w/Marshall McGhee and the Wanderers
TUESDAY, APRIL 23 Jazz Estate, Bad Habit Rabbit Kim's Lakeside (Pewaukee), Robert Allen Jr. & Friends Mamie's, Open Blues Jam w/Marvelous Mack Mason Street Grill, Jamie Breiwick Group (5:30pm) McAuliffe's Pub (Racine), The Jim Yorgan Sextet Miramar Theatre, Tuesday Open Mic w/host Sandy Weisto (sign-up 7:30pm, all-ages) Pabst Theater, Valerie June w/Parker Gispert Potawatomi Hotel & Casino, In Bar 360: Al White (4pm) Red Circle Inn, Dick Eliot & Greg Shaffer (6pm) Riverwest Jazz Gallery Center for the Arts, Jazz Jam Session Shank Hall, Delvon Lamarr Organ Trio w/The Michael Arnold Three The Underground Collaborative, Something’s Festering: Comedy w/ Olivia Grace & Eric Freedman Transfer Pizzeria Cafe, Transfer House Band w/Dennis Fermenich
WEDNESDAY, APRIL 24 Caroline's Jazz Club, Dean Lea Trio Conway's Smokin' Bar & Grill, Open Jam w/Big Wisconsin Johnson Hudson Business Lounge and Cafe, Jazz at Noon: Don Linke and Friends Iron Mike's (Franklin), B Lee Nelson Acoustic Jam Jazz Estate, Soul Night: Cameron Webb Kochanski's Concertina Beer Hall, Polka Open Jam Linneman's Riverwest Inn, Acoustic Open Stage w/feature Garrett Beth (sign-up 7:30pm, start 8pm) Mason Street Grill, Jamie Breiwick Group (5:30pm) Mezcalero Restaurant, The Jammers Morton's (Cedarburg), Steve Cohen & The Riccos (6:30pm) Paulie's Field Trip, Wednesday Night Afterparty w/Dave Wacker & guests Potawatomi Hotel & Casino, In Bar 360: Al White Sunset Grill Pewaukee, Robert Allen Jr. & Friends Tally's Tap & Eatery (Waukesha), Tomm Lehnigk The Back Room at Colectivo, Shy Girls w/AKUA The Cheel (Thiensville), Wiegratz & DeRose Jazz Duo (6:30pm) The Packing House Restaurant, Carmen Nickerson & Kostia Efimov (6pm) Turner Hall Ballroom, EELS
SHEPHERD EXPRESS
{ Wisconsin Conservatory of Music }
Manty Ellis All-Star Jazz Tribute Concert Grammy Award-winner Brian Lynch | Carl Allen | Jeff Chambers | David Hazeltine
Saturday, April 27 at 8pm 88Nine Performance Space, 220 E. Pittsburgh Ave.
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THEME CROSSWORD
BLASTS FROM THE PAST By James Barrick
Complete the grid so that every row, column and 3x3 box contains every digit from 1 to 9 inclusively.
© 2019 United Feature Syndicate, Dist. by Andrews McMeel Syndication
72. — bono 73. Youths 74. Some writers 75. Worth 76. New Year’s noisemaker 77. Devoured 78. Old audio technology: 2 wds. 80. Toward the mouth 81. Mingles 83. Like a dilettante 84. Spumous 85. Brunhilde’s mother 86. Homeric sorceress 88. Narrative poem 90. Reunion-goer 92. Veranda 93. Italian liqueur 97. Old office technology: 2 wds. 99. Old picture-taking technology: 2 wds. 101. Ron Howard role 102. Stopwatch 103. Not yet firm 104. Arabic letter 105. Apparatus 106. Sudden movement 107. Pillages 108. Bits to drink DOWN 1. Tater — 2. New Age singer 3. Swabs 4. Foreshadowed 5. Ranch denizens 6. Pimpinella 7. Hand (or fist) 8. Native: Suffix 9. Stethoscope part 10. Variety meat 11. Cotton cases 12. Son of Aphrodite 13. Eat 14. Accent
15. A Gorgon 16. False: Abbr. 17. Small hill 18. — of the Covenant 24. Dry 26. Black Sea resort city 29. Israel’s airline 32. — Canyon, Utah 33. Fat 34. Constitutes 35. War vessel 36. Old network hardware: 3 wds. 37. Boric and folic 38. Fellows 39. Old audio technology: 2 wds. 40. Chekhov’s “— Vanya” 41. Show disdain 43. Phenomena 44. Boreal region 45. Thought 46. Quiz show group 51. Different 53. Potted plants 54. Bike of a kind 55. Auctions 57. Doyens 58. Legal scholar 59. Too small to see 61. French philosopher 62. — gentian
63. Fragrant flower 64. Greek goddess 65. Conjecture 66. Initial attempt 67. Atmospheres 68. Jitterbug dance 70. OT book 71. Midler or Davis 74. Digest of Roman laws 75. Kind 76. Intern, British style 78. About 79. Scarlett’s home 82. Car for a yuppie 84. Marsh bird 86. Wicker worker 87. Sluggish 88. Ant 89. Treaties 90. The nucha 91. Corn lily genus 92. Letter between Kilo and Mike 93. Plus 94. Hindu caste 95. Drug experience 96. Lummoxes 97. Low-lying cloud 98. Something wellreceived 100. Boeotian queen
4/11 Solution
WORD FIND This is a theme puzzle with the subject stated below. Find the listed words in the grid. (They may run in any direction but always in a straight line. Some letters are used more than once.) Ring each word as you find it and when you have completed the puzzle, there will be 21 letters left over. They spell out the alternative theme of the puzzle.
Mining industry Solution: 21 Letters
© 2019 Australian Word Games Dist. by Creators Syndicate Inc.
ACROSS 1. Office sub 5. Mrs. DDE 10. Corpulent 15. Red giant in Cetus 19. — — about (around) 20. Santa — 21. Public assembly 22. Arab leader 23. Old office technology 25. Old computer technology: 2 wds. 27. Most pert 28. Rings 30. — couture 31. Domed recess 32. Notes 33. Buds 34. Bend the truth 37. Domain 38. King of Sweden 42. Entertainment award 43. Old source of information 47. Hostel 48. Kind of show 49. Express 50. Twinges 51. Quondam 52. “Honi soit qui — y pense” 53. — - — -lance 54. Like a mojito 55. Characterize 56. Juniors and seniors 58. Part of DJIA 59. Austrian composer 60. City in Australia 61. Refractory pot 62. Roof worker 63. Famed auto race: 2 wds. 65. Pierced 66. Mournful 69. Golf clubs 70. Damp 71. Sizeable pill
Solution to last week’s puzzle
Abutment Argon Auger Ayr Baryta Bega Beryl Brass Byng Calcite Clunes Coal Coen Cut
Detonate Digs Dyke Ebor Ellis Beach Erbium Euroa Ferrogabbro Flint Free Genoa Gold Heat Iron
Lead Lode Marl Mica Moe Nickel Nundle Oban Onyx Ore Pan Peewah Port Hedland
Pit Rain Rock Ruby Sarina Spar Steel Tin Topaz Towers Zinc
40 | A P R I L 1 8 , 2 0 1 9
4/11 Solution: My grandmother had one of those SHEPHERD EXPRESS
Solution: Rich in mineral deposits
Creators Syndicate 737 3rd Street • Hermosa Beach, CA 90254 310-337-7003 • info@creators.com
Date: 4/18/19
::NEWS OF THE WEIRD
::FREEWILLASTROLOGY ::BY ROB BREZSNY ARIES (March 21-April 19): French writer Simone de Beauvoir sent a letter to her lover, Aries author Nelson Algren. She wrote, “I like so much the way you are so greedy about life and yet so quiet, your eager greediness and your patience, and your way of not asking much of life and yet taking much because you are so human and alive that you find much in everything.” I’d love to see you embody that state in the coming weeks, Aries. In my astrological opinion, you have a mandate to be both utterly relaxed and totally thrilled; both satisfied with what life brings you and skillfully avid to extract the most out of it; both at peace with what you already have and primed to grab for much more. TAURUS (April 20-May 20): The Beat Generation of American poets arose in the late 1940s as a rebellion against materialistic mainstream culture and academic poetry. It embraced sexual liberation, Eastern spirituality, ecological awareness, political activism, and psychedelic drugs. One of its members, Jack Kerouac, tweaked and ennobled the word “beat” to serve as the code name for their movement. In its old colloquial usage, “beat” meant tired or exhausted. But Kerouac re-consecrated it to mean “upbeat” and “beatific,” borrowing from the Italian word beato, translated as “beatific.” I bring this to your attention, Taurus, because you’re on the verge of a similar transition: from the old meaning of “beat” to the new. GEMINI (May 21-June 20): “Scattered through the ordinary world there are books and artifacts and perhaps people who are like doorways into impossible realms, of impossible and contradictory truth.” Argentinian author Jorge Luis Borges said that, and now I’m passing it on to you—just in time for your entrance into a phase when such doorways will be far more available than usual. I hope you will use Borges’ counsel as a reminder to be alert for everyday situations and normal people that could lead you to intriguing experiences and extraordinary revelations and life-changing blessings. CANCER (June 21-July 22): The Free Will Astrology Committee To Boldly Promote Cancerian’s Success is glad to see that you’re not politely waiting for opportunities to come to you. Rather, you’re tracking them down and proactively wrangling them into a form that’s workable for your needs. You seem to have realized that what you had assumed was your fair share isn’t actually fair; that you want and deserve more. Although you’re not being mean and manipulative, neither are you being overly nice and amenable; you’re pushing harder to do things your way. I approve! And I endorse your efforts to take it even further. LEO (July 23-Aug. 22): Many experts who have studied the art and science of running fast believe that it’s best if a runner’s legs are symmetrical and identical in their mechanics. But that theory is not supported by the success of champion sprinter Usain Bolt. Because he has suffered from scoliosis, his left leg is a half-inch longer than his right. With each stride, his left leg stays on the track longer than his right, and his right hits the track with more force. Some scientists speculate that this unevenness not only doesn’t slow him down, but may in fact enhance his speed. In accordance with current astrological variables, I suspect you will be able to thrive on your asymmetry in the coming weeks, just as your fellow Leo Usain Bolt does. VIRGO (Aug. 23-Sept. 22): Virgo adventurer Jason Lewis traveled around the world using transportation powered solely by his own body. He walked, bicycled, skated, rowed, pedaled and swam more than 46,000 miles. I propose that we make him your role model for the next four weeks. You’re primed to accomplish gradual breakthroughs through the use of simple, persistent, incremental actions. Harnessing the power of your physical vitality will be an important factor in your success. LIBRA (Sept. 23-Oct. 22): Curcumin is a chemical found in the plant turmeric. When ingested by humans, it may diminish inflammation, lower the risk of diabetes, support cardiovascular health and treat digestive disorders. But there’s a problem: The body is inefficient in absorbing and using curcumin—unless it’s ingested along with piperine, a chemical in black pepper. Then it’s far more
SHEPHERD EXPRESS
available. What would be the metaphorical equivalent to curcumin in your life? An influence that could be good for you, but that would be even better if you synergized it with a certain additional influence? And what would be the metaphorical equivalent of that additional influence? Now is a good time to investigate these questions. SCORPIO (Oct. 23-Nov. 21): “I have the usual capacity for wanting what may not even exist,” wrote poet Galway Kinnell. How about you, Scorpio? Do you, too, have an uncanny ability to long for hypothetical, invisible, mythical and illusory things? If so, I will ask you to downplay that amazing power of yours for a while. It’s crucial for your future development that you focus on yearning for actual experiences, real people and substantive possibilities. Please understand: I’m not suggesting you’re bad or wrong for having those seemingly impossible desires. I’m simply saying that for now you will thrive on being attracted to things that are genuinely available. SAGITTARIUS (Nov. 22-Dec. 21): “Sometimes I have kept my feelings to myself, because I could find no language to describe them in,” wrote Sagittarian novelist Jane Austen. I’m guessing you’ve had that experience—maybe more than usual, of late. But I suspect you’ll soon be finding ways to express those embryonic feelings. Congrats in advance! You’ll discover secrets you’ve been concealing from yourself. You’ll receive missing information whose absence has made it hard to understand the whole story. Your unconscious mind will reveal the rest of what it has thus far merely been hinting at. CAPRICORN (Dec. 22-Jan. 19): All over the world, rivers and lakes are drying up. Sources of water are shrinking. Droughts are becoming more common and prolonged. Why? Mostly because of climate change. The good news is that lots of people are responding to the crisis with alacrity. Among them is an engineer in India named Ramveer Tanwar. Since 2014, he has organized efforts leading to the rejuvenation of 12 dead lakes and ponds. I propose we make him your role model for the coming weeks. I hope he will inspire you to engage in idealistic pursuits that benefit other people. And I hope you’ll be motivated to foster fluidity and flow and wetness everywhere you go. The astrological time is ripe for such activities. AQUARIUS (Jan. 20-Feb. 18): A blogger named Caramelizee offered her definition of elegance: “being proud of both your feminine and masculine qualities; seeing life as a nonending university and learning everything you can; caring for yourself with tender precision; respecting and taking advantage of silences; tuning in to your emotions without being oversensitive; owning your personal space and being generous enough to allow other people to own their personal space.”This definition of elegance will be especially apropos and useful for you Aquarians in the coming weeks. PISCES (Feb. 19-March 20): You Pisceans have been summoning heroic levels of creative intensity. You’ve been working extra hard and extra smart. But it seems that you haven’t been fully recognized or appreciated for your efforts. I’m sorry about that. Please don’t let it discourage you from continuing to express great integrity and authenticity. Keep pushing for your noble cause and offering your best gifts. I’m proud of you! And although you may not yet have reaped all the benefits you will ultimately sow, three months from now I bet you’ll be pleased you pushed so hard to be such a righteous servant of the greater good. Homework: Imagine your future self sends a message to you back through time. What is it? Freewillastrology.com. Go to realastrology.com to check out Rob Brezsny’s Expanded Weekly Audio Horoscopes and Daily Text Message Horoscopes. The audio horoscopes are also available by phone at 877873-4888 or 900-950-7700.
::BY THE EDITORS OF ANDREWS MCMEEL SYNDICATION
Party Poopers
I
n Raleigh, N.C., residents of The Dakota apartment complex are stepping out a little more confidently after management engaged the services of a company called PawzLife. The Raleigh News and Observer reported on March 22 that residents were growing disgusted with the amount of dog feces on the sidewalks and green spaces around the complex. So, management turned to a hightech solution: Residents who own dogs are required to bring them to a “pup party,” where PawzLife collects their DNA with a simple saliva swipe and creates a “unique DNA profile” for each dog. The company then visits the neighborhood to pick up any stray poop, and owners whose dogs are a match with the poop DNA are fined $100 per offense. PawzLife owner Matthew Malec said, “We are just trying to make the Earth a little bit better to live on.
English Setter Kaz James, 37, from Salford, England, has known since he was a child that he was different from other people. “I didn’t ever feel like a human. I always felt like a dog that was really out of place,” James told Metro News. He first started to understand his peculiarity when he gained access to the internet at 17 years old. “I was known by my friends for grabbing hold of the collar of their shirt in my teeth and biting or licking them, very canine-type behaviors,” James said. Today, he eats out of a dog bowl and owns three custom-made dog suits—one a $2,600 fur suit shipped from Canada. “My behaviors were quite dog-like in childhood, probably from the age of 6,” he said.
Koreatown Showdown Traffic on a street in the Koreatown neighborhood of Los Angeles came to a virtual stop as two cars engaged in a legendary standoff over a parking space on April 1. Fox News reported that Mariah Flores, who was positioned across the street, documented the entire two-hour dispute on Twitter, as the “black car” and the “silver car” jockeyed to parallel
park in one open spot along the sidewalk. As horns honked and tensions mounted, a “plot twist” changed the whole dynamic: The owner of a third vehicle, parked in front of the empty space, left, leaving room for both black and silver to park. The drivers quickly settled their vehicles in the spaces but then sat in their cars for some time. “Like, are they afraid of each other or is it just awkward now?” Flores wondered. Finally, the driver of the silver car emerged, prompting Flores’ comment, “Silver takes the gold!”
Fang’s for the Memories A wealthy San Francisco philanthropist, Florence Fang, 84, is being sued by the city of Hillsborough over the “Flintstones” home and grounds she has created in the suburb. The oddly shaped house was built in 1976, and Fang bought it in 2017. Today, it’s painted purple and red, features a large “Yabba Dabba Do” sign near the driveway, and Fang has added dinosaur and mushroom figurines, along with Fred Flintstone himself, to the yard. “We don’t like it when people build things first, then come in and demand or ask for permission later,” huffed Assistant City Attorney Mark Hudak, who told KTVU Fang built without the proper permits and the property is subject to code violations along with offending the neighbors’ aesthetic sensibilities. But Angela Alioto, Fang’s attorney, said the home is Fang’s “happy place.” Fang doesn’t live in the home but uses it for entertainment and charitable events. “She’s had an incredible life, and I think it’s wonderful that, at 84 years old, she has found something that makes her so happy,” Alioto told the San Mateo Daily Journal.
Inn to Canada The Smuggler’s Inn on Canada View Drive in Blaine, Wash., sits just a stone’s throw from the Canadian border. Fittingly, on April 4, a Canadian court charged its owner, Robert Boule, 69, with 21 counts of “inducing, aiding or abetting” seven people who tried to illegally enter Canada between May 2018 and March 2019. Boule had remarked to CBC News in the past that it wasn’t unusual to see people sneaking across the border at night. He remains in custody in Canada. © 2019 ANDREWS MCMEEL SYNDICATION A P R I L 1 8 , 2 0 1 9 | 41
::ARTFORARTâ&#x20AC;&#x2122;SSAKE
42 | A P R I L 1 8 , 2 0 1 9
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LIQUOR
LESS $5.00 MIR= $19.88
2017 MEET BEAT $ .48 WITH INSTANT VODKA 2017 $ 2015 .99 REG. $ $17.99 .99 KIM MONIKER locally advertised Guaranteed so bring in those ads 16 $ .99 HOLLOW $.48 .99 CHAT 818 $AnyTOAD .99 ELOUAN .88 $$ priced… .48 CHATA $15 $48 MAIL IN REBATE $ .99 CRAWFORD 2016 1.75 Liter $ 6STE. 7H3MIC CHARDONNAY .99 CHARDONNAY 9 8 PINOT NOIR EVOLUTION 6 ON A CASE SAUVIGNON CABERNET 12 750 ml. ROSE RO Full Service, Full Selection Serving theBLANC Milwaukee Area Since 1945 WITH INSTANT $ .48 WHITE $ .99 $ Closed .99 WHISPERING 18 $ .99 $ .98 SANTA 16 $ .48 8 ANGEL $ .48 $ $ .99.88 LESS $3.00 6 .48 $SANTA Easter 8.99$RIT KENDALL MARKHAM15$ CLOUDLINE $MARGHERITA .99 ONLY SPECIALS! INFO@OTTOSWINEANDSPIRITS.COM EMAIL US TODAY TO BE ADDED TO THE OTTO’S E-MAIL OUR ON-LINE 6 7-STORE 8LIST ROSE 7 CARMENET GRIGIO 9 TO RECEIVEPINOT 12 REG. $19.99 JACKSON SAUVIGNON PINOT 120 WINE MIR= $15.99 Sunday 2017 CHARDONNAY WITH INSTANT CHARDONNAY BLANC NOIR 2015 2017 REG. $17.99 $ .48 $ .99 $MONIKER .88$ .99 OR KIM WE WILL VOGA PINOT CHATEAU 7 REG. $10.99 TOAD HOLLOW 18 $ .99 9 MEET ELOUAN INSTANT BEAT .48.48 CRAWFORD 2016STE. H3$$MICHELLE $ .48 $ 16.65 WITH 3 GRIGIO CHARDONNAY $48 MAIL IN REBATECHARDONNAY EVOLUTION SAUVIGNON NOIR $10.48 10 $16PINOT 13 CABERNET6 .99 MOSCATO ROSE ROSE ON A CASE WHITE 18 $WITH.97 .99 INSTAN $ $INSTANT .48 BLANC JACK DANIELS WITH $ .65 .99 WHISPERING $ .48 $ $ .48 SANTA 8 3 $ .99 BANFI ROSA 6 1800 SILVER$ Full $ .99 ANGEL 1510 8 10 13 Full Selection Serving the Milwaukee Area Since 1945 .48 Service, $ .99 $ .99 MARGHERITA BOMBAY $ .88 REGALE 8 K $ PINOT .99 ROSE MARKHAM GIFT SET 6 7 8 CARMENET MILAGRO SILVER GRIGIO KENDALL CLOUDLINE 9 KETEL ONE SANTASPARKLING RITA OR REPOSADO 12 JACKSON REG. $19.99 BACARDI YELLOW RUM CHARDONNAY EMAIL US TODAY TO BE ADDED TO THE OTTO’S 7-STORE E-MAIL LIST TO RECEIVE OUR ON-LINESAUVIGNON ONLY SPECIALS! INFO@OTTOSWINEANDSPIRITS.COM PINOTVODKA 120 WINES SAPPHIRE BOTANICALS WINE Liters WITH INSTANT SUPERIOR,TAIL GOLD, $ OR.48 REG. $17.99 $ CHARDONNAY .99 BLANC GRAPEFRUIT NOIR& ROSE, BAILEY’S REOSADO $ .88 TEQUILA 18 BLACK, OAKHEART CHATEAU REG. $10.99 16 $PEACH .48 ORANGE GIN $LIME.97 11 $ .99 LIMON $48.99 MAIL IN REBATE CREAM 6 $ .48MICHELLE $ 1.75.65 $ .48 1.75 Liter EVOLUTION $ 8 TEQUILA CUCUMBER MINTIRISH $3 .99 ON A CASE WITH INSTANT $8.97 10STE. 10 Liter$ .65 13 $ ROSE .48 $ .48 WHITE 3INSTANT Liter WITH INSTANT WHISPERING 10 CROWN ROYAL,750 ml. $ $17 .68.12 WITH 10 13 SANTA $ .28 $ .68 BERINGER ANGEL 19 $ .88$ .88$ .48 MARGHERITA $ CROWN .99 APPLE $ .99 $ .28 $ .99 18$ .9919 $ROSE .88CARMENET KNIGHTS VALLEY 8 VANILLA 187 KENDALL MARKHAM CLOUDLINE $ $WINES .88 PINOT GRIGIO SANTA RITA 8 YELLOW 9 6INCLUDES $KETEL15 $ .99 SAUVIGNON BAREFOOT CABERNET 2 BUCKS 8.99 ONE.48 JACKSON NEW JACK TAIL CHARDONNAYPINOT BACARDI RUM 120 WINES KORBEL 12 ABSOLUT WINES $ .48 BLANC VODKA CHARDONNAY NOIR $ BOTANICALS .98 AMSTERDAM DANIELS GOLD, RYE $ .98 .99 SUPERIOR, GLASSES$PLUS GET A VODKA $ .99BRANDY 18 Closed GRAPEFRUIT & ROSE, 24 24 $ 19.88 VODKA 16 $ .97 $ .48 $ .99 BLACK, OAKHEART BEEFEATER’S WITH INSTANT $48 MAIL IN REBATE FREE 2 LITER COKE ORANGE 3 $ $ $ $ .48 .4811 $$8.48 6 PEACH $ $ 8.99 LIME GIN $ $ .48 .12 15.99 LIMON ON A CASE 19.68 10.48 10.65 13 CUCUMBER MINT REG. $24.99 19 15 WITH .48 INSTANT 17 WITH INSTANT WITH INSTANT $ .99 $ $ 17.12 Easter $ $ .28 .48 $WITH .68 CROWN ROYAL, BULLEIT 19 19 INSTANT 29 $ .28 18 BREAD & $29 .99 19 $ .88 CROWN APPLE BOURBON 18 KENDALL MARKHAM CLOUDLINE 7 YELLOW BUTTER SANTA RITA CANADIA 9 VOGA PINOT GRIGIO OR MOSCATO
LIQUOR LIQUOR
19.88
$
28
WINE
LI
$
750 ml.
WINE
24.88
MALFY GIN
SAUVIGNON 750 ml.
IMPORTSunday
24 24 Closed 18 24 6 .48 OR 24 8 15 8 1919 3 12 10 10 13 Easter 15THE 19 19 10 28 MONTH 17 29 MILLER LITE, MILLER HIGH MICRO WISCONSIN BEER CROWN ROYAL, IMPORT OF 24 18 Sunday 19 CROWN APPLE KENDALL priced… MARKHAM YELLOW $ .88 1819 BUTTER 19 $1 RITAads MIR=28 $14.12 advertised Guaranteed so PINOT bring in SANTA those 29 DRAFT OR 64 LIFE REG. BAREFOOT CANADIAN CLUB ORKETEL VANILLA BOURBON JACKSON SAUVIGNON OFORTHE MONTHBOTANICALS THEAny locally 24 TAIL WINES ONE CHARDONNAY, 4/21/19 120 WINES CORONA OR MODELO LESS $5.00 NEW 4/21/19 $ WITH INSTANT BACARDI RUM WINES WEOF WILL CHARDONNAY BLANC NOIR JACK.88 CAPTAIN OR RYE $ KORBEL NOIR VODKA 30 Pack Cans LESS $5.00 VODKA ABSOLUT MIR= $14.99 LES TANQUERAY 24.98 SMIRNOFF AMSTERDAM 12 YEAR PINOT RYE SUPERIOR, GOLD,
WE WILL MEET BEAT MEET BEAT OR LIGHT 19 Bottles RAISED 10 GRAIN 24 8 or Cans1945 MONTH 312 PackSince Cans Selection 8 12 10 10 2413 Full Full Serving the Milwaukee Area $Service, .48 30 Pack 28FREE GLASS10 BLACK WALNUT, 15 Full Service, Full Selection Serving the Milwaukee AreaNAKED Since 1945 24 19 .99BLANC
$
750 ml. ENTHUSIAST
LIQUOR
EMPLOYEE EMPLOYEE OWNED OWNED
$48 .65 MAIL IN REBATE ON A CASE
$
750 ml.
$
750 ml.
19
750 ml.
MIR= $19.88
750 ml.
MIR= $15.99
750 ml.
1.5 Liter
750 ml.
OR
LIQUOR
1.5 Liter 750 ml. 750 ml. 750 ml. $ .98 JACKPLATA DANIELS DANIELS RYE MORGAN ALTOS $ BRANDY .97 CABERNET $ .99 MIR= OR REGULAR, FLAVORS OR VODKA 1800$19.88 SILVER VODKA MIR $GIN BOMBAY Any locally advertised priced… Guaranteed so bring SPICED RUM ORLiter 1.75 Liter $ & ROSE, .48 $ in those .65 ads GRAPEFRUIT .48 OAKHEART GIFT SET$RED, 750 ml. ELIJAH 750 ml. M $.48 .88 .88 &SAPPHIRE $ $ BLACK, .98JIM REPOSADO WHITE BERRY 1.75 1.75 Liter REPOSADOOR OR BEEFEATER’S PEACH ORANGE BEAM 1.75 Liter WITH INSTANT Liters CAPTAIN OR LIME LIMON 1.75 LiterVODKA $ .88 LESS $5.00 TANQUERAY CRAIG $ .88 SMIRNOFF TEQUILA TEQUILA $ .99 $ .48 BREWER MALFY GIN GIN CUCUMBER MINT GIN WITH INSTANT 1.75 Liter $ .12 $ .88 $ .99 1.75 Liter MORGAN JACK DANIELS $ .99 MIR= 750 $19.98 BOURBON 750 ml. 1.75 Liter OR 750 ml. GIN 1800 SILVER REGULAR, FLAVORS ml. 1.75 Liter BOTTLE WITH INSTANT 750 RUM ml. $ .68 SPICED $ .88 1.75 Liter CROWN ROYAL, GIFT $&SET .88 $ ml.JIM .88BEAM RED, WHITE BERRY .99 ELIJAH LESS LESS $5.00 OR$ REPOSADO SEAGRAM’S .28 $ .48$ 750 $3.00 LESS $3.00 1.75 Liter .48 OR PARDOCS BULLEIT RED$ KETEL THREESOME INSTANT $ INCLUDES 2PK BUCKS ON 12 Liters CLUBCUERVO 1.75 Liter CROWN APPLE .99WITH MIR= $19.88 .88CANADIAN ONE CRAIG NEW GLASSES PLUS TEQUILA MIR= 7 $15.99 CROWN RUM MIR= $14.12$ 750 ml. GET A MALFY GINBACARDI BREWER BOURBON $ .88AMSTERDAM WITH INSTANT .99 GOLD SILVER VANILLA INFO@OTTOSWINEANDSPIRITS.COM FREE$5.00 2 LITER COKE BOTANICALS VODKA 1.75 Liter EMAIL US TODAY TO BE ADDED TO THE OTTO’S 7-STORE E-MAIL LIST TO RECEIVE OUR ON-LINE4ONLY SPECIALS! $ $ OR 1.75 .99 WITH INSTANTGOLD, Liter BOURBON 750 ml. SUPERIOR, 12LESS YEAR RYE PackOR 16 BOTTLE 750oz. ml. Cans OR RYE GRAPEFRUIT &JACK ROSE, TEQUILA 750 ml. FREE 6 PK CANS MIR= $14.99 VODKA KORBEL JACK DANIELS ABSOLUT BLACK, OAKHEART $ .88.88 .88 750 ml. LESS $5.00 750 ml. $ .88 $ .88 750$ml.BOMBAY 1.75 Liter1800 SILVER $ PEACH ORANGE 2017 $ .98 DANIELSORRYE ALTOS$PLATA LESS $3.00 GIFT SET 2015 BRANDY OR LIME LIMON .48 INCLUDES 2 BUCKS FREE MI OR VODKA OR REPOSADO OREGON MICRO BREWS DOMESTIC $Liter .99 MIR=ELIJAH $19.88 $ HENRY’S SPARKLING2017 JIM BEAM SAPPHIRE 2017 OREGON 12 Pack $ .98 Liters CUCUMBER MINT 750 ml. 1.75 Liter $MIR= .88 1.75 KIM .12 $15.99 GLASSES PLUS GET A OR REPOSADO O CRAIG BEEFEATER’S TEQUILA CAPTAIN BREWER 2015 VOGA PINOT 750 ml. GIN INSTANT 2017 TANQUERAY WITH INSTANT SMIRNOFF VODKA ELOUAN $WITH .99 FREE 2 LITER COKE LESS CROWN $5.00 WISCONSIN BEER WITH INSTANTMILLER Liter MICRO 1.75 MILLER HIGH OREGON TEQUILA $.28 .99 $ LITE, .68 KOOZIE BOURBON or MONIKER Cans KIM PINOT ROYAL, $ .48 1.75 Liter IMPO CRAWFORDBottles CHARDONNAY 2016 H3 GIN HARD WATER W/TOAD 30 PKHOLLOW SODA/ OR MORGAN BOTTLE OR GRIGIO $ CHARDONNAY GIN OR REGULAR, FLAVORS NOIR LESS $3.00 750 ml. MIR= $19.98 750 ml.
14
13
BEER BEER
29.88
Pack Bottles 6 12 Pack Bottles
$
1.75 Liter
FREE 6 PK CAN WITH 12 PK WITH INSTANT 18 Pack Bottles or Can
TANQUERAY GIN
1800 SILVER REPOSADO TEQUILA
$
19
BUY 1 - GET 2ND 6 PK FREE 12 Pack Cans
12 Pack Bottle 12 Pack Cans
OR
Liter OR12 Pack Cans
12 Pack Bottles
WITH INSTANT
BEER
OR
12 PK
MICRO BREWS
BEER
CAPTAIN MORGAN SPICED RUM
1.75 Liter
Liter
Pa 1212Pack Pack Bottles or Cans 12 12
ON OR RANGER 6 Pack Bottles
6 Pack Bottles 12 Pack Cans
GET A 24 oz. CAN OF ESTRELL JALISCO WITH 12
$ 24.88
13
RYE
750 ml.
12 Pack Ca 12 Pack Bottle 12 Pack
12 Pack
LESS $5.00 MIR= $19.88
750 ml.
FREE 19.2 OZ. CAN OR OF VOODOO
FREE 19.2 OZ. CAN OF VOODOO RANGER ON 12 PK
BLACK WALNUT, NAKED THREESOME OR PARDOCS RED 4 Pack 16 oz. Cans
BEER
OR
24.98
750 ml.
19.88
750 ml.
19.48
NEW BELGIUM
2 LITER COKE BottlesFREE or Cans OR
11
ELIJAH CRAIG BOURBON
$
LIQUOR
$
MALFY GIN
$
WITH INSTANT
750 ml.
10 MICRO WISCONSIN BEER OF THE MONTH OF THE RAISED GRAIN MONTH
12 Pack Bottles or Cans
FREE 19.2 OZ. CAN OF VOODOO RANGER ON 12 PK
NEW GLARUS
12 Pack Cans
13
JIM BEAM BREWER BOTTLE
12 Pack Cans
4 Pack 16 oz.30 Cans Pack Cans
12 Pack Bottles or Cans
5
750 ml.
6 Pack Bottles BLACK WALNUT, NAKED 1.75 Liter 6 Pack Bottles ml.Cans Pack THREESOME OR PARDOCS RED 12750 OR 12 Pack 4 Pack 16 oz. CansBottles OR
Bottles OR 750 ml. 30 Pack CansOR PARDOCS RED 6 Pack THREESOME 30 Pack Cans
FREE KOOZIE
$ 15.99
14.48 12 PK
OR WALNUT, 30 Pack Cans BLACK 1.75 ORLiterNAKEDOR
FREE 6 PK INCLUDES 2 BUCKS MICHELOB LIME CACTUS W/ 12PLUS PK GET A 12GLASSES Pack
DOMESTIC
OR
30 Pack Cans
MIR= $15.99 12 Pack
FREE 6 PK BTLS. OF OR or Cans Liter BANQUET ON Bottles 30 PK 1.75
Liters
$
$3.00 30 LESS Pack Cans
30 Pack Cans 3012 Pack Cans Pack Bottles or Cans OR
30 Pack Cans OR
19.48
RANGER ON 30 Pack Cans
$ 13.58
7
$
FREE 19.2 OZ. CAN OF VOODOO
1.75OR Liter
30 Pack OR Cans
OR
12
1.75 Liter 1.75 Liter
BLACK WALNUT, NAKED 12 Pack C THREESOME OR PARDOCS RED 12 P 1.75 Liter 6 Pack Bottles 4 Pack 16 Cans 12oz. Pack Cans WITH MINT BLACK WALNUT, NAKED CUP OR PARDOCS RED JULEPOR 12THREESOME Pack GET A 24 oz. 750 ml. Bottles4or Cans Pack 16 oz. Cans 1.75 Liter CAN OF ESTREL 1.75 LiterFREE 750 ml. 12 Pack 750 ml. JALISCO WITH 12 KOOZIE Bottles or Cans OR OR
WITH INSTANT
30 Pack Cans
Liters
COORS LIGHT OR BANQUET
$ 19.48
OR
30 Pack Cans
MILLER LITE, MILLER HIGH LIFE REG. DRAFT OR 64 30 Pack Cans LIGHT
WITH INSTANT
30 Pack Cans
15.48
750 ml. ml. 750
KEYSTONE FREE 6 PK BTLS. OF ICE OR BANQUET ON 30 PK LIGHT WITH INSTANT
$ 11.78
BUDWEISER OR BUD LIGHT
30 Pack Cans
30 Pack Cans
$
$ 13.99
12 Pack Cans
14
1.75 Liter
FREE 6 PK CANS HENRY’S SPARKLING HARD WATER W/ 30 PK
WITH INSTANT
MICHELOB ULTRA
6.88
6 PEPSI PRODUCTS
SODA/ OTHER SODA/
OTHER SODA/ OTHER
BEER
MIR= $14.99
1.75 Liter
13
SMIRNOFF VODKA REGULAR, FLAVORS OR RED, WHITE & BERRY
$ 18.99
LESS $3.00 MIR= $15.99
31.88
BOMBAY SAPPHIRE GIN
810 $
BEER
JACK DANIELS GIFT SET
Liters
28.99
$
FREE KOOZIE
12 Pack Cans
12.38
12 Pack
BELLS OBERON
14.68
LAKEFRONT
$
12 14 8
$
6 Pack Bottles
8
INCLUDES 2 BUCKS GLASSES PLUS GET A FREE 2 LITER COKE
12.99
CIDER/MALTERNATIVES
1.75 Liter
28.88
8.78
$
6 Pack Bottles
SPRECHER
6.98
$
LEINENKUGEL’S SUMMER SHANDY, CANOE PADDLER, GRAPEFRUIT VARIETY
12 Pack Bottles
$
OR
8.78
$ .48 7
WHITE CLAW SPARKLING DAILY’S FROZEN POUCHES HARD SELTZER
3/$ .00 3
3
MILWAUKEE BREWING ELYSIAN SPACE DUST HOP HAPPY IPA, LOUISE DEMISE, OR DAY GLOW 6 Pack Bottles MKE IPA OR OUTBORD CREAM ALE
750 ml. ml. 750
$
BUY 1 - GET 2ND 6 PK FREE
WITH INSTANT
30 Pack Cans
OR
WITH INSTANT
17
13 8
OR
4.28
10
750 ml. ml. 750
OR OR 30 Pack Cans
OR
OR
FREE 19.2 OZ. OR 12 Pack 12 Pack Cans 6 Pack Bottles CAN OF VOODOO 12 Pack Bottles or Cans OR Bottles or Cans 12 Pack Cans 16.9 oz. Bottles TONIC OR MIXERS RANGER ON OR OR 12 Pack 30 Pack Cans BLACK WALNUT, NAKED 12 Pack Pack Cans 12Cans Pack 12 PK 30Pack Pack Liter Cans 6 Bottles 6 Pack Bottles 1212 Pack Cans THREESOME OR PARDOCS RED FREE 6 PK OR OR OR 6 Pack Bottles OR 1 - GET 2ND MICHELOB LIME 30 Pack Cans 4 Pack 16 oz. Cans OR 6 Pack Bottles 12 Pack BUY FREE 6 PK 30 Pack Cans Bottles or Cans 1.75 Liter CACTUS W/ 12 PK 12 Pack Bottles 1.75 Liter 30 Pack Cans 6 PK FREE 30 Pack Cans CAN WITH 12 PK 12 Pack BLACK WALNUT, NAKED 6 Pack Bottl WITH INSTANT 1.75 Liter Liter Bottles 1.75 OR or Cans 12 Pack Cans THREESOME OR PARDOCS RED 6 Pack Bottles 18 Pack 4 Pack 16 oz. Cans FREE 6 PK CANS Bottles or Cans 4 Pack 12 Pack Bottles FREE 19.2 OZ. HENRY’S SPARKLING OR 30 Pack Cans 12 Pack 16 oz. Cans 12 Pack Cans CAN Bottles or Cans HARD WATER W/ 30 PK 16.9OF oz.VOODOO Bottles 12 Pack TONIC OR MIXERS RANGER ON Pack Liter 12 Pack Cans Bottles or Cans 12 12 Pack Cans 18 Pack 12 Pack Bottles 30 Pack Cans 12 PK OR 6 Pack Bottles 12 Pack Cans Bottles or Cans 4 Pack OR 6 Pack Bottles OR 16 oz.OR Cans 12 Pack C 12 Pack Cans 750 ml. ml. OR 750 16.9 oz. Bottles OR OR 12 Pack Bottles 30 Pack Cans 30 Pack Cans Liter 30 Pack Cans 1.75 Liter Liter 12 Pack Cans 1.75 6 Pack Bottles 12 Pack Cans 12 Pack Cans OR 6 Pack Bottles 6 Pack BottlesGET A 24 oz. 750 ml. ml. 750 12 Pack Bottles CAN OF ESTRELLA 12 Pack Bottles 30 Pack Cans FREE 6 PK BTLS. OF FREE 19.2 OZ. JALISCO WITH 12 PK OR CAN OF VOODOO BANQUET ON 30 12 PK Pack RANGER ON 12 Pack Bottles Bottles or Cans 12 Pack 12 Pack Bottles OR 12 Pack Bottles 30 Pack Cans 12 PK FREE 19.2 OZ. 1.75 Liter 6 Pack Bottles OR 1.75 Liter CAN OF VOODOO OR 12 Pack Cans ARTOISPEPSI MIR= $14.99 MINT BUY RANGERWITH ON OR VARIETY CANOE PADDLER, WITH INSTANT DAILY’S 76TH AND . . .1. -. GET . . . 2ND . . . . .SPARKLIN ......... CASE 12 Pack MIR= $14.99 ULTRA SCHWEPPES OR PORTER WITHAPPLETON INSTANT AVE. BUDWEISER LIGHT 12 Pack OUTBORD Bottles NEW 12 PKJULEP JULEP CUP 12 Pack Bottles 12 PK FALLS 50% OFF. HARD CUP 16.9 oz. Bottles GRAPEFRUIT TONIC OR MIXERS 30 Pack Cans 30 Pack Cans FROZEN POUCHES PRODUCTS FREE GLASS W15413 MAIN ST., MENOMONEE . . . . . . . SELT . .12 .. OR BUD $ .68 DROP DEAD 750 ml. ml. ALE ON GLARUS 750 $ CREAM .98 Liter FREE 6 PK BUY 1 WITH - GET 2ND OR VARIETY 12 Pack Cans WITH INSTANT 12 PACK PLANK WITH INSTANT LIGHTLIME 12 Pack Cans 15380 WATERTOWN RD. .INSTANT . . . . . . . . .12 . .Pack . . . .Can .. BLONDE 6 Pack Bottles NEW MICHELOB 12 Pack Bottles 12 PK 50% OFF 30 Pack Cans BUY 1 - GET 2ND FREE GLASS 6 Pack Bottles MILWAUKEE SMIRNOFF VODKA FREE 6 PK GLARUS MICHELOB
13
750 ml. ml. 750
1.75 Liter Liter 1.75
12 OR
30 Pack Cans
*NOT ALL ITEMS AVAILABLE AT ALL LOCATIONS. AD EXPIRES 4/22/19
10 10
750 ml.
$
15
18
1.5 Liter Liter 1.5 750 ml.
7 LOCATIONS TO SERVE YOU!
16
1.5 Liter Liter 1.5
10.98
6 Pack Bottles
OR
$
750 ml. ml. 750
750 ml. ml. 750
WITH INSTANT POINT AMBER, MICHELOB MILK SHAKE ULTRA PORTER OR DROP DEAD BLONDE
17.48
MIXERS
750 ml. ml. 750
OR 1.75 Liter
816
12 Pack Bottles or Cans
750 ml. OR
30 Pack Cans
OR
INCLUDES 2 BUCKS 1.75 LiterGLASSES PLUS GET A
Liters BLACK WALNUT, NAKED FREE 2 LITER COKE 750 ml. THREESOME 1.75 LiterOR PARDOCS RED 4 Pack 16 oz. Cans
1.75 Liter
OR 30 30 Pack Pack Cans CansLESS $5.00 MIR= $14.99 1.75 Liter Liters
30 Pack Cans
OR
30 Pack Cans
1.75 Liter
30 Pack Cans
750 ml. ml. 750
30 Pack Cans
OR
Liter
750 ml.
LESS $5.00 OR MIR= $19.88
OR
FREE 6 PK CANS 1.75 Liter FREE 6 PK BTLS. OF HENRY’S SPARKLING OR HARD WATER W/ 30 PKBANQUET ON 30 PK
750 ml.
750 ml. ml. 750
1.75 Liter
SCHWEPPES
99¢
750 ml.
WITH INSTANT
750 ml.
MIR= $14.12 OR
OR
15 12
1.75 Liter
12
1.75 Liter
750ml. ml. 750 750 ml.
12 Pack Bottles or Cans
1.75 Liter
LIQU
750 ml.
1.75 Liter OR
30 Pack Cans
FREE 6 PK CANS 1.75 Liter HENRY’S SPARKLING 750 ml. OR 750 ml. ml. 750 ml. HARD WATER W/ 3030 PKPack Cans 750
$
OR
750 ml.
750 ml.
$
6
8
750 ml.OR 30 Pack Cans
1.75 Liter
750 ml. OR
FREE 6 PK MICHELOB LIME CACTUS W/ 12 PK
LESS $5.00 MIR= $19.98
750 ml.
750 ml. ml. 750
SODA/ OTHER
1.75 Liter
12.88
ESTRELLA JALISCO
12 Pack Cans
$
GET A 24 oz. CAN OF ESTRELLA JALISCO WITH 12 PK
STELLA ARTOIS
13.98
12 Pack Bottles
$
CIDER/MALTERNATIVES
12.99
12 Pack Cans
$
FREE 6 PK CAN WITH 12 PK WITH INSTANT
18 Pack Bottles or Cans
$
BUY 1 - GET 2ND 6 PK BUYFREE 1 - GET 2ND
WITH INSTANT
12 Pack Bottles
$ 10.88
6 Pack Bottles
COOLER OF THE MONTH SEAGRAMS VARIETY
SODA/ OTHER
17.88
$
SEAGRAM’S VODKA
1.75 Liter
11.98
WITH INSTANT
$
750 ml.
18.48
MILAGRO SILVER OR REOSADO TEQUILA
$
IMPORT
WITH INSTANT
IMPORT OF THE MONTH
CORONA
13.78
$
FREE GLASS ON 12 PACK
11
8
8 77 STRAWBERRY, 6.00 LEMONADE $ .38LOCATIONS TO SERVE 88 7 Y 11VARIETY 11 3 99 99WITH INSTANT 12 244 4 WITH INSTANT3 $ .48 18 12 $ .88 77
19 3/$
BLONDE $ INSTANT17.68$6.88 WITH $ .88
CACTUS W/ 12MICHELOB PK LIME
WITH INSTANT
MIKE’S
11.88
FREE 6 PK
$
LESS $5.00 $5.00 LESS MIR= $19.88 $19.88 MIR=
FREE ZOO TICKET PRICE WITH INSTANT
750 ml. ml. 750
12 Pack Bottles or Cans
12 PackMICHELOB
12 Pack Bottles or Cans
CACTUS W/ 12 PK 4600 ON W. 12 BROWN DEER RD. ..................... WITH. INSTANT PACK CAN 6 PK FREE WITH 12 PK 12 Pack Cans BREWING WITH INSTANT 8850 N. PORT WASHINGTON RD. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . WITH INSTANT ELYSIAN WITH INSTANT WITH INSTANT INSTANT WITHWITH INSTANT BUD HAPPY IPA, SPACE DUST HOPMILWAUKEE WITH INSTAN BON & VIV BREWING ELYSIAN *NOT ALL ITEMS AVAILABLE ATMIKE’S ALL LOCATIONS POINT AMBER, WITH INSTANT 12 DEMISE, OR DAY GLOW WHITE CLAW 12 Pack 12 Pack BREWER WATER HOP HAPPY IPA, SPIKED SELTZERS SPACE DUST LOUISE MICHELOB MILKPOINT SHAKE 6 Pack Bottles BON & VIV Bottles or Cans Bottles or Cans 8 oz OR MKE IPA OF THE MONTH AMBER, 12 Pack Cans 1.75 Liter Liter SPARKLING DAILY’S COOLER PEPSI CASEPORTER LOUISE DEMISE, OR DAY GLOW 1.75 ULTRA OR SCHWEPPES SPIKED SELTZERS 750 ml. ml. 750 MICHELOB OUTBORD CA 6 Pack Bottles 16.9 oz. Bottles MILK SHAKE 12 Pack Bottles TONIC OR MIXERS HARD SELTZER FROZEN POUCHES OR MKE IPA SEAGRAMS VARIETY PRODUCTS 12 Pack Cans 30 Pack Cans DROP DEAD ULTRA LESS $3.00 OR PORTER Liter CREAM ALE STR 12 Pack Cans 12 Pack Cans LESS $3.00 OUTBORD FREE 6 PK 12 Pack Bottles 30 Pack Cans BLONDE 6 CREAM Pack Bottles DROP DEAD MIR= $15.99 $15.99 MICHELOB LIME LEM MIR= ALE
OR ULTRAOR
Bottles or CansULTRA 1.75 Liter Liter 1.75
18
7
12 Pack Cans
12.38
6
1.75 Liter Liter 1.75
1.75 Liter Liter 1.75
BUY 1 - GET 112ND $ 6 PK FREE $
WITH INSTANT
6 Pack Bottles
BON & VIV SPIKED SELTZERS
10 7 $LOCATION 10 .88 FREE 6 PK $8.78 13 .99 $ .48 17 12 $ .99 $ .98 14 $ .48.98 CANADIAN CLUB W63 N154 .00 AVE., C$ CAN WITH 12 PK $ .48 3/$ CAPTAIN 13 KETEL ONE $ .88 12 ¢ TANQUERAY 24 2 $ .88 NEW WITH INSTANT $ .28 17 15 3 WASHINGTON BACARDI RUM 3476 OAKLAND AVE. . $ . 12 . . . . . .3 .. $ .99 $ 4750 .48 ml. WITH INSTANT BOTANICALS $ $ .99 WITH INSTANT MORGAN WITH INSTANT 99 $ .48 30 GIN REGULAR, FLAVORS .88 13$ .99 AMSTERDAM 7 BUDRYE VODKA CIDER/MALTERNATIVES 12 LIGHT RITAS 15 76TH AND APPLETON AVE. . . . . SPICED RUM RED, WHITE & BERRY SUPERIOR, 12 YEAR GOLD, 6 SEAGRAM’S 13RUMLOCALLY CIDER/MALTERNATIVES MIKE’S COOLER OF THE $ .88 W15413 MAINMONTH ST., MENOMONEE GRAPEFRUIT & ROSE, EMPLOYEE OWNED VODKA VODKA MALFY GIN $ .88 12 Pack BLACK, OAKHEART $ 28 ORANGE $OR $ WATERTOWN .99 SEAGRAMS VARIETYPLANK RD. 15380 CHATA WHITE $ 12 Pack.88 $8 oz. Cans .88 BREWER WATER 24 1.75 Liter CLAW PEACH 10.98 $ .78 18.99 $ .98 .88 . . . . OR LIME LIMON 4600 W. BROWN $ DEERTO 7or3/$ LOCATIONS $ .99 $ .88 Bottles Cans 12 10 .98.98 8$8SPARKLING $ .48$ 11RD. .78 .12 DAILY’S $Liter CUCUMBER MINT PEPSI 10 $ $11 .00 19CASE $ 12 .99 SCHWEPPES 1.75 8850 N. PORT WASHINGTON .48 $ .48 W63 N154 WASHINGTON AVE., CEDARBURG . . . RD. ... ¢ 2 18 $ LINE .38 $ .28 12 3 17 750 ml. $ .48 $ .48 CAPE HARD 16.9INSTANT oz. Bottles $ 4 .48 99 HARD $ WITH .88 INSTANT 12 8 WITH 17 SELTZER TONIC OR MIXERS FROZEN POUCHES WITH INSTANT PRODUCTS RYE
OR
750 ml. ml. 750 CACTUS W/ 12 PK $ .98
$
SODA/ BEER LIQUOR LIQUOROTHER
750 ml. ml. 750
WITH INSTANT
750 ml.
BEER
1.75 Liter
750 ml.
TONIC
750 ml. ml. 750
OR
OR
12
750 ml. ml. 750
9 11
750 ml. ml. 750
BREWER WATER CASE
750 ml. ml. 750
8
8
16.9 oz. Bottles
19
750 ml. ml. 750
$ .98 2
6
750 ml. ml. 750
13
750 ml. ml. 750
W63 N154 WASHINGTON AVE., CEDARBURG . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .262-377-4360 3476 OAKLAND AVE. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .414-961-1383 76TH AND APPLETON AVE. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .414-536-0100 W15413 MAIN ST., MENOMONEE FALLS . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .262-255-0057 15380 WATERTOWN PLANK RD. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .262-784-3545 4600 W. BROWN DEER RD. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .414-354-5831 8850 N. PORT WASHINGTON RD. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .414-540-1190
WINE WINE BEER
750 ml. ml. 750
LOCALLY EMPLOYEE OWNED
750 ml. ml. 750
LIQUOR
28 Full Service, Full Selection 18 $ .48 Serving NEWthe Milwaukee Area Since 1945 $ 17.78 29 19 31 19 19 29SPECIALS! 19 15 EMAIL US TODAY TO BE ADDED TO THE OTTO’S 7-STORE E-MAIL LIST TO RECEIVE OUR 18 ON-LINE ONLY INFO@OTTOSWINEANDSPIRITS.COM 28 BELGIUM 24 28 18 29 10 17 19 12 WITH INSTANT 19 15 24 17 12 $ 24.78 28 LIFE REG. 19 64 DRAFT PINOT NOIR 15 $HEINEKEN .88THE OF MONTH 19 CROWN APPLE OF THE C MONIKER $ .88 JACK DANIELSCUERVO VOGA PINOT WITH INSTANT SAUVIGNON CABERNET SPICED RUM TOAD HOLLOW 18 MOSCATO ROSE OR 1800 SILVER RED, WHITE & GRAIN BERRY 29 OR $LIGHT .48MONTH ELOUAN BOMBAY 31 GOLD SILVER VANILLA $ .99 $ .99 OTHER RAISED ESTRELLA SEAGRAM’S SEAGRAM’S GIFT SET BLANC $ .48 WITH INSTANT WITH INSTANT 18 Pack MICRO PAULANER 2016 H3 $ .48 ELIJAH BULLEIT REPOSADO $ 19 .88 $ CRAWFORD .99 COORS WOODFORD 15 BREWS DOMESTIC JIM TEQUILA SAPPHIRE JACK GRIGIO OR WITH INSTANT $ .99 CHARDONNAY CHARDONNAY KORBEL 29 ROSA ABSOLUT 7 CROWN VODKA 19 $28.4819 NEW $ BEAM .88 $MALFY .99GIN BANFI $ .58 PINOT NOIR CRAIG BOURBON 8 TEQUILA $ .99 $ .48 $ .98 BOURBON $ .99 DANIELS RYE ALTOS PLATA BREWER GIN LESS $5.00 Bottles or Cans 15 BRANDY 14 REGALE 4 Pack VODKA $ WISCONSIN .99 $ SAUVIGNON RYE 24 750 ml. JALISCO 24 CABERNET BELGIUM BEER 8 .88 SPARKLING MILLER HIGH MICRO BOURBON .99 18$3.00 MILLER LITE, MIR= WITH .88 6 MOSCATO 750 ml. REPOSADO $14.99 ROSE 8 LIGHTOR$OR BOTTLE 91 PTS. PTS. $BEEFEATER’S 28 91 $ .88 $ MINT .98 LESS $5.00 WITH 64 INSTANT LIFE $ JULEP CUP ml. 12 REG.750MICRO 12 .88 LESS DRAFT 16MONTH oz. Cans BREWS DOMESTIC TEQUILA $ MIR= .99$19.88 OF THE Pack OFMIR= THE WINE ENTHUSIAST ENTHUSIAST $ 12 .48 Cans $ $ .48 .78 90 PTS. 19 BLANC $REG. $19.99 GIN 750 ml. WINE 17 11 90 PTS. 750 ml. $ WINE .99 $ 29 $15.99 WITH INSTANT BANQUET $ .48 INCLUDES 2 BUCKS .98 LIGHT 15 19 8 31.88 WINE SPECTATOR ESTRELL INSTANT $ .99 WITH WITHROSA INSTANT $ .99 SPECTATOR WISCONSIN BEER REG. $17.99 750 ml. MICRO COORS MILLER HIGH RAISED GRAIN CAPTAIN MILLER LITE, MONTH BANFI GLASSES PLUS GET A IMPO $ .58 19 TANQUERAY 24 WITH INSTANT $ .88 SMIRNOFF VODKA $ .88 $64 LIGHT .48REG.$ WITH INSTANT JALISC .99 $ .99 SEAGRAM’S $ .48 15 SPRECHER WITH INSTANT CHATEAU WITH INSTANT LIFE REG. $10.99 DRAFT LAKEFRONT BULLEIT $ .98 FREE 2 LITER COKE $ .48 MORGAN OF THE MONTH OF THE 13 $ .88 C 11 WOODFORD 30 30 Pack$Cans.99 19 19 $ .48 REGULAR, FLAVORS 2912 Pack CansGIN NEW 7 CROWN JACK DANIELS BANQUET LIGHT BOURBON MICHELLE 1800RED, SILVER SPICED RUM EVOLUTION SPRECHER BOURBON LAKEFRONT 6 PackSTE. Bottles RAISED GRAINREGALE $ .99 MONTH 14 $ . BOMBAY WHITE & BERRY $ FREE .48 GIFT SET BELGIUM MILAGRO SILVER WITH INSTANT RYE 91 PTS. ROSE SEAGRAM’S ELIJAH 6 PK CANS 12 REPOSADO $ .88$19.99 JIM BEAM SAPPHIRE 19 $$ .48 WITH INSTANT WHITE $ VODKA .88 RUM NEW SPARKLING FREE $ .48 $ .98 MALFY GIN HENRY’S SPARKLING WHISPERING REOSADO REG. $ .38 CRAIG MICRO DOMESTIC TEQUILA19 $BREWER .88 BERINGER 14 $ BELGIUM 28 176BREWS SANTA GIN $ .78 CHATA KOOZIE 12 HARD WATER W/$ 30 PK .99 $$ WINE .98 ENTHUSIAST $$ .98 ANGEL 90.99 PTS. INSTANT TEQUILA KEYSTONE 750 ml. $ .38 24 BOURBON WITH .99 CAPTAIN 18 WITH INSTANT MARGHERITA BOTTLE WITH INSTANT 8 TANQUERAY 24 $ .88 $ .88 SMIRNOFF VODKA 28 WISCONSIN BEER INSTANT MICRO MILLER HIGH MILLER LITE, ICE GET 24 oz. COORS KNIGHTS VALLEY LESS $5.00 $.58 .78 IM ROSE $WITHAREGULAR, .88 MORGAN WINE SPECTATOR 7 REG. $17.99 $ $11 9 KEYSTONE LESS $3.00 $.98 CARMENET GIN 64 LIGHT $.88 PINOT GRIGIO FLAVORS 19.88 REG. LEINENKUGEL’S WITHCOORS INSTANT $ .48.48 ESTRELL 8MONTH $19.88 RUM LIGHT 29 $ DRAFT .48 INCLUDES 2 BUCKS OF13 THE WITH INSTANT $.88 30 OF THE BELLS $15.99 31 CHARDONNAY 18 $MIR= SPICED .99 CABERNET RED,MIR= WHITE & BERRY CANLIFE OF ESTRELLA $REG. STELLA SUMMER SHANDY, 18 ARTOIS LIGHT GLASSES PLUS.58 GET A SEAGRAM’S $10.99 JALISCO 19 BANQUET OBERON LIGHT WITH INSTANT .78 $ .88$CHATEAU 15 91 PTS. PTS. WINE WINE FREE 6 PK BTLS. OF $18.48 WITH INSTANT RAISED GRAIN RUM SPRECHER MONTH WITH INSTANT 91 CANOE PADDLER, LAKEF FREE 13 2 LITER COKEDOS $ .99 MALFY GIN BUDWEISER $ .48 VODKA $ .88 BANQUET $ .99 11 28JACK JALISCO WITH 12 BUD PKNEW ENTHUSIAST ICE OR .99 WITH CHATA SPRECHER GRAPEFRUIT ENTHUSIAST LAKEFRONT STE. MICHELLE DANIELS .8 16BANQUET ON 30 PK $ .68INSTANT$$ $ .48 19 $ .48 $18 24 1800 $ SOL EVOLUTION 19SILVER VARIETY $ WITH INSTANT 12 .98 $48 MAIL IN REBATE 14.48 $ .9 GIFT SET $ .88 ELIJAH $ LIGHT .48BOMBAY 14 6 $ $ .98 MILAGRO SILVER NEW 19.48 13 REPOSADO EQUIS .98 BELGIUM $ BAILEY’S .38 WITH6$INSTANT JIM BEAM 19 ROSE SAPPHIRE FREE 6 PK CANS 19FREE 12 ON A CASE LIGHT 11 REG. $24.99 Bottles GLARUS MICRO BREWS IMPORT DOMESTIC KEYSTONE REOSADO WHITE 6 CRAIG 12 $ .99FREE12 Pack LEINENKUGEL’S TEQUILA 18 WITH INSTANT WITH INSTANT KEYSTONE $ .48 6 PK BTLS. OF HENRY’S SPARKLING BREWER GIN WITH INSTANTWHISPERING $ MICHELOB .99 750ICE ml. 15 IRISH CREAM Bottles 12 KOOZIEMILWAUKEE TEQUILA BELLS $ .78 30 Pack Cans WITH INSTANT BANQUET ONBEER 30$ PK12 Pack ICE HARD WATER W/MICRO 30 PK 750 ml. SANTA FREE 19.2 OZ. WISCONSIN BOTTLE WITH INSTANTBOURBON HIGH MILLER LITE, $MILLER 28 IMPORT THE M STELLA LIGHT LIGHT BREWING BREAD & INSTANT JACK ELYSIAN .88 ULTRA ESTR SUMMER SHANDY, DANIELS 13.99 $8 $LEINENKUGEL’S .78OFCIDER INSTANT BERINGER WITH LEINENKUGEL’S WITH WITHINSTANT INSTANT $ BOMBAY .88 ANGEL COORS 1800 SILVER LIFE REG. BE BELLS 64OBERON DRAFT CAN OF VOODOO $CORONA $ WITH .58 OF THE MONTH OF THE $2LIGHT .48 HOP HAPPY IPA,.88 BON KENDALL MARKHAM CLOUDLINE ORSTELLA MOD SPACE DUST 29 $ .48 INCLUDES BUCKS GIFT SET .99 MARGHERITA SUMMER SHANDY, YELLOW SUMMER SHANDY, JAL BUTTER MILAGRO SILVER SANTA RITA $ &OBE VIV 31 .88 ELIJAH .99 REPOSADO OBERON $$ .88 .78 POINT $ AMBER, LIGHT 24 BAREFOOT $ .78 JIM BEAM SAPPHIRE LOUISE DEMISE, 18 DAY GLOW 13 $ .78 ARTOIS GLASSES PLUS GET A ARTOIS 19 KNIGHTS VALLEY CANOE PADDLER, JACKSON SAUVIGNON PINOT TAIL WINES BAILEY’S CHARDONNAY, RANGER ON 120 WINES SPIKED SELTZE CANOE PADDLER, RAISED GRAIN REOSADO ROSE CANOE PADDLER, MONTH BUDWEISER CRAIG .48 WITH 15 TEQUILA MICHELOB MILK SHAKE .98 12 INSTANT Pack BANQUET BUDWEISER $ MKE IPA BREWER GIN FREE$$ 211 LITER COKE 11 CARMENET WINES GRAPEFRUIT BUDWEISER PINOT .99 CHARDONNAY BLANC GRIGIO NOIR SPRECHER IRISH CREAM LAKEFRONT FR TEQUILA BUD $ GRAPEFRUIT 10 OR ULTRA BOURBON PORTER WITH $INSTANT 12 Pack Bottles .78 OUTBORD 19 PINOT 12 PK BUD 750 ml. BOTTLE $$12 $ NOIR .48 OR .98 NEW $ .68 .78 CABERNET WITH 28 INSTANT $$13 14 O LIGHT DROP DEAD VARIETY 750 ml. $ .88 8VARIETY GRAPEFRUIT CREAM ALE $ .97 14 14 $WITH INSTANT $ LIGHT .88 NEW CABERNET $ .99 CHARDONNAY 12GET.99 13 NEW .88 BELGIUM $ .98 .68 $ FREE $ .48 BLONDE 750 ml.$24 29 GLARUS $ $ .38 $ .48 .48 $ 6 PK CANS $OR BUD .48 $ .65 $ .48 19.48.98 8 $.48 .99 $ .99 3 $ DOMESTIC A 24 $17.4831 FREE .48 MICRO BREWS IMPORT 18 GLARUS 750 ml. 6 $ 19 WITH INSTANT 8 12 HENRY’S SPARKLING 91 PTS. WINE $ .48 12 $ .99 KEYSTONE BUY 1 GET 2ND 15 10 10 13 CAN OF ES OR VARIETY $ .99 WITH INSTANT 15 WITH INSTANT $ .48 $ .88 MILWAUKEE MICHELOB $ .78 $WITH .88INSTANT FREE 6 PK BTLS. OF $KOOZIE .99 WITHWITH HARD WATER W/ 30 PK WITH INSTANT 7 LIGHT WITH INSTANT HEINEKEN INSTANT 12 JALISCO WIT WITH INSTANT INSTANT $ .99 ICE WISCONSIN BEER MICRO 10 BREWING ELYSIAN HIGH 613 NEW ULTRA ENTHUSIAST MILLER LITE, MILLER MILWAUK BANQUET ON 30 PK MICHELOB 8WITH15 WITH INSTANT IMPORT OF THEHOP MONTH $ SPACE .99 ESTRELLA WITH INSTANT 12 Pack Bottles PK 50% IPA, OFF CIDER/ COORS LIGHT HAPPY DUST 12 .58 30 Pack Cans LIFE REG. $ OF.48 64 LEINENKUGEL’S DRAFT BREWING ELYSIAN WITH INSTANT FREE GLASS ULTRA BON & VIV CLAW 13 OF THE$BREWER MONTH WATER THE LIGHT JALISCO CORONA OR MODELO INSTANT POINT AMBER, BELLS WHITE $48 MAIL IN REBATE LOUISE DEMISE, DAY GLOW STEL MICRO IMPORT DOMESTIC 13 LIGHT CANADIAN CLUB SELTZER GLARUS SPARKLING DAILY’S HOP SPACE DUST SPIKED PEPSI SHANDY, CASE .98 SCHWEPPESMILK SHAKE SUMMER MICHELOB $BREWS $ HAPPY .4 OBERON WITH MKEINSTANT IPA RAISED GRAIN MONTH BANQUET KETEL ONE $ .78 ON 12 PACK POINT AMBER, $ .99 HARD SELTZER ARTO FROZEN POUCHES NEW PRODUCTS $ .48 CANOE PADDLER, 10 SPRECHER LOUISE DEM ULTRA DAY GLOW BACARDI RUM PORTER LAKEFRONT ON A CASE $ .88 16 $ .78 WISCONSIN BEER OUTBORD BUDWEISER $ VODKA .48 HIGH MICRO FREE GLASS MILLER $ LITE, MILLER 12 Pack GOLD, Cans 11 IMPORT OF THE MONTH $ .99 REG. $24.99 MICHELOB $ .98 BOTANICALS MILK SHAKE $ .98 19 .48 3/$ .00 DROP DEAD 12 YEAR RYE AMSTERDAM SUPERIOR, NEW GRAPEFRUIT MKE IPA $ .78 8 12 CREAM ON 12$ PKALE .68 $ 12.38 BUD $ LIFE REG.INSTANT 64 DRAFT 14 ¢ 2 $ .48 OF THE MONTH $ .28 WITH OF THE CORONA MODELO 10 3 ULTRA PORTER .48 BLONDE $ GRAPEFRUIT & ROSE, VODKA $ 99 $ oz. .78 VARIETY WITH INSTANT OUTBOR $ 13 .38 BELGIUM WITH INSTANT 14 BLACK, OAKHEART 12 LIGHT 17 4DEAD 19 MILWAUKEE FREE 6 PK CANS GET A$24 MICHELOB PEACH ORANGE OR $LIGHT .88MONTH $ .88 13A OR DROP RAISED GRAIN .48 6.98 NEW 8 $LIMON OR WITH 12 CREAM FREE OR .99 $ WITH INSTANTKEYSTONE FREE 6 PK HENRY’S SPARKLING CAN OF ESTRELLA LIME $ .48 WITH INSTANT FREE GLASS 10 7INSTANT FREE 6 PK BTLS. OF$ WITH INSTANT $GLARUS INSTANT .78WITH INSTANT KOOZIE $WITH .78 .99 19.48 CUCUMBER MINT $ 12 .48 DOS MICHELOB LIME HARD WATER W/ 30 PK BREAD & JALISCO PK NEW $BLONDE $ELYSIAN .12 6.88 $ .48 ICE HEINEKEN BUY - GET12 2ND ON 121WITH PK BREWING BANQUET ON 30 PK 8 ULTRA 17 14 CACTUS W/ 12 PK 12 WITH INSTANT ESTRELLA $ .48 EQUIS WITH INSTANT WITH INSTANT 13 15 17 PAULANER 6 PK FREE BELGIUM LIGHT MILWAUKEE $ .68 COORS MICHELOB WHITE CLAW KENDALL MARKHAM CLOUDLINE BREWER WATER $ .99 WITH INSTANT CROWN12 ROYAL, $ .58 $ELYSIAN .88 YELLOW BUTTER WITH INSTANT LEINENKUGEL’S 7.88 BELLS SANTA RITA FREE LESS $3.00 $3.00 Pack WITH13 INSTANT JALISCO $ INSTANT HAPPY WITH INSTANT SPARKLING LESS BREWING DAILY’S 7SPACE LOCATIONS TO S LIGHT WITH PEPSI CASE ULTRA STELLA SODA/OTHER CIDE SCHWEPPES 19 HOP IPA, SHANDY, SPACE DUST WITHKOOZIE INSTANT SUMMER 6 BAREFOOT 13 CUERVO CROWN APPLE $ .78 18.28 OBERON MIR= $14.12 BANQUET$ $ SELTZER FROZEN POUCHES $ HOP .48 JACKSON SAUVIGNON PINOT .78 PRODUCTS HEINEKEN MIR= $14.12 HAPPY IPA, HARD DUST ARTOIS BON & VIV TAIL WINES CANOE PADDLER, CHARDONNAY, OR OR Bottles or Cans 120 WINES BON & 8 OR GOLD SILVER OR VANILLA SPRECHER W63 N154 WASHINGTON AVE., CEDARBURG . . . . . . ..V . BUDWEISER ESTRELLA LAKEFRONT WITH INSTANT $ .98 COOLER OF THE MONTH 10 POINTBLANC AMBER, $ .88DAY GLOW 16 POINTWINES AMBER, $ BREWER .98 11750$ml.DEMISE, WATER GRAPEFRUIT COORS 3/$ PAULANER .00 LOUISE DEMISE, .58 LOUISE OR DAY TEQUILA JACK ¢ SCHWEPPES 1.5 Liter 2 5 BUD $$3476.28 .68 OAKLAND AVE. .NOIR . . .3 .IPA . . . . . OR . . . . . .$SPIKED . . . DAILY’S . . ..38 . . SEL ... 12 CHARDONNAY NOIRGLOW MICHELOB MILK SHAKE JALISCO $ .98 LIGHT PEPSI CASE KORBEL ABSOLUT $ .48 MKE $ .98 PINOT 13 SPIKED SELTZERS VARIETY 99 WITH INSTANT 12 4 1.5 Liter 14 $ .98 $WITH .4813 WITH LIGHT $ .38 10 INSTANT $$ .98 ULTRA 76TH .78 AND APPLETON AVE.INSTANT . . . . . . . . .FROZEN . . . . INSTANT . . . . POU ..... MILK SHAKE PORTER DANIELS RYE TONIC MIXERS ALTOS6 PLATA Packml. Bottles19 BANQUET NEW OR PRODUCTS 750 ml. 750.98 ml. 750 BRANDY WITH $ OUTBORD OR VODKA MICHELOB GET A 24 oz. SPRECHER LAKEFRONT $ .98 FREE IPA$ OR FREE $ ESTRELLA .88 SEAGRAMS VARIETY 16 $ 12$DROP INSTANT $ GLARUS 24$5.00 12.97 Pack Cans OR REPOSADO .886 KEYSTONE FREE 6 PK BTLS. OF DEAD CABERNET $MKE.99 W15413 ST., MENOMONEE FALLS ON . WITH . 3/$ . .GLASS .PACK .12 . . . ..0 ... CAN OF12 $ .98 OR 8 MAIN BEEFEATER’S CREAM5 ALE 12 $12 .486 PK $ $ .99 .48 DOS LESS $5.00 JALISCO WITH 12 PK15380 WATERTOWN ¢ LESS $ 2 .48 TEQUILA $ BLONDE OR PORTER $750 .28 .48 PLANK . . . . . . . . . . . .3 ..... $ $19.48 $$19.98 .65 GIN ULTRA $ICE .48 $ .38 MICHELOB $ LIME .98 BANQUET ON 30 PK ml.RD. .SOL WITH INSTANT 12 $ .78 19.48OUTBORD 15 BUY 1 - GET 2ND Pack MILWAUKEE MIR= $19.98 EQUIS 99 12 Bottles MIR= 4 15.99DROP $$ 17 .99 .99 LIGHTKEYSTONE CACTUSLEINENKUGEL’S W/ 126 PK 12 W. BROWN DEER . . . . . . . . . TO . . . WITH . CAN . . FREE . 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14
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19
12
W63 N154 WASHINGTON . . . . . . .262-377-4360 13 AVE., CEDARBURG . . . . . . . . .$. . . . . ..88 3476 OAKLAND AVE. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .414-961-1383 8 $ .88 76TH AND APPLETON AVE. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .414-536-0100 LOCALLY EMPLOYEE OWNED$ .48 MORGAN GIN $ SPRECHER OR REGULAR, FLAVORS LAKEFRONT $ .98 .88 16 12 5 W15413 MAIN ST., MENOMONEE FALLS . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .262-255-0057 SPICED RUM 1.75 Liter RED, WHITE & BERRY $ Liter $ WITH INSTANT 1.75 1.75 Liter 6.98 12$.38 .88 RUM 15380 WATERTOWN PLANK RD. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .SEAGRAM’S . VODKA . . . . . . . . . . . . .262-784-3545 DOS $ .88 SOL .99 EQUIS $ CHATA 1.75 Liter LEINENKUGEL’S BELLS 4600 W. STELLA BROWN DEER RD. . . . $. . . ..78 . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .414-354-5831 750 ml. SUMMER SHANDY, OBERON $ ARTOIS $ .98 13 LESS $5.00 CANOE PADDLER, $3.00 10.88 LESS $ .48 8850 N. PORT WASHINGTON RD. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .414-540-1190 MIR= GRAPEFRUIT $19.88 $ .68 MIR= $15.99 $ .98 VARIETY 6 Pack Pack Bottles Bottles 6
.48
8.99
30 Pack Pack Cans Cans 30
3
$
13
BANQUET
$
12 Pack 8 oz. Cans
24.98
$
7.48
29
14
.28 431 2 2
$
6 Pack Bottles
19 715LOCATIONS 19TO SERVE YOU!
MICRO BREWS$ $ .48
DOMESTIC
19
28
$
19.98 24
.28
6 Pack Cans
¢ 99 29
$
15
$
BUD LIGHT RITAS
.98
CAPE LINE HARD STRAWBERRY, LEMONADE VARIETY
2
$
OR
AVE. . . . . . *NOT . . . . .ALL . ZOO . . ITEMS .TICKET . . . . .AVAILA . . .OR .. CACTUS W/ 12 PK WITH INSTANT CROWN ROYAL, $ .48 EMPLOYEE OWNED PRICE WITH INSTANT 6 PK FREE WITHLOCALLY INSTANT JACK DANIELS WITHBUD INSTANT Liter WITH INSTANT APPLETON AVE.LIGHT . . . . .RITAS .............. 12$3.00 Pack Cans 12 Pack Cans LESS WITH INSTANT 1800 SILVER WITH INSTANT WITH INSTANT76TH ANDMIKE’S BOMBAY BUD12 LIGHT CUERVO CROWN APPLE OR GIFT SET Pack RITAS MILAGRO SILVER $ .99 OR REPOSADO ELIJAH WHITE CLAW 12 Pack W15413 MAIN ST., MENOMONEE FALLS . . . . . . . .. MIKE’S BREWER WATER JIM BEAM SAPPHIRE Liters oz. Cans Liters MIR= $14.12DAILY’S $ .99 WHITE CLAW 12 Pack OR REOSADO Bottles or Cans12 8Pack BAILEY’S BREWER WATEROR TEQUILA SPARKLING CRAIG PEPSI CASE Cans SCHWEPPES OR GOLD SILVER 15380 Bottles WATERTOWN PLANK RD. .HARD .............. OR VANILLA Cans 8 oz. BREWER GIN CASE FREE SPARKLING PEPSI 1.75 Liter Liter $ .99 CAPE LINE TEQUILA IRISHPRODUCTS CREAM 16.9 1.75 oz. Bottles $ or.88 .88CAPE 1.75 TONIC ORSCHWEPPES MIXERS SELTZER FROZENDAILY’S POUCHES HARD Liter BOURBON 1.75 Liter LINE HARD 16.9 oz. Bottles Liter $ TONIC OR MIXERS HARD SELTZER BOTTLE FROZEN POUCHES 4600 W. BROWN DEER RD. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 750 ml. PRODUCTS 750 ml. Liter Liter 750 ml. STRAWBERRY, 750 ml. 12 Pack Cans 12 Pack Cans OR TEQUILA 750 ml. JACK 750 ml. ml. Liter ZOO TICKET $ ABSOLUT .88 3/$ .00 STRAWBERRY, 12 Pack Cans 12 Pack Cans 750 KORBEL $ .98 $$ .98.88 N154 WASHINGTON AVE.,N. CEDARBURG . LEMONADE . . . . . . RD. . . . .. .. .. .. .. .. .. .. .. .. .. .2623/$W63 .00 PORT .... ¢ $ $ .88 $ .388850 INCLUDES 2 2 BUCKS BUCKS $ .48 FREE WASHINGTON LEMONADE $ .48 INCLUDES ¢ 750 ml. $.28.28 $ .99 PRICE$WITH INSTANT RYE ALTOS PLATA WITH INSTANT 3476 OAKLAND AVE. .38 . . . . . . . .ZOO . ZOO .FREE . .TICKET . .6. .Pack . OR . . OR .VARIETY . .VARIETY . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .414GLASSES PLUS PLUS GET GETDANIELS A GLASSES A BRANDY OR VODKA TICKET *NOT Pack $ FREE 2 2 LITER LITER COKE COKE WITH INSTANT WITH76TH INSTANTAND APPLETON FREE AVE. . PRICE . PRICE . . WITH . .WITH .INSTANT . INSTANT .ALL .Cans . . ITEMS . . .6Cans .Pack .6Cans .AVAILABLE .$. . . .48 . . . .48 . .AT . . ALL . . . .LOCATI . .414EMPLOYEE OWNED 750 ml. WITH INSTANT 1.75 Liter LOCALLY WITH INSTANT OR REPOSADO WITH INSTANT BEEFEATER’S W15413 MAIN ST., MENOMONEE FALLS . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .262LESS $5.00 TEQUILA GIN 15380 WATERTOWN PLANK RD. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .262264285004 253587001 MIR= $19.98 750 ml. 1.75 Liter 4600 W. BROWN DEER RD. . . . . . . . . . . WITH . . . . . .INSTANT . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .414WISCONSIN BEER MILLER LITE, MILLER HIGH MICRO IMPORT OF THE MONTHW63W63 N154 WASHINGTONAVE., AVE., CEDARBURG . . .. .. ..... .. .. . .RD. . . .. .. ... .. ...... ....262-377-4360 N154 WASHINGTON CEDARBURG 8850 N. PORT WASHINGTON ....262-377-4360 . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .414LIFE REG. OR 64 DRAFT OR 3476 OAKLAND AVE. .. ... .. .. .. .. SEAGRAM’S .. .. .. .. .. ... .. .. .. .. .. .. .. .. ..... .. .. .. .. .. .. .. .. ... .. .. .. .. ..414-961-1383 OF THE MONTH WITH INSTANT OF THE CORONA OR MODELO 3476 OAKLAND AVE. . . . .414-961-1383 BULLEIT 30 Pack Cans 30 Pack Cans OR LIGHT ALL ITEMS AVAILABLE AT WOODFORD ALL LOCATIONS. AD EXPIRES 4/22/1 OR 12 Pack Pack Bottles BottlesEMPLOYEE or Cans Cans APPLETON AVE.. .. .. .. ..7 .. ..*NOT .CROWN RAISED GRAIN LOCALLY OWNED 12 or MONTH 30 Pack Pack Cans Cans 76TH76TH ANDAND APPLETON AVE. .... .. .. .. .. .. .. .. .. ..... .. .. .. .. .. .. .. .. ... .. .. .. .. ..414-536-0100 . .414-536-0100 30 $ .48 BOURBON W15413 MAIN MENOMONEEFALLS FALLS . .. .. .. .. .. ..... .. .. .. .. .. .. .. .. ... .. .. .. .. ..262-255-0057 BLACK WALNUT, WALNUT, NAKED NAKED FREE GLASS W15413 BOURBON BLACK LESS $5.00 1.75.. .Liter MAIN ST.,ST., MENOMONEE . .262-255-0057 $ .48 $ .78 NEW THREESOME OR OR PARDOCS PARDOCS RED RED THREESOME ON 12 PK 15380 WATERTOWN PLANK RD. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .262-784-3545 OR RYE MINT 15380 WATERTOWN PLANK RD. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . WITH .262-784-3545 MIR= $14.99 4 Pack Pack 16 16 oz. oz. Cans Cans BELGIUM 4 FREE 6 6 PK PK CANS CANS FREE 4600 W. BROWN DEER RD. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .414-354-5831 ml.INSTANT FREE JULEP CUP HENRY’S SPARKLING SPARKLING 750WITH 12 Pack Pack 46008850 W. BROWN DEER RD. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .414-354-5831 HENRY’S 12 N. PORT WASHINGTON RD. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .414-540-1190 Bottles or or Cans Cans $ .78 KOOZIE HARD WATER WATER W/ W/ 30 30 PK PK Bottles HARD 750 ml. 8850 N. PORT WASHINGTON RD. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .414-540-1190 HEINEKEN ESTRELLA WITH INSTANT 18 Pack Pack 18 PAULANER *NOT ALL ITEMS AVAILABLE AT ALL LOCATIONS. AD EXPIRES 4/22/19 COORS LOCALLY EMPLOYEE OWNED $ .58 CAPTAIN Bottles or or Cans Cans 4 Pack Pack Bottles *NOT ALL ITEMS AVAILABLE AT ALL LOCATIONS. AD EXPIRES 4/22/19 4 JALISCO TANQUERAY OR SMIRNOFF VODKA LIGHT OR 6 Pack Bottles