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Monthly Archives: February 2020
Happenings what’s coming up in Northeast Ohio starting Feb. 21 – News-Herald.com
Posted: February 27, 2020 at 2:09 am
Here is a brief rundown of some coming entertainment options in Northeast Ohio. Make submissions for consideration via email to entertainment@morningjournal.com or entertainment@news-herald.com. You must include a phone number and/or web address for publication.
Allen Memorial Art Museum: Oberlin College, 87 N. Main St., Oberlin, presents "The Enchantment of the Everyday: East Asian Decorative Arts From the Permanent Collection, through July 19; "Ukiyo-e Prints from the Mary Ainsworth Collection," featuring 100 prints from asurprise gift of more than 1,500 Japanese woodblock prints featuring actors, courtesans, and landscapes of the floating world of 17th- to 19th-century Japan, through June 14. Call 440-775-8665 or visit oberlin.edu/amam.
Cleveland Museum of Art: 11150 East Blvd., presents "PROOF: Photography in the Era of the Contact Sheet,"through April 12; Tiffany in Bloom: Stained Glass Lamps by Louis Comfort Tiffany," through June 14; "Michelangelo: Mind of the Master," through Feb. 23; "Second Careers: Two Tributaries in African Art," through March 8; "Picasso and Paper," May 24 through Aug. 23; "Revealing Krishna: Journey to Cambodias Sacred Mountain," Oct. 18 through Jan. 3. Call 216-421-7340 or visit clevelandart.org.
Lakeland Community Colleges Gallery at Lakeland: 7700 Clocktower Drive, Kirtland, presents "frm WOMAN XIII... Created by women, of women and about women," Feb. 23 hrough March 27 (artist reception 3:30 to 5 p.m. March 22); "Lakeland Community College Visual Arts Student Exhibition," April 5 through 29 (artist reception and awards ceremony 7 p.m. April 9); "11th Annual May Show at Lakeland Juried Arts Exhibition," May 14 through June 26 (artist reception and awards ceremony 6 p.m. May 14). Call 440-525-7029 or visit lakelandcc.edu/gallery.
Sculpture Center: 1834 E. 123rd St., Cleveland, presents "Revealed Emerging Artist Series 2020," featuring works from Lisa Walcot and Nate Ricciuto," through March 13. Call 216-229-6527 or visit sculpturecenter.org.
Ursuline College's Florence ODonnell Wasmer Gallery: 2550 Lander Road, Pepper Pike, presents "Community: Together We can," second Women's History Month Student Art Showcase," Feb. 28 through May 1 (opening reception 5 p.m. Feb. 28). Call 440-646-8121.
Valley Art Center: 155 Bell St., Chagrin Falls, presents "Identity THINGS, the final iteration of a three-year series of exhibits exploring concepts of identity, through March 4. Call 440-247-7507 or visit valleyartcenter.org.
Lorain Community Music Theater: will hold auditions for "Mamma Mia," 1 to 4 p.m. March 14, 2 to 5 p.m. March 14 and 2 to 4 p.m. March 21 at St. Peter School, 3655 Oberlin Ave., Lorain -- bring sheet music to sing a 32-bar cut of a vocal selection in the style of the show. Visit loraincommunitymusictheater.org or email LCMTshows@gmail.com.
Wolstein Center: 2000 Prospect Ave. E., Cleveland, presents "Sesame Street Live! Let's Party!," April 4 and 5. Call 877-468-4946 or visit http://www.wolsteincenter.com.
Agora Theatre & Ballroom: 5000 Euclid Ave., Cleveland, presents "Letterkenny Live," March 27; Nikki Glaser, April 11; Whitney Cummings, April 25; Sal Vulcano, May 13; Nate Bargatze, May 29; Heather McMahan, June 11. Visit clevelandagora.com.
Cleveland Improv: 1148 Main Ave., Cleveland, presents Eddie Griffin, Feb. 21 and 22; Michael Colyar, Feb. 27 through March1 . Call 216-696-4677 or visit ClevelandImprov.com.
Hilarities 4th Street Theatre: 2025 E. Fourth St., Cleveland, presents Adam Carolla, Feb. 27; Chris Distefano, Feb. 28 and 29. Call 216-736-4242 or visit pickwickandfrolic.com.
MGM Northfield Park: 10777 Northfield Road, Northfield, presents Tracy Morgan, Feb. 29; Trevor Noah, March 14; Deon Cole, April 17; Sinbad, April 18; Ron White, June 6. Call 330-908-7625 or visit mgmnorthfieldpark.mgmresorts.com.
Playhouse Square: 1501 Euclid Ave., Cleveland, presents Iliza Shlesinger, March 5; Trey Kennedy, April 24. Call 216-241-6000, or visit http://www.playhousesquare.com.
Wolstein Center: 2000 Prospect Ave., presents Jim Gaffigan, March 6. Call 216-687-2000 or visit http://www.csuohio.edu/wolsteincenter.
Agora Theatre & Ballroom: 5000 Euclid Ave., Cleveland, presents Radiate 2020, Feb. 21; Space Jesus, Feb. 28; The Floozies, Feb. 29; Pigeons Playing Ping Pong, Goose, March 5; Killswitch Engage, August Burns Red, March 10; Neon Future IV -- The Color of Noise Tour featuring Steve Aoki, Timmy Trumpet, Riot Ten Godlands, Global Day, March 11; Three 6 Mafia, March 13; Lupe Fiasco, March 14; DragonForce, March 17; Silversun Pickups, March 18; Subtronics, HeSh, Chee, March 19; All Fizzed Up: Ohio's First Hard Seltzer Event, March 21; RUFUS DU SOL, May 23; A Bowie Celebration The David Bowie Alumni Tour, March 25; Cody Johnson, March 26; Tiny Meat Gang, March 28; Boogie & & Boogie T.rio, April 3; In This Moment, Black Veil Brides, Ded, April 4; Big Gigantic, April 5; Liquid Stranger, April 8; Citizen Cope, April 17; The Front Bottoms, April 29; Tech N9ne, May 11; Jacob Collier, May 19; Bikini Kill, May 22; Symphony X, May 24; Awolnation, Andrew McMahon in the Wilderness, The Beaches & Bleeker, June 2; Simple Plan, New Found Glory, Knuckle Puck, June 10; Ministry, July 13; Coheed and Cambria, Sept. 8; Ty Segal & The Freedom Band, Sept. 25; Krokus, Oct. 2; Amaranthe, Oct. 3. Visit clevelandagora.com.
Akron Civic Theatre: 182 S. Main St., presents Michael Stanley and The Resonators: "Stage Pass Revisited," March 7 (sold out). Visit AkronCivic.com.
Beachland Ballroom: 15711 Waterloo Road, Cleveland, presents Whitney Fenimore, Feb. 21; Into the Blue, Feb. 21; John's Little Sister, Beach Stav, Feb. 22; John Wlton & the Awakening, Erie Waters, Feb. 22; Bluegrass jam, Feb. 24; Nektar, Feb. 26; DOOMSQUAD, FREAKwents, Ghost Noises, Feb. 27; Dodapod, Feb. 28; an evening with Fred Eaglesmith, Feb. 28; Danielle Nicole, Feb. 29; The Stolen Faces, Feb. 29; Radical Face, March 1; The Brook & The Bluff, March 3; Black Lips, March 4; The Yawpers, March 4; Reigning Sound, The Alarm Clocks, March 6; Bro Dylan, Mimi Arden, Sol Fox, March 6; New Bomb Turks, The Chargers Street Gang, March 7; Angela Perley, March 7; Of Montreal, Lily, Horn Horse, March 8; Theo Katzman, March 10; Gladie, March 10; Consider the Source, March 11; Squirrel Nut Zippers, March 11; Kendall Street Company, CBDB, March 12; Caroline Roas, Good Baby, March 13; Rumpke Mountain Boys, March 13; Nora Jane Struthers, Austin Stambaugh, March 14; The Nubmers Band (15-60-75), March 14; Brett Cobb, March 18; In the Pines, March 18; Lucky Chops, March 19; James Supercave, March 19; Keller Williams's Grateful Grass featuring Love Cannon, March 20; A Celebration of Cleveland Rock History with Deanna Adams and Ray Carr, March 21; Revival ABB, March 21; Wussy, The Amprays, March 21; Ward Davis, Josh Morningstar, March 22; The Bombpops, Tightwire, Billy Liar, March 22; Dark Water Rebellion, Harriers of Discord, March 23; Betcha, March 25; Cherry Pools, Jet Black Alley Cat, Small Talks, March 26; Tab Benoit, March 27; Joey Harkum, March 28; Pussy Riot, March 29; That 1 Guy, March 29; Alicia Witt, April 1; Brand X, CSC featuring the Cuda Brothers, April 1; The Sadies, April 3; The Unlikely Candidates, April 4; Jim Donovan & Sun King Warriors, April 4; Ghost-Note, Passafire, April 8; Clern Snide, April 8; "Hell's Decibels 2020: with Satan, Night Demon, Haunt, Bewitcher, April 10; Nine Pound Hammer, April 10; Fleetmac Wood's Rumours Rave, April 11; Joint Operation, Dutty, Ride the Vibe, April 11; Fly Golden Eagle, Desert Noises, April 12; Lilly Hiatt, The Harmaleighs, April 14; Litz, Baccano, April 15; Chris Jacobs Band, April 16; King Buffalo, Oregon Space Trail of Dom, April 16; Dixon's Violin, April 17; Stephen Malkmus, Qais Essar & the Magic Carpet, April 18; Torres, April 21; Brandy Clark, April 21; Kitchen Dwellers, April 22; Parsonsfield, April 24; RDGLDGRN, Little Stranger, April 26; Tod MacDonald, Madchild, Nova Rockafeller, April 26; Greg Dulli, April 28; Amyl and the Sniffers, April 29; Steve Forbert, May 1; Satsang,May 9; They Might Be Giants, May 12; They Might Be Giants, May 13; Red Wanting Blue, May 14; MolchatDoma, ChrystaBell, May 19; Dan Rodriguez, May 20; Joy Wave, May 21; Caligula's Horse, Moon Tooth, Ebonivory, May 23; Pokey LaFarge, June 9; Jill Andrews, June 13; Fuzz, June 19; The Guillotines, The Strains, Obnox, June 20; The Claudettes, June 24; Big Thief, Aug. 3; Oh Sees, Sept. 13. Call 216-383-1124 or visit beachlandballroom.com.
Blossom Music Center: 1145 W. Steels Corners Road, Cuyahoga Falls, presents Kenny Chesney, Michael Franti & Sperhead, May 28; Thomas Rhett, Cole Swinell, Hardy, June 6; Tames Taylor and His All-Star Band, Jackson Browne, June 12; Maroon 5, Alice Cooper, Tesla, Lita Ford, June 14; Meghan Trainor, June 18; Halsey, CHVRCHES, Omar Apollo, June 21; Dave Matthews Band, June 23; Lady Antebellum, Jake Owen, Maddie & Tae, June 25; Journey, The Pretenders, June 30; Chris Young, Scotty McCreery, Payton Smith, July 9; Daryl Hall & John Oates, Squeeze, Kt Tunstall, July 14;Rod Stewart, Cheap Trick, July 21; The Doobie Brothers, July 22; Tim McGraw, Midland, Ingrid Andress, July 24; Dead & Company, July 27; Backstreet Boys, July 28; Foreigner, Kansas, Europe, July 29; Nickelback, Stone Temple Piots, Tyler Bryant & The Shakedown, Aug. 4; Chris Stapleton, Elle King, Kendell Marvel, Aug. 6; Sammy Hagar & The Circle, Whitesnake, Night Ranger, Aug. 12; The Black Crowes, Aug. 18; Sam Hunt, Kip Moore, Travis Denning, Ernest, Brandi Cyrus, Aug. 20; Distrubed, Staind, Bad Wolves, Aug. 21; Incubus, 311, Badflower, Aug. 26; Rascal Flatts, Sept. 4; Zac Brown Band, Sept. 10; Brooks & Dunn, Sept. 18. Call 330-920-8040 or visit blossommusic.com.
Canton Palace Theatre: 605 Market Ave. N., presents Donnie Iris and The Cruisers, Hey Monea, March 28; Chicago, Aug. 9. Call 330-454-8172 or visit cantonpalacetheatre.org.
FirstEnergy Stadium Home of the Cleveland Browns: 100 Alfred Lerner Way, Cleveland, presents Rolling Stones, June 19; Def Leppard, Motley Crue, Poison, Joan Jett & The Blackhearts, July 3; Justin Bieber, Aug. 14. Visit FirstEnergyStadium.com.
Goodyear Theater: 1201 E. Market St., Akron, presents American Authors, MAGIC GIANT, Feb. 22. Call 330-690-2307 or visit goodyeartheater.com.
Grog Shop: 2785 Euclid Heights Blvd., presents The Blue Stones, Feb. 22; Carlos Jones and the P.L.U.S. Band, Feb. 29; Cam'ron -- Purple Haze 2, Feb. 26; We Were Promised Jetpacks, Feb. 27; OM, Wovenhand, March 9; Weedeater, March 10; BBNO$, March 11; Avi Kaplan, March 17; Pussy Riot, March 28; AlexG & Empath, March 30; Chris Renzema, April 3; Damo Suzuki's Network, Ma Holos, April 4; Soccer Mommy, Tomberlin, April 9; Jon Mark McMillan, April 14; The Beths, May 2; Red City Radio & Decent Criminal, May 7; The Record Company, May 21; Nada Surf, May 30; AJJ, Xiu Xiu, Emperor X, May 31; Neil Hamburger, June 3. Call 216-321-5588 or visit grogshop.gs.
House of Blues: 308 Euclid Ave., Cleveland, presents Iration, Ballyhoo!, Iya Terra, Feb. 21; Local Brews Local Grooves, a craft beer and music festival, Feb. 22; flor, Winnetka BowlingLeague, Feb. 25; G Herbo, Feb. 25; Nicole Bus, Tone Smith, Feb. 26; Ross Mathews, Feb. 27; Who's Bad (Michael Jackson tribute), Feb. 28; Gaelic Storm, Feb. 29; Young Dolph, Key Glock, March 7; Elohim, Bahari, Mehro, March 7; Audrey Mika, March 9; Jaux, Drezo, March 10; Bad Omens, Bloodline, Thousand Below, March 12; Fit for a King, Chelsea Grin, March 12; NEFFEX, March 13; Mod Sun, March 13; Mr. Speed (KISS tribute), March 14; Dayglow, March 15; Devin Townsend, The Contortionist, Haken, March 15; The Wonder Years, Free Throw, Spanish Love Songs, March 16; The Purple Madness (Prince tribute), March 20; R&B ONLY featuring Tiara Monique and Apex Laurent, March 21; Social House, March 21; beabadoobee, Eliza & The Delusionals, March 31; Hippie Sabotage, ilo ilo, March 24; Fleshgod Apocalypse featuring the Veleno Quartet, The Agonist, March 26; COIN, Sure Sure, March 27; Andrew Santino, March 28; Grieves, The Holdup, March 28; Davido, April 1; Circa Survive, April 4; Lauren Sanderson, April 4; James Arthur, Delacey, April 5; Sepultura, Sacred Reich, Crowbar, April 6; Jade Novah, April 8; Silverstein, Four Year Strong, I, The Mighty, April 10; Eli Young Band, High Valley, April 11; The Glitch Mob, Ivy Lab, April 12; Hot Chelle Rae, April 13; The Infamous Stringdusters, April 16; Trevor Hall & Brett Dennen, April 19; Organ Grinders Ball 25, April 25; Noah Reid, April 26; Girl Talk, April 29; Palaye Royal, The Hunna, Arrested Youth, May 7; GBH, MDC, May 7; Here Come The Mummies, May 9; Fetty Wap, May 12; The Devil Makes Three, May 13; Tanya Tucker, May 20; Trap Karaoke, May 30; The Cypertronic Spreee, May 31; Bayside, Senses Fail, Hawthorne Heights, June 3; STARSET, Physics Girl, June 27; Angel Olsen, Okay Kaya, July 20. Call 216-241-5555 or visit hob.com/cleveland.
Jacobs Pavilion: Nautica Entertainment Complex, West Bank of the Flats, Cleveland, presents NF, May 8; AJR, May 22; Above & Behond, May 24; Melanie Martinez, June 12; Joe Russo's Almost Dead, June 18; Barenaked Ladies, Gin Blossoms, Toad the Wet Sprocket, July 3; Megadeth, Lamb of God, Trivium, In Flames, July 8; David Gray, July 14; Kidz Bop, July 19; Lauv, Maisie Peters, Role Model, July 26; Goo Goo Dolls, Lifehouse, Forest Blakk, Aug. 12; Alicia Keys, Aug. 21. Call 216-861-4080 or visit http://www.nauticaflats.com.
Kent Stage: 175 E. Main St., Kent, presents Hard Day's Night, Feb. 22; The High Kings, Feb. 24; The Numbers Band, Feb. 29; We Banjo 3, March 4; Dave Mason, March 7; Carbon Leaf, March 8; Eric Johnson, March 9; Howard Jones, March 10; Christone "Kingfish" Ingram, March 12; Robert Cray, March 14; Marc Cohn, March 21; Bob Mould, March 25; The Music of Cream, April 22; Justin Hayward, Aril 25; Shawn Colvin, May 18;Tab Benoit, June 2;Wishbone Ash, Sept. 25. Call 330-677-5005 or visit kentstage.org.
Lorain Palace Theater: 617 Broadway, Lorain, presents Journey to the Heart (Heart tribute), March 21; Stars of the Sixties starring Bobby Rydell, Shirley Alston Reeves, The Duprees, The Vogues, April 17; Winger, Firehouse, April 24; Back to the '70s tour, featuring Blue Swede, The Trammps, Norman Greenbaum, Looking Glass featuring Elliot Lurie and others, June 20. Call 440-245-2323 or visit lorainpalace.com.
MGM Northfieldd Park: 10777 Northfield Road, Northfield, presents Jill Scott, Feb. 21 (postponed to June 12; Great White, Slaughter, Feb. 22; Ms. Lauryn Hill, March 12; Dennis DeYoung, March 13; Grand Funk Railroad, March 21; Gordon Lightfoot, March 27 (rescheduled from Sept. 20); Gary Gallen, April 10; Straight No Chaser, April 4; Chicago, April 16 (sold-out); Wish You Were Here (Pink Floyd tribute), April 25; Gladys Knight, May 7; Kenny "Babyface" Edmonds, May 8; Todd Rundgren, May 14 and 15; Southside Johnny and The Asbury Jukes, May 16; Jill Scott, June 12 (moved from Feb. 21); Buddy Guy, June 25; Happy Together Tour starring The Turtles, Chuck Negron formerly of Three Dog Night, The Association and more, Aug. 16. Call 330-908-7625 or visit mgmnorthfieldpark.mgmresorts.com.
Music Box Supper Club: 1148 Main Ave., Cleveland, presents Motown Night with Nitebridge, The Ark Band (Bob Marley tribute), Feb. 21; Bill Toms & Hard Rain, Feb. 21; Mardi Gras Brunch with Mo' Mojo, Feb. 23; John Gorka, Amilia K. Spicer, Feb. 23; Sinatra Brunch featuring Michael Sonata, Feb. 23; The Diamond Project (Neil Diamond tribute), Feb. 28; Van Morrison tribute by Nitebridge with Colin Dussault, Feb. 29; Maura Rogers & The Bellows, Liz Bullock & The Tremonts, Feb. 29; Hot Jaz Brunch with Hot Djang, March 1; Tom Petty Brunch featuring Shadow of Doubt, March 1; Mr. Jimmy (Led Zeppelin show), March 4; Kevin Griffin, March 5; Remember Jones, March 6; Tweed, March 6; Peace Frog (Doors tribute), March 7; Thornetta Davis (Aretha Franklin tribute), March 7; Irish Brunch with The Kilroys, March 8; Raul Malo, March 9; Kasim Sulton's Utopia, March 10; Bluewater Kings, March 11; St. Patrick's Brunch with The Portersharks, March 15; Kat Edmonson, March 16; Ronnie Baker Brooks & Coco Montoya, March 20; Dolly Parton Night with Rachel & The Beatnik Playboys, March 20; Austin Walkin' Cane, March 21; An Acoustic Evening With Michael Stanley & Friends, March 21; Beatles Brunch with The Sunrise Jones, March 22; Dweezil Zappa, March 24; Swearingen & Kelli: Fire & Rain, March 26; Katmandu (Bob Seger tribute), March 27; Odyssey & Company, Hubb's Groove, March 28; Alejandro Escovedo, March 29; Eagles Brunch with Out of Eden, March 29; James McMurtry, March 31; Mary Bridget Davies, April 2; Chicago Farmer and The Fieldnotes, April 2; E5C4PE (Journey tribute), April 3; Billy Joel Brunch, April 5; Bluewater Kings, April 8; Marcia Ball & Tommy Casto & The Painkillers, April 9; June Sladek & The Side FX Project, April 9; Moving in Stereo (The Cars tribute), April 10; Church of Cash, April 10; Jonah Koslen, April 11; Easter Brunch with Marys Lane, April 12; Easter Beatles Brunch with The Sunrise Jones, April 12; Vanessa Carlotn, Jenny O, April 13; Jazz Is Phish, April 16; Los Lobos, April 17; Becky Boyd & Groove Train, April 17; Linda Ronstadt Brunch with Rachel & The Beatnik Playboys, April 19; Crystal Bowersox, April 19; Rickie Lee Jones, April 22; Sinatra Night with Michael Sonata, April 24; Penny & Sparrow, April 26; Roaring 20s Brunch with Eric Seddon's Hot Club, April 26; TUSK (Fleetwood Mac tribute), May 7; Patrick Sweany, May 9; Alan Doyle-TX, May 13; Rhett Miller (acoustic), May 14; Broken Arrow (Neil Young tribute), May 15; Poi Dog Pondering, May 23; Louis Prima Jr. & The Witnesses, May 29; Doobie Brothers Brunch with China Grove, May 31. Call 216-242-1250 or visit musicboxcle.com.
Nighttown: 12387 Cedar Road, Cleveland Heights, presents Moises Borges Quartet, Forecast, Feb. 21; Alice Blumenfeld-ABREPASO'S Tabloa Flamenco, Feb. 22; Baldwin Wallace Musical Theatre, Feb. 24; Jiggs Whigham & Friends, Feb. 25; Ethnic Heritage Ensemble, Feb. 26; Lionel Loueke, Feb. 27; Eric Everett Jazz Quintet featuring Charlene Smythe, Feb. 28; Cyrille Aimee, Feb. 29; Debi Lewin -- "Marquis Showcase," March 1; Hudson HS Big Band, March 2; Westbound Situation, March 3; Nanny & Dani Assis Brazilian Sextet, Moises Morges, March 6; Bill Rudman's "Seize the Day," March 7 and 8; April Verch & Joe Newberry, March 8; Joe Hunter & Pete Cavano, March 12; Gerald Skillern, David Thomas Trio, March 13; Tim Lekan plays Cole Porter featuring Celine Opdycke, March 14; Disney @ Nightown -- Baldwin Wallace Musical Theater, March 16; The New Barleycorn, March 17; Chip Stephens, Glenn Wilson Duo, March 18; Howie Smith & Organ Ism, March 19; Hard Day's Night (Beatles tribute), March 20 and 21; Dominick Farinacci -- "Spirit of the Groove," March 22; JazzWorks, March 27; Stephane Wrembel, March 28. Call 216-795-0550 or visit nighttowncleveland.com.
Playhouse Square: 1501 Euclid Ave., Cleveland, presents Steven Curtis Chapman, March 1; Joe Bonamassa, March 6 and 7; "A Cappella Live!" featuring The Filharmonics, Committed, Blake Lewis and Women of the World, March 20; Rain (Beatles tribute), March 28; The Musical Box's "A Genesis Extravaganza Part II," March 29; Celtic Woman, April 10; The Cleveland Pops Orchestra Performs Windborne's The Music of Queen, Apri 24; Alison Krauss, April 29; "An Intimate Evening With David Foster," featuring Katharine McPhee, May 3. Call 216-241-6000 or visit PlayhouseSquare.org.
Rock & Roll Hall of Fame And Museum: Cleveland, presents Big Sam's Funky Nation Concert, 8 p.m. Feb. 28. Call 888-588-ROCK or visit http://www.rockhall.com.
Rocket Mortgage Fieldhouse: 1 Center Court, Cleveland, presents The 1975, Phoebe Bridgers, Beabadoobee, June 3; Harry Styles, July 15; Janet Jackson, July 28; Rage Against the Machine, July 29. Call 216-420-2200 or visit rocketmortgagefieldhouse.com.
Stocker Arts Center at Lorain County Community College: 1005 N. Abbe Road, Elyria, presents In My Life (Beatles tribute), March 11 in the Hoke Theatre; Helen Welch, "A Little Brit Different," March 20 and 21; O Soul Trio's "Hooray for Hollywood," March 27 and 28in the Cirigliano Studio Theatre;Farewell Angelina, May 6in Hoke Theatre; Rachel Brown & The Beatnik Playboys' "Patsy Cline and Friends, May 15 and 16; Sisters in Song (Rachel Brown and Kristen Jackson), May 29 and 30in the Cirigliano Studio Theatre. Call 440-366-4040 or visit http://www.StockerArtsCenter.com.
Tri-C JazzFest at Playhouse Square: presents Take 6, Kirk Whalum, 7:45 p.m. June 25 at KeyBank State Theatre; Fly Higher: Charlie Parker, 6 p.m. June 26 at Ohio Theatre; Angelique Kidjo, Spanish Harlem Orchestra, 7:45 p.m June 26 at KeyBank State Theatre; John Mayall and Walter Trout, 10:15 p.m. June 26; Julian Lage, Emmet Cohen, 1 p.m. June 27 at Ohio Theatre; Karriem Riggins, Joel Ross, 3:30 p.m. June 27 at Allen Theatre; Charles Lloyd, 6 p.m. June 27 at Allen Theatre; Punch Brothers, 7:45 p.m. June 27 at KeyBank State Theatre; Cha Wa, 10:15 p.m. June 27 at Allen Theatre. Visit tri-c.edu/jazzfest.
Wolstein Center: 2000 Prospect Ave., presents 70's Soul Ja, featuring The Stylistics, Heatwave, The Emotions and more, March 7; Erykah Badu, March 21. Call 877-468-4946 or visit wolsteincenter.com.
Broadway in Akron: a series at E.J. Thomas Hall in conjunction with Playhouse Square, presents "Riverdance," April 24 through 26. Call330-253-2488 or visit broadwayinakron.com.
Oberlin College & Conservatory: presents "The Foreigner's Home," 7 p.m. Feb. 26 at Apollo Theatre, 19 E. College St. Call 440-775-8160 or 800-371-0178 or visit http://www.oberlin.edu/artsguide.
Rock & Roll Hall of Fame And Museum: Cleveland, presents "Amazing Grace," which spotlights Aretha Franklin as she records live gospel album at New Tmemple Missionary Baptist Church in Los Angeles in 1972; "Chuck Berry," 7 p.m. Feb. 26; "CURATION-25: From There to Here/From Here to There," March 6; "Sound of My Voice," March 25; "Dennis and Lois," May 13; "ZZ Top," May 30; "Miles Davis: Birth fo the Cool," June 3; "John & Yoko: Above Us Only Sky," June 10. Call 888-588-ROCK or visit rockhall.com.
Shot on an iPhone 7+ for less than $1K, directorKevin Naughton Inside Akrons Tent City documents a local homeless communitys attempt to self-organized and the Akron city governments efforts to displace them. Juxtaposing interviews with city officials and the houseless residents of the tent community, the documentary web series subverts stereotypes and humanizes a marginalized portion of American society. The film will be shown during theShort. Sweet. Film. Fest., which boasts more than 150 films under 30 minutes from around the world and which has an emphasis on local films. It runs Feb. 26 through March 1 in the Alex Theater at the Metropolitan at The 9, 2017 E. Ninth St., Cleveland. Visit ShortSweetFilmFest.com.
Short. Sweet. Film. Fest.: featuring more than 150 films under 30 minutes from around the world with an emphasis on local films, runs Feb. 26 through March 1 in the Alex Theater at the Metropolitan at The 9, 2017 E. Ninth St., Cleveland. There also will befilm workshops, networking events, and screenplay table readings throughout the festival, which are free and open to the public. Visit ShortSweetFilmFest.com.
Stocker Arts Center at Lorain County Community College: 1005 N. Abbe Road, Elyria, presents the Winter/Spring Film Series (all films at 7 p.m. in The Hoke Theatre) -- "Give Me Liberty," Feb. 21, "The Station Agent," March 6, "The Red Violin," March 27, "Working Woman," April 10 "Britt-Marie Was Here," April 24. Call 440-366-4040 or visit StockerArtsCenter.com.
CityMusic Cleveland: presents a "The New World Revisited, featuring John Clayton, soloist, Dominick Farinacci, soloist, Orlando Watson, spoken word, 7:30 p.m. March 11 in Dr. Wayne L. Rodehorst Performing Arts Center, D-Building, Lakeland Community College, 7700 Clocktower Drive, Kirtland, 7:30 p.m. March 12 in Milton and Tamar Maltz Performing Arts Center, 1855 Ansel Road, Cleveland, 7:30 p.m. March 13 in Lakewood Congregational Church, 1375 W. Clifton, and 8 p.m. March 14 in Shrine Church of St. Stanislaus, 3649 E. 65th St., Cleveland. Call 216-321-8273 or visit citymusiccleveland.org.
Cleveland Orchestra: performing at Severance Hall, 11001 Euclid Ave., Cleveland, presents a program of the music of John Williams, conducted by Williams, April 26. Call 216-231-7300 or visit ClevelandOrchestra.com.
Cleveland Philharmonic Orchestra: presents a program featuring Lu's "Good News From Beijing," Brahms' Piano Concerto No. 1 and Beethoven's Symphony No. 7, 7:30 p.m. March 7 at Westlake Performng Arts Center, 27830 Hilliard Blvd., and 3 p.m. March 8 at Cleveland State Berkman Hall Auditorium, 1899 E. 22nd Ave. Call 216-556-1800, or visit clevephil.org.
Fine Arts Association: 38660 Mentor Ave. Willoughby, presents The Fine Arts Association Community Chorus, "Mozart Requiem," March 29; The Cleveland Jazz Orchestra, April 18. Call 440-951-7500 or visit http://www.fineartsassociation.org.
First Music: a concert series by First Lutheran Church, 1019 W. Fifth St., Lorain, presents Jonathan Moyer performing Bach's Clavier-Ubung III on the church's new Fritts pipe organ, 3 p.m. Feb. 23. Visit FirstLutheranLorain.org/firstmusic.
Lake Ridge Legacy Chorus of Sweet Adelines International: presents Pot O' Gold Night at the Races, featuring horse races, raffles, wine tasting from Giuseppe's Wine Celler in Amherst and more, 6 p.m. March 7 at Amvets Post 22, 1517 State Road, Vermilion. Call 440-934-0265 or visit elyriasweetadelines.com.
Lakeland Community College: 7700 Clocktower Drive, Kirtland, presents the Lakeland Civic Band, "March Bdmess," 4 p.m. March 1; the Lakeland Civic Orchestra, "Songs of Change," 4 p.m. March 8; 48th annual Lakeland Jazz Festival, March 20 and 21 (Big Band Evening Extravaganza, featuring the Lakeland Jazz Orchestra, 8 p.m. March 20, and Carol Weisman Trio, featuring Carol Weisman, Anne Drummond and Brandi Disterheft, 8 p.m. March 21); the Lakeland Civic Chorus, "It Might as Well Be Spring," 4 p.m. April 5; the Lakeland Civic Band, "Of Sailors and Whales," 4 p.m. April 19; the Lakeland Civic Orchestra, "Orchestral Games," 4 p.m. April 26; the Lakeland Civic Jazz Orchestra and the Impact, "Dealer's Choice: Big Band Favorites Through the Decades," 4 p.m. May 3. Call 440-375-7225 or visit http://www.lakelandcc.edu/arts.
Quire Cleveland: presents "Journey Home: Finding Unity After Loss," a program centering on two settings of the Lamentations of Jeremiah by Thomas Tallis and Robert White, 7:30 p.m. Feb. 28 at St. John Cantius Church, 906 College Ave., Cleveland, and 5:30 p.m. Feb. 29 at St. Vitus Church, 6019 Lausche Ave., Cleveland. Call 216-223-8854 or visit http://www.QuireCleveland.org.
Towne and Country Players: present "America's Finest Singing Machine," featuring the Bowling Green State University Men's Chorus, 3 p.m. March 22 in the former BGSU Huron Playhouse, 325 Ohio St., Huron. Call 419-668-0637.
Troy Township Contra Dance: at Troy Community House, 3950 Main Market Road/Route 422, presents a dance with live folk music, 7:30 p.m. (lesson at 6:30 p.m.)Feb. 1 and March 7. Call 216-316-0068 or visitneohiocontradance.org.
Environmental Learning Center: 7250 Alexander Road, Concord Township, presents Science Day!, featuring hands-on activities, noon to 4 p.m.. Call 440-358-7275 or visit lakemetroparks.com.
Observatory Park: 10610 Clay St., Montville Township, presents guided night sky viewing, 7 to 11 p.m. Feb. 22, March 14 and 28; astronomy nights led by Chagrin Valley Astronomical Society Volunteers, March 21. Call 440-286-9516 or visit geaugaparkdistrict.org.
West Woods Nature Center: 9465 Kinsman Road, Russell Township, presents "Earthscapes and More," featuring quits by artist Deb Berebile, through April 20; Armchair Adventures Travelogues, 2 to 3 p.m. -- "Michigans Upper Peninsula Adventure," with Shane Wohlken and John Kolar, Feb. 23. Call 440-286-9516 or visit geaugaparkdistrict.org.
Theater
Beck Center For The Arts: 17801 Detroit Ave., Lakewood, presents "The Scottsboro Boys," through Feb. 23. Call 216-521-2540 or visit http://www.BeckCenter.org.
Broadway in Akron: a series at E.J. Thomas Hall in conjunction with Playhouse Square, presents "Waitress," April 28 and 29. Call330-253-2488 or visit broadwayinakron.com.
Chagrin Valley Little Theatre: 40 River St., Chagrin Falls, presents "The Taming," a comedy by Lauren Gunderson, Feb. 21 through March 7 in the River Street Playhouse. Call 440-247-8955 or visit cvlt.org.
Cleveland Play House: Performing at Playhouse Square, presents "CLUE, A New Comedy," through Feb. 23 in the Allen Theater; "Antigone," March 28 through April 19 in the Outcalt Theatre; "A Doll's House, Part 2," April 25 through May 17. Call 216-241-6000 or visit clevelandplayhouse.com.
Cleveland Public Theatre: 6415 Detroit Ave., Cleveland, presents "Breakout Session (or Frogorse)," by Nikkole Salter, Feb. 22 through March 14; a collaboration with Teatro Publico de Cleveland and in Spanish with English subtitles, "Marisol," by Jose Rivera, March 5 through 21. Call 216-631-2727 or visit cptonline.org.
Dobama Theatre: 2340 Lee Road, Cleveland Heights, presents "Dance Nation," by Clare Barron, March 6 through 29; "The Other Place," by Sharr White, April 24 through May 24. Call 216-932-3396 or visit http://www.dobama.org.
Fine Arts Association: 38660 Mentor Ave., Willoughby, presents "Charlotte's Web," through March 11; One Act Festival "Then Below!," March 27 through April 5; "Chicago," June 5 through 20. Call 440-951-7500 or visit http://www.fineartsassociation.org.
French Creek Theatre: located within the French Creek Nature & Arts Center, Sheffield Village, presents "The Drowsy Chaperone," through Feb.23; "And Then There Were None," by Agatha Christie," April 24 through May 10; The Music Man," July 10 through 26; "MacBeth," Aug. 14 through 16. Call 440-949-5200, ext. 221 or visit metroparks.cc/theatre.php.
Great Lakes Theater: at the Hanna Theatre at Playhouse Square in Cleveland, presents "Sleuth," a whodunit thriller, through March 8. Call 216-241-6000 or visit greatlakestheater.org.
Hanna Theater: Playhouse Square, Cleveland, presents "Sex n' the City: A (super unauthorized) Musical Parody," March 12; "The Golden Girls Show," March 13 and 14. Call 216-241-6000 or visit http://www.playhousesquare.org.
Near West Theatre: 6702 Detroit Ave., Cleveland, presents "The Mystery of Edwin Drood," by Charles Dickens, Feb. 21 through March 8. Call 216-961-9750 or visit nearwesttheatre.org.
Playhouse Square: Euclid Avenue, Cleveland, presents "Anastasia," through Feb 23; "Divorcees, Evangelist and Vegetarians," a ppresentation of the LatinUs Theatre Company and performed entirely in Spanish, Feb. 21, 22, 23, 28 29 and March 1; "Jesus Christ Superstar," March 10 through 29; "A Bronx Tale," Chazz Palminteri's one-man show, March 22; Disney's "Frozen," July 15 through Aug. 16; "Hamilton," Sept. 22 through Nov. 1. Call 216-241-6000 or visit http://www.playhousesquare.com.
Barnes & Noble: 7900 Mentor Ave., Mentor, presents Dylan "Hornswoggle" Postl, "Life Is Short and So Am I: My Life Inside, Outside, and Under the Wrestling Ring," 1 p.m. Feb. 22. Call 440-266-0212.
Youngstown band The Vindys are among the acts slated to play Brite 2020, a winter music festival that also will feature Ra Ra Riot, Red Rose Panic and other. Brite gets underway at 3 p.m. Feb. 22 in the West Bank of the Flats. Visit BriteWinter.com for more information, and learn more about The Vindys at TheVindys.com.
Brite 2020: a winter music festival with performances by Ra Ra Riot, Red Rose Panic, The Vindys and more, will be 3 p.m. to 1 a.m. Feb. 22 in the West Bank of the Flats. Visit BriteWinter.com.
Cleveland Botanical Garden: 11030 East Blvd., presents the 14th annual "Orchid Mania," the theme for which is "Vibrant Vietnam," through March 1. Call 216-721-1600, or visit cbgarden.org.
Cleveland History Center of the Western Reserve Historical Society: 10825 East Blvd., Cleveland, presents "Breaking the Mold": The Art of Thelma & Edward Winter, through Aug. 2. Visit wrhs.org.
Cleveland Home + Remodeling Expo: featuring an appearance by Ty Pennington of TLC's 'Trading Spaces," will be March 20 through 22 at the I-X Center in Cleveland. Visit HomeandRemodelingExpo.com.
Cleveland Museum of Natural History: 1 Wade Oval Drive, University Circle, presents "Ultimate Dinosaurs," through April. 26. Call 216-231-1177, 800-317-9155, or visit cmnh.org.
Cleveland Public Library: presents "Cleveland 20/20: A Snapshot of Our City," featuring nearly 200 photographs with cour central themes -- intimate moments, geogrphy, water and leisure, through November in Brett Hall in the Main Library, 325 Superior Ave.Call 216-623-7039 or visit cpl.org.
Great Lakes Science Center: 601 Erieside Ave., Cleveland, presents inaugrual Great Science Gala and Ion Awards, March 7. Call 216-694-2000 or visit greatscience.com.
Maltz Museum of Jewish Heritage: 2929 Richmond Road, Beachwood, presents "Leonard Bernstein: The Power of Music," an exhibition, through March 1. Call 216-593-0575 or visit MaltzJewishMuseum.org.
Music Box Supper Club: 1148 Main Ave., Cleveland, presents in partnership with Western Reserve Historical Society's Cleveland History Center, Cleveland Stories Dinner Party, Wednesdays through May. Call 216-242-1250 or visit musicboxcle.com.
Playhouse Square: Cleveland, presents "The National Geographic Live -- "Coral Kingdoms and Empires of Ice," Feb. 26; "The Bachelor Live!" hosted by Becca Kufrin and Ben Higgins, Live," April 3; National Geographic Live -- "Nature Roars Back," April 22. Call 216-241-6000 or visit playhousesquare.org.
Rocket Mortgage FieldHouse: 1 Center Court, Cleveland, presents Dude Perfect, June 4; Cirque du Soleil's "Crystal," June 24 through 28. Call 888-894-9422 or visit rocketmortgagefieldhouse.com.
Steele Mansion Inn & Gathering Hub: 348 Mentor Ave. Painesville, presents Public Guided Tour. Feb. 25; Public Guided Tour, March 26; Murder Mystery Dinner, April 4; Public Guided Tour, April 28. Call 440-639-7948 or visit SteeleMansion.com.
Summit Racing Equipment I-X Piston Powered Auto-Rama: featuring Amanda Berry's restored 1986 Monte Carlo, will be March 13 through 15 at the I-X Center in Cleveland. Visit PistonPowerShow.com.
Tri-C High School Rock Off: featuring 37 acts representing 63 schools from Ohio, Illinois and Pennsylvania, presents the Final Exam, Feb. 29, at the Rock & Roll Hall of Fame and Museum in Cleveland. Visit rockhall.com/rockoff.
Wizard World Comic Con Cleveland: featuring appearances by "Outlander" cast members Caitriona Balfe, Richard Rankin, Colin McFarlane and Duncan Lacroix, "Teen Wolf" cast members Tyler Hoechlin, Khylin Rhambo, Ian Bowen and Dylan Sprayberry, "The Princess Bride" cast members Cary Elwes and Wallace Shawn), "Overwatch" voice actors Anjali Bhimani, Benz Antoine, Carolina Ravassa and Chloe Hollings," as well as other guests, the "Animation Celebration" and more, runs March 6 through 8 at Huntington Convention Center. Visit wizardworld.com/comiccon/cleveland.
Wonderstruck in Cleveland: a music festival featuring Portugal, The Man; Walk the Moon, Of Monsters and Men, Third Eye Blind, Brittany Howard, will be June 6 and 7 at Lakeland Community College, 7700 Clocktower Drive, Kirtland. Visit Wonderstruckfest.com.
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Happenings what's coming up in Northeast Ohio starting Feb. 21 - News-Herald.com
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6 of the Best Places to Drink in New Orleans – Big Easy Magazine
Posted: at 2:09 am
There are a lot of bars and restaurants in New Orleans that serve delicious cocktails. Because of the vast number, it can be hard to find the right one youre looking for. To help you with your search for the best spot to sip at, weve come up with a list of the best places to drink in New Orleans. From easy day drinking spots for your brunches with the girls that turn into all-day affairs, to the late-night bars for your friends bachelor party, we want to make sure you know all the best spots. Take a look!
Even if youre not a tourist, this bar is still an enjoyable place to visit and sip at. The bar was built into a moving carousel. If youre worried about getting motion sick, dont worrythe bar spins slowly enough that youll barely notice. You have to try out the bars most famous cocktail, the Vieux Carre.
If you and your friends are beer lovers, then youll definitely want to head to the Bulldog. Its got a great patio and some of the best bar food in the area. Its an awesome spot if you want to get away from the tourists of the French Quarterfor a chill night, this patio is the place to visit. They have around 50 beers on tap, so dont miss out!
On the other hand, if youre more of a wine lover, then Bacchanal is the place to be. Previously a quirky little wine shop, its now evolved into this wine garden utopia where people can spend a night sipping on crisp wine, order wine and cheese, and enjoy live music. The backyard is massive, but if thats not what youre feeling, they also have a cocktail and wine bar upstairs.
Just finished up your walk or bike ride? Make a pit stop at the Wrong Iron to slake your thirst with their wide selection of beers, cocktails, and frozen cocktailsall on tap! They have racks for your bikes, a beer garden if you havent gotten your fill of sunshine, and an atmosphere that youll have a hard time leaving.
The dive bar to end all dive bars, Lafittes Blacksmith Shop is the late-night place to be. Sure, everyone has their own opinion on which is the best dive out of the 582 bars on Bourbon Street, but this one is one of the oldest bars in America. Theyve been serving beer and frozen drinks since the 1700sits a must-visit.
Live music describes New Orleans in a nutshellTipitinas is its institution. Though you could close your eyes and point to find a live music join on Frenchmen Street, this is one of the best places to go for music and drinks in the whole city. Plan to come when a local brass band is playingits an experience youll never forget.
As fun as it is to explore New Orleans and find your favorite new drinking spot, make sure youre doing so responsibly. Never drink and drive, and always understand how alcohol affects your body. Even if youre walking, alcohol affects your mood, so play it safe and know your limits. Happyand safesipping!
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If you care about local independent progressive media in an era where multi-millionaires such as John Georges are monopolizing our local press, then please donate any amount you can to make our operation a success. We can do this! Do not give up.
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Thank you,Scott PloofPublisherBig Easy Magazine
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6 of the Best Places to Drink in New Orleans - Big Easy Magazine
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Francesca Sorrenti recalls the anarchy of ’90s New York, and how Davide provided a light – Document Journal
Posted: at 2:09 am
Davide Sorrentis photographs defined an eraand, unfairly, came to define 'Heroin Chic. Here, Francesca Sorrenti describes her son's bright, painful genius, and sets the record straight.
Alongside his brother Mario and peers like Glen Luchford and Harmony Korine, Davide Sorrenti captured the mad and gritty youth culture of New York, which came to define the era. In just a year and a half, the work of the previously little-known, but pivotal, 90s fashion photographer has been inescapable. Its been featured in the full-length documentary See Know Evil by Charlie Curran, in the extensive exhibition Our Beutyfull Future at Camera Club Projects in New York, and now in a second editionthe first 750 copies sold out immediatelyof Davide Sorrenti ArgueSKE 1994-1997 (IDEA Books). The retrospective monograph features Davides photographs, graffiti, tearsheets, and other ephemera, and releases at Dashwood Books in New York tonight, February 25.
Unfortunately, after his death, which was wrongfully attributed to a heroin overdose, Davides work unfairly came to define Heroin Chic. What most people didnt know was that Davide suffered from a serious illness that was rapidly deteriorating his body and caused him constant pain. I sometimes would say, Your girls always look like theyre sad, reflected his mother, Francesca Sorrenti, as we sat in the living room of her Downtown Brooklyn apartment a few months ago. And he said, Well Im melancholy and thats what I project. And sometimes its not even really that; its a dream world. Im projecting a dream world.
Over our six-hour conversation, Francesca discussed Davide, raising her tight-knit family, and how one woman created such an empire of creative talent.
All images from Davide Sorrenti ArgueSKE 1994-1997, courtesy of IDEA Books.
Paige Silveria: Tell me about your earlier years in New York.
Francesca Sorrenti: When I was 18, I ran away from home in Queens to Manhattan. I lived a crazy life; I stayed with a girlfriend for a bit who was a groupie and seeing Marty from the Jefferson Airplane. I found a job at a small club called The Scene and met a lot of groups there: Jimmy Hendrix, Janis Joplin. At the time, some groups who were really hot played in stadiums, but mostly they played in small venues. You just hung out and partied. At Maxs Kansas City, I met Donna Jordan and I started hanging out with her and Jane Forth. At night thered be Lou Reed or [Pablo] Picasso. It was really a scene. I was friendly with Karl Lagerfeld, who was a young guy in his 20s, and Antonio Lopez.
I had met Andy [Warhol] at The Scene and he invited me down to The Factory, but it was too crazy for me. Ive always been on the outskirts. I wasnt too wild. I always thought Id write a book called, Whats A Good Catholic Schoolgirl Like You Doing In A Place Like This? Im not religious, but I went to Catholic school and have all of those fears. [Laughs] You dont think about it; youre just fearful. Its in the back of your mind: Oh, Im not going there! Its not going to end well.
Paige: You also spent time in Italy?
Francesca: Since I was 11, wed go to Italy in the summertime. My mother inherited all this property from her father. Wed go down to Naples, Capri, or the little town that my mother was brought up in. Its funny because my mother was so chic and glamorous when she was young, but the town she grew up in was so small.
Paige: Where did she get it from?
Francesca: It was in her blood! Her family was extremely wealthy. I remember when I first walked into my grandmothers place, there were these huge 30-foot wooden doors pushing open into the courtyard. She had this huge terrace. Below the house, all of the workers who served her lived. She didnt even have running water. Every day they would bring her cauldrons up for the kitchen and bathroom. In America, we were used to taking showers every day. So wed be on the terrace with the cauldrons taking baths. People would say, If you take a bath every day, youll die. They didnt really have schooling. So there were these two worlds: up on top at the castle and then down at the bottom, where it was so poor.
Paige: When did you meet your first husband?
Francesca: I met Ricardo, whos the father of my three kids, one summer while I was there. He came from a very well-to-do family of builders and architects. We had a great life in Italy. It was a great time to be in Europe. Here we were, these funky parents dressing unusually. When Mario was born, he came out of the hospital wearing these old jean overalls Id found. In fashion, everything was new.
Paige: What did you do for work?
Francesca: I had my own little jean shop that I was forced to close, because I got robbed all the time because it was Naples. [Laughs] And then I was offered a job at Fiorucci, which was a mega company. They allowed me to work out of Naples because I had kids. Id go to Milan maybe once a week. Those were the days when you could get on the plane, literally, if the steps were still attached.
Paige: What was it like working for Fiorucci back then?
Francesca: I was there [from] 73 until 1980 and it was amazing. In the beginning I was in charge of designing recycled denim. We were a team of friends, a community. It wasnt just about making clothes; it was about going to the store, meeting the customers, doing the window dressing. We were never exhausted. We were always laughing. I remember once getting kicked out of this big fashion convention for ready-to-wear. In the 70s, fashion shows were only for couture. And at these conventions, the big companies would build these huge closed-off rooms, so you couldnt see their designs. Once, with my American accent, I pretended to be a buyer from Chicago and snuck in. My friends had put this big sticker on my back saying, Im with Fiorucci. I had maybe three-to-five minutes to look at everything before someone noticed the sign on my back and I was escorted out of the building. Everyone was clapping for me, because we were all spies. It was fun. Then I changed my outfit and put a hat on and went back in through another entrance.
Paige: When was Davide born?
Francesca: In 1976. At the time, they didnt know much about the illness, Thalassemia. It was rampant in Italy; its a Mediterrean disease. Those with the illness werent living long at the time. A transfusion at the time only lasted a week. I was devastated.
Paige: How old was he when he was diagnosed?
Francesca: He was a year and one month, and he was on his deathbed. I was in Africa and I had this horrible dream; I knew that something was wrong and that I had to call home. It was like mothers intuition. So I called and my mother said that Davide wasnt well. So I flew back from Algiers. I looked at him and I didnt want to believe it, but it popped into my head that he had Thalassemia. It was really hard, bringing Davide back to life and dealing with it. Bringing him to the hospital and doing so much. I went back to Fiorucci and just fell out of love. I wanted to go home to New York. I didnt want to be there anymore. And there were other factors too.
Paige: What were they?
Francesca: Well my husband and I had broken up two years prior. I would have acquired, as I got older, a reputation as a divorcee. People would tell me I had to be more womanly and settle down. Stop dressing like a freak. Take care of your kids. There was still a lot of classism back then, especially in Naples. When you come from a well-to-do family, you stay that way; you dont mingle. At some point you put on that pleated skirt and the twinset. Be a proper woman. But then I would come to New York for work. And there was Studio 54 and Xenon, shiny stretch pants and sequin tops. And Id take Davide with me sometimes to go to the hospitals here. People would tell me, You have children? Youre too young! In America I was too young and in Italy I was too old. Being separated, you have every male neighbor knocking on your door asking, Do you need any help? just the Italian way. No I dont need help. And so I decided to just go home. I didnt see a good future for my kids. And then Davide, there [were more treatment options] for his illness in the States.
Paige: What was treatment like for him in Europe?
Francesca: I had gotten together this Thalassemia committee to get more progress for the illness. I would bring them news from New York, where one of the best centers was. In Naples, I used to see parents from the rural areas come into the hospital with six kids, and three had Thalassemia. They wouldnt be transfused in time, so theyd start to be deformed. If you dont get the blood, your extremities grow longer, your face distorts. Ill never forget being at the hospital just after he was diagnosed and seeing all of these children that were so disproportionate. I went into the bathroom and banged my head on the wall. I cracked my skull. Thats how freaked out I was. It was a very hard time. But it gave me strength. It all made me stronger.
Paige: After moving to New York, you worked at a coffee shop for a while and did other odd jobs. Then your first job in fashion was styling?
Francesca: Where you made your money as a stylist then was through catalogs. They were like books. If you wanted to find out about an outfit, youd go to the credits in the back. I did really well with it. This woman who hired me, she thought I had all of this experience working in Italy. She says, You know it really doesnt pay much; its only $500 a day. $800 for the shoot. And Im like, Oh shit! I went to the coffee shop and said, Fuck you, and threw my dress at the owner; they were so vile. So things got better and we moved to a bigger apartment on E 16th Street. I met my current partner, Steve. Weve been together ever since.
Paige: What were your kids up to?
Francesca: Mario became a fashion model. Davide started to dress real cool like his brother. This was before grunge had hit. Johnny Depp had this TV show, 21 Jump Street. Davide was 13 and he resembled Johnny Depp; he emulated him. Hed do his hair like him. He always had a knack for style. Then the 90s came along. Mario had a girlfriend then named Kate Moss, a nobody, just a young girl. They were in love. The story is that he brought her over to stay with us at our apartment. He was doing a job for Interview, his first magazine [assignment]. He told them that hed like to use his girlfriend. Joe Mckenna said, No. But Mario convinced him. And that was Kates first exposure. There are so many stories about this, but this is the real one. From there, their careers really started. Davide was very influenced by his older brother. And they were still very close. Of course there were fights; You touched my film! Fuck! Davide started experimenting. He started walking around with a camera. He wasnt feeling well. Unfortunately, by the time he was 18, his bones were that of an 80-year-old. He suffered a lot in his back, his legs, his stomach. But he never said anything. Then he started to smoke a lot of weed. He said it made him feel so good when he smoked, so I allowed him. It helped him with his pain.
Paige: What was your first photo job?
Francesca: In the 90s Mario told me to pick up a camera, so I did. I was really lucky because I had all of this experience from all of the different things Id done. Mario said, Ma, youre such a player. Youre always workin it. My first job was a catalogue for Macys. Patrick Demarchelier usually did it. And they gave it to me, this mega catalogue. I freaked out. It turned out amazing. It was their best-selling catalogue ever. This is when department stores were mega. Steven Meisel was an art director there, at Macys. There are a lot of things people dont know about the past; they just get to the glamour part of fashion. And then all of a sudden there was this whole grunge movement going on and drugs started to come into the scene.
Paige: When did drugs begin to change things?
Francesca: Its really nobodys fault. We had the 60s; there was Woodstock, pot, Haight-Ashbury, communes, hippies. It was a global youth movement. In the 90s, it was the youth within the fashion industry. Kids were coming in from London and getting hired by Americans because theyre EnglishI dont think we ever detached ourselves from loving the English. And they were bringing a lot of drugs with them. The well-to-do European kids always had a problem with heroin. In Naples, I had friends who did heroin that were very wealthy. It was the rich mans drug. But there was this whole movement. We were about to come out of the recession. And these kids came in with all of these great ideas, this kind of photography and way of dressing. Fashion was unfashion. Girls didnt have to wash their hair; they didnt have to wear makeup. They could just wear their clothes any way that they wanted to.
Paige: Was there a nihilistic bent?
Francesca: It was just out of control. Youd go to modeling agencies and all of the bookers were kids. And all of the people, I dont want to name names, but a lot of the designers and company owners, since the recession of 89, had been going under. So they were giving free reign to bring business back: Wow, this is amazing. Go on a trip. Shoot whatever you want. It was all about Kurt Cobain and Nan Goldin, these tortured souls. People became idols, and justly. Kurts music was fabulous. Nans pictures are beautiful. But the kids wanted to be her and she had issues. Kurt kills himself, and now suicide is cool. You would say to a kid, Youre going to die. And they say, Oh well, Kurt died.
Paige: How did your kids cope with it?
Francesca: Davide would come home sometimes and say, Hey ma, you have to help this girl whos on drugs. I started to see girls on set who were wasted and I knew it wasnt pot. I sent girls home. I called their mothers. I sent kids to rehab. And then Davide met James [King]. They fell in love. James had her problem. But you know, they never did heroin together. Never. She was very aware of how sick he was. Davide tried to help her. It didnt work. They always fought. They loved each other. They were so in-tune. Then one day in August of 96, he ends up in the hospital. I found out later that the real culprit wasnt heroin; it was half a pill of Oxycodone. Anything he did, it was minimum. Hed only have a pill here and there, because he took a long time to recoup. He had the body of an 80-year-old. He had osteoporosis. He had liver deterioration. So he knew he couldnt overdo it. But then he tried heroin, and ended up in the hospital again. No one knew about the Oxycodone.
Paige: That must have been so scary. He was so young and yet had all of these constraints.
Francesca: Towards the end he was very heartbroken. He just didnt know where he was heading. And he didnt feel well. He became a little lax with his transfusions. It just snowballed, the whole thing. But to talk about his talent, to call it Heroin Chic? Really? I was over his body saying, This is not cool. This is not chic. And then Ingrid Sischy calls it Heroin Chic. Years later I was at Zac Posensat the time he was a student at Central Saint Martins and Vanina was staying with him and they invited me to visit. Zac was fabulous and had these amazing fashion books. He had this one encyclopedia of fashion. I was looking in the back for Marios name. And they had Davides name and it says, Davide Sorrenti, ended the era of Heroin Chic. And, well, that is a true statement. Kids were dying of overdose. People were dying of suicide. It got really dark. But it didnt start that way. It started with a sense of freedom. We can do what we want. But society cannot survive in anarchy. So few of us know how to be civilized and be moderate. If we were, it would be utopia. But were not. And unfortunately thats the way it is. I just happen to have three very talented kids who were sponges and voyeurs like their mother and father and stepfather.
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BOE Hears Progress On Mental Health Initiative – My veronanj
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Calling Veronas student mental health initiative one of the most important things that Verona has done, Director of Special Services Frank Mauriello told the Board of Educations Tuesday meeting that the district has made significant progress in addressing mental health issues since the mental health ballot question passed. The initiative, Mauriello said, has gotten students and their families the support they need, raised grades and lowered absenteeism, while reducing Child Study Team caseloads to more manageable levels. He also said that the students who have met with mental health professionals through the program have learned coping skills that are enabling them to address some new situations without additional intervention.
To get Veronas initiative off the ground, Mauriello said, the district had to overcome four barriers: limited financial resources, culture issues, a lack of acceptance of mental health issues, and a lack of specialized staffing. He thanked the community for approving the dedicated funding for mental health services in 2018, and thanked the volunteers on two action committees whose work in 2017 made the mental health ballot question possible. Superintendent Dr. Rui Dionisio created the committees in the wake of a student death by suicide. (This reporter served on one of the action committees and is the mother of the child who died.)
Verona has drawn on four main programs for its mental health initiative: Effective School Solutions, which is providing the district with licensed social workers; Peekapak, social emotional learning curriculum for K-4 students; and Positive Behavior Support in Schools (PBSIS) a collaboration between the New Jersey Department of Education Office of Special Education and The Boggs Center, Rutgers Robert Wood Johnson Medical School that supports a range of school intervention needs. The collaboration has expanded mental health counseling to the elementary schools, and has added to the resources at H.B. Whitehorne Middle School and Verona High School.
Mauriello said there is a growing mental health epidemic among K-12 students, which he called the invisible disability, with some 17% of students nationwide now showing mental health issues. He noted that it can take an average of 11 years for a person who has been diagnosed with a mental health issue to get appropriate treatment, and said that one of Veronas goals is to make that shorter for Veronas students. Mauriello noted that Verona has developed a relationship with St. Clares Hospital in Denville that is making it possible for Verona students to get a mental health evaluation in 24 to 48 hours and not the two weeks that it often takes.
Veronas mental health initiative has earned the district local, state and national recognition, said Mauriello, who noted that he and Dr. Dionisio had presented to a national conference of superintendents in San Diego earlier in February. We are not the only people struggling with this epidemic, he said.
You can watch Mauriellos presentation in the video below, view his slide deck here and learn more about Veronas mental health and wellness programs through the districts website.
In other business at the BOE meeting, Dr. Dionisio noted that Verona had achieved an exceptionally low 2.12% rate on the bonds that will be issued to finance this years referendum work, which will translate into a $2.2 million savings for taxpayers.
Dionisio said that New Jersey will release its school aid numbers on Thursday, and that this years outlook seems promising since Gov. Phil Murphy has promised to invest an additional $336 million in K-12 education statewide, as well as $1.1 billion to close the shortfall in the states teacher pension fund. Dionisio said that he expects to have a preliminary Verona school budget on March 20, which will be voted on at the BOEs second April meeting after public presentations.
Dionisio also noted that Verona will have three retirements this year: Diane Newman, the assistant in the VHS guidance department, VHS art teacher Terry Sherman and middle school science teacher Carol Thomas, who was also Dionisios seventh grade science teacher.
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It’s time to make progress on the Piedmont Greenway, backers say – Greensboro News & Record
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GREENSBORO The nonprofit Piedmont Land Conservancy alerted transportation officials Wednesday that after two decades of talk and planning, the proposed Piedmont Greenway through Guilford County is ripe for action.
The proposed 19-mile route would link Greensboros trail and greenway system to that of Winston-Salem, following the wending path of Reedy Fork Creek to the Forsyth County line, PLC conservation planner Palmer McIntyre said.
Were here because we have the plan and lets start building support for it, McIntyre said.
McIntyre told the Greensboro Metropolitan Planning Organization on Wednesday that the concept dates to the early 2000s, an initial master plan was completed in 2003 and supporters recently have updated it.
McIntyre said the nonprofit conservancy has taken on the role of champion of the project and its facilitator. She said PLC hopes to bring together the government and private groups that could make progress building the bicycle and pedestrian link between the A&Y Greenway north of Greensboro and the Salem Lake trail network in Winston-Salem.
Founded in 1990 and based in Greensboro, the conservancy works with landowners to help them preserve farms, woodlands and other property important to the environment in its natural state. The group has helped conserve more than 27,000 acres in Guilford and eight other counties in the Piedmont Triad region where it focuses.
The local MPO supervises transportation planning and construction projects in Greensboro and much of Guilford County outside of High Point. Greensboro City Councilwoman Marikay Abuzuaiter chairs the panel that held its monthly meeting Wednesday afternoon.
McIntyre said the greenways 11-mile, Guilford leg would be built in three sections at an estimated cost of $22.3 million. It realistically could take another 20 years to complete, she said.
But she said it would deliver many benefits for that investment by providing a footpath linkage to a variety of community assets that include Bur-Mil Park, Summerfield Park, Oak Ridge Town Park, Triad Park, and the business districts of Colfax, Kernersville, Oak Ridge and Summerfield.
McIntyre said Forsyth County is ready to start construction on its first section of the greenway near Salem Lake.
McIntyre did not ask the Greensboro planning group to take any action at Wednesdays meeting. But she said later that the MPO could play a future role as the governmental link between local officials and the state Department of Transportation that often provides significant amounts of construction money for regional bicycle and pedestrian projects.
Other levels of government also would be involved as the project moves forward. For example, the cost of the 2.8-mile first leg between U.S. 220 and Interstate 73 would be lessened because Greensboro city government already owns much of the land as part of its watershed protection program, McIntyre said.
Other greenway and trail advocates addressed the Guilford County Board of Commissioners earlier this week at the county officials annual retreat, urging them to consider adding money for the Piedmont Greenway and other such projects in an upcoming bond referendum that the board is considering.
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After one year of work on I-440, TDOT officials say progress is on budget and on time – NewsChannel5.com
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NASHVILLE, Tenn. (WTVF) Tennessee Department of Transportation officials said a lot of progress has been made in the year since crews broke ground on the massive I-440 construction project.
"Most of the corridor is already built in phase one and phase two," Project Manager Clayton Markham said. "The roadway is a little bit wider, you have that new concrete median barrier, you can see some of the lighting going in...you don't hear the cars going across the potholes anymore."
The project is still on-budget and on-time, scheduled to be completed in August, 2020, and cost $153 million, according to TDOT officials.
Despite the progress, there's still a lot left to do in the six-month time frame.
"We have a lot of the detail work to go through, a lot of the lights, a lot of the signs." That work includes another major closure that will happen in March. You can find details on that closure below.
People who live next to the seven mile stretch of interstate said the years-worth of construction has caused plenty of headaches. Complaints included the new lighting installed along the road shining into backyards and homes, traffic issues diverting angry drivers onto residential streets and construction noise reverberating through homes.
"At night they do the grating, and when they do the grating its a loud thumping kind of noise when they use the big graters, and sometimes you can feel the vibrations in the house," Eve Maxwell said. But Maxwell said overall, she's happy with how crews have handled the highway.
"Oh you know, it really hasn't been very bad," she said. Still, she's looking forward to the day the project is away from her backyard.
"I'll be glad to be able to use 440 again and not worry about whether or not you'll be caught in traffic!" Maxwell said with a laugh.
The next major closure in the project will come in mid-March.
Over the weekend of March 21, 2020, I-440 and I-65 will be closed at the interchange. Interstate traffic will be diverted around the work zone. According to TDOT, it will work like this:
The closures will start Friday, March 20 at 9 p.m. and run through through Monday, March 23 at 5 a.m. The closure will be moved to the next weekend if weather doesn't allow for the work. A map of the closure is below.
Hilt, Eric
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Progress 2020: Western PA looks to future of transportation from highways to hyperloops – The Times
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For more than 80 years, western Pennsylvania has considered ways to ease traffic congestion on roadways and reduce the states carbon footprint amid climate change concerns.
Beaver County, like most of Appalachia, has historically evolved alongside breakthroughs in transportation.
Riverside boroughs saw significant population growth following the introduction of railroads in the second half of the 19th century, with the Pennsylvania Railroad system connecting Rochester and Freedom with Conway and Baden on one side of the Ohio River and the Pittsburgh & Lake Erie Railroad fortifying Monaca and what would eventually become Aliquippa on the other.
Streetcars had eased travel between towns by the end of the century, prompting a new age of tourism and economic development in Beaver County communities.
Population sizes continued to grow as J&L Steel set up shop in subsequent decades, and so did the need for reliable transportation. Trolley lines, passenger trains and bus companies came and went, but automobiles ultimately reigned supreme. Talks of interstates and infrastructure soon followed.
For more than 80 years, western Pennsylvania has considered ways to ease traffic congestion on roadways and reduce the states carbon footprint amid climate change concerns. The state has the second-most structurally deficient bridges in the United States, according to an American Road and Transportation Builders Association report released last year, as well as some of the worst roads in the country realities that some say only exacerbate the urgency for innovation.
When transit is discussed in Pittsburgh, ideas often include light-rail, air service, highways, Hyperloop and, more recently, gondolas. Mayor Bill Peduto is entertaining the possibility of a Pittsburgh Mobility Authority to better connect neighborhoods with non-traditional transit.
Beaver County isnt Pittsburgh, and the citys solutions are not always viable here, but proposals such as a high-speed Hyperloop and driverless vehicles could be in our future, even as automobiles remain vital to the American way of life.
Passenger cars are not going anywhere right now, but how we use them, and how we approach public transit and commercial travel will inevitably change, said Ralph Mandel, a Pittsburgh-based urban developer. It has to.
Rideshare apps like Uber and Lyft are already the norm in most metropolitan areas, and carpool lanes continue to incentivize collective travel. Whats next, Mandel said, is electric and self-driving vehicles, although its unclear how long itll be before either of those technologies are standardized. Argo.ai, a Pittsburgh-based driverless car startup, already offers driverless delivery services here and elsewhere throughout the country.
Less than a decade after Maglev Inc. went bankrupt and plans for a state-of-art electromagnetic people mover fell through in Pittsburgh, the city is now considering a high-speed Hyperloop.
The technology, still young, would theoretically transport passengers in tubes at speeds exceeding 500 miles per hour by electromagnetic propulsion and magnetic levitation. This could drastically reduce commute times, but build-out would be expensive and demanding.
The Mid-Ohio Regional Planning Commission is considering a 30-year Midwest Connect plan to connect Pittsburgh and Chicago through Columbus with a 41- minute commute time. The group estimates roughly $300 billion in economic benefits for communities along the corridor and a sizable environmental benefit resulting in fewer vehicles on the road.
Another group, the Northeast Ohio Areawide Coordinating Agency is working on a project called the Great Lakes Hyperloop System, which would connect Cleveland, Chicago and Pittsburgh promising an estimated travel time of 48 minutes between Pittsburgh and Chicago.
The agency and Hyperloop Transportation Technologies Inc. completed a feasibility study late last year estimating the project's cost to be about $40 billion, although investors could expect a profit of $30 billion during its first 25 years of operation, the study said. Costs for the routes involving Pittsburgh range from $8.4 billion to $9.1 billion.
The financial and economic results are unprecedented, illustrating a strong case for the public-private partnership to continue working to bring hyperloop to the Great Lakes corridor, authors wrote in the study.
How transportation will advance in the next few decades is still uncertain, so its important to be realistic and prioritize our immediate needs, Mendel said. Sustainable public transportation and additional air service is a catalyst to more inclusivity.
In many cities, here being no exception, buses are not always dependable. They run late, slowly and change routes with little notification. Proper bus lanes, routes and signals can solve some of these issues.
Making public transportation, especially buses, more reliable, available and safe is a safe bet, he said. This could mean more Beaver County Transit Authority investment, or diverse, affordable flight options with hub connectivity. Ultimately, its up to communities how they want to propel into the mid-21st century.
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PROGRESS 2020: Business briefs – The Times
Posted: at 2:08 am
FINANCIAL SERVICES
West-AirComm Federal Credit Union
West-AirComm Federal Credit Union has been a proud part of Beaver County for more than 70 years. Founded in 1949 by the employees of Westinghouse Electric, the credit union has its roots deep within the industry of the region.
West-AirComm serves more than 20,000 members with both technology and personal service. The financial services include investments and loans at some of the best rates in the region, free checking, first mortgages and home equity loans.
West-AirComm puts the credit union mission of People Helping People into motion on a daily basis. The staff offers personal service if you have questions about your finances.
The staff also volunteers their personal time to charitable organizations in the community. In 2019, they volunteered more than 1,200 hours and raised $11,000 for the spotlight charity, Operation Troop Appreciation.
West-AirComms 2020 charity initiative Cruisin for a Cause, will benefit the Beaver County Association for the Blind. The nonprofit organizations mission is to provide services to blind and visually impaired persons that promote their independence, prevent blindness and give those who are blind or disabled employment opportunities. The money raised help to fund the associations goal to provide a better means of transportation to the visually impaired.
From being deeply rooted in industry to providing financial services and supporting the communities it serves, West-AirComm cares about its members.
For more information, visit http://www.westaircomm.com or visit any one of the branches in Beaver, Aliquippa or Moon Township.
Farmers Building and Savings Bank
ROCHESTER Farmers Building and Savings Bank, 290 West Park in Rochester, specializes in mortgage loans, home equity loans and home improvement loans. The bank also offers do-it-yourself construction loans to enable those who have construction knowledge to assist in the building of their home.
The bank has drive-through facilities and off-street parking. It is handicapped accessible.
Farmers provides premium-rate passbook savings that earn interest from day of deposit to the day of withdrawal.
What is unique about our passbook savings accounts is that they are not internet accessible. This helps alleviate identity theft issues, said Dennis L. Goehring, president and managing officer. You, the account holder, bring in your passbook for transactions. Its simple and safe.
Farmers also offers Christmas club accounts and direct deposit of payroll, Social Security and pension checks. Funds are insured by the Federal Deposit Insurance Corp.
Farmers Building and Savings Bank is one of Beaver Countys few remaining independent financial associations. All employees and managers are from the Beaver County area and boast more than 150 years of combined banking experience. They include Martin Samchuck, Rita L. Hinton, Sarah Brogley, Pamela Locke and Dennis L. Goehring. Since the bank was founded in 1894, theyve employed only 17 individuals.
More information is available by calling the bank at 724-774-4970. Youll speak with a real person, not an automated answering system.
Friendly Federal Credit Union
ALIQUIPPA Friendly Federal Credit Union, 2000 Main St. in Aliquippa, is a full-service institution that continues to expand its offerings and membership.
Friendly Federal offers auto loans, home equity loans, holiday and vacation clubs, mortgages, IRAs, certificates of deposit, money markets, free checking, direct deposit, a youth club, debit and credit cards, home banking, bill pay and an onsite ATM machine.
For the past 18 years, the institution has received the Bauer Financial five-star rating for exceptional performance. This year, it celebrates 65 years of service.
The credit union was founded in 1955 as the J&L Service Department Employees Federal Credit Union. The J&L Byproducts, Seamless and Steelworkers Credit Union joined the institution. In 1986, the financial facilitys name was changed to Friendly Federal Credit Union. Today, the credit union has assets of more than $53 million, with a membership of about 5,000.
Cynthia Hladio is the chief executive officer/manager. Phyllis Heckman is the branch manager. Carl E. Hennen is the chairman; Ed Murphy is the treasurer; and Lynn Nero, Helen Pane, Sue Ronosky, Amy Walker and Deanna Ross are directors.
The branch office is located at 384 State St. in Baden.
Information: 724-375-0488; 724-869-3500; http://www.friendlyfcu.org.
AUTOMOTIVE SERVICE
Myers Service Center & Quality Quick Lube
BEAVER In January 1990, Rick Myers and his sons, Rick and Ron, opened an auto repair business at 475 Buffalo St. in Beaver. They wanted Myers Service Center & Quality Quick Lube to do three things: be honest and upfront with customers, provide quality, affordable work each and every time, and earn the continued loyalty and trust of each customer.
Thirty years later, the Myers family has been blessed to have so many returning customers, many of whom they consider extended family, and blessed to have dedicated auto technicians and employees.
To Mark, Matt, John, Paige, Gray, Alaina and Paul, thank you for your dedication and for giving customers excellent service day-in and day-out. That commitment to excellence is what makes the business successful.
The Myers family business couldnt have succeeded without these great employees and loyal customers. Thank you. Myers Service Center and Quick Lube looks forward to continuing such service for many years to come.
Information: 724-774-7655.
EDUCATION
Geneva College
BEAVER FALLS Geneva College prepares undergraduate students to serve faithfully and fruitfully in their lifes work. With a vocational focus and liberal arts core, a Geneva education is grounded in Gods word, enabling students to think, write and communicate well in todays world.
For traditional students, Geneva offers more than 145 majors and programs, including biology business, communication, computer science, education, engineering, nursing, psychology and student ministry. The faculty cares about the success of each student, and the 13-to-1 student-faculty ratio makes that possible. Geneva professors have real-world work experience, academic achievements, and are actively engaging the culture through research and writing while professing an active Christian faith.
In addition, Geneva fields 18 varsity sports teams in NCAA Division III athletics for men and women, hosts intramural sports leagues and coordinates more than 200 student activities each year.
Adult undergraduates can earn a degree at Geneva in as few as 16 months and complement their professional and family commitments with full online programs.
The masters degree programs MBA, counseling, cybersecurity, higher education and leadership studies can help students excel toward a more promising future. These high-demand professional degrees equip students for principled Christian service to their organizations and the world.
In 2019, U.S. News & World Report ranked Geneva as the No. 3 Best Value Regional University for combining high academic quality with affordability. Kiplingers Personal Finance also lists Geneva on its prestigious list of national Private Universities of Value.
Genevas main campus is located in Beaver Falls. The college is governed by the Reformed Presbyterian Church of North America.
Geneva College does not discriminate on the basis of race, color, sex, disability, and national or ethnic origin.
Information: 800-847-8255; http://www.geneva.edu.
Penn State-Beaver
CENTER TWP. Penn State Beaver offers the personal experience of a small campus with the resources of a Big Ten research university. Students come from western Pennsylvania as well as 28 states and seven foreign countries to live in our newly remodeled residence hall, participate in our championship-winning intercollegiate sports and learn from award-winning faculty.
Students and the community now have an opportunity to participate in the Beaver Valley LaunchBox, a signature program of Invent Penn State, a commonwealth-wide initiative to promote entrepreneurship and innovation in the region and help spur economic development, job creation and campus-community collaboration.
The LaunchBox is powered by community business leaders, professors and ambitious students to provide subject matter expertise and training to help local entrepreneurs and innovators to build and grow their businesses and convert their ideas into a reality successfully. We have partnered with the Beaver County Library System to establish Creative Corners in each of the countys public libraries. We also offer community workshops in the libraries and on the Penn State Beaver campus.
To learn more about the Beaver Valley LaunchBox and our community programs visit on Facebook, Twitter, Instagram and at beavervalley.launchbox.psu.edu.
Pennsylvania Cyber Charter School
MIDLAND Educating children in kindergarten through 12th grade, the Pennsylvania Cyber Charter School, better known as PA Cyber, is one of the largest and most experienced online public schools in the nation.
Students will find creative online learning environments, personalized instruction and top-notch curriculum at PA Cyber. Qualified, state-certified teachers use rich academic content that is aligned to state standards and meets the approval of the Pennsylvania Department of Education.
PA Cybers instructional model focuses on its students. It recognizes their changing developmental stages while respecting their differences and unique abilities. Using a flexible but focused learning model, PA Cybers teachers create a personalized education program for each student.
Headquartered in Midland, PA Cyber has offices throughout Pennsylvania. They serve as a hub for enrollment, orientation and enrichment. The nearly 10,000 students enrolled in PA Cyber belong to a real community, where they grow academically, emotionally, socially and physically.
PA Cyber offers choices for live and self-paced instruction, along with a variety of opportunities for interaction with teachers and peers. The extensive course list and program offerings include the creative and performing arts, STEM and gifted programs, advanced placement classes, and a variety of clubs and other activities. Certified faculty and staff are available to engage with students and families at their convenience.
PA Cyber provides a tuition-free, accredited curriculum with access to all technology and the personal guidance students need for success. The technology platforms are leading edge, user-friendly and enhance the educational experiences of the students. Each student receives a laptop, printer, textbooks and online connectivity, as well as an expert technological support team that is responsive, skilled and dependable.
PA Cyber graduates can be found attending highly regarded universities, colleges, professional academies and vocational schools. Any school-aged child living in Pennsylvania may enroll.
Information: 888-722-9237; http://www.pacyber.org.
Community College of Beaver County
CENTER TWP. Community College of Beaver County, the second smallest community college in Pennsylvania, accomplished big things in 2019 on its Center Township campus.
In March, Roger W. Davis was named the colleges ninth president after serving as interim president since May 2018. Davis, who holds a doctorate in urban educational leadership from Morgan State University in Baltimore, is the colleges youngest president. He joined CCBC in July 2016 as executive vice president and provost.
Academically, CCBC launched the School of Industrial Technology and Continuing Education. The School of Aviation Science founded by James M. Johnson was renamed in his honor. The program, which celebrated 50 years of flight, offers the No. 1 aviation training program in the nation. It includes four two-year degree programs professional pilot, air traffic control, aerospace management and unmanned aerial vehicle (drones).
Additionally, Nursingprocess.org ranked CCBCs nursing school fifth in the nation, and G.I. Jobs magazine named the community college a military-friendly school. CCBC also received the Carnegie Science Award for Leadership in STEM education of its high school academies, and is the first non-profit higher education program in the state to provide digital textbooks for a single low-cost fee.
For more than 50 years, CCBC has been a gateway to success for area students and continues to provide a path to prosperity and family-sustaining careers.
Clarion University of Pennsylvania
Clarion Universitys more than 4,700 determined students are building a bright future through challenging academics and diverse interests, all while living in a charming, civic-minded town that embraces them.
Clarion offers undergraduate and graduate degree programs in business, education, health science and the arts with a 19-to-1 student-to-faculty ratio, and nationally and internationally accredited programs. The university leads Pennsylvanias State System of Higher Education with 28 national accreditations and offers a multitude of internship and study abroad opportunities that give students hands-on experience in their chosen field and in research before they earn their degree.
The university is comprised of its scenic campus in Clarion, which has evolved since its seminary beginnings in 1867, its Clarion University-Venango campus in Oil City and Clarion Online, which offers excellence in education from anywhere in the world.
The 2020 US News and World Report ranks Clarion Online in its Top 100: best online bachelors programs and business programs, best online nursing graduate programs and best online master of education programs.
With a focus on professional development, the university has launched inventive programming and certificates. The Respiratory Care three-year bachelors program prepares students to be registered respiratory therapists and work in diverse roles through the health care delivery system.
The Department of Special Education and Disability Policy Studies and the Competent Learner Model Center of Excellence announced new, online certificate programs. Undergraduate and graduate level certificates in assistant applied behavior analyst and competent learner model are available as well as an advanced competency certificate program for special education students.
The university also offers an online opioid treatment certificate, the first of its kind in the Pennsylvania State System of Higher Education.
More than 160 student organizations complement 175-plus academic programs, including academic, Greek, political, multi-cultural and service groups. Students from 42 states and 15 countries attend Clarion which boasts 58,236 alumni worldwide.
ENTERTAINMENT
Sheffield Lanes, Lounge
ALIQUIPPA Once again this summer, Sheffield Lanes and Lounge in Aliquippa will expand.
Owners Rick and Jeannie DAgostino and their son, Zach, plan to enlarge Rickey Dees Pizza kitchen. Since it reopened in 2009, the former Crescent Township-based business has become an integral part of Sheffield Lanes.
During these winter months, live entertainment continues. With the vinyl sides down, the veranda, warmed by a gas fireplace and heaters, is the perfect place to enjoy local musicians, wonderful food and a beverage. The veranda, which opened last May and provides customers with a non-smoking area, is a great place for private parties.
Sheffield Lanes offers a comfortable smoking lounge and wide selection of bourbon and Scotch, as well as many domestic and craft beers. The lounge also features a humidor stocked with premium cigars. Local musicians play several evenings during the week.
The state-of-the-art Pro Shop, managed by Matt Mowad, recently completed its third second year of business and is quickly becoming a premier spot for bowlers to upgrade their equipment or buy their first bowling ball. The Pro Shop opens at 1 p.m. on Monday, Tuesday and Friday, and at 11 a.m. on Wednesday and Saturday.
The lower-level Fallout Shelter, which will celebrate its 12th anniversary in March, is an intimate venue for live music, special events and private parties. The Shelter is a host to the Beaver County Cigar Club which meets the Thurd Thursday of each month. The cigar club plans to hold its fourth Knob Creek Single Barrel Bourbon release party this summer.
Sheffield Lanes has been a local landmark since it opened in 1950 as a 12-lane duckpin center. Now, the landmark is a 20-lane, 10-pin center that hosts mens, womens, mixed and youth bowling leagues. During the week, Sheffield Lanes offers open bowling specials including Family Funday on Sunday and Electric Bowl on Friday and Saturday. The facility also hosts birthday parties, corporate events, and family and class reunions.
Sheffield Lanes is a go-to spot for league and recreational bowlers who enjoy music, good food, and a well-stocked bar. The friendly staff knows many of their patrons on a first-name basis and strives to keep things running smoothly.
Sheffield Lanes is looking forward to summer with the veranda, open-air deck and bocce courts. Stop by.
Information: 724-375-5080; http://www.sheffieldlanes.com.
FOOD
Oram's Donut Shop
BEAVER FALLS For more than 80 years, Orams Donut Shop, 1406 Seventh Ave. in Beaver Falls, has delighted customers with its famous cinnamon rolls and donuts. Orams takes pride in making fried pastries the old-fashioned way from scratch with quality ingredients and original family recipes.
Customers in Beaver County show appreciation to Orams year after year by voting it the Best Doughnut Shop in The Times Best of the Valley contest. Orams appreciates the community support and will continue to produce the best sweet treats for Beaver County.
Each week, the creative staff at Orams comes up with exciting new flavors. Past specials have included the original cinnamon roll with maple-cream cheese icing and a pumpkin cream cheese-filled doughnut rolled in cinnamon-powdered sugar. To learn about the weekly specials at Orams, follow the shops Facebook, Twitter, Google and Instagram accounts.
Customers can now order their favorite doughnuts online by visiting the shops website, http://www.Orams.com. Online orders require a minimum of a dozen doughnuts and orders must be submitted before 8 p.m. for next day pickup. Orams continues to take orders by phone.
Hours: 5 a.m. to 2 p.m. Monday through Saturday.
To order: 724-846-1504; http://www.orams.com, http://www.facebook.com/oramsdonuts
Rosalind Candy Castle
NEW BRIGHTON Rosalind Candy Castle, 1301 Fifth Ave. in New Brighton, is a full-line chocolate candy manufacturer, wholesaler and retailer. Specialties include custom favors for weddings, showers and anniversaries, fund-raising candy and gifts for all occasions.
Rosalind Candy Castle has been in business for 106 years and employs 30 people. The century-old business offers an extensive line of chocolate confections made from scratch.
Jim Crudden is the president of Rosalind Candy Castle. His children Michael, vice president of operations and Jennifer, vice president of sales and marketing are carrying on the family tradition of manufacturing chocolates using the original recipes. Crudden believes the business is successful because of the passion and dedication of its employees, who treat each other like family.
The business continues to expand through new retail outlets and popular fundraising programs, used by many schools and organizations throughout western Pennsylvania. The redesigned company website also has led to growth throughout the United States.
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Citi, BAML analysts see progress in GE’s annual report – Seeking Alpha
Posted: at 2:08 am
General Electric (GE -3.4%) drifts lower even after winning some analyst support for its recently released 2019 annual report that was knocked by longtime GE bear Stephen Tusa of J.P. Morgan.
Citi analyst Andrew Kaplowitz sees the lack of incremental negatives in the filing as a sign of progress, indicating the company remains on the path to a sustainable turnaround.
Kaplowitz, who maintains a Buy rating and $16 price target on GE shares, sees no signs of significant emerging "new issues," which he believes is significant because it lends credibility to the viability of GE's previously announced roadmap for improving results over the course of several years.
BofAMerrill Lynch's Andrew Obin also reiterates his Buy rating with a $16 target after reviewing the 10-K, saying GE"has undergone a significant reinvestment cycle, positioning it well from a competitive standpoint."
Obin estimates GE Industrial's free cash flow will experience a further $1.6B drag from supply chain transformation in 2020, but decreased factoring will lower that type of drag in subsequent years.
GEs simplification efforts are paying off, Obin says: Compared to last year, GE has 38% fewer manufacturing sites, 16% lower gross Industrial debt, 10% fewer subsidiaries and 8% lower functional costs, yet its adjusted GE Industrial operating profit improved 7% in 2019.
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Citi, BAML analysts see progress in GE's annual report - Seeking Alpha
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50 years of ‘Power, Progress, and Promise’ at the Neal-Marshall Black Culture Center – Indiana Daily Student
Posted: at 2:08 am
The Neal-Marshall Black Culture Center is located at 275 N. Jordan Ave. The center celebrated its 50th anniversary last October. Izzy Myszak
The Neal-Marshall Black Culture Center celebrated its 50th anniversary Oct. 13. The centers 50th-anniversary theme is Power, Progress, and Promise.
Gloria Howell, the centers associate director, said one of the goals of the 50th anniversary is to honor people who came before and made the existence of the center possible.
The Neal-Marshall Black Culture Center provides academic and other resources, such as spaces for students to study and cultural programs, to support students and their success. The center welcomes first-year students with the Freshman Pinning Ceremony and honors black students graduating from IU with the Black Congratulatory Ceremony.
The Neal-Marshall Black Culture Center, previously named the Black Culture Center, was established thanks to campus activism in the late 1960s.
Black student groups sent a document to the Faculty Council in 1969 outlining their goals to increase black faculty, admit more black students and introduce black studies programs. The document was approved and Herman Hudson became the first chair of Afro American Studies, which is now the Department of African American and African Diaspora Studies. Hudson created the black culture center, a facility that served the universitys teaching, research and service missions, while also working to offer a positive environment for black students, faculty and staff, according to the centers information guide.
We want to take into account how far weve come, Howell said.
Nancy Cross-Harris, a Neal-Marshall Black Culture Center staff member, said she has seen the growth of the center, and she feels joy that students today have more opportunities.
It was a struggle to get, Cross-Harris said.
The Neal-Marshall Black Culture Center has experienced several name changes and relocations in its time. The Black Culture Center opened on North Jordan Avenue in 1973. Plans for a new building with more space for student facilities were formally proposed in May 1981. According to the centers website, in 2002,a new 97,000-square-foot building named the Neal-Marshall Black Culture Center opened. The new name honored the first black male and female graduates of IU.
Marcellus Neal graduated in 1919 and Frances Neal graduated in 1895, according to the Department of African American and African Diaspora Studies website. Both were students at a time when black students were not allowed to live on campus. After completing their degrees at IU, both worked in the field of education. For 25 years, Neal served as the head of the science department at Washington High School in Dallas, Texas. Marshall worked as a teacher and university administrator at Edward Waters College in Florida, Florida Memorial College and Spelman College in Georgia.
In 50 years, campus has changed a lot, but the center remains a go-to for black students.
They make us feel welcome here on campus, sophomore Ja'Nay Coleman said.
Coleman said the center is like a home.
"It's kind of overwhelming being the only black student in class sometimes," sophomore Mariam Sows said. So coming to the Neal-Marshall, being surrounded with people like you that are doing the same thing that youre trying to do, its uplifting.
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The driver left more than $500 worth of tools in the car.
Census forms will arrive in the mail in March.
Herrera plans to continue promoting the learning of Spanish and Portuguese.
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