October-ish 2015 single pages
Transcription
October-ish 2015 single pages
the M A C a STATE of the MACOPOLITAN address It takes a village to sustain a village voice....that’s not, you know, the Village Voice The Macopolitan is inching toward its one-year anniversary in December, and we’ve enjoyed an abundance of non-monetary community support. Readers have contacted us in person and stopped us on the street to tell us how much they appreciate having a different kind of community publication around. Forward-looking, fun, and surprising are some of the words they’ve used. More and more of you are sending us your event information. Few local businesses or gathering places decline to make the Mac available in their establishments, and we’ve managed to amass 409 Facebook “likes” without even trying. All this appreciation is great, and we’re thrilled that so many of you like what we’re doing, but we have to tell you that it’s going to require a lot more material support—that is, much more than we’re currently getting—to keep the Macopolitan in print or even to make it to a one-year mark that’s only a couple months away. So it seems like a good time to revisit, reiterate, and clarify some early statements we made about our intended purpose(s) and the organizational model we are trying to follow. You have undoubtedly noticed that this publication contains advertising. We do not sell ads to line our pockets, but to help cover the cost of providing the community with a FREE, citizenproduced publication aimed at raising community morale and increasing local participation in creative, edifying, altruistic, and fun activities. Our ad rates are bargain-basement low, and we’d like to keep those where they are for now, in order to provide a lower-cost advertising alternative for the community. Should our advertising support and other revenue ever EXCEED our operating expenses, we intend to invest any such excess in community organizations and/or projects that improve local quality of life. Unfortunately, we aren’t even close to reaching that point, and our current advertising and donation support is not covering expenses. A few “angels” have been keeping the project afloat, but we need a village. Use our new online-donation doohickey to toss us a couple of bucks—if you can afford a few more bucks, please consider becoming a sponsor. Christie Davis WICE Board President MACO-nouncements WEBSITE DEVELOPMENTS: online donation capacity coming soon We know it can be a Herculean task to locate an envelope, and a stamp, and then you’re like, what’s their address again? Forget it, I want a cookie. Not to worry! By the time you read this (or very soon thereafter), you will be able to conveniently toss a few bucks our way via the Macopolitan’s website: www.macopolitan.org MORE WEBSITE DEVELOPMENTS: web content We added a web content page last month, and as this issue goes to press we are adding two more pieces of content to it. Go check them out. YOU WON’T BE BORED ON THIS BOARD Finally, we are resuming an active search for new WICE board members. Get all the details on that website we just mentioned. business manager brief Warning: sports metaphors The past several fall seasons have been pretty happy times for this “biz man.” Mainly because my favorite National League Central team has been dominating the major leagues and keeping me excited throughout October, and also because my favorite West Division American Football Conference team has been picking up where baseball leaves off, with legendary performances from possibly the best quarterback of all time. In this respect, life has been good! This year, however, I have a new team that has been delivering homeruns and field goals, month after month and often in overtime. This ragtag group of all-stars, better known as the WICE board Macopolitan staff, is closing in on its first year of existence. We’ve had ups and downs, for sure, but we have yet to meet a challenge that has sent us to the locker room in defeat. We certainly couldn’t have made it this far without some stalwart friends and fans—advertisers and fiscal sponsors who recognized our potential and came out to cheer us from half-empty bleachers in the freezing drizzle. Or even join us on the field. Calling all the very small We’d really like to have some more of you get in the game, though, so we’re going to try a little advertising offer. We’re calling it Macopolitan Micro-Entrepreneur Month, and we’re offering a 15% reduction in the cost of ANY size ad to qualifying businesses.* This offer is limited to our holiday edition—that’s right, this is the issue that will come out around Thanksgiving, at the start of the holiday shopping season. What’s a micro-entrepreneur? Definitions vary, but for purposes of this offer we’re thinking of solo, self-employed free agents without employees or big-time business assets. We’re thinking about the pet sitter, the piano teacher, the wedding photographer, the tutor, the massage therapist, the part-time maker of artisanal pickles. (Oh, wait, that’s Brooklyn.) The shoveler of driveways, how’s that. The mower of lawns. See the detailed announcement on our website, and GO TEAM. Daniel Clark, Macopolitan Business Manager the Macopolitan top left: labyrinth created by multitalented local artist Kelley Quinn, who is also an Instructor of Spanish at WIU. Photo by Tim Schroll top right: Fire Guy by Gary Irby. Photo by Christie Davis bottom left: entrance to one of the property’s remaining beehive kilns. Visitors can learn how the brick-making process worked in a small on-site museum. Photo by Christie Davis bottom right: A found-object “family” created by Brickyard owner-stewards Dev and Tim Schroll. Photo by Tim Schroll opposite page: Dev’s stained-glass work on the door to the Sun Building—one of the guest cottages that could potentially be used as an artist’s retreat. Photo by Tim Schroll the Macopolitan sports & outdoors Fri/sat/sun oct 16–31 Horn Field Corn Maze What better way to enjoy autumn in the midwest than by getting lost in a corn field? All Halloween & kids ages are welcome, but participants age 16 and under must be accompanied by a parent or guardian. 7–9 p.m. Fridays, 1–9 p.m. Saturdays, and 1–4 p.m. Sundays $5/person Horn Field Campus, 985 China Rd., Macomb sun oct 18 fri–sat oct 16–17 Vishnu Springs open house 3rd Annual Fall Festival A rare opportunity to visit historic Vishnu Springs. Author Paul Thomas Ferguson will First Christian Church hosts a fall festival open to all. Carnival games, face painting, pumpkin be signing Watershed, the first novel in his planned Vishnu Springs trilogy, with copies decorating, bouncy houses, petting zoo, and lots of fun fall foods. Kids are invited to come in available for $15 and a portion of each sale benefitting the Friends of Vishnu preservation costume on Friday for Trunk or Treat, which begins at 7 p.m. Register at www.fccmacomb.org committee. Marla Vizdal will present a talk about the site’s fascinating history at 1 p.m. by Monday, October 12 for the bags tournament that starts Saturday at noon. Cost is $10 per Canceled in event of rain. Directions: take the Tennessee/Blandinsville blacktop (E350th) entry. Otherwise, enjoy this entirely free event! to N1100th, turn west and follow the road to the site. Fri 5:30–7:30 p.m., Sat 10 a.m.–1 p.m. 10 a.m.–4 p.m., Vishnu Springs, Colchester FREE First Christian Church parking lot, Macomb FREE sat Oct 24 sat oct 17 Atkinson/McCord Cemetery tour at Argyle Lake State Park Moon Over Macomb Join park staff for a historical walking tour of the Atkinson/McCord cemetery located Close out the Farmer’s Market season with festivities including a straw bale maze, pedal tractor on the park’s property. Participants should be able to walk ½ mile on moderate terrain to course, music, crafts, reading, trolley rides, free haunted museum tours, and a costume parade. access the cemetery. Meet at the park visitor center or at the trap range. 9 a.m.–1 p.m., Courthouse Square, Macomb FREE 10 a.m. - 12 p.m. Argyle Lake State Park, Colchester FREE sat OCt 17 sat nov 14 Haunted Museum Tours Woodland Wonders Nature Hike at Argyle The museum will be haunted by the “ghosts” of prominent local women, who will tell first- Learn how park wildlife is preparing for the cold winter months during a morning hike person stories about their lives and contributions. on one of Argyle’s most popular trails. Hike will begin at 10 a.m. at the visitor center and 10 a.m.–1 p.m., Western Illinois Museum, Macomb $5 suggested donation per family conclude by noon. 10 a.m. - 12 p.m. Argyle Lake State Park, Colchester FREE Sun oct 18 Life is a Cabaret! sat/sun, nov 21 & 22 Refreshments, music, and fun activities! Bring the family out to this open house-style Midwest Regional Quidditch Tournament fundraiser hosted by McDonough County Kiwanis. Raffle tickets for door prizes will be sold, Life imitates art in “muggle quidditch,” a real-world adaptation of Harry Potter’s favorite and all proceeds will support local Back-Pack/Sack Program for schoolchildren. sport. Co-ed teams of relative grownups, none of whom can fly, run around a field with 2–4 p.m., Spotlight Event Center, 102 E. Market St., Colchester. Free-will donations. broomsticks between their legs. Although this sounds like a painful accident waiting to happen, the game is evidently growing in popularity on college campuses and elsewhere. Sat oct 24 Check it out at Veterans Park, right here in Macomb. Teams, times, and other details are Improvised Interesting: Clay Organisms TBA: check the Macomb Convention and Visitors Bureau website, makeitmacomb.com, Part of the University Art Gallery’s “Sock Monkey Saturday” programming for kids. All for further info. materials will be provided. For more info, contact Rhonda at [email protected]. 10:30 a.m.–12 p.m., University Art Gallery, WIU FREE thur oct 29 17th Annual Halloween Concert Children of all ages are invited to attend this orchestral concert of fun and fantastical whimsy as a prelude to weekend Halloween activities. Orchestra members and conductor will perform in costume, and the audience is encouraged to wear their costumes, as well. Children can participate in a parade of costumes during the concert, while also enjoying popular movie music themes played by the orchestra. 6:30 p.m., COFAC Recital Hall, WIU FREE oct 23 - dec 11 YMCA of McDonough County Circus Academy Kids can join the circus without running away in this 8-week after-school program, now in its fifth year. Trapeze-flying, stilt-walking, ball acrobatics and other circus activities are taught. Circus class session runs Oct 23 – December 11; classes meet Fridays, 4:30–6:30 p.m. send your events to [email protected] or else the malevolent Mac-o-lantern will come to your house, eat all your Halloween candy, and mess up your Netflix queue. Accompanying photos are adored. You may also submit event info on our website www.macopolitan.org $48 for the session for YMCA members, $96 for non-members. Registration is now open. Call the Y for more info: 309-833-2129 11 the Macopolitan meetings & miscellany give/receive Wednesdays in Oct thur oct 22 THUR OCT 15 Yoga 26th Annual Take Back the Night Mobile Food Pantry Ron Green teaches this weekly class for all This march and rally to end sexual Gratis groceries for folks in need, from River Bend Food Bank in partnership with the Center levels. 5–6 p.m., $5/class assault and gender-based interpersonal for Youth and Family Solutions. Registration between 10:30–11 a.m. Distribution starts Unitarian Universalist Fellowship violence begins on WIU’s campus with at 11 a.m. Bring your own bags or containers. Colchester Community Center, Friendway 300 Wigwam Hollow Rd, Macomb resource tables, the Proclamation Reading, Park, 500 E Roberts, Colchester. Contact Carrie Depoy for questions, 309-833-1791 speakers, and performers. Participants THurs & Sat in oct will then join a candlelight march from SUN oct 25 Macomb Farmers’ Market campus to Chandler Park, where the rally Soup n’ More 7 a.m.–1 p.m., Courthouse Square, will conclude. Contact WIU Women’s Free community dinner, open to everyone. Volunteers needed at 2 for setup. Macomb Center for more info: (309) 298-2242. 4–6 p.m., First Presbyterian Church, 400 E. Carroll St., Macomb 6:30–8:30 p.m., WIU campus & thur oct 15 fri Oct 30 Chandler Park, Macomb Free Macomb Beautiful Annual Free Range Yoga Halloween Blood Drive Awards Banquet wed oct 28 The free rangers vant to dlink your blood! Not really. They just wanna save it for someone who Community folks will receive Altrusa Club of Macomb might need it in the future. Your reward? A free class of your choice with Dawn, Anne, or beautification awards, and Bob Anstine Learn about this great service group Kindra—IF you register in advance and show up in costume! 1-4 p.m., Free Range Yoga, will be awarded the Special Award at their monthly meeting. Check their Macomb Email Dawn Piper to register: [email protected] of Merit for contributions to the Facebook page for meeting time: https:// beautification of Macomb. 6:30 p.m., www.facebook.com/MacombAltrusa Sat Nov 7 Wesley United Methodist Church, Georgetown Country Club, Macomb International Trivia Night & Silent Auction Macomb Free Save the date for this trivia night and silent auction hosted by the International Honor Society Phi Beta Delta. Proceeds go toward international education scholarships. Adv tickets only, available at the Western Illinois Museum or from Penny Yunker Sat oct 31 To register or for info, contact Patti Jones ([email protected]) or Dana Vizdal (dm-visdal@ (309-837-9119) Macomb Worthogs Homebrew Club wiu.edu). Register by October 23, $10/person. 7 p.m., Wesley Village Community Center, Beer nerds gather to discuss and enjoy 1200 E. Grant St., Macomb MON oct 19 their favorite beverage. 3 p.m., The Wine McDonough County Sellers sat nov 7 Genealogical Society 121 S. Randolph St., Macomb Bowl For Kids’ Sake 2015 William “Bill” Wilson will discuss Old Bowling fundraiser supports the Warren and McDonough Counties Big Brothers Big Sisters Forts and Block Houses of Early Illinois. sat nov 14 program. More information and tickets are available at www.bbbsmv.org 7 p.m., Western Illinois Museum, Altrusa Holiday Bazaar 9 a.m.–2 p.m., Digger’s College City Bowl, 123 E. Adams St., Macomb Macomb FREE Begin your holiday shopping at this wonderful bazaar. Local vendors will be sat nov 7 Mon oct 19 offering their craft items, pet accessories, “Pets 4 Vets” Meet and Greet Macomb Camera Club jewelery, kitchen supplies, and more!. People 4 Paws, a relatively new animal-welfare organization based in Macomb, hopes to Calling photographers of all experience Admission is free, so don’t hesitate! match a few military veterans and/or current servicemembers with their canine soulmates. levels to learn about photo-improvement 9 a.m.–3 p.m., Macomb High School, The organization has arranged very low-cost adoption for veterans and servicemembers; they features of Adobe Lightroom, Raw, 1525 S. Johnson St., Macomb Free will also facilitate obedience training &/or specialized service training for the lucky dogs. and Bridge. Meeting will also include Adoptable dogs and experienced trainer will both be in attendance. discussion of a charity event to help 11 a.m.–2 p.m., Lowderman Auction Company on Hwy 136 two miles west of Macomb low-income families obtain quality More info: www.people4pawsil.org Free family portraits. 7 p.m., National Guard Armory, 135 W. Grant St., Macomb Free TUES oct 20 Macomb High School Meet local moms, get free breastfeeding information and support. Kids always welcome. 6–7 p.m., Early Beginnings Childcare, 339 S. Johnson St., Macomb Free wed oct 21 Macomb Beautiful monthly meeting Speaker Carey Corrie of Boehm Garden Center in Rushville will present on “Trees, Trees, Trees...” beginning at noon. 11:30 a.m., Old Dairy, Macomb Free high school happenings La Leche League of Macomb wed oct 14 MHS Fall Choir Concert 7 p.m., Fellheimer Auditorium Macomb High School FREE mon oct 19 Annual Chili Supper Eat some delicious chili with a hot dog, veggies, dessert, and a drink while listening to the Macomb bands perform short programs. All proceeds will go to support the 6-8th grade band program at Macomb. 5–6:45 p.m., Macomb High School Commons $8/adults, $5/children 6th grade & under the Macopolitan 12 causes The Brix-Lindahl Challenge: best thing to happen to local shelter animals since the Brix Challenge! by your editor The amazing human being at left is Chris Brix, and the dog is Pee Wee Brix. Around this time last year, Mr. Brix issued a month-long donationmatching challenge that raised $11,000 for the Humane Society of McDonough County, which enabled the HSMC to dial up its lifesaving work. This year Brix has been joined by Tate and Sharon Lindahl—shown here with kitty Matilda—and this whole trio of humane humans will match up to $1,000 each in donations given to HSMC by October 31. The Humane Society, by the way, works with the McDonough County Animal Shelter but is an entirely separate, all-volunteer organization. You might say that the Humane Society works to make the shelter more humane and to get its inmates fixed, vaccinated, and released into cozier surroundings in the greatest possible numbers. If you’ve ever wanted to help local shelter pets, do it now! Do it next month, too, but do it now, because your money will go twice as far. Donations of any amount are appreciated, and all funds will be used to help McDonough County animals through important HSMC initiatives. According to an HSMC press release, these initiatives include spay/ neuter programs, rescue/ foster/adoption programs, and medical needs (i.e., shelter cat vaccines, emergency medical fund, and foster pet care). To help: Donate via PayPal on the Humane Society website at www.hsmcil.org, or mail your donation to this address: Brix-Lindahl Challenge Humane Society of McDonough County PO Box 7, Macomb, IL 61455 13 the Macopolitan 15 the Macopolitan Monmouth gets the blues interview by King Neptune On Saturday, October 24th, the Rivoli Theater in Monmouth will be hosting the Deep Blue Innovators Blues Festival. I sat down with festival founder and all around groovy guy/bon vivant Paul Schuytema, who vigorously explained what to expect. In this interview, we’ll learn about diddly bows, King Neptune: Tell me about the Deep Blue Innovators Blues musical concoctions, Festival. deep blue innovators, and the joys of Paul: Well, this is our 9th year [for this] blues festival in Monmouth. We have it every fall, and the idea was to try and not be like a generalist blues festival. I mean, my love of the blues is super olddrinking beer and school: you know, like the kind of blues you play—Piedmont blues, Lightnin’ Hopkins, pre-World War smoking ribs. We’ll II stuff. But I also like innovative stuff, hence the Deep Blue Innovators name. Basically, folks that also be kicking a have kind of like a foot in the past, and a foot on the cutting edge of the blues. rhinoceros with a telecaster guitar. This is our ninth event, and the thing that I have the most fun doing is trying to kind of imagine the musical concoction of the acts that come together. I hope it’s an impressive lineup for people, and that they hear something they’ve never heard before. King Neptune: Where will the festival be held? Paul: We always have it at the Rivoli Theater on South Main street here in Monmouth, and it’s a really cool place because it’s an old vaudeville theater. It’s not super fancy, like the Orpheum in Galesburg, but it was kind of like a working class vaudeville theater. It’s got a really nice balcony, it’s got a really nice stage, but it’s kind of rough around the edges, so that makes it a little bit better for the blues. King Neptune: How do this year’s performers exemplify the idea of the “deep blue innovator”? Paul: We have this young guy, Micah Kesselring, who’s coming in from Ohio. He’s kind of a long-haired, barefoot new face of the blues. He’s like 22 years old, but he plays resonator deepthroated blues, and I just love that: the young people looking all the way back to [musicians] like Son House. Then we’ve got this really interesting guy that I saw maybe 10 years ago. He comes from Florida—he looks like he comes from the swamps. Ben Prestage. He’s a multi-instrumentalist, and he basically makes all of his own instruments. He does sort of modified diddly bows, which are the really primitive old blues instruments where they would take, y’know, a cigar box and a broomstick and a broom wire and make these instruments. But he’ll do, like, a multi-stringed one, where some of the strings actually go through one set of pickups and go into a guitar amp, and the other strings go into a bass amp, and he’ll, like, capo them with a sharpie marker. It does this really, like, low, swampy boogie kind of blues, but these instruments make sounds you didn’t think [they] could make. Like kicking a rhinoceros with a telecaster, something like that. Then we got a band I absolutely love, Davina and the Vagabonds. There’s that whole ‘everything old is new again.’ They’re kind of the hip lounge act of the late 20s and early 30s, with the standup acoustic slap bass, horn section, keyboard player, and nasal-singing female vocalist just doing these raunchy kind of barroom, peanuts-on-the-floor kind of blues. the Macopolitan 16 2015 Innovators, this page from top left: Charlie Detroit, Ben Prestage, Davina of Davina and the Vagabonds (Davina photo by Grinkle Girl Photography, other photos courtesy the artists) rock & ruralroll And then our headliner is Moreland and Arbuckle. The guitarist plays an advanced diddly bow that he made, but he gets the really kind of like rockin’ sort of rhythm going, and then the harmonica player plays almost kind of a percussive harmonica, with really low bass notes. It’s kind of like this roots funk. If you take it all together, it’s almost kind of like this one is accidently sort of a hipster blues festival. It wasn’t necessarily the thought that I was kind of going for, this roots throwback sound. I think it’s going to be cool; I’m looking forward to it. Deep Blue Innovators Blues Festival WHEN music starts at 2 p.m. on Saturday, Oct. 24 WHERE Rivoli Theater 219 S. Main St. in Monmouth Tickets $20 advance/$25 door also on Oct 24 a free pre-fest harmonica workshop with Joel Fleming, 10:30 a.m.–12 p.m. at Buchanan Center for the Arts in Monmouth. King Neptune: Sounds like you’ve put a lot of thought into the acts you’re hosting at the festival. Is that one of the things that makes the Deep Blue Innovators event different from any other blues festival in the area? Paul: I’m trying to create kind of a sonic tapestry, and bring something that someone hasn’t heard before. And the cool thing is...the people who come to the blues fest, that’s kind of what they expect. In fact, they sort of trust the blues fest to give them a great day of music. Most of the people who come show up at 2 o’clock and stay til the end. They’re full of ribs, full of beer, full of good music by the end of the day...I mean they’re into it; they hunker down and they’re into it. And they get to meet the musicians, and there’s [only] one stage, so everyone’s got to sound check in front of one another. There’s no hiding behind the curtain or anything like that. It’s just that sense of intimacy that people are looking forward to. King Neptune: Any workshops going on? Paul: This year we’re bringing in Joel Fleming, who is an absolutely accomplished harmonica player. He was in the Air Force Tops in Blue*, he won the Hohner Harmonica second best harmonica player in the United States, and he’s going to be doing a workshop from 10:30 until noon the day of the festival, at the Buchanan Center for the Arts. It’s free of charge and the first 20 people will get a free Hohner harmonica—just to get you started and see how he gets some of his different sounds. I think it’ll be a lot of fun. Maybe we’ll get a lot of people drinking beer, and playing harmonica at the end of the blues show. King Neptune: Is there going to be food at the festival? Paul: Food and drink! The Rivoli Theater is connected to the Bijou Pub and Grill. The Bijou’s got like 15 types of beer on draught, maybe 35 types of craft beers. They have a full menu that’s going all day long, so Reubens and Philly cheesesteaks. But the cool thing is—and we’ve had this every year at the blues festival—Eddie B, a local pork pit master, brings his smoker out front, right in front of the Rivoli Theater, and all day long he just smokes slabs of ribs. And it’s the most heavenly thing to have an ice cold beer, listening to the blues and just blinded by rib smoke; it’s just the most wonderful thing. He has never ever not sold out of every bone of rib that he’s smoked. It’s just a great thing, and that’s I think why people stay, too; you can get a nice Guinness, and you can get a slab of rib dinner while you’re watching the blues. You know it’s not quite Beale Street, but it’s about as close as we can get in the cornfields. 2015 Innovators, this page from top: Micah Kesselring (courtesy the artist), Moreland and Arbuckle (photo by Gavin Peters) King Neptune is the stage name of a solo blues musician based in Macomb. *Tops in Blue is a touring performance ensemble made up of United States Air Force active duty members. 17 the Macopolitan thank you, sponsors! Burton Law Office LLC First Presbyterian Church* Regional Office of Education #26 Anonymous Armand Affricano Mary and Paul Banach Melina Barona Beverly Braniff Gordon Chang John Curtis & Karen Mauldin-Curtis Alice & Bill Davenport Marty Fischer Greg Hall Inselhaus Inc. Monica & Richard Iverson Barbara “Babs” Lawyer Shawn Meagher Sam & Becky Parker Shazia Rahman Randy Sollenberger Bill Thompson Jacque Wilson-Jordan Paula Wise next issue all your holiday doings Randy Sollenberger, back by popular demand local dog tells own story and.....we dunno! Send us something. *in-kind sponsor 19 the Macopolitan