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Entries from December 1, 2022 - December 31, 2022

Thursday
Dec082022

Minneapolis Public Works is Training and Hiring

Excerpt from the December 8 City of Minneapolis e-news:

The City of Minneapolis’ Public Works Department is looking for people to join the teams that keep the city running. Help spread the word about these opportunities with friends, family and community.

Public Works is hiring and training for several job openings:

  • Public Works service worker 1 trainee: performs manual labor, learns to drive and operate equipment. Supports the department’s construction and maintenance activities. You will be supported in obtaining your CDL Class B license.
  • Public Works service worker 1: performs manual labor and drives and operates equipment to support construction and maintenance work.
  • Public Works service worker 2: performs manual labor, drives and operates heavy specialty equipment to support construction and maintenance work.
  • Water distribution operator trainee: performs manual labor to maintain the City’s water distribution system.
  • Water distribution operator: performs manual labor and semi-skilled work to maintain the City’s water distribution system.

Read more information on the City website.

See a list of upcoming information sessions

Wednesday
Dec072022

MacPhail Announces 2022-23 GMI Artists in Residence

MacPhail's Global Music Initiative Announces This Year’s Performance and Teaching Artists in Residence 

MacPhail Center for Music is excited to announce this year's roster for the Global Music Initiative (GMI) Artists in Residence program. This program brings exciting, culturally relevant, inclusive and free music performances and education opportunities to communities and schools across Minnesota.

Now in its third year, MacPhail’s GMI Artist-in-Residence program gives Minnesota musicians opportunities to perform or teach music that fosters innovation and cultural equality, with contributions of many different styles and traditions. The purpose of the initiative is to create inclusive curricula, teaching methods, and provide ample performance opportunities outside of the classical canon.

“Minnesota has one of the richest and historic music communities in the world. I’m just so excited that we get to showcase musicians of this caliber. Through these residencies, we have access to these magnificent musicians, and we get to put them in spots where lots of people can benefit from live music and engage with these artists,” says Christopher Rochester, MacPhail Director of the Global Music Initiative, and jazz program.

New to the residency program is the addition of the teaching artist track which will directly connect resident artists with students in K-12 schools through Minnesota at no cost to the school. Elizabeth Winslow, MacPhail’s Director of School Partnerships explains, “By engaging with our artists in residence, K-12 music educators can begin to bridge the gaps between traditional music education and expanding students’ musical horizons. The curriculum's created better reflect their students’ backgrounds.”

The teaching artists for the 2022-23 GMI Artists in Residence are Fode Bangoura, Yanathan Bekure, Ernest Bisong, Soojin Lee, Siama Matuzungidi, Krysta ‘K.Raydio’ Rayford, and Terrell Woods/Carnage the Executioner. Each resident will participate in 40 hours of school clinics, along with cultivating a project that will engage students in meaningful and inclusive ways.

The Global Music Initiative’s Performing Artists in Residence for 2022-23 are Pooja Goswami Pavan, Lucia Sarmiento, Arthur “L.A.” Buckner and Yohannes Tona. These artists will provide performance opportunities that represent people of color, the LGBTQ+ community, and women.

MacPhail President/COO Paul Babcock voiced his excitement about this year’s residents, “The artists in this year’s Artists in Residence program are amazing and I’m so excited to hear and see their work through performances, workshops, classes, and jam sessions. I’m especially excited about the residency activities that will take place in schools. Students throughout the state will have access to these artists to learn and experience their music, culture, and artistry through music. And, because this is a grant-funded program, it is free for the schools.”

Tuesday
Dec062022

Check Out the Uptown Winter Wonderland, Enter Contest to Win Gift Cards

Article by Becky Fillinger, Photos by Spacecrafting

Uptown businesses have come together to form a holiday windows campaign to spread holiday cheer and draw visitors to the neighborhood. There’s also a digital art contest that everyone can enter to win gift cards from local businesses.

The campaign was put together by Love From Uptown, a collaboration of local businesses that believe in the long-term viability of Uptown. Holiday window installations are up in both empty storefronts as well as existing businesses. Participating locations have created a map that makes visiting the area easy to navigate: 

The Uptown Winter Wonderland effort highlights 24 different locations and features unexpected installations at several empty storefronts, including four anchor spaces on the corner of Lake Street and Hennepin Avenue (the former Juut Salon, the Morton Building, and empty second-floor spaces in the Rainbow Building and Seven Points). The empty space on the first floor of the MoZaic East building on Lagoon Avenue also has a floor-to-ceiling installation that features hand-made paper ornament sculptures and twinkle lights. “For the MoZaic Building, we wanted to create something a little more whimsical that plays off of the existing art on the plaza,” explained Michaella Holden of Lucent Blue Events and Design, the creative partner on the project. “We tried to design something unique for each empty space, both as a nod to the artistic roots that this neighborhood has had over the years, as well as to showcase the potential that these spaces have for the future.”

Additional storefronts that put up installations include Peoples Organic, The UPS Store, Orange Theory Fitness, and Barbette, among others.

Chicken and Waffles from Arts + Rec Uptown, photo Becky FillingerFor dining I recommend Arts + Rec Uptown. The venue describes itself as “an art-forward entertainment venue serving a chef-driven menu and expertly crafted cocktails.” I can tell you that the décor is funky and that on a recent Saturday, General Manager Andrew Avila served me delicious chicken and waffles, yogurt parfait and mimosas.

Have brunch and then take a holiday walking tour of Uptown.

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Winter Wonderland Digital Art Contest!

To help spread the word, the public is invited to participate in a digital art contest on social media. Take a photo, create a video, or make a photo-collage of your favorite Uptown Winter Wonderland scene, and enter for your chance to win local gift cards! Submit your entry by December 11 - winners will be announced the week of December 12. More details and complete contest rules can be found at www.lovefromuptown.com.

Monday
Dec052022

Are You a Fan of Norse Mythology? Check out Vanaheimr, a Production by The Fox & Beggar Theater - Dec 22 at The Cedar

Article by Becky Fillinger, photos provided

We all love the tried-and-true holiday shows and look forward to them every year. But if you’re eager to experience a brand-new show, based on Norse mythology, we have a recommendation for you! We spoke to Nat Allister, Artistic & Managing Director for The Fox & Beggar Theater, about his upcoming production Vanaheimr. There’s only one show on December 22, so order your tickets quickly! 

Nat AllisterQ:  Please tell us a bit about The Fox & Beggar Theater – what’s the history and mission?   

A:  I was born and raised in Northfield, MN, but I started The Fox & Beggar Theater in North Carolina in 2014 while living in Asheville. The idea lay somewhere in all of the marvelous intersections between circus, theater, dance, and visual art.Our first show was called "Animalia," a massive nouveau cirque production inspired by the six classes of animals in a sort of surreal reimagining of Genesis. "Animalia" was pretty, but also quite dark; and the shows basically got prettier and darker from there. Next came "Tarocco" on the centennial of WWI, about a dying Italian infantryman's delirious fantasies in which he imagined himself The Fool on an existential journey encountering all twenty Major Arcana of the Tarot. The show tackled the topics of death and trauma, and being forced to accept something that you couldn't fully understand. More shows came, generally seeking beauty and magic inside the darker places of the human psyche. Somewhere along the way, I came up with the phrase "little lights for dark worlds" to describe my art, which felt right.

In 2020, I moved back to Minnesota and have been rebuilding The Fox & Beggar Theater from the ground up, as a sponsored project of Springboard for the Arts. In the last two years I've embarked on two tours around the Upper Midwest with two fantastic casts. These shows were actually both comedies, of all things - a Spaghetti Western about late-stage capitalism called "Goodnight, Absalom!," and a devised circus show about modern loneliness called "The Lonesome Spectacular!" This December's "Vanaheimr" will be a full return to the dark wilderness of my earlier work.

Q: I can’t express how much I regret that I didn’t see your earlier productions! Speaking of Vanaheirm, you have a performance at The Cedar Cultural Center coming up on December 22. Is it a preview of a work in progress? What can you tell us about it? 

A: I've always been fascinated by Norse mythology, and love this passage written by Michael Chabon: [Norse mythology] begins in darkness, and ends in darkness, and is veined like a fire with darkness that forks and branches. It is a world conjured against darkness, in its lee, so to speak; around a fire, in a camp at the edges of a continent-sized forest, under a sky black with snow clouds, with nothing to the north but nothingness and flickering ice." The stories are rich and wild and messy and beautiful and compelling, and have done more to inspire the modern fantasy novel than any other single source. However, they can also be troubling at times, and perhaps it is no accident that these stories have historically attracted the attention of the far right, from Wagner and Hitler to more recent sects of neo-fascism.

For those who were raised on Norse mythology, you might recall a group that is always mentioned, yet has rarely (if ever) been properly explored. These are the Vanir, a tribe of deities allied to the war-loving Æsir but connected to stuff like nature, fertility, and the harvest. Five years ago, I dreamed of a project called Vanaheimr for the very first time, retelling stories from Norse mythology from the perspective of this less-understood tribe of deities. Along the way, I learned that scholars have wondered if this tribe was picked up from the forgotten gods and goddesses of a Neolithic group of hunter-gatherers that existed in Scandinavia before the Bronze Age. Their culture was wiped out, but perhaps their worldview lives on in the surviving myths of the Viking Age. And I thought: this is good. This is a story worth exploring.

So Vanaheimr was born - a show about nuance, and conflict, and planetary collapse. A show about our ancient history and about our future as a species on this planet.

In 2020, after moving back home to Minnesota, I began developing the show for a Minnesota run. I wrote the script (composed entirely in trochaic tetrameter, and performed by just two narrators) at an artist residency last winter in the deep north woods in the middle of a snowstorm. And now, I am beyond excited for the next chapter, coming to The Cedar Cultural Center on the longest night of the year.

We will be previewing the show inside a lavish wintry set designed by me, Scott Bloom, and Alina Antoniou. Shadow puppetry will be created and performed by Rebecca Mellstrom and Kate Tobie. Willie J. Johnson and Rhiannon Fiskradatz will be narrating the story over blood-pounding music composed by Walken Schweigert and performed by Walken, Alma Engebretson, and myself. Dancers Dom Locke and Levi Martin will be performing both behind and in front of our shadow screen, costumed by the great Twin Cities designer Kathy Kohl, and lit by Trevor Zapiecki. And that's not all; there's too many artists to list in one post and some are still coming.

Above and below - making dark spirits in the Vanaheimr workshop.

This upcoming preview on the solstice is meant to function as a fundraiser, a promotional event, and a ritual blessing to kick off the project for further development, before performing with a cast of twenty-two artists next year in December, 2023. I'll be presenting the full project after the performance and talking about the 2023 run, which will be free, all-ages, and open to the public.

Q: Do I need a background in Norse mythology to appreciate the show? 

A: The show is packed with references to the worlds of the pre-Christian Nordic peoples. Anyone who loves these myths as much as I do will hopefully delight in seeing these characters brought to life. However, nobody needs to know them to appreciate Vanaheimr. The show is visual, and it's auditory, and it's meditative; it's meant to engage the senses and to touch you deep down in the old and wild places in your heart.

Saturday
Dec032022

Turn to The Laundry Evangelist to Conquer Stains of Christmases (and Thanksgivings, Hanukkahs and New Years) Past, Present and Future

Article by Becky Fillinger

Patric Richardson                                                          Photo credit: Minnesota Monthly

You pull out your special holiday tablecloth and there are stains from celebratory feasts from years gone by. Guests at your current holiday parties will spill red wine or cranberry sauce, candles drip wax and gravy and butter leave a greasy residue on many items of clothing and home linens. What to do? In our area, we are lucky to have the The Laundry Evangelist nearby or as close as a YouTube video. We talked to Patric Richardson about facing common holiday stains without fear.

Q:  What about old stains on table linens from prior years’ feasts?

Oxygen bleach powderA:  First, don’t panic! Stains from the past can be handled with ease. Wash the item with laundry soap and oxygen bleach powder - 90% of old stains will be gone after this process. Don’t put the item in the dryer – air dry it to determine what stains remain. For remaining stains, sprinkle on an oxygen bleach powder and rub with an oily soap. In a few hours, run under hot water – then put it back in washer.

Here’s a tip for your readers: On the nights after your dinner parties, take the simple approach first. Wash your linens with a little soap and oxygen bleach powder – don’t dry them. After air drying, check for remaining stains. 

Q:  Moving to the present - please give us a remedy for gravy/butter/greasy stains.

A:  Of course, first spray the stain with white vinegar and water – then run it through the wash. If that doesn’t do the trick, you need to add an oily soap to your solution. Please don’t use dish soap – it can wreck the fabric. 

Q:  Are you ever asked how to remove candle wax?

A:  Every month I’m asked about removing wax from linens. First, brush away any chunks of wax. Then, get two pieces of brown craft paper – one for over and one for under the stained item. Then press with a warm iron. The stain will melt and release into the paper on both sides. When you finish this process, treat any remaining stain with an oily soap as we do with grease stains and launder. 

Q:  I need a solution for red wine stains.

A:  I have one for you. This will also work for cranberry stains. Mix oxygen bleach powder with warm water. Immerse your item in this mix. When the water turns color, you may remove the item and run through the wash.

Q:  And for stains of the future?  

A:  Please refer to my YouTube channel for answers to the many stain dilemmas of holidays yet to come! My book, Laundry Love, Finding Joy in a Common Chore is available wherever books are sold or you may purchase a signed copy at my website. It makes a great holiday gift for college students (or anyone just learning to do laundry) and new home owners. I’ve also learned that parents are using it to teach children at home how to take care of their clothing – weekly lessons in laundry. So, I think any family that does laundry could benefit from my book. Also follow me on Instagram and Facebook.

Friday
Dec022022

Holiday Village at Young Quinlan Building Features 40+ BIPOC- and Woman-owned Businesses, Thru December 24

The Holiday Village is officially open through December 24, Wednesdays-Saturdays 11 am-6 pm, Sundays 11 am-4 pm. The Young Quinlan Building is located at 81 S 9th Street.

Browse and shop at the Holiday Village this holiday season! The Black Market Events, The Roho Collective and Strive Bookstore will feature 40+ BIPOC and woman-owned local artists, makers, authors and chefs.

Located in the historic Young Quinlan Building—one of downtown’s first department store locations—The Holiday Village highlights collaborative entrepreneurship and a community-oriented shopping experience.

Makers include Crown Publishing, Hunt for Variety, Nature’s Syrup, Notetorious, Travel Gang, Grand Rising Press, Your Majesty Incense and Candles, Pieces of Kandakes, Hersiherbs, Dipp’d In Hunnie, Kobi Co., Regina Love Collections, Sweet Heaven by NNE, Treat Me Too Dog Treats, Unique Styles by Ricka. Artists include Tina Bliss, Christopher E. Harrison, Del Bey, Esther Osayande, Melodee Strong, Kenneth Caldwell, Ron Brown, Deshawn Henry, Angela Davis, Walter Griffin, Jeremi Hanson, Crystal Sokuu, Barbara Thomas, Christopheraaron Deanes, T’Mores Little, Jesus Ramirez, Loretta Day, Flahn Manly, Yvette Grifea Gray, Shea Maze, Chuck Love and Leeya Jackson. Strive Publishing is a featured vendor.

The market is supported by the Chameleon Shoppes initiative of the mpls downtown council. For more information, visit www.chameleonshoppes.com and follow @chameleonshoppes on Instagram.

Friday
Dec022022

Share Feedback on Mayor Frey’s Recommended 2023-2024 City Budget at Dec 6 Public Hearing

Exerpt from the December 1 City of Minneapolis e-newsletter:

There is one more public hearing for people to provide feedback on Mayor Jacob Frey’s recommended 2023-2024 City budget. Comments can also be submitted online at the City’s website.

The proposed 2023 budget is $1.66 billion and the 2024 budget is $1.71 billion. The proposed tax levy increase for 2023 is 6.5% and is expected to be 6.2% in 2024. Visit the City’s website to learn more about the mayor’s recommended budget, key dates in the approval process, FAQs and more. You can also watch a series of videos on the City’s budget process.

Comments submitted online will be entered into the public record and shared with the mayor and council members. The City Council is scheduled to vote on adopting the budget on Tuesday, Dec. 6.

Upcoming City budget public hearing

  • 6:05 p.m. Tuesday, Dec. 6, Room 317, City Hall, 350 S Fifth Street

Learn how to participate in public hearings.

Thursday
Dec012022

Columbia Park: 129 Years of History

Article by Michael Rainville, Jr.

Spanning over 180 acres, Columbia Park along Central Avenue in Northeast Minneapolis has been an indispensable feature to the city for almost 130 years. The surrounding communities enjoy amenities such as a dog park, archery range and an 18-hole golf course, but over the course of its long history, major changes have taken place. Today we will look at how the park has transformed throughout the years.

Section of a map from 1898 that shows Sandy Lake

In 1892, the Minneapolis Park and Recreation Board made plans to create an ice rink on Sandy Lake for the coming winter season. During this time, land was being plotted and people were moving in, so the park board decided to purchase 144 acres, including the majority of the 40-acre Sandy Lake. The price was high, coming in at $208,000, or over $6,000,000 after inflation. Many park commissioners were in favor of acquiring the land but were still hesitant. In order to show their enthusiasm for a very large new park, the neighbors petitioned the park board to approve their purchase plans, and the sellers put $20,000 of their own money on the table for immediate parkland improvements.

The park board officially acquired the land in December of 1892, 400 years after Christopher Columbus became the second recorded European to lead a crew to the Americas, thus Columbia Park was born. The acquisition of this park also rekindled the idea of having a parkway encircle Minneapolis, the Grand Rounds. The next summer, following the success of the ice rink on Sandy Lake, a bandstand was erected in the park for seasonal entertainment. Various ideas were thrown around for what to do with all this land, such as putting in an arboretum, a nice resort, athletic fields or a golf course, but in the meantime, the lowland areas of the park were used to grow hay. Over the next decade and a half, the park expanded by another thirty-one acres.

Sandy Lake, thought to be spring fed, began to retreat during the early years of the park. By 1910, the lake was only filled during the wet season and even then, it was more of a pond with marshland surrounding it than a lake. In 1914, the City of Minneapolis was installing storm sewers in that part of Northeast, so superintendent Theodore Wirth talked them into putting in the sewer at a level that would drain the lake. Since then, the lowlands of Columbia Park have had flooding issues in the Spring from time to time.

With more land at their dispense, the park board was ready to connect Columbia Park to the Grand Rounds. In 1912, a plan was made for the Northeast stretch of the Grand Rounds and two years later, Thirty-third Avenue was renamed “St. Anthony Parkway” from University to the Camden Bridge. This Northeast section was completed in 1924 and inaugurated with a parade. It became the first east-west route north of Lowry Avenue.

Photo from 1925 of the clubhouse under construction

The 18-hole golf course in Columbia Park looked a little different when it first opened. With the success of the 9-hole course at Glenwood Park, now known as Wirth, the park board installed six holes with sand putting greens at Columbia in 1917. Three years later, they put in three more holes, and two years after that in 1922, nine holes were added to make eighteen with the sand greens being replaced by grass. The new 18-hole course quickly became a must-play for local golfers, but there was not a system in place to handle the high demand. In order to cater to the needs of a popular course, the park board constructed a clubhouse in 1925 that would later be named “The Manor” in 1930.

Wirth's 1930 park plans

That same year, superintendent Wirth created a plan to connect Columbia Parkway, that runs along the northern edge of the park, to Thirty-third Avenue next to the clubhouse. This plan included a large picnic shelter, many athletic fields, and an indoor swimming pool situated along Central Avenue. This new road would wind its way between the recreational parkland and golf course, crossing the Soo Line Railway tracks at the Columbia Park Bridge that was installed in 1895. This bridge is only one of two steel, ribbed-arch bridges in Minnesota, was closed to vehicle traffic in 1958, and currently connects holes two and three at the golf course. The Great Depression immediately halted Wirth’s 1930 plan and it never came to fruition.

Women's golf national champion Patty Berg playing an exhibtion match, 1940.

A shoe race on the 4th of July at the park, 1947.

In 1956, the Northeast Lions Club paid for the park’s first picnic shelter, which was the first of many in the park system to have coin-operated electric outlets and hotplates. In the late 1960s, the golf course was expanded in order to stay competitive from roughly 4,600 total yards to 6,200 yards. Cross-country skiing and snowshoeing were also become popular activities and the golf course began manicuring trails in the winter. In the 1990s, Columbia Park became home to the park system’s first golf learning center, across the parkway from the dog park. The next major upgrade came in 1997 when the park installed a new playground with a very fun but dangerously long slide, updated paths, volleyball and basketball courts, and a soccer/rugby field that has became a popular spot for rugby clubs around the Twin Cities.

More recently, the park board and the Mississippi Watershed Management Organization are working to mitigate flooding and improve the ecosystem of the park. The first phase of this project, which started in October of 2020, includes replacing the storm sewer system along with controlled burnings and trimmings of sections of the park for a total of twenty acres with the intent of planting native prairie vegetation and oak savannahs. Phase two, which is scheduled to begin in May of 2021, includes grading and reseeding the golf course. The work that is being done will greatly enhance the experience for its visitors, human and animal alike, and I soon look forward to walking the greens of Columbia Park when improvements are complete.

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Click here for an interactive map of Michael's past articles.

Thursday
Dec012022

Small Business Spotlight: The Nicollet Diner

Article by Becky Fillinger

The Nicollet Diner at 1333 Nicollet has transformed its new 14,000 square foot space into a fun, contemporary 24-hour diner, drag venue and craft cocktail lounge. We spoke to Sam Turner, Owner/Founder, to get the scoop on the different experiences available when we visit.

Q:  What’s new with The Nicollet Diner?

A:  A lot! After eight years in Loring Park, The Nicollet Diner has moved just two blocks north to 1333 Nicollet Mall. The Diner is still open 24/7 365 days a year. I recommend you check out the menu and try our Biscuits and Gravy, Wings, Malts and Burgers. You can order breakfast any time of the day - our Bacon, Eggs, Hashbrowns and Toast is still the best seller. 

Q:  Roxy's Cabaret recently opened too. What types of events are planned for the cabaret?

A:  Roxy’s Cabaret is Minneapolis' newest drag venue, highlighting professional drag and featuring a variety of other live entertainment.  We currently host themed drag shows four times a week with Charity Bingo on Tuesdays. We are excited to expand the entertainment in the cabaret to include stand-up comedy, live music, independent film and cult classic watch parties soon.   

Q:  Will there be holiday-themed drag shows?

A:  Absolutely! On December 3rd, 10th and 17th our regular Saturday night show FLAMboyANCE will offer a special holiday edition, All We Want for Christmas is You!

Roxy's Old FashionQ:  Which leads us to the third business at the space, On the RoX. Please tell us more.

A:  On the RoX, is our take on an elevated craft cocktail lounge with spectacular 2nd and 3rd floor outdoor patios. We feature a brilliant, competition level craft cocktail menu. We wanted to build a space perfect for happy hour, gathering with friends or a nightcap after an amazing date. 

Q:  How may we follow your news?

A:  We are very active on social media! All four of our concepts have independent websites, Facebook and Instagram profiles and we keep our Google listing up to date with events, offers and updates. Please come visit us and check us out at:

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