February 2013 Entertainment Guide

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February 2013 FREE ART & THE GRAPHIC NOVEL Feb 1-28 - Zumbrota WINTER DANCE PARTY III Feb 2 - Northfield CHARLEY’S AUNT Feb 15-23 - Owatonna PINTS & VINES Feb 23 - Faribault BILLY JOHNSON Feb 28 - Northfield Covering Cannon Falls, Faribault, Farmington, Lakeville, Northfield, Owatonna & Surrounding Areas

description

An array of happenings for the month of February in and around Northfield including theater, music, food, and other forms of entertainment.

Transcript of February 2013 Entertainment Guide

Page 1: February 2013 Entertainment Guide

February 2013FREE

art & the graphic novel Feb 1-28 - Zumbrota

winter dance party iiiFeb 2 - Northfield

charley’s auntFeb 15-23 - Owatonna

pints & vinesFeb 23 - Faribault

Billy Johnson ☛Feb 28 - Northfield

Covering Cannon Falls, Faribault, Farmington, Lakeville, Northfield, Owatonna & Surrounding Areas

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[email protected] © Northfield eNtertaiNmeNt Guide

900 N Hwy 3 Northfield, MN

507-645-8912 nfld DQ Manderfeld

www.dairyqueenofnorthfield.com

OPENINGFebruary 25!

Coming To Northfield Dairy Queen in 2013

ORANGE JULIUS/ORANGE JULIUS SMOOTHIESYogurt at its best!

An exhibit that will be enjoyed by the whole family.Feb 26-April 16 • Artist Reception March 1, 5-7pm

Paradise Center for the Arts, Faribault, MN

An Artistic CollaborationTom Frank, Author/IllustratorCraig Wasner, Music/Voice Over

Maren Wasner, VocalsTodd F. Edwards, Video/Animation

This activity is made possible by the voters of Minnesota through a grant from the Southeastern Minnesota Arts Council thanks to a legislative appropriation from the arts & cultural heritage fund.

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february 2013 Check us out online at www.northfieldguide.com 1

ContentsExhibits �����������������������������������������������������������2

Theater �����������������������������������������������������������6

Shorts ��������������������������������������������������������������4

Vintage Band Festival 2013 ���������������������5

Happenings�������������������������������������������������� 7-26

Positively Division Street ����������������������� 28

Historic Happenings: Sid Freeman ��������������������������������������� 31-35

February Gigs �������������������������������������������� 36

Clubs, Classes & More ���������������������������� 37

Advertisers’ Index ������������������������������������ 38

Dining ����������������������������������������������������39-40

NEG Coupons ���������������������������������������������39-40

On the Cover: Billy Johnson brings his feel-good, blue-col-lar, barroom-rousing tunes to Northfield’s Tavern Lounge Jan. 31 and Feb. 28.

your source for happenings since 2005

Vol. 8, Issue 2February 201317 Bridge SquareNorthfield, MN 55057507/[email protected]

Publisher:Rob SchanilecBy All Means Graphics

Advertising:Teresa Tilson, Sales Manager [email protected]

Contributors:Felicia CrosbySusan HvistendahlRich LarsonLocallygrownnorthfield.org Northfield.orgNorthfield Music Collective

Online:at northfieldguide.com! A flippin’ cool digital edition, downloadable PDF, archives and content submission form.

It’s all here.Attractive setting … gorgeous spaces … access to high-quality care and services.

Northfield Retirement Community offers: • Catered living

• Assisted living

• Housing with services

• Skilled nursing care

• Memory care

• Rehabilitation

• Full-time spiritual care services with a community chaplain and pastoral care

To learn more, visit our website at www.northfieldretirement.org.

507-664-3466 www.northfieldretirement.org

Northfield Retirement Community

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Crossings at Carnegie320 East Ave., Zumbrota • crossingsatcarnegie.com 507/732-7616 • M/T/W/F 10am-5pm, Th 10am-8pm, Sa 10am-4pmBill Willingham: Art and the Graphic Novel – through Feb. 28 – featuring Willingham, Gene Ha, Adam Hughes, Mark Buckingham, Peter Gross and Chrissie Zullo. Artists’ Recep-tion: Feb. 23, 1-3pm.

Eclectic Goat – 413 Division St. S. • 507/645-0301 • M-Sa 10am-5:30pm, Th until 7pm, Su Noon-4pm – Hip Handmade Goods!

Flaten Art Museum1520 St. Olaf Avenue • 507/786-3556 • stolaf.edu/collections/flaten • M/T/W/F 10am-5pm, Th 10am-8pm, Sa/Su 2-5pm Gallery closed Jan. 31-Feb. 6Sunday Night Supper Club – through Feb. 15 – featuring the 2013 St. Olaf Art Apprentices Mat Brutger, Anders Nienstaedt, Sheila Novak, Justina Ny, Anda Tanaka and James Wilson.

Axis Mundi: Levvittown by Sculptor Holly Laws and Play-wright Charlotte Meehan - Feb. 22-April 7 – a reinvented min-iature neighborhood deconstructing the ideals and pitfalls of the famous post-World War II housing enclave for returning veterans. Levittown remains the quintessential American suburb. Public Lecture by Laws and Meehan Feb. 21, 7pm in Dittmann 305. Exhibit Opening Reception: Feb. 22, 6-8pm.

Northfield Arts Guild 304 Division St. • 507/645-8877 • northfieldartsguild.org M-F 10am-5pm, visit web site for weekend hoursNirthfolde Visitors’ Bureau – through Feb. 9 – Nirthfolde, a bucolic, yet bustling burg situated in a parallel universe that neatly overlaps Northfield, Minnesota, has existed relatively unnoticed for over a century and a half. This installation will include misinfor-mation panels, historical artifacts and other mildly perplexing dis-plays. Featured prominently among the attractions will be a map and information orienting the general public to the pleasures of the Cowling Arboretum Contemplative Transit System, a display about Nirthfolde’s place in the pop pantheon, Hitsburg USA – Record Factory of the Upper Midwest (1958-1973), a dubiously informa-tive exhibit on Nirthfolde’s mysterious Monoliths of Mystery and a scale model of a prehistoric beaver lodge metropolis that many believe graced the Cannon River right where downtown Nirthfolde now stands. Creative directors: David Lefkowitz and Doug Brat-land. Quasi-Fictional Places: The Nirthfolde Visitors’ Bureau and Other Original Facsimiles – a talk by Lefkowitz: Jan. 30, 7:30pm, Weitz Center for Creativity Cinema, Carleton.

Lines Without Borders: Prints, Paintings, Drawings and Ceramics by Four Artists - Feb. 13-March 15 – featuring four regional artists: Maryrose Gondeck, Marion Angelica, Jonathan McFadden and Marcia Haffmans. The show includes lyrical and refreshing imagery dealing with landscape, the environment and our inner world. Fabulously layered prints, gorgeous and functional ceramics, intricate imaginative drawings and powerful paintings. Opening Reception: Feb. 15, 7-9pm.

Northfield Historical Society408 Division St. • 507/645-9268 • northfieldhistory.orgM-Sa 10am-5:30pm, Su 1-5:30pmDear Northfield Exhibit – through April 12 – based off the website DearPhotograph.com, vintage Northfield photos are superimposed over contemporary views of the same area, with the old photo held up in reference.

Northfield Senior Center Gallery 1651 Jefferson Pkwy. • 507/664-3700 northfieldseniorcenter.orgAndrea Costoupolos – Feb. 11-March 17 – Rochester resident Costoupolos is an eclectic artist, skilled in many media. This exhibit features her paintings and jewelry. Opening Reception: Feb. 19, 4-6pm.

Paradise Center for the Arts321 Central Ave., Faribault • 507/332-7372Tu/W/F/Sa 12-5pm, Th 12-8pm, Su/M closed

Carlander Family Gallery: Tom Willis – through Feb. 26 – Tom Willis was thinking about retirement when he took a pottery class at the Faribault Art Center in 2000. He has been a potter ever since and continues to increase his skills by working in his studio and taking classes from well-known potters. Tom recently received an Established Artist Grant through the Southeastern Minnesota Arts Council to develop glazes that compliment his work and turn clay body into ceramic art.

Mary Lingen: Landscape in Time – through Feb. 26.

Vranesh Boardroom Gallery: Jennifer Smoody: Modification of Commercialism – through Feb. 26.

Tom Frank – Feb. 26-April 16. Illustrator Tom Frank will show-case his latest ebook titled It Happened One Night On the Milky Way. His exhibit will include the workings of how he developed his ebook from hand illustrations to an on-screen flip book in addition to other creations he has done for small children. For this project Frank collaborated with Craig Wasner (music/voice over), Maren Wasner (vocals) and Todd F. Edwards (video/animation). Artist Reception March 1, 5-7pm.

Corey Lyn Creger Memorial Gallery:Alyssa Hanson – through Feb. 26Caleb Northrop – Feb. 26-April 16

Paradise Center Health Arts Gallery at District One Hospital200 State Ave., Faribault Featured Artists: Jorge Ponticas, Rhody Yule, Jody Hanscom, Jane Strauss, Pearl Tait, Cynthia Ali, Marcus Moller, Tom Fakler

Studio Elements16 Bridge Square • 507/786-9393 • studioelements.net Th 10am-5pm, F/Sa 10am-5pm, Su 12-4pm.Fine art, unique gifts and fun junk.

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By Felicia Crosby

Bringing the Music Back Feb. 3, 1959 is known in rock and roll his-tory as “the day the music died,” when bad weather brought down the small plane that carried Ritchie Valens, Buddy Holly and the Big Bopper. On Feb. 2, 2013, you can help bring the music back by joining Winter

Dance Party III at the Contented Cow in Northfield. Beginning at 8:30 and going till 11, a half-dozen or so great bands will rock out to the best of the ’50s. Don your poodle skirt or your horned-rimmed glasses and prepare to dance and sing along; audience participation is all part of the celebration.

Signed by Local Authors Cannon River Winery does it all: excel-lent, award-winning wines, extraordi-nary events and, always, support for and recognition of local artists and performers. This time they’re putting the spotlight on writers; join them on Feb. 9, from 12 to 5 at the winery in Cannon Falls for the 2nd Annual Local Author’s Day book signing event and sales. This is a great way to find a new favorite book, connect with the author who wrote it and get immersed in the world of words with a glass of red in hand. For information, call 507/263-7400 or go to cannonriver-winery.com. This event is free and open to the public. And if visual arts is more (or also) your thing, the Winery is doing it again, but with visual artists, on Feb. 23.

Writing to be Drawn How does a comic book come to be? The answer is that before it’s drawn it needs to be written, which requires the writer to think like an artist. And how does that happen? Find out by joining award-winning comic book author Bill Win-ningham for a one-day class called Writing to be Drawn on Feb. 9 from 10am to 1pm at Crossings at Carnegie in Zumbrota. The winner of many industry awards and a four-time Hugo nominee, Win-ningham will take you through the creative and structural process of creating a comic book story, maybe even getting you started in your own comic book journey. For information, call 507/732-7616 or go to crossingsatcarnegie.com; class is recommended for writers age 12 through adult. Winningham and other noted cartoonists are exhibiting at the Crossings all month with an Artists’ Reception Feb. 23, 1-3pm.

It Happened One Night On the Milky Way Trail A little boy named Mikey gets the chance of a lifetime when he’s invited to join in a roundup as a cowboy wrangler. The resulting action-packed dream adventure is the basis of a delightful new e-book by author/il-lustrator Tom Frank and exhibited at the Paradise Center for the Arts in Faribault from Feb. 26 to April 16. On March 1, join Tom at the artist reception from 1 to 5 and learn how he goes through the process of creating an e-book, with the collaboration of the dream team who made it all come together, Craig Wasner, Todd Edwards and Maren Wasner. For information, call 507/332-7372 or go to para-disecenterforthearts.org.

Send us your shorts! (keep ‘em brief). Send to [email protected] by the 15th of the month.

Northfield Armory 519 Division Street, downtown Northfield

$9 adults, $6 students (family cap $25)

Dance away the winter’s chill at the

A community contra dance with music by Contratopia

7th Annual Northfield Winter Stomp!

7th Annual Northfield Winter Stomp!

Friday, February 22 7-10:30 pm

Friday, February 22 7-10:30 pm

All are welcome, no partner required. Contra dance instruction at 7pm.For more information, contact [email protected]

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Vintage Band Festival

u p d a t e

Paid Advertisement

From the VBF President, Dan Bergeson

During the four days of Vintage Band Festival 2013, music will be played continually from noon until late into the evening throughout Northfield and surrounding communities.

Thirty bands will showcase an amazing variety of styles and sounds in ensembles ranging in size from three people to more than 50 players each. There will be Civil War bands, community bands, bands from Sweden and Austria, New Orleans-style bands, British brass band-style bands; 30 bands from all over the United States and Europe.

Music will be made in Northfield on street corners, in parks and pubs, churches and concert halls, on the banks of the Cannon River, and in venues in Faribault, Cannon Falls, Red Wing, New Ulm, Chatfield, Dundas and Minneapolis.

We’ve done this twice before (2006 and 2010) and I can tell you from past experience that memories will be made and relationships formed this August that will last a lifetime. Please save the dates of Aug. 1-4 now and plan on joining us for this incredible weekend celebrating the music and musicianship of vintage bands and their musicians. Visit us online at www.vintagebandfestival.org for all of the details, including a roster of the bands and photos and descriptions of the previous two festivals. Make a donation of $25 or more to help defray the costs of the weekend and we’ll send you a commemorative collectible pin. And if you want to become involved in the planning and staging of the festival, become a VBF volunteer today.

Bring on the bands!

VintageBandFestival.org • 507-645-5604 • 800-658-2548 • [email protected] Box 130, 204 W 7th St • Northfield, MN 55057

The Festival Needs Your Support Now

Did you know that the brass band musicians who played in the recent hit movie Lincoln will be performing at the Vintage Band Festival in August?

Four days, 30 bands, 100 concerts. Sign up now to lend a hand or con-tribute towards a wonderful commu-nity celebration of music.

Give $5 or more and you’ll receive an official VBF sticker, suitable for your bumper, and be entered into a drawing to win festival creator and organizer Paul Niemisto’s voice on your answer machine!

Give $25 or more and we’ll also give you an official VBF 2013 pin that will get you discounts from now until the end of the festival at participating sponsors.

And finally, consider being a sponsor – all levels welcome – give us a call and we’ll find a way for you to make a difference.

Stop by Vintage Band Festival headquarters at 17 Bridge Square in Northfield (the offices of By All Means Graphics and The Entertainment Guide) and we’ll guide you through the process.

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TheaterJack FrostFeb. 1-2, 8-9, 7pm; Feb. 2-3, 9-10, 2pm Children’s Castle Theater, Lakeville Area Arts CenterCombining the magic of Willy Wonka with the good will of the Grinch, this never-before-told tale will brighten your winter with song, dance and an unforgettable story. Tickets: $10 adults, $8 children ages 10 and under and seniors.

Poe PiecesFeb. 8-9, 14-16, 7:30pm; Feb. 9, 16, 2pm; Feb. 10, 6pm Kelsey Theater, St. Olaf, NorthfieldEdgar Allan Poe, master of the macabre, fascinates and frustrates in equal measure. Students will create an original piece based on and incorporating material from the writings and life of Edgar Allen Poe. Working with text, image, object and movement, stu-dents invite you to join them in this experiment of imagining and performing the uncanny and unnerving world of Poe. Tickets: $8. 507/786-8987 for reservations.

Yiddish Cowboys and Cabin 12: An Evening of One-Act PlaysFeb. 8-10, 15-17; F/Sa 7:30pm, Su 2pm Northfield Arts Guild TheaterYiddish Comedy will be performed first in the evening and is family-friendly and the gritty drama Cabin 12 will be the second act of the evening. An exciting world premiere, Larry Greenstein’s Yiddish Cowboys takes place in Poland in 1939, where townspeople of Villeker are excited to have a real Hollywood western filmed in their village. Cabin 12, written by John Bishop, is a powerful story of a father and son who must find a way to communicate in their time of grief and transform their pain into love. Tickets: $15 adults, $10 students to see both plays, $8 to see one of the plays.

Charley’s AuntFeb. 15-17, 21-23; Th-Sa 7:30pm, Su 2pm Little Theater, OwatonnaSet in Oxford, England in 1892, this world-famous farce has moved millions to tears of laughter. Jack Chesney loves Kitty Verdun and Charley loves Amy Spettigue. They invite the ladies to meet Charley’s wealthy aunt from Brazil. But alas, the millionaire aunt sends

word that she will have to defer her visit for a few days. The dear young things must not be compromised and neither will the youths give up the opportunity of declaring their love. The prob-lem is solved by forcing another Oxford undergraduate into a black dress and old-fashioned cap and wig.

Auditions:I Was a Rat

Feb. 17-18, 7-9pm, Northfield Arts Guild TheaterA play by Barbara Field based on a book by Philip Pullman and directed by Mickey Morstad. Performances will be weekends April 19-28. New people are encouraged to audition. Roles for adults and youth ages 10-60s. 507/645-8877 to schedule an audition. Walk-ins welcome.

Curtain Call Theater’s Annual Dinner Theater: On Golden PondFeb. 15-16, 22-23, 6:15pm dinner, 7:30pm curtain call Feb. 24, 12:15pm dinner, 1:30pm curtain call Hilltop Hall, MontgomeryThis is the love story of Ethel and Norman Thayer, who are return-ing to their summer home on Golden Pond for their 48th year. They are visited by their divorced, middle-aged daughter and her dentist fiancé, who then go off to Europe, leaving his teenage son behind for the summer. Reservations are required for dinner at least 24 hours in advance. Tickets may be purchased online at curtaincalltheatre.net or at showtix4u.com. Tickets: $25 dinner and show, $10 show only.

The World of Carl SandburgFeb. 23, 7pm and Feb. 24, 2pm Northfield Senior CenterUnder the direction of Myrna Johnson, the Encore Players will present a Readers’ Theater version of The World of Carl Sandburg by Norman Corwin. This script brings together the best of the Pulitzer Prize winner’s verse and prose (including some of his famous biography of Lincoln). The readings are interspersed with folk songs from Sandburg’s songbag. Dessert will be served follow-ing the performances. Tickets: $10, at northfieldseniorcenter.org or 507/664-3700.

620 S. Water Street, Northfieldcarbonesnorthfield.com

In Northfield

507-645-2300

Omelette Bar Sundays 10am-12pm

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Superbowl PartyFeb 3

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HawaiianPARTYFeb 23

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M-F 11am-2pm

Taco Tuesdays 3-11 Wing Wednesdays 3-11

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MONDAYS: Bar Bingo • 4:30pmSpike’s Bar and Grill, Faribault

Chess Night • 7pmContented Cow, Northfield

TuESDAYS: Open Mic Night 7pm-midnightBabe’s Music Bar, Lakeville

WEDNESDAYS: Babe’s Bar Bingo • 7pmBabe’s Music Bar, Lakeville

THuRSDAYS: Water Pong Tourneys 9-11pmBabe’s Music Bar, Lakeville

DJ Dance Party • 9:30pmSpike’s Bar and Grill, Faribault

Live DJ and Karaoke 9:30pmFroggy Bottoms, NorthfieldBy Speedo Entertainment.

FRIDAYS: Karaoke • 9pmRueb ‘N’ Stein, Northfield Castle Rock N Roll, Castle Rock

SATuRDAYS: DJ Music • 9pmRueb ‘N’ Stein, NorthfieldCastle Rock N Roll, Castle Rock

All Request Dance Party 9:30pm-midnightBabe’s Music Bar, Lakeville

Free Jukebox Saturday Night Froggy Bottoms, Northfield

EVERY OTHER SATuRDAY: Euchre Tournament • 11amSpike’s Bar and Grill, Faribault

SuNDAYS: Babe’s Poker Tourney 4 and 6:30pmBabe’s Music Bar, Lakeville

Quiz Night • 8pmContented Cow, NorthfieldFour-person teams compete for prizes.

HAPPE N I NG S The last days of January…

TuESDAY, JANuARY 29

Dance: Alice Project Performance • 7:30pmDittmann Center, St. Olaf, NorthfieldAn interdisciplinary, participatory, percussive dance and musical theatrical spectacle loosely based on Alice in Wonderland. Directed by Joe Chvala, artistic director of The Flying Foot Forum, and St. Olaf studio art member Irve Dell. This performance is the culmi-nation of a month of creative collaboration with students from dance, theater, art, music and technical theater.

Acoustic Jam Session • 7:30-10pmContented Cow, NorthfieldEvery Tuesday night show up with your unplugged instrument of choice and jam – or just show up and listen!

WEDNESDAY, JANuARY 30

Traditional Irish Music Session • 7-9pmHogan Brothers Acoustic Café, NorthfieldA gathering of musicians and listeners in a relaxed, informal set-ting. Along with the music enjoy conversation, camaraderie and perhaps even a few Irish dance steps.

Quasi-Fictional Places: The Nirthfolde Visitors’ Bureau and Other Original Facsimiles – a talk by David Lefkowitz 7:30pmWeitz Center for Creativity Cinema, Carleton, NorthfieldSee galleries page.

Mark H ThacherFinancial Advisor

1250 S Hwy 3, Northfield, MN507-645-0270

Greg PierceFinancial Advisor509 Division St

P.O. Box 664, Northfield, MN507-663-8809

Christian LocknerFinancial Advisor

1250 S Hwy 3, Northfield, MN507-645-0270

Jon M Snodgrass CFP®, AAMS®

Financial Advisor158 N Water St Ste 4, Northfield, MN

507-663-0325

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THuRSDAY, JANuARY 31

Billy Johnson • 8:30-11pmTavern Lounge, Northfield“Commitment-free rock ‘n’ roll. While he’s been moonlighting with George Scot McK-elvey in the B-Team, former Hillcats singer Billy Johnson confirms he belongs on the A-list alongside G.B. Leighton as one of the Twin Cities’ best feel-good, blue-collar, barroom-rousing tune smiths with his first solo album, tellingly titled It’s a Good Life.” – Chris Riemenschneider, Star Tribune. Billy has opened for the BoDeans, Five For Fighting, Train, Poco, Paul Thorn, Van Hunt, Lowen and Navarro, Old 97s and more. See billyjohnsonmusic.com.

FRIDAY, FEBRuARY 1

Michael Loonan • 5:30-8:30pmCannon River Winery, Cannon FallsPiano man Michael Loonan performs a variety of music including popular standards, contemporary classics, jazz and classical.

Tim Fast • 6-8pmHogan Brothers Acoustic Café, NorthfieldA nationally-touring finger-style guitar-pick-ing, harmonica-bending, singer/songwriter. His music is infused with folk, blues and country, and he plays both covers and original songs.

Dave Lambert • 6:30pmWings Tavern and Grille, Owatonna

Theater: Jack Frost • 7pmLakeville Area Arts CenterSee theater page.

Zillionaires • 8-11pmRueb ‘n’ Stein, NorthfieldOne of Northfield’s most popular and danceable bands. Upbeat originals and classic covers. No cover.

Gated Community • 8-10:30pmContented Cow, NorthfieldA combination country band and think tank dedicated to the politics of equality and the pursuit of recondite but usually licit substances.

Ben Aaron CD Release Party • 8-11:30pmTavern Lounge, NorthfieldAaron will release his new CD, Blue Winter. Original folk, blues and Americana for a night of great live entertainment. More at benaaronmusic.com.

Ken Wanovich • 9pmRuby’s Redeye Grill, LakevilleAcoustic classic rock styles, accomplished finger styles, smooth and engaging vocals, a little magic harmony and some driving percussion – a virtual one-man-band experience.

Michael Loonan photo andrewsphotography.com

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Cait Leary • 9:30pmFroggy Bottoms, NorthfieldA musical hybrid: poppy without the lyrical cliches, jazzy without the training and sweet with a preference for profanity.

Iron Horse • 9:30pm-closeBabe’s Music Bar, LakevilleMinnesota’s most sought out six-piece, high-energy contemporary country act.

Face First • 10-closeGrandpa Al’s, FaribaultA seven-piece variety rock band rooted in Minnesota, featuring award-winning and national recording artists performing modern and classic rock.

SATuRDAY, FEBRuARY 2

Tim Patrick • 1-4pmCannon River Winery, Cannon FallsSeveral years ago, Patrick found himself and his shaky voice in the spotlight at Nye’s Piano Bar in Minneapolis. The rest is history: opera, musicals, a CD in 2006 that got him discovered by Joanne Grauer (pianist to Andy Williams, The Osmonds, The Lennon Sisters and more), a second CD under

her direction, a gig with the Minnesota Jazz Orchestra and in 2007, playing the Blue Moon in Croatia. In 2009 he made LA jazz critic Scott Yanow’s book, The Jazz Singers: The Ultimate Guide, and was named Gigmaster.com’s choice for the 2008 Rising Star Award for Best Jazz Singer!

Theater: Jack Frost • 2 and 7pmLakeville Area Arts CenterSee theater page.

TreVeld • 5-8pmCannon River Winery, Cannon FallsString musicians who perform music that blends genres such as gypsy, swing, old time, Celtic, bluegrass, blues, chamber and Nordic roots.

Ned Netzel • 6-8pmHogan Brothers Acoustic Café, Northfield

Winter Dance Party III • 8-11:30pmContented Cow, NorthfieldThe Contented Cow is saluting the 54th anniversary of the last performance of Buddy Holly, the Big Bopper and Ritchie Valens. The original tour crisscrossed Southern Minnesota several times before

the ill-fated last show at the Surf Ballroom in Clear Lake, Iowa. Put on your best poodle skirt and your horn-rimmed glasses as you dance to a half-dozen or so great bands playing the best rock and roll songs from the 1950s.

Tex Pistols Band • 7:30pmCrossings at Carnegie, ZumbrotaA quartet of smoking hot guitars, emotive vocals and tight harmo-nies. An Americana sound that’s classic yet unexpected featuring Brian C. Peters, Dik Shopteau and Scott “Scooter” Nelson, who started sharing their country-influenced Americana sound in 1986 when they began touring extensively. Boyd Lee fills out the quartet.

LAKEVILLE AREA ARTS CENTER

Don’t Say You Don’t RememberOld Friend ProductionsSaturday, February 23, 7:30 p.m.A musical tribute to the unforgettable hits, with narration exploring the stories behind the music. Tickets: $18

Vecchione/Erdahl Oboe Bass Duo with Julie Johnson and the No-AccountsSunday, February 24, 2 p.m.A delightful fusion of Minnesota roots and classical music. Tickets: $14.50 adults/$12 seniors & students (call for the series discount)

Deuces Wild! Dueling PianosFriday, March 8, 7:30 p.m.Dynamic piano duo guaranteed to entertain people of all ages with a mix of classic rock, country, rap and show tunes. Tickets: $22

Lakeville Area Arts Center 20965 Holyoke Ave, Lakeville

Reserved seats now available online www.LakevilleAreaArtsCenter.com or call 952-985-4640

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Elliot Hilton • 8-11:30pmTavern Lounge, NorthfieldThis veteran indie pop rock star brings a delightful brand of melodic musician-ship – currently lead singer, guitarist and keyboardist for the Twin Cities power pop quartet, Hart Lake Mystery, Hilton’s sound is influenced by the likes of the Replacements, Brian Wilson, the Beatles, Big Star, Elliot Smith and Matthew Sweet.

UFC 156 Party Night • 9pmCarbone’s Pizza and Sports Bar, NorthfieldTelevised live.

Dan Switch • 9:30pmFroggy Bottoms, NorthfieldAn engaging acoustic artist who plays a large variety of well-known covers.

Smokescreen • 10-closeGrandpa Al’s, FaribaultA rock variety band that has been entertaining audiences around the Upper Midwest for more than 20 years. They headline many fairs, festivals and city celebrations. Dwight Holmbo (lead vocals, guitar, synthesizer, harmonica and fiddle), Chris Kerber (vocals and guitar), CJ Stahlberg (vocals and bass) and Tim Boeck (drums).

Jena Marie Band • 10pmSpike’s Bar and Grill, FaribaultCountry music.

Johnny Cash Tribute • 7:30pmLakeville South High SchoolPhilip Bauer’s dynamic stage presence and impressive vocals have been thrilling audiences for years. Bauer’s music career began locally when he won first place in the Minnesota State Fair Talent Contest. Since then he has travelled and performed all over the world. Tickets: $28.50 preferred seating, $23.50 balcony seating.

Willie B’s Blues Band • 8pmTipsy Turtle Bar and Grill, WelchWillie B formed the Willie B’s Blues Band in the summer of 2010 in Red Wing, Minn. His style is influenced by the “Crunchy Texas Blues Sound” as well as the “Chicago Clean Tone.” He has been gig-ging regularly with a rotating lineup of musicians spread through the Twin Cities Metro. Willie B is a member of the Minnesota Blues Society.

Comedian Tim Bedore • 8pmParadise Center for the Arts, FaribaultPublic Radio’s Vague but True writer and per-former, also seen on NBC, FOX, Showtime, Comedy Central, HBO and A&E, Bedore is a stand-up comedian whose unique background has produced a professional entertainer who knows how to cut across the boundaries of individual

attitudes and get an audience to enjoy his way of looking at the world. $17 members, $22 nonmembers.

HAPPENINGS Saturday, February 2, continued

Smokescreen

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TUESDAy, FEBRUARy 5

Gypsy Jazz Jam Session • 7-9pmUpstairs Rueb, NorthfieldCellist Martha Larson featuring Robert Bell and the Twin Cities Hot Club. Gypsy Jazz combines hot jazz and cool swing with an unmistakable Romany vibe. These local jazz greats will guide participants through a fun, informal evening of play-along tunes. Bring your instrument or just come to listen. All instruments welcome.

WEDNESDAy, FEBRUARy 6

Bluegrass Jam • 6-8pmEl Tequila, NorthfieldBring an instrument or just take it in. For more information, call 507/301-9091.

Traditional Irish Music Session • 7-9pmHogan Brothers Acoustic Café, NorthfieldA gathering of musicians and listeners in a relaxed, informal set-ting. Along with the music enjoy conversation, camaraderie and perhaps even a few Irish dance steps.

THURSDAy, FEBRUARy 7

Spa Evening • 5-8pmAnna’s Closet, NorthfielddoTERRA Essential Oils rep will teach about oils – also enjoy foot baths, massages, hair treatments.

Rice County Women: 1850s-1920s • 7pmRice County Historical Society, FaribaultSusan Garwood, RCHS executive director, will talk about early Rice County women and their role in settling the county. Free for RCHS members, $2 nonmembers.

Fesler-Lampert Series: The Hornheads 7:30pmNewhall Auditorium, Shattuck-St. Mary’s, FaribaultAn internationally-acclaimed quintet of horn

players – Prince’s former horn section. More at hornheads.com. Tickets: $15 adults, $9 students.

SuNDAY, FEBRuARY 3

Forum: Laughter yoga!!! • 9:30amSt. Peter’s Church, NorthfieldNorthfield High teacher Lisa Weis, our local laughter ambassador, will lead this discussion. Weis has laughed all her life growing up

in the Midwest and while serving in the Peace Corps in the Republic of Yemen. She’s laughed through 20 years of marriage, raising two children and along the way discovering anyone can laugh, no experience necessary, no tools required. And when prac-ticed in a group – it’s contagious. It’s called

laughter yoga because it includes deep breathing exercises from yoga. Come to the forum and find out what’s so funny.

Everett Smithson Band • 2pmCovered Bridge Restaurant & Lounge, Zumbrota

Buddy Holly Bowl • 2pmCrossings at Carnegie, ZumbrotaJimmy Stanley as Buddy Holly and featuring the Red Wing Crick-ets. Presented by ZAAC. All proceeds benefit the State Theatre Encore Renovation Campaign.

Theater: Jack Frost • 2pmLakeville Area Arts CenterSee theater page.

Brenda Owens • 2-5pmCannon River Winery, Cannon FallsFolk.

Superbowl Party • 5pmCarbone’s Pizza and Sports Bar, NorthfieldFree half-time buffet.

MONDAy, FEBRUARy 4

Northern Roots Session • 7:30-9pmContented Cow, NorthfieldAn informal weekly gathering of musicians to play acoustic music with roots in the north, particularly the Nordic countries. Partici-pants and listeners of all ages and levels of experience are welcome.

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The Hornheads

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Mark Mraz • 8:30-11pmTavern Lounge, NorthfieldEverybody’s favorite “piano man” tickles the ivories and performs favorite sing-along songs, golden oldies and classic covers from the pop music archives.

FRIDAY, FEBRuARY 8

New Moon Trio • 5-7pmContented Cow, NorthfieldHere’s a taste of 100 years of popular tunes, random requests and spontaneous harmonies featuring Ross Currier on bass, Lance Heisler on drums and Justin London on guitar.

The D’Sievers • 5:30-8:30pmCannon River Winery, Cannon FallsA group of musicians from Rochester and surrounding Southeast Minnesota com-munities. The core sextet consists of Steve Sawyer on bass, Eric Straubmuller on piano, Lee Krueger on drums, John Siev-ers on trombone, Curt Shellum on trum-pet and Dick Rohrbaugh on saxophone. Together they play a variety of music with a focus on improvisation.

Step in Clouds • 6-8pmHogan Brothers Acoustic Café, NorthfieldFormed through the magic of Craigslist, Step in Clouds is com-prised of members hailing from China, Britain and America. While they bring their own influences spanning genres from acoustic singer/songwriter through heavy metal, the sound they create is all their own. Breathtaking melodicism and deft musicianship combine to create a unique listening experience characteristic of the band’s meditative rock sound.

Theater: Jack Frost • 7pmLakeville Area Arts CenterSee theater page.

Theater: Yiddish Cowboys and Cabin 12: An Evening of One-Act Plays • 7:30pmNorthfield Arts Guild TheaterSee theater page.

Dala • 7:30pmCrossings at Carnegie, ZumbrotaJuno nominees and winners of the 2010 Canadian Folk Music Award for Vocal Group of the Year, Amanda Walther and Sheila Carabine write and sing in har-mony best described as angelic. Darlings of the Canadian music scene, Dala are now poised to bring their fresh brand of acoustic pop music to the world. They

draw upon influences like The Beatles, Joni Mitchell, Neil Young and Bob Dylan.

HAPPENINGS Thursday, February 7, continued

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Whiskey Trick • 9:30pmFroggy Bottoms, NorthfieldGood old-fashioned rock ‘n’ roll – cranked up Marshall amps without the perms or lycra catsuits. Rock the way it should be.

Flashmob • 9:30pm-closeBabe’s Music Bar, LakevilleFast-paced, high-energy pop/rock blitz featur-ing a diverse and unexpected set list.

Blackout • 10-closeGrandpa Al’s, FaribaultFrom just north of Minneapolis, Blackout members are instantly recognizable by the dueling guitar riffs of Tony Zoff and Jeremy Newton, jumping bass lines of Russ Peterson, the incredible and strong drumming of Donny March and the strong, authentic vocal style of Brent Hockert. Blackout’s sound resembles a collection of Stone Temple Pilots and Ozzy Osbourne with a little Black Crowes added for flavor and just a pinch of Prince.

Chris Brooks • 10pmSpike’s Bar and Grill, FaribaultCountry rock.

SATuRDAY, FEBRuARY 9

Chocolate Stroll • 10am-closeDowntown NorthfieldStroll the shops of Division street while tasting chocolate delights! Have your card punched at all participants for a chance to win a gift. See ad on back cover.

Theater: Poe Pieces • 7:30pmKelsey Theater, St. Olaf, NorthfieldSee theater page.

Beguine Brothers • 8-10:30pmContented Cow, NorthfieldBilled as an old-time country and western revue with smatterings of the Urban Hillbilly Quintet, among others.

Jack Klatt • 8-11:30pmTavern Lounge, NorthfieldIn authentic troubadour tradition, Klatt has traveled far and wide through the highways and byways of America, Europe and Canada with his guitar. Klatt entertains with his boisterous finger-picking style and whiskey worn voice in the tradition of the likes of Utah Phillips, Blind Willie MacTell and Townes Van Zandt. In 2011, with his band The Cat Swingers, Klatt released a critically acclaimed collaborative album with a number of veteran Minnesota legends including Spider John Koerner, Dakota Dave Hull, Cornbread Har-ris and Charlie Parr. Mississippi Roll has since garnered praise all the way from California to the UK and has been featured on Min-nesota Public Radio’s “Heartland Radio” and 89.3 The Current.

Guest Recital: Dylan Chmura-Moore, Trombone • 8:15pmUrness Recital Hall, St. Olaf, NorthfieldProfessor of Trombone at University of Wisconsin-Oshkosh.

Crankshaft & the Gear Grinders • 9pmField House Pub, Rochester“One of the best and most interesting roots, rock and blues gets acts playing around town these days,” – Cities 97.

All Washington • 9pmRuby’s Redeye Grill, Lakeville

Whiskey Trick

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Hopeful Romantics 7:30pmFirst United Church of Christ, NorthfieldPrudence Johnson and Dan Chouinard will provide a tour of the Great American Songbook, shar-ing music of Gershwin, Carmichael and other great American compos-ers. Johnson’s career has taken her from nightclubs to Carnegie Hall and from the theater stage to the silver screen, with roles in A River Runs Through It and A Prairie Home Companion. Chouinard, a pianist, accordionist and storyteller, plays, tours and records regularly with an ever-expand-ing roster of musicians and writers. He regularly creates special programs which blend storytelling, interview and music, most recently Café Europa III for Minne-sota Public Radio. Tickets $15.

Scottie Miller • 8pmOak Center General Store, Lake CityAn American pianist and singer/songwriter born in Minneapolis, Miller’s style is a combination of blues, soul, funk and jazz that blend together seamlessly. He per-forms worldwide as a solo artist or with the incredibly funky Scottie Miller Band.

Art Vandalay • 8-11:30pmTavern Lounge, NorthfieldA healthy mix of Neil Young-inspired roots rock, laid-back country folk and well-crafted lyrics. Their songs hit on everything, from hitchhiking brides to pearl snap shirts, swaying between easy bossa nova grooves, indie-rock drive and gritty folk-rock.

Mister Peabody •10-closeGrandpa Al’s, FaribaultClassic rock cover band.

SuNDAY, FEBRuARY 10

Theater: Yiddish Cowboys and Cabin 12: An Evening of One-Act Plays • 2pmNorthfield Arts Guild TheaterSee theater page.

Theater: Jack Frost • 2pmLakeville Area Arts CenterSee theater page.

Andrew Walesch • 2-5pmCannon River Winery, Cannon FallsBlues and jazz by “the boy with the voice.” A great variety of classics and originals.

Second Annual Local Author’s Day Book Signing Event • 12-5pmCannon River Winery, Cannon FallsLocal authors have been invited to spend the day at the winery autographing and selling their books. Free and open to the public.

Theater: Poe Pieces • 2 and 7:30pmKelsey Theater, St. Olaf, NorthfieldSee theater page.

Theater: Jack Frost • 2 and 7pmLakeville Area Arts CenterSee theater page.

Andrew Walesch 2-5pmCannon River Winery, Cannon FallsBlues and jazz by “the boy with the voice.” A variety of classics and originals.

Hambone Music Fest Winter Fundraiser 5pm onField House, RochesterBeat those winter blues with this

annual fundraiser for the June festival itself featuring Lew Klimesh, Jambon Cru, the Avey Brothers, Jimmi & the Band of Souls, and Howard “Guitar” Luedtke & Blue Max. An evening of Minnesota’s best roots, rock and blues. $10 admission.

Christopher Anders • 6-8pmHogan Brothers Acoustic Café, Northfield

Faribault Chamber of Commerce Annual Membership Appreciation Gala • 6-11:30pmAmerican Legion Club, FaribaultEntertainment by the Outtakes Band. Social hour begins at 6pm, dinner and pro-gram follow at 7pm. Advance reservations are $50 and includes dinner.

Theater: Yiddish Cowboys and Cabin 12: An Evening of One-Act Plays 7:30pmNorthfield Arts Guild TheaterSee theater page.

HAPPENINGS Saturday, February 9, continued

Jimmi & the Band of Souls

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Guest Recital: New Orleans Marine Quintet • 8:15pmUrness Recital Hall, St. Olaf, Northfield

WEDNESDAY, FEBRuARY 13

Rice County Women Presentation • 1:30pmFaribault Senior CenterSusan Garwood, RCHS executive director, will talk about early Rice County women and their role in settling the county.

Bluegrass Jam • 6-8pmEl Tequila, NorthfieldBring an instrument or just take it in. For info, call 507/301-9091.

Traditional Irish Music Session • 7-9pmHogan Brothers Acoustic Café, NorthfieldA gathering of musicians and listeners in a relaxed, informal set-ting. Along with the music enjoy conversation, camaraderie and perhaps even a few Irish dance steps.

THURSDAy, FEBRUARy 14

Flaten Lecture: Printmaker Ruthann Godollei • 7pmDittmann Center 305, St. Olaf, Northfield

Theater: Poe Pieces • 7:30pmKelsey Theater, St. Olaf, NorthfieldSee theater page.

Minnesota Sinfonia • 7:30pmCathedral of Our Merciful Savior, FaribaultPart of the Fesler-Lampert Series. This classical music event fea-tures a professional chamber orchestra and features cellist Dmitri Kouzov – Variation on a Theme. Free admission, reservations required. Children welcome.

Concert: St. Olaf Band • 3:30pmSkoglund Center, St. Olaf, NorthfieldWinter tour home concert. Conducted by Timothy Mahr.

Theater: Poe Pieces • 6pmKelsey Theater, St. Olaf, NorthfieldSee theater page.

Casa Sin Dueño • 7pmCrossings at Carnegie, ZumbrotaDirect from Mexico City, Israel Vega presents a robust and vibrant style of music traditional to Veracruz, Mexico. Born from African, Arabic, Spanish and indigenous roots, Son Jarocho is

recognizable by its driving 6/8 rhythm, call-and-response format of verses and unique instrumentation. Vega will be joined on stage by Cadence Nelson and other performers.

MONDAY, FEBRuARY 11

Northern Roots Session • 7:30-9pmContented Cow, NorthfieldAn informal weekly gathering of musicians to play acoustic music with roots in the north, particularly the Nordic countries. Partici-pants and listeners of all ages and levels of experience are welcome.

TuESDAY, FEBRuARY 12

Acoustic Jam Session • 7:30-10pmContented Cow, NorthfieldEvery Tuesday night show up with your unplugged instrument of choice and jam – or just show up and listen!

HAPPENINGS Sunday, February 10, continued

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Exhibit Opening Reception: Lines Without Borders • 7-9pmNorthfield Arts Guild GallerySee galleries page.

An Evening of Art and Dance • 7:30pmLakeville Area Arts CenterChoreographers from Ballet Royale Minnesota interpret visual artwork by local artists through music and dance. This unique artistic collaboration includes interactive discussions with the audi-ence of the intent, inspiration and interpretation of the artwork and dances. Tickets: $12, includes complimentary coffee hour with artists and dancers following the performance.

Theater: Charley’s Aunt • 7:30pmLittle Theater, OwatonnaSee theater page.

Vladmir Gorbach • 7:30pmCrossings at Carnegie, ZumbrotaInternationally acclaimed guitarist Gorbach has captivated audiences across Europe, Australia, the United States and his native country of Russia. Gorbach began studying guitar at a young age in Novosibirsk and later attended the Glinka Con-servatory and, in Germany, the Music Academy in Cologne.

Theater: Yiddish Cowboys and Cabin 12: An Evening of One-Act Plays • 7:30pmNorthfield Arts Guild TheaterSee theater page.

Monroe Crossing • 7:30pmParadise Center for the Arts, FaribaultMonroe Crossing dazzles audiences with an electrifying blend of classic bluegrass, bluegrass gospel and heartfelt originals. Their airtight harmonies, razor-sharp arrange-ments and on-stage rapport make

them audience favorites across the United States and Canada. $15 members, $19 nonmembers, $10 students.

Theater: Poe Pieces • 7:30pmKelsey Theater, St. Olaf, NorthfieldSee theater page.

Optimum Trajectory • 8-10:30pmContented Cow, NorthfieldTogether for six years, this band takes a tune, gives it a unique twist, playing originals plus well-known rock and blues tunes. They know how to play and entertain with original acoustic jazzy kinda stuff.

Sasha Mercedes • 8-11:30pmTavern Lounge, NorthfieldA feisty folk-rocker that draws you in with her compelling and powerful vocal stylings. Lyrical, genre-bending, thought-provoking, inspiring, catchy, easy to relate to, easy to listen to. Find her at sashamercedes.com.

Timothy Howe • 9pmRuby’s Redeye Grill, LakevilleSilky vocals, melodic lines, acoustic guitar. Howe’s been compared to Jason Mraz, Gavin Degraw, Bruno Mars, John Mayer and Howie Day.

Midnight Collision • 8:30-11pmTavern Lounge, Northfield

Anti-Valentine’s Day at Boston’s • 9pm-closeBoston’s Bar, FaribaultCome in with your single friends and enjoy drink specials, Shoot the Wall of Shame for prizes and get away from everything heart shaped!

FRIDAy, FEBRUARy 15

Kaitlyn Berber • 5-7pmContented Cow, NorthfieldSoft rock by a Carleton student on electric acoustic guitar.

BZ Girls • 5:30-8:30pmCannon River Winery, Cannon FallsThe BZ Girls are a blend of sweet tight har-monies that combine infectious rhythmic and soulful music in a classic style. Carol Z adds her guitar stylings while Tara B tickles the ivories.

Dinner Theater: On Golden Pond • 6:15pmHilltop Hall, MontgomerySee theater page.

David Ullman • 7-9pmHogan Brothers Acoustic Cafe, NorthfieldUllman, a 33-year-old transplant from Cleveland, Ohio, plays passionate, furrow-browed folk-rock, perfect for fans of desperate voices (Bruce Springsteen), dry wine (Eddie Vedder) and dark beer (Glen Hansard). Get a free taste at davidullman.net.

Photo Jamie Guy

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Shaw Brothers • 9:30pm-closeBabe’s Music Bar, LakevilleA premier Midwest band that has been performing for more than 16 years in Central Minnesota and the Twin Cit-ies area. A high-energy rock band that engages audiences with good hits and a great time.

Rebel Queens • 10pmSpike’s Bar and Grill, FaribaultFaribault’s own girl band.

SATURDAy, FEBRUARy 16

Second Annual Local Artist Gallery • 12-5pmCannon River Winery, Cannon FallsLocal artists will be displaying and selling their artwork at the winery.

Theater: Poe Pieces • 2 and 7:30pmKelsey Theater, St. Olaf, NorthfieldSee theater page.

PKZ • 2-5pmCannon River Winery, Cannon Falls

The Heart’s Gala • 5:30pmElk’s Lodge, FaribaultProceeds benefit Ruth’s House Transitional Shelter for women and children. Tickets: $50. Call Gina at 507/210-6514 or email [email protected].

Tuition Daddies • 6-8pmHogan Brothers Acoustic Café, Northfield

yMCA Daddy Daughter Dance • 6-8:30pmNational Guard Armory, NorthfieldThis is your opportunity to show the little girl in your life how important she is to you. An entire evening dedicated to the special relationship you share. This is a young girl’s prom night with strobe lights, dancing and cake. $20/couple, $5 each additional child for members; $26/couple, $8 each additional child nonmembers.

Dinner Theater: On Golden Pond • 6:15pmHilltop Hall, MontgomerySee theater page.

Sudden Lovelys • 7:30pmCrossings at Carnegie, ZumbrotaBilling themselves as “aggressive folk from Nordeast Minneapolis,” the Sud-den Lovelys formed in the summer of 2010 and consist of Paige Prescher and Daniel Ferraro. They play quiet, pretty songs, coupled with those that will bite your head off.

Theater: Charley’s Aunt • 7:30pmLittle Theater, OwatonnaSee theater page.

Theater: Yiddish Cowboys and Cabin 12: An Evening of One-Act Plays • 7:30pmNorthfield Arts Guild TheaterSee theater page.

HAPPENINGS Friday, February 15, continued

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Jagged Ease • 2-5pmCannon River Winery, Cannon FallsThe creative sound of a five-piece band with Gabe Holmes (acous-tic guitar, vocals), Steve Hanson (bass), Kevin Dobbe (drums) and Charlie Lacey (lead guitar).

Concert: St. Olaf Choir • 3:30pmBoe Memorial Chapel, St. Olaf, NorthfieldWinter tour home concert. Conducted by Anton Armstrong.

MONDAY, FEBRuARY 18

Flaten Lecture: Framing Art in the Liberal Arts • 4pmDittmann Center 305, St. Olaf, NorthfieldCatherine Carter Goebel’s lecture is titled, “Framing Art in the Liberal Arts: Engaging a College Community in Interdisciplinary Art Historical Inquiry.”

Northern Roots Session • 7:30-9pmContented Cow, NorthfieldAn informal weekly gathering of musicians to play acoustic music with roots in the north, particularly the Nordic countries. Partici-pants and listeners of all ages and levels of experience are welcome.

TuESDAY, FEBRuARY 19

Artist Opening Reception: Andrea Cos-toupolos • 4-6pmNorthfield Senior CenterSee exhibits page.

Jivin’ Ivan and the Kings of Swing • 7:30-11:30pmSignature Bar and Grill, FaribaultClassic acoustic swing, hot picking and stellar singing. Bring your dancing shoes.

Alison Rae • 8-11:30pmTavern Lounge, NorthfieldKnown for her mesmerizing vocals and insightful lyrics, this talented and critically acclaimed artist delivers songs that touch on the simple beauty of the world around us. Samples of her original music can be found at alisonrae.bandcamp.com/album/birds.

Froggy’s Theme Night: ’80s • 9:30pmFroggy Bottoms, NorthfieldNick Crawford of EPIC Sound and Light.

Iron Horse • 10pmSpike’s Bar and Grill, FaribaultMinnesota’s most sought out six-piece high energy modern coun-try act.

SUNDAy, FEBRUARy 17

Theater: Yiddish Cowboys and Cabin 12: An Evening of One-Act Plays • 2pmNorthfield Arts Guild TheaterSee theater page.

Theater: Charley’s Aunt • 2pmLittle Theater, OwatonnaSee theater page.

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Gypsy Jazz Jam Session • 7-9pmUpstairs Rueb, NorthfieldCellist Martha Larson featuring Dean Har-rington and the Mill City Hot Club. Gypsy Jazz combines hot jazz and cool swing with an unmistakable Romany vibe. These local jazz greats will guide participants through a fun, informal evening of play-along tunes. Bring your instrument or just come to listen. All instruments welcome.

WEDNESDAY, FEBRuARY 20

Early Rice County Pioneers • 10-11amNorthfield Senior CenterSue Garwood, executive director of the Rice County Historical Society, will speak on a few of Rice County’s earliest residents and some of their stories. Learn about the Nuttings – both of North-field and of Faribault; hear Anna Larson’s description of what it was like to be an early teacher in the early 1860s; hear the stories about early Native American/settler relationships; listen to Ann North describe early life in Northfield and more.

Bluegrass Jam • 6-8pmEl Tequila, NorthfieldBring an instrument or just take it in. For more information, call 507/301-9091.

Traditional Irish Music Session • 7-9pmHogan Brothers Acoustic Café, NorthfieldA gathering of musicians and listeners in a relaxed, informal set-ting. Along with the music enjoy conversation, camaraderie and perhaps even a few Irish dance steps.

THuRSDAY, FEBRuARY 21

St. Dominic Preschool Open House and Registration • 5:30-7:30pmSt. Dominic School, NorthfieldSt. Dominic School is a faith-based preschool welcoming everyone. Classes offered five days a week, three days, 2

days and half days, Tu/Th. Children participate in art, music, phy ed, buddy reading, Spanish and computer. More at school.churchofstdomininc.org

Whipple and the Dakota/US War • 7pmNorthfield Historical SocietyThe Northfield Historical Society will host The Venerable Canon Benjamin Scott. He will speak on the role Bishop Henry Whipple played in the 1862 US/Dakota War.

Public Artist Lecture: Sculptor Holly Laws and Playwright Charlotte Meehan • 6-8pmDittmann 305, St. Olaf, NorthfieldSee galleries page.

Flaten Lecture: Laws and Meehan • 7pmDittmann Center 305, St. Olaf, NorthfieldLecture by Holly Laws, sculpture installation, and Charlotte Mee-han, playwright.

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HAPPENINGS Tuesday, February 19, continued

Dea

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Ashes for April • 5-8pmCannon River Winery, Cannon FallsFour guys plus six acoustic instruments plus retro pop songs equals Ashes for April. Lincoln Ashbury (acoustic gui-tar, mandolin, vocals), Chubby

Ashton (upright bass, vocals), Rocco C’Ash (drums, percussion), Mickey Mash (acoustic guitar, ganjo, vocals).

Exhibit Opening Reception: Levvittown • 6-8pmFlaten Art Museum, St. Olaf, NorthfieldSee galleries page.

Dinner Theater: On Golden Pond • 6:15pmHilltop Hall, MontgomerySee theater page.

Midwest Wine Stroll • 6:30-10pmCannon River Winery, Cannon FallsTaste local wines and foods.

7th Annual Northfield Winter Stomp • 7-10:30pmNorthfield ArmoryA community contra dance with music by Contratopia. Dance instruction at 7pm. No prior contra dance experience or dance partner required. $9 adults, $6 students, $25 family cap.

Northfield Wine Club • 7-9pmGrand Event Center, NorthfieldThe inaugural meeting of the year: “Think Spring/New Arrivals.” Free and open to the public.

Theater: Charley’s Aunt 7:30pmLittle Theater, OwatonnaSee theater page.

Dolce Woodwind Quintet 7:30-9pmContented Cow, NorthfieldA favorite classical music quintet returns to play the Cow.

Mark Mraz • 8:30-11pmTavern Lounge, Northfield Everybody’s favorite “piano man” tickles the ivories and performs favorite sing-along songs, golden oldies and classic covers from the pop music archives.

FRIDAY, FEBRuARY 22

Occasional Jazz • 5-7pmContented Cow, NorthfieldMainstream classic jazz of Miles Davis, Thelonious Monk, Duke Ellington, Dave Brubeck and others in the same style.

Valentine, Chinese New Year No Problem.

Leave the Cooking to Us.

107 East 4th St. • Northfield • 645-7101MandarinGardenNorthfield.com

Eat in • Take outs available

Dolce

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Joe and Vicki Price • 9pmWhistle Binkies North, RochesterJoe’s music is a crazy elastic form of old-school guitar blues. Vicki’s more disciplined and structural guitar style provides a comping background spine to Joe’s slide and lead work

and the two styles dovetail into a coherent and convincing whole. Over their 27 years together they have opened for such notables as Buddy Guy, John Lee Hooker, Willie Dixon, Pine Top Perkins, Homesick James, Honeyboy Edwards, Louisiana Red, Al Green and Greg Brown.

Daniel Switch • 9pmRuby’s Redeye Grill, LakevilleA fantastic and engaging acoustic artist who plays a large variety of well-known covers.

Timothy Howe • 9:30pmFroggy Bottoms, NorthfieldSilky vocals, melodic lines, acoustic guitar. Howe’s been compared to Jason Mraz, Gavin Degraw, Bruno Mars, John Mayer and Howie Day.

Shirts and Skins • 9:30pm-closeBabe’s Music Bar, LakevilleShirts and Skins combine high energy, an incredible stage presence and great vocals and musicianship with what they call “the x fac-tor.” One of the hottest young rising bands in the region.

Book Reading/Signing: The Clodhopper Monologues Part II 7:30pmGrand Event Center, NorthfieldAuthor Michael Perry returns with a box of books and a passel of stories. Tickets: $12 advance, $15 door. Purchase at Monkey See Monkey Read in Northfield or go to sneezingcow.com.

Theater: Charley’s Aunt • 7:30pmLittle Theater, OwatonnaSee theater page.

Paradise Unplugged: Barb Piper • 8pmBoston’s Restaurant & Sports Bar, FaribaultParadise Unplugged is an acoustic music series taking place the fourth Friday of every month through March with a showcase of all five artists at the Paradise Center for the Arts on April 5.

New Orleans Suspects • 8pmWhiskey Bones, RochesterFive musicians create music that is firmly rooted in the modern New Orleans sound with compelling originals and tasteful covers.

Lonesome Dan Kase • 8-11:30pmTavern Lounge, NorthfieldFor the last 15 years, Kase has been playing his unique brand of country-blues on stages throughout the country. His live per-formances showcase his unique finger-picking style and warm vocals as well as his deep knowledge of the history of the blues. www.lonesomedan.com.

HAPPENINGS Friday, February 22, continued

Photo: Peter Lee

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Dinner Theater: On Golden Pond • 6:15pmHilltop Hall, MontgomerySee theater page.

Theater: The World of Carl Sandburg • 7pmNorthfield Senior CenterSee theater page.

Pints & Vines • 7pmParadise Center for the Arts, FaribaultThe only event in town where you could potentially win a Wall of Wine and a Wall of Beer in the

same night. Sample a variety of fine wines and handcrafted brews at this not-to-be missed event. Limited tickets available. $15 mem-bers, $19 nonmembers, and a $5 raffle for the walls.

Winter Words • 7:30pmNorthfield Arts GuildA reading of original literary works by local authors, poets and writers.

Don’t Say you Don’t Remember • 7:30pmLakeville Area Arts CenterAn unforgettable musical tribute including heartfelt renditions of the songs you loved then with a sophisticated style you’ll appreciate now. Hear some of the all-time favorites performed by a seven-piece ensemble composed of leading Twin Cities performing and recording artists. Tickets: $18.

Dirty Word • 10pmSpike’s Bar and Grill, FaribaultDirty Word’s playlist leaves no genre untouched including five decades of top 40 pop, soulful funk grooves, rock-ing’ country and classic rock and pop hits.

SATuRDAY, FEBRuARY 23

Artists’ Reception: Art and the Graphic Novel • 1-3pmCrossings at Carnegie, ZumbrotaSee galleries page.

Annie Lawler • 1-4pmCannon River Winery, Cannon FallsLawler’s musical influences include Ella Fitzgerald, Eva Cassidy, Patsy Cline and Emmylou Harris. She has warmed up for the Mav-ericks, Tim McGraw and the Marshall Tucker Band. She performs a mix of blues, jazz and alt country.

Average Janes • 5-8pmCannon River Winery, Cannon FallsA little country from the ’70s, ’80s and today – without the twang.

14th Annual Saints’ Night Out • 5pmSt. Dominic School, NorthfieldA fabulous buffet dinner, silent and live auction, games and raffles. Join other adults in the Northfield community for this year’s Fiesta-themed celebration of St. Dominic School. Email [email protected] with questions or to donate an item. Dinner 5-7pm, silent auction 5-8pm, live auction 8:30pm.

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North of Nowhere • 8pm-12amContented Cow, NorthfieldPrior Lake rock/alt-country band has influences including Cross Canadian Ragweed, The Band, Bob Dylan, Jimi Hendrix, Drive by Truckers, Neil Young,Byrds, Tom Petty and Lynyrd Skynyrd.

SUNDAy, FEBRUARy 24

Dinner Theater: On Golden Pond • 12:15pmHilltop Hall, MontgomerySee theater page.

Theater: The World of Carl Sandburg • 2pmNorthfield Senior CenterSee theater page.

Coffee Concert Series: Vecchione/Erdahl Oboe Bass Duo with Julie Johnson and the No-Accounts • 2pmLakeville Area Arts CenterA delightful fusion of Minnesota roots and classical music. Tickets: $14.50 adults, $12 seniors and students.

Don Paulson • 2-5pmCannon River Winery, Cannon FallsBluegrass and folk with influences by the likes of The Beatles, Ricky Skaggs, Vince Gill and Nickel Creek.

Everett Smithson Band • 6pmReggie’s Brewhouse, OwatonnaHot movin’ music from up and down the Mississippi River, with zydeco (swamp rock), blues and funky roots of all kinds, this band has soulful Creole flavor that will bring a party atmosphere to any show they play.

Ragamala • 7:30pmKelsey Theater, St. Olaf, NorthfieldDance concert by the renowned South Indian Bharatanatyam company, a 2012 recipient of one of the coveted McKnight Artist fellowships for choreographers.

Theater: Charley’s Aunt • 7:30pmLittle Theater, OwatonnaSee theater page.

A Briefcase Full of Blues Brothers • 7:30pmCrossings at Carnegie, ZumbrotaBilling themselves as newly discovered siblings of Jake and Elwood Blues, Grant F. Haake and Jeff Lee are joined by Muggsy Lauer and Leon Laudenbach on guitars, Andy Deckard on drums, Ellis Haake on bass, George Mauer on keys and a horn section consist-ing of Ken Vork, Keith Haake and Mike Anderson, along with a couple of special guests. They perform a whole briefcase full of Blues Brothers’ R&B, soul and blues repertoire.

Hawaiian Party • 8-closeCarbone’s Pizza and Sports Bar, NorthfieldHawaiian theme with DJ Matty Matt.

Joe Fessler • 8-11:30pmTavern Lounge, NorthfieldUp-and-coming singer/songwriter Joe Fessler is well-known on the coffee house circuit in Minnesota, Wisconsin and Iowa. Inspired by artists like The Fray and John Mayer, Fessler is working on his debut album.

HAPPENINGS Saturday, February 23, continued

Fessler

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THuRSDAY, FEBRuARY 28

Faculty/Guest Recital: Cellist David Carter • 11:30amUrness Recital Hall, St. Olaf, Northfield

Flaten Lecture: Byers and Lowe • 7pmDittmann Center 305, St. Olaf, NorthfieldLecture by Betsy Byers, painting, and Kristen Lowe, drawing and filmmaking.

Wine Tasting • 7:30pmBoston’s Bar, FaribaultTry six different wines hand picked to go with four gourmet foods selected from a special menu. There will also be a prize drawing and wine discounts. Space is limited so call 507/331-3255 to RSVP. Admission: $25.

Billy Johnson • 8:30-11pmTavern Lounge, Northfield“Commitment-free rock ‘n’ roll. While he’s been moonlighting with George Scot McKelvey in the B-Team, former Hillcats singer Billy Johnson confirms he belongs on the A-list alongside G.B. Leighton as one of the Twin Cities’ best feel-good, blue-collar, barroom-rousing tune smiths with his first solo album, tellingly titled It’s a Good Life.” – Chris Riemenschneider, Star Tribune. Billy has opened for the BoDeans, Five For Fight-ing, Train, Poco, Paul Thorn, Van Hunt, Lowen and Navarro, Old 97s, and many more. See billyjohnsonmusic.com.

MONDAy, FEBRUARy 25

Guest Recital: Bernhard Scully, Horn • 7pmUrness Recital Hall, St. Olaf, Northfield

Northern Roots Session • 7:30-9pmContented Cow, NorthfieldAn informal weekly gathering of musicians to play acoustic music with roots in the north, particularly the Nordic countries. Partici-pants and listeners of all ages and levels of experience are welcome.

TUESDAy, FEBRUARy 26

Acoustic Jam Session • 7:30-10pmContented Cow, NorthfieldEvery Tuesday night show up with your unplugged instrument of choice and jam – or just show up and listen!

WEDNESDAy, FEBRUARy 27

Bluegrass Jam • 6-8pmEl Tequila, NorthfieldBring an instrument or just take it in. For information, call 507/301-9091.

Guest Recital: Pianist Matthew McCright • 7pmSkifter Hall, St. Olaf, Northfield

Traditional Irish Music Session • 7-9pmHogan Brothers Acoustic Café, NorthfieldA gathering of musicians and listeners in a relaxed, informal set-ting. Along with the music enjoy conversation, camaraderie and perhaps even a few Irish dance steps.

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By Rich Larson

For a while now, I’ve been telling anyone who would listen that 2013 is going to be a big year for music in Northfield. In the next few months, we’re going to have new releases by Alison Rae, the Counterfactuals, Furia, and Wesley Church and the Fabulous Vanguards. You can debate all you want whether or not Northfield is nurturing a music “scene,” but there is no doubt that this town is producing some outstanding music.

The first of these new releases is Heavy on My Mind, from Matt Arthur & The Bratlanders, and it’s a remarkable, yet surprising, document. Anyone who has seen their live show knows that the best single word to describe them is “mighty.” Matt Arthur, though blind and diminutive, is a giant on stage. His earnest passion for music comes at you like a tsunami. It picks you up, knocks you back and puts you wherever it sees fit. The only way to accompany that is with still more power, which comes from drummer Joel Beithon, bassist Doug Bratland and guitarist Don Bratland. This is a roots-based rock band built on Midwestern sensibilities that have been filtered through Johnny Cash’s guitar and Neil Young’s ampli-fier turned all the way up.

At least that’s what they used to be.

Heavy On My Mind opens with Old Friend. Beithon offers a shuffle drum beat, guest Randy Broughten plays a wonderfully mean-dering steel guitar line, and Matt Arthur gives us a spoken word delivery, sentimentally reflecting on the passing of time and the departure of a trusted companion. There isn’t a hint of distortion or feedback, even when Don finally jumps in with a sweet, concise little solo to end the song. For those of us who are used to measur-ing this band in decibels, it’s a stunning display of subtlety.

“We’re not the band that played for a year-and-a-half at the Con-tented Cow anymore,” Doug tells me.” Adds Don, ”We are happy [with the record], but there are a lot of things here that are consid-erably different from our preconceived notions.”

So, where did this kinder-gentler version of Matt & The Brats come from?

The first answer might be the newest member of the band, key-boardist Pete Christiansen. The presence of his Hammond organ settles the music down, and allows the other players to relax. “We’ve known for a while that we wanted keys – especially that organ sound – in the music,” says Don, “so that we all didn’t feel like we had to be making a noise all the time. Especially Matt. He doesn’t feel like he has to play every note. The organ fills in the gaps. It’s the glue that holds everything together.”

But Christiansen brings more than just a relaxed feel to the music. “Pete’s been great. He’s such an interesting character,” says Doug.

“He brings a different mind set than the rest of us. Especially me and Doug,” says Don.

“He’s really laid back,” says Doug. “Otherworldly laid back. He’s been some really good energy in the band. He’s just so mellow about it all.”

Don chimes in, “When you mix my intensity with Matt, it pushes things too far to one side. Joel’s a pretty laid back guy, so Pete really brings the balance that’s needed.

Another element that adds to this new sense of nuance is Michael Morris, who produced the album, and Tyler Cook who engineered the recording process. After looking around for a while, the band finally decided to record in Morris’ studio, The Barn. The equip-ment there is all vintage, analog gear. Because it has a limited recording capacity, and because it doesn’t have the ability to go back and fix mistakes the way digital recording equipment does, it forced the band to really think about what they wanted to play, and how they wanted to play it.

“Our North Star on this was just talking to the band,” says Morris. “We’d ask them what their vision of a song was in their collective head. That can be a really fuzzy thing in general, but it’s something you just have to decipher. And sometimes they would tell me a song should sound a certain way, but when they played it, it didn’t sound like that. So, we had to figure out what would sound that way. It was a process.”

“That was another magical part of the experience’” says Doug. “Mi-chael just knew what these songs needed. Every decision these guys made was the right one.”

“Not that we didn’t question those decisions along the way,” says Don. “But in the end, we trusted them. Like I said, this record didn’t end up being what we set out to record.”

This is not to say that the entire album is a quiet, subdued string of songs. The emotional centerpiece is, ironically enough, the only non-original song. Will Oldham’s I See A Darkness has long been a staple in the band’s set. But with the added elements of Christian-sen’s Hammond, and the haunting back-up vocals provided by An-gie Talle, the band has created a go-to mission statement. You want to know who this band is, and what they’re all about? Go listen to that song. Or, there’s the joyful protest romp of Put Down Your Rifles. And then there’s the old spiritual Woke Up This Morning. Arthur delivers this with the utter conviction and total exaltation of a man who knows how and why he’s going to see a better place one day. Through the spare production, you can see him standing on stage at an old tent revival. This is powerfully delivered music, but with a depth that is totally unexpected from this band.

Whether or not this was the album they had originally envisioned, there is no question that the band is quite proud of it. And right-fully so. It shows a band that is coming of age, and moving into its prime. If this is an example of what’s to come out of Northfield this year, 2013 could be even bigger than I’d imagined.

Heavy On My Mind by Matt Arthur and the Bratlanders will be released in February on Rice County Records. It can be pre-ordered at ricecountyrecords.bandcamp.com.

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Your Care Is Our Specialty

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507-646-1478 : NorthfieldHospital.org/WomensHealthCenter2000 North Avenue, Northfield

With You for LifeThe highly trained OB/GYNs at the Women’s Health Center offer supportive and comprehensive care for women in every stage of life.

: Christine Braun, MD : Dana Olson, MD: Melanie Dixon, MD : Deborah Suppes, MD

Women’s Health Center physicians see patients at our clinic on the Northfield Hospital campus. Call 507-646-1478 for an appointment.

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Next to Sid’s picture were the words, “He has a store of knowledge he never learned in books.”

Sid spent two years at Carleton working on a degree in business but after his father bought a bankrupt men’s clothing store in North-field, Sid dropped out of college in the fall of 1926 to manage and become owner of what was named Freeman’s The Hub. (Harry continued to work at his Cannon Falls store until he died suddenly of heart failure on Dec. 29, 1929.) The Hub was located at 327 Division St. S. on property leased from the First National Bank just to the south until 1976 when the bank needed the space for expan-sion. The Hub ended up at 413 Division St. S.

During the slow days of the Depression, Sid found time to practice his violin in between customers. (Dan remembered Sid saying he really learned to play the violin when called upon to be a backup to the organist who usually played for silent films at the Grand Theater.) Sid also joined in the regular ongoing poker games held in an upstairs room at the hotel. Dan has heard a story about how Sid’s mother Sadie showed up at the store to see how things were going and someone sounded an alert to Sid at the hotel. Sid said to the players, “Give me all the money! I’ll count it up and we’ll split it and start all over next time!” Since they had been playing all night into the day, “Dad would run over to Carleton, take a shower, clean up,” and then Sid would come back down to the store with this poker money. Sid would tell his mother, “I’ve been out collecting” and put the money in the till. It was Sid’s little trick to cover his tracks.

The Dec. 27, 1935, Northfield News announced the Freeman-Ben-nett nuptials of Dec. 15, held in St. Paul. Maggie Lee wrote in a Feb. 6, 1975, Northfield News story about how Sid met Lydia Bennett of Owatonna, a student at Carleton College: “When she dropped in at The Hub hoping to find an orange polo shirt, Sid didn’t have one, but promised to get one for her. He admits now that he really didn’t try because he found her so attractive, he wanted to keep her coming back.” Sid finally did find an orange polo shirt for her in Acapulco, Mexico, in 1974.

The Hub (“The store for men – and for women who shop for men”) expanded to Rochester, Winona and Owatonna after World War II and, in 1948, Sid partnered with a former employee, Jack Skeffington, to start a rental firm called Skeffington’s Formal Wear in Minneapolis. In 1952, Sid bought out Skeffington and, accord-

ing to a July 1979 story in Corporate Report, “In its heyday, in the ’50s and ’60s, the Skeff-

ington’s rental firm had 23 stores, as far away as Cincinnati, New Orleans and

Dallas, and boasted a $3.5 million volume.” First-year volume had been $60,000 and, after 1977-1978 when Sid had sold off all but five close-

unforgettable Sid Freeman “No matter where you go in the United States, it has been said, you will find someone who knows that Jesse James raided a Northfield bank and you will find someone who knows Sid Freeman.” So began the obituary in the May 22, 1986, Northfield News, about the death in San Diego of one of the most colorful figures in North-field history. Sid was clothier to both “town and gown” as long-time proprietor of Freeman’s The Hub and ran a multi-million-dollar chain of men’s wear shops called Skeffington’s, enterprises which led to his hobnobbing with people of note from the sports and entertainment industries. I will be calling Sid by his first name in this column, not only because that is how everyone knew him but because I will be quoting and referencing another Freeman frequently, Sid’s son Dan Freeman. And everyone in town knows him as Dan or Danny – or as “Mr. Northfield.”

Dan may have inherited the name “Mr. Northfield” from his father, but Sid was actually a native of Cannon Falls. Dan told me that Sid’s father Harry came to St. Paul in the late 1800s from Poland and married Sadie Finkelstein from Lithuania. Sid was born on Sept. 24, 1905, the same year Harry established a dry goods and clothing store in Cannon Falls. The Freemans raised their four children there, Beatrice, Sidney, Ralph (known as Rex) and Daniel (after whom Northfield’s Dan was named). Dan said his father Sid grew up working at the store and “really took to it.”

The list of activities in the Cannon Falls High School yearbook for Sid’s senior year in the Class of 1923 included playing baseball, football and basketball and violin in the orchestra. (Sid was, in fact, given All-State quarterback honors for the 1922 football season.)

HISTORICHAPPENINGS

By Susan Hvistendahl

Far left: Harry Freeman’s dry goods store in Cannon Falls was established in 1905. Harry is shown behind the table.

Left: Sid Freeman’s senior picture in Cannon Falls High yearbook for 1923.

Photos courtesy of Cannon Falls Area Historical Society and Museum.

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spent at Carleton and Sid brought his good friend, the comedian George Gobel, to be celebrity grand marshal of the Defeat of Jesse James Days parade in 1983 (see sidebar stories). Sid had numerous well-known friends in the fields of entertainment, sports (includ-ing Mickey Mantle, Whitey Ford, Billy Martin, Calvin Griffith and Vern Gagne) and politics (Hubert Humphrey, Karl Rolvaag and Ed Thye). Dan told me, “You just never knew who was going to walk through the door.” Or who might be taking a nap on Sid’s couch at home. Dan recalled a time he and his kids had been watching re-runs of the Dick Van Dyke Show and then went over to his par-ents’ house. Dan’s five-year-old daughter Suzanne exclaimed, “It’s Buddy!” when she saw Morey Amsterdam sleeping on the couch there. (Amsterdam played comedy writer Buddy Sorrell on the award-winning TV show of the 1960s). That woke up Amsterdam, who then engaged them in conversation about the episode of the show they had just watched.

Sid was honored on Dec. 1, 1966, as Outstanding Boss by the Northfield Jaycees at a banquet at the Carleton Tearoom. (It was the first of two banquets for Sid that night. He was due at another banquet to celebrate the conclusion of his two years as Carleton Alumni Fund chairman, fund drives that had broken all records.) The Jaycee citation stated that countless men trained in his store had received the “benefit of his zestful approach to life and busi-ness” and praised his involvement in many civic projects and his sponsorship of local athletic teams. With his connections, Sid “has filled literally thousands of ticket requests for Minnesota Gopher football and basketball games and, recently, for the Minnesota

to-home stores, he was “still doing a very respectable $1.2-million volume” at the age of 74. Dan told me that his father “couldn’t keep all those balls in the air, so he finally sold out the clothing stores and concentrated on just The Hub in Northfield and Skeffington’s up in Minneapolis.”

Dan explained that the idea for the formal wear business had come from college students who would bring their tuxedos to The Hub and say, “Sid, what will you give me for this? I’m leaving college and not playing in an orchestra anymore and I don’t need it.” So Sid would buy the tuxedos back for resale or rental to other college musicians or for dances and proms.

Sid and Lydia had four children, Dan, Jim, Jon and Deborah, and welcomed other family members to their household from time to time if the need arose. In fact, the children (Sylvia, Ruth and David Chase) of Lydia’s sister came to live with them and all gradu-ated from Northfield High School. Sylvia Chase went on to be an award-winning broadcast journalist. Dan said that at one point both of his grandmothers were also living with them, “so it was quite a circus.” It made for tight quarters but, Dan said, “As you get older, you understand what is going on, and my dad just loved tak-ing care of people, helping people out.”

Sid loved music and, since there were few entertainment venues in Northfield back then, Dan has many memories of Sid’s friends com-ing to the house, playing piano, guitar and trombone, with Sid on violin. “I’ve always said my dad was one of the very few Dixieland violinists!” said Dan, who also noted that jazz great Doc Evans (Car-leton Class of 1929) would stop by to play when he was in town. Sid would order the kids, “Get upstairs!” but, “We’d come back down,” said Dan, and by the end of the evening 30 or 40 people would have gathered at the house to enjoy the music and have fun.

Dan was involved with The Hub starting with small chores in grade school such as sweeping floors. He then worked part-time as a salesman through high school (he was in the NHS Class of 1958) and became a partner in 1964. The Hub was a hangout for students and young Dan was impressed with “all the affection I saw between these fellows,” as high school and college graduates would come back to Northfield and greet his father with hugs.

There was a “hero board” at The Hub with pictures thumb-tacked onto it of the many celebrity friends Sid had been making through his business dealings and other associations. Sid had known ac-tor Jack Carson dating back to a rowdy couple years Carson had

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had taken time off from pursuing his degree to manage The Hub but returned in 1968, graduating in 1970.) Dan was proprietor of the Rueb ‘n’ Stein from 1975 to 1983. After The Hub closed and Sid died in 1986, Dan took over Skeffington’s Formal Wear for 12 years. He now runs Freeman’s Formal Wear from his home. He has driven for EcoTrans shuttle service and has been on KYMN radio for more than 40 years, including a Sunday morning radio show. Dan and his former wife, Gretchen Christeson (NHS ‘57), have three children, Nate, Jeff and Suzanne.

Dan has acted in more than 70 stage productions throughout Southern Minnesota. He had a “dream come true” in 2010 when he and his daughter, Suzanne, starred together in On Golden Pond at the Paradise Center for the Arts in Faribault. Dan has been an integral part of Defeat of Jesse James Days activities and many visitors and townspeople are familiar with his long-time narration of the bank raid re-enactments on Division Street. He also stepped up to the plate to be coordinator of the Sesquicentennial celebra-tion of Northfield in 2005 and to find funding for the annual 4th of July fireworks displays. Dan was the recipient of the Joseph Lee Heywood Distinguished Service Award in 1994.

I asked Dan what he thought of the title “Mr. Northfield” that has been bestowed on him by many in the town. He said, “Well, it’s daunting, believe me, because at this age [72], I can’t keep up with what I used to be able to do but so be it, I’m not going to dismiss it or anything. It brings me to an age I’m not ready to be, how’s that?”

Dan has had recent health setbacks and on Jan. 25 there was a trib-ute and benefit called “Stepping Out for Mr. Northfield” for him at the Grand Event Center. Dan is grateful for the support of his com-munity and told me, “It’s one of the great things about Northfield, the way we look after each other.”

Vikings and Twins. He was instrumental in bringing professional baseball and football to Minnesota.”

Another honor for Sid came from Carleton College during Carleton’s centennial reunion weekend on June 1, 1967, with an Alumni Achievement Award for his service to Carleton and his business and community accomplishments. Just weeks earlier, Sid had arranged for his friend, Twins’ owner Cal Griffith, to provide the whole college with free tickets for a game on May 22 against the Chicago White Sox at Metropolitan Stadium to celebrate Carleton’s 100th anniversary.

The announcement that “Zestful Freeman” would be retiring came in Maggie Lee’s story in the Feb. 6, 1975, Northfield News. He was handing over The Hub to son Dan and Dave Graff but would con-tinue to commute to Minneapolis as president of Skeffington’s. Sid and Lydia continued their around-the-world travels, with a par-ticular fondness for Mexico, where they had a home in Manzanillo.

Unfortunately, by 1983, Sid’s health was in decline from Alzheim-er’s disease. Under care in San Diego, he died there in his sleep on May 16, 1986, at the age of 80. Lydia Freeman died in Northfield at the age of 93 on Nov. 30, 2006. Her obituary in the Northfield News of Jan. 3, 2007, took note of her work with the Girl Scouts (she had held local and regional offices), raising money for the Northfield swimming pool and her tireless efforts in Owatonna to preserve the architectural integrity of the National Farmers Bank (now the Wells Fargo Bank). This bank was designed by the famed architect Louis Sullivan who had been commissioned by her father Carl Kent Bennett in 1906.

Dan was inspired from an early age by his parents, came to admire others who were making Northfield a better place and couldn’t wait to do it himself. Dan began volunteering and “finding ways to give back to the community that gave me so much.” Dan was named “Outstanding Young Man” at a Jaycee dinner in December of 1968 for being active in civic and athletic events, Arts Guild and Fall Festival, while attending St. Olaf and working at The Hub. (He

Top left: Sid Freeman shows his eques-trian skills in 1948, when the first bank raid re-creation was held in Northfield. Said Sid: “My intimates refer to me as ‘Sundown Sidney, the kosher cowboy.’” Photo courtesy Chip DeMann.

Top center: (Left to right) George Gobel and Al Quie (marshals of Defeat of Jesse James Days parade, 1983), Chip DeMann (chairman of DJJD) and Sid Freeman (Gobel’s host and friend). Photo courtesy Northfield Historical Society.

Top right: Sid looks over list of Alumni Fund donors in 1966. Courtesy Carleton College Archives.

Left: “Lyd, Lonely Alumni Fund Widow, in Jesse James Cafe,” from 1966 Carleton Voice. Sid’s wife, Lydia, wrote of Sid’s tenure as national chairman of the Alumni Fund: “He took to the idea the way stu-dents take to the arb in the springtime.” Courtesy Carleton College Archives.

HISTORY continued on next page

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SID’S FRIEND: GEORGE GOBELSid had an enduring friendship with the much beloved, amiable comedian with a crew cut, George Gobel. Gobel started singing country music on Chicago’s WLS “Barn Dance” and went on to win an Emmy Award for “Outstanding New Personality” in 1955 for his NBC comedy show, which ran from 1954-60 (with the last season on CBS).

Sid had been introduced to Gobel at an event in Minneapolis by Rev. Robert Dillon, a priest at St. Dominic Church in Northfield, who had served in the military with Gobel. (One of Gobel’s favorite lines was that he had been a B-26 bomber flight instruc-tor for the U.S. Army Air Force in Oklahoma during World War II and “We must have done a good job down there because not one enemy plane got past Tulsa.”) Sid soon became Gobel’s cloth-ing supplier and friend. Scott Richardson wrote in the Northfield News of Sept. 1, 1983, “Gobel would occasionally make reference to Sid Freeman and Northfield on his comedy show…And Gobel once got a big laugh on the Johnny Carson show by wearing a mink tie sent to him from Freeman’s The Hub in Northfield.”

Sid persuaded Gobel to serve as celebrity grand marshal of the Defeat of Jesse James Days parade in 1983. In full “outlaw” regalia, Chip DeMann (chairman of the 1983 DJJD committee) and Wayne Eddy met Gobel and his son Greg at the Minneapolis air-port and immediately outfitted Gobel in derby and duster, much to his delight.

The very first of the DJJD banquets was held with former Minnesota governor Al Quie being presented with the first Joseph Lee Heywood Distinguished Ser-vice Award. The Northfield News report-ed on Sept. 15, 1983, “George Gobel was delightful in his role as celebrity grand marshal for the celebration. He kept the 300 who attended the Friday evening banquet in stitches during a 20-minute monologue.” Gobel concluded with the words, “Always remember, you can lead a horse to water but before you push him in, remember how a wet horse smells,” after which he was given a standing ovation. When reminded of this, Dan Freeman said, “Oh, that’s wonderful. That’s what made Gobel so funny because he had a way of being humorous without being harmful. He never would put someone down.” Gobel was “a little daft, a little goofy, but his humor was just so gentle.”

The 1983 DJJD celebration was termed the “best ever” in the Northfield News of Sept. 15. Chairman Chip DeMann estimated that about 60,000 spectators lined the grand parade route to salute Quie and “Lonesome George” Gobel, lonesome no more. Wayne Eddy told me that Gobel expressed how nice the people were to him and what a good time he was having. Gobel was impressed by the small community “with the big hearts” and “he was very receptive to it all,” said Eddy.

Dan Freeman (shown here, left, with Skip Zimmerman on the 4th of July, 2007) was inspired by his parents, Sid and Lydia, to give back to his community. For his service Dan has been recognized as “Mr. Northfield.”

HISTORY continued from previous page

Sid Freeman once told writer Maggie Lee that he enjoyed life and, if he could, he would come back as a dolphin because “they’re always happy.” Both Sid and Dan Freeman have left a legacy of happiness and service in their wake to the town they both have loved.

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SID’S FRIEND: JACK CARSONSo here’s the story that’s been around about actor Jack Carson and Northfield clothier Sid Freeman. From Jan. 1929 to Jan. 1931, Carson had been a Carleton student and then went off to seek fame. Years later Sid saw Carson playing a role on the screen in a movie at the Grand Theater and said, “That guy owes me a bill!” Sid tracked him down, they became fast friends and when Carson died, Sid was among the pallbearers at his funeral.

True? Probably, Sid’s son Dan Freeman told me.

But there is more to the story. Jack and Sid had been drinking buddies during Carson’s time at Carleton and “I think they had their share of fun and perhaps a few troubles together.” Since Northfield was “dry,” Dundas was the place to drink and “Jack would frequently end up in the Dundas jail” and have to be bailed out by Sid.

Carson came to Carleton from Milwaukee and established him-self as a “perennial prankster,” as evidenced in the Carleton Ar-chives. When he and his friends became irritated with a speaker at the chapel who habitually talked too long, they planted several alarm clocks set to go off when his time was up. Carson once filled the pipes of the chapel organ with flour before a recital and would amuse himself by taking potshots from his dorm window with a rifle at the campus clock, causing it to chime. “Puzzled maintenance staff repeatedly try to fix the clock before they discover the cause of its malfunction.” In 1931, Carson was asked to leave college after several drinking and gambling episodes. But accounts say he “literally stumbled into his future career” during his time at Carleton when “dressed as Hercules for a college stage production, he tripped and nearly demolished half the set.” Car-son and a friend Dave Willock formed a vaudeville act featuring physical comedy for which Carson’s frame (6’ 2”, 220 pounds) was well-suited.

Carson went on to appear in more than 100 movies, playing roles described as “bluff blowhards or happy-go-lucky sidekicks” in pictures such as Strawberry Blonde (1941) with James Cagney and Rita Hayworth, Gentleman Jim with Errol Flynn (1942) and as Officer O‘Hara in Arsenic and Old Lace with Cary Grant (1944). He also teamed up with Dennis Morgan for musical comedies and was in a couple films with Doris Day, with whom he had a brief romance.

Carson found his way into dramas, as well, including A Star is Born (1954) with Judy Garland (where he played a “backstabbing publicity chief”), Cat on a Hot Tin Roof (1958) with Burl Ives,

Elizabeth Taylor and Paul Newman (as the brother of Newman’s character) and Mildred Pierce with Joan Crawford (1945).

Carol Donelan, associate professor of cinema and media studies at Carleton, told me that when she teaches Mildred Pierce every year in her Film Noir class, she points out Carson’s portrayal of real estate agent Wally Fay, a jerk who is always “on the make.” Yet, Donelan said, “You can’t help liking him. He’s charming. The ability to make us like and empathize with a smarmy jerk is a testament to Jack Carson’s considerable acting skills. You can tell he’s having fun with the role.” Her students are always “thrilled to claim him as a fellow Carl.” (Carson once told an interviewer that Carleton was his school, though “perhaps I’m prouder of it than it is of me.” He joked that its name “doesn’t lead itself easily to any good vaudeville gags. Like Siwash.”)

Carson also was a guest and host on television shows in the 1950s, with his own show on NBC 1954-1955. In the fall of 1962, he col-lapsed during a rehearsal for a Broadway play. The diagnosis was stomach cancer, which claimed his life Jan. 2, 1963. He was only 52 years old. From his funeral, an AP photo was sent out of his fourth wife, Sandra Jolley, in tears “on the arm of Sid Freeman.”

A columnist once called Carson “the best educated and most erudite actor in the film industry.” In response, Carson wrote: “Thank you. I want you to know I didn’t have to go to the dic-tionary to see what ‘erudite’ meant.”

***********************************************************

According to Dan Freeman, Sid was a “hero worshiper” who actually befriended his heroes. Sid would say, “I like to find out what makes them tick! Sometimes I can’t see it, but you stick around with them for a while and you find out most of them are a lot smarter than people think and most of them are more determined and goal-oriented.” Sid, the clothier, “had a head for business,” said Dan. “He knew when to turn it on and really go to work at it.” And then he “wanted to have fun” and loved meeting famous people. That was, said Dan, sort of Sid’s hobby.

The Jaycee award citation Sid was given in 1966 called Sid “Northfield’s international goodwill ambassador. He has made friends all over the world and has a knack of meeting impor-tant and average people in the same easy manner, making them feel comfortable immediately. Counted among his friends are statesmen, entertainers and big-league athletic stars. But more importantly, he has never forgotten his friends at home – here in Northfield.”

Jack Carson (left) visited with Carleton College president Larry Gould on July 18, 1954. Carson was expelled from Carleton in 1931 but went on to a successful career in movies and on television. Photo courtesy Carleton College Archives.

Jack Carson, Sid’s friend, teamed up for two movies with Doris Day in 1949.

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Ben Aaron ............................................1 – TavernAcoustic Jam .....................Most Tuesdays – CowAll Washington .................................... 8 – Ruby’sChristopher Anders .................... 9 – Hogan BrosAshes for April .........22 – Cannon River WineryAverage Janes ...........23 – Cannon River WineryThe Avey Brothers ......................9 – Field HouseBallet Royale

Minnesota ...................15 – Lakeville Area ArtsPhilip Bauer ............................ 2 – Lakeville S HSKaitlyn Berber ........................................15 – CowChris Brooks ........................................ 8 – Spike’sBeguine Brothers .....................................8 – CowRobert Bell ..............................................5 – RuebBlackout .................................... 8 – Grandpa Al’sBluegrass Jam ...............Wednesdays – El TequilaBZ Girls ....................15 – Cannon River WineryDavid Carter .....................................28 – St. OlafCasa Sin Dueño ............................10 – CrossingsContratopia ......................................22 – ArmoryCrankshaft & the Gear Grinders . 8 – Field HouseDirty Word .........................................22 – Spike’sDolce Woodwind Quintet ....................21 – CowDylan Chmura-Moore .......................8 – St. OlafD’Sievers ....................................8 – Cannon FallsDala ..................................................8 – CrossingsFace First ................................... 1 – Grandpa Al’sTim Fast ...................................... 1 – Hogan BrosJoe Fessler ...........................................23 – TavernFlashmob...............................................8 – Babe’sGated Community ..................................1 – CowVladmir Gorbach .........................15 – CrossingsDean Harrington ..................................19 – RuebElliot Hilton .........................................2 – TavernHopeful Romantics ................................9 – UCCHornheads ........................................7 – Shattuck

Irish Music ............... Wednesdays – Hogan BrosIron Horse ..................... 1 – Babe’s – 16 – Spike’sGrant Haake ..................................23 – CrossingsTimothy Howe............... 15 – Ruby’s – 22 – FrogJagged Ease ...............17 – Cannon River WineryJena Marie Band .................................. 2 – Spike’sJambon Cru ................................9 – Field HouseJimmi and the Band of Souls ....9 – Field HouseJivin’ Ivan Swing ........................... 16 – SignatureBilly Johnson ......................................28 – TavernJulie Johnson and

the No Accounts .........24 – Lakeville Area ArtsJack Klatt ..............................................8 – TavernLew Klimesh ...............................9 – Field HouseDave Lambert .......................................1 – WingsMartha Larson .....................................5, 19 RuebAnnie Lawler ............23 – Cannon River WineryCait Leary .................................................1 – FrogJeff Lee ...........................................23 – CrossingsLonesome Dan Kase..........................22 – TavernMichael Loonan ........1 – Cannon River WineryHoward “Guitar” Luedtke &

Blue Max ..................................9 – Field HouseMatthew McCright...........................27 – St. OlafSasha Mercedes ..................................15 – TavernMidnight Collision ............................14 – TavernScottie Miller ............9 – Oak City General StoreMinnesota Sinfonia ......................14 – CathedralMister Peabody ......................... 9 – Grandpa Al’sMonroe Crossing ............................ 15 – ParadiseMark Mraz ........................................ 7, 21 TavernNed Netzel ................................... 2 – Hogan BrosNew Moon Trio ....................................8 – CowNew Orleans Marine Quintet .........12 – St. OlafNew Orleans Suspects .........22 – Whiskey BonesNorthern Roots Session ............Mondays – Cow

North of Nowhere .................................23 – CowOccasional Jazz ......................................22 – CowOptimum Trajectory .............................15 – CowOuttakes .............................9 – American LegionBrenda Owens ...........3 – Cannon River WineryTim Patrick ................2 – Cannon River WineryDon Paulson ............24 – Cannon River WineryBarb Piper ....................................... 22 – Boston’sPKZ ...........................16 – Cannon River WineryJoe and Vicki Price ..22 – Whistle Binkies NorthAlison Rae ..........................................16 – TavernRagamala ...........................................23 – St. OlafRebel Queens .....................................15 – Spike’sBernhard Scully ................................25 – St. OlafShaw Brothers .....................................15 – Babe’sShirts and Skins ..................................22 – Babe’sEverett Smithson

Band ............3 – Covered Bridge, 24 – Reggie’sSmokescreen ............................. 2 – Grandpa Al’sSt. Olaf Band .....................................10 – St. OlafSt. Olaf Choir ....................................17 – St. OlafStep in Clouds............................. 8 – Hogan BrosSudden Lovelys .............................16 – CrossingsDan Switch ......................... 2 – Frog, 22 – Ruby’sTex Pistols Band ..............................2 – CrossingstreVeld ........................2 – Cannon River WineryTuition Daddies ........................ 16 – Hogan BrosDavid Ullman ........................... 15 – Hogan BrosArt Vandalay ........................................9 – TavernVecchione/Erdahl

Oboe Bass Duo ...........24 – Lakeville Area ArtsAndrew Walesch ..9, 10 – Cannon River WineryKen Wanovich...................................... 1 – Ruby’sWhiskey Trick ..........................................8 – FrogWillie B’s Blues Band..................2 – Tipsy TurtleZillionaires ..............................................1 – Rueb

February Gigs

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Cannon River Woodcarving Club – 507/339-0336Third Monday of the month, 7pm, Ivan Whillock Studio, Faribault

Cannon Valley Civil War Round Table • Feb. 21, 7pmRice County Historical Society, Faribaultdesc.

Crossings at Carnegie – crossingsatcarnegie.com, 507/732-7616 Classes in the arts for preschoolers through adults.Writing to be Drawn – Feb. 9, 10am-1pm – ages 12 through

adult. Bill Willingham, a 30-year veteran of comic book writ-ing and winner of comics’ most prestigious award for comic writing, will take you through the ins and outs and how to write when it’s going to be drawn. Willingham’s comics series include Fables and Sons of Empire. He is a novelist, short story and comic book writer, winner of many industry awards and four time Hugo nominee.

Painting by Intuition: A Point Zero Workshop – Feb. 28-Mar. 3, 10am-6pm – Point zero painting, with its emphasis on process, not product, is a method of self-exploration and spiritual dis-covery rather than a traditional painting class. A sense of trust and integration can be gained as unexpected images emerge. Debby Purdy, M.A.A.T., L.C.P.C., is an art therapist and licensed clinical professional counselor and teacher of the point zero painting process as described in the books by Michele Cassou.

Cub Scout Pack 300 – 612/490-4048, cubs300.org

Just Food Co-op, Northfield – 507/650-0106 Mondays: Knitting Night, 7-9pm, 507/645-6331

MOMS Club – [email protected] – First Wednesday of each month, 10am, St. Peter’s Church, Northfield – If you are a full-time or part-time stay-at-home mom, this club may be for you. MOMS Club is a local chapter of the International MOMS Club, an organization dedicated to providing support and a sense of community for stay-at-home moms.

Northfield Arts Guild – 507/645-8877 – Find classes for kids and adults at northfieldartsguild.org.

All Abilities Dance Workshop – Feb. 9 3:30-5pm – Drop ins welcome. $15 non-member, $13 member. For all abilities – whether you get around by wheelchair, walker, or can do cartwheels – whether you have developmental or sensory issues – this class will help you explore themes from modern dance, improvisation and somatics to move your body and connect with others in ways you never thought you could. Instructed by Kate McDonnell, Dancer with Different Abilities (HonorY-ourBody.Net). If you need a personal care assistant, bring him or her along. For information, call the Northfield Arts Guild, 507/645-8877

Northfield Buddhist Meditation Center – Children’s Circle Class (ages 3-9), Sundays, 3-4pm – Children and their parents meditate, do yoga and learn about Buddhism in a fun, peaceful atmosphere of exploration. Everyone welcome.

Clubs, Classes and More…Northfield Public Library – 507/645-6606

First Steps Early Literacy Center, Mon, Fri, Sat, 10-12pmLego Club, Thu, 3:30-5pmPaper Art Club, Tue, 3:30-5pmPatty Cake Infant Lapsit, Tue, 10-11amToddler Rhyme Time, Wed, 12-1pmPreschool Story & Craft Time, Thu, 10-11am

Northfield Public Schools Community Services 507/664-3649

Northfield Senior Center – northfieldseniorcenter.org 507/664-3700 – Programs for active older adults in a premier fitness facility with an indoor pool and certified fitness instructors. Bike club, hiking trips, ping pong, nutrition talks, art classes, writ-ing classes, card groups, dining center, fitness classes and more.

Northfield Yarn – 507/645-1330 – Open Stitching, third Thursday of each month, 6-8pm. Bring a project and share in the fun. Free.

Paradise Center for the Arts, Faribault – 507/332-7372 Find art-related classes for kids and adults at paradisecenterforthearts.org.

Education Potter for Adults with Tom Willis – Wed. through Feb. 20, 6-8pm – age 40+. Tools are optional. This class is for any skill level. $84 members, $108 nonmembers, $36 supply fee for clay, glazing and firing.

Basic Keepsake Ornament Display Box Workshop - Feb. 9, 10am-1pm – In this three-hour workshop you will complete a simple display box with acrylic glass. A kit is provided that includes a prepped cigar box, foil and acrylic glass at a cost of $10. You bring the ornament. You will select a background and vintage Christmas wrap. The cost of the vintage wrap depends upon your selection and can range from $3 to $17, or bring your own. Bring an old shirt or apron. Instructed by Mary Warner. $21 members, $27 nonmembers.

Rice County Historical Society, Faribault 507/332-2121, rchistory.org

River Bend Nature Center, Faribault, 507/332-7151 – Classes and activities at rbnc.org.

History Tours of River Bend – Join a naturalist for a journey back in time to discover the history of the land. Travel is by golf cart. Tours last 1.5 hours and can accommodate up to five people. Call to schedule. Donations welcome.

Secure Base Counseling Center, Northfield – securebasecounselingcenter.com – 507/301-3412

Mindful Parenting – 4th Saturday each month, 2-3pm – Parent-ing is an challenging opportunity to practice being present and mindful. This discussion group supports its members as they apply mindfulness practice to parenting.

Blended Families – 4th Tuesday each month, 7-8pm – Couples who bring children together from previous relationships have an opportunity to create a whole new family. This blending of families brings with it many rewards and many challenges. This group supports its members as they celebrate lovely aspects and grow through challenges of life in a blended family.

VFW Club, Northfield – Sundowners Car ClubFirst Wednesday of each month, 7:30pm. – Anyone who has

an interest in street rods, customs, antiques, special interest or foreign is welcome to attend.

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A&W ........................................................... 39-40Aging Services for Communities ....................34Anna’s Closet ....................................................25Apple Chevrolet Buick Northfield ........... 39-40Aquatic Pets ......................................................34Bierman’s Furniture and Flooring..................24Budget Blinds ...................................................38Buff & Coat ......................................................29Buzz ..................................................................25By All Means Graphics & Printing ..inside backCannon Valley Veterinary Clinic .............. 39-40Carbone’s Pizza & Sports Bar ...........................6Cathedral of Our Merciful Savior ..................27Chapati Indian Restaurant ..............................36Cocoa Bean ......................................................11Coldwell Banker South Metro ..........................3College City Beverage ........................................7Contented Cow ................................................36Craig Wierson Brick, Stone & Concrete Inc. ...8Crossings at Carnegie ......................................20Culver’s ............................................. inside frontDairy Queen..................................... inside frontEclectic Goat ....................................................25Edward Jones .....................................................7

El Tequila Restaurant ......................................22Flaten Art Museum............................................9First United Church of Christ ........................29Froggy Bottoms River Pub ................................1Gooters Dough to Go ....................... front coverHideaway Coffeehouse and Winebar .............21Hogan Brothers Acoustic Café .......................32Johnny Angel’s Eatery & Pub ..........................27Just Food Co-op...............................................15KYMN 1080AM, Kymnradio.net ...................30Lakeville Arts Center .........................................9Landmark Homes, Paul Smith .......................23Left Field .............................................................5Le Tour du Chocolate ........................back coverMandarin Garden Restaurant ........................21Merlin Players ..................................................24Mr. JST Technology Consulting .....................38Northfield Arts Guild ......................................22Northfield High School ...................................19Northfield Historical Society ..........................12Northfield Hospital & Clinics ...................13, 29Northfield Lines ...............................................21Northfield Liquor Store ..................................14Northfield Oils and Vinegars ..........................25

Northfield Retirement Community .................1

Northfield Senior Center ................................20

Northfield Winter Stomp ..................................4

Paradise Center for the Arts ............................10

Prairie’s Edge Humane Society .......................32

Professional Pride Realty.................................16

Quality Bakery .................................................20

Quarterback Club ............................................12

The Rare Pair ...................................................17

Ranchero Supper Club ....................................21

Rueb N Stein ....................................................26

St. Olaf College Performing and Visual Arts ..............................................38

Schmidt Homes Remodeling ..........................14

Shattuck-St. Mary’s .........................................18

The Sketchy Artist ............................................25

State Farm Insurance, Mark Quinnell .............................. inside front

Tagg 2 ................................................................25

Verizon Wireless ........................................ 39-40

Welcome Services ..............................................4

Witt Bros., Service, Inc ....................................11

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february 2013 Check us out online at www.northfieldguide.com 39

A&W Page 39-40 404 Wilson Ave. NW, Faribault • 507/334-9379 – Old-fashioned restau-rant and drive-in, bringing people together to share great food, great root beer and friendly hospitality. Enjoy our signature root beer in a cold frosty mug for a truly one-of-a-kind taste and don’t forget the A&W original Coney Dog.

Carbone’s Pizza & Sports Bar Page 6 620 So. Water St, Northfield, MN 55057, 507/645-2300, carbones-northfield.com, Mon-Sat 11-1am, Sun 11am to midnight. Family friendly sports bar. Monthly and daily food and beverage specials. 2-for-1 happy hour daily, 11am-7pm, 10pm-12am. Half-price appetizers Mon-Fri 3-7pm.

Castle Rock N Roll Bar and Grill – 27798 Chippendale Ave 507/645-0676 • Facebook: Castle Rock N Roll Bar and Grill – 11-1am (every day). Great burgers and pizza, with daily specials. Located at the corner of Hwy. 3 and Cty. Rd. 86. Private party room available.

Chapati Page 36 214 Division St., Northfield • 645-2462 • chapati.us, closed Mondays – Cuisine of India. Variety of curry and Tandoori entrees including a large selection of vegetarian items. Wine and beer.

Cocoa Bean Page 11 515 Division St., Northfield • 9:30am-6am, 7 days a week • 507/645-5322 – Fresh crepes, Belgian waffles, hot coffee, chai, tea and more.

DININGContented Cow Page 36 302 Division St. S., Northfield • contentedcow.com • 3pm-close British-style pub with authentic British specialties and a variety of soups, salads and sandwiches. Extensive patio overlooking the Cannon River. Great selection of imported and domestic draft beer and a full selection of wine and spirits.

Culver’s Inside Front Cover 960 Highway 3, Northfield • 507/645-7700 • culvers.com/restaurants/northfield/ • 10:30am-7pm – Culver’s ButterBurgers use fresh, never fro-zen 100% Midwest beef. Our fresh frozen custard is made daily from real Wisconsin dairy. For something different, try the hearty tenderness of beef pot roast, the grilled-up-fresh goodness of a rueben or the hand-battered North Atlantic cod filet.

Dairy Queen Inside Front Cover 900 N Highway 3, Northfield • 507/645-8912 • dairyqueenofnorth-field.com • Feb-Apr: 10am-9pm, May-Aug: 10am-10pm, Sept-Oct: 10am-9pm – Dairy Queen treats and cake, homemade or southern style BBQ brisket sandwiches and famous juicy polish hotdogs. Home of the Blizzard.

El Tequila Page 22 1010 Hwy. 3 S. • 664-9139 • 11 a.m. -10 p.m., Northfield – Family restaurant offering authentic Mexican cuisine as well as wonderful mar-garitas and more.

Fireside Lounge and Supper Club – 37540 Goodhue Ave., Dennison 507/645-9992 • firesidelounge.net – Tu-Su 10am-close, closed Mon. A menu to satisfy all tastes, from burgers and sandwiches to steaks and shrimp dinners. Friday night fish special, Saturday night prime rib special and Sat/Sun breakfast specials. Like FiresideLoungeSupperClub on Face-book and receive a coupon for a free appetizer – limited time offer.

SELF DOG WASH$11 per dogWe provide all the supplies & clean up the mess!

1/2 hour limit

1600 Cannon Lane • Northfield, MN 55057

507-645-5619 • 866-253-8049SHOP OUR

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A&W Root Beer • Burgers • Chicken • SidesSweets & Treats • Hot Dogs • Kids Cruisers

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404 Wilson Ave.Faribault, MN507-334-9379

CLIP AND SAVE! Get a good deal – support our supporters – and strengthen your GUIDE! We thank you.

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Cannot be used on bill payments or with any other offer. Some restrictions apply. See Store for deails.

Good through 3-31-13

anything in the store

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1600 Cannon Lane • Northfield, MN507-645-5619 • 866-253-8049

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$1395 OILCHANGE

Up to 5 quarts of oil, fully synthetic oil extra. Excludes diesel and hybrid engines. Plus tax and shop supplies. Must have coupon. Not valid with other coupons. Expires 2/28/13

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404 Wilson Ave., Faribault, MN • 507-334-9379

$2 OFFCombo Meal

limit 2 per customer

Quality Bakery and Coffee Shop Page 20 410 Division St., Northfield • 645-8392 – Opens 6 a.m. Tuesday-Saturday – Owned and operated by the Klinkhammer family since 1949. Quality baking from scratch using delicious family recipes with no preser-vatives. Custom cakes, homemade breads, donuts, pies, cookies, espresso, lunch and more.

Quarterback Club Page 12 116 3rd St. W., Northfield • 507/645-7886 • Mon-Sat 6am-9pm, Sun 10:30am-8pm – Family friendly dining in Northfield for 37 years. House specialties include broasted chicken, BBQ ribs and flame-broiled hamburgers.

Ranchero Supper Club Page 21 4452 40th St W, Webster • 952/652-2700 • Tu-Th 5-9 pm, Fri-Sat 5-10 pm, Sun 5-8:30 pm – Owned by the Ettlin family for 35 years, Ranchero steaks are among the best in Southeast Minnesota. For traditional German fare try the Pork Schnitzel with German beer. Excellent food, fine service, a true supper club experience.

The Tavern of Northfield – 212 Division St., Northfield 507/663-0342 • tavernofnorthfield.com • Sun-Thu 6:30am-10pm, Fri-Sat 6:30am-11pm, lounge open daily 3pm-midnight. Located in the historic Archer House since 1984, The Tavern offers casual dining with a wide variety of homemade menu items and specials daily featuring fresh fish on Fridays and prime rib on Saturdays. The Tavern Lounge sports a deck overlooking the Cannon River, appetizers and a full bar with live music Thur-Sat.

1200 S Hwy 3, Northfield, MN • cannonvalleyvet.com • 507-650-7208

10% off entire retail purchase of food, dog & cat supplies, toys and treats.

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Froggy Bottoms River Pub Page 1 307 S. Water St., Northfield • 507/301-3611 • Sun 11am-9pm, Mon/Tue 11am-11pm, Wed-Sat 11am-1am – Upper-class bar food including appetizers, salads, burgers and more. Open for lunch and dinner. Entrees starting at 5pm.

The HideAway Page 21 421 Division St., Northfield • 507/664-0400 Mon-Fri, 6am-10pm, Sat-Sun 7am-10pm – Cozy bistro atmosphere serving unique appetizers and sandwiches. Coffee drinks, wine and beer specialties.

Hogan Brothers’ Acoustic Cafe Page 32 415 Division St., Northfield • 645-6653 • Sun-Tue 9 a.m.-9 p.m., Fri and Sat 9 a.m.-10 p.m. – Hot hoagies since 1991. Also soup, sandwiches, Espresso, gourmet coffee and ice cream.

J. Grundy’s Rueb ‘N’ Stein Page 26 503 Division St., Northfield • ruebnstein.com • 507/645-6691 • 11am-close – Great burgers and famous Ruebens. Casual relaxing atmosphere. Huge selection of imported and domestic beers, fine spirits and wines. Game room, happy hour 3:30-6pm, Karaoke on Fridays at 9pm.

Johnny Angel’s Eatery & Pub Page 27 37592 Goodhue Ave., Dennison 507/645-6666 • Tue-Thu 4pm-2am, Fri-Sun 12pm-2am – American (Traditional), Italian, Pizza, Sand-wiches. Nightly specials include Wednesday-Baby Back Ribs; Thursday-Specialty Pasta; Friday-Fish Fry; Saturday-King Cut Prime Rib.

Mandarin Garden Restaurant Page 21 107 East 4th St., Northfield • 507/645-7101 – MandarinGardenNorthfield.com, Lunch: Wed-Fri 11:30am-2pm, Dinner: Tue-Thu 4:30-9pm. Fri/Sat, 4:30-10pm. Authentic Peking and Szechuan cuisine, freshly prepared, dine-in or take-out.

The Ole Store Restaurant – 1011 St. Olaf Ave., Northfield 507/786-9400 • olestorerestaurant.com – Mon-Th 11am-9pm, Fri/Sat 11am-10pm (breakfast: Sat 7am-12pm, Sun 7am-1pm) – Contem-porary dining with neighborhood charm. Relax at a table with linens and fresh flowers or sit in our cozy lounge. A full menu including appetizers, rustic flatbread pizzas, salads, soups, entrees, steaks, fresh seafood, sandwiches and gourmet desserts. Reservations available.

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