Wednesday, March 22 2017

Our monthly 614 Homes series travels to Westgate

Good Wednesday Columbus. It's Zoey.

Our second round of 614 Homes is live, and this time we headed to Westgate. Check out the charming home with lots of pictures sure to inspire.Want to see your home featured on Columbus Navigator? We're taking applications, so hit reply and let us know why your house would be a perfect fit. But not before checking out this month's installment at the link below.

Navigator full story:  614 Homes - Joe & Rick In Westgate

The Rundown:

The Weather: 38. 0% chance of rain. Sunny.To do: Ever imagined yourself on Antiques Roadshow? Local estate sale company JA Baker is offering the next best things with a night of wine and free appraisals at Camelot Cellars. Event runs from 6-9, and you can get appraisals for furniture (bring a picture if it's a big piece), paintings, jewelry, and many other categories of items. Check out event details here.

Navigator Originals:

A combination residential and commercial property is set to make its debut in the Franklinton area, with an official ground breaking date and other details finally available to the public.

A weekly arts workshop for anyone willing and wanting to create.

Business and Representative Jim Renacci enters the Ohio Governor's race on the heels of several other Republican candidates.

Celebrate World Poetry Day with everyone at the Navigator as we tell you a little bit about our own favorite poems.

The Wednesday Conversation:

Ohio State announces Lou Holtz & Phil Knight as spring game guest coaches. [Eleven Warriors/Byrnes]

Dividing Lines: Minimum-wage hike, job training are focus of efforts to close pay gap. The Dispatch continues their excellent series on economic inequality in Columbus. [The Columbus Dispatch/Ferenchik]Columbus police announce 100,000 hours of dash cam footage "inadvertently" deleted. Have to see how this plays out before rushing to judgment, but it certainly isn't a good look.  [ABC6/White]Columbus State will be offering $500 scholarships to laid off retail workers as part of a strategy to help workers who are losing jobs in the face of increased online shopping. [Dispatch/Feran]

 Long read for your lunch break:

The year is 1981, the beginning of the Reagan era. People everywhere are changing, America itself is transforming into an cartoonish fallacy of what it once was. Follow along as Peter Birkenhead recounts the significance of that summer, to his life and to the country's.

Did that friend you've always admired for their intelligence and good looks forward this to you? Subscribe!Have a wonderful Wednesday.