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  • Middle Eastern fest returns next week

    Traditional Middle Eastern performances from the 2015 St. George Middle Eastern Food Festival entertain guests. Photo courtesy of John ManosTraditional Middle Eastern performances from the 2015 St. George Middle Eastern Food Festival entertain guests. Photo courtesy of John ManosTamara Imam - Managing Editor
    managing@insideuab.com

    For the 35th year in a row, the Saint George Middle Eastern Food Festival is using food as the main agent for cultural appreciation and understanding.

    The festival, hosted by St. George Melkite Greek-Catholic Church, will take place from Thursday, Sept. 8 to Saturday, Sept. 10 at the church on 16th Avenue South. The hours of operation are 10:30 a.m. to 9:00 p.m. each day.

    Members of the parish, mother and son duo Annette and Jeremy Ritchey, are leading this year’s festival as first-year chairmen. The chairmen hope that the festival will continue to bring the Magic City together to celebrate Middle Eastern culture through food and dance.

    To Annette Ritchey, the festival is all about “providing our Arabic, our Middle Eastern hospitality to Birmingham.”

    The festival boasts somewhere from 8,000 to 10,000 attendees each year, with people sometimes coming from out of state to enjoy the food, music and various vendors. While lines can become long throughout the weekend, Jeremy Ritchey says for festival-goers not to be discouraged.
  • Red Planet Preview: Sloss Fest set for solid sophomore shows

    SlossLast year's Sloss Fest drew crowds of hundreds who came to enjoy the inaugural lineup. Photo by Brandon VarnerJared Chesnut - BlazeRadio Operations Manager
    redc@uab.edu

    In the middle of an Alabama summer and its sweltering heat, the country’s last standing blast furnace, Birmingham’s Sloss Furnaces, will play host once again to some of the hottest bands for the second annual Sloss Music and Arts Festival.

    On July 16-17 the historical site will open its doors for a weekend of great music from an eclectic mix of bands and artists, as well as some of the best in local brews and foods.
  • Review: Birmingham's second annual Sloss Fest

    2016 07 17 15.16.02Photo by Jared Chesnut Jared Chesnut - BlazeRadio Operations Manager
    redc@uab.edu

    Day One

    Between iron casting, tributes to artists who’ve passed the torch and giant cat heads with stunner shades, there was a ton to take in and only so much time to do so. Here are a few highlights from Saturday’s offerings.

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