Dallas Voice (Dallas, Tex.), Vol. 14, No. 30, Ed. 1 Friday, November 21, 1997 Page: 36 of 80
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Continued from Previous Page
restaurants, including the sophisticated
contemporary French bistro, L'Antibes,
and the casual New American restau-
rant, Frezno. The owners of the latter
recently opened Dagwoodz Diner, a
quirky place that redefines the tradi-
tional diner experience with such off-
beat creations as chocolate chip focaccia
French toast and fried bologna barbe-
cue sandwiches. Another terrific nearby
option is the pan-Latin American
restaurant, Tapatio, which is famous for
its irresistible fresh-baked bread and
inventive spicy cooking (plus its cute
waiters). After your meal, grab a seat
and a cup of espresso at the relentlessly
cruisy Coffee Table and sit and watch
the world stroll by.
Where partying is concerned,
Columbus is mostly about down-home
neighborhood bars, but there are a few
high-energy exceptions located in the
downtown area. The Garage and the
Columbus Eagle are tops among the
guys, with a younger stand-and-model
crowd favoring the former and a more
mixed-age, less-intense bunch of guys
fond of the Eagle. The dyke hot spot is
Wall Street, comedienne Suzanne
CLEVELAND
Continued from Page 34
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13612 Midway Rd
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17610 Midway Rd.,
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A quiet cobbled lane in Columbus’s Historic German
Village.
Westenhoffer's all-time favorite lesbian
venue. Hard-core leather hounds hang
out at the Eagle in Exile, and neighbor-
hood janes and joes play pool and dish
at the Clubhouse, an attractive base-
park of fountains and statuary over
which looms the focal point of the
downtown comeback, the completely
restored City Tower Center. Built in
1929, this 52-story complex houses
restaurants, upscale shops, and a com-
muter rail station. A few blocks north,
ment bar beneath Out On Main. In the
Short North, men and women like to
clink glasses at the upscale video bar
Havana and its cruisier cd’usin Union
Station. ▼
along the shores of Lake Erie, is the
pyramidal Rock and Roll Hall of Fame,
an invigorating tour of music and pop
culture over the past half-century. With
apologies to the Polka Hall of Fame in
suburban Euclid, this is Cleveland's
only certifiable must-see attraction.
Abutting downtown is the
Warehouse District, a tract of beautiful-
ly restored cast-iron buildings that now
house three queer nightclubs, several
good restaurants, a handful of funky
shops and galleries, and dozens of gor-
geous loft apartments. Down a steep
hill are the city's once-anemic river
flats, which have also been spiffed up
with rowdy clubs and restaurants.
Drive 10 minutes east of downtown
to reach the city's primary cultural and
educational center, 500-acre University
Circle. Don't miss the Georgian-style
Cleveland Museum of Art, the nearby
Cleveland Museum of Natural History,
and the highly rewarding Cleveland
Botanical Garden. From here it's a
quick hop to Cleveland Heights, one of
the nation's most racially and econom-
ically integrated communities. Many
gays and lesbians live here, and the
town's bustling Coventry Road is lined
with offbeat boutiques, coffeehouses,
and gay-friendly businesses.
You have to head in the opposite
direction to find Cleveland's other
major gay hub, Lakewood, whose
Detroit Avenue is the center of Cleve-
land's gay scene. When the weather's
cooperative, scads of queer folk head to
nearby Edgewater Park. Nobody's
going to confuse this dull stretch of
beige sand with Waikiki, but it's plenty
of fun on summer weekend afternoons.
Cleveland's dining scene is as
unflashy as it is dependable, with
strong influences from its Eastern
European, Greek, and Italian immi-
36
NOVEMBER 21, 1997 DALLAS VOICE
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Vercher, Dennis. Dallas Voice (Dallas, Tex.), Vol. 14, No. 30, Ed. 1 Friday, November 21, 1997, newspaper, November 21, 1997; Dallas, Texas. (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth616180/m1/36/: accessed April 26, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu; crediting UNT Libraries Special Collections.