Toledo Free Press – Sept. 7, 2014

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Sept. 7, 2014

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Algae Crisis

Inside Collins Andrew McClure offers a tour of the water treatment plant. By Danielle Stanton, page 6

PLUS:

Toledo Mayor D. Michael Collins’ firsthand account of the early hours of the water crisis. page 7


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Toledo Free Press

A Toledo tradition since 2005 ToledoFreePress.com

September 7, 2014


September 7, 2014

ToledoFreePress.com

Publisher’s statement

Opinion

A Toledo tradition since 2005

3

DON LEE

Doesn’t hold water

S

omeone sees a firefighter at Costco buying bottled water and the rumor spreads that a water ban must be imminent. Someone in line at a grocery store hears half of a phone conversation about a news report and the rumor spreads that a water ban must be imminent. Someone says he has a friend who has a cousin who knows a man who works with a guy who knows a contact at the water treatment plant who says tests are off-the-chart toxic, and the rumor spreads that a water ban must be imminent. While it is understandable that people’s confidence in the quality of local water has been shaken, it has been disturbing to see how quickly rumors of water bans have spread and how persistent those rumors are. Like a dog chasing its tail, social media whips itself into a flurry of rumors and outright lies about the region’s battle with toxic algae. credit, after an initial shaky start, Thomas F. Pounds theToD.itsMichael Collins administration is visibly working to keep the public informed and the rumors of another ban at bay. The City of Toledo started posting tap water test results on its website. The “daily water pumpage” for the Collins Park Water Treatment Plant is also posted on the site. There has also been a management change. Tim Murphy was named the interim commissioner of water treatment on Aug. 26, one day after commissioner David Leffler resigned. Collins said he asked for the resignation because he’d lost confidence that Leffler could rectify his policies or facilitate the city’s vision for the future. Following criticism over how the city shared information during the water crisis, Collins hired a new public information officer. Stacy Weber worked for the Toledo-Lucas County Health Department and Lucas County Emergency Management Agency. She’ll be in charge of the city’s social media accounts, as well as communicating with the media. All of these steps (along with a long overdue media tour of the Collins Park Water Treatment Plant Aug. 28) add up to a clear effort to keep the process transparent and the public informed. There is no way to guarantee Toledo can avoid another water shutdown as the algae season progresses. But Collins has apparently learned from his early mistakes, made some major course corrections and is working to restore our confidence in the city’s ability to navigate any potential crisis. Hopefully our fellow citizens will remember that most rumors of imminent disaster simply do not hold water. O Thomas F. Pounds is president and publisher of Toledo Free Press. Contact him at tpounds@toledofreepress.com.

LIGHTING THE FUSE

Heather Fay’s thriller music

A

s music continues its evolution from melody to and honesty one might expect from a woman who wrote rhythm and from organic instruments to com- the lyrics, “If I were to wear my heart on my sleeve, would puter performance, Heather Fay is at once a re- you say it looks pretty and that it suits me? / Or would you visionist and a visionary. Fay writes and plays a style of roll your eyes like those other guys do, and tell me to take it off because it embarrasses you?” folk music that is progressive enough to Toledo Free Press: Is this the first batch defy the Americana label but not so experiof songs that you’ve written since you bemental as to be truly alternative. She writes came a mom? That has to have a major imabout relationships and parenthood with a pact on how you approach your music and raw honesty that embraces melancholy over your lyrics. euphoria without sacrificing optimism. Heather Fay: Yes, it definitely has Her latest album, “Cherish the Broken,” changed. The first song I wrote on my first provides a snapshot of modern woman at her album was basically when I was becoming most conflicted and determined. Vulnerable a mom; I was pregnant with my daughter, but not weak, hesitant but not confused, Fay Ruby. Songs started pouring out of me when uses her music to examine the crossroads faced by many people who strive to have it Michael S. miller I was pregnant with her, so one or two of the songs went on my first album. And then I all, even as they deal with the dawning susfound when I was pregnant, all this creativity and everypicion that something important lingers just out of reach. During a recent telephone interview, Fay discussed her thing was coming out. It was amazing. converging roles as mom and artist with the good humor n MILLER CONTINUES ON 4 Thomas F. Pounds, President/Publisher tpounds@toledofreepress.com

A publication of Toledo Free Press, LLC, Vol. 10, No. 36. Established 2005. EDITORIAL James A. Molnar, Design Editor jmolnar@toledofreepress.com Sarah Ottney, Managing Editor sottney@toledofreepress.com Danielle Stanton, News Editor dstanton@toledofreepress.com Tom Konecny, Associate Editor tkonecny@toledofreepress.com Jeff McGinnis, Pop Culture Editor PopGoesJeff@gmail.com

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Toledo Free Press is published every Sunday by Toledo Free Press, LLC, 605 Monroe St., Toledo, OH 43604. Subscription rate: $100 /year. Reproduction or use of editorial or graphic content in any manner without permission is strictly prohibited. Copyright 2014, all rights reserved. Publication of advertisements does not imply endorsement of advertisers’ goods or services.


Opinion

n MILLER CONTINUED FROM 3 I don’t know — hormones or something — whatever it was, it was such a simple process. And then I had her and became a mom and there were so many different feelings that came into that. And then I had my son and during that time it was like I couldn’t write. I think I was just so enmeshed in being a mom and being present. I was living in every moment as opposed to reflecting on every moment in songwriting. And more recently, I’d say it was probably not that long ago, when my son had his 1-year birthday and I started getting the itch to write again and perform again and I had come across Google+ and Hangouts, ways to kind of get my music out there without having to leave home and kind of sacrifice being a mom. I was kind of struggling with, “How do I, now that I’m a mom, am I still a singer-songwriter, am I still a musician? Can I still do this?” Because I don’t want to sacrifice one for the other, I can’t. I’m not gonna leave my kids and just go [laughs]. So I think I was struggling with that a lot and it may have been getting in the way of my songwriting. TFP: Some of the songs, like “Breaking My Heart” and “I Would For You,” are about vulnerability. Is that something that just came about from being a mom? Talk about the vulnerability that weaves itself through some of the new songs. Fay: I’m already a sensitive person and I don’t know what it is, I always say I feel things so much more than the average bear, or maybe I show it more. Everyone feels it; I just wear my heart on my sleeve. But definitely (since) becoming a mom, everything is more heightened, more sensitive and I definitely felt more vulnerable. I also think that I found a lot of strength in becoming a mom, a lot of my purpose. Like OK, I get it now. My songwriting was previously all about me, me, me; this is much more about, “God, I’m scared I’m not gonna be there for them or I’m gonna get heartbroken and lose my way.” It all became very much more rooted in vulnerability. TFP: “Autumn’s Chill” really catches that. You talk about slides and butterflies and grass stains, but you also talk about aches and pains and hide-and-seek from reality. Fay: As we grow older, we kind of get jaded and lose the wonder of the world, and as children we kind of see the world as amazing and magical and everything is new, bright and colorful. And as we get older everything dampens, gets darker and a little less vibrant. And falling in love with anybody, whether it be a spouse, friend, partner, whatever, can bring me back to that place of just, “Oh my God, everything’s magical.” They

September 7, 2014

A Toledo tradition since 2005 ToledoFreePress.com say love is a drug and it’s true, and it just heightens everything. I felt that with my children, but I know they’re gonna grow up and I wanna protect that wonder in their eyes. But I know I can’t get lost in that because I have to guide them. Things are gonna happen, life is gonna be hard, they’re gonna scrape their knees. TFP: When you sit down to write songs, are you writing a poem that’s set to music, or music you match words to? Fay: I usually just have a phrase that will pop into my mind and that usually sits with me for a little bit. The funny thing is, these phrases usually come to me in the shower. I’ve heard that that’s the thing that happens with writers. For some reason that’s the place where these ideas come. It can come anywhere but that seems to be the place where it comes. And then I sit down with my guitar and kind of just strum out a few chords and see where the story goes from there. I write with my guitar. I know a lot of people journal and turn their journal into song and add a melody. I can’t do that; the two go together when I write. TFP: Your lyrics are very literary, unlike the average modern song where a dozen words are repeated over and over. You’re telling little stories and going through a whole different structure of songwriting, going against the moment. Fay: A majority of it is just who I am and the music I grew up listening to and my inspirations … TFP: Who are some of those? Fay: Tom Waits is probably my No. 1 songwriter. He’s a master songwriter and creates such beautiful music and I love his voice against these beautiful stories, it’s such an amazing thing to me. I grew up with my mom listening to James Taylor and Carole King and I love Jeff Tweedy, Simon and Garfunkel. Colin Hay (from Men at Work) is another one of my favorite songwriters who’s underappreciated. TFP: I wouldn’t have put Colin Hay anywhere near Tom Waits. The other artists you mentioned are connected; Hay kind of goes against the other ones you mentioned. Fay: Not so much the Men at Work stuff. They’re fun and were a great band, but I saw him at a venue called Largo in Los Angeles, one of my favorite places to see music, and I didn’t really know who he was. I was like, “Oh, the Men at Work guy,” and he was unbelievable. His songwriting is amazing, his voice is beautiful. Listen to his solo stuff, it’s very poignant. Another is Elvis Costello. A lot of my therapy when I was young was music, so I really ingested what they were saying. It was the most important thing to me. TFP: I’m playing your album and all of a sudden, out of nowhere, I hear Michael Jackson’s “Thriller.” It’s an incredibly creepy version because it’s slow and deliberate compared to the

original, which is a campy thing. Fay: I had been asked to do a Hangout concert for Halloween, and I was like “Oh, I’ve gotta throw a creepy song in there,” so I was like, what song do I wanna do? I wanted to do something unexpected and it just came to me, I’ve gotta do “Thriller.” I love Michael Jackson, early Michael Jackson was — as much as I say pop wasn’t an influence on me, Madonna, Michael Jackson, all that early pop stuff was an influence and part of my growing up. I picked up my guitar and I just started slowly kind of finger-picking it and I was like, “Oh, this could totally be cool. I play with my bandmates; I play with an upright bassist and a mandolin player and I knew we could do some really cool stuff if we deconstructed a little bit and then kind of take it to a more haunting place and a spooky place. TFP: In “Life is Beautiful,” you talk about “No Dolce & Gabbana” and eschewing most of the material things. That goes very much against the grain of most popular music these days, the I need, I want, I gotta havetype themes sort of running through current music. Are you taking a stand against that materialism? Is it a reaction to that or is this one of your lifelong philosophies? Fay: I feel like such an old lady, “Oh, kids these days, they don’t understand what life was,” ... and I get it, growing up in the glitz and the glamour of pop music. I’m not a pop artist, obviously, that’s not where my heart is, but I don’t get it. I don’t get the addiction to things and I think a lot of the problems

Photo courtesy Kevan Christine

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n

Heather Fay’s second album is “Cherish the Broken.”

in our society are because we’re just too materialistic and focused on what we have and what we’re wearing and what we’re driving. It’s addiction. I could easily get sucked into it; I have to fight it every day, when someone shows up with something blingy it’s hard not to get [sucked in]. I’ve seen myself get pulled and I don’t like where it pulls me be-

cause it’s not real. Not that people can’t enjoy it, because everyone should, absolutely 100 percent, but when you think that’s what life is about, it’s scary. TFP: All things in moderation, correct? Fay: Exactly. O Learn more about Heather Fay at her website, www.heatherfay.com.

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toledo free press photo and cover photo by christie materni

Water crisis

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Collins Park Water Treatment Plant administrator Andrew McClure, photographed Sept. 3, 2014.

Upgrades planned at Collins Park Water Treatment Plant By Danielle Stanton

Toledo Free Press News Editor dstanton@toledofreepress.com

At the Collins Park Water Treatment Plant, chemists and engineers transform Lake Erie water into drinking water for nearly 500,000 people. Fish are removed and contaminants are purged — including enemy No. 1, the toxin microcystin that comes from the blue-green algae clogging the lake. It was concern surrounding those microcystins that caused a “no-drink” water advisory for the Toledo region Aug. 2-4. Soon after, the Collins Park Water Treatment Plant came under scrutiny when the Ohio Environmental Protection Agency claimed it had plans to take over operations if the city failed to improve the plant’s conditions. It seemed the 73-year-old plant was to take at least partial blame for Mayor D. Michael

Collins’ administration’s failure to protect the city’s drinking water. But city officials refute that, saying it was a harmful algal bloom at the water intake site, not conditions at the plant, that caused the advisory. “There’s a perception that this is a 70-year-old plant on its last leg,” said Andrew McClure, the Collins Park Water Treatment Plant administrator. That couldn’t be further from the truth, he said. That’s why McClure and program manager Warren Henry wanted to give the media a tour inside the plant, built in 1941, to show reporters that walls are not falling down, paint isn’t peeling and all filters and pumps are working properly. They want Toledoans to know their tax dollars are hard at work bringing safe drinking water to their taps. “We want to be good stewards of public funds,” Henry said Aug. 28.

The plant is slated to undergo millions of dollars of repairs and an expansion. Officials are looking into ways to combat the algae, but wouldn’t specify what new technology they would use. Overall, they were optimistic that the plant would be operating for many years to come.

Treatment process

In Lake Erie, raw water enters what’s called an intake crib through 16 underwater ports. The intake crib is 83 feet in diameter, 24 feet below the surface of the lake and two and a half miles offshore. The water travels from there to a pump, which sends the water eight miles to the Collins Park Water Treatment Plant. The water has been in pipes from Lake Erie up until it reaches the chemical feed room at the plant. Here, chemicals are added, including activated carbon, aluminum

sulfate, potassium permanganate, chlorine and fluoride to soften the water and remove contaminants. From the chemical feed room, the water flows to the flocculation and sedimentation rooms. Here, residue is removed as large particles bond and fall to the bottom of the basin and fine material that doesn’t settle is filtered out. At this point, the water looks good enough to drink but isn’t safe yet, Henry said. The water, which had been open to the air since entering the plant, now flows into pipes below ground level. This piping is 30-50 years old, Henry said, and is slated for upgrades. The water flows from the pipes to water reservoirs, then high-service pumps send it through the distribution system and finally to customers’ faucets. The administrators of the system call it a “barrier” system, in which several safeguards are put in place to

protect the water, beginning with the chemicals added at the low-service pumping station where contaminants such as fish are removed to the high -service pumping station at the end of the line where filters continue to remove contaminates before pumps move it to customers.

Cost of repairs, expansion

Administrators during the tour discussed “improvement costs” to the plant, totaling about $264 million over five years. Some of those expenditures include $1.7 million for structural repairs at the intake crib, about $30 million for pump upgrades, $37 million for filtration improvements and about $100 million in basin upgrades. “It’s easy to throw away the old,” Henry said. “Just because something has aged doesn’t mean you throw it away. Repairs can last a long time.” n WATER CONTINUES ON 8


September 7, 2014

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Community

A Toledo tradition since 2005

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Water crisis

Mayor Collins: My analysis of our water incident Editor’s Note: The following document was provided to Toledo City Council in the days following the Aug. 2-4 drinking water ban. Minor edits have been made for clarity. By D. Michael Collins Mayor, City of Toledo

results of 2.469 mg/L and 1.926 mg/L respectively. Both were nondetectable under the old method. Initially discussions with the Ohio EPA involved doing additional testing at locations outside of Toledo and evaluating our position at 8 a.m. Saturday morning. O Shortly before 1 a.m. on Aug. 2, the Ohio EPA Director [Craig] Butler contacted Public Utility Director Ed Moore and recommended we should define the water as “Do Not Consume.” This was made public in a press release and in social media. O The media release went out at 1:20 a.m. on Aug. 2, [City] Council President [Paula] Hicks-Hudson was contacted and a voice message was left at 1:21 a.m. Lucas County Sheriff John Tharp was called directly and calls were placed to media sources to stress the importance of the notification to the public. O Sheriff Tharp contacted Lucas County officials and Lucas County Emergency Management Agency. Councilwoman Lindsay Webb texted members of City Council at approximately 2:23 a.m. O The Lucas County Emergency

D. Michael Collins Management Agency sent out a text alert at 3:43 a.m.: “All City of Toledo water customers are advised not to drink, boil or shower in the water until further notice.” This warning was not consistent with our declaration. O We then moved to Critical Event Control Center and set it up

in the Lucas County 911 Communication Center. The hours advanced and by 8 a.m. we established direct telephonic conference ability with Director Butler and his staff (Ohio EPA) and Gov. John Kasich. O The operation was then divided into the operational response and the internal analysis from the plant. O The discussions resulted in engaging the Ohio National Guard, the Ohio Highway Patrol, the private sector [including] Kroger, Walmart, Meijer and others. This endeavor was to be capable of logistically defining locations for distribution and collecting water for public allocation. O The internal issues resulted in sending samples to the U.S. EPA in Cincinnati, Ohio EPA in Columbus, Lake Superior State University in Michigan and our own facility. O There were several presentations to the media over the course of the day and information was provided to the extent we were facing this challenge and with Gov. Kasich and Director Butler and his staff all in place. n COLLINS CONTINUES ON 9

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feel compelled to share the events and challenges faced as a result of the harmful algal bloom and its impact on our water supply. The first thing I must suggest is we have a facility which is [73] years old. This system has served us well and in truth produced water of the highest quality anywhere in the United States. The science and engineering which were used in the construction of the plant were the finest the world had to offer. When we look at the broader picture not all systems are the same, we use the natural resource from Lake Erie. There are other point sources such as rivers, deep-water wells, freshwater lakes, recycle systems and reservoirs. Our geographical location enables us to have one of the best sources

for water on this planet. Unfortunately, as a society we have been poor stewards of this marvelous nature’s gift. The multitude of discussions as to how we arrived at this compromised environmental challenge is not the final step, in my opinion; dialogue absent an action plan serves no positive outcome. Due to this event we have been the focus of both the national and international media. I believe we must as a community and region act with one goal, and that is seek solutions, create policy and define the future for the future generations. To those who assume we have more time, my question is what do we do when we run out of time? I believe I must now advance this discussion to the events of Aug. 1-4, 2014. I offer the following as a chronologic record: O Ohio EPA directed us to perform testing using a different protocol. The previous test protocol we used was in place and accepted for accuracy for the past several years. Testing results taken at 4:30 p.m. and 9:15 p.m. had


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Community

n WATER CONTINUED FROM 6 Media members asked whether it would be more cost-effective to build a brand-new facility. Henry likened the plant to an automobile. “I don’t believe in buying a new car because it needs a new set of brakes,” he said. During the tour, it was evident that the building was old but in good repair, at least cosmetically. The ceiling that hangs over the open drinking water looked clean and fresh with shiny gray paint. The new roof has been worked on in sections and is nearing completion, McClure said. The age of the structure was apparent in art deco filtration control panels, which are no longer in use. “We’re rehabbing everything and with the new addition, we’ll get another 70 years,” Henry said. “I have no hesitation saying this at all.” McClure and Henry discussed the expansion while standing on the location of the planned site, saying

A Toledo tradition since 2005 ToledoFreePress.com the “redundant expansion” will give them a potential 160-milliongallon capacity. Currently, they are using a 120-million-gallon system — six treatment basins, each with a 20-million-gallon capacity. The expansion will allow portions of the plant to be shut down for heavy maintenance instead of trying to make repairs in a working section of the plant or having to wait until winter when water use is lower, McClure said. The repairs will be phased in within the next four years and the expansion is about two years out, they said. “We’ve operated this facility successfully for 70 years,” Henry said. “We’re the only plant for the area.” In other costs, the treatment plant is paying about $1.7 million more for chemical treatments since the algae crisis, administrators said. They have a $3 million to $4 million budget for chemicals. Administrators say they do not know how much they’re going to use because they can’t predict the condition

September 7, 2014

of the lake water. The chemical budget for this past year was $4.7 million, which won’t change despite the conditions of the lake, because they have a three-year contract with suppliers.

The algae

Administrators are looking to technology to deal with the algae. They said there are a number of different options they could use at the plant to protect the water against microcystin, including membranes, ozone or granulated carbon. They are looking at augmenting the chemical and/or the filtration process. Henry called these options “barriers,” and said they are not just concerned about the microcystin but about all contaminants. “We hope to have another barrier by next year,” Henry said. In the meantime, McClure said the plant, with its chemists, engineers and 30 licensed operators, is working in partnership with the Ohio EPA. “Everyone has their role to play and we’re working hand-in-hand,” he said. O

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September 7, 2014

ToledoFreePress.com

n COLLINS CONTINUED FROM 7 O As we moved into the early hours of Aug. 3, we had not received consistency in our collective testing and thus continued with the operational and internal efforts. O Mid-afternoon on Aug. 3, the professionals in quality testing with the input of Jeff Reutter, Ph.D., from The Ohio State University, reached a

Community

A Toledo tradition since 2005

consensus and one single test was the outcome. A document was prepared as a result of these discussions and signed off by Director Butler and myself. O A key point to remember is this is the first time a single protocol (for detecting microcystin) was agreed to and it is now the standard for the State of Ohio. O Late Aug. 3, in the conference call, the Ohio EPA, U.S. EPA and Gov. Kasich all opined that the directive of

“Do Not Consume” could be lifted, based upon the latest outcome from the single standard test. O Toledo’s test would not be available until around 3 a.m. on Aug. 4, it was decided we would wait until our test results were available. O When the test results were available there were two sample area test results which were inconsistent with the 30 points of distribution samples.

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These locations were in Point Place and East Toledo. O As part of a conference call with Director Butler and the governor, the city collected three distribution samples from the two locations that had inconsistent results. O Collection and testing was complete around 8:45 a.m. on Aug. 4. The tests demonstrated all samples were in the nondetectable range and consistent with the original 28 samples. O The system warning was lifted in a press conference at 9:25 a.m. on Aug. 4. O Aug. 6, [Toledo Fire & Rescue Department] Chief [Luis] Santiago conducted a post-event “hot wash” (debriefing) and a final report will be forthcoming. O Aug. 7, a meeting was held with our partners in other jurisdictions to discuss and create a protocol for future communications. Reflecting on this experience, there should have been a universal and direct contact system in place. In terms of our ability to inform the community, I would suggest my responsibility was to ensure we were capable of handling the incident and seeing that water was available to the community that could be used in the absence of safe tap water. My total objective was to move the internal process to address the matter and keep the community from engaging in a state of panic. I am reminded of a conversation I had with a citizen at a public event [after the water advisory]. He, I believe, gave me sage advice and a sound analysis of this incident. He defined this in three parts. First there are the Monday morning quarterbacks, second the academic who will lecture and opine with no real world experience and finally the individual in the leadership position who actually faces the adversity and

9

In terms of our ability to inform the community, I would suggest my responsibility was to ensure we were capable of handling the incident and seeing that water was available to the community that could be used in the absence of safe tap water.” challenge and takes action. I must also state that the professionalism and dedication of our employees, both classified and unclassified, defined the culture of the Toledo workforce. The other public servants from all jurisdictions and the Toledo-Lucas County Health Department stand out as true professional public servants. The safety and security of the community is paramount and all decisions were solely influenced with that responsibility in mind. To close, I would be remiss if I failed to address the great response from the community. Our community responded and became directly involved in the distribution process. I said at the time and it deserves repeating, “Toledo has a populace of men and women of character, compassion and resolve” our future will be defined and this even, as unfortunate as it was, will serve us in our mission. You will do better in Toledo! O


10 Community

A Toledo tradition since 2005 ToledoFreePress.com

September 7, 2014

Taxpayers

TFP delinquent land tax ads yield $3.9 million more than Blade average at nearly half the cost

TOLEDO FREE PRESS MANAGING EDITOR sottney@toledofreepress.com

Each year, the Lucas County Auditor’s Office is required by law to publish a list of delinquent land tax notices in a local publication. In December, the notices were published in Toledo Free Press, the first time a free weekly newspaper has published the Lucas County list. Toledo Free Press was the only publication to submit a bid and published the notices at a cost of $168,025. Between January and March, $10.7 million in late and delinquent land taxes was collected, according to county records. That’s $3.9 million more than the average amount collected for the past four years at almost half the cost to taxpayers. Between 2009-12, the notices were published by The Blade at an average

cost of $321,000. An average of $6.8 million in taxes was collected each year between January and March following the publication of the notices. The county paid The Blade $339,935 to run the notices in 2009, $287,135 in 2010, $347,272 in 2011 and $309,870 in 2012. Taxes reported collected between January and March of the following years were $6.8 million in 2010, $6.4 million in 2011, $6.9 million in 2012 and $7.1 million in 2013. Toledo Free Press became eligible to publish legal notices with the signing into law of Ohio House Bill 153 by Gov. John Kasich in October 2011. The legislation eliminated the link between charging for newspapers and being permitted to publish legal notices and opened the legal publication business to any “newspaper of general circulation” that publishes at least once a week and meets other criteria, including at least 25 percent editorial

content, being published continuously for at least three years and the ability to add subscribers to its distribution list. The bill also requires the newspaper to offer its best classified rate. “Before 2011, it really was tied strictly to whether you had a valid U.S. Postal Service mailing permit and generally those mailing permits are whether you’re a paid circulation newspaper,” said Dennis Hetzel, executive director of the Ohio Newspaper Association (ONA). “In 2011, the qualifications, you could argue, were relaxed. The postal permit requirement is still there, but there are other paths by which a newspaper can qualify.” In October 2012, Lucas County Auditor Anita Lopez sought an opinion from the Lucas County Prosecutor’s Office, which ruled, “[Toledo] Free Press would now qualify as a paper of general circulation.” That year, The Blade’s bid to pub-

lish the delinquent land tax notices was $330,617 and Toledo Free Press’ bid was $86,100. Lopez recommended the 2012 contract be awarded to The Blade, citing Toledo Free Press’ lower circulation in areas such as Neopolis and Curtice. The Lucas County Commissioners, who have the final say, agreed. “For me, this comes down to covering areas,” Lopez said. “I thought it was important to go with the broader circulation because of what we were doing. Our Constitution in our country protects property rights. Property is something sacred in our country. The most important reason why this ad has to occur is to protect property rights. That goes beyond the bottom line dollar. You have to balance that, but when we’re saying, ‘You’re delinquent to the point where we can take your property,’ this becomes the last call to the public to get in here and

pay your taxes. That, to me, is lost in the process. Those were my concerns. That’s important to me as a lawyer. At the end of the day, I have to make my decision based on what I think is best for citizens and stick to my guns.” Hetzel said statewide there are both dailies and weeklies that publish legal notices and awarding such contracts is “a local government decision.” “The first thing they have to establish is if the newspaper that gets it is qualified in the law,” Hetzel said. “Then they have to compare and contrast competing bids and decide what’s going to serve the public best. The theoretical basis of a published notice is that it should be in a publication that is invited into people’s homes, that is wanted and not ignored. Like anything else in life, there are many factors involved that government officials need to consider. It’s not always based on price.” n LAND TAXES CONTINUES ON 11

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September 7, 2014

ToledoFreePress.com

n LAND TAXES CONTINUED FROM 10 Toledo Free Press Publisher Tom Pounds said that the “perceived shortcoming” in circulation has been addressed and said he still believes, as he

Congratulations to our

has discussed in numerous columns, that TFP offers advantages beyond cost savings to those publishing legal notices. “While a daily newspaper comes and goes in one day, our paper is on racks in 432 locations for seven days in

addition to our 70,000 home-delivered copies,” Pounds wrote in December 2012. “It is worth noting that taxpayers who wish to see the information they have paid to publish would get that information at no cost in Toledo Free

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Community 11

A Toledo tradition since 2005

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Press; they would have to pay for it (again) to read it in a daily newspaper.” Lopez said she agreed TFP had addressed the circulation concern and that last year’s numbers showed “good results.” “The numbers speak for themselves. We are saving money,” Lopez said. “It’s very hard to argue with that.” The Village of Ottawa Hills, City of Toledo, City of Sylvania, Monclova Township, Lucas County Metropolitan Housing Authority, Toledo Public Schools, Washtenaw County and Metroparks of Toledo Area have also published legal notices in Toledo Free Press. Lopez said she was approached last year — she declined to say by whom — after the bidding period on the delinquent land tax notices had closed and asked to re-open bidding since only one bid had been submitted, but she said no. “I would like to make it very clear that I was definitely asked to reconsider, asked would I object to re-advertising the bid or allowing this bidding to be reopened last year and I said, ‘No, I think we move forward,’” Lopez said. “We had an eligible paper that met the qualifications, that had met the concerns from 2012. And the numbers had already been made public, so whoever would compete against that bid would know how to lowball them. You just can’t do that. That undermines the entire process

of a public bid.” Recent legislation will bring another change to the publication of legal notices. Starting in March, all notices printed in Ohio newspapers will also be required to be posted on www.PublicNoticesOhio.com, a free website operated by the ONA. The change comes after Kasich signed House Bill 483 in June, which included the ONA-backed measure. ONA has operated PublicNoticesOhio.com for more than 10 years, but posting there hasn’t been mandatory until now, Hetzel said. PublicNoticesOhio.com will replace a state-run site created in 2011. Notices will still be required to be printed in newspapers first, but uploading to the site will be required in order to continue to qualify to publish Ohio public notices. In a June blog post announcing the new online requirement, Hetzel said it may save money for agencies as notices that are required to be published twice may publish a shortened version in print for their second run if the full list will be going online. “It’s good for everyone to have them all aggregated on one website, in the private sector and not a government website,” Hetzel told Toledo Free Press. “We worked hard on that and think it’s for the long-term good of our industry and the public.” O

It’s Like Having Front Row Seats For The Best Show In Town See the best fall color in your Metroparks. Pick up or download an Autumn Adventure brochure and walk at least eight trails. Free t-shirts go to the first 50 people who turn in their completed forms. (T-shirts also available for $14.) Walk on your own or register for a guided walk with a naturalist at MetroparksToledo.com. See you on the trail! UPCOMING EVENTS Autumn Adventure: Wild Times History Paddle

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Enjoy a 3-mile paddle around one of northwest Ohio’s naturally wild islands as you learn about some of the wild times in the history of Ft. Miamis, Audubon Islands and Orleans Park. Participants must be 12 or older. All minors must be in the same canoe as their legal guardian. Two people per canoe. Participants should wear clothes that can get wet and bring sunscreen, bug spray and water. Saturday, September 6, Noon to 2:30 p.m. Fort Miamis Metropark, 1868 River Road, Maumee, OH Fee: $9 (Metroparks Members $7) | Reservations

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12 Community

A Toledo tradition since 2005 ToledoFreePress.com

Employment First Initiative helps find jobs for people with developmental disabilities By Duane Ramsey TOLEDO FREE PRESS SENIOR BUSINESS WRITER news@toledofreepress.com

Gov. John Kasich’s Employment First Initiative helps people with developmental disabilities in Lucas County land jobs with local companies. The initiative, created by an executive order signed in March 2012, changed how services are provided to people with developmental disabilities by making it a priority to expand employment opportunities for about 80,000 such individuals in Ohio. The goal of the initiative is to enhance the individual’s self-determination and offer opportunities for greater wealth, quality of life and a sense of self-worth, said John Martin, director of the Ohio Department of Developmental Disabilities (DODD). Lucas County was one of the counties selected by the state to suggest how the initiative will be implemented in the community. The emphasis is focused on job development with area businesses, said Sharon Helle, senior director of board services and supports for the Lucas County Board of Developmental Disabilities (LCDD). “The initiative said we should look at employment first and help prepare them for that. It’s shifting the way we think about things. We are working together, collaborating with businesses and communities on the program,” Helle said. The Employment First Initiative is a rehabilitation program that provides funds to help people in a sheltered workshop or day program to get jobs. The LCDD received a $25,000 grant from the Ohio DODD to support the program in fiscal year 2015. “There are lots of benefits and positive results from this program,” Helle said. Many employers who were having trouble filling entrylevel jobs are finding LCDD’s pool of candidates a solution,

she said. Research has shown that attendance is better and turnover is lower among people with developmental disabilities in the workforce, Helle reported. “They can be a valuable addition to your workforce,” she said. Kevin Tyree works as a merchandise associate at the Best Buy store on Monroe Street. He stocks product, cleans displays, and changes the signs for merchandise in the store. His experiences there have helped him gain confidence to keep branching out. “I’m ready for another job,” Tyree said. “I have put in an application for maintenance work at the Toledo Zoo.” “Diversity and inclusion are part of Best Buy’s culture to provide an open environment for everyone,” said Aaron Haury, general manager of the Monroe Street Best Buy store. “You have to keep an open mind. They must be qualified like any other candidate for hire. It’s about finding the right fit for them. Sales isn’t usually right but stocking product works,” said Haury, who has worked for Best Buy for nine years. More than 200 people in Lucas County have been helped through the efforts of the LCDD working with the Opportunities for Ohioans with Disabilities, Ohio Department of Education, Department of Job and Family Services, Department of Mental Health & Addiction Services and Ohio Rehabilitation Services Commission. The LCDD is providing support for 89 people working jobs with local businesses and organizations and 111 people working in small groups at business locations while preparing 14 additional people searching for jobs in the community, Helle said. Opportunities for Ohioans with Disabilities is a partner agency in the Employment First Initiative with the Ohio DODD. For more information, visit www.ohio employmentfirst.org. O

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September 7, 2014

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September 7, 2014

ToledoFreePress.com

A Toledo tradition since 2005

Community 13

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14 Money Matters

A Toledo tradition since 2005 ToledoFreePress.com

September 7, 2014

THE RETIREMENT GUYS

Is your retirement safe?

H

ow many people do you know who have lost money to some unfortunate circumstance, situation or event? We have all heard sad stories of people making fortunes and then losing them overnight. Or, working a lifetime to accumulate a nice nest egg only to lose it or have it severely Mark damaged by theft, Nolan bad spending habits or an illtimed stock market decline. Don’t be lulled into a false sense of security. We are not all that far removed from the severe stock market decline of 2008, which caused many poised to retire to change their plans and delay retirement due to lack of sufficient resources after the market crash. The stock market has been

rolling along nicely since then and it is only human nature to not think about the reality that what goes up must eventually come down. The biggest concern The Retirement Guys see while working with those planning their retirement years is that of “outliving my money.” There are several important tips we can offer to help you not CLAIR outlive your money BAKER and to have a better chance at a happy and comfortable retirement. Here are a few: 1. Understand the different types of risk and your tolerance for each. There are many types of risk that can affect retirement, including stock market risk, interest rate risk, liquidity risk, purchasing power risk, etc. n RETIREMENT CONTINUES ON 15

ACHIEVE A HIGHER LEVEL OF FINANCIAL SECURITY. Security isn’t something you just hope for. You build it with a solid financial plan. Addressing the costs of long-term care as part of your plan can help you achieve financial security. Who’s helping you build your financial future? Michael D Morgan, CLTC Field Director (419) 407-8669 michaelmorgan.nm.com

Bradley Patterson, CLTC Field Director (419) 407-8642 bradley-patterson.com

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September 7, 2014

ToledoFreePress.com

n RETIREMENT CONTINUED FROM 14 2. Make sure each of your accounts has a specific purpose. Don’t just throw money in investment accounts and hope they do well without a defined purpose for each. 3. Manage the different types of risk based on time frames. Determine what you will need your money for and when you will need it. 4. Do what grandma and grandpa told you. Don’t put all your eggs in

Money Matters 15

A Toledo tradition since 2005

one basket. Diversification can help reduce overall risk. 5. Understand where the income allowing you to live out the rest of your life comfortably will come from and protect it. Think about any possible events that could damage any income stream. Plus one: The biggest and most important tip of all is to create and implement a plan (a good one). The Retirement Guys call this good plan The Retirement Game Plan.

I (Mark) have a tendency as a sports fan to relate to things in sports terms. A game plan can be used to help win the game of retirement. Whether you are a sports fan or not, you probably can relate to being part of a team. Each team member has an important role to help the team achieve the goal of winning the game. These team members can help you with important issues such as investment allocation, taxes, insurance, income flow, estate

Your Road is Our Road

planning, etc. The problem is that in many cases the different team members don’t all work together. This can be a classic case of the right hand not knowing what the left hand is doing. You may have your investment person, insurance person, attorney, etc., each with a different agenda. At The Retirement Guys we like using what we call the “comprehensive approach.” These many issues have a tendency to overlap. What you do with your investments, taxes, health care planning and estate planning can all have an effect on each other. Factoring as many of these issues as we can into the plan can better help us manage the different types of risk we mentioned earlier. If you can get the different team members and parts of your plan to synchronize, the more likely you are to achieve success. A big key is not procrastinating but rather taking action. Do you have a false sense of security? It is likely that the next big market crash is coming at

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some point. Are you prepared for it? How will you be affected if we have to relive 2008? Do you have any types of circuit breakers on your investment accounts to potentially reduce stock market losses? Do you have a retirement game plan? You can take a little bit of action by getting information. Visit www. retirementguys.com and request your free copy of The Retirement Game Plan Summary. Start to take steps before the next bomb hits. O

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16 Money Matters TREECE BLOG

I

A Toledo tradition since 2005 ToledoFreePress.com

What makes a market?

n their infancy, financial markets in such work, or to hire someone who looked far different than they do does, “investors” might as well take today. When markets and securi- their savings to a roulette table. Over time, though, an entire inties were brought about, they were created in order to provide capital to dustry has sprung up to guide people, and their savings, companies just starting as through the markets. well as liquidity to owners Unfortunately, many of and executives of existing these advisers have little companies. Many going more knowledge than concerns were becoming their clients about how absolutely gigantic commarkets work. Quite panies, and many owners often they’ve been more and managers wanted focused on finding good to sell their shares for clients than finding cash to do other things. At the same time, there Dock David TREECE good investments. As a result, many have lost were plenty of people who wanted to buy portions of these com- money for their clients. And so, oddly enough, whole new panies to share in their future earnings. Back in those days, FDIC pro- theories have evolved to vindicate adtection didn’t exist and there simply visers. Concepts like diversification or weren’t safe places to put money. modern portfolio theory have tried People fortunate enough to accumu- to explain why it’s OK — even good late some savings often invested it in — that advisers routinely pick some things like ships or timberland. Being losing investments. These theories and able to buy into a company being run their proponents postulate that every by knowledgeable, professional man- good portfolio should have some winagers that might make investors even ners and some losers. Meanwhile, few members of the inmore money seemed like a great idea. From the market’s early days vesting public have been told just who there has always been a segment they should be talking to for guidance. of pure speculation — people who Few realize that there is a difference didn’t know anything about compa- between a financial adviser/planner nies or economies, but were simply and a money manager. Many work chasing hunches or tips. Over time, with an adviser who provides guidthe amount of this “dumb money” has ance and takes care of client needs, but increased to such a degree that now few investors use money managers, most of the world’s financial markets who spend their time researching the markets to make strategic, informed are little more than gambling pits. These developments have left in- decisions on investments. In the world of finance, a finandividuals with little chance of success in investing. Some may have an edge cial plan is the equivalent of a road if they work for a company and know map, while investments are vehicles. its culture and direction, or if they are A financial adviser, in this world, is a studious people willing to analyze the map maker. They may be very good at fundamentals of companies and in- making maps, but that doesn’t mean dustries in order to make informed they know what they’re doing when decisions. Unless they’re willing to put they get out on the road. Conversely, a

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money manager is a driver who knows the lay of the land. They may not be great map makers, but they can help you avoid the speed traps and potholes. The hope is that, over time, a money manager can outperform the shotgun approach of diversification. At the very

least, they can help their clients to avoid the perils of the pit, and ignore the jawboning of stockjobbers. O

Dock David Treece is a partner with Treece Investment Advisory Corp (www. TreeceInvestments.com) and is licensed

September 7, 2014

with FINRA through Treece Financial Services Corp. He provides expert content to numerous media outlets. The above information is the express opinion of Dock David Treece and should not be construed as investment advice or used without outside verification.

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Sept. 7, 2014

Local ‘ghost communicator’ Chris Bores leads ghost tours at the Collingwood Arts Center. PHOTO COURTESY CHRIS BORES

HAUNTED HUNTS Collingwood Arts Center offering tours, chance to hunt ghosts.

Kurfis attended a reunion for Mary Manse College graduates and many students from the school once housed in the sottney@toledofreepress.com building shared their stories, including ollingwood Arts Center one of a nun who sits in the balcony. “Apparently they used to always (CAC) has long had a reputation for being haunted, with see someone in the balcony, which many former residents, stu- some of the old residents had told me dents and visitors reporting hearing about as well,” Kurfis said. To capitalize on the creepiness, or seeing unexplainable things. “There are stories about people CAC began offering ghost hunts with being buried in the basement. There local ghost hunter Chris Bores earlier are stories about a nun hanging her- this year. Kurfis connected with Bores after self,” said Interim Executive Director Sarah Kurfis, who has been with CAC he rented the CAC auditorium to for about a year. “I researched this all screen his documentary, “Pursuit of when I started and can’t find anything the Paranormal,” last year. “He came in and was hunting that’s historical on this, but a lot of 3661 Devers_Collision_TFP95_Layout 1 around 8/30/12before 1:28 PM Page 1 his event and said we people have stories.” By Sarah Ottney

TOLEDO FREE PRESS MANAGING EDITOR

C

had activity here,” she said. Kurfis asked Bores if he’d be interested in leading ghost hunt tours at CAC and he agreed. He has done about one a month since spring and CAC now plans to launch a full series of tours for the Halloween season. Upcoming hunts will be 8 p.m. to 1 a.m. Sept. 13 and Sept. 27. October hunts will be 8 p.m. to 2 a.m. Oct. 4, 11, 12, 17, 18, 24 and 25. Ghost hunts are for ages 18 and older and participants will need to bring ID and sign a waiver. Check-in starts at 7:30 p.m. Doors will lock at 8 p.m. A limited number of tickets are sold per hunt. Cost is $35. If available, tickets at the door are $45. Tickets for the Sept. 27 session will be sold via LivingSocial.

Starting in October, cider and snacks will be provided “to keep you rared up and ready to find more creepy things,” said Lexi Staples, CAC special events coordinator. To kick off the October hunts, Bores will offer a lecture Oct. 3 sharing tips and tricks for novice ghost hunters. Cost is $5. “I’m going to talk about all the evidence we collected here, the tools we use and end by playing a video I got here, a 60-minute conversation edited to 15 minutes, where people will be able to see the interaction with one spirit,” he said. Lecture attendees will get a coupon for $5 off one of CAC’s October ghost hunts. An optional ghost hunt will take place after the lecture from 10

p.m. to 2 a.m. Cost is $35. Free mini ghost tours will also be offered during CAC’s upcoming Food Truck Festival on Sept. 20 at 2:30 p.m., 3:30 p.m., 4:30 p.m., 5:30 p.m. and 6:30 p.m. CAC historical tours will be offered at 3 p.m., 4 p.m. and 5 p.m. Full-length ghost hunts always start with an hour-long historical and paranormal tour of CAC, Kurfis said. “After that, it’s kind of a ghost hunting free for all,” she said. “We turn everybody loose in the building and they can do their own independent investigations. Some who are more novice ghost hunters will do the tour, poke around and leave. Others stay all the way up to the end.” n GHOST CONTINUES ON 18

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18 Star “The offices and rented studios are locked, but other than that it’s pretty wide open. It’s the first time the building has really been open to the public in the last five or six months. So we get a lot of people who come to the ghost hunt, I think, just to see the building and have tours, too.” Kurfis said she knows ghost hunts aren’t “arty” but she feels they fit CAC’s new mission “to provide an outlet for creative community involvement while preserving a historic space.” Money raised by the ghost tours currently goes to basic operating costs, but Kurfis hopes it will soon be able to go toward capital improvements to save the building. “We’re in a lot better position than we were even a year ago or a few months ago, but we’re still digging ourselves out of a hole caused by mismanagement,” Kurfis said. “One of the tours reported walking across the stage and hearing somebody walking behind them. One of our staff members is taking credit for that. He said he went around the building and told the ghosts to be really active because we’re trying to save the building. He said, ‘If you’re here, we need you to be really super creepy tonight.’” Bores, a Sandusky native who now lives in Toledo, said his favorite place to investigate at CAC is the former nuns’ living quarters on the fourth floor. “I’ve gotten EVT (electronic voice phenomenon) there, voices you don’t hear at the time of the recording but when you play it back, you will hear it,” Bores said. “I was in one of the nuns’

rooms asking what year it was and this older woman, as if very perturbed by my question, just said ‘Jesus.’ Like she was really annoyed by the question.” Bores also said he’s been “attacked” in the basement by “something more malevolent.” “The meter spiked dark red, which means a lot of energy, and I felt a weird tingly sensation at the back of my neck, like needles. Very discomforting,” Bores said. “The only reason that happened was I was kind of provoking it. It told me to get out and I said, ‘Make a noise and I’ll leave.’ It got to the point where I said, ‘OK, we’re leaving.’” Bores said he first got into paranormal investigations about seven years ago, his interest sparked by the TV show “Ghost Hunters.” He specializes in “spirit communication.” He formed a paranormal team called Haunted Investigators in 2006 and gained a YouTube following. His 2013 documentary, “Pursuit of the Paranormal,” includes a 90-minute conversation with a spirit at the St. Augustine Lighthouse in Florida, among the most well-known haunted places in the U.S., Bores said. Bores said he’s been ghost hunting at Collingwood Arts Center all winter and was able to talk to all the residents before freezing temperatures and outdated heating and electrical systems forced an end to the residency program in February. “It seemed like all of them had something weird happen to them,” Bores said. “One guy said he was cleaning up and closing some of the doors in the building and a voice from

the other side of the door said, ‘Get out.’ I haven’t had anything like that happen, but I have heard voices, like someone talking at the end of a corridor and you run down there and there’s no one there and it stops. “Some nights are very quiet, some nights are crazy,” Bores said of the tours. “I just hope they have a good time.” Pat Tansey, CAC founder and longtime unofficial building caretaker, said he’s also had a few unsettling experiences over the years, especially in the early 1980s after the nuns moved out. “In the early years I was pretty much alone, trying to make things work here,” Tansey said. “Being in a building this big all alone, you heard every noise, creak, crack. I might be on the stage alone at night trying to build a platform for a choral performance or graduation ceremony and the lights would be on on the stage but not in the auditorium. “You know how you sometimes look around because you feel like someone’s watching you? That happened to me four or five times. I’d turn the lights on and there’d be nothing there. But pretty soon I’d have that hairraising feeling on the back of my neck. “I don’t know if there’s any truth to it. It’s like the people who say they saw UFOs and no one believes them, but to me that was real.” Private ghost hunt rentals of the CAC are also available. Cost is $350 for the first five hours and $50 for each additional hour. For tickets or more information, visit www.collingwoodartscenter.org or call (419) 244-2787. O

Collingwood Arts Center Interim Executive Director Sarah Kurfis and Special Events Coordinator Lexi Staples have fun dressed as ghosts to promote CAC’s upcoming ghost hunts. TOLEDO FREE PRESS PHOTO BY CHRISTIE MATERNI

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New photography book captures rock, blues stars By Barbara Floyd Special to Toledo Free Press

Were you lucky enough to see Elvis Presley when he performed at the University of Toledo’s Centennial Hall in 1977? How about KISS at the Toledo Sports Arena in the 1980s? Or Bob Dylan at Savage Hall in 1989? Or Richie Havens at the Poe Ditch Festival in Bowling Green in 1975? If you missed any of these amazing musical events, do not worry. John Gibbs Rockwood was there, taking photographs that captured the oncein-a-lifetime moments. Not only was he there, but he was often backstage or in the first few rows, where he was able to capture these performers in candid, up-close shots. More than 150 of Rockwood’s best photographs from the past four de-

cades have been assembled in “Can I Get A Witness,” a recent publication of The University of Toledo Press. “The reason I got up close was because I got a camera. And the reason I got a camera was, of course, so I could get up close. I was never afraid of getting right in the face of the performers, leaning down at their feet to feel the shot. I wanted the lines, the wigs and brims, the tear ducts, the sand, the life story in their faces,” Rockwood said. To get his photographs, Rockwood worked as a driver, roadie and messenger for the musicians, often also becoming a confidant. Not trained as a photographer, Rockwood nevertheless showed considerable skill in framing the expressions of many of the best-known musical stars of the day, and many who were less known

but no less talented. The book of black-and-white images includes not only rock stars, but also many blues and jazz performers: Muddy Waters performing in UT’s Student Union Ingman Room in the 1980s, B.B. King at the Sports Arena in the 1970s and Howlin’ Wolf at Eastern Michigan University in 1973. In addition to working odd jobs for musicians, Rockwood also played with many of them. “John has introduced us to a nearly uncountable number of rock ’n’ roll, blues and jazz musicians, sometimes performing with them, sometimes accompanying them on his camera like a musical instrument. He works in black and white the way Monet worked in pastels,” wrote Walter Salwitz of The Dynatones in the book’s introduction.

Other performers photographed by Rockwood and featured in the book include Bruce Springsteen, The Rolling Stones, Tiny Tim, Jerry Lee Lewis, Dave Brubeck and Stevie Ray Vaughan. Since most of the photographs

were taken during concerts performed in and around Toledo, “Can I Get A Witness” also captures the history of the musical scene in Northwest Ohio. Rockwood was born in Cleveland, but has lived most of his life in Toledo. He has been a bandleader, a blues singer and a harmonica player who performs under the stage name Johnny “Porkchop” Dupree, fronting the band Voodoo Libido. He estimates he has taken more than 26,000 photographs over the past four decades. He selected his best for this book, which was designed by recent UT graduate Andrew Grady. “Can I Get A Witness” is $22.95 and is available from the UT Press website at utoledopress.com, at the UT Barnes & Noble Bookstore, or by contacting UT Press Director Barbara Floyd at (419) 530-2170. O

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FoodieCards Toledo 2015 Night Ranger has a sold-out show with 38 Special at Hollywood Casino Toledo on Sept. 13. PHOTO COURTESY B.R.P. ENTERTAINMENT

Night Ranger still motoring By Vicki L. Kroll Toledo Free Press Staff Writer star@toledofreepress.com

Fans of Night Ranger will notice the cover of the new disc, “High Road,” looks familiar. “We wanted to put little bits of our past in there, all the album covers and all the titles. We thought it’d be interesting, kind of like find Waldo or whatever,” drummer and singer Kelly Keagy said and laughed. “It’s fun.” Even more fun is cueing up the CD, which was released in June. On “High Road,” singer and bass player Jack Blades sings: “See the sun come up, it’s a beautiful day to be dreaming.”

“We always try to write songs that are in a positive light,” Keagy said during a call from a tour stop in Detroit. He said he and Blades started writing the song, which was finished thanks to Blades’ son, Colin. With “Knock Knock Never Stop,” the band lives up to its 1983 song: They can still “Rock in America.” “There’s always going to be those songs on Night Ranger albums. We just love those feel-good, party and you’re in your car [songs] because that’s how we got started,” Keagy said. “Music’s supposed to make you feel good, whether it’s just like a melody or whether it’s something it’s saying that catches you.” And there’ll always be a ballad or two on their discs. It was Keagy who

wrote the 1984 monster hit “Sister Christian” for his younger sister who was graduating from high school. “I had the chorus, which is ‘Motoring,’ but the beginning of it, I was singing ‘Sister Christy,’ and the guys were like, ‘What are you singing there?’ And I was like, ‘I don’t really know, I don’t have it all written, Sister Christy,’” he recalled. “And they were like, ‘Christy? We thought you said “Christian.”’ “And then we kind of looked at each other and said, ‘That sounds better.’” Night Ranger — Keagy, Blades, guitarist Brad Gillis, keyboardist Eric Levy and guitarist Keri Kelli — will play a sold-out show at Hollywood Casino Toledo at 9 p.m. Sept. 13. Also taking the stage will be 38 Special. O

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Star 21

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By Vicki L. Kroll Toledo Free Press Staff Writer star@toledofreepress.com

Manes flying, hooves sparkling — 15 magnificent, bold horses will

dance and prance Sept. 13 at Huntington Center. By chance, 2014 is the Year of the Horse, according to the Chinese calendar. It’s just by coincidence that Rene

Gasser brought the Gala of the Royal Horses to the States for its American debut eight months ago. “The audiences have been absolutely fantastic,” he said. “The people are so grateful for us to bring these horses to the

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United States because usually you only see these in Vienna or Spain or Holland.” Historically, these horses of Europe were associated with nobility. “You’ve got those beautiful Andalusian, Friesian horses, Lipizzaner — it’s that regal look. And when they perform, people just can’t get enough of them,” Gasser said. And the horses turn it on when they gallop into the spotlight. “A lot of people ask me, ‘Do they like performing?’ And oh my God, yes. The audience can actually tell when they watch them,” Gasser said. “The horses are definitely characters.” During a call from a tour stop in Stillwater, Oklahoma, Gasser’s love for the animals was evident. “We have 15 horses on one big trailer and I drive it myself. It’s 53 feet long, and it’s been specially made. It’s got all air-ride suspension, so you can’t feel any bumps in the road,” he said. “And it’s got special vents on it so it’s all nice and cool for them.” Cameras in the trailer allow for constant monitoring of the fourlegged athletes. “They’re the rock stars of the horse world, so we try to give them that treatment,” Gasser said and laughed. Headliners set to perform in Toledo are Lipizzaners Ringo, Mozart, Maestro, Baby, Bona and Bonavista; Friesians Gharred, Armani and Rico; Andalusians Jerano, Quintero, Habano, Bandero and Coco; and the Arabian Marcus. “My family goes back seven generations working with horses,” said Gasser, a riding master who created the show. “The traditional movements for the horses of war all have been for the military, and we are using it for

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Gala of Royal Horses to parade into Toledo

Gala of Royal Horses the living art. But at the time, all of the movements had a purpose.” He offered an example. “The air above the ground is where the horse goes up on its back legs and he jumps up into the air and kicks out with all four legs. That would be used to, if you were surrounded by your enemy, the horse would actually jump up in the air and kick all its legs out at once and that would make room for you to get away,” Gasser said. That spectacular showstopper is usually performed by Lipizzaners, he added. “Horses are very, very sensible animals. You can’t push [training] on them too hard. If it’s done correct, it’s so beautiful to watch,” Gasser said. “It takes a long time and a lot of energy and patience.” There will be music and flamenco dancers to accompany the display of equine artistry and grace. The Gala of the Royal Horses will take place at 7:30 p.m. Sept. 13 at Huntington Center. Tickets range from $40 to $90. O

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September 5-13, 2014

What’s what, where and when in NW Ohio

Compiled by Matt Liasse Events are subject to change.

MUSIC

The Ark

This intimate venue showcases acts from the A-list to the lesser known. 316 S. Main St., Ann Arbor. (734) 761-1451, (734) 761-1800 or www.theark.org. ✯ Sarah Jarosz: Sept. 5. ✯ The Crane Wives: Sept. 6. ✯ Ellis Paul & Rebecca Loebe: Sept. 7. ✯ Ramblin’ Jack Elliott: Sept. 8. ✯ The Moth Michigan GrandSLAM Championship: Sept. 9. ✯ Leftover Salmon: Sept. 10. ✯ Shawn Colvin & Steve Earle at Royal Oak Music Theatre: Sept. 11.

Barr’s Public House

Focuses on craft beer, hand-crafted specialty drinks, well-rounded wine selection and an eclectic food menu. 3355 Briarfield Blvd., Maumee. (419) 866-8466. ✯ Dooley Wilson: 9 p.m. Sept. 5. ✯ Meaghan Roberts & Megan Leslie: 9 p.m. Sept. 6. ✯ Kyle White: Sept. 11.

Bronze Boar

Be sure to check out this Warehouse District tavern’s namesake, overhead near the entrance. 20 S. Huron St. (419) 244-2627 or www.bronzeboar.com. ✯ Open mic: Thursdays and Mondays. ✯ Beg To Differ: Sept. 5. ✯ Zodiac Click: Sept. 6. ✯ Steve Finelli and Oliver Roses: Sept. 8. ✯ Steve Kennedy: Sept. 11.

Dave Rybaczewski

One half of Elixer. ✯ Frog Leg Inn, 2103 Manhattan St., Erie. 6 p.m. Sept. 10.

Dégagé Jazz Café

Signature drinks, such as pumpkin martinis, plus live local jazz performers. 301 River Road,

Maumee. $5 weekends for cafe seating. (419) 794-8205 or www.degagejazzcafe.com. ✯ Ramona Collins: Sept. 5 and 6. ✯ Gene Parker: Sept. 9. ✯ Gene Parker & Friends: Sept. 10. ✯ Damen Cook: Sept. 11.

The Distillery

The mic is open on Sundays, but paid entertainers rock out Fridays-Saturdays. 4311 Heatherdowns Blvd. (419) 382-1444 or www. thedistilleryonline.com. ✯ Live Trivia with DJ Brandon: Tuesdays.

Doc Watson’s

Named in honor of the owners’ forefather. 1515 S. Byrne Road. (419) 389-6003 or docwatsonstoledo.com. ✯ Sporcle Live Trivia: Thursdays.

Durty Bird

A full bar featuring frozen drinks and happy hours (4-7 p.m.) on weekdays, plus live entertainment four nights a week. 2 S. St. Clair St. (419) 243-2473 or www.yeoldedurtybird.com. ✯ Jack and the Bear: 9 p.m. Sept. 5. ✯ Distant Cousinz: 9 p.m. Sept. 6. ✯ Whitty & Murphy: 1 p.m. Sept. 7. ✯ The New Mondays: 7 p.m. Sept. 8. ✯ Quick Trio: 8 p.m. Sept. 9. ✯ Jeff Stewart: 7 p.m. Sept. 10. ✯ Ragtime Rick and the Chefs of Dixieland: 8 p.m. Sept. 11.

Elixer

This two-man band (consisting of Dave Rybaczewski and Walter Guy) performs Beatles songs acoustically. www.beatlesebooks.com/elixir. ✯ Mancy’s Italian Grill, 5453 Monroe St., 7:30 p.m. Sept. 5. ✯ Tres Belle And Martini Lounge: 3145 Hollister Lane, Perrysburg, 9 p.m. Sept. 6.

Frankie’s Inner-City

Toledo’s venue for rock. Tickets vary between $5 and $14, unless otherwise noted. 308 Main St. (419) 693-5300 or www.FrankiesInnerCity.com. ✯ PeaceKeepin’ Music presents Rey V’s Birthday Showcase with Defonix, J. Davies, Rey V, Dboi, A-Laz Gonzales and Sixx Digit: Sept. 5.

Come to The Blarney ... Go From There!

facebook.com/blarneytoledo

601 Monroe St. Right Across from Fifth Third Field

hAPPY hOUR Mon-Fri 4-7 pm WEDNESDAYS ½ OFF BOttlE WiNE Night

✯ Mobile Deathcamp: Sept. 6. ✯ In Dying Arms, Forevermore, SycAmour and My Enemies and I: Sept. 9. ✯ Live Nation presents Crown The Empire, Volumes, SECRETS, Ice Nine Kills and The Family Ruin: Sept. 10. ✯ Moon Hooch and Shmotel: Sept. 11.

SWINGMANIA

French Quarter J. Patrick’s Pub

The Village Idiot

Live entertainment after 9:30 p.m. FridaysSaturdays. Holiday Inn French Quarter, 10630 Fremont Pike, Perrysburg. (419) 874-3111 or www.hifq.com. ✯ Green Eyed Soul: Sept. 5 and 6.

Jazz on the Maumee

The Art Tatum Jazz Society will provide smooth, cool “Twilight Jazz” along the river, appetizers included. 5:30-7:30 p.m. Wednesdays, Grand Plaza Hotel’s Aqua Lounge, 444 N. Summit St. $5-$15. (419) 241-1411, arttatumsociety.com. ✯ Ben Sidran with Ricky Peterson, Billy Peterson and Leo Sidran: Sept. 10.

Hollywood Casino Toledo

Hollywood Casino Toledo offers musical distractions from all the lights, noise and jackpots. 777 Hollywood Blvd. (419) 661-5200 or www. hollywoodcasinotoledo.com. ✯ Soulstice: Sept. 5. ✯ Soul Hustle: Sept. 6. ✯ 38 Special with Night Ranger, 9 p.m. Sept. 13, sold out.

Huntington Center

500 Jefferson Ave. (419) 321-5007, (800) 7453000 or www.huntingtoncentertoledo.com. ✯ Journey: Sept. 7.

Name That Tune

✯ The Oarhouse, 5044 Suder Ave.: 8-10 p.m. Mondays, 6-8:30 p.m. Fridays. ✯ Ralphie’s Sports Eatery, 6609 Airport Hwy.: 8-10 p.m. Tuesdays. ✯ Jeds Barbeque and Brew, 855 S. HollandSylvania Road: 6-8 p.m. Wednesdays. ✯ Pat & Dandy’s Sports Bar & Grill, 3344 W. Laskey Road: 9-11 p.m. Wednesdays. ✯ Ralphie’s Sports Eatery, 5702 Monroe St.: 7-9 p.m. Thursdays.

With its focus on swing music, Jeff McDonald’s group of musicians provides a peek into another era. (419) 708-0265, (419) 874-0290 or www.swingmania.org. ✯ Trotters Tavern, 5131 Heatherdowns Blvd., (419) 381-2079: 8 p.m. Tuesdays. Tunes combined with pizza and booze, some would say it’s a perfect combination. 309 Conant St., Maumee. (419) 893-7281 or www. villageidiotmaumee.com. ✯ Ben Daniels Band: Sept. 6. ✯ Dooley Wilson: Sept. 7. ✯ Frankie May and Bobby Barefoot: Sept. 8. ✯ John Barile & Bobby May: Sept. 9. ✯ Zimmerman Twins: Sept. 11.

Ye Olde Cock n’ Bull

Featuring 30 draught beer selections, daily drink specials and live entertainment seven days of the week. 9 N. Huron St. (419) 2442855 or facebook.com/cocknbulltoledo. ✯ Danny Mettler hosts Open Mic Night: Wednesdays. ✯ Bobby May and John Barile: Sept. 5. ✯ Beg 2 Differ: Sept. 6. ✯ Dick Lange Blues Jam: Sept. 7. ✯ Steve Kennedy: Sept. 9. ✯ Captain Sweet Shoes: Sept. 11.

EVENTS Discover the River Cruise

Two hour cruises of the Maumee River. Adults $15, kids younger than 12 are $7. 10 a.m. to noon Sandpiper Boat, Jefferson Street Dock, Jefferson Avenue and Summit Street. (419) 537-1212. Saturdays through Sept. 27.

European Car Show

Fifth annual show hosted by Vin Devers Autohaus of Sylvania, 5570 Monroe St. Rain or shine 9 a.m. to 4 p.m. Sept. 7. Registration 9-11 a.m. Awards 2 p.m. Proceeds benefiting Muscular Dystrophy Association. Contact Jason Perry at jperry@vindevers.com.

Thursday, Sept. 11th Jeff Stewart Friday, Sept. 12th Not Your Average Saturday, Sept. 13th The Bradberries

Sponsored by:

Global Grooves

Showcase of world dance and music, featuring dance and music styles of the Middle East, India and West Africa. The Martin School Auditorium, 10 S. Holland-Sylvania Road. Sept. 6. Tickets are $10 at the door and $8 in advance. Tickets can be purchased at www.aegela.com.

Lace It, Face It, Walk It

This is the second annual event to benefit the Autism Society of Northwest Ohio. Olander Park, 6930 Sylvania Ave. 8 a.m. Sept. 6. For more information, visit www.asno.org.

The Main Event

Free art and music festival on Main Street in East Toledo, featuring live entertainment on five stages, two pop-up art galleries, food trucks and more. 2-11 p.m. Sept. 13. For more information, visit EastToledoCC.com.

Oktoberfest Beer Tasting

Sponsored by the Monclova Historical Foundation, all proceeds support ongoing improvements for the Monclova Community Center. Caper’s Restaurant, 2038 S. Byrne Road. 6-8 p.m. Sept. 9. Tickets can be purchased at (419) 866-1336 or monclovacc@bex.net.

The Toledo Zoo

2700 Broadway St. $11-$14. (419) 385-4040 or toledozoo.org. ✯ Free-flight Butterfly Exhibit: Free with zoo admission. Open daily. ✯ Feasts with the Beasts: Sept. 5. ✯ Grandparents’ Day: Sept. 7. ✯ Day of Honor: Sept. 7. ✯ I DO at the Zoo: 3-7 p.m. Sept. 7. ✯ Senior Discovery Days: Sept. 9. If you would like your event in The Pulse, contact Matt at mattliasse@gmail.com

Premier Downtown event anD recePtion center

WE’LL CUSTOMIZE FOR YOU

Fundraisers • Holiday Parties • Celebrations Reunions • Sports Banquets • Corporate Retreats Summer Picnics • Employee Appreciation Events Client Appreciation

www.theblarneyeventcenter.com 419-481-5206


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BRINGING THE FLAVORS OF

Loma Linda A Toledo Tradition 10400 Airport Hwy. Toledo’s Best urant Mexican Resta for over 58 years!

(1.2 miles east of Toledo Express Airport)

419-865-5455

Bienvenidos Amigos!

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mexico

to northwest ohio

Voted Toledo’s Best Margarita 2013

THE ORIGINAL MEXICAN RESTAURANTE & CANTINA IN TOLEDO

Locally Owned & Family Operated 7742 W. Bancroft (1 Mi. West of McCord) 419-841-7523 10” x 10.25” ad

HOURS: Monday-Thursday 11 a.m. – 11 p.m. Friday-Saturday 11 a.m. – Midnight Sunday Closed


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Ent Insider Last Man Last Man Shark Tank (CC) 20/20 (CC) News J. Kimmel Wheel Jeopardy! Oscar Pistorius Hawaii Five-0 (CC) Blue Bloods (CC) News Letterman The Office Simpsons Utopia (N) (CC) Kitchen Nightmares Fox Toledo News TMZ (N) Minute Jdg Judy FamFeud Running Wild Dateline NBC (N) (CC) News J. Fallon NewsHour Business Wash Deadline James McNeill Royal Paintbox (2013) Charlie Rose (N) (CC) Criminal Minds Criminal Minds Criminal Minds Criminal Minds Criminal Minds Million Dollar LA To Be Announced To Be Announced TBA Colbert Daily Key Key Key Tosh.0 Tosh.0 Tosh.0 South Park (CC) Alvin-Chipmnk Dog Girl Meets Gravity Wander I Didn’t Liv-Mad. ANT Farm Jessie SportCtr Football College Football Baylor at Buffalo. (N) (Live) (CC) SportsCenter (N) (CC) ››› Matilda (1996) Mara Wilson. ››› The Goonies (1985) Sean Astin, Josh Brolin. The 700 Club (CC) Diners Diners Diners Diners Diners Diners Diners America Diners Diners Love It or List It, Too Love It or List It, Too Love It or List It, Too Hunters Hunt Intl Hunters Hunt Intl Movie The Brittany Murphy Story (2014) (CC) ›› 28 Days (2000) Sandra Bullock. (CC) Ridic. Ridic. ››› Napoleon Dynamite (2004) Jon Heder. › Scary Movie 2 (2001) Shawn Wayans. Big Bang Mom (CC) Fam. Guy Fam. Guy Fam. Guy Fam. Guy ››› Blades of Glory (2007) Will Ferrell. (DVS) Red Headed Woman ››› Red Dust (1932) Clark Gable. ›› Design for Living (1933) (CC) Trouble in Paradise Supernatural (CC) ›› The Replacements (2000) Keanu Reeves. (CC) (DVS) Legends “Rogue” Franklin Law & Order: SVU Mod Fam Mod Fam Mod Fam Mod Fam Mod Fam Mod Fam Mod Fam Mod Fam Big Bang Mod Fam Masters of Whose? America’s Next Model OK! TV (N) Two Men Fam. Guy Cleveland

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Good Morning News Hanna Ocean Explore Rescue College Football (N) Your Morning Saturday (N) (CC) Recipe J. Oliverr All In Changers Paid Prog. Paid Prog. Wild Am. Aqua Kids Eco Co. Hollywood Paid Prog. Paid Prog. Paid Prog. Paid Prog. Kids News Pregame Today (N) Paid Prog. Paid Prog. Zou (EI) Chica Noodle Justin Tree Fu LazyTown Soccer Super WordWrld Thomas Cat in the MotorWk Our Ohio Wild Ohio Michigan Earthflight-Nat Criminal Minds (CC) Criminal Minds (CC) Criminal Minds (CC) Criminal Minds (CC) Flipping Vegas (N) Top Chef Duels Top Chef Duels Million Dollar LA Million Dollar LA Million Dollar LA Comedy ››› Bad Santa (2003) Billy Bob Thornton. (CC) ›› Starsky & Hutch (2004) Ben Stiller. (CC) Animal Doc McSt. Sofia Dog Liv-Mad. Jessie I Didn’t Dog Girl Meets Gravity Jessie SportsCenter (N) (CC) College GameDay (N) (Live) (CC) College Football ››› Bolt (2008) ››› The Fox and the Hound (1981) Premiere. ››› The Hunchback of Notre Dame (1996) Be.- Made Best Thing Farm Pioneer Pioneer Trisha’s The Kitchen (N) Kids Cook-Off Hse Crash Hse Crash Hse Crash Hse Crash Buying and Selling Buying and Selling Buying and Selling Paid Prog. Paid Prog. Paid Prog. Paid Prog. Paid Prog. Paid Prog. ››› The Hand That Rocks the Cradle (1992) Made Made ››› Bring It On: In It to Win It (2007) › Bring It On Again Payne Browns There King King ›› Head of State (2003, Comedy) Chris Rock. Heartbrk ››› The Three Musketeers (1948) (CC) (DVS) Carson ›› The Secret of Dr. Kildare (CC) The Law Rides Again Law & Order “Pride” Law & Order Law & Order “Rebels” Law & Order ›› Transporter 3 (CC) Paid Prog. Paid Prog. Satisfaction Satisfaction Rush “Get Lucky” Rush “Dirty Work” Sonic X Bolts Spider Spider Dragon Digimon Yu-Gi-Oh! Yu-Gi-Oh! Pets.TV Career

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Ent Insider The Quest (Season Finale) (N) (CC) Shark Tank (CC) News J. Kimmel Wheel NFL Kickoff NFL Football Pittsburgh Steelers at Baltimore Ravens. (N) News at Eleven The Office Simpsons Sleepy Hollow (CC) Bones (CC) (DVS) Fox Toledo News TMZ (N) Minute Jdg Judy FamFeud The Biggest Loser (N) (CC) Dateline NBC (N) (CC) News J. Fallon NewsHour Business Toledo Stories (CC) Murder on the Home Front (2013) Front and Center (CC) Sun Stud The First 48 (CC) The First 48 (CC) The First 48 (CC) Killer Kids (CC) The First 48 (CC) Tardy Tardy Game of Crowns (N) Tardy Extreme Guide Tardy Happens Jersey Colbert Daily Chappelle Sunny Sunny Tosh.0 Tosh.0 Tosh.0 Daily Colbert Dog Jessie ›› Alvin and the Chipmunks (CC) Austin Liv-Mad. Girl Meets ANT Farm Jessie SportsCenter (N) (CC) Football Countdown College Football Houston at BYU. (N) (Live) ››› Dolphin Tale (2011) Harry Connick Jr.. ››› Matilda (1996, Comedy) Mara Wilson. The 700 Club (CC) Chopped Chopped Chopped Beat Flay Beat Flay Diners Diners Hunt Intl Hunters Fixer Upper (CC) Fixer Upper (CC) Hunters Hunt Intl Fixer Upper (CC) Project Runway (CC) Project Runway (CC) Project Runway “Rainway” (N) Project Runway “Rainway” (CC) Ridic. Ridic. Ridic. Ridic. Ridic. Ridic. Ridic. Snack-Off Ridic. Snack-Off Big Bang Mom (CC) Big Bang Big Bang Big Bang Big Bang Big Bang Big Bang Conan (N) (CC) Zebra TCM ››› The Nutty Professor (1963) Jerry Lewis. ›› The Caddy (1953, Comedy) Dean Martin. Castle “Boom!” Castle (CC) (DVS) Castle (CC) (DVS) Castle (CC) (DVS) Dallas (CC) Law & Order: SVU Law & Order: SVU Rush “Dirty Work” (N) Satisfaction (N) Rush “Dirty Work” Big Bang Mod Fam The Vampire Diaries The Originals (CC) OK! TV (N) Two Men Fam. Guy Cleveland

Saturday Morning ABC 13 CBS 11 FOX 36 NBC 24 PBS 30 A&E BRAVO COM DISN ESN FAM FOOD HGTV LIF MTV TBS TCM TNT USA WTO5

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September 13, 2014

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College Football (N) (Live) Football College Football (N) (Live) News Lottery College Football (N) (Live) (CC) News Paid Lucas Oil Off Road Football Football College Football Georgia at South Carolina. (N) (Live) (CC) Wheel Jeopardy! Reckless “Civil Wars” (N) (CC) 48 Hours (CC) News TBA MLB Baseball Regional Coverage. (N) (S Live) (CC) College Football Illinois at Washington. From Husky Stadium in Seattle. (N) Extra College Football Texas vs. UCLA. From AT&T Stadium in Arlington, Texas. News English Premier League Soccer PGA Tour Golf Tour Championship, Third Round. (N) (S Live) (CC) News News Jdg Judy College Football Purdue vs. Notre Dame. (N) (S Live) (CC) News SNL This Old House Hr Cooking Quilting Billy Joel: Trust Artists Den Globe Trekker Steves Travel Lawrence Welk Murder Myster. Antiques Roadshow As Time... Wine Masterpiece Classic Extreme Builds (N) Love Prison (CC) Storage Storage Storage Storage Storage Brandi Brandi Brandi Criminal Minds (CC) Criminal Minds “JJ” Criminal Minds (CC) Criminal Minds (CC) Criminal Minds (CC) Million Dollar LA Tardy Tardy Housewives/NJ Housewives/NJ Housewives/NJ ›› Office Space (1999) Ron Livingston. ›› American Pie 2 (2001) Jason Biggs. ›› American Pie 2 (2001) Jason Biggs. ››› National Lampoon’s Animal House › Vegas Vacation (1997, Comedy) Chevy Chase. (CC) South Pk South Pk ›› Yes Man (2008) Jim Carrey, Zooey Deschanel. (CC) ››› Dumb & Dumber (1994) Jim Carrey, Jeff Daniels. Tropic T Jessie Good Good Good Austin Austin Austin Dog Dog Dog Jessie Jessie Girl Girl I Didn’t I Didn’t Dog Dog Lab Rats Mighty Austin Liv-Mad. College Football Teams TBA. (N) (Live) Score College Football Teams TBA. (N) (Live) Score Football Scoreboard College Football Teams TBA. (N) (Live) (CC) SportsCenter (N) ››› Alice in Wonderland (1951) ›››› Cinderella (1950), Eleanor Audley ››› A Bug’s Life (1998), Kevin Spacey ››› Despicable Me (2010), Jason Segel ››› Brave (2012) Voices of Kevin McKidd. ››› The Princess and the Frog Rewrap. Beat Flay Restaurant: Im. Diners America Iron Chef America Food Truck Race Chopped Diners Diners Diners Diners Diners Diners Diners, Drive Diners, Drive Love It or List It (CC) My Big My Big My Big My Big My Big My Big My Big My Big Hunters Hunt Intl Hunters Hunt Intl Property Brothers Property Brothers House Hunters Reno Hunters Hunt Intl HandThat › Killers (2010) Ashton Kutcher. (CC) ›› Kiss the Girls (1997) Morgan Freeman. (CC) Flowers in the Attic (2014) Heather Graham. Deliverance Creek (2014) Lauren Ambrose. Deliverance Creek (2014) Lauren Ambrose. › Bring It On Again Teen Mom 2 Ridic. Ridic. Ridic. Ridic. Ridic. Ridic. › Scary Movie 2 (2001) Shawn Wayans. ›› Harold & Kumar Go to White Castle ›› White Chicks (2004) Shawn Wayans. ›› The Heartbreak Kid (2007) Ben Stiller. Friends Friends Friends Friends Seinfeld Seinfeld ›› Bad Teacher (2011) Cameron Diaz. Big Bang Big Bang Big Bang Big Bang Big Bang Big Bang Sullivan Heartbrk ››› The Fighting Sullivans (1944) (CC) ››› Fail-Safe (1964) Henry Fonda. (CC) ››› The Guns of Navarone (1961, War) Gregory Peck. (CC) ›››› Belle de Jour (1967), Jean Sorel ››› Walk on the Wild Side (1962) (CC) ›› Transporter 3 ›› From Paris With Love (2010) › Rush Hour 3 (2007, Action) Jackie Chan. ›› The Replacements (2000, Comedy) Keanu Reeves. ›› Red (2010, Action) Bruce Willis. (CC) (DVS) ›› Tower Heist (2011) Premiere. › I Now Pronounce You Chuck and Larry (2007) (CC) ›› Cheaper by the Dozen (2003) Premiere. › The Back-up Plan (2010) Jennifer Lopez. ›› He’s Just Not That Into You (2009) Ben Affleck. Mod Fam Mod Fam Mod Fam Mod Fam Icons Live Life EP Daily EP Daily Rules Two Men Rules Two Men Big Bang Commun Big Bang Mod Fam Movie EP Daily EP Daily OK! TV Made Two Men Two Men

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September 7, 2014

ToledoFreePress.com

Comics & Games 25

A Toledo tradition since 2005

Solution, tips and computer program at www.sudoku.com

DIZZY

BY DEAN HARRIS

TFP Crossword

“Tribute” ACROSS

n SUDOKU ANSWERS FOUND ON 26

Third Rock

Almanac

n ANSWERS FOUND ON A48

By Elizabeth Hazel

Your Tarotgram and Horoscope

Sept. 7 – 13, 2014

Events: Full Moon in Pisces (8th); Mars enters Sagittarius (13th) Aries (March 21-April 19)

Libra (September 23-October 22)

Sunday and Monday can be foggy. You may feel sleepy or too distracted to focus. You’re ready to push hard on Tuesday. Explaining complex ideas in simple ways convinces others to accept changes. Brainstorms lead to breakthroughs. Take your dancing shoes on Saturday.

You’re likely to be jostled by extreme feelings this week. You’ll either love it or loathe it. Try to discover where all this emotion is coming from. The best thinking and discussions take place on Thursday. Continue to steer clear of other peoples’ relationship messes.

Taurus (April 20-May 20)

Scorpio (October 23-November 21)

You’re thrust into the public eye and into large groups this week. Pay close attention to social status cues. Discussions on Wednesday and Thursday fire your ambitions and heighten output. Consume in moderation and remain adaptive to changes over the weekend.

Group affiliations define various aspects of your identity. These groups are active and in transition this week. Health and work issues drag some people out of the circle. Others struggle to find their perfect niche. Avoid making assumptions on surface observations.

Gemini (May 21-June 21)

Sagittarius (November 22-December 21)Juggling too many jobs and roles can be stressful.

Your imagination is on overdrive as the week begins, especially if you’re prone to superstitions. Engage in productive discussions midweek; people make generous offers. You may bounce between different groups over the weekend. Speedy turnarounds are possible.

Just because you can doesn’t mean you should. After Wednesday, consider streamlining your identity and resume so you can work smarter, not harder. The weekend offers brilliant connections and superb amenities.

Cancer (June 22-July 22)

Capricorn (December 22-January 19)

Social and family events draw you out into the world. Vast landscapes and pervasive cultural influences have to be absorbed. Others help you verbalize experiences midweek, as you may struggle to find words for complex emotions. The weekend brings aha moments.

Groups that affect your overall well-being and financial health are tricky to deal with. Power games are afoot; keep tabs on insiders. Special information floats your way on Thursday. Move toward the endgame carefully, because there’s no room for mistakes.

Leo (July 23-August 22)

Aquarius (January 20-February 18)

Major transitions are taking place with family and friends. Big plans are afoot, and you’re swamped by a myriad of details and big deadlines. People provide generous assistance midweek and keep you on track with your goals. Enjoy the fruit of your labors on Saturday.

Long-term efforts are in full-flower. Carry out the final tasks that ensure ultimate success. After Wednesday, a deluge of communications strains your ability to focus. On Friday, attention shifts to domestic/family matters and sharing abundant pleasures with loved ones.

Virgo (August 23-September 22)

Pisces (February 19-March 20)

The full moon looms over your closest relationships. Mind and heart can be at odds. Unexpected triggers cause emotional overloads. After Wednesday, a good friend helps you make sense of your inner conflicts. Devise potential plans of action over the weekend.

You belong to many groups, but retain your individuality. Some groups may need fresh members and an updated mandate. Enthusiastic discussions generate lots of ideas. Plans are formalized after Thursday. Weekend events are fantastic, but a bossy person is a turn-off.

Elizabeth Hazel is a professional tarotist-astrologer and author. She gives readings every Wednesday at Attic on Adams above Manos Greek Restaurant. She may be contacted at ehazel@buckeye-express.com (c) 2014

1. Prepare a present 4. Beloved Northwestern Ohio entertainer born in Kentucky 9. Brewed beverage 11. Turndown 12. With-15-Across, autobiographical song by 4-Across 15. See 12-Across 17. Subject of the new documentary “Life Itself” 18. Express shock 21. Drag queen accessory 23. Weapon in old sci-fi movies 27. With 38-Across, musical group with whom 4-Across toured 30. Add complexity 31. As well 32. Lyricist, to some 36. FX hit comedy 38. See 27-Across 39. With 46-Across, legacy of 4-Across

by Dave DeChristopher 1

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2. @ 3. Princess prodder 5. Period 6. Light punch 7. “Understand?” 8. Portman or Brown 10. Cancel

13. Take in 14. Percy ---- Shelley 16. Housecat’s comment 17. Twelve-year school 19. Devoured 20. Cheerleader’s attribute 21. Gridder Roethlisberger 22. Tread the boards 23. Money player 24. Cleopatra’s killer 25. Some kitchen appliances 26. Peeper 28. Actress Campbell 29. Rhino feature 30. Infamous biblical haircutter 33. Programming 34. Former name of the CNN Center 35. Hidden supply 37. Classic sitcom nerd 40. Sense of self 41. Director Wenders 42. Tater ---45. 3.14159

n CROSSWORD ANSWERS FOUND ON 26


26 Classified community

community

Employment

legal notices

Public notice

Education

A+ Self Storage at 1324 W. Alexis Toledo, OH 43612 will offer for public sale at 3:30PM on September 24, 2014 the following units: Unit 401, Danielle Conley 1617 Milburn Toledo, Ohio 43606: Rug, Loveseat, Sofa; Unit 638, Shaw L Liggons 7984 East Brook DR Temperance, MI 48182: TV, Boxes, Mattress; Unit 642, Aleena Rohoman 3428 Brigham St Toledo, OH 43608: TV, Headboard, Mattress; Unit 1015, Patricia Maluchnik 4466 288th Toledo, Oh. 43611: Storage Tubs, Boxes, Table; Unit 1017, Michael Miller 6022 Rolland dr Toledo, OH 43612: TV, Boxes, Box Spring; Unit 1701, Rob Blaze 2544 Schroeder Ct. Toledo, OH 43613: Storage Tubs, Tires, Cabinets; Unit 1906, Ebony Hughes 2220 Warren Toledo, OH 43620: Office Chair, Computer Desk, Box; Unit 2112, Kristin Fisher 3704 Watson Toledo, OH 43612: Boxes, Sofa, Storage Tubs;; Cash and Removal. Call ahead to confirm: 419-476-1400

THE FOLLOWING STORAGE UNITS WILL BE SOLD AT PUBLIC AUCTION BY LOCK-IT-UP, LLC ON OR AFTER 9.23.14 AT LEONARD’S AUCTION SERVICE 6350 CONSEAR RD OTTAWA LAKE, MI RICHARD LEONARD AUCTIONEER. 3605 S EBER RD MONCLOVA OH 43542 2024 TODD DIXON 13351 AIRPORT HWY SWANTON OH 43558 RESTAURANT EQUIPMENT. 27533 HELEN DR PERRYSBURG OH 43551 2048 SERGIO ANGEL DBA MI HACIENDA 3302 GLANZMAN RD TOLEDO OH 43614-3856 RESTAURANT EQUIPMENT . 10740 AIRPORT HWY SWANTON OH 43558 5041 TINA STINER 2170 S BERKEY-SOUTHERN HOUSEHOLD. 3032 BRITTANY BETZ 706 BROOKSIDE DR HOUSEHOLD. 6424 MEMORIAL HWY OTTAWA LAKE MI 49267 2055 TERRENCE SWARTZ 2557 CHARLESTOWN AVE TOLEDO OH 43613 HOUSEHOLD. 2004, 8136, & 8134 THOMAS MERCER 6550 BRINT RD SYLVANIA OH 43560 HOUSEHOLD. 802 S REYNOLDS TOLEDO OH 43615 2012 SHONTRELL FLANAGAN APT 105 HOUSEHOLD. 2301 SCOTT LAURIE JR 1128 RICHLAND MAUMEE OH 43537 HOUSEHOLD. 4035 CYNTHIA JONES 2865 TORREY WAY MARIETTA GA 30067 HOUSEHOLD. 4030 MARSHALL GRAVES 2534 KEY ST APT 37 HOUSEHOLD. 5008 SAMANTHA WARE 3601 HILL AVE LOT 18 HOUSEHOLD. 6004 ALYSIAH LOGGINS 2331 AIRLINE AVE HOUSEHOLD. 8102 LINDA PRATER 4444 AIRPORT HWY 19 HOUSEHOLD. 8302 TIFFANY RICHARDSON 63 MECHANICS LANE PLYMOUTH PA 18651 HOUSEHOLD. 1046 S BYRNE RD TOLEDO OH 43609 2019 LATASHA DIGGS 1229 SIBLEY HOUSEHOLD. 3002 JAMES PIRTLE 453 PINEWOOD AVE HOUSEHOLD. 3032 AIRPORT HWY TOLEDO OH 43609 4305 REGGIE BROUGHTON 320 EVERETT ST HOUSEHOLD. 2421 ANTHONY GASTON 3601 HILL AVE LOT 15 HOUSEHOLD. 1101 CHRISTOPHER GRADDY 3725 VICTORY DR HOUSEHOLD. 3316 DUSTIN RD OREGON OH 43616 5048 LOREEN JOHNSON 2614 PRATT TOLEDO OH 43605 HOUSEHOLD. 7050 JOHN VILLALOBOS 1537 LIBERTY ST TOLEDO OH 43605 HOUSEHOLD. 4601 JACKMAN RD TOLEDO OH 4362 3205/3206 QUINTIN WILEY 819 THORNWOOD APT 31 HOUSEHOLD. 1905 MARIJANE SHARP 2015 ELLIOTT HOUSEHOLD. 1104 TONI DAVIS 2017 CALUMET AVE HOUSEHOLD. 1404 JEFFREY DECANT 613 OREGON RD NORTHWOOD OH 43619 HOUSEHOLD. 1019 BRIAN BAKER 3616 ALMEDA DR HOUSEHOLD. 1078 QWIDA HUBBARD 833 GRIBBIN LN HOUSEHOLD.

THE OCEAN Corp. 10840 Rockley Road, Houston, Texas 77099. Train for a New Career. *Underwater Welder. Commercial Diver. *NDT/Weld Inspector. Job Placement Assistance. Financial Aid available for those who qualify. 1-800-321-0298.

NOTICE TO BIDDERS

Sealed bids will be received by the Board of County Commissioners of Lucas County, Ohio, in the Purchasing Department until 2:00 P.M. (local time), September 22, 2014 and opened immediately thereafter for #14-012C Copiers – Lucas County for Lucas County Job & Family Services, according to specifications on file in the Purchasing Department, Board of County Commissioners and available for examination during regular working hours or download the bid by going to the site; http://www.co.lucas.oh.us/bids.asp. Prior to 2:00 P.M. (local time), September 22, 2014, each bid upon submission must be stamped for the time and date and placed in our bid box. The bid box is located in the Receptionist Area, Lucas County Purchasing Department, One Government Center, Suite 480, Toledo, Ohio 43604-2247. Each bid shall contain the full name of each person submitting the bid and the name of every person or company interested in same and must be accompanied by a Bid Bond, Certified Check, Cashiers Check or Money Order drawn on a Solvent Bank or Savings and Loan Association, in the sum of One Thousand Dollars and No Cents ($1,000.00). This notice is posted at http://www.co.lucas. oh.us/bids.asp. The right is reserved to reject any and all bids. By order of the Board of County Commissioners, Lucas County, Ohio. Carol Contrada – President Tina Skeldon Wozniak – Commissioner Pete Gerken – Commissioner Bid #14-012C Copiers – Lucas County Publish: September 7, 2014

General Employment Toledo Edison is now hiring Meter Readers in the NWOH region. Responsibilities include reading meters on customers’ premises, covering a route on foot or with the use of a vehicle, and resetting and resealing meters. No previous experience required. Must be a high school graduate or equivalent, and have a valid driver’s license. Must have a clean background and MVR, and pass a drug test. Reporting site would be one of three different locations: Holland, Downtown, or Northwood. Pay rate is $14.50 per hour. Contractor position, but could lead to a full-time. Apply via fax only 419249-6225 attn: Meter Reader Opening. No phone calls please. FirstEnergy proudly supports workforce diversity. All qualified applicants will receive consideration for employment without regard to race, religion, color, national origin, sex, age, status as a protected veteran, or status as a qualified individual with a disability. No recruiters or agencies without a previously signed contract. Unable to sponsor or transfer H-1B visas at this time.

Do you need a GREAT part-time job? be a toledo free press home delivery carrier!

Walking Routes available CALL: 419-241-1700 ext. 221

For Sale Household items Estate tool sale! Garage items, hand & air tools, 3/4 socket set, impact hammer & MORE! Sat., Sept. 6, 8 a.m. to Noon at 2329 Glenrose Lane, Heather Glen Estates.

Rentals

W R A I T N O D B B A Y A S G A S T H D E E E L O U I R L A K A E H A L

P E A S P E P I E L

E D D I E B O G G S A O O E E N O T H E R P U T I N N A M A U M M E R E B E R T L E N L O B O A P H A S E R N E W C H R I S T Y E N T O O P O E T V O R S V V E M I N S T R E L S N A S H E R I E W E S T G O G I H O P W O F F A M E T I P S

FOR YOUR CONVENIENCE

Early morning and late evening appointments!

Customer satisfaction and pet care are

OUR tOp pRIORItIEs! n

DOUGLAS SQUARE APTS 4811 Douglas Rd.

n

Accepting Applications for 3 Bedroom Apartments Appliances Furnished; Utility allowance. Rent Based on Income Applications by Appointment 419-472-6087 Equal Housing Opportunity

Call 419.241.1700, Ext 230 to place a Classified Ad!

n Crossword ANSWERS FROM 25

Alexis Road Animal Hospital

Apartments / Duplexes

Wanted WANTS TO purchase minerals and other oil & gas interests. Send details P.O. Box 13557, Denver, Co 80201

n SUDOKU ANSWERS FROM 25

September 7, 2014

A Toledo tradition since 2005 ToledoFreePress.com

n n n n

State-of-the-art facilities On-site lab & x-rays Surgery & Dentistry Spay & Neuter OPEN Vaccinations YS A DA 6 Medical Boarding EEK! W

Call us for special prices on heartworm and flea medications!

50% OFF

DOVES MANOR APARTMENTS 1040 Brookview, Toledo OH

A Housing Community for the Elderly (62 or older) Appliances furnished Utilities included in rent One bedroom Apartments Rent based on annual income. Applications taken by appointment 419-389-9999 Equal Housing Opportunity

Office Exam Fee Reg. $29

asK FOR DENtal spECIals

Fall spECIals Routine Cat spay & Neuter only

$50

Routine Dog spay & Neuter only

$65-85

Coupons expire 09/30/14. Must bring in ad for discounts. TFP.

1837 W. Alexis Road, Toledo, Ohio

419.475.8387

thank you for giving us the opportunity to serve you and your pets. Toledo Free Press publishes classified ads and cannot be responsible for problems arising between parties placing or responding to ads in our paper. We strongly urge everyone to exercise caution when dealing with people, companies and organizations with whom you are not familiar.

All real estate advertised in this paper is subject to the federal Fair Housing Act, which makes it illegal to advertise any preference, limitation, or discrimination based on race, sex, handicap, familial status or national origin, in the sale, rental, or financing of housing. This Publisher will not knowingly accept any advertising that violates any applicable law. All persons are hereby informed that all dwellings advertised in this paper are available on an equal opportunity basis. If you believe you have been discriminated against in connection with the sale, rental, or financing of housing, call the Toledo Fair Housing Center, (419) 243-6163.


September 7, 2014

ToledoFreePress.com

A Toledo tradition since 2005

Toledo Free Press 27

SUPERSTORE

Monroe

Only

845 due

Sport

at lease signing for Chrysler employees and all eligible family members

Ram 1500 Crew Cab 4x4 BIG Horn

Only

1845 due at lease signing for everyone else

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MON 9-9 • TUES 9-6 • WEDS 9-6 THURS 9-9 • FRI 9-6 • SAT 9-4


28 Toledo Free Press

A Toledo tradition since 2005 ToledoFreePress.com

September 7, 2014

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