Toledo Free Press STAR - June 23rd, 2010 - Episode 1, Chapter 16

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CONCERTS ■ HIP-HOP ■ SPORTS PO OR ORTS RTS T S ■ CO COMIC C O MIC M I C BOOKS B O O K S ■ LOV LOVE L O V E AND AND S SEX E X ADVICE A D V I C E ■ THE T H E PULSE: PU UL LS LS SE E : EV EVENTS E VE EN N NTS TS C TS CALENDAR AL A ALENDAR LE EN N DA DAR D A R ■ FIN FINE INE N E ART ARTS AR RT RTS T S ■ EXH EXHIBITS EX E XH HIBITS IB B I T S ■ FO BITS FOO FOOD OD D ■ FILM FIL LM LM

JUNE 23, 2010

KING – OF THE –

JUNGLE Animal A nimal nim mal Planet P Planet’s laanet’s ’s JEFF JEFF CORWIN CORWIN visits Monroe to help unveil River Raisin Heritage Trail Story by Betsy Woodruff, Page 12

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CLUBS: Meat Puppets to rock Frankie’s 4 PEOPLE: Nick Amrhein brings it back from LA 5 BOWLING GREEN: Blues singer John Németh hits Cla-Zel 7 ON THE ROX: Old school Hip-Hop, courtesy Andrew Z. 8 COVER: Jeff Corwin comes to Monroe 12 THE PULSE: Calendar of events 14 SPORTS: Chris Schmidbauer on UT football 18 EXHIBITS: River House showcases mixed media 20 SCULPTURE: Plastic art to grace Huntington Center 20

MEAT PUPPETS AT FRANKIE’S • COMICS: MARTHA WASHINGTON • JEFF CORWIN IN MONROE • TONE LOC AT LEVIS COMMONS JUNE 23, 2010 • Episode 1 Chapter 16 • Toledo Free Press Star, Toledo, OH: “C’mon. Let’s go see how much we’re going for on eBay.” — Hamm the Piggy Bank, “Toy Story 3.”

‘‘

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Wisdom from Young MC, page 8

Schmidbauer on UT, page 18

For a fan, CHIKARA’s unique show provides a much-needed respite from the doldrums of mainstream wrestling.”

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If you have a job, keep your job, If you are in school, stay in school. Make music your hobby until it becomes lucrative ...”

It’s no secret UT is in the business of winning, and that is exactly what football coach Tim Beckman was brought in to do.”

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4 ■ WEDNESDAY, JUNE 23, 2010 / WAX ON, WAX OFF AT TOLEDOFREEPRESS.COM

Living legends Influential Meat Puppets to play at Frankie’s. By Mighty Wyte TOLEDO FREE PRESS STAR STAFF WRITER star@toledofreepress.com

Frankie’s will host one of the most underrated and underappreciated bands of the last 30 years when its doors open for the Meat Puppets on June 24, and if you know anything about rock, you’ll be there. As if 30 years of writing, recording and touring aren’t enough, the Meat Puppets were responsible for influencing the likes of Nirvana and Soundgarden, amongst an endless list of others. In late ’93 the Meat Puppets performed with Nirvana during its acoustic “Unplugged” appearance and the song “Lake of Fire” became a cult hit. After the “Unplugged” appearance, the band released the “Too High To Die” album. The album, which earned a gold record, was the source of the memorable radio hit “Backwater.” Shortly after the release of its “No Joke!” album in ’95, the band broke up, mainly because of bassist Chris Kirkwood’s substance abuse problems.

After two “breaks” from 1996-2001 and again from 2002-2005 The Meat Puppets have released two more albums, “Rise to Your Knees” and “Sewn Together.” These two most recent releases have proven this band is still capable of writing and recording amazing material. As a direct result of its major-label experience and access to massive recording studios, the band made it a point to redefine what was important while putting together the last two albums. They decided to seek out and use a small analog studio so the music became the focus. Twelve albums and three decades after originally forming as a hardcore punk band, the Meat Puppets still write, tour and give fans what they want. The Meat Puppets are fantastic musicians who play great music and put on a damn good show. Frankie’s is where you need to be June 24. Doors for the Meat Puppets show open at 8 p.m. Tickets are $12 in advance and can be purchased at Culture Clash, Ramalama Records or any TicketMaster outlet. Tickets are $15 the night of the show. ✯

Meat Puppets formed in 1980. PHOTO COURTESY MEGAFORCE RECORDS.


RISE AND SHINE, CAMPERS AT TOLEDOFREEPRESS.COM / WEDNESDAY, JUNE 23, 2010 ■ 5

Taking flight

w w w. c a r s t e r e o 1 . c o m

Clay grad finds Hollywood niche. By Michael Stainbrook TOLEDO FREE PRESS STAR STAFF WRITER star@toledofreepress.com

Many burgeoning visual and performing artists make the trip to the City of Angels, but only a select few grow their own wings upon arrival. A local man managed to do just that when he made the cross-country trek three years ago. Nick Amrhein, a 23-year-old Clay High School graduate and lifelong resident of Oregon, drove to Los Angeles to pursue his passions of photography and video and found a place among some of the biggest names in the media industry. He has since returned to Northwest Ohio and now runs his own media company. But it didn’t start out so easily. “I worked at Marco’s Pizza and worked my butt off and saved money just to buy this camera,” he said, referring to his Sony VX-2000 camcorder, his first piece of video recording equipment. The first camera he used for photography was a Pantax that took black-and-white photos. During his freshman year at Owens Community College, Amrhein found out he was diabetic. It was a discovery he did not make until it was almost too late. A normal blood/glucose level should remain below 180 milligrams per deciliter in diabetic adults, according to the American Diabetes Association. Amrhein’s blood sugar topped 1,000. “It was pretty gnarly,” he said. “The doctor told me if I showed up an hour later, I might not be here today. That really persuaded me to take actions and follow my dream.” Amrhein had wanted to go to Los Angeles ever since he began skateboarding at age 13, but it was not until a friend came back to Northwest Ohio that his dream was realized. A high school friend, Mico Montes, had returned to Toledo but was planning a trip back to the West Coast. Amrhein saw this as the perfect opportunity to act on his aspirations. “I decided to go out there together and give it a shot,” he said. The duo’s trip was anything but luxurious. Amrhein drove to L.A. in a Honda Civic with 200,000 miles and with just $1,000. He spent several hundred dollars on gas and didn’t have a steady job waiting for him when he arrived. “We lived in Orange County for about a month couch surfing,” he said. “For the first couple months out there I survived on peanut butter and jelly, just barely scraping by.” Amrhein networked with photographers he met and began earning $50 for assisting with small-scale photo shoots. Eventually he, Montes and a third friend found a one-bedroom apartment 15 miles north of Downtown Los Angeles. Amrhein and Montes shared the bedroom, and their friend slept in the kitchen. It cost each of them $375 a month. Amrhein then found two jobs, one as a hotel worker and the other at a Los Angeles clothing store. He continued this line of work for the better part of a year, but then he realized his dreams were not being fulfilled.

BRAND NEW AMRHEIN “I kind of took grasp of why I’m really out here,” he said. “I’m not able to pursue what I came out here for.” That was when he caught his first big break. While working at the clothing store, Amrhein noticed a very fashionable customer. “There was a guy — he had a crazy style — walking in the store,” he said. Amrhein was the cashier on duty, and he noticed signs that the customer might be a photographer from the images on his credit card. The man proved to be Jim Jordan, who does photography for some of the best-known magazines in the country. Not much time later, Amrhein was helping out with photo shoots for Vogue. “After that it was like, ‘this is it,’” he said. “I ended up leaving both jobs and started doing freelance photography at that point.” Amrhein went on to photograph and shoot video of a number of celebrities, including professional skateboarder Rob Dyrdrek, Pete Wentz (Fall Out Boy), West Coast Customs and Guns N’ Roses. He wound up with a photography internship with Loyalty Creative and moved to within a block of the beach. He made some extra money by working at a Mexican restaurant. “People started recognizing some of my work in L.A.,” he said. “Being there for three years, I felt I got a grip on what L.A. was about and what the industry was like.” Amrhein’s internship ended when Loyalty Creative had to make cuts. At that point, he decided to come back to Toledo. “I was just kind of worn out. I wanted to be with my friends and my family and kind of take in all that I’d done.” Since returning, Amrhein has worked on starting his own studio to expand his company, 3byOne Media. 3byOne operates out of Toledo and Los Angeles; he still makes regular trips to the West Coast. Amrhein reconnected with the local skateboarding community and helped start the group 4 Down 4 Life. The group meets weekly and uses Toledo-area skate parks to build community. Local skate shops sponsor the group. “I was the guy who was always taking photos at the skate park,” he said. “Now that [my friends] are older too they’re really supportive of me.” “Skateboarding will always be in your blood no matter how busy you get or how busy you will be.” ✯

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EARLY REGISTRATION ENCOURAGED! Go to: WWW.RIDEFORKEITH.COM ALL MOTORCYCLES WELCOME! Contact Sara Shaw at 419.699.0577 or sara@rideforkeith.com Proceeds go to the Officer William Miscannon Scholarship Fund at Owens Community College in memory of Det. Keith Dressel.


6 ■ WEDNESDAY, JUNE 23, 2010 / YOU MAY SAY WE’RE DREAMERS, BUT WE’RE NOT THE ONLY ONES. TOLEDOFREEPRESS.COM

W Watch this week’s newsstands for Star writer JiJim Beard’s “Ghostbusters: Con-Volution” comic.

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Few comic book writers or artists rise to susu perstar status within the industry ry — to witness two such luminaries on one project is a rare thing. One of those sainted projectss is being collected in one volumee for the first time by Dark Horse se Comics and should be cause for celebration among discerning ing comic fans: “The Life and Timess of Martha Washington in the TwentyntyFirst Century.” Paul Shiple of The Game Room zeroed in on the hefty tome as hiss pick of this week’s offerings, describing bing it as “a massive 600-page dystopian an political satire brought to you byy Frank Miller and Dave Gibbons. This coming age i off story follows the life of Martha Washington, a young African-American woman, who attempts to survive in a fractious and polarized United States of the future. Highly recommended.” Miller is, of course, the creator of the infamous “Sin City” and the legendary “Dark Knight Returns.” Gibbons’ place in comic book history

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was cemented by his artwork for a little project known as “Watchmen.” Separately, these two guys rocked the comic industry with their previous work; when they got together on “Martha Washington,” they created something Washing ... and the kind of narrative truly special sp that de demands examination and slow savoring. savorin This collection brings together stoof the titular character ranging ries o from 1990 to 2007, including three miniseries and three one-shots. Marmini tha’s tales are fascinating, yet also horrifying, existing in one of those hor science fiction futures that’s oftensci times tim a bit too familiar for comfort; there th are also echoes of Ayn Rand’s “Atlas “A Shrugged” here for those of a conservative bent. This isn’t a pretty picture of the years to come, p yet Miller and Gibbons make it wonderful to digest. It’s a pricey book, but it’s an investment that t It’ i will reward you every time you pick it up. This week also sees the arrival of a minor footnote in comic history called “Superman” No. 700. If you’re so inclined, you can put it on the shelf next to the previously released “Batman” No. 700 and the upcoming “Wonder Woman” No. 600. ✯

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Magic man Blues singer John Németh hits BG’s Cla-Zel to jumpstart the venue’s blues music series.

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The Cla-Zel Theater in Bowling Green will kick off its blues music series June 25 with blues singer/harmonica player John Németh. The Cla-Zel, a major venue for live entertainment in downtown Bowling Green, often features live musical acts a few times a month and will continue to do so throughout the summer. Banan Alkilani, director of public relations, said the Cla-Zel wanted to do a blues music series because it is an interesting genre that has been popular all over different parts of the country. “It certainly has a history in Toledo and other places in Ohio, as well as the Detroit area,” he said. Nicknamed “magician of the harmonica,” Németh, 34, is originally from Boise, Idaho. After extensive touring during the past decade, he has earned a reputation as a phenomenal blues singer and a virtuoso of the harmonica. According to his website, Németh’s style is reminiscent of B.B. King, Ray Charles and Junior Parker. He has toured with famous blues acts such as Robert Cray and has performed in major music festivals across the U.S., Canada, Europe and Asia. In 2007, Németh released his debut national album “Magic Touch.” Németh will perform at 8 p.m. June 25 at the Cla-Zel. Tickets are $12 in advance and $15 at the door. The concert will be a CD release party for his second national album “Name The Day.” Alkilani said the Cla-Zel has continued to book blues bands through the summer and into the fall.

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NÉMETH “The blues series is sort of a non-ending series at the moment,” he said. “We are going to have probably one to two blues shows a month.” While the Cla-Zel has bands scheduled for the rest of the year, it is not limiting itself to only certain types of music. “We’re not sticking with one particular genre,” Alkilani said. “We are also interested in bringing in lots of New Age music as well.” Coming up during the summer, the ClaZel will feature blues acts such as Bryan Lee, Andrew “Jr. Boy” Jones and John Lee Hooker Jr., son of blues legend John Lee Hooker. For more information, visit www.ClaZel. net or JohnNemethblues.com. ✯

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8 ■ WEDNESDAY, JUNE 23, 2010 / AND DON’T CALL US ‘SHIRLEY’ TOLEDOFREEPRESS.COM

Wild things By Martini Rox TOLEDO FREE PRESS STAR STAFF WRITER star@toledofreepress.com

Andrew Z of 92.5 Kiss FM is the last guy I thought would put on a two-day Old School Hip Hop concert in Perrysburg at Levis Commons ... but he did and I had no choice but to go. I mean, come on! Young MC, Tone-Loc, Coolio and Naughty By Nature? Friday’s storm prevented Naughty By Nature from performing, but Saturday proved to be a new day. After it was done, I called Andrew Z to wish him a happy Father’s Day and ask him a few questions. Martini Rox: What made you bring old school Hip-Hop to Northwest Ohio? Andrew Z: I grew up in LA and this is really the stuff I grew up on. I knew it had never been done, I knew people would like it. Back when you were in high school you were dancing to this and having a good time so I knew it would work. MR: What difficulty did you face planning an urban event in Perrysburg and why not in the Toledo city limits? Andrew Z: About eight weeks ago we started putting this together, and usually for a concert some people work on it for months. I’m a last-

Andrew Z brings Old School jams — Coolio, Young MC, Tone-Loc, Naughty By Nature — to NW Ohio.

minute guy; I tried to get it at Festival Park and the City of Toledo was behind it, but there had already been a couple of events booked. My restaurant is at Levis Commons, so that’s why I ended up going that route. MR: Does the Miller Lite Music Fest have a future? Will you do this again? Andrew Z: Most definitely! I may do something like this two or three times a year. When I envisioned this, I knew I wanted to have a concert and a party. It was great because it was a bunch of people who had never done anything like this and we didn’t know. If you build it they will come, and they did. There were three or four key people behind the scenes who really drove this thing and they did such a phenomenal job and I was lucky that I found them.

Naughty By Nature In 1993 I wore open-top knit hats with my hair wildly hanging out and denim outfits from Merry-Go-Round with “Jodeci boots” while riding around town blasting Naughty By Nature’s “O.P.P.” This was a part of the soundtrack to some of the most carefree days of my life. Hits like the aforementioned “O.P.P.,” “Hip-Hop Hooray,” “Feel Me Flow” and “Craziest” were constantly played on the radio and on “Yo! MTV Raps.”

Coolio and Andrew Z. at Levis Commons. PHOTO BY MARTINI ROX

The aptly titled “19 Naughty III” and “Poverty’s Paradise” were successful albums that provided urban hits from the New Jersey natives Treach, Vinnie and DJ Kay Gee.

Naughty By Nature still drew a crowd as the headliners of Andrew Z’s Miller Lite Music Fest at Levis Commons. ■ OLD SCHOOL CONTINUES ON 9


ARE YOU WATCHING ‘WORK OF ART’ ON BRAVO? TOLEDOFREEPRESS.COM / WEDNESDAY, JUNE 23, 2010 ■9 ■OLD SCHOOL CONTINUED FROM 8 Acts like Tone-Loc, Coolio and Young MC warmed up the crowd in the hot weather that turned to storms, canceling Naughty’s June 18 appearance. But the group gave a spectacular performance the next day. Within minutes after the show, I was backstage watching the groupies swarm DJ/ Producer Kay Gee and a shirtless Treach Quietly, his co-MC/hype man, Vinnie, retreated to a couch alone and with that, I had found the perfect place to inquire about their recipe for longevity. MR: How did you maintain the dual role as the group’s hype man first, MC second? Most stars would have a problem staying in their lane. Vinnie: I tend to stay in that lane because when we first started I was the beat box, Kay Gee was the DJ and Treach was our MC. We started the group like that in high school and as we went on and started recording a lot of people liked my voice and said, “Yo, Vin, you need to step up, you need to rhyme more.� Naturally, I wasn’t a writer and just being under Treach’s apprenticeship, especially with Kay Gee on those beats, I just had to step it up and I started to write a bit more. By this time Treach decided he wanted “in� on the interview, casually sitting on the couch while wiping the sweat off his body. This is where Vinnie, as if on cue, quietly made his exit. MR: Treach you have been concentrating on film and television for the last 10-plus years; have you found it hard to go back to touring? Treach: It never stopped. They were both going on at the same time. Whenever I do a movie on my days off, I fly out to do shows. We keep the brand popping whether Kay Gee is doing production, whether I’m doing movies,

Vin’s doing websites and the mechanics behind that, we all just bring it back to the brand. MR: I understand you are newly reunited as a group. Was your appearance on MTV’s “The Buried Life� the first performance all three of you came back to do? Treach: Kay’s been performing in shows with us for about a year; me and Vin never stopped. We’ve been doing 100 to 150 shows a year worldwide since 1991. MR: How would you advise older MC’s who are looking to get back into the rap game when its focus has changed so much from the “golden era?� Treach: It’s more of an independent hustle now. With the Internet and everything else you could set your career up that way. You could have record labels, radio stations looking you up if you have enough hits and your website is hot and you are out there grinding.

Young MC All it took was a phone call. I called; left a message and a half hour later Marvin Young called me back. When we met up in the hotel lobby it was apparent (not just from the phone call) that this man was about his business. I have interviewed many artists but never one who introduced themself using their legal name. Yes, this interview would be different and I decided to have a conversation based on his ability to continuously generate money in his 20-plus years in the Hip-Hop music industry. You may know him from his hits like “Bust a Move� and “Principal’s Office� or for his role as the writer of Tone-Loc’s hits “Wild Thing� and “Funky Cold Medina.� You may just know him

from his stint on VH1’s “Celebrity Fit Club .� Prepare to know Young MC in a different way as he schooled me on how an artist takes care of business and earns “long money� in the music industry. MR: Did you ever think 20 years later you would still be performing? Young MC: None of us did, none of us did, the best way to say it is, my experience with Tone-Loc. He had “Wild Thing� before I had “Bust a Move� and “Funky Cold Medina,� which I helped on before “Bust a YOUNG MC Move� came out. Both of us had a local record in L.A., but we didn’t have anything that was near national. When we finished “Wild Thing� we were like, “OK, 30,000 units, 50,000 units, that will be enough for him to get a car and for me to pay off some student loans,� because nothing from the West Coast had blown so big to where we could say not only would it get out of the state, but out of the region and sell enough records. MR: Can you explain as a writer in this business what publishing or writing for others has done for your career? YMC: Stage is short money. I come out, I’m doing shows like this, it’s great, I get a check, it pays bills, people feel good and that’s great. Longterm money you’re talking about what you got to put in your will, what you build your future around. That’s publishing, to a certain extent it’s master ownership if you get the deal down. I have a bachelor’s degree in economics, never wrote it down on a job application but it’s helped

me so much in terms of taking meetings with people, and they think, “well he’s as equipped as I am, he knows what I’m doing on the other side of this desk, so I can’t put one over on him.â€? The publishing angle really helps when the shows aren’t happening as much, when things aren’t going as well from the traditional artist standpoint. The publishing aspect is the one that takes my records that may not be selling a lot in stores and say, OK, we just got you a nice fivefigure license for this project, or we just got these uses or we just got this overseas vehicle to make you some money on your masters. The Internet has been a great thing as well because I have a bunch of masters that I have not been able to really get a lot of traction with retail that all of the sudden I’ve been able to turn around and get sold online and I own them. Publishing is the thing that I can really focus on and make it a career as opposed to being at the mercy of Billboard or being at the mercy of a radio station. MR: What advice do you want to give to artists planning to embark on a career in music? YMC: I’ve been giving the same advice for the last 20 years. If you have a job, keep your job, if you are in school, stay in school. Make music your hobby until it becomes lucrative enough to become your job. The reason I say that is from my own personal experience. As soon as someone realizes you’re desperate and the only thing that can benefit you is them giving you a deal, they will give you the worst deal possible. MR: Thanks for the lesson. As we continue on ... âœŻ

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Coleman to play Maumee River Jazz Series By Betsy Woodruff TOLEDO FREE PRESS STAFF WRITER star@toledofreepress.com

Jesse Coleman, a Toledo native, will perform at the Maumee River Jazz Series on June 23. Coleman began playing saxophone by accident. He said he was “a decent, not-so-enthused clarinet player� in his high school band when his band director decided the group had too many clarinets. The director announced to the students in the rehearsal room that the next male freshman clarinet player to walk in would become a saxophone player; Coleman entered the room and his classmates started cheering for their new saxophonist. “It changed the course of my life,� he said. “I got enthusiastic about my music.� He began to learn baritone sax and taught himself the bass lines from some of his favorite bands: Earth Wind and Fire, Tower of Power and Chicago. He also joined his school’s jazz band. The saxophone was easier for him to play and he liked it much more than the clarinet. “The clarinet sounds nasal, very nasal, very drab if you’re not great at it,� he said, adding that as a high school freshman, he was not an especially gifted clarinetist. “I didn’t like the tone. When I got to sax, the tone automatically sounded brighter, better. I was like, ‘OK, this is good’.� He began playing for his friends and in church. After graduating from high school, he began to travel with a gospel band. He was

COLEMAN 18, seven years younger than anyone else in the band. Since then, he has been to 35 states, countless cities, Canada and Jamaica because of his music. “It just bit me like a snake,â€? he said. “I was addicted to it.â€? After 10 years, the band dissolved and he came back to Toledo. He recorded a CD called “The Joy of Sax.â€? He describes his music as smooth jazz in the tradition of David Sanborn and Kirk Whalum. “It’s not yakety-yakety sax,â€? he said. âœŻ

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12 n WEDNESDAY, JUNE 23, 2010 / NO READER LEFT BEHIND. TOLEDOFREEPRESS.COM

River Raisin Trail celebra By Betsy Woodruff Toledo Free Press Staff Writer bwoodruff@toledofreepress.com

I

t’s not every day that a world-famous TV star comes to Monroe. So when Jeff Corwin, host of Animal Planet’s “The Jeff Corwin Experience,” comes June 25, it’s because something important is happening: the official opening of the River Raisin Heritage Trail. The trail has immense ecological and historic significance, according to Bill Braunlich, the president of the Monroe County Historical Society. It connects Sterling State Park, the Ford Marsh area of the Detroit River International Wildlife Refuge, the River Raisin National Battlefield Park and downtown Monroe. Braunlich said that he thinks it is the only trail connecting a state park with a national battlefield.

Ecological Significance

The trail goes through a coastal wetlands environment that

draws a number of rare species. It attracted Corwin’s interest because of the bald eagles that live near it. The area has undergone a tremendous resurgence of bald eagles, Braunlich said, thanks to the passage of the Endangered Species Act in 1973, Congress’s ban on DDT and better protection of coastal wetlands environments. Twenty years ago, nobody would see bald eagles in that area. But today, there are more than 100 nesting pairs in the trail’s vicinity. “It’s not unusual to talk to someone and say, ‘Oh my god, I saw bald eagles today,’” he said. Corwin said citizens of Monroe should be proud of the role the area plays in bald eagle conservation. “You do it for all of us,” he said. Braunlich said one of the purposes of the trail is to educate people about the coastal wetlands through which it runs. “A big part is reclaiming this environment so that the species that originally thrived here can thrive once again,” he said. “The trail really brings it all together. That’s what’s so exciting about it.”

Joe Verkennes, director of marketing for Monroe County Community College (MCCC) — to which the trail will run at some point in the future — said hikers on the trail will feel like they have left civilization and gone back in time. “I was just amazed when I went on it the first time,” he said. Hikers may see blue herons and the American lotus, which only grows in clean waterways. Braunlich said hikers can reach a point where they no longer see any buildings or hear the sounds of the freeway. They can experience what the area was like 200 years ago when only 16,000 people lived in the state of Michigan, he said. “It really represents a reclamation of our coastal wetlands and Lake Erie,” Braunlich said.

Historic Significance

By linking the River Raisin National Battlefield to downtown Monroe and Sterling State Park, the trail improves access to the important site. The battlefield was the site of the Massacre of the River Raisin, a devastating slaughter of American forces by the

British in the bloodiest bat member the the Michigan pects for Am Lakes looked But the de icans to fight “What ha Braunlich sa 9-11 momen Verkenne park has grea “It’s all co ronmental re

Two Days

The trail’s and 26. The r sign made by

Photos (left to right): A view of the River Raisin Trail from a jogger’s perspective shows the many curves along the way thanks to the many trees that line the trail; one of many bench areas a

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1pm Shotgun Start – 18 Hole Scramble Lunch is included prior to golf. Longest Drive, Closest to the Pin, Longest Putt, Betting Holes, 50/50 Raffle, Skins The Oregon/Northwood Rotary Annual Golf Invitational proceeds help benefit school children attending the Challenger Learning Center. Rotary International is an international service organization. The Oregon/Northwood Rotary Club addresses social and health issues like illiteracy, homelessness, hunger, poverty and educational needs by providing financial support from money raised through club fundraisers. For more information on team registration or sponsorship opportunities please visit our website at www.clubrunner.ca/oregon-northwood


PEACE, LOVE AND UNDERSTANDING AT TOLEDOFREEPRESS.COM / WEDNESDAY, JUNE 23, 2010 n 13

Jeff Corwin talks oil spill By Betsy Woodruff Toledo Free Press Staff Writer news@toledofreepress.com

ates opening

e War of 1812. Braunlich said it was one of the ttles of the war and gave rise to the cry, “ReRaisin!” which rallied American forces all across n territory. At that point during the war, the prosmerican victory in the Michigan theater and Great d poor. efeat at the River Raisin battlefield spurred Amert harder against the British. appened there was a psychological turning point,” aid. “It served as a galvanic moment; it was the nt of the War of 1812.” es said that linking the battlefield with the state at significance for the area. oming together, this tie between history and envieclamation,” he said.

s of Festivities

s dedication celebration will span two days, June 25 ribbon-cutting ceremony, which will unveil a huge y local artisans, is at 3 p.m. June 25 at the corner

of East Elm and Detroit Avenues. It will be free and open to everyone. Corwin will be present as a special guest. That afternoon, there will be a living history encampment showing what life was like during the War of 1812. Reenactors from the LaCroix Company will give demonstrations of artillery firing, marching, drilling, medicine, and cooking from 3-5 p.m. This is also open to all at no cost. That evening at 7 p.m., Corwin will give a multimedia presentation at MCCC on the importance of protecting endangered species. He will also sign copies of his new book, “100 Heartbeats.” Tickets are $16 each or $30 for VIP seating. They can be purchased at www.monroeccc.edu/theater or by calling (734) 384-4272. The next day, June 26, will be full of activities that celebrate the trail, including a 5-mile Race for the Trail, kayaking trips, small group tours of the trail led by experts on its ecological significance, a 2-mile Tails on the Trail dog walk, family bike ride, ghost tours, and a photography exhibition. Several of these events cost $10 or more; for more information, visit http://www.rrtrail.com/calendar.html. O

Jeff Corwin, internationally known for hosting “The Jeff Corwin Experience” on Animal Planet, will come to Monroe on June 25 for the dedication of the River Raisin Heritage Trail and to give a multimedia presentation. Corwin said this area of the country has deep ecological significance, both to the rare species that live here and to species that pass through. “The ecosystems within your community –– the great stretches of prairie that you have out there and wetland habitat and agricultural habitat –– is a living link that sustains our great bird species that go from north to south and south to north in a crucial flyway,” he said. Bald eagles, which are visible from the River Raisin trail, famously escaped extinction. Their presence in this area — especially around the River Raisin trail — attracted Corwin to the project. “We almost lost this species of bird, but incredibly today, it shines as a wonderful example of how we can make a difference and we can change the course of history,” he said. “We can turn back the clock of time; this species was in a heartbeat of extinction and today there are 10,000 pairs of bald eagles throughout the lower 48.” Corwin said he hopes his lecture (tickets are $16; www.monroeccc.edu/theater) will inspire attendees to participate in efforts to protect endangered species. He said the gulf oil spill was a wakeup call to him. Some species which had barely escaped extinction may disappear because of it.

“All this work may literally have been washed down a greasy toilet,” he said. After his presentation, Corwin will sign copies of his newest book, “100 Heartbeats: The Race to Save Earth’s Most Endangered Species.” He said that the planet is experiencing an extinction crisis only matched by the disappearance of the dinosaurs 65 million years ago after an asteroid crashing into Earth. “But now the asteroid is really us,” he said. A species becomes extinct about every 20 minutes, according to Corwin, and humans are responsible for the unsustainable exploitation of natural resources and habitat destruction that has led to this. “Halfway through the century, you will likely see half the wildlife on earth is gone if we continue on this concourse,” he said. Corwin has hope for the survival of endangered species, though. He said several species that had been officially declared extinct have made comebacks, especially in the United States. “It’s not too late,” he said. “If it was too late, I’d be in the Caribbean having a margarita.” Instead, Corwin advocates better habitat preservation, more responsible use of natural resources and reduced reliance on fossil fuels. Individuals play an important role in protecting the environment, he said. “The most dangerous thing to conservation is the sense of powerlessness, the idea that you do not have power. You do. As an individual, you exercise that power, whether it’s becoming a conservation scientist or how you behave as a consumer or who you vote for,” he said. O

along the trail; Corwin with a wallaby PHOTOS COURTESY MONROE COUNTY COMMUNITY COLLEGE.

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14 ■ WEDNESDAY, JUNE 23, 2010 / WE KNOW WHAT YOU DID LAST SUMMER TOLEDOFREEPRESS.COM

THE PULSE

JUNE 23-30, 2010

What’s what, where and when in NW Ohio

Compiled by Whitney Meschke Events are subject to change.

MUSIC Bitter End Restaurant & Bar: If you like your entertainment with a lake view, this may be your spot. 900 Anchor Pointe Road, Curtice. (419) 836-7044 or www. bitterendbar.com. ✯ Ron Razzberry: June 25. ✯ Barile & May: 4 p.m. June 27, no cover. ✯ John Barile & the High Country Ramblers: July 2, no cover ✯ Midnight Special: 7 p.m. July 3, $5. ✯ Video DJ Trip: After the July 4 fireworks.

The Blarney Irish Pub: Catch local acts while taking in the pub’s modern Irish and American fare. 601 Monroe St. (419) 418-2339 or www. theblarneyirishpub.com. ✯ David Lester: June 24. ✯ The Bridges: June 25-26. ✯ Rick Whited: July 1. ✯ Chris Shutters Band: July 2. ✯ Hey Monea! July 3.

Bronze Boar: Be sure to see if this Warehouse District tavern’s namesake, overhead near the entrance, has been returned. 20 S. Huron St. (419) 2442627 or www.bronzeboar.com. ✯ Open mic night with Chris Knopp: Mondays. ✯ Ben Barefoot and friends: Tuesdays. ✯ Brandon Duke: Wednesdays through Aug. 4. ✯ Rivers Edge: June 24. ✯ Stonehouse: June 25. ✯ Gin Bunny: June 26. ✯ Joe Woods Band: July 1. ✯ Bush League: July 2. ✯ The Coosters: July 3.

Brooklyn’s Daily Grind: Coffee and music, what more can one want? If a snack is the answer, this is your spot. 723 Airport Hwy., Holland. (419) 724-1433 or www. brooklynscafe.com. ✯ Poetry open mic: 8-10 p.m. June 23. ✯ Decent Folk: 8-11 p.m. June 25. ✯ Blue Monday, Dan “Mudfoot” Hubbs, Jack Schlib: 6:30-9:30 p.m. June 28.

Caesars Windsor: If you have your passport, consider hopping the Detroit River for this casino’s entertainment offerings. Ticket prices, in Canadian dollars, are for the cheapest seats; attendees must be 19 or older. Caesars Windsor Colosseum, 377 Riverside Dr. East, Windsor, Ontario. (800) 991-7777 or www.caesarswindsor.com. ✯ Paul Anka: 9 p.m. June 26, $39. ✯ Russell Peters: 9 p.m. July 3, $49.

Here We Go 4311 Heatherdowns Blvd. (419) 382-1444 or www.thedistilleryonline.com. ✯ Tony & Lyle: June 23. ✯ NBC Band: June 24. ✯ City Limit Sundown: June 25-26. ✯ Nathan Cogan: June 29. ✯ Greg Aranda: June 30. ✯ Earregulars: July 3.

Doc Watson’s: Named in honor of the owners’ forefather, this bar and restaurant serves a variety of dishes and entertainment. 1515 S. Byrne Road. (419) 389-6003 or docwatsonstoledo.com. ✯ John & Bobby: 9:30 p.m. June 23. ✯ Name This Tune: 7 p.m. June 24. ✯ John Barile and Nick Caswell: 10 p.m. June 25.

Centennial Terrace: This venue next to a quarry hosts dance parties, swing bands and rockers. 5773 Centennial Road, Sylvania. (419) 882-1500, www.playsylvania.com or www.ticketmaster.com. ✯ Night Session Big Band: 7-10:30 p.m. June 23, $8. ✯ Summer Disco Party: 8 p.m.-midnight June 25, $25. ✯ The Johnny Knorr Orchestra: 7-10:30 p.m. June 30, $8.

Degage Jazz Cafe: Signature drinks, such as the Sly Fox, plus live local jazz performers. 301 River Road, Maumee. $5 Tuesdays-Thursdays. (419) 794-8205 or www. degagejazzcafe.com. ✯ Jason Quick: June 25-26.

The Distillery: Karaoke is offered Tuesdays, but paid entertainers rock out Wednesdays-Saturdays.

Fat Fish Blue: Serving blues and similar sounds, as well as bayou-style grub. Levis Commons, 6140 Levis Commons Blvd., Perrysburg. (419) 931-3474 or fatfishfunnybonetoledo.com. ✯ Fat Fish Blue: 9:30 p.m. June 25-26, $7.

Frankie’s: Toledo’s venue for rock. 308 Main St. Tickets vary between $5 and $15, unless noted. (419) 693-5300 or www.FrankiesInnerCity.com. ✯ Four Letter Lie, Lower Definition, I Am Abomination, Life on Repeat, Goodbye Blue Skies, Fight the Tide: 6 p.m. June 23. ✯ The Meat Puppets, Highbinder, Dirty Filthy Mugs: 8 p.m. June 24. ✯ Tortoise, Brett Nauckle: 9 p.m. June 25. ✯ The Comeback: 9 p.m. June 26. ✯ Just Surrender, TeamNate, Don’t Fear the Sun, New Collisions, No Privilieges, the Rooftops: 6 p.m. June 27.

NAOMI to host bowling fundraiser N.A.O.M.I. Transitional House will host a bowling tournament at Southwyck Lanes in Toledo on June 26. The fundraiser, called Bowling-For-AChange, will take place at 6 p.m. with checkin and registration beginning at 5 p.m. Bowlers should register with teams of four. New Attitude On My Image (N.A.O.M.I.) houses women who are recovering from alcohol and substance abuse, said Sandra Rivers-Gill, N.A.O.M.I. board member. The facility has been around for about 14 years and took the name N.A.O.M.I. in 2000, said Arron Woods, board president. Women usually stay at the house for about nine months. About nine women completed the N.A.O.M.I. program and found permanent housing last year, and N.A.O.M.I. has served about 76 women since its inception, Woods said. N.A.O.M.I. partners with area agencies to help the women, many of whom have lost custody of their children, he said. Through a UT partnership, N.A.O.M.I. women recently wrote and published a book of poetry, he said. The tournament costs $20 per person, but with $50 in sponsors, it’s free. Participants receive T-shirts and winners receive trophies. For more information, visit naomith.org or call (419) 343-1726. ✯ — Mary Petrides

www.TAS1.com


DO YOU KNOW YOU ARE MY SUNSHINE? TOLEDOFREEPRESS.COM / WEDNESDAY, JUNE 23, 2010 ■ 15 ✯ Gwen Stacy, Inhale Exhale, This or the Apocalypse, Burn the Ships, Trust Me I’m a Doctor, Days of Waiting: 6 p.m. June 29. ✯ Black Diamond Heavies, the Falling Spikes, Dooley Wilson: 9 p.m. July 1. ✯ It Prevails, Close Your Eyes, Heart of Gold, Seasons, the Farther I Fall: 5 p.m. July 2.

Ground Level Coffeehouse: Mix your beans with some music for an eclectic brew. Open mic on Monday nights. 2636 W. Central Ave. (419) 671-6272 or www. groundleveltoledo.com. ✯ The E Zone erotic poetry: 8 p.m. June 24, $3. ✯ Cottonwood Jam String Band fundraiser: June 26.

Saturdays. Holiday Inn French Quarter, 10630 Fremont Pike, Perrysburg. (419) 874-3111 or www.hifq.com. ✯ Soul Fissh: June 25-26. ✯ Jackpot: July 2-3.

FREE FOR ALL June 26, 2-7 p.m.

Rainbow Festival

This event celebrates the lesbian/gay/ bisexual/transgender community with vendors, live poetry and music, art and food. Maumee Valley Unitarian Universalist Congregation, 20189 N. Dixie Hwy., Bowling Green. (419) 353-8353 or www.mvuuc.org.

Manhattan’s: This “slice of the Big Apple” in the Glass City puts on a show for the weekends. 1516 Adams St. (419) 243-6675 or www. manhattanstoledo.com. ✯ John Jelinger Trio: 6 p.m. June 24. ✯ Jeff Stewart: June 25. ✯ Stonehouse: June 26. ✯ Toledo School for the Arts Jazz Ensemble: 6 p.m. June 29. ✯ Noteworthy: July 2.

Mickey Finn’s:

All ages, all genres are welcome. 4500 N. Detroit Ave. Ticket prices vary between $5 and $15, unless noted otherwise. (419) 269-4500 or www.headlinerstoledo.com. ✯ Chiodos, Fight the Tide, Hard Heart Away: 6 p.m. June 25. ✯ Saliva, Shamans Harvest, Lifeline, Cold Conspiracy: 7 p.m. June 27, $18-$22. ✯ DGAF, Mars, the DRP: 9 a.m. July 3.

A variety of genres to wash your drinks down with. Open mic nights, 8 p.m. Wednesdays, no cover; $5-$7 cover other nights. 602 Lagrange St. (419) 246-3466 or www.mickeyfinnspub.com. ✯ You Can Be a Wesley, Stately Mane: 9 p.m. June 23. ✯ Trigger Effect: 9 p.m. June 24. ✯ We Launch Rockets: 9 p.m. June 25. ✯ Hobo Stew: 9 p.m. June 26. ✯ Hypernova: 9 p.m. June 30.

J. Patrick’s Restaurant & Pub:

Murphy’s Place:

Live entertainment after 9:30 p.m. Fridays-

Jazz — straight, smooth, bebop or traditional —

Headliners:

Hurry to see Tortoise Very rarely do instrumental acts come through and play our fair city. Very rarely do instrumental acts make it out of the garage or home studio they inhabit. Regardless of the norm, Tortoise is a five-piece collective of individually impressive artists. The music Tortoise presents is expansive and vast. Far from onedimensional and the polar opposite of what is considered ‘normal’ or mainstream, Tortoise is more visceral than anything. What is perhaps all kinds are played here. 151 Water St. (419) 2417732 or www.murphysplacejazz.com. ✯ Clifford Murphy and Claude Black: 8 p.m. June 23. ✯ Ellie Martin: 9 p.m. June 25, $6. ✯ Glenda McFarlin and Toledo Public Schools talent: 9 p.m. June 26, $8.

Ottawa Tavern: Casual meals with weekend entertainment. 1815 Adams St. (419) 725-5483 or www.otavern.com. ✯ The Main Street Gospel, Vug, Arakas and the Stallions, WEe: June 25. ✯ Zimmerman Twins, Minglewood Labor Camp: June 26. ✯ True Widow: June 29.

most enticing about Tortoise is that instrumental music tends to invite interpretation. There are no vocals or lyrics to direct tone or influence what the listener may feel. Tortoise will play Frankie’s June 25. Doors for the Tortoise show open at 9 p.m. and tickets are $18 in advance, $20 at the door. Tickets are available from Culture Clash or Ramalama Records or any TicketMaster outlet. ✯ — Mighty Wyte ✯ A night of jazz with Gene Parker: 8 p.m. June 25-26.

The Village Idiot: 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. ✯ 5 Neat Guys: Wednesdays. ✯ Mark Mikel: Friday afternoons, Tuesday nights. ✯ The Bob Rex Band: Sunday afternoons. ✯ Frankie May & Barefoot Ben: Mondays. ✯ Wilburshaw: June 23-24. ✯ Bobby May Drybone Revival: June 25. ✯ Cloud Magic: June 26.

Wesley’s Bar & Grill: Pizza Papalis: Get slices with a topping of entertainment. 519 Monroe St. (419) 244-7722 or www. pizzapapalis.com. ✯ Ronn Daniels: 7 p.m. June 24.

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16 ■ WEDNESDAY, JUNE 23, 2010 / LIVE AND LEARN AT TOLEDOFREEPRESS.COM

Woodchucks:

Courtyard Concerts:

The place to go for an eclectic mix of people and music. 224 S. Erie St. (419) 241-3045. ✯ Karaoke with The Georgia Peach: Wednesdays. ✯ Retro Night with DJ Rage: Thursdays.

Rock while you eat rolls at this series of lunchtime concerts. 11:30 a.m.-1 p.m. Tuesdays, Latham Courtyard, downtown Findlay. (419) 422-4624 or www.artspartnership.com. ✯ Alan Seibert: June 29.

Lunch at Levis Square concert series: Downtown Toledo Improvement District conspires to set lunch to music. Noon-1:30 Thursdays through Aug. 26, Levis Square, North St. Clair Street and Madison Avenue. (419) 249-5494.

Maumee River jazz series: Live music near the lapping waters of the river. Wednesdays through June 30, Navy Bistro, 30 Main St. (419) 697-6289. ✯ Jesse Coleman: June 23. ✯ Herbie Russ: June 30.

Acoustic Rock: Mr. Seley will present a concert of kooky lyrics and lively music for summer reading club participants. www.toledolibrary.org. ✯ 1:30 p.m. June 23, McMaster Center, Toledo Lucas County Main Library, 325 N. Michigan St. (419) 259-5207. ✯ 4 p.m. June 23, Kent Branch Library, 3101 Collingwood Blvd. (419) 259-5283. ✯ 10:30 a.m. June 24, Reynolds Corners Branch Library, 4833 Dorr St. (419) 259-5303. ✯ 2 p.m. June 24, Point Place Branch Library, 2727 117th St. Registration: (419) 259-5390.

Brown Bag Summer Concert Series: Grab your ham (or veggie) sammiches and listen to some tunes while you digest. Vendors will be on hand for those who forget to pack! 12:15-1:15 p.m. Wednesdays, north lawn of Toledo Lucas County Main Library, 325 N. Michigan St. (419) 259-5207 or toledolibrary.org. ✯ Randy & the Reef Sharks: June 23. ✯ Elixer: June 30.

Verandah concert:

Music at the Market:

Sunset Serenades:

Weekly concerts will pierce the summer heat. 7 p.m. Thursdays, Commodore Park, Louisiana and Indiana. (419) 873-2787 or www. perrysburgarts.org. ✯ Suburban Legend: June 24.

Eddie Boggs. Music will waft over the lake as the sun sets. 7 p.m.-dusk June 23, Olander Park, 6930 Sylvania Ave., Sylvania. $3 parking for nondistrict residents. (419) 882-8313 or www.olanderpark.com.

Rally by the River:

All-Star Review Drum and Bugle Corps contest:

It’s back! A Toledo summer music institution will resume with a variety of acts laying tunes over the Maumee River. 5 p.m., Promenade Park, Water Street, Downtown, west bank of the river. $20-$25. (419) 283-7299, (419) 8243999 or rallybytheriver.com. ✯ Skid Row, Dokken, L.A. Guns and FIRE: June 25. ✯ Survivor, Pat Travers, Altered Ending, MAS FiNA: June 26.

Rally in the Alley: Adults can celebrate the end of the workweek with live music, food and drinks. 5-8 p.m., Latham Courtyard, Findlay. www. findlayhancockchamber.com. ✯ Tongue ’n’ Groove: June 25.

WED – 6/23

THU – 6/24

@ vs.Louisville Syracuse 11:45 6:30 p.m. a.m.

@ Louisville 7:05 p.m.

FRI – 6/25

Jammin’ Grammas. The porch of the Hayes home becomes a stage for this free series of seasonal performances, preceded by ice cream socials. Bring your own seats! 6:45-8 p.m. June 23, Rutherford B. Hayes Presidential Center, Spiegel Grove, Hayes and Buckland avenues, Fremont. (419) 3322081, (800) 998-7737 or www.rbhayes.org.

GLASSMEN Drum and Bugle Corps and other world-class professional corps from across the country will compete. 8-10:30 p.m. June 24, Doyt Perry Stadium, Campbell Hill and Wooster Street, BGSU. (419) 352-7339.

TMA concerts: American Harp Society Ensemble. Visual and audible arts combine for a new experience. 7 p.m. June 25, Great Gallery, 2445 Monroe St. (419) 255-8000 or toledomuseum.org.

‘Toy Story 3’ offers comedy, suspense In “Toy Story 3,” Andy’s toys are in danger of residing in his attic or being discarded. Fearing the latter, they sneak into a box headed for Sunnyside Daycare. Once there, they discover that it is ruled by the tyrannical Lots-o-Huggin’ Bear (Ned Beatty). Woody (Tom Hanks) escapes to a young girl’s home, but decides to help free his friends. “Toy Story 3” is a rollicking comedy and a suspenseful adventure. The new toys provide many sidesplitting moments. Ken (Michael Keaton) is obsessed with 1960s fashion, and has corny dialogue with Barbie (Jodi Benson). The Chatter Telephone (Teddy Newton) sounds like a gangster with inside information. Mr. Pricklepants (Timothy Dalton) is a theperrysburgarts.org.

✯ The Roman Griswold Blues Band: July 1.

Club Friday: Some of the city’s most talented performers entertain museum-goers during TMA’s It’s Friday events. 6:30-9:30 p.m., 2445 Monroe St. (419) 255-8000 or toledomuseum.org. ✯ Blind Bobby Smith & Princess Tiona: July 2, Peristyle Terrace.

FOURTH OF JULY

Music at the Market:

FOURTH OF JULY

Weekly concerts will pierce the summer heat. 7 p.m. Thursdays, Commodore Park, Louisiana and Indiana. (419) 873-2787 or www.

18th Annual Salute to America:

SAT – 6/26

SUN – 6/27

MON – 6/28

@ Indianapolis @ Indianapolis @ Indianapolis @ Indianapolis 7:15 p.m. 7:00 p.m. 2:00 p.m. 7:00 p.m.

Fireworks, both in the sky and from the De-

troit Symphony Orchestra, will celebrate independence. 6-10 p.m. July 1-4, Henry Ford Museum & Greenfield Village, 20900 Oakwood Blvd., Dearborn, Mich. $14-$27; $5 parking. (313) 982-6001, (800) 835-5237 or www.thehenryford.org.

Red, White & Kaboom Fireworks: A “venetian” boat parade, battle of the bands contest, Taste Toledo culinary festival and entertainment by Eagles tribute band Hotel California, Aerosmith tribute band Draw the Line, the Toledo Symphony and 338th Army Band are planned. July 2-4, Promenade Park, Water Street, downtown, west bank of the Maumee River. $3. www.redwhitekaboom.com.

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atrical porcupine. Their interactions with Andy’s toys are hysterical. Most of the camera angles put us next to the characters. This point of view allows us to share their emotions. As the toys decide whether to leave or stay at Andy’s house, we feel their uncertainty. As the toys are imprisoned by Lots-o-Huggin’ Bear, their anger and fear are palpable. When the toys’ future appears grim, we can grasp their desperation. The first two “Toy Story” films made us fall in love with Woody, Buzz Lightyear (Tim Allen), Jessie (Joan Cusack) and the rest of Andy’s toys. “Toy Story 3” sets these characters on a quest for survival and purpose. It is a pleasure to join them. ✯ — Chad Meredith

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FLY LIKE AN EAGLE AT TOLEDOFREEPRESS.COM / WEDNESDAY, JUNE 23, 2010 ■ 17

New CD releases at Ramalama Records ✯ Street Songs of Love Escovedo, Alejandro ✯ Emarosa Emarosa ✯ Attack of the Wolf King Haste the Day ✯ Perch Patchwork Maps & Atlases

✯ Porcupine Tree: Anesthetize Porcupine Tree

✯ Slaughtered Severe Torture

Comments & tweets from TFP readers on Twitter, Facebook & the website. Compiled by Mike Driehorst, Toledo Free Press Star Social Networking Manager

✯ Night Work

✯ Expo 86

Elliottmarkc Went to Fifi’s in #Toledo for anniversary dinner on Sat. was awesome — great food great service! #greatdiningexperience

Scissor Sisters

Wolf Parade

Jun 21st via web Mark Elliott, Toledo

✯ Rush: Beyond the Lighted Stage Rush

Maumee Community Picnic & Fireworks Show: Brats, hot dogs and ice cream; live music from Johnnie Rodriquez; kids’ games; and an explosive ending. 5 p.m. July 3, 100 block of East Wayne Street, Maumee. www. maumeeuptown.com.

✯ No Time to Bleed Suicide Silence

The MetroBarks Festival: Canines and their companions will strut their stuff in contests including best kisser, best dressed and looks most like owner; a “Mutt Show,” music, food and kids’ activities are planned, too. 8 a.m.-3 p.m. June 26, Secor Metropark, 10000 W. Central Ave., Berkey. (419) 407-9700 or metroparkstoledo.com.

Sylvania Star Spangled Celebration: The patriotic blast will highlight music, dancing and kids’ activities. 7 p.m.-midnight July 3, Centennial Terrace, 5773 Centennial Road, Sylvania. $3-$5; $5 parking. (419) 8821500 or www.playsylvania.com.

Crosby Festival of the Arts:

1813 Independence Celebration:

Portage River Festival:

Get a taste of freedom, 1813-style, with cannon firings, music, demonstrations, hands-on activities for children and an 18gun national salute. 9:30 a.m.-5 p.m. July 3 and noon-5 July 4, Fort Meigs, 29100 W. River Road, Perrysburg. $4-8. (419) 874-4121, (800) 283-8916 or www.fortmeigs.org.

Entertainment, flea and craft market, lawn mower pulling contest, kiddie tractor pull, talent and classic car shows are planned to celebrate the river the town was founded on. All day June 27, Rice Street, downtown Elmore. (419) 832-2968, (419) 862-3552 or www.elmorehs.tripod.com.

Old-Fashioned 4th of July:

BOWLING GREEN and surrounding area B

History will come to life, complete with Independence Day celebrations. 10 a.m.-5 p.m. July 3 and 5; noon-4 July 4, Sauder Village, 22611 Route 2, Archbold. $7.50-$14.50. (800) 590-9755 or www.saudervillage.org.

FAIRS & FESTIVALS

After 45 years, this festival has fine art down to a science. 10 a.m.-7 p.m. June 26 and 10 a.m.-4 p.m. June 27, Toledo Botanical Garden, 5403 Elmer Dr. $8. (419) 536-5566 or toledogarden.org.

BG & MORE

Cla-Zel Theater: This venue has been rocking BGSU students (and others) for years. 127 N. Main St., Bowling Green. (419) 353-5000 or www.clazel.net. ✯ Traveling by Sea, She Bears: 7 p.m. June 23, $5. ✯ John Németh: 8 p.m. June 25, $12-$15.

FAIRS & FESTIVALS

Napoleon/Henry County Ribfest:

Grumpy Dave’s Comedy Nights:

Baby back ribs will be prepared by civic organizations, with music from The Rusty Griswolds. 5:30-10:30 p.m. June 25, downtown Napoleon. www.visitnaphc.com.

This venue offers weekly humor-fests (maybe to make up for the crankiness). Above the Easy Street Cafe, 104 S. Main St., Bowling Green. $3$5. www.grumpydavespub.com. ✯ Mark Knope, Jen Shenberger: June 29.

St. Patrick of Heatherdowns Festival:

Howard’s Club H:

Music (Rodney Parker & Liberty Beach, 7 p.m. June 25; Extra Stout, 4 p.m. June 26; Velvet Jones, 7 p.m. June 26; and Duwayne Malinowski, 1 p.m. June 27), bingo and other games, rides, chicken dinners ($5-$8) and a white elephant sale are on the schedule. June 25-June 27, 4201 Heatherdowns Blvd. (419) 724-4770 or www.toledostpats.org.

Bowling Green comes alive at this venue for rock and more. 210 N. Main St., Bowling Green. (419) 352-3195 or www.howardsclubh.com. ✯ The Novel Ideas, Cats Molvia: 9 p.m. June 24. ✯ Atlas, Flaming Hot Marbles: 9 p.m. June 25.

Riverside Wine Festival: Ohio wineries will uncork their best offerings, plus visitors can try gourmet foods; art, wine and dining demonstrations, entertainment (Tim Oehlers, Jack Taylor Jazz Quartet and Blues 215), fine arts and crafts. Noon-8 June 26, Riverside Park, 219 McManess Ave., Findlay. $10-$20. (419) 422-4624 or www.artspartnership.com.

pgoodness At 5th 3rd stadium catching our first mudhens game! So nice here!!!! #Toledo

Rainbow Festival: This event celebrates the lesbian/gay/bisexual/ transgender community with vendors, live poetry and music, art and food. 2-7 p.m. June 26, Maumee Valley Unitarian Universalist Congregation, 20189 N. Dixie Hwy., Bowling Green. (419) 353-8353 or www.mvuuc.org.

Check out Bowling Green and surrounding area listings online at www.toledofreepress.com

brandoncarte American Legion’s Buckeye Boys State event since 1978. I am so glad that I went to @BGSU for the @AmericanLegion’s Buckeye Boys State. Now I’m going @Applebeeing with my mom and grandma. Jun 20th via mobile web Brandon Carte

Jun 19th via Twitter for iPhone Dawn

Facebook:

William Barry Roberts, Toledo, comment to Larry Kaczala story “He was an intelligent man. Anyone in the environmental sciences is still very grateful for his AREIS Online GIS project. Politically, he and many other moderates were sucked down by the Republican Party's shift to a hate-based and radical religious movement in the 1980's. Remember his name on every gasoline dispenser when you would fill up in those bitter cold Toledo mornings and nights? R.I.P.”

ToledoFreePress.com: Joepa, comment from Chris Schmidbauer's Big Ten/Nebraska story “Nebraska does absolutely bring in TV $$… ND is in for their Olympic sports) recruit I wouldn’t say second to none (Let’s not forget Rutgers, Pitt and Syracuse for example and ND will come crawling to Big 10, Touchdown the Irish) but they are up there nationally. Jesus and all. Now you have a super Speaking of not forgetting the Irish the next conference.” move is to raid the Big East (the conference UTAlum, comment in response to Michael S. Miller column “Live and learn” “Did it ever occur to you that a public funded institution would consider opening themselves up to a private business to promote a product would be unethical?

Oh, that’s right, you’re still learning ethics from UT, aren’t you? Keep up the learning. This little tirade indicates that you still have a lot to learn.”

Concerned, response to above comment “UT Alum, that’s funny because UT has absolutely no problem promoting the Toledo Blade to students and staff and the public through their OFFICIAL Facebook page.

Also, UT took the initiative on their own to automatically send it to students in their email every morning whether they want it or not. Curious.”


18 ■ WEDNESDAY, JUNE 23, 2010 / OUR CRUSH ON CRYSTAL GROWS AT TOLEDOFREEPRESS.COM

Right direction Beckman fueling hopes for Rocket football.

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Coaches never get a break. f you were to ask any college football coach Recruiting can be even tougher when you are what the toughest part of his job is, most the head coach at a school like UT. Competing would probably say that it iss recruiting. with two big nearby schools, Having been around und colco olw who also just happen to be lege football on a personal al w level for more than 10 ttwo of the most storied proyears, I can tell you that ggrams in college football, can make the task of recruiting recruiting can seem like ke that much harder. an endless odyssey at times. mes. It is easy to see why many Tapes for tomorrow’s coldon’t envy Rockets head lege football stars are always ways d coach Tim Beckman one bit, pouring in to football offi ffices co throughout the country. try. aat least as far as recruiting is Coaches are constantly in cconcerned. But the secondcontact with coveted talent alent yyear coach and his rebuilding program have continued during the season and when CHRIS SCHMIDBAUER to work hard during these the winter rolls around, colsummer months. lege coaches live out of a Beckman and his suitcase during the week and Rocket staff have been crissthen have students making king official visits on the weekends. ends. ccrossing Ohio these past few weeks hosting incoming high The process repeats itselff for w school seniors from across the better part of two months onths the Buckeye state at one-day until signing day. Then it is football camps. time to get started on the next year’s crop of talent. ■ UT CONTINUES ON 19

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COME SAIL AWAY AT TOLEDOFREEPRESS.COM / WEDNESDAY, JUNE 23, 2010 ■19 ■UT CONTINUED FROM A18 UT has already hosted camps in Cleveland, Youngstown, Columbus, Cincinnati and Detroit, as well as a few at the Glass Bowl. The camps on the road aren’t necessarily a novel idea. I’m sure many other coaches have employed similar tactics, but the camps speak to a deeper understanding that Beckman appears to have about college football. It’s no secret UT is in the business of winning and that is exactly what Beckman was brought in to do. But along the way it appears that the coach is trying to turn UT into a brand that stretches far beyond the boundaries of Northwest Ohio. I’m sure the Rocket staff would love to be able to recruit in and around Toledo for its team, but unfortunately that notion is not realistic. Sure, the Glass City always boasts a few talented warriors on the gridiron, but there is plenty of talent to be found elsewhere, too. The state of Ohio is always bursting at the seams with some of the best football talent in the country, and while the top 5 percent will more than likely head to a powerhouse football program, there is still 95 percent that will select a place to continue their playing careers. That is where the Rockets come in, and what is even more important is that Beckman recognizes that. Many of the students who attended the Rocket’s one-day camps probably did not know very much about the UT football program or the university in general. Some may not have even heard of UT prior to attending to the camps. What’s for certain is that they didn’t leave the camp without knowing about the school and its football team after.

The other bonus, of course, is that Beckman and his staff got a chance to see talented high school athletes who they had on their radar for the 2011 recruiting class and some that may not have been, too. It paints a bigger portrait of what college football is these days. Beckman and his staff understand that a football program isn’t just whether you win or lose on Saturdays in the fall and whether you win a championship or not. Sure those are the most important things, but in the cutthroat business of college football, it is all about what you are going to do for an encore as well. The successful programs have a visible presence statewide and nationwide to attract talent year in and year out, and the only way a program can do that is by being present in those areas. Beckman’s strategy paid dividends this year, when his first full recruiting class was ranked No. 1 out of all the MAC schools by several recruiting services. While a high ranking doesn’t ensure onthe-field success, it is a major step in the right direction. While fans expect better than the 5-7 record the Rockets posted last season, the midnight blue and gold will still have question marks heading into the 2010 season. But Beckman and his staff are doing all they can to make sure that no coaching staff in college football will outwork them. âœŻ Chris Schmidbauer is sports editor for Toledo Free Press and Toledo Free Press Star. Contact him at cschmidbauer@toledofreepress.com. He also can be heard every Tuesday at 11 a.m. on the Odd Couple Sports Show on Fox Sports Radio 1230 WCWA.

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Mixed media

River House showcases Sandra Jane Heard. By John Dorsey TOLEDO FREEE PRESS STAR STAFF WRITER jdorsey@toledofreepress.com

Sandra Jane Heard’s latest artistic offering has been a long time coming. The exhibit, on display at River House Arts in Perrysburg, is the artist’s first solo show in nearly 15 years. Heard is a member of the Young British Artist Movement, which includes artists born between 1960 and 1970. In addition to completing foundation training in art at Braintree College, Heard also studied the science of textiles at Huddersfield University in Yorkshire, before completing a BFA degree from the California College of Arts and eventually moving to the Perrysburg area in 2007. She has since exhibited her work at three fiber arts shows at the 577 Foundation, as well as the 2010 Ohio +5 show at the Dairy Barn in Athens, Ohio. Heard’s last solo show was in Sonoma, Calif. She has also shown at venues such as Penn State University and Mesa Arts. “This show came about out of a friendship with Bill Jordan and Paula Baldoni, who own River House. I first got to know them around the local community; our kids go to the same school. One of the reasons why I hadn’t done a solo show in so long is because we were moving every other year for like 10 years and there wasn’t that closeness,” Heard said. “I started helping curate for the gallery and they just thought that I should put together my own show. I would be happy to work in my basement, but Bill and Paula said, ‘Hey, this needs to be out there.’ I created around 20 pieces over a seven-month period. I just allowed the work to be fluid and tried to use the materials in different ways to convey my message using a repetition of movement. I don’t really make traditional art, but instead let my work follow the journey.” For Heard, who took a hiatus from exhibiting her work to raise her family, the River House exhibition highlights the journey of her life, not only as an artist, but also as a human being.

Standing in front of the sculpture outline are team members Greg Mueller, Sayaka Ganz, Steve Williams and intern Kevin Banek. PHOTO COURTESY BLUEWATER COMMUNICATIONS

Plastic art to grace Huntington Center

“Steel Matriarch” by Heard. PHOTO BY WILLIAM JORDAN

“My work exposes the inside to the outside; it’s about those things in all of us that you just can’t touch. This exhibit includes vessels inspired by Native American dream catchers I saw while living in Phoenix,” she said. The exhibit runs though July 30 and is free and open to the public. River House Arts is located at 115 W. Front St. For more information, visit www.riverhouse-arts.com. ✯

CTS

SPORT SEDAN

26 MPG

This August, a new piece of art will grace the Huntington Center, and it will be made of trash. The work, a bird’s-eye-view sculpture of the Maumee River, will be made from hundreds of post-consumer blue, green and purple plastic items. A trio of BGSU alumni, called the GMW Public Art Team, is working on the project. The artists, Sayaka Ganz, Greg Mueller and Steve Williams, are building the sculpture piece-bypiece in the Imagination Station, according to Sara Stacy, the group’s public relations counsel. Mueller said the group wants people from the area to bring plastic items, including old toys, kitchen utensils, tools, baseball helmets and broken chunks of plastic, to a collection bin at the Imagination Station for them to use to make the sculpture. “Anytime they go to the arena, they’ll see their piece as part of the whole,” he said. Right now, the group is working on building a mesh frame on which to affix the

% 0APR

plastic. Once the frame is finished, around July 1, people will be able to attach the pieces of plastic that they bring, participating in the project. “The idea is to have a green project that depicts this amazing piece of nature that we have available to us in the Toledo area,” Stacy said. Ganz said the sculpture will be about 55 feet long. It will have LED lights behind it that will create a stained glass-effect on some parts of the sculpture. The project is coordinated by the Arts Commission of Greater Toledo. Funding is from the Lucas County Commissioners and private donors, according to Mueller. People can drop off plastics at the Imagination Station on Tuesday to Saturday from 10 a.m. to 5 p.m. and Sunday from noon to 5 p.m. The artists will be working on the sculpture Thursdays to Saturdays at 10 a.m. to 5 p.m. through July 31. ✯ — Betsy Woodruff

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22 ■ WEDNESDAY, JUNE 23, 2010 / BARS! TOLEDOFREEPRESS.COM

Outside the box C A publication of Toledo Free Press, LLC, Vol. 1, No. 16. Established 2010. Thomas F. Pounds, President/Publisher tpounds@toledofreepress.com Michael S. Miller, Editor in Chief mmiller@toledofreepress.com EDITORIAL

Mary Ann Stearns, Design Editor mastearns@toledofreepress.com James A. Molnar, Lead Designer jmolnar@toledofreepress.com Brandi Barhite, Associate Editor bbarhite@toledofreepress.com Kristen Rapin, Special Sections Editor krapin@toledofreepress.com Chris Schmidbauer, Sports Editor cschmidbauer@toledofreepress.com Andrew Farr, Bowling Green Editor afarr@toledofreepress.com Mike Driehorst, Social Networking Manager mdriehorst@toledofreepress.com ADMINISTRATION

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HIKARA Pro Wrestling, an independent promotion out of Pennsylvania, will run a card in Taylor, Mich., on June 26 at the Taylortown Trade Center. It is the company’s first show in the state. The event’s name? “We Must Eat Michigan’s Brain.” An unusual title, to bee sure sure, e, but CHIKARA — which c ch will also run June 27 in Cleveland — is an unusual wrestling company. “It is not unlike a comic m mic book come to life,” said founder, owner and performer mer Mike Quackenbush during n a ng recent interview. “There’ss a great blend of not just intert ternational wrestling styles, but of storytelling genres and elements from outside the prop JEFF wrestling box. If the WWE E is Top 40 radio, CHIKARA A is that little college radio station t tion at the end of the dial that plays p all the wacky songs.” Indeed, for a fan, CHIKAI IKARA’s unique show provides des a much-needed respite from m the doldrums of mainstream m wrestling. With colorful and memorable characters, a light-hearted tone and an in-ring style that features some truly outstanding performers, there really is nothing like a CHIKARA event. The company began in 2002 as an extension of a wrestling school founded by Quackenbush and fellow indie talent Reckless Youth. “It was a very natural progression. There had to be an outlet for (students) once they were ready to perform,” Quackenbush said. Many of the wrestlers who graduated in that first class remain with the company today. Founded at a time when professional wrestling was striving to be as raunchy and “adult” as possible, CHIKARA’s policy from day one was to present a product for the whole family. “I became a wrestling fan as a kid and I think had the content of the shows then been as risqué or edgy as wrestling shows are now, my parents would have never let me watch it. I would never want someone to be excluded because our content was inappropriate,” Quackenbush said. “It was always our goal to attract younger fans first. Everything else is just gravy.” Perhaps, but there’s plenty of gravy to be had.

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CHIKARA’s wacky humor and quality performers have drawn a variety of loyal fans, from young children to hardcore wrestling fanatics. Its cult followers have been dubbed the CHIKARMY. “It’s rewarding to know that people appreciate all the hard work and creative energy invested in something like CHIKARA. som so That sort of thing motivates us u to stay on top of our game, gga ” Quackenbush said. It’s a tough road for independent wrestling, especially pe for fo a product as off-thebeaten-track as CHIKARA. be b Quackenbush said the biggest Qu Q obstacle is a lack of exposure. ob o “Even in the age of the Internet, where you can reach IInt people around the globe p with w your product, the reality is, there’s so much to a watch, it’s easy to get lost. w “The WWE has done a fantastic job of programming ffan their tth fans to think that they are a the premiere brand in the t business. The fact is, they are a just the wealthiest brand. Nothing more, nothing less. No N But Bu their fans are reluctant to B try t other things, because their rhetoric has proven so effective.”

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CHIKARA events bring something different to pro wrestling. Expanding into new areas like Michigan is a definite challenge. “Anytime we come to a new market, it is a gamble. We’re a small company at the end of the day, and mounting tours of New England or the Midwest is risky. We survive on ticket and DVD sales, so we have to hope our fans come out and support us.” The Michigan event will have special appeal for wrestling fans, as it was just announced that Bryan Danielson, widely considered one of the best wrestlers in the world, will be appearing at the show. Danielson was controversially fired from WWE a week ago, ironically for an apparent violation of their ridiculously stringent policies on what makes their product “family friendly.” His match for CHIKARA will be Danielson’s first in a year for an independent company. This means the attention of the wrestling world will be with CHIKARA on June 26, and maybe the product presented will convince those fans to continue supporting this offbeat and incredibly entertaining company. “It’s hard to break through with them,” Quackenbush said of mainstream wrestling fans. “They’ve been trained to react to TV stars, not good wrestling. So putting on the best wrestling available isn’t sufficient hook to reel those fans in. We just have to do things the best way we know how, and not think ‘who will like what we’re doing?’ but realize “the right people will like what we’re doing.” ✯ E-mail Jeff at PopGoesJeff@gmail.com.

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