Toledo Free Press – January 6, 2013

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JANUARY 6, 2013


Opinion

JANUARY 6, 2013

I

have a close friend who is incredibly difficult to shop for. He isn’t overly inclined to seek material things, lives in relative comfort and can provide for his needs and luxuries as the year rolls along. I see him as a great challenge, and there is a lot of fun in seeking a gift that will surprise him and show some initiative. In an era of gift card efficiency, I enjoy hunting and gathering. This year, as I began searching for a special gift, I stumbled across a news release that proclaimed, “‘Golden Girl’ Rue McClanahan’s personal property and show business memorabilia available to fans on www.estateofrue.com website.” My friend, in addition to being an intelligent, professional and seriousminded man, is a huge fan of the ’80s show “The Golden Girls.” It’s a quirk, but he has every season on DVD and has watched them repeatedly. I visited the website, and browsed through such sale items as McClanahan’s Emmy, her signed scripts and other neat items, all of which would have soaked up several years’ worth of my holiday budget. But my search was rewarded when I found three Christmas ornaments handmade by McClanahan, complete with not only certificates of authenticity but photos of her with each ornament. I will probably give them to my friend, tell him I got them at an estate sale and watch him pretend to love them until I give him the full story of each item. This seems like a unique, trendsetting idea in the world of pop culture, so I contacted Michael J. La Rue to ask him a few questions about the site. “Rue loved to shop and to collect, and she did both her entire life,” La Rue said. “She had so many closets and storage spaces, I don’t think anyone knew how vast her collections had become. When I found her prom dress from 1949 though, I knew we were in for a big adventure. Despite holding

Golden Girl gold successful auctions in New York City launch party for “NYC Pet Project” and Beverly Hills, we haven’t even put at Planet Hollywood in Times Square when it was released a year later. Then, a dent in Rue’s treasure trove.” La Rue said that “among the jew- years after that, I ended up writing and elry, clothing, artwork and household producing a musical adaptation of her memoir “My First Five items on the site, there Husbands ... And The are many one-of-aOnes Who Got Away.” kind pieces that come TFP: Having “Rue” directly from McClanain your name didn’t han’s professional life,” hurt. a six-decade career that La Rue: Rue asked included roles in nine me to marry her three series, more than 50 times over the years, movies and 100 televibut on questioning was sion shows and more forced to admit that than 200 theatrical productions before her Michael S. miller part of the reason was she just wanted to be Rue La Rue! death in 2010. TFP: So selling her estate was in Toledo Free Press: Please talk about the initial project that brought her will? La Rue: Rue had 23 beneficiaries you and Ms. McClanahan together. Michael J. La Rue: I love when in her will — with 11 of those being people ask how Rue and I first met animal charities. She made it clear because it is such a glamorous answer: to both me and her son Mark Bish We met at Studio 54! However, this that — after he removed any items of was years after the debauchery it is sentimental value or things that he known for, after it had been converted wanted to keep from the estate — she to an events space, and we were both wanted all of her personal property there attending a fundraiser for an and show business memorabilia to animal shelter — not quite as exciting be made available to her fans. Rue as what one can image, but still, we did often said, “I get to live this glammeet there. I had just begun work on orous lifestyle because of the love a charitable coffee table book — “NYC and loyalty of my fans — that and the Pet Project” — and the powers-that-be residual checks, of course.” So, last at Barnes & Noble advised me to get year, Mark and I had auctions in New York City and Beverly Hills, but they some celebrities involved. When I saw Rue, I introduced my- didn’t even put a dent in the invenself and asked if she had a pet. She told tory. Rue loved to shop and she was me she did, so after explaining what I a lifetime collector of many things. was doing — creating a book with por- Rue had actually suggested a website traits of people and their pets, with love before she passed, and so when the letters from them to their animals, with fans started asking for a way to ac100 percent of the proceeds going to quire a piece of memorabilia directly, animal shelters that had “no kill” poli- we created estateofrue.com. TFP: Where are the proceeds from cies — I asked if I could come over and shoot a picture of her with her cat, Miss the sales going? La Rue: Rue made provisions for Bianca. She and I really seemed to hit it off during the shoot — it felt like when her son, her sixth husband, nine of her you’re hanging out with an old friend relatives and 11 animal charities in her you’ve known since you were kids — will. Rue specifically left her personal items and show business memorabilia but come on, she was Blanche! She ended up hosting the book to her son Mark, that way he could Thomas F. Pounds, President/Publisher tpounds@toledofreepress.com

A publication of Toledo Free Press, LLC, Vol. 9, No. 1. Established 2005. EDITORIAL Mary Ann Stearns, Design Editor mastearns@toledofreepress.com James A. Molnar, Lead Designer jmolnar@toledofreepress.com Sarah Ottney, Managing Editor sottney@toledofreepress.com Brigitta Burks, News Editor bburks@toledofreepress.com Jeff McGinnis, Pop Culture Editor PopGoesJeff@gmail.com

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LIGHTING THE FUSE

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Michael J. La Rue with Rue McClanahan.

see to it her wishes for everything to be made available to her fans were followed through with. TFP: What is the oddest item up for bid? La Rue: There are so many unique items on the site, I think the 1957 birthday card to Rue from her Grandma Fannie with a 1935 $1 silver certificate inside is cool; it is amazing that Rue hung onto it for over 50 years, and particularly amazing considering she was a broke actress for decades and she never spent that buck! Also, Rue loved to craft; she’d heat up the

glue gun and go to town on projects — she called it “flousing things up.” We put a vintage toaster she’d “floused up” on the site and it is definitely odd. TFP: Talk about the rare opportunity for fans to own some of these items, such as an Emmy. La Rue: Rue was the only one of “The Golden Girls” to have a provision built into her contract allowing her to keep her character’s wardrobe. As a result, we have over 200 “Blanche” pieces that are going to be posted on the site. n GOLDEN CONTINUES ON A4

Michael S. Miller, Editor in Chief mmiller@toledofreepress.com

STAFF WRITERS news@toledofreepress.com Brandi Barhite • Mike Bauman • Jeremy Baumhower • Jim Beard John Dorsey • Vicki L. Kroll • Don Lee John P. McCartney • Duane Ramsey Chris Kozak, Staff Writer Emeritus • Lisa Renee Ward, Staff Writer Emeritus COPY EDITORS/PROOFREADERS Darcy Irons, Marisha Pietrowski, Gary Varney

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 2013, all rights reserved. Publication of advertisements does not imply endorsement of advertisers’ goods or services.


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the hot corner

Opinion

JANUARY 6, 2013

don lee

The gun control debate

T

he year has come to a close, someplace safer. If you think you need them to and random thoughts occur to me about a year filled with keep the government from taking highs and lows. The high point, for them away, you are delusional. If me at least, was the return to sanity the government should ever decide in the elections after wandering for to come for your guns, it’s going to two years in the Tea Party wilder- get them, rest assured, even if it has ness. A low point was the gerry- to “pry them from your cold, dead mandering that took place after the hands” as the saying goes. No matter how many guns 2010 census that kept too many of the obstructionist remnants in of- and how much ammo you have, fice, both on the state and federal others have more and better ones, so don’t fool yourlevel. Oh well, maybe self. Many of the 2014 will help things. crimes involving The gun debate guns were comreared its ugly head mitted by persons following a number who had no busiof mass shootings. ness owning guns The Newton, Conn., in the first place. murder of 20 small The Aurora, children and six Colo., gunman teachers and school had a number of employees has hit weapons he legally a note that appears Don BURNARD bought along with to have affected the American public more than usual 6,000 rounds he bought online. after such an event. The National That should not be possible with Rifle Association and the gun lob- effective background checks, and byists have struggled to keep their no one should be able to buy large hold on the politicians as public amounts of ammunition online opinion calls for more reasonable like that. No one is talking about taking everyone’s guns. Anyone gun laws. Let me say at the outset that who believes that that is what the I am a gun owner and grew up discussion is about is delusional. The standard NRA talking with guns. At one time, I was even a member of the NRA, be- points like “Guns don’t kill fore Wayne LaPierre and his ilk people; people kill people” miss turned it from an educational the point. Any idiot knows it’s not entity that taught gun and hunter the gun’s fault. What the discussion is, and safety into a right-wing political movement that subscribes to the should be about, as one post on belief that the more guns one has, Facebook said, is about manthe safer we all are, and that any datory safety courses for gun type of gun should be easily avail- owners, more stringent backable without any registration or ground checks for gun buyers, both from retailers and gun background checks. I own and have owned a shows, and stronger negligence number of guns in my lifetime, penalties. It’s about the people both for hunting and sport as well who have guns, not the guns. Better mental health care also as for personal protection. I believe these are legitimate uses for fire- plays a significant role in the disarms. I don’t, however, believe that cussion too, but that’s another the general public has any need or column in itself. For now, how use for assault weapons or high- about some sane, responsible gun laws? Polls show the public overvolume ammo clips. No gun I have ever owned was whelmingly supports it. Arming teachers, theater capable of loading more than 10 bullets into it, and most were or ushers, etc., or posting armed are in the three to five range. If you guards everywhere is no answer. are a hunter, that is more than suf- That is the definition of a police ficient. If you need 30-100 or more state, isn’t it? We need a rational bullets and an assault rifle to hunt, discussion now, before any more then you have no business hunting. innocent lives are lost because If you need those size clips we’re too afraid to have a meanfor protection, you should move ingful discussion. O

n GOLDEN CONTINUED FROM A3 Also, many other one-of-a-kind items like: Rue’s 18carat gold Cartier bracelet, one of which was given to each of “the girls” after the final episode was filmed by the producers of “The Golden Girls”; the actual prop calendar “The Men of Blanche’s Boudoir” from the iconic “’Twas the Nightmare Before Christmas” episode; Rue’s original “Golden Girls” contract; and we even have her Emmy on the site. Truth be told, we’d never sell the Emmy, so we listed it for $1 million (and if some billionaire did buy it, we’d do a PayPal refund). We posted it because we knew Rue’s fans would want to see it. TFP: How has fan feedback been? Any criticism? La Rue: We also administer “The Official Rue McClanahan Memorial Facebook Page” and the fan feedback to estateofrue.com has been 100 percent positive. Many fans were concerned that they wouldn’t be able to afford anything, so we are doing our best to keep a wide range of price points posted. Remember, all of Rue’s personal property is going to show up on the site too, so even if a fan can’t afford a rare piece like “The Men of Blanche’s Boudoir” calendar, they could hopefully get Rue’s bathrobe or some throw pillows from her living room couch. People have raised eyebrows over the intimacy of certain items — like her prescription bottles or childhood photos — but we just remind them that this was Rue’s wish. She didn’t want her things to end up moldering in a box in someone’s basement, or worse, in a Dumpster, which is the normal fate of the vast majority of anyone’s things after they pass. Personally, I love the idea that these things of Rue’s that we’re shipping off — and we’ve already sent items to 10 different countries and many more states — these items are likely going to be prized possessions of the purchasers, and therefore Rue’s things will be preserved, loved and taken care of for many years to come. TFP: How long will items be available? La Rue: Since Rue loved to shop and collect, and she

Since her things are going to fans all over the world, we have no doubt they are going to be safely preserved for generations to come.” — Michael J. La Rue

saved everything, this is a big job. Rue’s son Mark has stated, “My mother gave me a secure and beautiful life, and I intend to see her final wishes carried out no matter how long it takes.” Looking at the rate of sales and then to the pile of sequined and marabou-feathered treasures, I believe it is going to take us at least another two years to get all of Rue’s things distributed to her fans. TFP: Was anything given to museums or Smithsoniantype places? La Rue: There is a gentleman who is curating a collection of television memorabilia with the intention of creating a museum, and he has been acquiring pieces for years and safely storing them so they aren’t lost forever. The producers of “The Golden Girls” gave him a few of Blanche’s famous outfits directly — one was the red sequined number from the scene when Blanche sang “I Wanna be Loved by You” on top of the piano at the “Rusty Anchor” — and he was the highest bidder on a few other outfits at Rue’s Beverly Hills auction. But, again, since her things are going to fans all over the world, we have no doubt they are going to be safely preserved for generations to come. O Michael S. Miller is editor in chief of Toledo Free Press and Toledo Free Press Star. Email him at mmiller@toledofree press.com.


Opinion

JANUARY 6, 2013

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community

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JANUARY 6, 2013

WELLNESS

By Brandi Barhite

Toledo Free Press Community Ombudsman bbarhite@toledofreepress.com

Ken Dumminger described being on the National Transplant Waiting List as “absolute sheer panic.” His daughter asked if he was going to die. He fought the misconception that his renal failure was linked to alcoholism. He worried about how he was going to pay for the liver transplant — if he was lucky enough to get one. And then the phone rang. It was local radio personality Harvey Steele. “I got a call one day from Harvey and he said, ‘A little birdie told me you are on the transplant list,’” Dumminger said. “I personally think he got my name from the transplant center in the Cleveland Clinic,” Dumminger said. “He will deny it or won’t say anything about it, but that is how he works. Harvey is a little bit of an evasive individual; he doesn’t tell you everything he knows.” But Dumminger didn’t care. The Fremont resident welcomed the conversation with Steele, who has thrived since his 1997 liver transplant. “I had no idea what they were going to do and what was going to happen and that is when Harvey stepped up to the plate and said, ‘Ken, don’t worry about this. I have been through this. While it is a little bit terrifying, you will make it.’ He gave me the total concept that everything will be OK.” And everything was OK. Dumminger had his transplant in January 2002, which his insurance helped cover (not everyone is as lucky), and Steele never lost touch. “It wasn’t like he just contacted me once; he contacted me on a regular basis,” said Dumminger, now 65. “Basically, he set it up so he was my mentor.” Even as Steele celebrates the 15th anniversary of his transplant, he continues to mentor those who are on the National Transplant Waiting List. He promotes organ donation — the gift of life — just as passionately. “I still talk to people who are in my situation,” Steele said. “I say, ‘The surgery is the least of your issues. You have to deal with the fact that in order for you to live, someone else has to die.’ Not only that, but the family has to donate their organs; they have to be nice enough to do that.” Steele remembers his mental state at the Cleveland Clinic.

TOLEDO FREE PRESS photo and cover photo by joseph herr

Local radio personality celebrates 15 years with new liver

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HARVEY STEELE, WHO IS CELEBRATING HIS 15TH ANNIVERSARY OF A LIVER TRANSPLANT, NOW PROMOTES ORGAN DONATION.

“You are in a place you thought you would never be. I would go to the end of the hall and there would be guys looking out the window, looking for helicopters to come to the Cleveland Clinic — maybe they had something for them. “They would watch the news to see if there were automobile accidents,” Steele said. “It wasn’t that you wanted something bad to happen to someone else; you just had no control.” It was 1985, and Steele was just 28 years old. His second daughter, Allison, had just been born. Like many new fathers, he wasn’t sleeping much. “I had that permanent headache because I felt the need to be up half the time even though I couldn’t breastfeed. It was sort of that dull headache; I was popping a couple of aspirin every four hours and it gave me a bleeding ulcer.” The bleeding ulcer took him to the hospital where he received eight units of blood — at least one contained what later became known as Hepatitis C. It was just six months before screening began for the virus. The next time he donated blood, he got a letter. He made an appointment with his doctor.

“I was told, ‘You will have elevated liver enzymes, but that is about it,” Steele said. In August 1997, his belly began to fill with abdominal fluid as his energy diminished. After going to his primary doctor and being misdiagnosed, it became clear his 40-year-old liver was in trouble. “I was operating under the assumption that I didn’t have anything to worry about with the liver, but when I noticed my yellow tinge, I knew that would be jaundice and it is directly related to the liver one way or the other.” Steele was diagnosed with endstate liver disease. After three days of tests, it was determined he was sick enough to need a transplant, but healthy enough to survive the surgery. At that time, there were 60,000 people on the National Transplant Waiting List — waiting for organs like livers, hearts, lungs and kidneys. That number has grown to more than 116,000 today. “It was good news, and bad news,” Steele said. “The good news: I made it on the National Transplant Waiting List; the bad news: I am on the National Transplant Waiting List.” Steele continued to work his half

of “Shores & Steele” (then an afternoon show on K100) as he waited the estimated 18 months before a liver would be available. “I [would] come in during the morning, take a nap and then come back and work those three hours and then pretty much collapse,” Steele said. “I am thinking, ‘How am I supposed to do this for a year and half?’” Meanwhile, he kept getting blood tests until his beeper went off in early September. It was the transplant office at the Cleveland Clinic. The blood test results indicated he had become too sick to wait at home. He had to wait at the clinic, even though the doctors had nothing for him. He had to decide what to tell his listeners. “We have always been in the community and always doing things,” Steele said. “It became rather obvious when Gary is on and I haven’t been on.” Gary Shores remembers the time well. He saw Steele’s plight as a chance to rally listeners behind his radio partner, while simultaneously informing people about the desperate need for more donors. “I have an intercom at my dis-

posal and I need to play more than hits,” Shores said. “We had Harvey on the radio and he revealed that he was going to have a liver transplant.” The listeners reacted. Life Connection, a nonprofit designated by the federal government as the Organ Procurement Organization for Northwest and West Central Ohio, received dozens of calls a day asking about Steele and how to become a donor. “Say a Prayer for Harvey” signs were hung throughout town. People sent thousands of cards, all of which Steele read and still has to this day. “The people in this community are simply amazing,” Shores said. No one entertained the idea that his co-host might not make it. “Everyone kept a positive thought,” Shores said. “We didn’t allow that thought. It would have been unacceptable.” These days Steele jokes about how close he came to death. “All the TV stations covered it,” Steele said. “I looked like hell. The people in Cleveland would say, ‘Are you sure you want to do this?’ All the TV stations were competing for the last footage of me.” n LIVE CONTINUES ON A7


community

Steele continued to give interviews as he lived at the clinic. Halloween came and went. He actually started to resemble a pumpkin, he said. “All they could do was manage my symptoms; there was no way to improve symptoms. When your liver doesn’t work, everything goes wrong. I had good days and bad days, which was more like good hours and bad hours.” The hallucinations set in. His wife, Mary Beth, and two girls would visit on the weekends. He would have conversations with them, but wouldn’t remember any of it. Then on Nov. 2, 1997, he was awakened by some nurses. They had a match. Hours later, he learned the new liver was in him, but it wasn’t functioning like it should. It wasn’t a rejection; it just wasn’t starting up like the doctors had hoped. All hazy, he heard the surgeon say, ‘We are going to look for another liver.” Steele thought the drugs were talking. “I don’t ever have to play the lottery because I have won it twice,” he said. “Later that day, they found another liver. The odds of which are astronomical.” He received his second — and current — liver Nov. 5. Today, Steele’s daughter, Kara, has made it her life’s work to recruit donors. Kara was just a teenager when Life Connection was receiving hundreds of calls about her father, she said. She is now director of community relations for Life Connection of Ohio. “From a young age, going through that experience, I realized that in some way I wanted to find a way to give back for the gift that my dad received,” she said. But there was a time when she didn’t know if she would get to see her dad live, let alone work with him on this cause.

“I blocked out a lot of that time. I don’t remember it. What I do remember is being really, really scared. I thought, ‘Is my dad going to live at the Cleveland Clinic or is my dad not going to live?’” Thankfully, he lived because of the generosity of an organ donor, she said. Misconceptions about organ donation are common. Some people are afraid if their license indicates they are a donor, the hospital staff won’t work as hard to save them. Not true. “That is why Life Connections exists separately,” Kara said. “Hospital staff is there to save lives. If that is not a possibility and that person passes then organ donation is an option.” People also worry about open-casket funerals. They shouldn’t. If an open casket is possible before organ donation, it is possible afterward. Additionally, organ donors can change their minds after registering through the Department of Motor Vehicles or www.DonateLifeOhio. org, Kara said. Potential donors could even just express their donation wishes to their families. Her dad said donor families are heroes. He has exchanged letters with his donor family and learned his liver came from a 60-year-old high school electronics teacher who died of a brain aneurysm. He left behind a wife and three grown sons. This is humbling when Steele thinks of the 15th anniversary of his liver transplant. “There is no cake or celebration. You feel very lucky to be alive. Any anniversary is also when someone out there lost a loved one,” Steele said. “It would be entirely inappropriate to shoot off a firework and go ‘woo hoo.’ I wouldn’t be here if it weren’t for those people who, in the worst possible time in their life, thought of someone else.” O

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resolutions

Toledo exercise venues offer variety By Brigitta Burks

Toledo Free Press News Editor bburks@toledofreepress.com

Paulette’s Studio of Dance looks more like a stylish salon than a standard workout venue. Moreover, poles run from the ceiling to the floor and strips of silk flutter down from the beams. At her studio, 4853 Monroe St., Paulette offers pole dance fitness and aerial fitness, a yoga-based workout in which students use silks to suspend themselves in the air (all while in graceful positions). Paulette’s studio is one of several Toledo workout venues offering unique exercise options in the season of New Year’s resolutions.

Paulette’s

Rita Yunker of Whitehouse started pole fitness at Paulette’s about a year and a half ago when she was looking for a unique dance class. “I needed something for me because I’m a mom and a wife. I needed something to do for myself and hopefully get my happy hormones going,” Yunker said with a laugh. “It perks me up if I’m having a bad day. … I’m much more confident now than I was. The social aspect in wonderful. All the [fellow students] are really friendly,” she added. That social aspect is important to many of her students, said Paulette, who has offered pole fitness since 2006. “They like the camaraderie of the class. … The support is what they’re telling me they love. It’s a workout in disguise. So you’re having fun; you’re dancing; you’re doing cardio/strength training, but it’s not the monotony and the repetition,” she said.

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Increased confidence is another benefit, Paulette added. “That comes as a surprise to people. They come here to get fit and the benefit is they find themselves walking taller, feeling more confident as they go about their day,” she said. “Everything gets a little sparkle to it.” The family-friendly studio also offers ballroom dancing, belly dancing, hip-hop/lyrical dance for kids and yoga, among other classes. Paulette, who was a dancer in Las Vegas, started teaching ballroom dancing and “that led to pole fitness, which led to the aerial fitness.” “Pole fitness became big quite a few years ago and out of my own interest for it, I was intrigued,” she said.

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“I tried it for myself and I fell in love with it, like all the students do,” Paulette added. “I learned of aerial fitness and I love trying new things so I saw it and heard of all those benefits and thought it would be a nice addition and nice complement to the pole fitness classes.” The dancer said she does see a spike in class attendance around the New Year. Paulette said that many of the resolution-season students do stick with it. She advised, “Nothing comes overnight. You have to work hard and I think that’s why having a group around you, working out with you, keeps you coming back.” n EXERCISE CONTINUES ON A8

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Studio Fitness

Studio Fitness, aka Pole-Licious Fitness, 1413 Bernath Parkway, offers pole fitness in addition to Zumba, chair dancing and belly dancing. There is also a pole fitness class designed for fuller-figured women. Karen Everage, co-owner of Studio Fitness, said she gravitated toward pole fitness because she was bored with the standard gym workout. “[I] just decided this was a fitness I could stick with because it was a little sassy, but it also built core strength and upper-body strength so it gave me what I was looking for at the time and it didn’t feel like I was working out. It was more like I was having a good time,” she said. She emphasized that the pole classes are a fitness regimen above all. “[Pole dancing] does have a negative stigma to it, but I try not to use sexy; I use sassy. And I always say this is a pole fitness class … the dance part is a plus. The emphasis is on fitness,” Everage said, adding some of her students are older than 60. Studio Fitness does get an influx of new students come January, Everage said. “The people who come in January, they may last to February and then they fall off. And then you might see

Being in shape is a mindset.” — Karen Everage

them again next year,” she said with a laugh. “I think they’re a little less dedicated, although they all have good intentions.” Everage said that making a resolution to work out is something that needs to be thought out. “Being in shape is a mindset. You can’t wake up one morning and say, ‘I’m going to start a fitness program.’ You have to train your mind to accept that for some time and get it in your head, that this is something that is going to stick,” she said. “Just like the time you put into purchasing a home or changing jobs, you have to put that energy into, ‘I’m gonna get fit; I’m gonna get healthy.’”

CrossFit LifeSport

Todd Ovall, owner of CrossFit LifeSport, 1121 Water St., said he is wary of taking on new clients during the beginning of the year. “If someone comes in January or February, I’m very dubious of their drive. I’m not going to turn them

away, but I really grill them a little bit more about where they are in life, how serious they are about it,” he said. In 2000, Greg Glassman founded CrossFit in California. “It’s constantly varied functional movements done at high intensity,” Ovall said, adding that intensity varies depending on where students are psychologically and physically. Patrons of CrossFit can expect a different workout, outlined by their trainer, whenever they enter the “box,” or gym. “It could be anything. It really changes up a lot. One day we’ll do bear crawls and another day, we’ll do sort of like sit-ups and push-ups, body weight stuff, and then one day it could be all Olympic lifting or power lifting,” Ovall said. “[CrossFit] came up through military, police and fire personnel because the nature of their job is they don’t know what the next day is going to hold for them.” The program has three categories: metabolic conditioning, which could include activities like running, rowing or jumping rope, weight lifting and gymnastics, which includes exercises like pushups that utilize body weight. CrossFit students can also expect health and wellness education

JANUARY 6, 2013

photo courtesy of todd ovall

A8. n Toledo Free Press

n CROSSFIT students often report weight loss and muscle gain.

in addition to their workout. “All the movements are biomechanically efficient so we teach people how to move better. It’s very educational first and foremost. We teach people about movement. We teach people about food. We teach people about sleep and then just try to push them down the road, get some concepts clear in their head,” Ovall said. The owner said the gym might

move soon from its current location because more space is needed. When Ovall started his gym four years ago, his was the 984th. Now there are about 4,500 worldwide. “[CrossFit’s] on ESPN now and I see in on Reebok commercials,” Ovall said. For more information, pricing and schedules, visit dancetoledo. com, studiofitnesspoledivas.com and crossfitlifesport.com. O


JANUARY 6, 2013

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Visit www.toledofreepress.com

n A9


community

A10 n Toledo Free Press

JANUARY 6, 2013

FOOD

By Sarah Ottney

TOLEDO FREE PRESS MANAGING EDITOR sottney@toledofreepress.com

Eating healthy doesn’t have to be an unpleasant experience, say organizers of Restaurant Week Toledo. Among the healthy dishes planned by local chefs for this year’s event are a sesame-seared Chilean sea bass at Rosie’s Italian Grille, a slow-roasted pork chop stuffed with spiced apples at Bar 145 and a chicken shish tawook sandwich at Poco Piatti. The third annual Restaurant Week Toledo, set for Feb. 21 to March 2, will feature at least one healthy option at each of the 28 participating, locally owned restaurants, said Becca Gorman, co-chair of Restaurant Week Toledo. Participating restaurants are Bar 145, Barr’s Public House, The Blarney Irish Pub, Bobby V’s American Grill, Burger Bar 419, Caper’s Restaurant, Gradkowski’s, ICE Restaurant and Bar, La Scola Italian Grill, Loma Linda, Mancy’s Bluewater Grille, Mancy’s Italian Grill, Mancy’s Steaks, Manhattan’s, Maumee Wines and Bistro, The Oliver House (Mutz, Maumee Bay Brew Pub, Rockwell’s and The Café), Plate 21, Poco Piatti, Registry Bistro, Rosie’s Italian Grille, Shorty’s True American Roadhouse, Tea Tree Asian Bistro, TREO, Ventura’s and Zinful. Each venue will feature a special Restaurant Week menu priced at $10, $20 or $30. (Drinks, taxes and gratuities are not included unless specified.) A portion of the proceeds will benefit local nonprofit Leadership Toledo’s youth programs. The catalyst for making Restaurant Week Toledo healthier was feedback from diners at last year’s event and the commitment was solidified when Medical Mutual signed on as a presenting sponsor, Gorman said. “We hope people will feel they can participate fully in Restaurant Week Toledo with no regrets,” Gorman said. “We want them to try multiple restaurants and experience new dishes and new flavors all around town and still feel like they are taking care of themselves.” A healthy diet helps to prevent or lessen the negative effects of chronic diseases such as diabetes, heart disease, hypertension and obesity, said Connie Beutel, manager of health promotion and wellness at Medical Mutual. “Almost all restaurants have healthy options and a lot of that is about requests. There’s a movement and a trend, recognizing that it is possible to eat out and eat healthy, so I think you’re seeing that a lot more and

this is a perfect fit,” Beutel said. Many people are surprised healthy food can taste as good as less healthy dishes, said Mark Tooman, communications manager for Medical Mutual. “I hope when people see these healthy options are available, they make the connection that they can eat healthy and still get delicious, tasty options at these restaurants,” Tooman said. Beutel said she also hopes the healthy options will help people learn to navigate menus and recognize keywords signifying healthier dishes. “There’s a lot of awareness that will come out just seeing things labeled as healthy options,” Beutel said. “How it is prepared and what it is will stick in people’s minds that this is healthier.”

TOLEDO FREE PRESS PHOTO BY JOSEPH HERR

Restaurant Week Toledo to feature healthy options

Rosie’s Italian Grille

Rosie’s Italian Grille in Toledo plans to offer not just one but three Healthy Option meals on its Restaurant Week Toledo menu. For lunch ($10 including a small side salad), Rosie’s plans to offer grilled herb chicken with fresh sautéed vegetables marinated with homemade Sicilian herb dressing. For dinner ($20 including a small dinner salad), Rosie’s will offer the grilled herb chicken as well as a Cajun herb grilled Mahi Mahi with fresh vegetables or a sesame-seared Chilean sea bass with fresh vegetables finished with ginger sesame drizzle. Rosie’s owner Phil Barone and chef Eric Kish both called fresh sea bass their favorite fish. “It’s very moist. You don’t really need to do a lot to it because it’s really flavorful anyway,” Kish said. “It’s very simple and healthy and really tasty.” The herb marinade is a tweak on an old family recipe. “It’s very light, not overpowering,” Barone said. “I’ve never found anything better to marinate chicken or fish with. It just gives a little twist, keeps it nice and moist and it’s good for you.” The Mahi Mahi has a little spice to it, Kish said. “It’s got that same herb dressing on it, but then we spice it up with some Cajun seasoning as well,” Kish said. “Grilled — that’s the way you want to do it. It’s a steakier fish.” The herb chicken dish features two 6-ounce pieces of tender chicken. “It’s simple and healthy,” Kish said. “There’s a lot of flavor, but it’s not bad for you.” Barone and two of his brothers started Rosie’s more than 30 years ago. The eatery is named after their mother

n CHEF ERIC KISH OF ROSIE’S ITALIAN GRILLE.

and uses recipes she brought with her from her hometown in Sicily. This year will be the third time Rosie’s has participated in Restaurant Week Toledo. “It’s grown,” Barone said. “The first year was kind of quiet. Last year, we were very busy and it was fun. I love it when things are hectic. The people I met were very friendly and very complimentary. They really enjoyed Rosie’s, some of them for the first time, which is good for us. It’s why we like to do specials like that, to bring in new people who may not have tried Rosie’s.” Kish said he was happy to comply with the focus on healthy options. “It’s what people want, especially now more than ever,” Kish said. “I just think that’s what it’s evolving to more and more. It’s just going to make it that much more popular.”

Bar 145

Chef Robby Lucas of Bar 145 said he enjoyed the challenge of coming up with healthy options. “No chef likes to be handcuffed and

be told, ‘This is what we’re doing,’” Lucas said, laughing. “But every chef likes a challenge so I think if we can get the Bar 145 identity across while staying within those guidelines then we’re better off for it. I definitely got excited for it.” Lucas came up with an herbroasted chicken breast with an apple and strawberry winter salad for lunch ($10) and, for dinner ($20), a slowroasted bone-in pork chop stuffed with spiced apples and served with an arugula salad and a gelato dessert. “We use an all-natural chicken — hormone-free, antibiotic-free. You can really taste that when you’re eating the meat itself. “It doesn’t taste processed. It tastes like chicken,” Lucas said, laughing. “As often as people say that, I don’t think people realize what chicken is supposed to taste like. “With the pork, we actually stuff the pork with the apples and as that cooks together it really infuses the flavor throughout the meat itself.” Lucas said he’s used to being creative with healthy food because

his girlfriend is a vegetarian. “I assume it gets a little boring being a vegetarian, so I’m always thinking [of new ways to prepare food],” Lucas said and laughed again. “I absolutely love cooking proteins, but vegetables are kind of the unsung heroes in a chef ’s world. There’s nothing a chef gets more excited about, especially our vegetables we buy from The Chef ’s Garden in Huron. When I open up this crate of Ohio-grown carrots, Brussels sprouts, broccoli and stuff like that, it really gets chefs excited.” This will be Bar 145’s second year participating in Restaurant Week Toledo. The eatery opened in 2011. “We had a great response last year,” said Lucas, who worked in Cleveland before moving to Toledo. “Restaurant Week in Cleveland is huge, so when they approached us and said they were doing one in Toledo we absolutely wanted to be part of it and we definitely wanted to do it again this year.” n HEALTHY CONTINUES ON A11


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JANUARY 6, 2013

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n ROASTED CHICKEN WITH AN APPLE AND STRAWBERRY SALAD WILL BE A HEALTHY OPTION FROM BAR 145.

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Bar 145 is known for its burgers, especially its stack-your-own option, but Lucas would love if Restaurant Week Toledo helps spread the word about the rest of Bar 145’s menu, which changes seasonally and offers unexpected twists, such as duck wings in place of chicken wings. “A lot of times people see bar in our name and they associate us with just bar food. Then they hear the burger in our tagline and think we just do burgers and we are so much more than that,” Lucas said. “Our burgers are great — I stand behind them 100 percent and they are amazing — but our menu encompasses so much more.” How food is prepared goes a long way toward making it healthy, said Lucas, who started cooking when he was 9 at the Put-in-Bay restaurant his father managed. “I’m not going to say we’re healthfood oriented here, but we serve homemade food from scratch. We don’t have a freezer here. Everything you eat that day is prepared that day,” Lucas said. “Rather than shortening

n A11

or fat alternatives, we try to use a lot of healthy oils and canola oils that lend themselves well to the flavors we’re trying to accomplish.” Jake Guthrie, director of operations for Bar 145, recently moved to Toledo from Columbus and said Restaurant Week Toledo brings some of his former city’s “foodie” culture to the Glass City. “I’m excited. Hopefully it gives people an opportunity to step outside their comfort zone and do something or try something they may not necessarily be prone to do,” Guthrie said. “It’s also one of those things that promote the culinary world in general, where people are excited to go out and dine. And what’s good for one is good for all.”

Poco Piatti

Poco Piatti, featuring Lebanese, Italian and Greek food, is already known for healthy dishes, said Elias Hajjar, owner of the Levis Commons eatery. The name means “small plates” in Italian and refers to the communal tradition of sharing dishes around the table with everyone trying a little bit of each one. “Mediterranean food in general is very healthy. We tend to use a lot more olive oil than butter, lots of vegetables, lots of lean meat,” Hajjar said. “We’ve always focused on being healthy and prided ourselves on offering our guests healthy options.” For lunch ($10), Poco Piatti will offer a choice of chicken shish tawook sandwich, falafel sandwich or poco burger served with a choice of hummus, feta dip or lebanee. For dinner ($20), diners can choose from two skewers of beef or chicken kabobs or salmon with a side dish. Dinner also includes a choice of chicken wrap, ara-yes or sauteed mushrooms and a dessert. This is Poco Piatti’s third year participating in Restaurant Week Toledo, and each year has gotten better, Hajjar said. “We have always believed very strongly in community and eating locally,” he said. “When the opportunity came up to join together with other locally owned restaurants and help charity and promote our businesses at the same time, it was the perfect combination of win-win for us. “The first year was good, but we were just getting the word out. The second year was much better for all the restaurants.” Hajjar expects this year to the best yet. “We’re excited to be a part of it. I really think it’s going to be great.” Toledo Free Press is a media sponsor of Restaurant Week Toledo. For more information, visit www.restaurantweektoledo.com. O


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A12 n Toledo Free Press

JANUARY 6, 2013

Photo by Mark Newman / Courtesy Grand Rapids Griffins

sports The

A Tony, Grammy and Oscar Winning Winter at Box Office Open Monday– Friday, 9 a.m.–5 p.m.

Saturday, February 2, 2013

n FORMER WALLEYE LUKE Glendening during his AHL DEBUT in Grand Rapids on Dec. 19.

Tenacity pays off for former Walleye rookie By Vincent D. Scebbi TOLEDO FREE PRESS STAFF WRITER news@toledofreepress.com

Luke Glendening’s road to pro hockey has been anything but certain. “I always wanted to do it. It’s every hockey player’s dream to play professional hockey. I didn’t know if it was ever going to become a reality,” said Glendening, who until recently played for the Toledo Walleye. The defensive forward took the next step after being called up to the Grand Rapids Griffins, the American Hockey League (AHL) affiliate of the Detroit Red Wings, on Dec. 17. “I was fortunate enough to get the opportunity and I’m just trying to go make the best of it,” Glendening said. “I’m not sure how long I’m going to be here, but I’m just trying to find any way I can to stay.” Glendening said his time with the Walleye allowed him to build his confidence and adjust to pro hockey. “At the end of the day, it’s all about how you play, if you play hard and you’re playing fast, and I think Toledo allowed me to gain confidence to do that,” he said. The confidence boost helped Glendening when he made his debut with Grand Rapids on Dec. 19, scoring his first AHL goal on his first shot. Just two minutes and 49 seconds into the opening period, Griffins forward Triston Grant shot the puck in front of the net and Glendening charged the net and sent the rebound past the netminder. Glendening got off to a hot start in his rookie season. In 27 games with the Walleye, he scored 14 goals, ranking him second among ECHL rookies as of Jan. 3. He scored 31 goals in 165 games during his college days at the University of Michigan. Glendening’s success at finding the net has been somewhat surprising to him and others. “His role has been a real strong defensive player at Michigan, and not that he couldn’t score, but his strengths were his work ethic, his physicality, his defensive responsibility and his leadership skills,” said Red Berenson, who coached Glendening from 2008-12 at UM. Berenson said Glendening’s knowledge allowed him to shine as a defensive forward, especially on the

penalty kill, where he excelled at shot blocking. “He was sort of the conscience of the line. He gave the line some physicality and he gave them some defensive responsibility. You want a player like that on every line,” Berenson said. “But we used him in more of a defensive role and he was the defensive player of the year in our whole conference.” Glendening said during his freshman year at Michigan, he skated in only 35 games, the fewest of any of his four seasons as a Wolverine. Berenson said he was not sure if Glendening would be a regular player. Glendening said this caused doubts about his future, but he worked hard and earned a regular spot his sophomore year. “He convinced us with the way he played and the way he practiced that he was going to work his way into the lineup,” Berenson said. During his four years at UM, Glendening was a two-time captain of the Wolverine squad and helped lead the school to a national championship appearance during the 2010-11 season. Glendening said he still was unsure about his future even after he graduated this year with a degree in political science. He was undrafted, but signed to a one-year contract with Grand Rapids on June 19. “I just kept working hard and I still didn’t know if it was going to work,” he said. “But it’s something I’ve always wanted to do.” He made his pro debut in April when he signed an amateur tryout contract with the Providence Bruins. Although he only played three games with the Bruins, Glendening said he learned a lot about himself and got a small taste of pro hockey. Glendening, a native of Grand Rapids, Mich., said playing in front of his hometown was special. “Every corner I looked into of the rink, it seemed like I saw someone that I knew, which made the moment a little extra special because there has been so many people from Grand Rapids that have stood beside me,” he said. Glendening said his parents told him he didn’t have to be the best player on the ice — just the hardest worker. “That’s something I’ve carried with me throughout life,” he said. “There’s always going to be people that are better than you at anything. ... If you can outwork them, see what happens.” O

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JANUARY 6, 2013

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RELIGION

Editor’s Note: David Yonke is a member of Calvary Church. By David Yonke EDITOR, TOLEDOFAVS.COM David.Yonke@ReligionNews.com

Calvary Church will celebrate its move to the former Rave Motion Pictures Maumee 18 theaters with three grand opening services Jan. 6. The distance between the old Calvary on Glendale Avenue and the new one on Conant Street measures just 2.3 miles, but the change in scene is as dramatic as some of the Hollywood cliffhangers that used to fill the screens at the ex-cineplex. “As a church we weren’t looking to make a geographic move. It wasn’t something we had put on our master plan,” said the Rev. Chad Gilligan, lead pastor. “But we felt when the building became available, there was a leading from God for us to look into the purchase of it. We took one step after another and felt the Lord kept opening the doors for us, so we kept walking through them. We felt we were being obedient to God’s will.” The old Calvary, on Glendale just east of Reynolds Road, had its worship services in a traditional 1,100-seat sanctuary with padded pews and a large stained-glass window behind the altar. The new Calvary, whose 18 the-

aters and expansive atrium cover 93,000 square feet, is having worship services in a 525-seat converted movie theater. The building sits on a 33.5acre site on Conant Street across from Urban Active fitness center. The new facility features a café that provides free coffee plus the sale of snacks, soft drinks and such specialty drinks as mochas and lattes. Café proceeds go toward Calvary’s local, national and international missions projects. Gilligan said the new location gives Calvary added visibility and the building’s history makes it appealing to many people in the Toledo area. “We hear over and over from people who have had memories in this building. They went on their first date here, or saw their favorite movie here. The curiosity and the appeal of this building go beyond the norm,” he said. The former movie theater was built in 1997 (“Titanic” played during opening week) and it was one of four local cineplexes bought by Dallas-based Rave Motion Pictures in January 2010. Rave closed the Maumee 18 theater in June, 2010, citing a surplus of screens in the Toledo area, and Calvary purchased it for $2.98 million in December 2010. The church, which has an average Sunday attendance of more

than 1,000, spent $1.5 million renovating and remodeling the building. Improvements included a new look to the atrium with new carpeting and a central fireplace, a renovated café and seating areas scattered throughout the building. Theater seats were removed from the floor of the largest theater to make room for a stage, and a Chicago firm designed and installed high-tech sound, video and lighting for the main sanctuary. An adjacent theater carries live video and audio feeds for use as an overflow room. One priority in remodeling was Calvary’s children’s and youth ministry areas, Gilligan said. The renovations were scaled back, due to the expense, from original plans that called for knocking down walls between two theaters to create one large sanctuary. That project is set for an unscheduled phase two. “We’ve been able to touch quite a bit of the building with just basic things that needed to be done, primarily electrical, lighting and technology,” Gilligan said. “We feel really good about the first phase because it gets us in the building and allows us to use and figure out how this church can best serve the church and the community.” Another change for Calvary is a

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more people come and check us out. Nothing has changed in our theology or our practice.” Grand opening services are set for 8:30 a.m., 10 a.m. and 11:30 a.m. Jan. at Calvary Church, 1360 Conant St., Maumee. More information is available online at www. toledocalvary.org or by calling the church, (419) 381-0254. O

shortened name, having dropped its denominational affiliation, Assembly of God, when it moved. The Assemblies of God, one of the largest Pentecostal denominations, was founded in 1914 and has 3 million members in the United States and 65 million worldwide. “In our culture, labels for churches don’t mean as much as they used to,” Gilligan said. “What we’ve found is that no matter what your church brand is, it can have a tendency to tell people not what you are, but what they aren’t. … We decided to make the brand less of a big deal so we’ll be able to have

David Yonke is the editor and community manager of Toledo Faith & Values (ToledoFAVS.com), a website that provides in-depth, nonsectarian news coverage of religion, faith and spirituality in the Toledo area.

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JANUARY 6, 2013

books

Native Toledoan chronicles the American West in new book By Jay Hathaway

Toledo Free Press Staff Writer news@toledofreepress.com

For many writers, the journey toward a finished novel is often long, laborious and unpredictable. Toledo native Len Francis Monahan’s path was no different, and it eventually led him into the American West. Monahan will release his novel, “Rattlesnakes, Ghosts and Murderers,” on Feb. 14, through Greta Fox Publishing. It is the first installment in a series of Western comedies. Monahan, 64, now resides in the Western U.S., but he has fond memories of his Toledo roots. He attended St. James Grade School and Libbey High School, where he was often chastised for his wandering mind. “Daydreaming is a perfect state for a writer, it would seem,” Monahan said. Monahan recalled renting canoes and braving the waters of the Maumee River as one of his favorite memories of youth. He also remembered being at odds with his father’s occupation. “As I was growing up, my father worked for the City of Toledo as a ‘garbage man.’ His occupation caused me some embarrassment — such is the idiocy of youth,” Monahan said. He eventually came to realize that his father’s intellect reached far beyond the confines of his trash removal job, and now credits him with being a vital inspiration. “I am proud to proclaim my father as one of the most intelligent persons I have ever known. He was, in fact, himself a writer, and inspired me toward that profession,” Monahan said. Long before realizing his own po-

tential as a scribe, Monahan pursued his education at the University of Toledo, where he earned dual bachelor’s degrees in psychology and p h i l o s o p h y. From there, he set out on a trail to discover his calling. “While in Toledo, I worked as a Merchant Marine, a spray painter for Kaiser Jeep, a psychiatric tech, a full-time musician and some other jobs I have tried to forget,” Monahan said. In 1978, he married Elaine Welling. Monahan called his marriage “the most fortuitous event” of his life. Throughout the 1980s, Monahan began discovering his worth as a musician, as well. “During that period, I wrote songs with an obsession and made my first professional recordings, ‘Being Alone for Christmas’ and ‘Christmas Lullaby.’ These songs played all over the United States, England, Australia and some other countries,” Monahan said. Though he was encouraged by the success, he was still hesitant to attempt a career in music. “I continued to do a bit more recording, but stopped completely until 1988 when I released ‘Another Road.’ That song jumped to No. 48 on the national independent charts, and I

decided to release ‘Tapping at Your Window,’ which popped onto the Top 100 Country Charts in Cashbox magazine and achieved No. 27 on the independent charts,” Monahan said. In 1989, he and Elaine decided to move westward, and settled into California’s Bay Area. Monahan struggled to find other musicians there who were serious about recording. “In terms of my music career, I guess I was much better off in Toledo,” Monahan said. Despite the disappointment, Monahan found a great deal of work in writing. He worked for a major publisher and wrote and edited articles for an estimated 5,000 national and international publications. He covered business, industry, medicine, education, law, economics, international news, U.S. military reviews and even CIA reports. “It was a constant education,” Monahan said. Twelve years ago, Monahan and his wife moved to the Sierra Nevada, not far from Yosemite National Park. This is where Monahan found the inspiration for his current literary endeavor.

Daydreaming is a perfect state for a writer, it would seem.” — Len Francis Monahan “One evening, as I sat on a friend’s 2,000-acre ranch and watched lights belonging to the Mexican drug cartel vehicles moving up and down the mountain roads, the phrase ‘Rattlesnakes, Ghosts and Murderers’ sprang to mind,” Monahan said. “At that moment, I realized what a marvelous title it was. This is how [the series] came into being.” The first book of the series, subtitled “McKenna and Barnett,” begins with an excerpt from a ranch hand’s diary, which tells of the events that lead to the crux of the story. The plot focuses around young protagonist Colt Barnett and his adventures as the leader of a ranch he inherited. Kathy Lynn, who represents Greta Fox Publishing, said that the book is not designed for any specific audience, but would most likely be enjoyed by readers in the young adult group and older. She said that the novel should appeal to women, as well, since it has a strong female

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figure as a central character. “It would also help if the reader has a well-developed sense of humor,” Lynn added. As for the future, Monahan said that the second book of the series should be released in a year or so. The third and fourth books will be completed thereafter. He also plans on traveling to Alaska to research future material. more immediate Regarding plans, Greta Fox Publishing will distribute the novel through Amazon and Barnes & Noble; it will be available for e-readers and in paperback. Greta Fox also plans to knock on Hollywood’s door. “Presently, we are trying to develop a movie deal for the ‘Rattlesnakes, Ghosts and Murderers’ series and have some film companies looking at it,” Lynn said. Beyond the series, Monahan said he will continue to write, not necessarily for literary glory, but because it keeps him distracted from life’s deliberations. “I don’t claim to have talked to the spirits or breathed words into incandescent clouds. I know I will live, move on and eventually be forgotten like everyone else. No amount of writing, working, spending or owning can ever change that. So, in the meantime, I just keep myself preoccupied.” O

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technology

By Duane Ramsey

TOLEDO FREE PRESS SENIOR BUSINESS WRITER dramsey@toledofreepress.com

NASA announced Dec. 21 that it selected Sierra Lobo Inc. of Fremont for a contract to perform engineering fabrication services at the Johnson Space Center in Houston. The cost-plus-award-fee contract has a potential value of $98.15 million if NASA exercises an option that would extend the length of the contract by two years. The three-year base period of the contract begins Feb. 1, according to NASA’s announcement. “This is the second largest contract in terms of revenue in our history,” said Donald Frank, executive director of business development for Sierra Lobo. The firm’s fabrication services for NASA will range from providing rapid turnaround of simple parts and modifications to the development of new products, prototypes and actual hardware for spaceflight. The hardware produced could range in size and complexity from small hand tools for astronauts to entire crew systems, according to NASA. Frank said some of their people were set to fly out to Houston on Jan. 1 to get started on the preliminary stage of the project. He said they ex-

It’s been a very good year for the company.” — Donald Frank

pect the project to require 120 people. That number will include existing employees who will go to Houston and new employees hired there and possibly in Ohio. “It’s likely we will hire some incumbent employees from other companies located there and fill other open positions with qualified people,” Frank said. The company currently has 500 employees and Frank expects that number to grow to about 565 at the beginning of this project for NASA. “It’s been a very good year for the company,” Frank said. Sierra Lobo has performed previous work for NASA’s Glenn Research Center in Cleveland and the Plum Brook Station in Sandusky. The company is a two-time winner of the George M. Low Award in the Small Business Service category. It was also named Small Business Prime Contractor of the Year by the Glenn Research Center in 2009 and 2011. Frank said that the Low Award is the highest award given to contrac-

PHOTO COURTESY Sierra Lobo

Sierra Lobo selected by NASA for contract at Johnson

n Sierra Lobo’s corporate offices in Fremont.

tors by NASA and very few contractors have won it twice. The award is named for a NASA leader who was dedicated to quality and excellence. Sierra Lobo announced additional work contracts for NASA and the U.S. Navy in September. NASA’s Marshall Space Flight Center selected the company’s Cryo-Tracker Mass Gauging System for its Space Launch System (SLS) Advance Development Program. The Cryo-Tracker system supports the SLS vehicle and re-

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duces costs by enhancing propellant monitoring capabilities. The reliability of the Cryo-Tracker sensor significantly exceeds that of current Saturn and Shuttle-era hotwire technology and has none of the shortcomings of capacitance-based probes that suffer high uncertainties due to pressure, temperature and stray electromagnetic interference, according to the company. Sierra Lobo received a $3.9 million contract award from the U.S. Navy to develop, fabricate and test a fuel cell and cryogenic reactants energy system for the Office of Naval Research’s Large Displacement Unmanned Underwater Vehicle Innovative Naval Prototype (LDUUV INP) energy and power. The development contract for

the Navy, currently being executed at the company’s Technology and Engineering Center in Milan, Ohio, is in its initial 18-month Phase I base period. With its successful completion, the company will proceed with a six-month Phase I option program and a 24month Phase II program to provide a fully integrated power system in a prototype LDUUV for testing. Sierra Lobo is a HispanicAmerican owned small business that was founded in 1993 with only nine employees. Today, Sierra Lobo employs engineers, technicians and administrative personnel in multiple locations. For more information about the company and open positions, go to www.sierralobo.com. O

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A16. n Toledo Free Press

JANUARY 6, 2013

By Sarah Ottney

TOLEDO FREE PRESS MANAGING EDITOR sottney@toledofreepress.com

Harbor CEO Dale Shreve is leaving the Toledo-based agency this month to take the helm of a national alliance of behavioral health care agencies. Shreve, who has been with Harbor for 33 years, including 13 years as its CEO, will move to Tallahassee, Fla., for a job as president and CEO of Mental Health Corporations of America (MHCA), an association of about 130 behavioral and mental health care providers, including Harbor. Shreve’s last day at Harbor is Jan. 22. John Betts, Harbor’s vice president of adult services, will serve as interim CEO while a national search for a replacement is conducted. “This comes at a great time for me both personally and professionally,” Shreve BETTS said. “[Harbor is] a great organization in great shape and will continue to be successful. It’s just when this dream job and this once-in-a-lifetime opportunity comes along, you’ve got to pull the ring and go for it.” Shreve said he will miss Harbor, but is excited for the new challenge. “Harbor is my baby,” Shreve said. “I’ve watched it grow and I’ve been a part of that. I’m going to miss the Toledo community. I’m going to miss the Harbor staff and board. It’s a great group of people and one that has meant a lot to me and my family. “While [MHCA] continues to be related to health care and behavioral health care, it’s a different aspect of that. I won’t be responsible for dayto-day service activities, but I’ll be responsible to help those organizations do those services as best they can.” MHCA hosts meetings for professional development and networking. “By meeting with organizations from different parts of the country that are addressing similar concerns but don’t see themselves as competitors, it allows members to pull together the resources they need to be

successful at home,” Shreve said. The 58-year-old Shreve, a Palmyra, Mich., native, started working at Harbor in 1979 as its assistant director. It was called Community Mental Health Center West then and had about 20 employees and a budget of less than $500,000, Shreve said. Today, Harbor has more than 400 employees in 12 Northwest Ohio locations and a budget of $25 million. “It was a much different organization when I joined,” Shreve said. “It’s had different names and different roles, but I’ve been here that whole time.” In 1985, Community Mental Health Center West became the West Center. Then West Center, which served primarily adults, consolidated with the Cummings-Zucker Center, which served primarily children and families, to form Harbor Behavioral Health Care. In 2009, the organization became simply Harbor. The organization has grown beyond behavioral health to include family medicine, adult day care services for individuals with developmental disabilities, vocational programs for individuals with barriers to employment, programs for children with autism and their families, employee assistance and wellness programs, school partnerships and more. “As we have grown, we’re serving more people and providing a broader range of services and doing a better job integrating those services and trying to address the complete needs of that individual,” Shreve said. Harbor is one of five “Medicaid health homes” in Ohio. “It’s not a physical home, but the concept of wraparound care, making sure you have a ‘home’ where things get centralized,” Shreve said. “So often people with mental health problems don’t get the other care they need, so this health home effort is how we’re trying to pull this together. It’s an integrated care approach I believe is so critical in terms of making sure we don’t just talk about someone’s depression or schizophrenia, but tie it into everything else going on with that person.” Betts, a Bryan native, has worked in the social service field for 39 years, 10 of those in his current position at Harbor. Shreve and Betts met when they

PHOTO COURTESY HARBOR

Harbor CEO leaving for position at national firm

n CEO

DALE SHREVE’S LAST DAY AT HARBOR IS JAN. 22.

both worked at Harbor when it was known as West Center in the mid1980s. Betts went on to work at several other social service organizations, including The Zepf Center, Quadco Rehabilitation Center, Lima State Hospital and Lima Juvenile Detention Facility, before returning to Harbor. “Dale is a good guy, a very good guy,” Betts said. “He’s made Harbor what it is, which in my opinion is the No. 1 behavioral health facility in the surrounding area and, quite frankly, in Ohio. It’s because of his leadership and his vision and his innovation that Harbor is where it’s at. “He’s definitely going to have a major positive impact on a larger scale at Mental Health Corporations of America by providing his talents to all the different providers throughout the country. Although sad for Harbor, I think it’s an excellent move for him and for the profession.” Shreve said he is confident in Betts’

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leadership ability at Harbor. “I’ve known John a long time,” Shreve said. “He knows the organization and the staff knows him, so I think he’s very well equipped to step in and keep things going. He’s got the full support of the Harbor board and staff.” Betts holds a bachelor’s degree in psychology and physical education from Bluffton College and a master’s degree in rehabilitation counseling from Bowling Green State University. He also finished his doctoral coursework in psychophysiology at the University of Toledo, but never wrote his dissertation after deciding not to go into teaching after all. “I’ve always been focused on the whole person,” Betts said. “That’s why I came back to Harbor and that’s why I’m here. I believe very strongly in the mission and vision and values that Harbor holds, which is to provide health, hope, happiness and opportunity for the people we serve and to

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be the best partner and provider of choice for the people we work with and the people we collaborate with. “It’s somewhat daunting (to become interim CEO) because you’re taking over from someone who’s done such a nice job for so long, but there’s a lot of new and innovative things going on with Harbor and that makes it exciting.” Betts is confident Harbor’s future is bright, since Shreve helped build a strong structure that will stand firm regardless of who is at its helm. “That is Dale’s legacy at Harbor,” Betts said. “He’s built a structure with staff that’s outstanding and a depth of supervisors, managers and administrators that are going to continue Harbor’s mission, vision and values. And I’m sure we will obtain a leader that will continue the concept of innovation so we can continue to lead in the mental health field.” For more information, visit harbor. org or mhca.com. O

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readers focus on are how to better health insurance needs now or in manage money, protect assets the future. Health insurance and long-term from a health care crisis and efficiently plan your estate. Which care insurance are the two areas goal you start with depends on to focus on. Health insurance can be a very comwhat is most imporplicated matter tant to your family. and circumRebalance instances change vestment accounts all the time. The to better manage best way to stay your money. Assign on top of all the a goal and a specific changes is to purpose for each sit down once a financial account year and review by creating buckets your current covof money. erage. Look for Creating buckMark CLAIR gaps and get the ets of money allows Nolan BAKER proper coverage an investor to target specific goals and select appropriate to avoid being financially wiped levels of risk for each account. The out by a health care crisis. Don’t more specific an investor can be as to just get advice in a group setting or the purpose of the money and time try to make decisions on your own; frame in which it will be used, the seek out professional and customeasier it will be to pick investments ized advice based upon your famthat are suitable for that account. ily’s unique situation by meeting In general, the shorter the time the with a health insurance specialist. Don’t forget to update your money will be in an account, the less risk an investor should take with the beneficiary forms for an efficiently money. We usually advise clients to planned estate. Many middle-class break accounts down into buckets American families think they don’t for current income, pay raises in the need to update their estate plans future, peak spending years, alterna- since the federal estate taxes won’t tive assets, long-term growth and an affect them, but they could be wrong. Every year or two, it is always a emergency account. The major areas of concern we good idea to sit down and talk with see are the economic cycle, the age an attorney to review your legal wave and political uncertainty. Over documents. A big mistake we often the past several years, the stock see people make is forgetting to keep market and the economy have been beneficiary forms updated. This one growing. This has left many retirees simple mistake could mean family getting comfortable again with members end up wasting thoudrawing current income off risky sands of dollars in taxes, fees and stock and bond accounts. Don’t rely expenses. The last thing you want on growth alone to fund retirement to do is to unintentionally disinincome needs; have safe accounts to herit a family member, which could happen if the beneficiary form is draw income from. Next, we are seeing a unique dy- not filled out correctly. To avoid the most common namic that our country has never seen before. This, in part, is due beneficiary mistakes, stop by to the millions of retiring baby our website at www.Retirementboomers. The impact this will have GuysRadio.com and order a copy on Wall Street as these baby boomers of the beneficiary checklist. O change from savers to spenders will have a dramatic impact in the future. For more information about The ReLast, the recent fiscal cliff de- tirement Guys, tune in every Saturday bate has been partly solved in the at 1 p.m. on 1370 WSPD or visit www. short term, yet the long-term risks retirementguysnetwork.com. Securijust continue to grow. Watch out ties and Investment Advisory Services as these issues heat back up in the are offered through NEXT Financial months ahead and rebalance while Group Inc., Member FINRA / SIPC. NEXT Financial Group, Inc. does not times are good. All Americans should take per- provide tax or legal advice. The Resonal responsibility to protect their tirement Guys are not an affiliate of assets from a health care crisis with NEXT Financial Group. The office is the proper insurance. Don’t rely on at 1700 Woodlands Drive, Suite 100, the government to take care of your Maumee, OH 43537. (419) 842-0550


ARTS Life

A18 n Toledo Free Press

JANUARY 6, 2013

PHOTO COURTESY FLEMING ARTISTS

IN CONCERT

SETH GLIER WILL PLAY AT THE ARK IN ANN ARBOR ON JAN. 11.

Singer-songwriter to play new music in Ann Arbor By Vicki L. Kroll

TOLEDO FREE PRESS STAFF WRITER vkroll@toledofreepress.com

“Things I Should Let You Know,” the beautiful, haunting title track of Seth Glier’s forthcoming disc, stays with you — and piques your curiosity. “I think I was writing that when I was getting into a relationship and realizing that things are getting serious,” he said. “And it wasn’t so much that I had to be real in the relationship or with the other person. The song is more about just being real and honest with yourself, and sometimes the relationship brought that out.” The singer-songwriter started the track in his Massachusetts

apartment, worked on it while touring and finished the song on a San Francisco rooftop. “I have this little portable recording studio that fits into a backpack essentially, and I threw that in the car because we were touring so much last year,” he said during a call from his home. “That was a song that I literally kind of stitched together in every state that we played in; sometimes I was recording vocals, sometimes I was recording guitar. And it definitely changes the process because your perspective is so representative of where you are.” Glier will play songs from “Things I Should Let You Know” when he stops at The Ark in Ann Arbor for an 8 p.m. show Jan. 11. Tickets are

$15. Doors open at 7:30 p.m. His second disc, “The Next Right Thing,” received a Grammy nomination for Best Engineered Album, Non-Classical. Glier recorded all his vocals himself, and was assisted by three engineers to finish the music on the CD. “I was watching ‘Family Guy’ at the time and someone congratulated me on Twitter. I had no idea; I thought it was just a joke,” he recalled about the nomination news. “I feel so lucky. I just turned 24 and never in my wildest dreams did I ever think that a Grammy nomination would be part of my career.” He’s been earning accolades. USA Today said his “exquisite tenor echoes Bruce Springsteen and Billy Joel.”

“I’m just trying to be me, and I’m trying to write what interests me and hopefully touch people along the way,” Glier said. “Things I Should Let You Know” is slated for release on MPress Records Jan. 29. “For me, the ultimate goal whether I’m making a record or whether I’m performing live, I want to leave people completely 100 percent transformed,” Glier said. “That’s beyond being entertained; it’s beyond just having them forget about their life and problems for a while. “At the end of their escape, they can face all the things that they were afraid to face and just be fearless.”O

I want to leave people completely 100 percent transformed. ... It’s beyond just having them forget about their life and problems for a while. At the end of their escape, they can face all the things that they were afraid to face and just be fearless.” — Seth Glier


ARTS Life

JANUARY 6, 2013

bodies haphazardly flung about like pieces of confetti. My half hour of high-IQ hijinks was suddenly hijacked by over-

whelming amounts of death and destruction. The abrupt shift from funny to apocalyptic human devastation came without warning in the form of a

I

was watching an episode of “The Big Bang Theory” this week when I witnessed hundreds, if not thousands, of people dying en masse, their

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n A19

short trailer for a movie called “World ongoing illicit affair with gun violence. I am a perfect candidate to be War Z.” I researched and found that the “Z” moved to sign the “Demand a Plan” in “World War Z” stands for “zombie,” petition being advertised by the celebrity pleas. so I am now preThe original “Desuming that the people mand a Plan” video was I saw being obliterated not the first version I were possibly unafhappened upon, though. fected by the violent The first version I saw events. I don’t know also featured the original much about zombies, clips of solemn-faced cebut it’s my underlebrities denouncing gun standing that their violence; however, those undead state makes clips were interspersed it difficult for them Shannon SZYPERSKI with clips, often graphic, to make the move to actually dead. Nonetheless, until I of many of the celebrities performing looked up the movie’s premise the acts of gun violence themselves during next day, I thought I had seen hordes movie and TV appearances. I see. Anyone with children, or who of the world’s alive-and-well populahas had even a brief encounter with tion being wiped out. Yes, I do realize it’s “just” a movie any human being, knows that “do either way. Yet, recent studies indicate as I say, not as I do” doesn’t stand our brains process fiction in books a chance against “monkey see, and movies as real enough to trigger monkey do.” I am reminded of the nonlanguage-processing regions. In 1987 anti-drug PSA that reveals the a New York Times piece titled “Your influence a father’s own drug use Brain on Fiction,” Annie Murphy Paul has on his son’s drug use. We can argue that celebrities, summed up the research by stating: “The brain, it seems, does not make movies, books, music, video games much of a distinction between reading and the like don’t have the influence about an experience and encountering on kids that parents do, but what it in real life; in each case, the same if the parents are the ones being influenced? What are we saying to neurological regions are stimulated.” A Huffington Post blog entry our children when we praise a book written by Keith Oatley, a fiction ef- about kids hunting one another, yet fect researcher, is titled “Is Fiction cry over Sandy Hook; when we still Good for You?” Oatley contends that cry over almost 3,000 lives being the resultant social understanding and lost on Sept. 11, yet get excited to empathy that comes from fiction is, see a movie about the world’s population being brought to the brink of indeed, good for you. If fiction in popular culture can be extinction? The signals have to be good for you, doesn’t it stand to reason mixed at best. Not every person who absorbs that, like most everything, it can also be bad for you? If we read books and fictional violence commits real acts view movies packed with death, dis- of violence, of course. In fact, I would memberment, destruction and dev- venture to guess the rate of copycatastation, wouldn’t that have a negative ting is quite low. Still, do we want to impact on our lives and our psyches in be consumers of death and destructhe same way opening our minds up tion, albeit fictional, for pleasure? to different relationships and cultures Are we really OK with passing such a pastime along to our children? If through fiction has a positive effect? I saw a few other interesting movie fiction can teach our brains a little clips this week. In light of the Sandy something about life, is violence the Hook massacre, the group Mayors thing we want to be learning about? Who taught them to enjoy this Against Illegal Guns released a video featuring dozens of celebrities listing stuff, to give violence a starring off recent major acts of gun violence role on the American stage, to find in the U.S. They then declare that entertainment value in our darkest enough is enough and demand that human acts? You, all right? we demand a plan of action against They learn it by watching you. O gun violence. I thankfully have no use for guns in my everyday life, the Second Shannon and her husband, MiAmendment isn’t my favorite and chael, are raising three children I am as horrified as most Ameri- in Sylvania. Email her at letters@ cans by our senseless, embarrassing toledofreepress.com.


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A20 n Toledo Free Press

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CARLSON’S CRITTERS

A home for Cheese Cake

Cheese Cake is a 1-year-old female orange and white longhair. Cheese Taylor Made Glass LLC is seeking a MainCake is an ex ade Glass LOhio LC is seeking a Maintenance Supervisor for the Payne, Ohio facility. tenance Supervisor forTaylor theMPayne, facility. Under the direction of the Engineering Manager the M aintenance Supervisor is responsible for hands on tremely friendly of the aEngineering Under the direction repair, coordinating, nd supervising the wManagork of the maintenance technicians and support team. The qualified candidate will be responsible fresponsible or the proper and timely maintenance f electrical loves and mechanical cat othat at-systems to er the Maintenance Supervisor is for support continuous production operations. hands on repair, coordinating, andwsupervising the maintenance Qualified candidate ill have 5-­‐7 years hands-­‐on experience aCheese long with supervisory tention. experience. work of the maintenance technicians and support Skills required Cake has some Thorough knowledge f general building/facility maintenance team. The qualified• candidate will obe responsible • Ability to troubleshoot and repair complex manufacturing equipment significant scarfor the proper and •timely maintenance of electriSkilled in logic controllers, PLCs Well versed in to working from prints and verbal direction ring along her cal and mechanical•• systems support continuSolid electrical and mechanical knowledge and experience ous production operations. • Working knowledge of hydraulic and pneumatics spinal column, • Proficient operating all toolroom equipment (mills, lathes, etc....) and test equipment will have 5-7 years hands Qualified candidate In addition: which appears to have been caused by • Technical degree or equivalent; on maintenance experience along with supervichemical or thermal burns. Although sory experience. • Must pass pre-­‐employment a drug screen We offer the following benefits: the injuries have healed, it is unlikely Skills required • Vacation (starting in first year) that she will be able to regrow hair in • Thorough knowledge ofTgeneral building/ • Paid Personal ime • Paid Holidays that area of her body. Cheese Cake facility maintenance • 401k with matching funds • Paid Life Insurance • Ability to troubleshoot and repair complex will also need to avoid spending • Medical, Dental and Vision Insurance manufacturing• Flexible equipment Benefit Plan time outside since the exposed skin Short & Long Term Disability plan controllers, PLCs • Skilled in logic•• Paid Bonus (monthly) Program will be more sensitive to irritations working from prints and • Well versed in Please apply in person or mail resume to: from sunburn. Cheese Cake doesn’t verbal direction Taylor Made Glass LLC N. Maple St. • Solid electrical407 and mechanical knowledge mind sharing a home with other cats Payne Ohio 45880 Attn: HR and experience and she is eager to enjoy the comfort Or email: mmcmaken@taylormadesystems.com Equal Opportunity Employer aand nd a Drug Free Workplace • Working knowledge of hydraulic and security of a permanent home. pneumatics

Cheese Cake has been spayed, examined by a staff veterinarian, is current on her vaccinations and is microchipped. Toledo Area SoHumane ciety is located at 1920 Indian Wood Circle, Arrowhead Park, Maumee. Adoption hours are 11 a.m. to 7 p.m. Tuesday through Friday and 10 a.m. to 6 p.m. Saturday and Sunday. Call (419) 891-0705 or visit toledoarea humanesociety.org. O

BAD CREDIT OR NO

• Proficient operating all toolroom equipment (mills, lathes, etc....) and test equipment In addition: • Technical degree or equivalent; • Must pass pre-employment a drug screen We offer the following benefits: • Vacation (starting in first year) • Paid Personal Time • Paid Holidays • 401k with matching funds • Paid Life Insurance • Medical, Dental and Vision Insurance • Flexible Benefit Plan • Paid Short & Long Term Disability plan • Bonus (monthly) Program

Please apply in person or mail resume to: Taylor Made Glass LLC 407 N. Maple St. Payne Ohio 45880 Attn: HR Or email: mmcmaken@taylormadesystems.com Equal Opportunity Employer and a Drug Free Workplace LAST CHANCE Free To Travel 18+, 30 Days Training Demonstrating An All Purpose Cleaner, After Training Earn $400-$800/Week. Call Mr. Matthews 256-998-2431, 256-232-6944 x147.

BAD CREDIT NO We Have The Price &OR The Selection! NEED A CAR - TRUCK - SUV or VAN?

Come to Franklin Park and Use Your

No MoNey DowN 0 DOWN TAXYOUREFUND CAN

REAL ESTATE

Come to Franklin Park and Use Your to Drive Home the Car of Your Dreams! SYLVANIA TOWNSHIP – NEW LISTING Condominiums

2 Bed, 1-1/2 Bath, 1151 sq ft, attached garage. Not a foreclosure or short sale – $54,900 SOUTH – $10,000 PRICE REDUCTION 3 Bed, 1-1/2 Bath, 1580 sq ft, attached garage. Not a foreclosure or short sale – $69,900 Mary Ann Stearns, Loss Realty Group 419-345-0071 or marstearns@bex.net

homes WEST TOLEDO – NEW LISTING 3 Bed, 1Bath, 1050 sq ft, 1 car garage, large eat-in kitchen, 4 season sunroom, updated bath, large fenced backyard, well maintained. Priced to sell quickly at only $49,900 Mary Ann Stearns, Loss Realty Group 419-345-0071 or marstearns@bex.net

TAX REFUND DRIVE HOME!!

to Drive Home the Car of Your Dreams!

BAD CReDIT! No CReDIT! No PRoBLeM!

CALL Now

CALL NOW!

419-882-7171 419-8827171 franklinparklincoln.com CALL NOW!

BAD CREDIT OR NO franklinparklincoln.com

SAVE YOUR TAX RETURN

BAD CREDIT OR NO

Come to Franklin Park and Use Your

TAXSHOP REFUND US NOW!!

Toledo, 614 Euclid Ave. 4BR/2BA Multifamily Home. Fixer-upper, Great Investment! Owner financing or cash discount $150 Down, $174/mo 803-978-1539 or 803-978-1607

Come to Franklin Park and Use Your to Drive Home the Car of Your Dreams!

TAX REFUND 0 DOWN

to Drive Home the Car of Your Dreams!

DEliVERS!

Please call 419-241-1700 ext. 221 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.

JANUARY 6, 2013

BAD CREDIT, NO CREDIT,

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.

NO PROBLEM!! CALL NOW!

419-882-7171 419-8827171 franklinparklincoln.com CALL NOW!

franklinparklincoln.com


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January 6, 2013

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Visit www.toledofreepress.com

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The Bachelor Sean meets the women. (N) (CC) Castle (N) (CC) News Nightline How I Met Broke Girl Broke Girl Mike Hawaii Five-0 (CC) News Letterman Bones (PA) (CC) The Mob Doctor (N) Fox Toledo News America Seinfeld The Biggest Loser “Get Moving” (N) (CC) Deception “Pilot” (N) News Jay Leno Antiques Roadshow Market Warriors (N) POV “Reportero” (N) Charlie Rose (N) (CC) The Haunting Of... The Haunting Of... The Haunting Of... (N) The Haunting Of... Real Housewives The Real Housewives of Beverly Hills (N) Happens Vander Futurama Futurama South Pk South Pk Brickle. South Pk Daily Colbert Tinker Bell and the Great Fairy Austin Good Good Jessie ANT Farm Pregame 2013 Discover BCS National Championship Alabama vs. Notre Dame. (N) (CC) Switched at Birth (N) Bunheads (N) (CC) Switched at Birth (CC) The 700 Club (CC) Diners Diners Diners Diners Diners Diners My. Diners My. Diners Love It or List It (CC) Love It or List It (CC) Hunters Hunt Intl Love It or List It (CC) An Amish Murder (2013) Neve Campbell. (CC) Movie MTV Special MTV Special Catfish Inbe MTV Special Fam. Guy Fam. Guy Big Bang Big Bang Big Bang Big Bang Conan (N) (CC) ››› Juliet of the Spirits (1965, Fantasy) Giulietta Masina. ››› Spirit of the Beehive (1973) The Mentalist (CC) The Mentalist (CC) The Mentalist (CC) CSI: NY (CC) WWE Monday Night RAW (N) (S Live) (CC) NCIS: Los Angeles Hart of Dixie (CC) Beauty and the Beast Rules Rules Amer. Dad Amer. Dad

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BRINGING THE FLAVORS OF

Loma Linda

Bienvenidos A Celebrating C elebrating 5577 yyears. ears. migos!

stt ToledoRe’sstaBures a t an Mexican yearss!! o er 57 y for ov for

10400 Airport Hwy. (1.2 miles east of Toledo Express Airport)

419-865-5455

HOURS: M Mo Monday-Thursday onday nd day ay-T -Th Thu hurs hurs rsd day 11 da 11 aa.m. .m. .m m. – 11 11 pp.m. .m m. d 11 a.m. – Midnight Mid i h | Sunday S d Closed C Cl Friday-Saturday

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Ent Insider Mod Fam Middle Happy Apt. 23 Private Practice (N) News J. Kimmel Wheel Jeopardy! NCIS (N) (CC) (DVS) NCIS: Los Angeles (N) Vegas “Paiutes” (N) News Letterman The Office How I Met Raising Ben-Kate New Girl Mindy Fox Toledo News America Seinfeld Jdg Judy Jdg Judy Betty Betty Go On Normal Parenthood (N) (CC) News Jay Leno NewsHour Business History Detectives Abolitionists Frontline (N) (CC) Charlie Rose (N) (CC) Storage Storage Storage Storage Storage Storage Storage Storage Storage Storage Atlanta Real Housewives Real Real Housewives Decorators Happens Real Colbert Daily Work. Tosh.0 Tosh.0 Tosh.0 Tosh.0 The Burn Daily Colbert ANT Farm Dog ››› The Lion King (1994) (CC) ANT Farm Jessie Good Jessie ANT Farm College Basketball Alabama at Missouri. (N) College Basketball Ohio State at Purdue. (N) SportsCenter (N) (CC) Pretty Little Liars (CC) Pretty Little Liars (N) The Lying Game (N) Pretty Little Liars (CC) The 700 Club (CC) Chopped Chopped “Belly Up” Chopped Chopped Chopped “Own It!” Hunt Intl Hunters Love It or List It (CC) Property Property Hunters Hunt Intl Scoring Scoring Wife Swap (CC) Dance Moms (CC) Dance Moms (N) (CC) America’s Supernanny To Be Announced Sucker Free MTV Special MTV Special Snooki Special If You Really Seinfeld Seinfeld Big Bang Big Bang Big Bang Big Bang Cougar Big Bang Conan (N) (CC) ›› Love Me Tender ››› Ocean’s Eleven (1960) Frank Sinatra. ››› Seven Thieves (1960) Premiere. Castle “Ghosts” (CC) Castle (CC) Castle “Knockdown” Castle “Lucky Stiff” CSI: NY “Admissions” Law & Order: SVU Law & Order: SVU Law & Order: SVU Law & Order: SVU Law & Order: SVU Big Bang Big Bang Hart of Dixie (CC) Emily Owens, M.D. Rules Rules Amer. Dad Amer. Dad

mexico

to northwest ohio THE ORIGINAL MEXICAN RESTAURANTE & CANTINA IN TOLEDO

7742 W. Bancroft (1 Mi. West of McCord) 419-841-7523

Open Monday to Saturday 11 a.m. Closed Sundays &10” Holidays x 10.25” ad


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Good Morning News Hanna Ocean Explore Rescue Recipe Food Your Morning Saturday Busytown Busytown Liberty Liberty Paid Prog. Paid Prog. Wild Am. Aqua Kids Eco Co. Hollywood Paid Prog. Paid Prog. Paid Prog. Paid Prog. Kids News Paid Prog. Today (N) (CC) Paid Prog. Paid Prog. Wiggles Pajanimals Poppy Cat Justin LazyTown Noodle Sid Cat in the Super Dinosaur MotorWk Michigan Wild Ohio Out Mag. Nature (CC) (DVS) Criminal Minds (CC) Criminal Minds (CC) Flip This House (CC) Flipping Vegas (CC) Flipping Vegas (N) Top Chef: Seattle Top Chef: Seattle Top Chef: Seattle Top Chef: Seattle Vanderpump Rules DL Hughley: End. › Superstar (1999) Molly Shannon. (CC) ›› Mystery Men (1999) Hank Azaria. (CC) Jake and the Pirates Phineas Gravity Fish Dog Jessie ANT Farm Austin Austin SportsCenter (CC) SportsCenter (N) (CC) Sunday NFL Countdown (N) (Live) (CC) College Basketball › Furry Vengeance (2010) Brendan Fraser. ›› Garfield: A Tail of Two Kitties (2006) BH Chihuahua Be.- Made Best Thing Paula Paula Pioneer Trisha’s Contessa Giada Chopped “Belly Up” Buying and Selling Property Property BathCrash BathCrash YardCrash Kit. Crash Hse Crash Hse Crash Paid Prog. Paid Prog. WEN Hair Paid Prog. Paid Prog. Skincare Double ›› Deadly Sibling Rivalry (2011) Music Videos MTV Special MTV Special MTV Special MTV Special Payne Browns There Jim Raymond Raymond Rules Rules ›› Bedtime Stories ›› Two in the Dark ›› The Prime Minister (1941) ›› Code of the Secret Service › Adventurous Blonde Law & Order Law & Order Dallas (CC) Dallas (CC) ›› Edge of Darkness Paid Prog. Paid Prog. ›› How Do You Know (2010) Reese Witherspoon. (CC) ››› Dan in Real Life (2007) (CC) Sonic X Rangers Transform. Justice WWE Dragon Yu-Gi-Oh! Yu-Gi-Oh! Career Icons

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January 10, 2013

10:30

Ent Insider Last Resort (N) (CC) Grey’s Anatomy (N) Scandal (N) (CC) News J. Kimmel Wheel Jeopardy! Big Bang Two Men Person of Interest (N) Elementary “M.” (N) News Letterman The Office How I Met Mobbed (N) (CC) Glee “Michael” (CC) Fox Toledo News America Seinfeld Jdg Judy Jdg Judy 30 Rock 1600 Penn The Office 1600 Penn Rock Center News Jay Leno NewsHour Business Toledo Stories (CC) Midsomer Murders Live From Artists Den Charlie Rose (N) (CC) The First 48 (CC) The First 48 (CC) The First 48 (CC) Beyond Scared Beyond Scared Matchmaker Matchmaker Matchmaker Kathy (N) Happens Matchmkr Colbert Daily ›› Office Space (1999) Ron Livingston. (CC) Tosh.0 Tosh.0 Daily Colbert ANT Farm Dog ››› Tangled (2010) Voices of Mandy Moore. Austin Good Jessie ANT Farm College Basketball Teams TBA. (N) (Live) College Basketball Teams TBA. (N) (Live) SportsCenter (N) (CC) › Wild Hogs (2007) Tim Allen, John Travolta. ›› RV (2006) Robin Williams. Premiere. The 700 Club (CC) Cupcake Wars Chopped Chopped Sweet Genius (N) Rachael v. Guy Hunt Intl Hunters Salvage Salvage Rehab Rehab Hunters Hunt Intl Hunters Hunt Intl To Be Announced Project Runway Project Runway Double Double Double Double Sucker Free MTV Special MTV Special MTV Special MTV Special Seinfeld Seinfeld Fam. Guy Fam. Guy Big Bang Big Bang Big Bang Big Bang Conan (N) (CC) Rebel Without ››› Demetrius and the Gladiators (1954) ››› Roughly Speaking (1945) (CC) The Mentalist (CC) NBA Basketball New York Knicks at Indiana Pacers. (N) NBA Basketball NCIS “Blowback” (CC) NCIS (CC) NCIS (CC) NCIS “Skeletons” (CC) CSI: Crime Scene Big Bang Big Bang The 18th Annual Critics’ Choice Movie Rules Rules Amer. Dad Amer. Dad

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

MOVIES

8 pm

6:30

7 pm

7:30

8 pm

8:30

9 pm

9:30

January 12, 2013

10 pm 10:30 11 pm 11:30

J. Hanna Full Plate Paid Paid Shark Tank (CC) ESPN Sports Saturday (N) News ABC Insider Lottery 20/20 (N) (CC) The 2013 Miss America Competition (N) News Castle Paid Paid Paid Paid Paid The NFL Today (N) NFL Football AFC Divisional Playoff -- TBA at Denver Broncos. (N) (Live) (CC) CSI: Crime Scene Criminal Minds 48 Hours (N) (CC) News CSI Paid Paid Paid Paid Bones (CC) Leverage (CC) Burn Notice (CC) Burn Notice (CC) McCarver Pregame NFL Football: NFC Divisional Playoff News Seinfeld Back Fat? Paid Paid Paid Ticket to the Tour Skiing Dog Challenge News News Jdg Judy Academic The Biggest Loser (CC) Deception “Pilot” News SNL This Old House Hr Chef John Besh Pledge Event Sara Moulton Pledge Event Lawrence Welk History Detectives Antiques Roadshow As Time... Wine Masterpiece Classic Flipping Vegas (CC) Flipping Vegas (CC) Celeb. Ghost Stories Celeb. Ghost Stories Celeb. Ghost Stories Storage Storage Storage Storage Storage Storage Storage Storage Storage Storage Storage Storage Housewives/Atl. Housewives/Atl. Housewives/Atl. Real Housewives Real Housewives Matchmaker Matchmaker Matchmaker › Mr. Deeds (2002, Comedy) Adam Sandler. › Mr. Deeds (2002) ›› The Goods: Live Hard. Sell Hard. (2009) ›› Welcome Home Roscoe Jenkins (2008) Kevin Hart: Grown G. Iglesias: Fluffy Jeff Dunham: Spark of Insanity ›› Office Space (1999) Ron Livingston. ›› Dumb & Dumber (1994) (CC) Austin ANT Farm ANT Farm ANT Farm Good Good Austin Austin Good Good Austin ANT Farm Jessie Jessie Jessie Shake It ANT Farm Dog ANT Farm ANT Farm ANT Farm Austin College Basketball College Basketball High School Basketball The Fab Five (CC) Nation 30 for 30 30 for 30 SportsCenter (N) BH Chihuahua ››› Big (1988, Fantasy) Tom Hanks. ›› The Pacifier (2005, Comedy) Vin Diesel. ››› Home Alone (1990) Macaulay Culkin. ›› Ramona and Beezus (2010) Joey King. ››› Matilda (1996, Comedy) Mara Wilson. Unwrapped Restaurant: Im. Restaurant Stakeout Diners Diners Iron Chef America Rachael v. Guy Diners Diners Diners Diners Diners Diners Diners Diners Iron Chef America Love It or List It (CC) Hunters Hunters Hunters Hunters Hunters Hunters Hunters Hunters Hunters Hunt Intl House Hunters Reno Love It or List It (CC) Love It or List It (CC) Hunters Hunt Intl Hunters Hunt Intl Deadly Gone (2011, Suspense) Molly Parker. (CC) ›› The Killing Secret (1997) Ari Meyers. ›› Orphan (2009) Vera Farmiga, Peter Sarsgaard. (CC) In the Dark (2013) Elizabeth Rohm. (CC) An Amish Murder (2013) Neve Campbell. MTV Special MTV Special MTV Special MTV Special MTV Special MTV Special MTV Special MTV Special MTV Special MTV Special MTV Special ›› Bedtime Stories › Norbit (2007) Eddie Murphy. (CC) Friends Friends Friends Friends King King King King Big Bang Big Bang Big Bang Big Bang Wedding Band (N) Cougar Wedding ›› The Return of Frank James (1940) ›› The Way West (1967, Western) Kirk Douglas. (CC) ›››› The Treasure of the Sierra Madre (1948) ››› What Ever Happened to Baby Jane? (1962) (CC) A Streetcar Named Desire ›› Edge of Darkness (2010) ››› Minority Report (2002) Tom Cruise, Colin Farrell. (CC) ››› Inglourious Basterds (2009, War) Brad Pitt, Mélanie Laurent. (CC) (DVS) ››› The Bourne Identity (2002) (CC) The Bourne Identity Dan Real ››› The 40-Year-Old Virgin (2005) Steve Carell. (CC) NCIS “Forced Entry” NCIS “Probie” (CC) NCIS “Jeopardy” NCIS “Smoked” (CC) NCIS “Bounce” (CC) NCIS “Obsession” NCIS (CC) (DVS) CSI: Crime Scene Live Life On Spot Game Raceline EP Daily EP Daily ’70s ’70s Rules Rules Two Men Two Men Big Bang Big Bang › Texas Rangers (2001), Dylan McDermott Fam. Guy Fam. Guy Futurama Futurama

Friday, January 11th

Earth Hits Hard facebook.com/blarneytoledo

601 Monroe St. Right Across from Fifth Third Field

Saturday, January 12th

The Rivets

You’re only a hops, skip, and jump a whey from Blarney Blueberry Ale and a great time.

HAPPY HOUR Mon-Fri 4-7 pm Live Entertainment Thurs-Fri-Sat

St. Patty’s Day COUnTDOwn

OnLY 11 MORE wEEKS!

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.theblarneybullpen.com 10” x 10.25” ad 419-481-5206


JANUARY 6, 2013

Visit www.toledofreepress.com

n A23

A Unique Residence for Seniors with Unique Needs Alzheimer & Memory Care • Private rooms/licensed “residential care” • Personalized programs • Memory enhancing actvities • Daily routines in a soothing environment • Emergency call system • Monitored by caregivers 24/7 • On-site church services • Private dining room and landscaped courtyard

Care for persons with Alzheimer’s disease and other forms of memory impairment requires specialized knowledge, dedication, patience and compassion. The caring staff at Swan Creek are trained to understand and work with challenges associated with early stages of dementia. Residents live in a separate, secure section of the community, specially designed to provide a familiar and engaging (yet non-threatening) environment. If someone you love has Alzheimer’s disease or other memory loss, Swan Creek can help. We offer the expertise, services and the resources you need to make extremely important quality of life decisions.

Call 419-865-4445

for more information and a tour.

5916 Cresthaven Lane • Toledo, OH 43614 • www.swancreekohio.org


A24 n Toledo Free Press

RENEW YOU $100 LEVIS COMMONS GIFT CARD RAVE MOVIE PASSES $50 BIAGGI'S GIFT CARD $25 SECOND SOLE GIFT CERTIFICATE $100 C STERLING GIFT CARD $50 GIFT CARD TO VENETIAN $25 GIFT CARD TO YOGURT VI HILTON GARDEN INN OVERNIGHT STAY ... AND MORE!

JANUARY 6, 2013


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