Toledo Free Press – Jan. 23, 2011

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Toledo’s WILLIAM BUFORD and his OSU Buckeyes are on top of the college basketball world. Story by Mike Bauman, Page A16

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january 23, 2011


OPINION

JANUARY 23, 2011

LIGHTING THE FUSE

PUBLISHER’S STATEMENT

Welcome, Harper M I

mentioned last week that my family has welcomed a new baby girl named Harper June Therese Pounds. She came into this world at 2:18 a.m. Jan. 12. I rarely use this space to talk about my personal life but this is truly a special occasion. I am 52 years old and thought my child-raising days were done. I have a 22-year-old named Katy and a 21-year-old, Austin. They are great young adults, although they will also always be my kids. We are blessed; Katy and Austin are both are in college and doing well. They are thrilled with the new addition. Katy even told Austin when they heard the news that “Now you are the dreaded middle child!” Harper’s mother, Liljana May Brescol, is a wonderful person who has a very positive attitude toward life. She has a young boy named Nolan who has been part of my life for some time now. I love him as if he is my own. When we learned of the pregnancy, Nolan was very happy to know he was going to have a baby sister. It was quite the learning Thomas F. POUNDS experience for all of us as we tried to explain to Nolan how Harper was growing in mommy’s belly. The entire nine months went by in a blink (for me that is — Liljana would beg to differ!) but as the day came closer I started reflecting on the experience. I asked myself, “Is this the right time in my life to do this? What kind of world am I bringing her into?” But I knew, yes, this is the right time; the world has always had issues that make parents wonder. The key will be the love and support we give our children; that is what will count. Harper arrived at St. Luke’s in the Family Birthing Center. The people there were just terrific. Two nurses, Kris and Mary, genuinely love their HARPER POUNDS jobs. The experience we had was wonderful and smooth as we were in one room for the entire stay. My daughter and Liljana’s sister, mother and aunt all were there. The experience was one that we will remember always and we can’t thank the folks at St. Luke’s enough. I first became a father more than two decades ago. With my first two kids, I was traveling all over the country with new jobs in new cities. The big difference now is that I am rooted here in Toledo. My hope is that as we join to raise Harper, I will be more focused on the important things — the things here at home. ✯ Thomas F. Pounds is president and publisher of Toledo Free Press and Toledo Free Press Star. Contact him at tpounds@toledofreepress.com.

A publication of Toledo Free Press, LLC, Vol. 7, No. 4. Established 2005. EDITORIAL Mary Ann Stearns, Design Editor mastearns@toledofreepress.com James A. Molnar, Lead Designer Brandi Barhite, Associate Editor bbarhite@toledofreepress.com Kristen Criswell, Special Sections Editor krapin@toledofreepress.com ADMINISTRATION Pam Burson, Business Manager pburson@toledofreepress.com

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The big E

any landmarks from my teen years are gone or unrecognizable — Southwyck Mall is a parking lot, Billy Paxton Westgate long ago lost Thackeray’s and Boogie RePaxton Demolition is the company responsible for cords, and the clock is ticking on Libbey High School. tearing down the theater. The firm was founded in 2000 The Showcase Cinemas complex on Secor Road, which and is the family’s third-generation entry in the demoliclosed in 2005, is being dismantled. Theater tion field. Vice President Billy Paxton has 1 is already rubble and Theaters 2 and 3 are more than 30 years of experience as a heavy gutted and waiting for the wrecking ball. equipment operator. His late grandfather OJ The theater was killed by the megaplex adstarted the tradition more than 80 years ago dition to Westfield Franklin Park Shopping and his father, Bill Paxton, owner of B&P Mall. But seeing it torn down has stirred up Wrecking, has worked on demolition jobs some personal ghosts and memories. in Toledo for 50 years. Owner Jamie Paxton In June 1977, I sat in the dark at the and daughters Kodie and Sumerr round out Showcase on Secor to see “Star Wars.” No the family business. entertainment experience since has seared as My friend Robert Russ scouted the deimmediately and resonated as permanently. molition site and facilitated a meeting with It’s easy to look back at the beaten and Michael S. MILLER Billy. Standing in the demolition site trailer, bewildered child I was and understand why looking at the weather-and-work-toughened “Star Wars” had such an impact. It was transportation away man, I hesitated to explain why I was hoping to own one from a reality of thrown dinner plates and being pushed of the neon letters. Billy looked like a man who unquesagainst walls and being smacked for imaginary transgres- tionably understood heavy equipment, but might not have sions. “Star Wars,” though I could not have expressed it patience for daydreams about first kisses. then, gave my mind a place to go when reality became too Billy may be responsible for knocking things down, but I much to process. Every creative impulse in my brain was discovered he has great empathy for the memories his work born anew that day; my love for music, film, writing, all sites still have for people. He told me that many people had things born in the imagination. stopped by to obtain theater seats, letters, even pieces of In 1982, my brother Mark and I took our mother Rachel carpeting and screen. Some were movie buffs, some collecto the Showcase Secor to see Steven Spielberg’s “E.T.” We tors, some just people like me, with an emotional connecdid not know it then, but it was the last time the three of tion. With hard hat and proper lighting gear, I was allowed us would ever enjoy such an evening. My mother’s deterio- to walk with one of Billy’s workers through the site. The rating health — and our crumbling relationship — would lobby, full of rubble and piles of seats, looks like a scene in prevent any subsequent nights out. But that night, for a zombie apocalypse film. It meant a great deal to me to sit a few hours, we had fun. As I have learned with the rap- one of the still-attached seats one last time, pretending I idly turning calendar pages, simple “fun” with friends and could smell popcorn and hear the pre-movie chatter. It was family is not to be taken for granted or looked down upon. a brief moment, but I will always carry it with me. I could not count the number of movies I saw at Showcase I made a deal with Billy and eventually backed up our Secor, or name all the friends with whom I shared those wide- Dodge Caravan to the demolition site. It wasn’t until I was awake dreams. Gary Moritz and I saw “Raiders of the Lost Ark” standing next to the letter E — the only neon letter left — there. Tony Tyson and I saw “Beverly Hills Cop” and “Aliens” that realized how little I had thought through the impulse. there. A fair amount of first dates took place there; maybe even The E was solid, dense steel, covered in flaking blue paint, a few second and third dates. It was in the parking lot of Show- with a vast maze of neon tubes running through its guts. case Secor, walking in a cool drizzle to see the 1997 “Star Wars It weighed at least 150 pounds and measured more than Special Edition,” that I impulsively stopped Shannon Scott, 5 feet from end to end and more than 3 feet tall. I had to brought her face to mine and first kissed her smiling and tanta- remove the kids’ car seats and drop the stow-n-go seats into lizing lips; she is now my wife, and I strive to keep that first-kiss the van floor, then enlist two site workers to help me load magic alive as we near our 10th wedding anniversary. it into the van. And so it was, stuck in traffic on Secor Road, waiting to It sits in a Toledo garage, waiting for attention. get to the I-475 entrance ramp, that I saw the steel beams It is garish and nostalgic and larger than life, which reand busted bricks and ... several of the original neon letters minds me of the movies. It inspires an overwhelming sense that used to line the roof, resting against the building. The that I am going to need a lot of help moving forward, which letters once spelled “S-H-O-W-C-A-S-E C-I-N-E-M-A-S reminds me of life. ✯ 1-2-3,” but when I saw them, all that was left was “A-E C-S 3.” With a swell of certainty, but in retrospect not much Michael S. Miller is editor in chief of Toledo Free Press and clarity, I knew how I wanted to preserve my memories of Toledo Free Press Star. Contact him at mmiller@toledo Showcase Secor. freepress.com. Thomas F. Pounds, President/Publisher tpounds@toledofreepress.com

DISTRIBUTION Charles Campos (419) 241-1700, Ext. 227 ccampos@toledofreepress.com PRODUCTION Charlie Longton, Photographer

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

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Toledo Free Press is published every Sunday by Toledo Free Press, LLC, 605 Monroe St., Toledo, OH 43604 Phone: (419) 241-1700 Fax: (419) 241-8828 www.toledofreepress.com. Subscription rate: $100 /year. Reproduction or use of editorial or graphic content in any manner without permission is strictly prohibited. Copyright 2011 with all rights reserved. Publication of advertisements does not imply endorsement of advertisers’ goods or services.


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SHREDDING THE CURTAIN

OPINION

JANUARY 23, 2011

LETTER TO THE EDITOR

Storm clouds gather Blade reporter defends Wilson story

S

tormwater is at the heart of the Council’s Public Utilities committee Toledo City Council debate on meeting for, “budget statements that reflect to Jan. 1, 2010, on all three utility rate increases. As has been covered in past col- accounts as to starting balances and umns, Toledo has a consent decree ending balances on Dec. 31, 2010.” Director of Public Utilities Tom with the Environmental Protection Agency (EPA) because our combined Crothers in response said, “Indeed, I sewer and storm system, when over- would have loved to have answered whelmed, releases excess sewage, those more quickly as well, but because of the implecalled a combined mentation of the SAP sewer overflow (CSO), system, and the parallel, into the waterways. if you will, operation of Many other areas the Ross system, I have that have consent denot yet to date, been able crees have opted to have to answer that with the a set fee on utility bills certainty that I feel comdirectly related to projfortable with the numects needed to satisfy bers. and until I am, you the EPA. It gives resisee that referral.” dents of an area a better Lisa Renee WARD willIfnot he is not comfortchance of seeing the additional fee end when the projects have able with the numbers as to expenses been completed. That can not be said and revenues, it could be asked, how can anyone know how much of a rate for an across-the-board increase. That is one of the reasons Coun- increase is really needed? Crothers cilwoman Lindsay Webb suggested promised Collins’ request would be not only a lower percentage increase met before the Jan. 25 meeting. One thing everyone does appear in water, sanitary sewer and stormwater rates, but included a set fee di- to agree on is that the consent decree is financially burdensome. The EPA rectly related to the consent decree. While her plan was changed and announced plans to make regulatory the percentage rates increased so the improvements to strengthen its stormoverall plan generated the same as water program this past summer. The EPA acknowledged in “Green the administration’s plan, it appears to be the only other plan that Mayor Infrastructure Case Studies: Municipal Policies for Managing StormMike Bell supports. Councilman Rob Ludeman has water with Green Infrastructure” in presented a utility rate plan, a 5 per- August 2010: “City and county govcent increase in water and sewer and ernments have limited financial resources to allocate to the many comno increase in stormwater. A problem with Ludeman’s plan peting demands under local control. is it would severely impact funding Municipalities are responsible for imof projects that deal with storm- plementing and enforcing expensive water, like cleaning ditches of debris CleanWater Act requirements, while also trying to pay for a large number to prevent/reduce flooding. While things could change before of other programs, both environthe Jan. 25 Council meeting, none of mental and non-environmental.” It said, “Green infrastructure apthe plans have enough support to predict passage. Should Ludeman’s plan proaches have a range of benefits for pass as written and the Mayor vetos the social, environmental and economic conditions of a community.” it, there is no increase in utility rates. Toledo has not made any serious That news may make many happy; after all, who wants to pay attempts to renegotiate the consent decree with the EPA. As has been pointed higher utility rates? The risk is if there is a catastrophic out in the past and was restated by failure of an element of our water Katie Swartz, associate director for treatment or sewer system, the money American Rivers, during the comhas to come from somewhere, most mittee meeting, discussions with the likely the General Fund, which would EPA to increase green infrastructure instead of gray should take place and is mean cuts or increased fees. Part of the problem is some on taking place in other cities. The sooner we find out what is Council do not have faith in the Bell administration’s numbers. This is possible when it comes to the consent compounded by the lack of transpar- decree, the better, from an environency when it came to requests that mental and a financial standpoint. ✯ were made by more than one member of Council. Councilman D. Michael Lisa Renee Ward operates the political Collins repeated his request Jan. 18 at blog GlassCityJungle.com.

TO THE EDITOR, Never, to my knowledge, has my reporting been analyzed at such length (“Monkey Business,” by Michael S. Miller, Jan. 16). Thanks for the attention. However, I think a lot of your conclusions and characterizations are wrong. First, in regard to identifying Larry Sykes as an AfricanAmerican, he states in the story that he feels personally insulted. Identifying his race helps explain why he feels personally insulted. It also shows the reader that he knows whereof he speaks. Secondly, I don’t take personally that I am the object of Wilson’s “derision.” It’s part of the business we’re in. We at times disagree. Thirdly, in response to how I “most likely” told my sources that the quote was directly referring to TPS students. Why would you assume that? In fact, I did not tell anyone that the quote made a direct characterization of TPS students as monkeys. To each person I called I explained Wilson’s set-up and read the exact quote. They didn’t need to be prompted. I checked back with Vasquez and he told me that nothing he learned subsequently made him think that Wilson’s comments had been misrepresented by The Blade. Fourthly, How is this a crack in the story: “The first crack in The Blade’s mission to sink Wilson came from Bell, when Jennifer Sorgenfrei, public information officer for the City of Toledo, said, “[The mayor’s] statement was in direct response to the portion of audio he was provided by The Blade,” the first public indicator that this mess originated with the daily paper of record.” Did the mayor retract his remark? If so, I’m not aware of it. Fifth, Brian Wilson is the one that threw out the monkey reference. He’s a professional. He knows what the word connotes when he’s talking about how to teach students in Toledo Public Schools. Anyway, it was a bad analogy. Monkeys don’t need to be taught to peel bananas. They do it instinctively, like swinging on vines. It’s not a parlor trick. Teaching dogs to walk on their hind legs or dolphins to balance a beach ball on their noses would be parlor tricks, and would have made Wilson’s point without the egregious offensiveness — or at least less offensively. But no, we have to go with monkeys. Sixth, contrary to your column, the very first story that appeared in The Blade fully explained the context of

Wilson’s remarks, including this paragraph: Following the “monkey” reference, Mr. Wilson explained that, “similarly, the children, just because you can teach them the answers to what are the capitals of the 50 states of America — that’s a fun exercise, but it does not teach them how to think, it doesn’t teach them how to be objective, it doesn’t teach them how to be entrepreneurs and individuals, and things of that order.” Seventh, why does not putting quotes around “little monkeys” qualify as “more fact-based reporting”? Eighth, regarding these two paragraphs: The unsigned editorial also includes this puzzler: “Comparing humans with lesser primates is, of course, a standard racial insult.” Really? Think about the stunning implications of that statement. There’s no outrage in it, just a ho-hum admission that “That’s just the way it is.” First, you know as a journalist that editorials are always unsigned. Second, we quoted respected AfricanAmericans making this point. I refer you back to the story. Third, we gave examples from history of where mentioning primates in connection with AfricanAmericans was offensive. Finally, I am very proud of The Blade’s handling of this story and of my own part in it. We did not misquote Brian Wilson. We did not take his remarks out of context. We supplied readers with the exact context and we gave Mr. Wilson the opportunity to explain more fully his reference. We also gave station general manager and vice president Andy Stuart the opportunity to respond and he chose not to, and throughout the weekend we left him messages offering to report his reaction. I think it’s telling that when Andy Stuart finally commented he characterized Brian Wilson’s apology as more of an apology than it actually was. Here’’s what Andy said: “He told his listeners that while he did not mean to offend anyone, and was not making a comparison to Toledo’s students, he recognizes that his use of this word was inappropriate and he apologized for that.” As you said in your column, Wilson said he was sorry if anyone was offended by his remarks — which isn’t the same thing as being sorry for making the remarks. Regards TOM TROY Blade Politics Writer

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EDUCATION CHAMPIONS

Successful approach to learning lacks district-wide implementation in TPS Editor’s Note: Toledo Free Press, United Way of Greater Toledo and 13abc’s “Bridges” with Doni Miller are profiling 12 education initiative programs in Northwest Ohio. This is the second story in the series. By Michael Stainbrook TOLEDO FREE PRESS STAFF WRITER news@toledofreepress.com

Five years ago, teachers at East Side Central Elementary School adopted an innovative learning style in an attempt to improve students’ classroom experience. The results were promising, but widespread use of the approach has not yet been achieved in Toledo Public Schools (TPS). The approach taken at East Side Central employs social and emotional learning (SEL), a process that stresses a multifaceted education of the complete student. Teachers help their pupils develop critical communication skills by facilitating an interactive classroom. Students are instructed how to engage each other positively and are given the opportunity to do so through various interpersonal exercises. “You can call it a field in education, or you can call it a movement,” said educational consultant Jennifer Miller, who has 15 years of experience promoting SEL in schools. “There’s been so much focus on

Jnouusntced!

An

academic press and high stakes tests that the socio-emotional lives of kids has been lost in the stress,” she said. United Way of Greater Toledo Women’s Initiative first introduced SEL to TPS in spring 2005. The group hoped to reduce teenage pregnancy and boost graduation and attendance rates through more effective teaching techniques at the grade-school level. “What they found ound more and more is that you have to start early to change either ther of those,” said Greg Braylock, Jr., an education specialist with United Way. After learningg of SEL, United d Way contacted d the Collaborativee for Academic, So-cial and Emotional al Learning (CASEL), EL), which recommended nded Miller get involved. d The district warmly received SEL, as did the faculty at East Side Central. In order to implement the changes, 80 percent of the school’s teachers had to vote in favor of it. They approved it unanimously and began implementation during the 2006-07 school year. The school uses Responsive Classroom, a SELbased curriculum.

“We wanted to certainly serve a lowincome population, but also a really critical piece was willingness to participate,” Miller said. “They immediately said, ‘This aligns with our philosophy, and we’re willing to take this on.’ ” So far, the results have been positive. School-wide attendance rose from 91 percent to 95 percent in four years, and suspensions dropped by nearly 8 percent in only one year. The school’s Ohio Departscho ment men of Education report por card has improved from “academic watch” to “eff “ ective” since SEL was introduced. Many schools try various techniques to raise their effectiveness, Miller said, but b SEL was East Side Central’s only S school-wide reform. scho “It’s hard to attri“ bute in schools because they do so many different things, but this one I think we can point to it and say it’s a reason for success,” she said. Parents have become more involved, too. When SEL was first implemented parents of East Side Central students volunteered 15 hours a year, Braylock said. That figure has since skyrocketed to 1,500 hours annually. East Side Central special

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Education Champions

education teacher Sue Rowe said the school has become friendlier, leading parents to become more willing to be involved. “The whole climate of the building in general, it’s more kind,” Rowe said. “We’ve seen a significant increase in parent involvement.” Despite the apparent benefit that SEL brings to classrooms, only one other TPS institution uses the approach school-wide. Sherman Elementary adopted SEL a year after East Side Central. Some other TPS instructors have completed the weeklong summer training session and stress this learning style, but no other schools have made broad changes to their curricula. Implementing SEL requires the financial backing of the district. United Way and other organizations provide some funding for putting it to practice, but TPS must pick up the tab for some of the training its teachers undergo through the Responsive Classroom curriculum. In addition to the annual summer session, teachers receive a couple hours of supplemental instruction every month. “The district has been very positive about Responsive Classroom and very interested. They’ve provided funds for the training to occur,” Rowe said. But widespread implementation of SEL and the related curriculum has not occurred. Miller said the slow progress is a natural part of any change

to academic practices. Rowe agrees. “Things come and go. As teachers, we get pretty skeptical about [change],” Rowe said, adding that SEL is here to stay. “The teachers realize that it’s not going away. The district has made an investment here.” Miller has continued discussing the future of SEL with TPS officials. Before any other schools can adopt the learning style, another teachers’ vote must take place. “We’re working with the district to determine what schools are next, what their priorities are,” she said. “It’s taken time. It’s been five years, but this year definitely we’ve had more conversations with the district at all levels.” Two other large school districts in the state have taken steps to adopt SEL in their classrooms. Cleveland Public Schools has announced it plans to implement the approach district-wide, and U.S. Rep. Tim Ryan (OH-17) secured a grant to explore SEL possibilities with Youngstown schools. Braylock hopes similar results will come to Northwest Ohio in the near future. “Individual teachers are definitely seeing the benefits of participation and are spreading the word,” he said. “At every level of leadership, we have support. We have partnership and buy-in that will make this type of initiative even stronger.” ✯

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JANUARY 23, 2011

COLLEGE SPORTS

BGSU team receives record donation By Chris Schmidbauer TOLEDO FREE PRESS SPORTS EDITOR cschmidbauer@toledofreepress.com

For more than 60 years William Frack has been devoted to BGSU Falcons men’s basketball, and now the Findlay native is making sure his beloved Falcons will be in good hands financially for a long time. On Jan. 19, Bowling Green State University Athletics Director Greg Christopher announced that through several irrevocable trusts, Frack will donate $10 million to the men’s basketball program — the largest private gift in BGSU. “This donation changes the trajectory of our program for years to come and sets a new bar for leadership at Bowling Green,” Christopher said. The endowment fund is the culmination of a six-decade love affair for Frack that began in 1948. “My father was a school teacher at Findlay High School, and when I was in the eighth grade, he took a job with the state department of education and he was stationed in Bowling Green,” Frack said. “My father started bringing me to basketball games in the old men’s gym, and I have never grown out of it.”

Donning an orange blazer with a brown turtleneck underneath, the 75 year-old talked about his hopes for his sizable donation. “This is going to help the whole university and athletic department,” Frack said. “It is going to attract major attention to the school.” Christopher and Frack hope this donation means BGSU basketball will be able to compete on the MAC and national levels. “Over the last 10 to 15 years, the landscape of college basketball has changed,” Christopher said. “We have seen teams like Gonzaga, Butler and George Mason who have had success at the national level.” Frack echoed that sentiment. “Sixty years ago, it didn’t take that much to run a Division I basketball program and be successful,” he said. “Today that is a very different case. If Butler and Gonzaga can do it, Bowling Green can do it.” BGSU head coach Louis Orr was moved by the donation as well. “Bill Frack is a seed sower,” Orr said. “He is so passionate and he shows it with his generosity.” Orr has been the head coach of

bigger programs in the past, having coached at Seton Hall of the Big East conference. He said this donation allows BGSU to give their student athletes all of the opportunities necessary to be successful in their college careers. “Resources are always a blessing, and I am a firm believer that we have to give our guys the best education possible. Anytime you can help a student athlete, it is a great thing. This is going to help bless many generations of basketball players for years to come.” This is not the first donation Frack has made to BGSU. Christopher said he was instrumental in the building of the new basketball arena, the Stroh Center, which is set to open this fall. Christopher said Frack made a $1 million donation to help the project succeed. Christopher said Frack’s generous spirit comes with no strings attached, which is what makes him a university favorite. “This is not about him, and he is not doing it for Bill Frack. He is doing it for BGSU men’s basketball,” he said. “He’s not concerned about where his name is going to be or having any kind of publicity. For Bill, it’s about Bowling Green State University.” ✯

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Local jewelers offer support for wounded veterans By Kristen Criswell TOLEDO FREE PRESS SPECIAL SECTIONS EDITOR krapin@toledofreepress.com

Some local jewelers are stocking up on a new and unique bracelet in support of wounded veterans. Licata Tradition and David Fair-

clough Fine Jewelers will now carry From Soldier to Soldier bracelets, sold as part of a national awareness and fundraising campaign benefiting Homes for Our Troops. The campaign, which just recently launched, raises money for veterans by selling designer versions of survival

and friendship bracelets worn by many soldiers in Iraq and Afghanistan. “It’s just one of those things where we can try and do a little bit for our troops,” said Nick Licata, manager and designer at Licata Tradition. “The bracelets are really neat looking and have an interesting story behind them.”

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Licata said his cousin, a member of the Air Force, first told him about the survival bracelets being worn in Afghanistan and about a group in the U.S. selling them to benefit veterans. For each bracelet sold $25 goes to Homes for Our Troops, a nonprofit organization aimed at building homes for wounded veterans from Iraq and Afghanistan. “We think it certainly supports a worthy cause. These soldiers have been injured or lost limbs and need special housing,” said David Fairclough, owner of Fairclough Fine Jewelers. “I think it’s a great charitable thing. Any way we can help the troops, we’re happy to.” From Soldier to Soldier is a campaign started by LovelinksAmerica in Massachusetts. The bracelets are made from parachute cord, like those made

in the field by soldiers, and are 100 percent manufactured in America, said Niels Christiansen, CEO and president of LovelinksAmerica. Eventually, the campaign plans to donate funds to additional programs that help wounded veterans, he said. Licata Tradition sold out of its first shipment of bracelets, but expects to have more soon. Fairclough just got its first shipment in and is selling the bracelets. Bracelets come with sterling silver or gold-plated clasps and vary in color. Prices for the bracelets vary between $95 and $145. Licata Tradition is located at 2042 S. Byrne Road. David Fairclough is at 7141 W. Central Ave. For more information about From Soldier to Soldier, visit the website www.fromsoldiertosoldier.org. ✯


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A8 ■ TOLEDO FREE PRESS

JANUARY 23, 2011

As Blanks settle into consistent routine, so does family cat Editor’s note: Toledo Free Press will follow the Blank family of Millbury for the next year as they rebuild their lives after a June 5 tornado destroyed their Main Street home. When the Blanks moved into their rebuilt home last month, everyone was ecstatic, except Rippy, who had a few BLANK choice meows. “He likes it now, but the night he came, he cried a long time because he didn’t know what was going on,” Julie Blank said. The 4-year-old cat named after basketball player Rip Hamilton lost his home like the rest of the family when a tornado tore through Millbury. After being lost and found, Rippy moved with the rest of the family to their friends’ house in Perrysburg Township. Six weeks later, he moved

with the family into a condo in Oregon. When Rippy moved yet again in December, he became frazzled. John Dinon, executive director of the Toledo Area Humane Society (TAHS), said the cat’s reaction was normal. TAHS is part of the DART team — Disaster Animal Response Team, FAMILY: which went out the day after the tornado to look for missing animals. Pets are not people, but they have some of the same characteristics as people and they like consistency,” Dinon said. But just like people, animals vary in how they handle change, he said. Animal behavior is situation dependent. When people adopt from the shelter, animals are thought to be a certain way, but the assumption is once they get into a house situation,

which is more normal than a shelter, things will get better, Dinon said. Rippy only spent a little time at the shelter after the post-tornado chaos separated him from his family. Julie doesn’t exactly know how it happened, but the night of the tornado, Rippy was in the basement with the family. When the water lines broke,

she thinks he jumped into a cubby hole. Julie and the rest of the family lost track of him as they climbed through the rubble that used to be their house. Julie remembers thinking, “I just thought I had to worry about human life.” But the next day, when a person at the scene said a cat had been found in a basement and taken to the Wood

County Humane Society, Julie said, “Oh my God, it is mine.” Dinon said the best way to help a pet adjust to a change is to keep some things as consistent as possible. In the Blanks’ case, it was good they kept the cat with them, even though they were moving a lot. Another tip is to set up a spot with a favorite bed and toy. ✯

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january 23, 2011

n A9

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community

A10 n Toledo Free Press

january 23, 2011

Ready U

Organizations seek disaster-ready volunteers By Kristen Criswell

Toledo Free Press Special Sections Editor krapin@toledofreepress.com

When tornadoes hit Millbury in June, hundreds of volunteers came out to lend support to those affected by the disaster. Many of those volunteers were directed through United Way of Greater Toledo’s volunteer reception center. “After the tornadoes hit we processed a lot of spontaneous volunteers,” said Emily Avery, manager of the volunteer center for United Way. While the Red Cross provided many previously trained volunteers to assist with the disaster, the volunteer reception center processed random volunteers who came out, Avery said. The center directed individuals to areas they were needed and helped cut down heavy traffic flows, she said. “It’s important to organize volunteers. Going out without knowing what’s needed, a volunteer’s expertise isn’t getting utilized,” Avery said. On Jan. 24, Ready U will host its first session of the New Year “Volunteering in a Disaster.” During the session, a panel of representatives from the Greater Toledo Area Chapter of the American Red Cross, Lucas County Medical Reserve Corps (MRC) and United Way will discuss ways individuals can assist during a disaster. “It’s a good idea to get involved in the community to see what kind of opportunities are available before a disaster. That way you can get some training in and prepare in case of an actual event,” said Cheryl Murphy, disaster response coordinator for the Lucas County MRC. Murphy will provide background about the Medical Reserve Corps and how volunteers can get involved, she said. The organization provides assistance during any national disaster that may need medical assistance. “We assist from flood, tornadoes and pandemic flu to any type of terrorism — small pox or anthrax. Anything that might place strain on a hospital, we’ll assist with,” Murphy said. Often, MRC volunteers are retired nurses or doctors, but volunteers don’t need a medical background as the organization provides training to its volunteers, she said. The Red Cross also trains its disaster action teams and volunteers prior to an event, said Diane Dixon, director of volunteer management at the Red Cross. Dixon will outline training volunteers receive as well as what Red Cross volunteers do on a daily basis at the session, she said.

“Just like in Millbury, volunteers always step up. [The Ready U session] will teach them about what they can do to make a greater impact in the community when there is another disaster,” Dixon said. “Unfortunately there will be another big event. There

is always another event.” Ready U is presented by the Red Cross and Lucas County Emergency Management Agency. “Volunteering in a Disaster” is scheduled for Jan. 24 at 7 p.m. and will last an hour. The session will take place

at Toledo-Lucas County Public Library Main Branch, 325 N. Michigan St. For more about Ready U programs and information on how to prepare for an emergency, visit ready-u.com. Toledo Free Press is a media sponsor for the Ready U program. O

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january 23, 2011

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n .A11

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community

A12 n Toledo Free Press

Artist Wil Clay dies

Toledo-area resident Wil Clay is reported to have died on Jan. 15 following complications after surgery in Toledo. Clay was an illustrator, storyteller, graphic designer, painter and sculptor. He received the Coretta Scott King Honor Award for IllusCLAY tration in 1993 for his artwork in the book, “Little Eight John” as well as receiving numerous other awards. He was 72 years old. Clay was born in Toledo. He returned to Toledo in 1987 after working in commercial design projects in Providence, Rhode Island and Houston, Texas. Clay opened a studio at the

Common Space Center for Creativity in 1988, where he taught drawing. In 1989 Clay’s six-foot bronze and stainless steel sculpture that honored the late Dr. Martin Luther King, Jr. titled, “Radiance” was dedicated in Downtown Toledo. The sculpture was placed on the Martin Luther King Jr. Memorial Bridge. The American Academy of Art in Chicago and the Vesper George School of Art in Boston and University of Toledo in Ohio are listed in his biography as places of study. Clay’s most recent illustration project was “A Biography of George Washington Carver” that was written by Steven Krensky. Funeral arrangement information has not yet been released, a memorial service has been scheduled for Jan. 22 at the Toledo Museum of Art, where some of Clay’s paintings are displayed. O — Staff reports

Knight open house

The Knight Academy, a co-ed charter school, will host an open house Jan. 26. The school, which serves students in grades five to eight, offers an extended school day as well as advanced classes in science, language and technology. During the open house, students and parents will have the chance to

january 23, 2011

tour the school and meet with faculty, staff and administrators. The open house is from 5 p.m. to 7 p.m. on Jan. 26. Knight Academy is located at 110 Arco Drive. O — Staff reports

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january 23, 2011

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Business Link

A14 n Toledo Free Press

january 23, 2011

THE RETIREMENT GUYS

NEW BUSINESS TOLEDO FREE PRESS PHOTO BY Sarah Ottney

Don’t lose what you have

I

n

FROM LEFT, General Manager Jason Sieminski, with Owner Stephanie Anderson and Jeff Anderson.

Maumee gets sweet new business

By Sarah Ottney

Toledo Free Press Staff Writer news@toledofreepress.com

Maumee residents may have noticed some delicious new smells wafting from under a bright red awning at the corner of Wayne and Conant streets. Maumee Valley Chocolate and Candy quietly opened its doors in November. The shop offers more than 700 varieties of treats, including chocolates, chocolate-dipped strawberries and specialty popcorn made fresh daily. It also offers gift baskets, retro candy, penny candy, lollipops, chocolate-covered pretzel rods, Oreos and graham crackers, 40 varieties of boxed chocolates, nuts and gummies as well as sugar-free treats. Owner Stephanie Anderson said the idea was to offer something for everyone. “Our goal in mind was to have the gourmet chocolates for those who are chocolate connoisseurs, but also for them to be able to have their children come in and have an affordable option like penny candy for the kids,” Anderson said. “We tried to make a mix of everything.” If your favorite treat is not found

on its shelves, the shop takes requests. “We’ve actually had so many requests,” Anderson said. “Some of them we can’t find, but we’re trying to make the store kind of what the community wants, so they feel like they’re a part of it, too.” Anderson and her husband, Jeff, who live in Maumee, had been eyeing the storefront for two years as they took walks with their young son. “It’s something we’ve wanted to do for a long time, 10 years, but the question was where,” Jeff Anderson said. “This building is so beautiful, the history is so rich. We thought, ‘Hey, maybe this candy idea might actually come to life.’” The building was built as a drugstore in 1905; the family renovated the original side windows as well as brightened the dark-colored interior of the building’s former tenant, a cigar shop, Jeff Anderson said. Stephanie’s cousin Jason Sieminski, who serves as general manager, makes running the shop a family affair. “We just really wanted to bring some family-oriented business to downtown, so people with kids like us could bring their kid to town, have some fun, and make an afternoon of

it,” Stephanie Anderson said. The couple’s son, now 3 ½ , loves to come in, grab one of shop’s red candy bags and “shop,” Jeff Anderson said. The shop also offers full-service party and event catering for weddings, birthdays and holidays. Candy stations have become popular at weddings, so the shop’s booth was a hit at a recent bridal show, Jeff Anderson said. Guests scarfed down a display of chocolates and strawberries before he had time to post that it was for display only, he said with a laugh. The shop, which hosted a ribboncutting in December, did brisk business over the holidays, with gift baskets flying off the shelves as fast as they could make them, Jeff Anderson said, and support from the community has continued. “We have a lot of local repeat customers that come in every couple days so that’s kind of neat,” Jeff Anderson said. Maumee Valley Chocolate and Candy, 101 E. Wayne St., is open seven days a week: 10 a.m. to 9 p.m. Monday through Saturday and 10 a.m. to 7 p.m. Sunday. Online ordering will be available soon. For more information, visit www.valley candy.com or call (419) 893-2388. O

More businesses are banking with Key. Shouldn’t you?

n our most recent columns that we call the Financial Fitness series we have outlined specific steps local residents can take to be in control financially now and in the future. First, resolve to be financially independent. Financial independence involves building up an emergency account, eliminate debts, and saving in retirement accounts. Next, get fit. Do this both physically and financially. Now, we are going to give you specific steps on how not to lose what you have. In our Jan. 16 “Get Fit” column, Mark pointed out the fact that I have lost 40 pounds since summer. To date, I have lost six pants sizes, two inches in my neck and have gone from an XL shirt size to a size medium. Mark is also doing great, losing nearly 20 pounds in the past Mark CLAIR few weeks. I now know specifically how Nolan BAKER to better take care of my health and what choices I must make in order to not lose what I’ve worked so hard to get. The same can be said when it comes to protecting what a family has financially. Recognizing what is important and gaining knowledge is good, but nothing happens until action is taken. Two specific action steps can be taken to protect what is important; protecting investments against loss and using insurance to protect yourself and the entire family. Looking at the stock market, it is great to see how fast the economy has recovered since the 2008 stock market collapse. Yet, unfortunately at this point many investors become lazy thinking their investments are doing fine and there is no need to make changes. Don’t make this mistake as it can be extremely dangerous. If the amount of loss an investor took in the past is not acceptable in the future, then there needs to be specific steps taken to prevent those losses from happening again, as Mark often describes, a mind shift needs to occur, or as Sara describes the keys to my physical fitness in the future is a lifestyle change. Protecting investment accounts against loss can be done in several ways. The next way to protect against losses is to use good old-fashioned insurance. Buying insurance allows an individual or a family to transfer risk to someone else. This can be done with car, home, health, life, disability and long-term care insurance to name just a few of the common types. The solution is to do a comprehensive review of all of the insurances. Since insurance can be purchased in various amounts and for various risks, review protecting what is most important first. Several different software programs and analyses can be done to find out what is the right amount of coverage an individual or a family needs. Protecting what a family has against loss is an important step in complete financial fitness. The logical conclusion is it is much better to protect against loss before the loss occurs. Reacting after the fact can lead to emotional purchases often at times when it might be too late. We realize reviewing insurances and strategies to avoid stock market losses when things seem to be going fine can seem unimportant. But trust us, now more than ever while everything seems fine is the most important time to review ways to protect against losses in the future. O For more information about The Retirement Guys, tune in every Saturday at 1 p.m. on 1370 WSPD or visit www.retirementguysradio.com. Securities and Investment Advisory Services are offered through NEXT Financial Group Inc., Member FINRA / SIPC. NEXT Financial Group, Inc nor its representatives provide tax advice. The Retirement Guys are not an affiliate of NEXT Financial Group. The office is at 1700 Woodlands Drive, Suite 100, Maumee, OH 43537.

Call us for your business needs – Ken Connell 419-259-5945 Rich Heck 419-259-8530 Member FDIC

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january 23, 2011

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n A15

TREECE BLOG

R

U.S. recovery hopes rest on manufacturing

egular readers will recall that arguments were laid out most recently we have repeatedly expressed in “The Next Motor City,” published in our long-term bullishness on December 2010. In thatPMpiece and1elsewhere, we the U.S. economy, particularly the in2692 Devers_MB_TFP_111 1/19/11 5:13 Page dustrial/manufacturing sectors. Our have detailed growing demand among

emerging Asian nations (e.g. Indian and China) for many of the goods for which more developed countries have relied on them for production. These countries, once valued for

their cheap labor, have started to be- ticle, Ford plans to hire roughly 7,000 come developed nations, thanks in new employees during the next two large part to outsourcing from the years. Following suit, Caterpillar is west. Now many of their people are be- currently building a $120 million plant in Texas. ginning to want the luxuIt seems that the ries they have producing market is finally learning for people in wealthier what we argued last countries, which already month in “The Heresy take many of these goods of Higher Education,” for granted. which was largely echoed In “The Next Motor in video from Glenn City” and elsewhere, we Reynolds on PJTV titled argued that the wave College Isn’t for Evof outsourcing that has eryone. Yahoo! Finance been so characteristic of developed industrial Dock David TREECE recently reiterated some of this thinking in a new nations during recent decades is finally drawing to a close. The article and video short, “Brain Drain: availability of available cheap labor Most College Students Learn Next to has declined significantly, and has Nothing, New Study Says.” The truth is that the concept of a been the source of poor publicity for more than one Fortune 500 company. “post-industrial” economy, which had Moreover, many firms are begin- never been seen before the U.S., doesn’t ning to realize that production in coun- exist. In order to maintain its status as tries like India, China and Mexico have an economic superpower, the United costs aside from shipping. Quality con- States (or any other developed nation trol has become a serious issue, as has for that matter) needs a strong industrial sector. Sure, there’s money to be theft of intellectual property. Just as importantly, with real un- made in technology, finance and other employment in the United States at sectors, but those are built on the founmore than 15 percent, the cost of labor dation of strong manufacturing. O in this country has declined. Finally, Dock David Treece is a discretionary companies are taking notice. The Wall Street Journal recently money manager with Treece Investpublished a telling article titled “U.S. ment Advisory Corp. (www.TreeceFactories Buck Decline.” It seems that Investments.com) and a stockbroker 2010 was the first year in more than licensed with FINRA. He works for a decade (since 1997) that American Treece Financial Services Corp and manufacturing added more jobs than also serves as editor of the financial news site GreenFaucet.com. The above it lost, netting 136,000 new jobs. Some might dismiss this tidbit as a information is the express opinion of flash in the pan, but every indication is Dock David Treece and should not that it is the start of a trend that might be construed as investment advice or just last. According to the Journal ar- used without outside verification.

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sports

A16 n Toledo Free Press

january 23, 2011

COLLEGE SPORTS

By Mike Bauman

Toledo Free Press Staff Writer news@toledofreepress.com

Many of today’s up-and-coming basketball players display a swagger and arrogance that accompanies their talent and athletic prowess. Players can be seen pounding their chests, flexing, roaring after big dunks and frequently jawing at the opposition. Ohio State University junior guard and Toledo native William Buford bucks that trend. On Jan. 15, the No. 2 Buckeyes were at home in a nailbiter, striving to stay unbeaten against fearless Penn State. With under three minutes to play and Ohio State trailing 61-60, a defensive lapse by the Nittany Lions left Buford wide open at the top of the three-point line. The 6-foot, 5-inch African Studies major from Toledo Libbey High School calmly caught the pass, fluidly knocked down the trey to give the lead back to his team and quietly jogged backwards to the other end of the floor as 18,809 fans in Value City Arena went nuts. No chest-pounding. No flexing. No selfabsorbed celebrating. Just a trigger of a shot and a cold, focused stare. Buford’s talent and demeanor are big reasons why OSU held on for that 69-66 win against Penn State and are the No. 1 team in the country at 19-0. “My family and my parents keep me grounded,” Buford said in a phone interview with Toledo Free Press. “I owe them all the respect for that. They’ve always been on me [saying], ‘Don’t ever get too bigheaded,’ same as my coaches and my teammates. They all kept me humble.” While the soft-spoken Buford is doesn’t say much, his multifaceted game on the basketball court has spoken volumes since his high school days with the Cowboys. Buford was a four-year starter at Libbey, where he earned three consecutive Toledo City League Player of the Year honors and was named Ohio’s Mr. Basketball, the Division II Co-Player of the Year as a senior in 2008, and McDonald’s, Parade and Jordan Brand All-American honors. One of the highest-ranked players in the 2008 class for his smooth shooting stroke and upside, Buford committed to Ohio State in October of his junior year, deciding to join the ranks of Toledo greats Kelvin Ransey, Dennis Hopson and Jim Jackson, who all elected to play for the Buckeyes. “I knew it was a great basketball program,” Buford said. “It was close to home. I figured it was best for me and my family, and I loved the organi-

zation. I’ve been watching Ohio State since I was a little kid. It was just an honor for them to even want to recruit me, so that’s why I came.” Buford wasted no time in showing everyone why he was one of the topranked players in his high school class, tying for a game-high 13 points on 50 percent shooting from the field in his first game at Ohio State. He went on to earn Big Ten Freshman of the Year honors in 2009 after averaging 11.3 points, 3.7 rebounds and 1.1 assists for the 22-11 Buckeyes. In his sophomore season, Buford’s averages increased to 14.4 points, 5.6 rebounds and 3.1 assists per game, which earned him third-team All-Big Ten honors as Ohio State finished with a 29-8 record and made it to the Sweet 16, where it fell 76-73 to Tennessee. “The four starters that were there had a sour taste in their mouth after that last game,” Buford said of the Sweet 16 loss. “You’ve just got to value every possession. That’s the main thing. Value every possession and play hard as long as you’re out there.” Buford and his teammates took that loss to heart and have been playing with a chip on their collective shoulder this season, evident from the start as the Buckeyes took down then-No. 10-ranked Florida 93-75 on the road in their second game of the 2010-11 campaign. He is one of four Ohio State starters averaging double figures in scoring, the others being sensational freshman forward Jared Sullinger (17.4 ppg), senior guard/ forward David Lighty (13 ppg) and senior guard Jon Diebler (11.5 ppg). “You just can’t stop or guard one person on this team,” Buford said. “It’s going to be hard to stop one person, but teams are going to give us their best shot every game. We know that, so we’ve just got to come out and play hard.” Buford has done just that this year, as the Buckeyes’ second-leading scorer at 13.7 points per game to go with his 4.1 rebounds and 3.6 assists per contest. He has also bulked up from 182 to 205 pounds since his freshman season, allowing him to become a more well-rounded player this year as he is shooting a career-best 45.8 percent from the field and 40.9 percent from three-point range. “It was a good transition,” Buford said. “I’ve been picking up weight. Our strength and conditioning coach has been working with us real hard. In high school, everybody was like the same strength and you can bump people off, but when I got stronger I was able to take contact more.”

Photo and cover photo: Associated Press

Quiet riot: Buford playing big for No. 1 Bucks

n

LIbbey High School graduate William Buford is the second-leading scorer on the OSU BasketbalL team.

Another big reason for Buford’s personal success and the team’s success is Ohio State head coach Thad Matta, whom Buford credits for being able to get the best out of his players and compete at a high level. “He’s just such a great guy,” Buford said. “I love his style of play. It’s just everything about him. He gets the best out of you every day in practice.” Buford’s play has not gone unnoticed by his Toledo basketball brethren

in the aforementioned Ransey, Hopson and Jackson, whom he says have told him to stay hungry, focused, not lose sight of what he’s doing and continue to get better each day. Buford recently met Ransey, a Macomber graduate who began this season as the Buckeyes’ fourth all-time leading scorer with 1,934 career points, for the first time at a captain’s dinner. “It was nice,” Buford said. “I used to hear about [Ransey] a lot back in my

hometown. When I met him, it was real exciting. He’s one of the greatest players and top scorers to ever come out of Ohio State.” Those former Toledo and Ohio State stars are just the few of many in the basketball world who have been keeping an eye on No. 44. An old adage is to watch out for the quiet ones. That’s fitting, because the message of Buford’s game says just that: Watch out. O


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january 23, 2011

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n A17

BOWLING

Local bowler wins state championship By Sarah Ottney

Toledo Free Press Staff Writer news@toledofreepress.com

A local woman recently bowled her way to a title that has eluded her for years — an Ohio Queens Tournament champion. Professional bowler Jodi Woessner of Oregon won the annual singles tournament on Jan. 9 at Roseland Lanes near Cleveland, competing against 123 female bowlers from across Ohio. “The Queens tourney is the most prestigious, biggest women’s tourney in Ohio,� Woessner said. “I’ve bowled in it close to 20 times and come close to winning an awful lot of times, but this was the first time I won it, so it was a good feeling.� The victory was even more special because Woessner dedicated it to the memory of her friend, a longtime coworker at Owens Corning, who had recently died. Her friend’s funeral was held during the qualifying rounds on Jan. 8 and Woessner wasn’t able to go. “It was just one of those special things,� Woessner said of winning. “I just felt at ease and just knew I was going to win. It was definitely a different feeling than I had had in the past. I just kind of pulled from her strength and remained calm.� The tournament came down to two undefeated bowlers, Woessner and Lindsey Coulles of Dayton. To win, Woessner had to defeat Coulles twice, which she accomplished with a score of 246-228 in the first match and 248-216 in the second match. “I thought I was pretty much going to lose it when I realized I had it locked up for the win,� Woessner said. “I kept it together pretty well, although I had tears streaming down my face. It was definitely something special.� The Lake High School graduate grew up in Millbury and said she has

WOESSNER been bowling “pretty much ever since I could walk.� “My parents were both big-time bowlers and this has always been in my blood,� Woessner said. “It’s something that came naturally to me, not that it’s not a lot of hard work, but I’ve been fortunate to have been very successful and that keeps me motivated.� Another motivating factor is Woessner’s competitive streak, which came out even more when the Professional Bowlers Association (PBA) recently started allowing women to enter tournaments and compete against men. “That added another dynamic, where not only can you be the best of women, but you can compete against men,� Woessner said. Woessner has risen to that challenge, as she is one of only six women to have won a PBA regional title against male bowlers. She won hers in 2008, her first year bowling with the PBA, competing against 97 other bowlers, including PBA star Jason Couch. Only one other woman competed in the tournament. “That kind of kick-started the next couple of years,� Woessner said. “That was a pretty big deal.� O

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A18 ■ TOLEDO FREE PRESS

JANUARY 23, 2011

INDUSTRY

By Corey Williams ASSOCIATED PRESS

DETROIT (AP) — Sharp designs with pizazz, power and elegance helped pull in crowds during the public opening of the North American International Auto Show, with U.S. automakers doing their best to impress consumers looking for signs of the industry’s recovery. Thousands of people from around the world filed from exhibit to exhibit inside the sprawling Cobo Center in Detroit. They perused the newest models from General Motors, Ford Motor Co. and Chrysler, as well as top competition from Europe and Asia. “The last two years, people would come and look. But now, they are sitting in the vehicles and asking questions,’’ said 43-year-old Sherry Fedewa, a manager in an auto parts company. “People can actually afford to buy something.’’ New car and truck sales came in last year at 11.6 million, up 11 percent from 2009. December sales rose to 1.14 million, an 11 percent leap from a year earlier. The annual auto show often gives consumers and car enthusiasts their first close look at the new vehicles, engine upgrades and gadgets coming off the assembly line each year. Amid renewed optimism in the American auto industry, organizers expect higher attendance than last year’s 714,000 visitors — and auto companies worked to convince them that the industry and region were recovering. Beneath massive video screens,

under banks of bright lights and parked on plush carpeting or tiles of various colors were vehicles of all kinds, from ultra-small SMART cars to ultra-large sport utility vehicles. The mix included minivans, striking subcompacts and top-of-the-line luxury vehicles. “We love the auto show. It’s nostalgia,’’ said Alissa McCoy, who drove about 80 miles from her home in Lansing. “It’s what you do when you’re from Michigan.’’ GM’s corner appeared to be drawing the biggest crowds, with dozens of people circling the company’s sport utility vehicles and sportier models. But the latest models from Ford and Chrysler also garnered interest. Fedewa was among those ogling the new Chevy Volt, an electric car with a base sticker price of $40,280. In December, GM sold between 250 and 350 of the cars, which the company said can travel about 40 miles on battery power before needing a charge but come with a backup gas engine to extend that range to 375 miles. GM predicts it will sell 10,000 in 2011, and between 35,000 and 45,000 in 2012. “It just stands out from the rest of all the smaller cars,’’ said Fedewa, of Burton, about 50 miles northwest of Detroit. “I like the style of the tail lights. The design looks so sleek.’’ McCoy, who works for GM, vowed not to stray from the GM family, but said the ultra-luxurious Maybach at the Mercedes-Benz exhibit might make her reconsider. A small army of amateur paparazzi wielding digital cameras and cell phones surrounded the long, sleek luxury car.

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THE CHEVROLET VOLT HAS BEEN DESCRIBED AS A ‘STANDOUT’ AT THIS YEAR’S DETROIT AUTO SHOW.

A disc jockey kicked out music near GM’s new Sonic subcompact — aimed at younger drivers — including one in a dazzling orange. Ford displayed its Mustang GT CS in “grabbier blue’’ and a “yellow blaze’’ Mustang 5.0. It all made for a better show than in past years, said David Gilhula, a field engineer for a natural gas company. “There are more vehicles and displays — some of the high-end cars like Ferrari and Maserati,’’ said Gilhula, of Kitchener, Ontario. Gilhula, 61, said he owns a Cadillac DTS and is impressed by GM’s progress. The Detroit automaker filed

for bankruptcy in 2009, but made $4.2 billion in the first three quarters of last year and is expected to post a fourthquarter profit in the coming weeks. “Three or four years ago, I figured GM — the name — was gone,’’ he said. Tim Holton, a utility inspector from Detroit, said any rebound is due to car companies finally paying attention to car buyers. “They are listening to us instead of their boards of directors,’’ Holton, 37, said. “We could care less about their quarters. We care about getting my kids to soccer games and how many times I have to fill up the gas tank.’’

With gas prices again on the rise and more than $3 per gallon in the Detroit area, Holton sized up a 2011 Chevy Tahoe Hybrid. He wants something with good mileage but with enough room for his three young children. In about six months, Ron Tate expects to buy a new car. He looked at the Chevy Malibu, but spent a lot to time in the Toyota exhibit. “I want something very dependable ... that will keep running for a couple hundred thousand miles,’’ said Tate, a project manager from Flint, about 53 miles northwest of Detroit. The show runs through Jan. 23. ✯

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■ A19

INDUSTRY

Auto union wants to organize non-Big 3 plants WASHINGTON (AP) — The

by foreign-based car companies, the union’s leader said Jan. 17. In a speech to union members,

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have avoided UAW rules that owners say can make plants less efficient. King said after years of declining membership, the union needed to represent a larger share of workers in the auto industry to strengthen its position at the bargaining table. He said the UAW had picketed about 50 of the largest foreign auto dealerships in the U.S. and planned to increase the number to 300 or 400 dealerships around the country. King said the union would need to mobilize all of its 1 million active and retired members in the organizing push. In 2009, when General Motors and Chrysler sought bankruptcy and Ford faced severe financial problems, the union agreed to let the companies pay newly hired workers about $15 per hour, about half the hourly wage of a longtime UAW worker. It also agreed to scrap the “jobs bank,’’ in which laid-off workers got most of their pay indefinitely for doing nothing. ✯

Daily attendance figures up for Auto Show DETROIT (AP) — The North American International Auto Show in Detroit continues to surpass last year’s daily public attendance. More than 250,000 people have attended the event in its first three public days at Cobo Center downtown. Jan. 15’s attendance reached 86,622. An additional 99,111 people filed through Sunday and 64,520 Jan. 17. Each of those figures is higher than the same days for the 2010 show. A spokesman says the show is on pace to reach its goal of 750,000 people through Jan. 23. Attendance last year was about 715,000. That was a jump of about 65,000 people versus 2009. The annual event features the latest models and concept vehicles and draws visitors from around the world. ✯

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UAW President Bob King laid out in stark terms the importance of the union’s work to organize a plant owned by a Japanese, South Korean or German competitor to the Detroit Three. King said the UAW would decide in three months which company it would target but said the organizing plans were critical to the union’s outlook. “If we don’t organize these transnationals, I don’t think there’s a longterm future for the UAW, I really don’t,’’ King said in a speech at the union’s legislative conference. During the past three decades, the UAW has had little success in organizing workers at U.S. factories owned by foreign car makers, which have built plants mostly in southern states, which are generally not as union-friendly as the industrial Midwest. Many of the foreign car companies pay wages comparable to UAW-represented factories owned by Detroit automakers, but the foreign companies

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5545 Secor Rd., Toledo (419) 473-1411


ARTS LIFE

JANUARY 23, 2011

Visit www.toledofreepress.com m

■ A21

MEDIA

Toledo gallery launches T hi-def Latino TV station By Sarah Ottney TOLEDO FREE PRESS STAFF WRITER news@toledofreepress.com

©2011 20 North Gallery. All rights reserved.

The producers of a Bowling Greenbased online television station focusing on arts, activism and multicultural issues in Northwest Ohio are set to launch a spinoff station in South Toledo focusing on Latino issues. RODRIGUEZ-WINTER W E PAw e b T V, which broadcasts free in high-definition via Veetle.com, has attracted nearly 800,000 viewers with its mix of local and national original programming since it started in March 2010, said co-producer Luis Chaluisan. The station’s new venture, BARRIO SETV, will be housed in a 2,000-square-foot space inside La Galeria de Americas, a gallery on South Broadway Street that promotes cultural awareness and tolerance through art. Maria Rodriguez-Winter, founder and owner of La Galeria, donated the space, which includes oak wood floors, natural and broadcast lighting, an overhead projection booth, broadcast and recording facilities and a 150foot antique service counter. The gallery is across the street from the Sofia Quintero Art and Cultural Center, which Rodriguez-Winter co-founded. “I’m excited to have this opportunity to provide a venue for Latino artists and increase our exposure in terms of size of audience,” Rodriguez-Winter said. “We’ve talked to various leaders in the community and everyone has been very open and supportive.”

An official launch party will be hosted at 8 p.m. Feb. 4 at SamB's Restaurant, 163 S. Main St., Bowling Green. The event, which will be broadcast live, will feature live music, DJs, poets, dancers, burlesque comedians and more, including Rock and Roll Hall of Fame member Rick Gerbeck, Steven Jay Athanas as The White Barry CHALUISAN White and His Acts Of Love, poetic art and music by Imani Lateef and Megan Yasu, and artist and sculptor Emanuel Enriquez. Local artists and authors will have work available for sale. Admission is $5 for adults and $3 for students with ID. A $10 pre-sale ticket will include two complimentary drinks. All proceeds will help underwrite programming for BARRIO SETV. The new station will cover anything related to the Latino community, including new exhibits, local artists, guest speakers from Latino organizations and other topics of local, statewide, nationwide and international interest, Rodriguez-Winter said. Upcoming programming will feature Mexican-American artist Enriquez of Bowling Green and Father Francisco Molina of El Salvador, Chaluisan said. Chaluisan, a former investigative journalist at Telemundo and CBS, was raised in the Bronx. He started broadcasting online in New York City as a “new media experiment” in the early days of Web streaming. In 2009, when he returned to Northwest Ohio, where he had worked early in his career, he decided to set up a station here.

Chaluisan said he wanted to create an alternative to the mainstream media, so that local voices and concerns could be aired directly. “The local stations do not pay the attention they should to Latino, AfricanAmerican, gays, artists and low-income white audiences in Toledo,” Chaluisan said. “They are completely missing the point. They are so enmeshed with and beholden to local advertisers and to whoever is pulling strings up at city hall. They are compromised.” WEPAwebTV was broadcast from the Ground Level Coffeehouse in Toledo before it closed; it now broadcasts from downtown Bowling Green. Past programming has included PBS documentaries, exclusive films, informational and health shows, local events, poetry readings, Latin music and more, Chaluisan said. The 54-year-old Chaluisan said he is passionate about the new project, having seen the progress Hispanic culture has made in Northwest Ohio in the past 20 years. “Being a Puerto Rican who lived here in the 1980s, when I had to have seasoning shipped in from New York City, now I come back and everything is available to me, including programming,” Chaluisan said. “The future of Toledo is not either African-American or white; the future of Toledo is Latino-Americans.” Chaluisan said he hopes to create what amounts to an online community cultural center. “We all look for something that sums up our careers and we want something to sum it up positively,” Chaluisan said. “I think that in the long run, this will be my legacy.” For more information, to browse previous broadcasts or to tune in live, visit www.newedgecabaret.com. ✯

Culture clash

hough most of us don’t realize its wonder until much later, there is a magical period between the birth of your first child and the time he or she discovers there is culture especially made for children. You can still watch your favorite TV shows, listen to your favorite music and possibly even fit in a newly released movie on DVD from time to time. As your child begins to discover and wield the world’s cultural offerings for the toddler crowd, however, the comforting walls of your own adult culture slowly and quietly begin to crumble around you. You eventually find yourself waking up in the middle of the night with the “Sid the Science Kid” theme running torturously through your brain and singing along to Kidz Bop alone in the car just because you’ve forgotten that alternatives exist. I still remember the moment six years ago when my husband, Mike, and I realized that our own pop culture needed to take a backseat for the good of our first child. We had not yet figured out that continuing to put our not-yet-2-year-old down for a daytime nap was what was keeping him wide awake until 11 p.m. After hours of unsuccessfully trying to get him to go to sleep each night, we would attempt to save our sanity by continuing our pre-parenting watch-TV-andcuddle-in-bed routine with an extra cuddler in Shannon SZYPERSKI the middle. Jack would finally gain contentment just by being sandwiched between us or even quietly nod off to sleep. One night as we watched yet another “The King of Queens” rerun, however, we heard Jack giggle and then interject, “Silly Artur!” Still, there was plenty of room for our cultural life to live in harmony with the cultural life of our offspring. And then there wasn’t. Our second child, Elaine, came along and was initially a bit deprived of the wide-open cultural space we had allowed Jack at the same age. The choosing of books, TV and music generally defaulted to her brother, as he was the one cognitively ready to realize that he actually cared about making such decisions. It wasn’t long, however, before Elaine caught on and the unrelenting, as-old-ashumanity sibling tug-of-war began to manifest itself within the confines of our family. As much as she did just want to be part of the mix, Elaine eventually realized that she also didn’t so much want to spend all of her time immersed in everything Pokemon and Ben 10. An all-out boy/girl, preschool/grade-school culture clash soon commenced, leaving me to trade in the Baby Bjorn I had grown so accustomed to wearing for a black and white shirt and a whistle. I used to scoff at other adults who allowed their children to dictate the cultural pulse running through their homes. I then became one of them, which seems to be a recurring theme of parenthood. Yes, Mike and I let “Top Chef ” and “The Office” slide and gave up on evening reruns altogether. However, we put up a fierce fight for “Lost” right up until the bitter end. I hesitate to admit it publicly, but there was a weeknight in the not-so-distant past when a certain boy, who should have been sleeping soundly in preparation for school the next day, was not only allowed but actually sent downstairs to play Wii for an hour when bedtime just didn’t take before “Lost” began. It was not a proud or oft-repeated moment, but it happened. Unlike our “The King of Queens” toddler incident early on, at least our 7-year-old remains in the dark about smoke monsters and creepy islands. ✯ Shannon and her husband Michael are raising three children in Sylvania. E-mail her at letters@toledofreepress.com.

Free Opening Reception Friday, January 28th, 6–9 p.m. Join us as 18 local & regional artists reflect upon the American Experience. … with special tribute to Wil Clay 20 NORTH GALLERY presents the

16TH Annual Black History Month Exhibit: Homage to LeMaxie Glover January 28–March 12, 2011

18 N. St. Clair Street Toledo, Ohio 43604

419-241-2400

www.20northgallery.net

Exhibit Hours: Wed. 4–8 p.m.; Thurs.–Sat. Noon–4 p.m. or by Appointment


ARTS LIFE

A22 ■ TOLEDO FREE PRESS

CABIN FEVER

Glass Pavilion offers hot indoor activity By Kristen Criswell TOLEDO FREE PRESS SPECIAL SECTIONS EDITOR krapin@toledofreepress.com

Art Hours at the Toledo Museum of Art’s Glass Pavilion offer Toledoans an escape from the winter blues. “It’s a great indoor activity,” said Jeff Mack, manager of the museum’s glass studio. Each Art Hour session offers individuals the chance to make their own glass artwork. There are different Art Hour sessions for flame work, flat glass and glass blowing. The sessions are all designed for individuals who’ve never made glass, Mack said. A facilitator will guide individuals through the entire process, he said. “They’ll lead a safety talk where you can touch tools. Then they’ll discuss the glass and what it’s made out of so they have an understanding of the material,” he said. “They get you right into the process. Walk through one and then the facilitator helps each person out through the process.” Depending on the project, Art Hour sessions can range in size from six to eight people. The Art Hours projects are often themed with the time of year. Projects vary from flowers, which are often made by glass apprentices just starting out, to pumpkins at Halloween and icicles in the winter, Mack said. During the next few weeks individuals will have the chance to make glass hearts during Art Hours. “The glass hearts make great gifts for your sweetheart. You can say, ‘Look I made this for you’” Mack said. “It’s not as refined, but you can say it’s something that you made.” Art Hours give those who may be interested in glass blowing the opportunity to try it. “People who have seen glass blowing are curious to see what it feels like. [Art Hours] are a great way to know if it’s something interesting in pursuing,” Mack said. “Glass tends to get expensive, so those who are looking into it as a hobby, this is a good way for them to dip a toe in the water.”

GLASS FLOWERS MADE DURING TMA ART HOURS. Individuals who are interested in Art Hour sessions with their family or group of friends can contact the visitors’ service desk and reserve a session during the week, Mack said. “It’s a great thing you can do with your friends,” he said. “You all can watch each other work, compare your art and tease each other.” The Glass Pavilion also hosts wine tasting sessions and free glass blowing demonstrations on the weekend. “You can have a glass of wine at the wine tasting, make a piece of art, have some food and watch a local glass artist working in the hot shop. It’s something neat to do on a Friday night or Saturday and Sunday afternoon,” he said. All Art Hour classes are hosted in the glass studio inside TMA’s Glass Pavilion. Art Hours are $15 for museum members and $25 for nonmembers. Individuals can sign up for each weekend’s Art Hour starting the Tuesday before by calling (419) 254-5771 Ext.7448. For a full list of events and Art Hours, visit www.toledomuseum.org/calendar. ✯

The Apollo Society 25th Anniversary Exhibition Through February 13, 2011

JANUARY 23, 2011

Doors tribute benefits YWCA A Tribute to Jim Morrison is scheduled at the Maumee Indoor Theatre for Jan. 29. The performance features the Maxx Band and Philip Barone as Jim Morrison. The Maxx Band and Barone have performed Doors music for several years at Put-in-Bay and decided to bring the act to Toledo, Barone said. “I think the music of The Doors hasn’t died. You turn on the radio and you’re going to hear The Doors. The music is timeless,” Barone said. “I think people should come out for that reason.” Proceeds from the concert benefit BARONE the YWCA. The concert begins at 8:30 p.m. with opening act Shane Piasecki. VIP tickets are $65 and include drinks. General admission is $20. Tickets can be purchased at Harold Jaffe Jewelers, Rosie’s Italian Grille, The Shed, Koto Buki and Maumee Indoor Theatre. For more information, call (419) 897-8902. ✯ — Kristen Criswell

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ARTS LIFE

JANUARY 23, 2011

Visit www.toledofreepress.com m

■ A23

IN CONCERT

‘Judy Blue Eyes’ to play Ann Arbor Folk Festival By Vicki L. Kroll TOLEDO FREE PRESS STAFF WRITER vkroll@toledofreepress.com

For 50 years, Judy Collins has been

on a quest to find and write great songs. “Something magical happens when you hear a song that you get attached to,” she said. “It’s mystical; you can’t diagnose it; you can’t examine it and

explore it and get any kind of an answer, at least I can’t because it is magical.” The folk icon is a music conjurer; there’s no misdirection, just a straightforward performance and voila! She’s

Upcoming Events at WCM! WCM 3rd Annual SUPER-CHILI-BOWL

Saturday, Feb. 5th and Sunday, Feb. 6th Kicking off at 11 a.m. at both locations Heat up the Big Game this year with us, as we present 6 different kinds of chili to feed your game day party. Taste them all and take your favorite home. Choose from: Traditional, Texas-Style, Chicken, Vegetarian and 2 Team Specials! Don’t Be Left Out In The Cold!

Don’t forget to grab Cornbread, Salsas, Chips, Dips, Beer and Much, Much More!

WCM CHEESE ISLAND Have a great recipe that includes a "hard-to-find" cheese? Looking for the perfect cheese to accompany a wine? Our cheese specialist, Amy, can answer your questions! You can contact Amy at either location, stop by and meet her in person or by phone. Maumee 419-794-4000 or Perrysburg 419-872-6900. Parmigiano ks Reggiano Chunks

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made the song her own. Think “Both Sides Now,” “Amazing Grace” and “Send in the Clowns.” On her 2010 disc, “Paradise,” the 71-year-old opens with the main song from “The Wizard of Oz.” “I was given the opportunity to do a children’s book on the Peter Yarrow imprint of children’s music picture books, and he wanted me to do ‘Over the Rainbow,’ which I’d never sung, although I was named after Judy Garland, which is nice. I was born in the same year the movie came out,” Collins said. A few seconds later during the phone interview, Collins, who was in London, recalled, “I sang [‘Over the Rainbow’] on ‘The Dinah Shore Show’ in 1981, and that program made it to YouTube, so you can see it there.” Fans may see the Grammy Award winner perform that classic at the Ann Arbor Folk Festival Jan. 29 at 6:30 p.m. at Hill Auditorium. Tickets are $47.50 and $30 or $85 and $50 for both nights. “I think [folk music] was always a powerful force long before the ’60s happened, but certainly during the ’60s when it had kind of a rebirth, it was very

helpful to focus people on the things that needed doing,” she said. “I think it’s a powerful force in galvanizing people emotionally and helping them to do the right thing.” Collins is finishing a book, “Suite Judy Blue Eyes: Sex, Drugs, COLLINS Rock ‘n’ Roll and the Music That Changed a Generation,” which she said will be out this fall, along with a new disc. While she couldn’t talk about the projects, when asked what it’s like to have a well-known Crosby, Stills & Nash song written for her, she replied, “It gets a girl’s attention.” She and Stephen Stills sing a duet on “The Last Thing on My Mind” on “Paradise.” “We’ve been friends all these years, but we’d never sung together,” she said. “We actually recorded together on my album in 1968 during that love affair when he wrote ‘Suite Judy Blue Eyes,’ but we’d never sung together, so it was thrilling.” ✯

OPEN HOUSE Saturday, January 22 10 a.m. 419.246.8732 x250 Snow date: January 29

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Effective 1/24/11 - 1/30/11 | We reserve the right to limitit quantiti quantities. ititiies | NNoo sales to vendors. | Not responsible for pictorial or typographical errors.

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CLASSIFIED

A24 ■ TOLEDO FREE PRESS

COMMUNITY

EMPLOYMENT

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PUBLIC NOTICE THE FOLLOWING STORAGE UNITS WILL BE SOLD AT PUBLIC AUCTION BY LOCK-IT-UP SELF STORAGE ON OR AFTER 2-09-11 AT LEONARD’S AUCTION SERVICE 6350 CONSEAR RD OTTAWA LAKE, MI RICHARD LEONARD AUCTIONEER 6424 MEMORIAL HWY OTTAWA LAKE MI 49267 4194 WILLARD GIBSON 10711 ARROWHEAD JEROME MI HOUSEHOLD. 5215 DAVID MATILE 4962 BURKEWOOD CT #204 SYLVANIA HOUSEHOLD. 6330 LANA MORSE 5773 MAIN ST SYLVANIA HOUSEHOLD. 9921 AIMEE MORAN 6220 MEMORIAL HWY HOUSEHOLD. 4601 JACKMAN TOLEDO 43612 1010 GARY DAWSON 2312 AVONDALE HOUSEHOLD. 1038 CHRIST THE KING REDEMPTIVE PO BOX 1062 TITUSVILLE FL HOUSEHOLD. 1049 JESUS LIRA 229 SOUTH AVE HOUSEHOLD. 3107 SHIRLEY WHITE 2731 GLENDALE #U HOUSEHOLD. 5311 LAURREEN SPROTT 2927 STICKNEY HOUSEHOLD. 6001 JASON FLORES 719 CLARK HOUSEHOLD. 6212 ANTHONY GANDY 2669 MIDWOOD HOUSEHOLD. 802 S REYNOLDS TOLEDO 43615 1001 JOHN OHERRERA JR 1140 S MCCORD #A6 HOUSEHOLD. 1040 ROXANNE TREESH 1925 HARLAN HOUSEHOLD. 1060 MARK HEM 3444 GALLATIN HOUSEHOLD. 2010 KAITLYNN JAQUAY 21 HIDDEN VILLAGE LANE HOLLAND HOUSEHOLD. 5013 TRACY WARNIMONT 1027 ORCHARD ST HOUSEHOLD. 7024 GARI HEALY/ GARI OFFET 2005 N SUMMIT ST HOUSEHOLD. 7033 KEITH TROMBLEY 19291/2 GLENDALE HOUSEHOLD. 10125 ANDREW CROCKETT 5001 SOUTH #186 HOUSEHOLD. 12400 WILLIAMS RD PERRYSBURG 43551 2066 MILISSA TAWNEY 815 WALBRIDGE AVE HOUSEHOLD. 3032 AIRPORT HWY TOLEDO 43609 4321 DEXTER WHITFIELD PO BOX 141011 HOUSEHOLD. 5105&5208 TIFFANY BIDDLE 202 GIBBONS HOUSEHOLD. 5605 FELICIA LAWHORNDAUGHERTY 1330 HAMILTON HOUSEHOLD. 7104 ASLENE MCGINISTER 1024 CAMPBELL HOUSEHOLD. 7218 SECRETHA BATES 1401 GRAND AVE HOUSEHOLD. 5401 TELEGRAPH RD TOLEDO 43612 2028 ARIEL WILLIS 2018 WALNUT HOUSEHOLD. 2507 SECUNDA BOOKER WHITFIELD 560 APPLE HOUSEHOLD. 2701 BILLIE JOHNSON 1208 SUNNYSIDE HOPEWELL VA HOUSEHOLD. 4012 DEBORAH VASQUEZ 818 BUSH ST HOUSEHOLD. 5002 TIFFANY SHALHOUP 5641 DOUGLAS HOUSEHOLD. 27533 HELEN DR PERRYSBURG 43551 1066 ROBERT GOMOLL 27696 OREGON #12 HOUSEHOLD. 11202 DAVID JAUCHIUS PMB #211 11 MAIN ST STE#7 WESTBROOK ME HOUSEHOLD. 10740 AIRPORT HWY SWANTON 43558. 5004 XOCHITL BULTEMA 5537 S TROY CHICAGO IL HOUSEHOLD.

SALES PROFESSIONAL Taylor Automotive Family seeks an experienced, high performing, car sales professional to join our dynamic team! Join the premiere team with the most rewarding compensation package: • Most aggressive commmission & bonus pay structure in the state! • Tremendous opportunity for advancement! • 401K & full benefits! • Car Allowance! • HUGE SIGNING BONUS AVAILABLE! Please contact Ed @ (419) 931-8000 x273 or send resume to taylorresume@yahoo. com. MIGRANT SEASONAL HEAD START AGENCY seeking candidates for the following employment opportunities at various locations: Center Manager – AA degree or higher in ECE or Child Dev. 6 college credits in Bus. Mgmt. Prior supervisor and Head Start exp. and bilingual in English/Spanish is preferred. Child Development Advocate – AA degree or higher in ECE or Child Dev. Prior Head Start exp. and bilingual in English/Spanish is preferred. Family Service Advocate – HS diploma/GED w/ 2 yrs social service exp. Bilingual in English/ Spanish. Knowledge of community resources. AA degree in Social Sciences and health exp. is preferred. Health Aide – HS diploma/GED with 1 year exp. in Health Care Field. Nurse Aide Cert. or Certified Medical Assistant with Head Start/non-profit exp. and bilingual in English/Spanish is preferred. Teacher – AA degree or higher in ECE, Child Dev. or related field w/ exp. teaching preschool aged children. Bilingual in English/Spanish is preferred. Teacher Aide/Bus Aide – HS diploma/GED. CDA credential and bilingual in English/Spanish is preferred. Bus Driver/Custodian – 21 yrs of age and have HS diploma/GED or 6 mths equivalent work exp. with valid CDL, School bus/Passenger endorsements and required state certifications. Head Start exp. and bilingual in English/Spanish is preferred. Cook/Cook Aide - HS diploma/GED and demonstrated exp. in quantity food prep. 1 year exp. in planning/preparing special nutrition programs, schools or other institution meals and bilingual in English/Spanish is preferred. Please visit us online at www.tmccentral.org for a list of positions by center or submit Cover Letter, Resume and Official Copy of Transcripts to: hrohio@mail.tmccentral.org or TMC Ohio, C/O Human Resources 601 North Stone Street, Fremont, Ohio 43420 TMC is an EEOE

FOR SALE MISCELLANEOUS BUY VIAGRA, Cialis, Levitra, Propecia and other medications below wholesale prices. Call 1-866-506-8676. Over 70 percent savings. www.fastmedonline.com.

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JANUARY 23, 2011

CARLSON’S CRITTERS

A home for Gunther Gunther is a 2-year-old male cat with a deep gray colored coat and long hair. Gunther likes to be his own boss and is determined to do whatever it is he wants to do. When he wants attention he can be very insistent and will refuse to leave you alone. He will follow you around bumping into your legs and squawking at you until you give him what he wants. When he wants some alone time, he will find a quiet place to sleep and ignore you if you call for him. Gunther doesn’t mind other cats but he likes to have his own space. He is a little underweight but he will look gorgeous once he gains a few pounds.

Your 24/7 Pet Care Destination • 24-Hour Services • Emergency Care • Boarding • Dentistry • Doggie Day Care • Grooming • Exotic and Wildlife Animal Care • and More!

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419.885.4421 4801 Holland-Sylvania (at Harroun) Sylvania, OH 43560 www.sylvaniavet.com Accredited member of the American Animal Hospital Association (AAHA) since 1978.

deals on wheels

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

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

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His long hair will need to be brushed a couple times a week to keep it from matting. If you’re searching for a little companionship, Gunther is the perfect cat to fill up those lonely nights. Gunther has been neutered, examined by a staff veterinarian, is current on his vaccinations, and is microchipped. Toledo Area Humane Society is located at 1920 Indian Wood Circle, Arrowhead Park, Maumee. Adoption hours are 10 a.m. to 6 p.m. Tuesday through Sunday. Call (419) 891-0705 or visit the website www. toledoareahumanesociety.org. ✯

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TV LISTINGS

JANUARY 23, 2011 Sunday Morning 8 am 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

8:30

January 23, 2011

MOVIES

9 am

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Sunday Afternoon / Evening 1 pm 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

1:30

2 pm

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One Life to Live General Hospital The Talk Let’s Make a Deal The People’s Court Justice Justice The Doctors Judge B. Judge B. Varied Programs Sopranos Varied CSI: Miami Varied Programs Varied Programs Movie Varied Programs SportsCenter Lines Football My Wife My Wife ’70s Show ’70s Show 30-Minute 30-Minute Guy’s Secrets Varied Programs Grey’s Anatomy Grey’s Anatomy Varied Programs Made Jim Raymond Jim The Office Movie Varied Programs The Closer Cold Case Varied Programs Wendy Williams Show The Tyra Show

4 pm

4:30

Ellen DeGeneres Oprah Winfrey Smarter Lyrics! Judge J. Judge J. Criminal

Varied

5 pm

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News News News News 11 at 5:00 News How I Met Raymond TMZ The Dr. Oz Show News Cyberchas BBC News Dog Varied Programs Tosh.0

Scrubs

6:30 ABC News News News NBC News NewsHour

Scrubs

NFL Live Jim Rome Around Pardon ’70s Show ’70s Show Gilmore Girls Cooking Giada Contessa Home Unsolved Mysteries Made Friends Friends

SportsCenter Still Stnd Still Stnd Paula 30-Minute Cash, Cari Designed Unsolved Mysteries Chris Chris The Seven ’70s Show ’70s Show ’70s Show Raymond Raymond King King

Law & Order

Law & Order

Friends

Chris

Friends

Chris

Law & Order NCIS Fam. Guy Fam. Guy

January 23, 2011 6:30

7 pm

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Paid Paid Dog Show Dogs compete for best in show. Paid Max Rock Abs Insider News ABC Funny Home Videos Extreme Makeover Desp.-Wives Brothers & Sisters News Carpet Skiing Walk Fit Paid Paid Paid NUMB3RS (CC) Criminal Minds (CC) NFL NFL Football AFC Championship -- New York Jets at Pittsburgh Steelers. (CC) Hawaii Five-0 (N) News Criminal NFL Champ. Chase Fox NFL Sunday NFL Football: NFC Championship -- Packers at Bears The OT Simpsons Simpsons American Simpsons Burgers Fam. Guy Cleveland News Recap Office Office NHL Hockey: Flyers at Blackhawks Adv. Sports Action Sports From Killington, Vt. (CC) News News Dateline NBC (N) ››› Sex and the City (2008) Sarah Jessica Parker, Chris Noth. News Paid Workshop Woods. Kitchen Sewing Independent Lens E Street Ebert Sessions Wheaton Austin City Limits (N) NOVA (CC) (DVS) Nature (N) Masterpiece Classic (N) (CC) World Lit MI-5 (CC) The Sopranos (CC) The Sopranos (CC) The Sopranos (CC) The Sopranos (CC) Criminal Minds (CC) Criminal Minds (CC) Criminal Minds (CC) Criminal Minds (CC) Criminal Minds (CC) Criminal Minds (CC) Criminal Minds (CC) Real Housewives Real Housewives Real Housewives Housewives/Atl. Housewives/Atl. Housewives/Atl. Housewives/Atl. Housewives/Atl. Housewives/Atl. Housewives/Atl. Happens Atlanta Scrubs Scrubs Scrubs ›› The Slammin’ Salmon (2009) (CC) ››› Ghostbusters (1984, Comedy) Bill Murray. (CC) Jim Gaffigan Nick Swardson Dave Chappelle Dane Cook Tosh.0 Onion Good Shake it Hannah Hannah Wizards Wizards Wizards Good Wizards Wizards Good Good Good Good Good Shake it Wizards Sonny Good Good Sonny Sonny Sunday NFL Countdown (Live) (CC) Billiards Billiards Billiards SportsCenter (Live) (CC) Poker Stars Poker Stars Poker SportsCtr NFL PrimeTime (CC) SportsCtr ››› The Parent Trap (1998, Comedy) Lindsay Lohan. ››› Enchanted (2007) Amy Adams, Patrick Dempsey. ››› Mean Girls (2004) Lindsay Lohan. Mean Girls 2 (2011) Meaghan Martin. Mean Girls 2 (2011) Meaghan Martin. Home Guy’s Best Best Diners Diners Food Cakes Cupcake Wars Restaurant: Im. Worst Cooks Challenge (N) Worst Cooks Iron Chef America Cupcake Wars My First First Pla. Estate Selling Buck Get, Sold House Hunters For Rent Unsella To Sell To Sell Hunters House Holmes on Homes Holmes Inspection House Hunters Income Income Pants 2 ›› Never Been Kissed (1999) (CC) ›› Waitress (2007) Keri Russell, Nathan Fillion. (CC) ›› Nine Months (1995) Hugh Grant. (CC) ›› The Bodyguard (1992) Kevin Costner, Whitney Houston. (CC) ›› Nine Months (CC) Teen Mom 2 Teen Mom 2 Made Made Made I Used to Be Fat Jersey Shore (CC) Jersey Shore (CC) Jersey Shore (CC) Skins “Tony” Teen Mom 2 ›› You’ve Got Mail (1998) Tom Hanks, Meg Ryan. (CC) › Fool’s Gold (2008), Kate Hudson (CC) ›› What Women Want (2000) Mel Gibson. (CC) ›› Mamma Mia! (2008) Meryl Streep. ›› Mamma Mia! (2008) Meryl Streep. ››› Since You Went Away (CC) ›››› Hannah and Her Sisters (1986) (CC) Seven Brides for 7 Brothers ›››› The Palm Beach Story (1942) (CC) ››› Black Narcissus (1947) Deborah Kerr. ›››› Lost Horizon (1937) Ronald Colman. ››› The Lord of the Rings: The Two Towers (2002) ››› The Lord of the Rings: The Return of the King (2003, Fantasy) Elijah Wood, Ian McKellen. (CC) ›››› The Dark Knight (2008) Christian Bale, Heath Ledger. (CC) Matrix Revol. Law & Order: SVU Law & Order: SVU Law & Order: SVU Law & Order: SVU Law & Order: SVU Law & Order: SVU Law & Order: SVU Law & Order: SVU Law & Order: SVU Law & Order: SVU Law & Order: SVU › Corky Romano (2001) Chris Kattan. Made Scrubs Friends Friends Chris Chris Two Men Two Men Heartland Ty returns. Heartland (CC) ›› Sleepover (2004, Comedy) Alexa Vega. Made in Hollywood

Monday Evening 7 pm 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

2 pm 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

3 pm

■ A25

Daytime Afternoon

12:30

Good Morning News This Week-Amanpour Conklin Bridges Roundtabl Coffee Your Morning Sunday CBS News Sunday Morning (N) Nation News Mass Motorcycle Racing Paid Prog. Paid Prog. Fox News Sunday Paid Prog. Paid Prog. Paid Prog. Shirt Off! How I Met How I Met Today (N) (CC) Meet the Press (N) Van Impe Paid Prog. Meaning Paid Prog. Paid Prog. Hockey Sid Cat in the Super Dinosaur Toledo Stories (CC) Global Harbors Antiques Roadshow John Mellencamp Private Sessions (N) ››› Ferris Bueller’s Day Off (1986) Premiere. Heavy “Tom; Jodi” The Cape “Pilot” (CC) Couples Real Housewives Happens Million Dollar Listing Million Dollar Listing Comedy Comedy Sinbad: Where U Been? (CC) › Strange Wilderness (2008) Steve Zahn. (CC) Scrubs Mickey Mickey Phineas Phineas Phineas Fish Deck Deck Wizards Wizards SportsCenter (CC) Outside Reporters SportsCenter (Live) (CC) ››› Freaky Friday (2003) Jamie Lee Curtis. › What a Girl Wants (2003) Amanda Bynes, Colin Firth. Parent Chef Nigella Rachael Ray’s Giada Giada Cooking Aarti Party Money Dinners Bathtastic! Sweat... Holmes on Homes Disaster House Yard Income House Hunters Hour of Power (CC) J. Osteen Paid Prog. Chris Chris ›› The Sisterhood of the Traveling Pants 2 Teen Mom 2 I Used to Be Fat Jersey Shore (CC) Jersey Shore (CC) True Life (CC) 28 Days ›› Jersey Girl (2004) Ben Affleck. (CC) ›› Runaway Bride (1999) Julia Roberts. (CC) Page Miss ››› Little Miss Marker (1934) ››› I Married a Witch (1942) ››› Since You Went Away (1944) Law & Order Law & Order Law & Order Law & Order “Blood” Lord of the Rings Paid Prog. J. Osteen Becker White Collar (CC) Fairly Legal “Pilot” (CC) Law & Order: SVU HomeFinder Old House For Home Paid Prog. Paid Prog. Foods Back Pain Paid Prog. Raceline

Visit www.toledofreepress.com m

7:30

January 24, 2011

MOVIES

8 pm

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Tuesday Evening

11:30

Ent Insider The Bachelor (N) (CC) Castle “Knockdown” News Nightline Wheel Jeopardy! How I Met Rules Two Men Mike Hawaii Five-0 (CC) News Letterman The Office The Office House (N) (CC) Lie to Me “Gone” (N) Fox Toledo News Seinfeld King-Hill Jdg Judy Jdg Judy Chuck (N) (CC) The Cape (N) (CC) Harry’s Law (N) (CC) News Jay Leno NewsHour Business Antiques Roadshow American Experience (N) Lincoln Charlie Rose (N) (CC) Intervention (CC) Intervention “Lorna” Intervention “Jimbo” Heavy (N) (CC) Heavy “Tom; Jodi” Real Housewives/Atl. The Real Housewives of Atlanta Tabatha’s Salon Take Tabatha’s Salon Take ›› Harold & Kumar Go to White Castle (2004) Sunny Sunny Sunny Sunny Daily Colbert Deck Deck ›› Hannah Montana: The Movie (2009) Hannah Hannah Deck Deck College Basketball Notre Dame at Pittsburgh. College Basketball Baylor at Kansas State. SportsCenter (CC) Pretty Little Liars (CC) Pretty Little Liars (N) Greek (N) (CC) Pretty Little Liars (CC) The 700 Club (CC) Flay Best Thing Unwrapped Diners Diners Best Thing Best Thing Good Eats Good Eats Hunters House Property Property House Hunters Cash, Cari Hunters Hunters Hunters How I Met How I Met Reba (CC) Reba (CC) Final Sale (2011) Laura Harris. Premiere. (CC) How I Met How I Met True Life Jersey Shore (CC) Jersey Shore (CC) Skins “Tea” (N) Skins “Tea” Seinfeld Seinfeld Fam. Guy Fam. Guy Fam. Guy Fam. Guy Fam. Guy Fam. Guy Conan (N) Assault on a Queen ››› The Heart Is a Lonely Hunter (1968) ››› Member of the Wedding (1952) (CC) Bones (CC) Bones (CC) Bones (CC) Rizzoli & Isles (CC) Rizzoli & Isles (CC) NCIS “Once a Hero” NCIS “Twisted Sister” WWE Monday Night RAW (S Live) (CC) White Collar (CC) Two Men Two Men 90210 “Liars” (N) (CC) Gossip Girl (N) (CC) Entourage Curb Scrubs Scrubs

The Buckeye Store & More! Starlite Plaza Sylvania next to Ralphie’s

7 pm 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

7:30

January 25, 2011

MOVIES

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Ent Insider No Ordinary Family State of the Union “2011” (CC) Cougar News Nightline Wheel Jeopardy! NCIS (CC) State of the Union “2011” (CC) Big Bang News Letterman The Office The Office Glee “Furt” (CC) State of the Union “2011” (CC) News Seinfeld King-Hill Jdg Judy Jdg Judy The Biggest Loser (N) State of the Union “2011” (S Live) (CC) News Jay Leno NewsHour Business Pioneers of Television Shakespeare Frontline (CC) (DVS) Charlie Rose (N) (CC) The First 48 (CC) The First 48 (CC) The First 48 (CC) The First 48 (CC) The First 48 (CC) Atlanta Housewives/Atl. Real Housewives/Beverly The Fashion Show (N) Housewives/Atl. Daily Colbert Nick Swardson Tosh.0 Tosh.0 Tosh.0 (N) Onion Daily Colbert Deck Deck ›› Eloise at the Plaza (2003) (CC) Deck Hannah Hannah Deck Deck College Basketball Florida at Georgia. (Live) College Basketball Purdue at Ohio State. SportsCenter (CC) ››› Mean Girls (2004) Lindsay Lohan. Mean Girls 2 (2011, Comedy) Meaghan Martin. The 700 Club (CC) B. Flay Best Thing Challenge Cupcake Wars (N) Chopped (N) Cakes Cakes Hunters House First Place First Place Selling NY Estate House Hunters Property Property How I Met How I Met Reba (CC) Reba (CC) Wife Swap (CC) Wife Swap (CC) How I Met How I Met Jersey Shore (CC) Teen Mom 2 Teen Mom 2 Teen Mom 2 (N) Teen Mom 2 Seinfeld Seinfeld The Office The Office The Office The Office Fam. Guy Fam. Guy Conan (N) ››› The Honey Pot Sons of the Desert ›› General Spanky (1936) ››› Topper (1937) Cary Grant. Bones (CC) ››› Bad Boys (1995) Martin Lawrence. (CC) Southland “Code 4” Memphis Beat (CC) Law & Order: SVU Law & Order: SVU Law & Order: SVU White Collar (N) (CC) Royal Pains (CC) Two Men Two Men One Tree Hill (N) (CC) Hellcats (N) (CC) Entourage Curb Scrubs Scrubs

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A26 ■ TOLEDO FREE PRESS Wednesday Evening 7 pm ABC 13 CBS 11 FOX 36 NBC 24 PBS 30 A&E BRAVO COM DISN ESN FAM FOOD HGTV LIF MTV TBS TCM TNT USA WTO5

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

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

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January 29, 2011

MOVIES

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Good Morning News So Raven So Raven Hannah Suite Life School Repla Your Morning Saturday Sabrina Sabrina Busytown Busytown Paid Prog. Pregame Animal Hollywood Eco Co. Mad... Marketpl Marketpl Marketpl Marketpl Kids News Paid Prog. Today (N) (CC) Paid Prog. Paid Prog. Turbo Shelldon Magic Bus Babar (EI) Willa’s Pearlie Sid Cat in the Super Dinosaur MotorWk Our Ohio Wild Ohio Michigan Nature (CC) (DVS) Sell House Sell House Sell House Sell House Sell House Sell House Flip This House (CC) Flip This House (CC) Top Chef Top Chef (CC) Top Chef (CC) Top Chef (CC) Million Dollar Listing Comedy Comedy Comedy ›› Trading Places (1983, Comedy) Dan Aykroyd. (CC) Stand-Up Stand-Up Mickey Mickey Phineas Phineas Phineas Fish Deck Deck Wizards Wizards SportsCenter (CC) SportsCenter (CC) SportsCenter (CC) College GameDay College Basketball ››› Bridge to Terabithia (2007) ››› The Chronicles of Narnia: The Lion, the Witch and the Wardrobe (2005) Big Daddy Giada Day Off Mexican 30-Minute Ingred. Fix Paula Paula Secrets Secrets Bathtastic! Sweat... Holmes on Homes Disaster Disaster Crashers Income Designed Designed Paid Prog. Faces Paid Prog. Paid Prog. Paid Prog. Paid Prog. Racing for Time (2008) Charles S. Dutton. (CC) Made I Was 17 Teen Mom 2 Teen Mom 2 10 on Top Jersey Shore (CC) Yes, Dear Yes, Dear Bloopers 4 ›› Win a Date With Tad Hamilton! (2004) ›› Bewitched (2005), Will Ferrell Red-Courage ››› Ministry of Fear (1944) ›› Crashing Las Vegas (1956) ›› The Iron Mistress Law & Order Law & Order Memphis Beat (CC) The Closer (CC) Law & Order Paid Prog. Paid Prog. Fairly Legal (CC) ››› Terminator 3: Rise of the Machines (CC) › The Condemned Sonic X Sonic X Yu-Gi-Oh! Sonic X Dragon Yu-Gi-Oh! Yu-Gi-Oh! Dinosaur Dog Tales Green

January 29, 2011

MOVIES

3 pm

10 pm

Ent Insider Wipeout (N) (CC) Grey’s Anatomy (CC) Private Practice (CC) News Nightline Wheel Jeopardy! Big Bang Dad Says CSI: Crime Scene The Mentalist (CC) News Letterman The Office The Office American Idol (N) (CC) Bones (N) (CC) Fox Toledo News Seinfeld King-Hill Jdg Judy Jdg Judy Commun Couples The Office Parks 30 Rock Outsource News Jay Leno NewsHour Business Toledo Stories (CC) Midsomer Murders Music Sun Stud Charlie Rose (N) (CC) The First 48 (CC) The First 48 (CC) The First 48 (N) (CC) Beyond Scared Beyond Scared Real Housewives Real Housewives Real Housewives Real Housewives Love Real Daily Colbert Futurama Futurama Futurama South Pk South Pk South Pk Daily Colbert Deck Deck ››› The Incredibles (2004), Holly Hunter (CC) Hannah Hannah Deck Deck College Basketball Teams TBA. (Live) Winter X Games From Aspen, Colo. (Live) (CC) SportsCenter (CC) Still Stnd ›› Practical Magic (1998) Sandra Bullock, Nicole Kidman. Funniest Home Videos The 700 Club (CC) Flay Best Thing Iron Chef America Unique Unique Cakes Unwrap Chopped Hunters House First Place First Place Selling NY Selling NY House Hunters House Hunters How I Met How I Met Reba (CC) Reba (CC) The Memory Keeper’s Daughter (2008) (CC) How I Met How I Met Teen Mom 2 Teen Mom 2 Jersey Shore (CC) Jersey Shore (N) (CC) Jersey Shore (CC) Seinfeld Seinfeld › Rush Hour 3 (2007, Action) Jackie Chan. Fam. Guy Fam. Guy Conan (N) The Asphalt Jungle ››› Man in a Cocked Hat (1959) ››› Being There (1979) Peter Sellers, Shirley MacLaine. NBA Pregame (CC) NBA Basketball Miami Heat at New York Knicks. (CC) NBA Basketball NCIS “Blowback” (CC) NCIS “Faith” (CC) Royal Pains “Pit Stop” Fairly Legal (N) (CC) White Collar (CC) Two Men Two Men The Vampire Diaries Nikita “Free” (N) (CC) Entourage Curb Scrubs Scrubs

8 am 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

January 27, 2011

MOVIES

8 pm

Saturday Morning

11:30

Ent Insider Supernanny (CC) Primetime: What 20/20 (N) (CC) News Nightline Wheel Jeopardy! NCIS: Los Angeles CSI: NY (CC) Hawaii Five-0 (CC) News Letterman The Office The Office Kitchen Nightmares Fringe “Reciprocity” Fox Toledo News Seinfeld King-Hill Jdg Judy Jdg Judy Minute to Win It (CC) Dateline NBC (CC) News Jay Leno NewsHour Business Wash. Deadline Lafayette-Lost Need to Know (N) (CC) Charlie Rose (N) (CC) Criminal Minds (CC) Criminal Minds (CC) Criminal Minds (CC) Criminal Minds (CC) Criminal Minds (CC) Real Housewives Real Housewives ››› Something’s Gotta Give (2003) Jack Nicholson. Something Daily Colbert Tosh.0 Tosh.0 Hart: Grown Little Man Iglesias: Fluffy Comedy Comedy Phineas Phineas Phineas Fish Deck Wizards Wizards Wizards Wizards Phineas Winter X Games From Aspen, Colo. (Live) (CC) NBA Basketball: Celtics at Suns Funniest Home Videos Funniest Home Videos Funniest Home Videos Funniest Home Videos The 700 Club (CC) Flay Best Thing Chopped Diners Diners Food Best Thing Unwrapped Hunters House Property Property Hunters Hunters Hunters Hunters Dream Home 2011 How I Met How I Met Reba (CC) Reba (CC) Reba (CC) Reba (CC) Reba (CC) Reba (CC) How I Met How I Met I Was 17 I Was 17 Jersey Shore (CC) Jersey Shore (CC) ››› Hustle & Flow (2005) Terrence Howard. Seinfeld Seinfeld ›› Get Smart (2008) Steve Carell. Premiere. The Office The Office The Office The Office Trouble in Paradise ››› Tunes of Glory (1960) Alec Guinness. ›› The Odessa File (1974) Jon Voight. Bones (CC) ›››› The Dark Knight (2008) Christian Bale, Heath Ledger. (CC) ››› Lethal Weapon NCIS (CC) CSI: Crime Scene CSI: Crime Scene CSI: Crime Scene CSI: Crime Scene Two Men Two Men Smallville “Collateral” Supernatural (N) (CC) Entourage Curb Scrubs Scrubs

1 pm

7 pm

January 28, 2011

MOVIES

8 pm

Thursday Evening

11:30

Ent Insider Middle Middle Family Cougar Off the Map (N) (CC) News Nightline Wheel Jeopardy! Live to Dance (CC) Criminal Minds (N) Blue Bloods (N) (CC) News Letterman The Office The Office American Idol “Auditions No. 3” (N) (CC) Fox Toledo News Seinfeld King-Hill Jdg Judy Jdg Judy Minute to Win It (N) Chase “Narco, Part 2” Law & Order: SVU News Jay Leno NewsHour Business Nova scienceNOW (N) NOVA (N) (CC) (DVS) Theodore Roosevelt Charlie Rose (N) (CC) Dog Dog Dog Bounty Hunter Dog Bounty Hunter Storage Storage Storage Storage Atlanta Real Housewives/Beverly Top Chef (CC) Top Chef (CC) Top Chef (CC) Daily Colbert Chappelle Chappelle South Pk South Pk South Pk Tosh.0 Daily Colbert Deck Deck Shake it Shake it Hannah Deck Hannah Hannah Deck Deck SportsCtr College Basketball Teams TBA. (Live) NBA Basketball San Antonio Spurs at Utah Jazz. (Live) Funniest Home Videos Funniest Home Videos Funniest Home Videos Funniest Home Videos The 700 Club (CC) B. Flay Best Thing Flay B. Flay Worst Cooks Restaurant: Im. Diners Diners Hunters House Holmes Inspection Holmes Inspection Holmes Inspection Vanilla Vanilla How I Met How I Met Reba (CC) Reba (CC) ›› Murder by Numbers (2002) Sandra Bullock. (CC) How I Met True Life True Life Teen Mom 2 I Used to Be Fat (N) I Used to Be Fat Seinfeld Seinfeld Browns Browns Payne Payne There There Conan (N) ›› Taxi, Mister (1943) ››› Lucky Jordan (1942, Drama) ››› The Snows of Kilimanjaro (1952) (CC) Phantom Bones (CC) Bones (CC) Bones (CC) Bones (CC) Southland “Code 4” NCIS “Suspicion” (CC) NCIS “Endgame” (CC) NCIS “Power Down” NCIS “Child’s Play” Fairly Legal “Pilot” Two Men Two Men Nikita “All the Way” The Vampire Diaries Entourage Curb Scrubs Scrubs

Friday Evening 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

January 26, 2011

MOVIES

8 pm

JANUARY 23, 2011

6:30

7 pm

7:30

8 pm

8:30

9 pm

9:30

10 pm 10:30 11 pm 11:30

Paid Paid Paid Paid Raising the Roof ESPN Sports Saturday Sports anthology. News ABC Entertainment ’Night ››› Dreamgirls (2006) Jamie Foxx, Beyoncé Knowles. (CC) News Anatomy College Basketball Regional Coverage. (CC) PGA Tour Golf Farmers Insurance Open, Third Round. (Live) (CC) News News Wheel Lottery CSI: Crime Scene Paid Paid 48 Hours Mystery News America Air Buddies (2006) Patrick Cranshaw. Outdrsmn McCarver The Unit (CC) The Closer (CC) Bones (CC) Simpsons Simpsons Cops (N) Cops Amer. Most Wanted News Seinfeld Fringe “Reciprocity” Paid Paid Skiing Figure Skating News News News Paid Chuck (CC) Figure Skating News SNL This Old House Hr Pepin Quilting Soundstage (CC) Austin City Limits Getaways Art Steves Rudy Lawrence Welk American Songbook Antiques Roadshow As Time... Vicar Adder Ohio Flip Beyond Scared Straight (CC) Beyond Scared Beyond Scared The First 48 (CC) The First 48 (CC) The First 48 (CC) The First 48 (CC) The First 48 (CC) The First 48 (CC) The First 48 (CC) Million Dollar Listing Tabatha’s Salon Housewives/Atl. Real Housewives Real Housewives House House goes through detox. (CC) House “Epic Fail” House “The Tyrant” House (CC) House “Brave Heart” Stand-Up Stand-Up Stand-Up Stand-Up Stand-Up Stand-Up Stand-Up Stand-Up Stand-Up Stand-Up Stand-Up Stand-Up Stand-Up Stand-Up Stand-Up Stand-Up Stand-Up Stand-Up Nick Kroll: Cool Kevin Hart Good Shake it Hannah Hannah Shake It Shake it Shake It Shake it Wizards Wizards Hannah Hannah Deck Deck Good Good Wizards Shake it Hannah Hannah Deck Deck College Basketball College Basketball College Basketball Georgia at Kentucky. College GameDay College Basketball Kansas State at Kansas. Winter X Games From Aspen, Colo. (CC) SportsCenter (CC) ››› Willy Wonka and the Chocolate Factory (1971) ››› Coming to America (1988) Eddie Murphy. ›› Snow Dogs (2002) Cuba Gooding Jr.. ›› The Game Plan (2007, Comedy), Madison Pettis ››› Remember the Titans Contessa Contessa Worst Cooks Chopped Cupcake Wars Iron Chef America Challenge Tailgate-Fieri Tailgate-Fieri Tailgate-Fieri Tailgate-Fieri Iron Chef America Unsella Get Sold Block Design Colour Buck Candice Sarah Dear Color Spl. Designed To Sell Hunters House Candice Color Spl. Dear Block House House Hunters Hunters ›› No Reservations (2007, Drama) (CC) ›› Management (2008) Jennifer Aniston. ›› She’s the One (1996) Jennifer Aniston. ››› Friends With Money (2006) (CC) › Picture Perfect (1997) Jennifer Aniston. ›› No Reservations Jersey Shore (CC) Teen Mom 2 Teen Mom 2 I Used to Be Fat Jersey Shore (CC) Jersey Shore (CC) ››› Hustle & Flow (2005, Drama) Terrence Howard. Cribs Jersey Shore (CC) Jersey Shore (CC) Be ›› Legally Blonde (2001), Luke Wilson Jim Raymond Raymond Raymond Raymond King King Seinfeld Seinfeld ›› Get Smart (2008, Comedy) Steve Carell. Talladega Nights: Ricky Bobby ›› The Iron Mistress ››› Ride the High Country (1962, Western) ›› I Shot Jesse James (1949) ››› Little Big Man (1970, Western) Dustin Hoffman. ››› Bad Day at Black Rock ››› The Dirty Dozen (1967) Lee Marvin. (CC) (DVS) ›› Payback (1999, Action) Mel Gibson. (CC) ››› Lethal Weapon 3 (1992) Mel Gibson. (CC) (DVS) ›› Lethal Weapon 4 (1998) Mel Gibson. (CC) (DVS) ››› Training Day (2001) Premiere. (CC) ››› The Bourne Supremacy (2004) (CC) › The Condemned (2007) (CC) Chaos (2005, Action) Jason Statham. (CC) ›› War (2007) Jet Li, Jason Statham. (CC) ›› Crank (2006) Jason Statham. (CC) ››› The Bourne Ultimatum (2007) Matt Damon. (CC) ›› Crank (2006) (CC) Icons Career Payne Browns Without a Trace (CC) Cold Case (CC) American American Fam. Guy Fam. Guy Two Men Two Men ›› Serendipity (2001) John Cusack. Entou Curb American American

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Friday, Jan. 28th & Saturday, Jan. 29th

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Live Entertainment Thurs-Fri-Sat Great Time.

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Friendly Staff. For music listings, drink specials, and weekly dining specials, go to:

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january 23, 2011

Visit www.toledofreepress.com

1/24/2011, 7– 8 p.m. Toledo-Lucas County Main Branch Library 325 N. Michigan St., Toledo

When wind, water and re threaten communities it often falls on volunteers to provide emergency assistance to our neighbors. Learn about disaster volunteer programs at agencies like the American Red Cross, United Way Volunteer Center, the Lucas County Medical Reserve Corps and others that can help you become trained to help your neighbors in an emergency. Hosted by 13abc’s

Sashem Brey Moderated by

Michael S. Miller Toledo Free Press Editor in Chief

Greater Toledo Area Chapter

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A28 n Toledo Free Press

january 23, 2011

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