Toledo Free Press – July 24, 2011

Page 1

24-page SPECIAL SECTION i GOLF

BEST Weekly newspaper in ohio

U.S. Senior Open at Inverness

Feature stories on the legends and history of summer’s biggest tournament, Page A19

2009, 2010 Ohio Society of Professional Journalists Awards

FREE

A Toledo tradition since 2005 JULY

24, 2011

www.toledofreepress.com

The

Boss RICHARD ST. JEAN is guiding the $300 million Hollywood Casino to its 2012 opening. Story by Zach Davis, Page A6

2011 4X4 JEEP $ 2 177 LIBERTY OR WRANGLER — Now Lease for only —

2011 JEEP LIBERTY 4X4

*39 mo mo. lease lease. 10 10,000 000 miles per year year. $1998 $1 duee att signing i i ffor returning t i Ch Chrysler l r employees lessees or $2998 due for anyone. Plus tax, title and doc fees. Offer expires 7/30/11.

mo.*

2011 JEEP WRANGLER 4X4

Monroe SUPERSTORE • 15160 S. Monroe St. • Monroe, MI • 1-877-284-5107 • www.monroedodge.com M


A2 n Toledo Free Press

JULY 24, 2011


Opinion

JULY 24, 2011

Visit www.toledofreepress.com

n A3

LIGHTING THE FUSE

Publisher’s statement

Harry Potter And The Boy Who Limits limit access Wore Blackface To The Movies

D

eveloping a cynical streak is an occupational hazard of the newspaper business. Years of reading and writing about corruption and the less honorable sides of human nature leads one to a place where most everything is called into question. This is especially true when it comes to government. Dealing with officials on all levels calls for a healthy dose of preventative paranoia. It may be sad to have to assume the worst until the best is shown, but power drives people to strange actions. There are strong laws that help the public keep tabs on elected officials, although those laws are only as enforceable as a governing body’s degree of cooperation. One of the long-standing protections in Ohio has been the lack of a maximum penalty for improperly destroying public documents. Recently, the Ohio Legislature reduced and capped the civil penalties for improperly destroying public records. The Legislature de facto eliminated a powerful financial consequence that made governments think twice before eradicating any materials, and especially materials that may Thomas F. Pounds cause embarrassment or controversy. As the Associated Press (AP) reported, “A measure signed into law by Gov. John Kasich places a $10,000 limit per case on fines an agency can be ordered to pay when sued for destroying records. It also limits attorney fees to $10,000 and requires suits to be brought within five years of a record’s destruction. “There were no such limits previously.” State Sen. Bill Seitz, a Cincinnati lawyer, told the AP the modification was “prompted by a $1.4 million initial finding against the city of Bucyrus for recording over 911 tapes from the 1990s. The law had said that agencies could be sued for $1,000 per destroyed document, with no maximum. Supporters of the new cap said people requested records they didn’t want but knew were destroyed so they could sue for a large payday.” It can be argued that the new limits might make it difficult for many people to afford the risk of suing when contested documents are erased. “Destroyed public employee records, evidence of police wrongdoing, evidence of environmental and human health dangers ... could all go away for a simple $10,000 fine,” Trent Dougherty, director of legal affairs for the Ohio Environmental Council, told AP. Especially when those fines would likely be paid with taxpayer dollars. Seitz argued that “the legislation protects taxpayers’ pocketbooks from greedy lawyers. If records are destroyed to cover up corruption, officials still could face criminal charges such as obstruction of justice and tampering with records. If anybody thinks that a $10,000 penalty and $10,000 in attorney fees is not a sufficient deterrent, then I would remind them that if the destruction is willful ... we have a whole battery of criminal laws that still apply.” Fair enough, but the new legislation should make those who champion open access to government more than a little nervous. Anything that provides “wiggle room” for those looking to keep the public ignorant should be condemned. This new standard is a victory for those who prefer to work in the dark, and a loss for those who prefer their government to work in the open light of day. O

Thomas F. Pounds is president and publisher of Toledo Free Press and Toledo Press Star. Contact him at tpounds@toledofreepress.com.

A publication of Toledo Free Press, LLC, Vol. 7, No. 30. Established 2005. EDITORIAL Mary Ann Stearns, Design Editor mastearns@toledofreepress.com James A. Molnar, Lead Designer jmolnar@toledofreepress.com Brandi Barhite, Associate Editor bbarhite@toledofreepress.com Sarah Ottney, Special Sections Editor sottney@toledofreepress.com

ADVERTISING SALES Renee Bergmooser, Sales Manager rbergmooser@toledofreepress.com Casey Fischer cfischer@toledofreepress.com Matt Mackowiak mmackowiak@toledofreepress.com Chick Reid creid@toledofreepress.com

T

he “Harry Potter” series deals directly with the dan- 2011 could walk around in public in blackface and think gers of prejudice and racism, so it was fitting to be it’s OK. We’re not talking about some satirical or political confronted with those issues during a screening of the fourth wall-breaking performance art. It was just one kid at the movies, dressed in costume with some kind of black latest “Potter” movie. During the late 1990s, I worked on assignment in San makeup or paint smeared over his face. Blackface has a long history as a tool for demeaning and Jose, Calif. During that era, I was long-distance romancing my eventual wife, Shannon, who lived in Ann Arbor. Part humiliating black people; I do not see any excuses that tranof bridging that continental gap was spending a lot of late scend that context. There are not a lot of black characters in nights on the phone. the “Harry Potter” books and movies, which Shannon battled mild insomnia in those seems endemic to epic fantasy stories. The days, and I battled cross-country home sick“Star Wars” movies employed exactly one ness. One of our solutions was for me to read prominent black actor for each of its triloto her each night until she was ready to sleep. gies (Billy Dee Williams as Lando Calrissian It was on her suggestion in that summer of in the Original Trilogy, Samuel L. Jackson as 1999 that I purchased a copy of “Harry Potter Jedi Mace Windu in the Prequel Trilogy). The and the Sorcerer’s Stone.” “Lord of the Rings” movies make the “Star It was a natural extension of our admiraWars” movies look like a Tyler Perry project. tion for the book series to see the “Potter” “Avatar,” employed black actors for its aliens movies as each one was released. Taking the adventure to its extreme, we ar- Michael S. miller but not for its scientists or military leaders. “Potter” has Lee Jordan, who fights ranged a safe haven for our young boys and drove to the Rave Motion Pictures theater at Levis Commons alongside the good-guy wizards, and Dean Thomas, who for the July 15 midnight premiere. Traveling with friends who is more visible than Jordan but mainly footnotes himhave been equally invested in the series, we arrived to find all self as a boyfriend of Ginny Weasley, who eventually falls 12 screens showing the film, and all 12 screens sold out or for Harry Potter. It has Kingsley Shacklebolt, a powerful close to it. Hundreds of fans filled the lobby, chattering excit- wizard who rises to a prominent leadership role. There is edly and bustling with anticipation. Many fans (who at one one young black woman, Angelina Johnson, who dates point probably smirked at fans who lined up in costumes for the supporting character Fred Weasley (and according to fan websites, marries his brother George after Fred dies “Star Wars” movies) were dressed as their favorite character. There were great bearded Hagrids, scores of Harrys in battle. This skin-color exposition on the Weasley famwearing black robes and black circular glasses, and several ily’s prejudice-free approach to life is a rare bit of narrasilver-bearded Dumbledores. The creativity on display was tive clumsiness on Rowling’s part). The young man in blackface must have been dressed impressive. One fan, dressed as Azkaban prisoner Sirius Black, wore the faded jail fatigues and had the full set of as Dean Thomas, as he lacked Lee Jordan’s dreadlocks and markings “tattooed” on his chest. I assume those quotes are Angelina Johnson’s uterus (my assumption). While seeing him did not completely sour my evening, required. There were sexy and demented Bellatrix clones, scary and silent Death Eaters and Dementors and at least his offensive and tasteless choice has resonated. Worst-case scenario, it was an excuse for a mocking, racist act of immaone person dressed as a winged Golden Snitch. With about 30 minutes before showtime, two of us turity. At best, it was an insensitive display of ignorance and walked to the concession stand. Waiting in the lengthy line immaturity. Or maybe he was just a historical re-enactor. I wonder if he left his parents’ home with the blackface gave us another opportunity to admire the “Potter” fans who had invested time and energy into dressing up to mark on, or if he applied it when safely out of his parents’ sight. I the end of the 10-year film series. It was exciting and fun, a also wonder if he would have employed the same mischievous strut at another theater; not just the mostly white safe moment free of real-world politics and pressures. Then a young man walked by, dressed in Hogwarts zone in Perrysburg, but maybe at Westfield, where he would wizard robes. He was tall, with brown hair and a quick gait. have been far more likely to face real-life black people. If he had been seen in blackface at Westfield, it would have His white face was smeared black. I openly stared as he crossed the lobby, stunned to see taken a lot more than magic words and phrases to prevent someone, even in the context of a celebration and costume him from learning just how offensive his actions were. O ball, wearing blackface. I caught the eye of my friend, who Michael S. Miller is editor in chief of Toledo Free Press and Towas similarly caught off guard by the sight. It surprised me — stunned me, really — that anyone in ledo Free Press Star. Email him at mmiller@toledofreepress.com. Thomas F. Pounds, President/Publisher tpounds@toledofreepress.com

ADMINISTRATION Pam Burson, Business Manager pburson@toledofreepress.com DISTRIBUTION Charles Campos (419) 241-1700, Ext. 227 ccampos@toledofreepress.com PRODUCTION Joseph Herr, Lisa Stang Photographers

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

STAFF WRITERS news@toledofreepress.com Mike Bauman • Jim Beard • Amy Campbell • Zach Davis • John Dorsey Vicki L. Kroll • Jason Mack • Jeff McGinnis • Kathryn Milstein • Patrick Timmis Duane Ramsey • Chris Schmidbauer, Sports Editor • Lisa Renee Ward, Web Editor Chris Kozak, Staff Writer Emeritus COPY EDITORS/PROOFREADERS Lisa Renee Ward, Brandi Barhite, Darcy Irons

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.


Opinion

A4 n Toledo Free Press

JULY 24, 2011

DON LEE

LETTER TO THE EDITOR

Deconstructing Flagg

TO THE EDITOR, I was wondering how long it would take before Steven Flagg would declare the TPS-TFT agreement to be a disaster, no matter what the settlement contained (“TPS Fact Finder report short on solutions,” July 17). I can only guess that it took a while to find some tactic to try to discredit the agreement. But Steve came through! First of all, he attacks a fact-finder who has a long history of mediating and resolving these types of disputes. When did Mr. Flagg ever do something like that? Secondly, what, precisely, are his credentials to comment about the negotiations process? Steve is dead wrong when he claims that, “Initial negotiating positions always seem to be established at polar extremes ... ” This statement alone makes it crystal clear that Mr. Flagg lacks first-hand knowledge in these matters. He also states, “TFT leadership was equally unrealistic in its efforts to maintain the status quo.” Where did that come from? TFT knew that concessions were necessary! Let him quote his source on that one! It was the TPS Board that voted 4-1 to hire an out-of-town attorney who had no long-term interest in Toledo or Toledo’s children, and who trumpeted his expertise in negotiating in “unionfree environments.” The extreme positions were very one-sided in this bargaining session. Mr. Flagg is obviously commenting in an area where he has little or no direct knowledge! What are his union-management negotiating experiences? There exists a collective bargaining method known as InterestBased Bargaining (IBB for short), also called “Win-Win” bargaining. A few years ago, then TFT President Francine Lawrence proposed this to thenSuperintendent John Foley. Mr. Foley seemed interested, but never committed his team to the time needed to train properly to employ IBB in the TPS-TFT process. The Berea School District and the Berea Federation of Teachers have used IBB for about 20 years, for example. I have negotiated both on the union side and the management side, and I have negotiated in the more traditional, confrontational style, as well as in IBB. Where is Mr. Flagg’s experience in these matters? Mr. Flagg always emphasizes the negative. It’s almost as if he prefers that TPS remain in conflict! He ignores the fact that TPS has made great strides in “student outcomes.” Mr. Flagg never mentions TFT-

sponsored successes like the elementary reading and math academies, which led to big jumps in test scores. He never mentions a successful, high poverty school like Birmingham, which jumped over categories all the way to the “Excellent” category in state ratings last year. Mr. Flagg implies that TFT gave up too little. He never mentions that the amount TFT gave back is estimated at $44 million in savings! How much did he want? $60 million? $80 million? $100 million? And if one goal is to attract and keep the best and brightest teachers to TPS, how much can we shrink the remuneration? Mr. Flagg also tacitly endorses SB5. I guess he believes the way to attract the best college graduates into teaching in Ohio (and, more specifically, Toledo) is to remove all collective bargaining rights from all public employees. No matter what its supporters may say, that is precisely what SB5 would do. I know that SB5 allows negotiations in limited areas. But how can there be true negotiations when one side can state that because there is an impasse, they can vote to write the contract language any way they want it to read? Mr. Flagg is entitled to his opinions. You are entitled to publish anyone you want to publish. When fine periodicals, or even fine websites, publish from outside sources, they most often list the credentials of the author. Besides being a selfproclaimed “educational activist,” precisely what are Mr. Flagg’s credentials to be considered a plausible source of expertise in areas of unionmanagement negotiations? And are his experiences specific to the public sector? You don’t get such expertise by watching school board meetings and talking to members with whom one is friendly. You’ve got to be there! Was he ever “there?” O Dale Pertcheck Dale Pertcheck and his wife retired as teachers from Toledo Public Schools on June 1. He will continue in his position as treasurer with TFT’s statewide affiliate, the Ohio Federation of Teachers, at least through the summer. He and his wife are members of the retiree unit from Toledo, TFT250R, which is affiliated with the Ohio Federation of Teachers and the American Federation of Teachers. He has been an officer with the Ohio Federation of Teachers since 1990 and was recording secretary from 1990-2006. He has served as treasurer since first being elected to that position in 2006.

Telethon LIVE from 6-8 p.m. Thursday, August 4th on NBC 24

www.campcourageous.com » 419-875-6828


JULY 24, 2011

B:10”

Opinion T:10”

Visit www.toledofreepress.com

n A5

S:9”

Pay down your mortgage just by making everyday purchases.

B:10.25”

S:9.25”

Fifth Third Checking account required. $50 minimum deposit to open new account, accounts closed within 180 days will be charged a $25 fee, and returned check and overdraft fees apply to all checking accounts. Earn rewards points by using your Homeowner Plus Value Credit Card with Homeowner Plus Value Package Rewards. Points are used to make principal reductions on your mortgage. See banker for details on the rewards program. An example of saving thousands assumes a 5% interest rate (5.090% APR) on a 30-year fixed-rate mortgage of $200,000. Saving $16,568 over the life of the loan based on an average monthly home improvement/home furnishing spending of $300/month and average monthly spending for all other credit card purchases to be $1,500/month. A 20% down payment with no private mortgage insurance (PMI) is assumed, with a monthly payment of $1,073.64. Loans are subject to credit review and approval. Fifth Third Bank, Member FDIC. Equal Housing Lender. Mortgage products offered by Fifth Third Mortgage Company and Fifth Third Mortgage-MI, LLC.

T:10.25”

With the Homeowner Plus Value Package from Fifth Third Bank, you could save thousands on your home mortgage. Every time you use your Fifth Third credit card, you’ll earn rewards points that you can use to pay down your mortgage faster. Visit 53.com/homeownerplus or a Banking Center today.


community

A6 n Toledo Free Press

DEVELOPMENT

JULY 24, 2011

By Zach Davis

Toledo Free Press Staff Writer zdavis@toledofreepress.com

The $300 million Hollywood Casino-Toledo, scheduled to be the first complete casino in Ohio, is rapidly taking shape. “It’s coming along quickly,” General Manager Richard St. Jean said. “I saw it for the first time when I drove into town about a month ago and I was just blown away by the view and proximity. It couldn’t have a better location. It’s just spectacular.” Other Ohio cities expected to open casinos in the future include Cincinnati, Cleveland and Columbus. Cleveland’s casino could still open before Toledo’s but it would only be a partially complete facility. The Toledo casino, which broke ground in August, is scheduled to open in the latter part of 2012’s second quarter. “You can see the formation,” St. Jean said. “It’s really starting to take shape. A lot of the infrastructure is starting to come up and the walls are starting to go up. I would say within 30 to 60 days you will really be able to make out the different venues and what it looks like. It’s just amazing how quickly it moves.” Despite the speed of the structure coming into fruition, St. Jean still has his deadlines. He is pushing to finish enclosing the building by the fall, especially after the setbacks that the elements provided during the past year. “From a timing perspective it’s critical to get the building enclosed,” St. Jean said. “Particularly with the winter we had and then the rain, that didn’t help the process along. n CASINO CONTINUES ON A7

toledo free press photo and cover photo by joseph herr

St. Jean: Casino construction ‘coming along quickly’

n

Richard St. Jean worked 25 years in las vegas for caesar’s palace and station casinos.


community n CASINO CONTINUED FROM A6

Anne Ruch, OB/GYN

“Now the goal is to get it enclosed so that by early fall we are totally enclosed and the majority of the focus becomes the inside of the property. At the end of the year, the building on the outside will look virtually complete.”

Leaving Las Vegas

Physician FOCUS

Breast Cancer: Detect and Protect! According to the American Cancer Society, 2.6 million men and women have breast cancer. Although it’s a very common and serious form of cancer, early detection can make a positive difference in the effectiveness of treatment. How can you ensure early detection? Here are some guidelines: • Conduct monthly breast self-exams. • Have routine clinical breast exams performed by your physician. • Begin routine mammograms at age 40. When conducting a breast self-exam, look for changes in the shape and size of your breast. Lumps or thickenings could be a sign of breast cancer, so tell your doctor about any unusual changes. Mammograms are used to find more subtle signs of cancer that can’t be felt through a physical breast exam. A digital mammogram uses low doses of radiation to produce images of the breast to detect and diagnose breast cancer. Combining both clinical exams and mammograms will help you lower your risk of breast cancer. As with all types of cancer, early detection is key. Talk with your doctor about your risks for breast cancer and develop a plan for early detection.

www.ppgdocs.org 800-PPG-DOCS

© 2011 ProMedica

St. Jean started his job as general manager of Hollywood Casino-Toledo a month ago after accepting the position from Penn National Gaming. He spent the past 25 years in Las Vegas working positions at Caesar’s Palace and Station Casinos. After working on projects including the Gun Lake Casino in Wayland, Mich., and the expansion of Thunder Valley Casino Resort in Lincoln, Calif., St. Jean heard about plans for a new casino in Toledo. The combination of bringing one of the first casinos to Ohio and helping a struggling economy was just what he was looking for to join Penn National. “I’ve known the Penn guys for about 10 years now,” St. Jean said. “I developed a great relationship and we said if the time was ever right we could have a [business] relationship. When I started learning about this project and it being one of the first in the state, the magnitude of the project and what it does for the economy I was very excited. It’s an exciting project in a part of the country I think could really use it. I think that Penn, myself and the team I’m putting together can really fulfill all those obligations.” To give him an idea of just what to expect with the more intricate aspects of the new casino, St. Jean began touring other Penn National facilities around the country. In early July, St. Jean traveled to its property in Charleston, W.V., for a more detailed look at the facility’s electronics, which will be integrated into Hollywood Casino-Toledo. “I went to see how it comes together,” St. Jean said. “There’s a lot of electronic messaging and technology that is particularly new to this region. It was hard to really understand what it meant until I went and saw it.”

Casino’s goals

That experience will be crucial in the upcoming stages of development, especially in a facility with so many different parts under one roof. The facility will have 119,000 square feet of gaming floor, including about 3,000 slot machines, 60 table games and 21 poker tables. Also featured in the building will be an entertainment venue which plans to consistently provide stage acts to perform. The casino’s goal will be to provide entertainment for the venue upwards of seven nights a week. “I see there is a tremendous need,” St. Jean said. “You can have great

MH-155-11 PPG_Ruch_breastcancer_ad_TFP.indd 6/28/11 3:00 1 PM

Visit www.toledofreepress.com

n A7

toledo free press photo by joseph herr

JULY 24, 2011

n

Richard St. Jean most recently worked for a casino in Wayland, Mich.

bands midweek and step it up on the weekends. It’s a venue that not only opens up to the lounge but opens up to the entire casino. It’s definitely going to be an entertainment mecca. It doesn’t anywhere compete with the larger venues, but we have created our own centric entertainment venue here in the middle of the casino.” The casino will also feature many different food options for incoming patrons. Among the places to eat will be Final Cut, a fine dining steakhouse, as well as the 350-seat Epic Buffet, a sports-themed restaurant and bar and a “grab-and-go” area. “One of the staples for Penn National Gaming is the quality of food and the food offered,” St. Jean said. “I think you are going to be able to find something for everybody. At the end of the day it’s about taking care of the guests, giving them what they want and making sure they want to come back.”

Major qualifications

For the casino to best take advantage of all of its features, St. Jean knows he will need to select the best employees for the job. In a job market where he expects to receive interest from upwards of 15,000 applicants, hiring around 1,000 people will be no small feat. There are, however, two major qualifications St. Jean is looking for. Hiring locally is a major goal for the casino, looking to employ at least 90 percent of its employees from the Toledo area. He also said that all applicants skilled in working with people will have a significant edge over others. “What we are really looking for at every position is people that can be a service ambassador,” St. Jean said.

“The No. 1 criteria we are looking at when we are selecting people is their ability to be friendly, outgoing, gregarious and really create that kind of environment. We definitely look for the special technical skills, but it’s really going to come down to people skills and their personality.” The casino will officially take online applications in the fall. St. Jean said that applicants can also express their interest in positions through its website, www.HollywoodCasino Toledo.com, and keep up to date on the hiring process. Initial plans are to begin searching for employees from October through December and make offers in the first two months of 2012. As for the salaries, St. Jean expects tipped jobs “will be very lucrative,” while non-tipped jobs will be dictated by the market. Employment will also include medical plans. Being an employee won’t necessarily exclude you from all the fun either. Employees will be barred from playing many of the games in the casino, but St. Jean expects there to be some gambling they should be able to participate in. “We do allow some team members to gamble but it obviously depends on the job that you do,” St. Jean said. “Some jobs by position and level in the organization are prohibited from gambling but more positions than not are allowed to play slots. Typically, no one is allowed to play table games. That has to be vetted out with the Ohio Gaming Commission. We can’t say for sure but there should be some form of gambling.” Among some of the concerns is a lack of a hotel near the property. For the casino to be built in Toledo, one of

the guidelines was it could not build a hotel on-site or within 10 miles until Lucas County hotels sustain a 68 percent threshold in occupancy for a three-year period. A lack of a hotel on-site has brought concerns of an increase in drunken driving. Those worries are not lost on St. Jean, who will attempt to prevent alcohol-related issues before they start by teaching his employees “preventive training.” “Any team member that has anything to do with alcohol serving, whether that’s at the restaurant and the bar or the valet handing out keys, is properly trained,” St. Jean said. “If someone’s intoxicated we will get them a cab. If they need to get to a hotel we will coordinate those. We take every step to make sure not only that our team members are safe but our patrons are safe. That’s an extensive part of our training.” One option for getting customers to their hotels Downtown includes shuttles, which the casino plans on providing free to customers. “We are planning to have transportation back and forth Downtown,” St. Jean said. “There will be a collaborative effort with the local lodging association so we can understand who wants to partner and who’s looking for this kind of business. It behooves us to have guests that want to stay here in town on extended stays. Those are certainly mutually beneficial. It’s all a work in progress.” O Portions of this interview were conducted with Toledo Free Press Editor in Chief Michael S. Miller during the July 11 broadcast of “Eye on Toledo” on WSPD 1370 AM.


community

A8 n Toledo Free Press

JULY 24, 2011

PEOPLE

By Zach Davis

Toledo Free Press Staff Writer zdavis@toledofreepress.com

On the anniversary of the death of University of Toledo sophomore Casey Bucher, family and friends gathered at the scene of his July 18, 2010, attack in remembrance with a candlelight vigil. Casey was stabbed on the corner of Bancroft Street and Westwood Avenue by 24-yearold Lawrence James as he was walking home BUCHER from work at Maxwell’s Brew. James asked Casey for cigarettes or change and attacked him after he declined. He called 911 but died shortly after. James had been released from prison 19 days before the incident, after serving a two-year sentence for stabbing another man. “He would still be with us today if the government knew what it was doing and did it right the first time,” mother Lisa Bucher exclaimed to the

crowd. “A psychopathic killer so close to the streets where our kids go to school. It should not have happened and it could have happened to any one of you. I wouldn’t wish this upon anyone, least of all Casey, a kindhearted kid who did not deserve this.” Bucher, who returned to the scene of the crime for the first time since the attack, blamed the government for its handling of James’ release, specifically its handling of his medication. “My heart hurts,” Bucher said. “This should not have happened. They let a psycho loose from the prison. There was no post-release control. He was kept on meds in prison to make sure he didn’t hurt anyone else in prison but he was let loose on the public with no follow-up and this is what happens.” James is serving 16 years to life at the Toledo Correctional Institution, with the opportunity for parole in 2026. Bucher will be doing everything in her power to make sure he isn’t allowed back into the public again. “So long as I am breathing I’ll ask these kids, the next generation, to make sure that he never gets out after I’m gone so none of their kids die,” Bucher said. “The government is not going to change unless we make them. He will be released again with $65, a bus ticket

and two weeks worth of meds.” Bucher has also taken exception to the proximity of James’ incarceration. The Toledo Correctional Institute is just 6 miles from the scene of the attack and close to James’ family. He had originally been sentenced by a judge to serve time in Orient, Ohio. “The judge ordered this individual to be locked up quite a ways away from here by her order,” Casey’s uncle Ryan Gephart said. “Now after a very short period of time he’s back in Toledo. There’s no good explanation for that. “My sister never gets to see her son again. His family gets to travel to jail to see him. He gets 13 hours of free time per day, I don’t even get 13 hours of free time per day. This is wrong and somebody in the state of Ohio needs to start doing their job because this person does not belong back in this city. He needs to be serving hard time away and needs to never get out again. This is unacceptable.” Bucher said she has recently discovered a way to petition the process and plans to do so. She noted that in 2008, before his first release, he had been incarcerated in Lebanon, Ohio. “There’s no reason he can’t go back there,” Bucher said. “This isn’t over yet.” O

Advertisers:

Why pay almost TWICE the amount for LESS coverage? “BEST WEEKLY NEWSPAPER IN OHIO” 2009 & 2010 Ohio Society of Professional Journalists Awards

toledo free press photo by joseph herr

Murder victim’s mother seeks to keep killer incarcerated

n

friends and family gather at a july 18 memorial for Casey bucher.

City Temperance Sylvania Lambertville Toledo (43623) Perrysburg Maumee Holland Toledo (43615)

Toledo Blade Penetration 38% 58% 49% 50% 53% 55% 54% 36%

Toledo Free Press Penetration 94% 93% 81% 80% 72% 68% 63% 53%

Toledo Blade Sunday Retail Open Rate $94.11 per column inch Toledo Free Press Retail Open Rate $62.00 per column inch With advertising budgets tighter than ever, you owe it to yourself to get twice the coverage at a much lower rate. Toledo Free Press, the largest circulated Sunday paper in this market, will help you reap the maximum return on your investment. Source 2010 ABC Audit Report

(Circulation over 100,000)

605 Monroe Street, Toledo, OH 43604 • 419.241.1700 • www.toledofreepress.com


community

JULY 24, 2011

King of the West Honeydew, Watermelon or Indiana Muskmelons

2

Green Line Green Beans 12 oz. 2/$5

7

$ 99lb.

Gluten-Free

ea.

6

$ 99

ea.

Brun-Uusto Grilled Cheese WCM Italian Bread 16 oz. 2/$4

lb.

FRESH MEAT Miller Amish Split Chicken Breast

Amy WCM Cheese Specialist

SEAFOOD Fresh Express American or Italian Salad Blends 10-12 oz.

U.S.A. Striped Bass Fillets

18

$ 59

99

$

lb.

2

K-Cups 12 ct. $6.99 Selected Varieties

GM Banana Nut or Honey Nut Cheerios 10.9-17 oz. 2/$5 Gatorade Sports Drink 20 oz. 8 pk. $4.99 ea. MADE FROM SCRATCH! BAKERY Walt’s HOMEMADE Cookies 6 ct.

6

2/$

WCM Angel Food Cakes 24 oz. $4.99 ea. WCM Danish Rolls 4 ct. $2.99 ea.

9

lb.

National Lasagna Day July 29th

ea.

10

7

Stubb’s BBQ Sauce or Marinades 12-18 oz. 3/$10 Kind or Think Thin Snack Bars 1.4-2.1 oz. 3/$5 BEER and WINE Skinny Girl Margarita 750 ml.

11

4

$ 99

2/$

3/$

Tropicana Orange Juice 89 oz. $4.99 ea. Our Family Natural Sliced Cheese 8 oz. 2/$5 SNACKS Black Jewell Microwave Popcorn 3 ct.

Our Family Frozen Vegetables 16 oz. 10/$10 Wanchai or Macaroni Grill Meals 24 oz. $5.99 ea. BEVERAGES Zevia Natural Diet Soda 12 oz. 6 pk.

ea.

99

lb.

“Sliced to Order” Land O’ Lakes Yellow or White American $5.49/ lb. Sweet Grape Tomatoes 1 pt. 2/$4 Red or Green Seedless Grapes $1.99/ lb. WCM In-House Made Macaroni Salad $3.99/ lb. DAIRY and FROZEN FOODS Toft’s Primetime Organic Valley Ice Cream 48 oz. Milk 64 oz.

$ 99

$

9

$ 99

PRODUCE and DELICATESSEN WCM In-House Made Lasagna

$ 99

lb.

ALL NATURAL Boneless Pork Chops $2.99/ lb. Magdalena (Gulf) Bay Scallops $9.99/ lb. Johnsonville Fresh Brats 19.76 oz. 3/$10 Atlantic Salmon Fillets $10.99/ lb. GROCERY and SPECIALTY FOODS Domino Colavita Extra Cane Sugar Virgin Olive Oil Keurig 5 lb. Bag 34 oz.

5

7

$ 99lb.

or Rotisserie Turkey $6.99/lb.

$ 99

2/$

WCM 9 in. Apple Pie or 8 in. Orange Swirl Cake

“Sliced to Order” Thumann’s Corned Beef No MSG &

USDA CHOICE Angus Strip Steaks

Fresh Pork Baby Back Ribs 2 pk.

1

n A9

Mid-Summer Meat Sale

$ 99

2

Visit www.toledofreepress.com

5

2/$

ea.

Primal 2007 Pinot Noir $19.99 ea. Seaglass 2009 Chardonnay 750 ml. $9.99

LARGE SELECTION GLUTEN-FREE AVAILABLE LARGE SELECTION OF OF GLUTEN-FREE ITEMS ITEMS AVAILABLE AT WCM AT WCM

4

$ 99

Fritos or Cheeto’s 9.75-10.5 oz. 2/$5 Pirates Booty White Cheddar Puffs 4 oz. 2/$5

ea.

MADE WITH STEVIA

Coca Cola Products 12 oz. 12 pk., 24 oz. 6 pk. Or 12 oz. 8 pk. 3/$12 Lipton Ice Tea 1 gal. $2.99 ea.

www.waltchurchillsmarket.com www.waltchurchillsmarket.com

Walt Churchill’s Market Friday Night EvENts • Every Friday in July - 4-7 p.m. at both locations Walt Churchill’s Market is the place to be at on Friday in nights in July. stop by and pick up a Meal to go right off the grill!

Effective 7/25/11- 7/31/11 | We reserve the right to limit quantities.

| No sales to vendors.

|

Follow us on twitter @ waltchurchills

Not responsible for pictorial or typographical errors.

Follow us on Facebook @ waltchurchillsmarket


community

A10 n Toledo Free Press

JULY 24, 2011

PEOPLE

By Matthew Quinn

Special to Toledo Free Press news@toledofreepress.com

Bowling Green State University student Larry Kinkaid thought he had a good plan as he trudged through the snow listening to his music. “I was trying to walk in the footprints other people had already made, the next thing I knew I was standing right in the middle of the tracks.” That’s when Kinkaid looked up and saw a train bearing down on him from only 5 feet away. He jumped out of the way, but was struck in the right arm and right leg. At first he thought everything was fine and he was going to be able to walk away. Then he took a closer look at his right leg. “I saw my leg and that’s when I knew everything was wrong; I blacked out for around 30 seconds to a minute,” Kinkaid said. “Then I woke up and started screaming for help.” However, Kinkaid couldn’t even hear himself yelling. The ringing in his ears was too loud for him to hear his own voice. Kinkaid managed to locate his cellphone and call the police. Finally his hearing came back and he heard the question coming through his cellphone, “Sir, who got hit by a train?” Up until that fateful day on Feb 5, Kinkaid had never broken a bone in his body. Kinkaid was taken by medical helicopter to St. Vincent Mercy Med-

ical Center, near his hometown of Sylvania. It was discovered there that Kinkaid had fractured his tibia, fibula, ulna and radius in addition to sustaining a concussion. “I did a good job of keeping it together, not to boast or anything but I wasn’t crying or anything, not until I saw my mom come in, then I just started bawling,” Kinkaid said. His mother, Diane, sat at his side at his hospital bed. “My baby, I almost lost you,” she said. Kinkaid said his main priority was to not think about what was happening to him. To pass the time, he asked members of the medical staff who they thought was going to win the upcoming Super Bowl, the Green Bay Packers or the Pittsburgh Steelers. Many of his fraternity brothers rushed to his side to show their support. One of the nurses said to Kinkaid “Wow, you sure are popular.” Kinkaid then said, “I’m in a fraternity; I paid for all of these friends.” His fraternity brother, Greg Maat, posted a funny message on his Facebook: “Larry quit milking this I got hit by a train thing!” Optimism for Kinkaid went beyond the nurses in that hospital room; Kinkaid’s doctors had comforting words for him as well. “The doctor said I could be walking completely normal within the next six months,” he said. Kinkaid was forced to take the se-

mester off from school in order for his injuries to heal. He is unable to participate in any athletic activity, prohibiting him from playing recreational sports he enjoys like volleyball and swimming. Kinkaid has been able to come back to Bowling Green to see all of his friends, but it wasn’t an easy process. “My grandparents did everything for me; I was hurt I couldn’t do anything,” he said. “You really take for granted the simplest things in life, such as going to the bathroom or being able to feed yourself, and my grandparents were there for me every step of the way.” Another trying part of the process was the public reaction. “I didn’t let it bother me what people were saying. I got hit by a train, I feel like an idiot for that,” Kinkaid said. He will return to Bowling Green in the fall to continue his bachelor’s degree. “Whenever I hear the train come by I definitely am aware of them now, but I don’t cry and go into a fetal position every time I hear them.” Kinkaid has crossed those tracks on East Reed Street since the accident. “I definitely look both ways when I cross them now,” Kinkaid said. One other question has seemed to be on Kinkaid’s friends’ mind as well. “What were you listening to?” He thinks he was listening to Ke$ha, but all of that seems irrelevant now. “I just feel lucky to be alive.” O

toledo free press photo by joseph herr

‘I almost lost you’: Student recovers from train accident

Raceway Park is Summer’s Best Bet for Entertainment! EVERY E VERY SATURDAY SATU URDAY Y THROUGH THR ROUGH H SEPT. SEPT. 17TH 17TH H

Join Us for Party @ The Park

featuring Hoozier Daddy, Mas Fina, 56 Daze and Nine Lives!

July 30: 56 Daze; August 6 Mas Fina; August 13: Mas Fina; August 20: 56 Daze; August 27: Mas Fina Check out our website for a complete list of events SUNDAYS ARE DOLLAR DAYS! GREAT FAMILY FUN!

5700 Telegraph Road

419.476.7751

www.racewayparktoledo.com n

Larry Kinkaid is recovering from a feb. 5 train accident on these tracks.


community

JULY 24, 2011

n A11

Visit www.toledofreepress.com

y l u J

SALE

®

In CertainTeed & VINYL Stock! CUSTOM TRIM SIDING WORLD’S VINYL WINDOW SHOWROOM SIDING AVAILABLE

Bring in your measurements and we will custom form your trim

DISTRIBUTORS FOR

SALE

Any Shape-Any Color

VINYL DECKING & RAILING SYSTEM

WHITE & Some Colors

44

$

95

Per Sq.

OUR WINDOWS QUALIFY FOR FED TAX CREDIT!

First Quality W/Warranty

SEAMLESS GUTTERS $ 10 $ 63

ALUMINUM

1

COIL STOCK

64

$

24” x 50 ft.

95

10 Colors Available

6”GUTTER

White + Colors

18 COLORS

1

5”GUTTER

IN STOCK

Per Foot .032 Gauge

Per Foot .027 Gauge

VINYL SIDING Molded ➪ Foam ➪ Insulation ➪ SUPERFOAM INSULATED

RUN TO ANY LENGTH WHILE U WAIT!

GUTTER LEAF GUARDS

White

VINYL SOFFIT

$ FOR OVERHANGS

7

85

Each

12” Wide x 12’ Long

FREE Installation Guides! 28 Locations To Serve You Better

MANY TYPES IN STOCK!! COLORS AVAILABLE

WYANDOTTE

419-535-1100

734-284-7171

2151 Eureka Rd. (1 Blk. East of Fort St.)

LIVONIA

DETROIT

CLIO

MADISON HTS.

30625 W. Eight Mile Rd. (1/2 MI. West of Middlebelt)

6450 Eight Mile Rd. (3 Miles East of I-75)

11240 N. Saginaw Rd. (1/2 Mile S. of Vienna Rd.)

30391 Stephenson Hwy. (Across from Costco @ 12 1/2 mi.)

248 478-8984

313 891-2902

810 687-4720

248 585-9050

54

Most Colors & Styles

$

95

Per sq.

C O M F O R T

Lifetime Warranty

TOLEDO

562 S. Reynolds Rd. (1 Mile N. of Aiport Hwy.)

VINYL SIDING

N A P C O

FOR ADDITIONAL LOCATIONS

www.sidingworld.com

INKSTER 3000 Middlebelt (1 Blk. S. Michigan)

734 728-0400

WATERFORD 5211 Williams Lk. Rd. (1/4 mile S. of Dixie Hwy.)

248 674-1300

Quantities Limited • One Sq. = 100 Sq. Ft • HOURS: MON.-FRI. 7:30-5:00 • SAT 8-12:00 • CLOSED SUNDAY (GONE FISHIN’)


community

A12 n Toledo Free Press

ready u

Ready U to discuss ‘Saving Your Bacon’ By Patrick Timmis TOLEDO FREE PRESS STAFF WRITER ptimmis@toledofreepress.com

Financial experts Tim Croak and Jeff Traudt will offer advice on protecting your home, property, income and financial assets in the face of disaster at this month’s Ready U event. The presentation on financial readiness, titled “Saving Your Bacon,” will begin at 7 p.m. July 25 at Wildwood Metropark’s Manor House, 5100 W CROAK Central Ave. The presentation is the last in a 10-session series presented by the Red Cross of Greater Toledo and the Lucas County Emergency Management Agency. The yearlong series was designed to educate the public and prepare individuals and families for potential emergencies in Northwest Ohio.

Croak, president of Creative Financial Partners, will focus on protecting financial documents from weather, crime and financial disasters. “I think it’s a huge issue,” Croak said. “We’ve obviously been beset with more disasters of many kinds than I think ever in history.” Croak said practical ways to protect yourself include identity theft protection and an emergency grab bag containing cash and copies of credit cards and passports. Traudt, the TRAUDT owner of a local State Farm Insurance agency, said he will discuss protecting physical property from natural disasters like floods, hailstorms and tornadoes. The major focus will be a basic outline of how to insure yourself against disaster. Many people who spend money on luxuries are underinsured with low deductibles, he said.

“They [have to] do their homework before a loss and not find out after a loss what was covered, what was not covered,” Traudt said. “They can call their insurance agent [beforehand] and get relief instead of calling the Red Cross.” Croak said he hopes people come away with “a sense of awareness that it’s not just business as usual anymore. You’ve got to go to greater lengths to protect yourself and there are things you can do by increasing your awareness but also by deciding you’re going to do something about it.” Attendees will receive reusable grocery bags. There will also be raffle prizes, including a gift card from The Andersons and a 5-gallon bucket, said Sheri Meeker, community disaster education specialist for the Red Cross. 13abc’s Kristian Brown will host the session. Toledo Free Press is a media sponsor for the Ready U program. For more information, visit the website www.ready-u.com. O

JULY 24, 2011

Volunteers needed to make clothing The Christ Presbyterian Church will host a clothes-making session for girls. Volunteers are being sought to help make skirts and jumpers to meet the Toledo Public School dress code. A session will take place Aug. 1 from 9 to noon at the church, located on Sylvania Avenue and Talmadge Road. For more information, email Ellen Bowers at j.bowers@ambt.net. O — Zach Davis

Knight Academy open house set for July 28 The Knight Academy will host an open house on July 28 from 8 to 6 p.m. Visitors of the co-ed school for students grades 5-8 will be able to take a tour of the school, meet the staff and register for the upcoming year. The Knight Academy is a “Race to the Top” school, offering advanced courses in science, language and technology as well as a longer school day and school year. For more information on the academy, visit www.TheKnightAcademy.org or call (419) 720-4444. O — Zach Davis

Goodwill accredited for jobs, vocational work Goodwill Industries of Northwest Ohio has been accredited for three years by the Commission on Accreditation of Rehabilitation Facilities (CARF). This is the 12th consecutive three-year accreditation it has received. The community employment services Goodwill has been accredited for include job development, comprehensive vocational evaluation services and employment skills training programs. It is the highest level of accreditation an organization can be awarded by CARF. CARF is an independent, nonprofit organization founded in 1966 which uses a consultive accreditation process to “promote the quality, value and optimal outcomes of services.” O — Zach Davis

MEDICAL ASSISTING Begin a rewarding medical assistant career! Complete your degree in five continuous semesters for one of the fastest-growing medical professions.

APPLY TODAY! www.owens.edu/medassist


community

JULY 24, 2011

Visit www.toledofreepress.com

FEED LUCAS COUNTY CHILDREN Part VI

n A13

By Patrick Timmis

Toledo Free Press Staff Writer ptimmis@toledofreepress.com

The Toledo Free Press “Round Up Hunger” campaign wrapped up July 17, raising $5,975 for Feed Lucas County Children (FLCC). The money will go directly to FLCC’s meal fund and will provide more than 4,260 meals to the county’s hungry children. The campaign has raised a great deal of awareness about FLCC’s cause, said the charity’s founder, Tony Siebeneck. Siebeneck said representatives from Cumulus Broadcasting in Toledo recently visited the charity’s kitchen. University of Toledo’s College of Medicine and Life Sciences has also gotten involved. Students from the college volunteered at FLCC’s kitchen, and the college afterward contacted Siebeneck to express interest in further helping FLCC. “We’re very thankful,” Siebeneck said of the community’s support. Walt Churchill’s Market was a key part of the campaign, asking customers if they would be willing to round purchases up to the next dollar

as a donation to FLCC. Walt Churchill, the stores’ owner, said one regular customer asked that his donation be rounded up $50. “This is a critical time for people that are in need, and it’s nice to be able to share,” Churchill said. “You can’t do everything, but you do what you can.” Mercy Children’s Hospital and Columbia Gas of Ohio were sponsors for the effort, and 13abc’s “Bridges” was a media partner. “Toledo always steps up and supports great causes, especially an opportunity to help the youngest residents of our community,” said Chris Kozak, communications manager for Columbia Gas of Ohio. FLCC and Toledo Free Press are in talks to repeat the “Round Up Hunger” drive in the coming holiday season. “We are extremely grateful to Walt Churchill, Mercy, Columbia Gas, 13abc and every single donor who gave pennies, dimes or dollars,” said Toledo Free Press Editor in Chief Michael S. Miller. “We will continue the partnerships and work to offer constructive options for our community’s most vulnerable citizens.” O

toledo free press photo by patrick timmis

‘Round Up Hunger’ campaign will fund 4,260 meals

n

FLCC’s Tony Siebeneck, left, accepts a customer-donation check from Walt CHurchill on July 20.

2011-12 SEASON TICKETS ON SALE NOW!

See All Four Shows for As Low As $90!* Stranahan box office • 419.381.8851 Video previews at theaterleague.com *Applies to Thursday and Sunday evening gallery seats

facebook.com/ToledoTheaterLeague


community

A14 n Toledo Free Press

Health Care

JULY 24, 2011

toledo free press photo by zach davis

COURTS

Toledo judge, lawyer selected for state bar association leadership

By Patrick Timmis

Toledo Free Press Staff Writer ptimmis@toledofreepress.com

n

Toledo mayor mike bell and CEO of Mercy St. Anne Brad Bertke on July 18.

Mercy opens Senior Emergency Room By Zach Davis

Toledo Free Press Staff Writer zdavis@toledofreepress.com

With the baby boomer population reaching retirement age, Mercy St. Anne Hospital announced the opening of its Senior Emergency Room on July 18. “This is a great facility that will help increase the quality of life for our citizens,” Toledo Mayor Mike Bell said. “We do have a population that is aging and we want to be able to take care of them in an appropriate way.” Every eight seconds, an American is turning 60 years old in the United States. That combined with people living longer was the reason Mercy decided to create the Senior ER, the first specially designated ER in the area. “Clearly with the number of older people in our society increasing at such a rate we recognized a need to provide specialized care to seniors,” President & CEO of Mercy St. Anne Brad Bertke said. “This is what seniors deserve, this is what our community deserves and we are proud that St. Anne is the first hospital in this area to introduce this concept.” The Senior ER is composed of five new rooms that will provide a specially-designed environment for senior citizens who are in need of emer-

gency medical attention. To decrease stress to the patients, the facility features calmer paint schemes and more comfortable padded seats. “We recognized that emergency rooms can be intimidating and confusing places for everyone, especially older patients and family members,” President & CEO of Mercy Andrea R. Price said. “The team members here at Mercy St. Anne put their heads together and have developed a truly groundbreaking solution that speaks directly to the needs of our senior patients.” Each waiting room also includes features to more adequately fit the needs of older patients. Among the features are thicker pressurereducing mattresses, easier to read clocks and TV remotes and phones with larger buttons. The facility also has nonskid flooring to help decrease falling. “The aging population presents us with challenges, but it also presents us with opportunities to provide care for a specific demographic with unique needs,” Chief of Staff Erich Pontasch said. Mercy is a not-for-profit health system based in Toledo that serves 22 counties in Northwest Ohio and Southeast Michigan. For more information on Mercy, visit the website www.MercyWeb.org. O

The Ohio State Bar Association selected two members from Toledo for its Board of Governors. James D. Jensen, a justice on the bench of the Lucas County Common Pleas Court, and Yolanda Gwinn, a law clerk for a U.S. Magistrate Judge, will each serve three-year terms. Jensen was selected as the District 4 representative. He grew up in Akron and graduated from Wittenberg University before attending the University of Toledo for law school. Jensen passed the bar and began practicing in 1970 before joining a JENSEN private firm in 1975. He spent one year as an assistant to the U.S. Attorney General in Washington, D.C. and has been on the Lucas County Common Please Court bench since 1995. He is a past president of the Toledo Bar Association and taught part time at UT for 20 years. “This actually has become my home,” Jensen said. “I’ve been here the longest I’ve ever resided anywhere.” He said he doesn’t plan on changing that status any time soon. “I enjoy my job a lot,” he said. “I plan on being on the bench as long as the law will permit me and as long as I’m

able and capable to do the job.” Gwinn is originally from Lima. She attended Kentucky State University for her bachelor’s degree and studied law at Ohio Northern University, graduating in 1984. But Toledo more-or-less became home, she said, and she stayed. She has worked in legal services for the poor and views her appointment as the next step in her legal career. “As a new board member my first duty will be to basically learn what’s going on,” Gwinn said. Reginald Jackson Jr., a Toledo attorney and past-president of the Ohio State Bar Association, said the association exists to serve its members, which include about 78 percent of all lawyers in Ohio. GWINN “It’s there to help lawyers be better lawyers,” he said. Jensen was selected by his district, while Gwinn was appointed by the bar association’s president as an atlarge member. “The purpose of the three at large is to make sure there is diversity on the board of governors: gender diversity, ethnic diversity [and] racial diversity,” Jackson said. Jackson said Jensen and Gwinn were selected as “lawyers who have demonstrated some community and civic and professional contributions.” O

Full Lebanese Menu Italian Specialties

Full Lebanese Menu Daily Luncheon Specials

Mon.-Thurs. 4 p.m.-11:30 p.m. Fri.-Sat. 11:30 a.m.-11:30 p.m. beirutrestaurant.com

Mon.-Fri. 11:30 a.m.-11:30 p.m. Sat. 5 p.m.-11:30 p.m. e-mail: labibh@aol.com

Creative Appetizers & Salads • Exotic Desserts • Lamb Specialties Vegetarian & Health Dishes • Homemade Pizza & Sauces CATERING & BANQUETS FOR ANY OCCASION CARRY-OUT AVAILABLE

Full Bar & Large Selection of Domestic & Imported Beer

(419) 473-0885

(419) 382-1600

4082 MONROE

1050 S. REYNOLDS

Just East of Douglas

North of Airport Hwy.

Featuring “small plates” of the Mediterranean.

Large selection of Italian, Spanish, Middle East, and Greek specialties. Mon.-Fri. 11:30am-11pm Saturday 5pm-11pm Full Bar, Sangria, Imported and Domestic Beer & Wines

(419) 931-0281 LEVIS COMMONS

NEW BANQUET ROOM


community

JULY 24, 2011

n A15

Visit www.toledofreepress.com

BRONDES SECOR

MORE For Your Trade! MORE Savings! MORE Selection! MORE Service! MORE Financing! MORE Inventory!

+

0APR %

Available on the following NEW 2011 Ford Vehicles

UP TO

60 months on New 2011 FUSION (Excludes Hybrid) TAURUS (Excludes SE)

• FORD • FORD • FORD ESCAPE Plus $1000

BRONDES FORD LEASE SPECIALS! NEW 2011 FORD ESCAPE XLT

+

Over 40 Available

#T11788

Sun & Sync

A/Z PLAN $

158 WITH RENEWAL $ 136

EVERYONE ELSE $

198 WITH RENEWAL $ 143

*24 Month Lease, 10,500 miles per year, .15-.20¢ each mile over. $2,995 due at delivery, plus taxes and fees. Amount due at delivery includes security deposit if applicable. Offer ends 8/1/11.

NEW 2011 FORD EDGE SE

+

Over 25 Available

#T11020

Roof Rails

A/Z PLAN $

232 WITH RENEWAL $ 211

EVERYONE ELSE $

279 WITH RENEWAL $ 225

*24 Month Lease, 10,500 miles per year, .15-.20¢ each mile over. $2,995 due at delivery, plus taxes and fees. Amount due at delivery includes security deposit if applicable. Offer ends 8/1/11.

NEW 2011 FORD F-150 SUPERCAB

+

Over 40 Available

A/Z PLAN $

222 WITH RENEWAL $ 199

#T11911

4x4, XLT

EVERYONE ELSE $

279 225

WITH RENEWAL $

*24 Month Lease, 10,500 miles per year, .15-.20¢ each mile over. $2,995 due at delivery, plus taxes and fees. Amount due at delivery includes security deposit if applicable. Offer ends 8/1/11.

BRONDES FORD BUY SPECIALS! NEW 2011 FORD FUSION

+

Over 25 Available

#C12053

NEW 2011 FORD F150

+

Over 40 Available

#T11000

NEW 2011 FORD ESCAPE XLT

+

Over 40 Available

#T12155

(Excludes Hybrid)

• FORD FLEX Plus $1000 • FORD EXPEDITION • FORD RANGER Plus $1000 0% APR financing available on approved credit through Ford Motor Credit Company. 0% APR available up to 60 mos. at $16.67 per month per $1000 financed and 36 mos. at $27.78 per month per $1000 financed. Offer ends August 1, 2011.

A/Z PLAN

16,632

$

WITH RENEWAL $

15,382

EVERYONE ELSE $

17,319

WITH RENEWAL $

16,069

A/Z PLAN

EVERYONE ELSE $

$

WITH RENEWAL $

WITH RENEWAL $

WITH RENEWAL $

$

18,737 17,487

19,692 18,442

A/Z PLAN

20,844

19,594

EVERYONE ELSE $

21,725

WITH RENEWAL $

20,475

See Our Entire Inventory at www.BRONDESFORDTOLEDO.com *Program subject to change. Take new retail delivery from dealer stock by 08/01/11. See dealer for full details and qualifications. A/Z Plan for Ford employees/retirees and eligible family members. All sale prices plus tax, title, and license. All factory rebates to dealer. Ford Credit rebates available through Ford Motor Credit. Renewal rebate available to customers terming any eligible FORD, LINCOLN, or MERCURY Red Carpet Lease and purchasing a new Ford vehicle. For all offers, take new retail delivery from dealer stock by 08/01/11. See dealer for complete details.

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


community

A16 n Toledo Free Press

JULY 24, 2011

PEOPLE

By Patrick Timmis

Toledo Free Press Staff Writer ptimmis@toledofreepress.com

Cody Kenyon spends his summers like most 12-year-olds. He rides his bike, plays football, baseball and basketball with his family and goes to summer camp. Unlike most kids, Cody lost his left leg when he was 11 months old. When Cody was born, one leg was too short, crippling him. The safest operation, and the one most likely to succeed, was amputation. “I can’t even tell you what it’s like to see some little kid laying there at 11 months old and there’s nothing you can do,” said his father David Kenyon. “And you had to make a decision like that, for the rest of his life and the rest of your life.” That life so far has been characterized by overcoming challenges and putting fears aside. “When I was really little, it felt like there was a little difference,” Cody said of himself and the children around him. “But as I get older, it feels like there’s no difference at all. I can do everything they can; some things even better.” Cody said he doesn’t think of himself as having a disability, and his mother Cindy Perlowitz said the family has never treated him differently because he has a prosthetic leg instead of a flesh and bone one. Whatever he wanted to try, he tried, she said. So Cody played volleyball in sixth grade. He plans on trying out for baseball, basketball and wrestling when he begins eighth grade this coming fall. “I’ve never seen him back down,” David said, describing his son as “unstoppable.” Cody is also a top-notch student. He earns straight A’s and will begin algebra, advanced language arts and other advanced classes this semester as an eighth-grader. Social studies is his favorite subject, he said — science is his least. He also likes to read and will pick up any kind of book. “As long as it’s thicker,” he said. “I don’t like thin, flimsy stuff.” Despite his dislike for science, Cody is interested in medicine. He is interested in becoming a prosthetist some day, constructing artificial limbs for other amputees. Helping people with similar experiences is an important goal for Cody. One of his heroes is David McGranahan, an amputee athlete

from Sylvania who runs sports clinics for amputees. Cody’s amputation was not the end of his medical difficulties. He has had four or five different legrelated surgeries, Cindy said, but he continues to bounce back from each one of them. “He just takes everything [in] stride,” she said. “He’s a lot of people’s inspiration.” Part of taking things in stride is learning how to do things his own way when he cannot do something normally. When Cody wanted to learn how to ride a bike, David had one built for him with custom pedals, but Cody could not get the hang of it. “I just got to do it different. I can’t do it like everyone else, I just got to figure out a way to do it my way,” David said his son told him. Finally they got a regular bike for him, and Cody took off. “He’s not really limited,” said Ira Perlowitz, Cody’s stepfather. “He’s scared to do things that other kids do, but once he does it, he’s just like any other kid.” But he has proven he is more than just any other kid. “He’s an incredible kid,” Ira said. “He shows us what can be done against odds. I think he pushes us and makes us a tighter family.” O

toledo free press photo by joseph herr

Amputation does not slow local boy

Celebrate

Customer Appreciation at the

MAUMEE ®

®

Monday - Sunday 7/25/11 - 7/31/11

Mini Hot Fudge Cake 99¢

Dine-in, drive-thru, & carry-out.

Big Boy & Fries Just $3.95 Dine-in, drive-thru & carry-out.

n

Cody Kenyon’s left leg was amputated when he was 11 months old.

My AAA

Saves me a bundle on car insurance! • Auto, Home and Renters Insurance • Life and Long Term Care Insurance • Recreational Vehicles • Member Discounts • Financial Services • Friendly, Caring Agents

AAA Insurance keeps you protected.

Contact an agent for a FREE, no pressure quote TODAY!

Chili-Cheese Fries $3.99

Dine-in, drive-thru & carry-out.

Saturday & Sunday 7/30 & 7/31/11 $6.85 Weekend Breakfast Bar Available regular breakfast bar hours. Regular price $7.85.

What’s Your Favorite Thing? ®

®

(419) 843-1240 AAA.com A Branch near you

1405 Reynolds Rd. Maumee, OH 419.893.8709


community

JULY 24, 2011

ANIMALS

By Kathryn Milstein

Toledo Free Press Star Staff Writer kmilstein@toledofreepress.com

A new adoption area may help local stray dogs find new homes. The Lucas County Dog Warden, which handles stray and homeless dogs in Lucas County, is hosting an open house for its newly renovated adoption area from 10 a.m. to 5 p.m. July 23 at its building, 410 S. Erie St. Julie Lyle, the chief dog warden, runs the organization. All three Lucas County Commissioners will speak, she said. Lyle will speak next with refreshments served afterward. Lyle said the new area will allow more dogs to be viewed for adoption and the adoptable larger dogs will now be available to be viewed by the public. Before the new adoption area, the organization did not have large enough cages for the larger dogs in a location for public viewing. The free event will include raffle prizes and dogs for adoption. Anyone who adopts a dog will receive a free veterinarian exam, she said. “We have all sorts of shapes, sizes

photo courtesy missy beach

New adoption area displays stray dogs

n

The newly renovated adoption area at the lucas county dog warden.

and ages of dogs, so we’re hoping that we can get a lot of folks out to adopt dogs that day,” Lyle said. “Right now, we have probably 25 or 30 dogs up for adoption, so obviously, as many of those that can find a home will make the dogs happy and make us happy.” The renovations were paid for by the Lucas County Dog Wardens dog

and kennel fund, from which the organization gets most of its operational funding. The Lucas County Dog Warden is open weekdays from 10 a.m. to 6 p.m. On Saturdays, it is open from 10 a.m. to 5 p.m. For more information about the event, visit the Lucas County Dog Warden Facebook page at www.face book.com/lucascountydogwarden. O

Visit www.toledofreepress.com

n A17

Libbey named to Register of Historic Places Members of the Ohio Historic Site Preservation Advisory Board have voted to recommend that Edward Drummond Libbey High School and three other buildings in Ohio be forwarded to the Keeper of the National Register of Historic Places for consideration. A July 15 news release by Tom Wolf of the Ohio Historical Society said that Libbey as well as Franklin County’s Athletic Club of Columbus, Stark County’s Louisville Historic District and Cuyahoga County’s Moreland Theater Building were all approved for recommendation on July 15, during a meeting at the State Library of Ohio in Columbus. The nominations for each of the properties will be forwarded to the Keeper of the National Register, who directs the program for the U.S. Department of the Interior. If the keeper agrees that the properties meet the criteria for listing, they will be added to the National Register of Historic Places. A decision from the keeper is expected in about 90 days. A listing does not obligate owners to repair or improve their properties and does not prevent them from remodeling, altering, selling or even demolishing them if they choose to do so. Owners or long-term tenants who rehabilitate income-producing properties listed on the National Register can qualify for a 20 percent federal income tax credit if the work they do follows the Secretary of the Interior’s Standards for Rehabilitation, guidelines used nationwide for repairs and alterations to historic buildings. Libbey was recommended for nomination to the National Register for its history of association with the growth and expansion of Toledo Public Schools in the 1910s and 1920s; as an example of how public education evolved in the nation’s growing urban centers during the early 20th century; as a stateof-the-art public high school building of the time; and as an example of the Collegiate Gothic style of architecture popular from about 1900 to 1930. The Ohio Historical Society release said Libbey remains Toledo’s largest high school building, and is one of the city’s few Collegiate Gothic style buildings. The designation cannot delay plans to demolish Libbey. O — Zach Davis

Home sales down in Toledo A-1 Accurate Limousine & Airport Service is the premier limo company in Toledo, Ohio. With an incredible fleet of 17 vehicles we provide state-of-the-art limousine service to the greater Toledo area. Our drivers our courteous and experienced and boast over 55 years of combined service. They are available to navigate you around major cities in the area such as Detroit, Cleveland, Dayton, Findlay, Bowling Green, Chicago, Pittsburgh and more. With vehicles available from small to large, we have the answer for your travel needs! TOLL FREE

(888)

381-8294 | (419) 381-8294

a1accuratelimo.com

The Ultimate Land Yacht seats 30 people. Complete with Hi-Fi system, 42” plasma TV, strobe lighting and wet bar. Call for a quote today.

Home sales are down for Toledo through the first half of this year. 3,080 homes were sold from January to June of 2011, compared to 3,417 for the same period in 2010, a 9.9 percent reduction, according to the Ohio Association of Realtors. Total revenue is $311,929,000, down from $365,639,000 through June 2010, a 14.7 percent reduction. The average price of homes is down 5.4 percent, from $107,006 in 2010 to $101,276. But Ed Sitter, president of the Toledo Board of Realtors, said he remains cautiously optimistic. “I think there is a very fragile recovery taking place,” he said. “I think we are going to see an increase [in] the amount of sales over last year in the months of July, August and September.” O — Patrick Timmis

Franciscan Sisters appoint administrator Sylvania Franciscan Village leaders appointed Sister Janet Doyle Administrator for the village. Sylvania Franciscan Village consists of the Sisters of St. Francis and its ministries, Lourdes College and Sylvania Franciscan Health. Doyle is the first administrator to be appointed by the village. “I will be working with the president of the college and the head of Sylvania health and the head of the community to find ways to develop a vision they’ve created,” she said. Doyle was the superintendent of schools for the Catholic Diocese of Toledo from 1990 to 2003. She then served as the director for the Catholic Center, Foundation for Senior Living in Phoenix, Ariz. The village, according to the Sisters of St. Francis website, was established in 2010 to provide a place of peace, justice and love of neighbor. A major part of her role will be outreach and building bridges, she said. DOYLE “[I will be] trying to find ways to serve those in need…” she said. “I think part of my role will be trying to see where the needs are and where some of the resources of the village could serve some of those needs.” O — Patrick Timmis


A18 n Toledo Free Press

community

JULY 24, 2011

RETAIL

By Sarah Ottney

TOLEDO FREE PRESS SPECIAL SECTIONS EDITOR sottney@toledofreepress.com

What was just a dream two years ago will become reality this week as two native Toledoans open an art supply store Downtown. The Art Supply Depo, at 29 S. St. Clair St., opened July 21, during the Arts Commission of Greater Toledo’s July Art Walk. Hours will be 10 a.m. to 6 p.m. Tuesday, Wednesday and Friday, 10 a.m. to 8 p.m. Thursday, 10 a.m. to 3 p.m. Saturday and closed Sunday and Monday. Proprietors Jules Webster and Dana Syrek said the shop will fill a niche by specializing in difficult-to-find supplies local artists need. “We knew the area needed an art supply store,” said Webster, owner of Shine Ceramics and a graduate of the University of Toledo’s art department. “There’s a real void.” Webster, a Toledo Free Press Star columnist, said UT once had an art supply store, but it closed. Downtown business Scrap 4 Art deals in scrap art material. Sylvania has For the Love of Art, but there was nothing Downtown, Syrek said. The pair is working closely with UT’s art department and has reached out to other local schools as well. The Art Supply Depo will carry typical items like paint, pastels and colored pencils, but will focus mainly on securing hard-to-find items, including large format paper for printmaking and drawing, rolls of canvas and encaustic, a type of paint made of color pigment and wax. “There’s nowhere else to get that in town, so we’re really trying to fill some specialty needs for materials,” Syrek said. The shop will also offer discounted bundle packages containing all the supplies needed for an art class. It will also carry copy paper and basic office supplies, Webster said. Webster and Syrek, who met through a mutual friend, first looked into buying a franchise but didn’t find one, so

they decided to come up with their own concept. “It was literally one of those things that came to me in the middle of the night,” Syrek said. Plenty of market research helped focus and refine the model based on what local artists were looking for, Syrek said. “The model really cares about what people are looking for and that’s the core of how we’re building the business,” Syrek said. A gallery space will sell work by local artists and patrons will be able to use Wi-Fi, browse art books, read, study and exchange ideas in a lounge area, Webster said. “We just want it to be a place that sparks creativity and just inspires a new mode of thinking,” Webster said. Future plans include displaying local artwork and becoming a stop on the Art Walks as well as offering in-store workshops, Webster said. The store’s logo and website were designed by local artist Jemma Hostetler of Studio Sans Nom. The Downtown location provides proximity to the UT art department, the Toledo Museum of Art and Toledo School for the Arts, Syrek said. It’s also convenient for the core group of artists who live, work and have studios Downtown. “A lot of the smaller retail businesses are moving back Downtown,” Syrek said. “We felt like St. Clair Street was really the right neighborhood for us to do well.” Their idea is testament to the possibilities of small business in Toledo, Syrek said. “We wouldn’t be able to do this probably anywhere else the way we’re doing it here,” Syrek said. “We really believe in Toledo, we believe in Downtown. Small business is possible here and people should embark on their ventures if they choose to. It’s going to be an exciting week. It’s been a long time coming.” For more information on The Art Supply Depo, visit the website www.artsupplydepo.com. O

toledo free press photo by joseph herr

Art supply store to open Downtown

n

6340 Dorr St.

Toledo, OH 43615 419.865.5656

www.gardenlandnursery.com Gardenland Nursery & Garden Center is The Sod Depot at Gardenland your one-stop shop for everything you Nursery specializes in providing lawn need related to your lawn and landscape: sod for a beautiful, durable lawn. For more than 30 years we ❀ Trees & Shrubs have supplied homeowners and ❀ Garden design professional landscape contractors ❀ Landscape design high-quality sod. Let us help you ❀ Annuals create a beautiful oasis in your ❀ Perennials own backyard!

Dana Syrek, left, and Jules Webster, owners of The Art Supply Depo.


Treece

Proud to be the finance and business experts featured in . Treece Investment Advisory Corp. • www.TreeceInvestments.com


A20 n Toledo Free Press

u.s. senior open 2011

JULY 24, 2011

Our Mission is to improve your health and well-being. For more information about your health, call or click today.

www.promedica.org

800.PPG.DOCS Š2011 ProMedica

PROM731_Mission_10x10.25_0004.indd 1

5/11/11 11:37 AM


u.s. senior open 2011

JULY 24, 2011

Visit www.toledofreepress.com

Welcome to In verness! On behalf of th e members and United States Se nior Open Cham staff of the Inverness Club, we pionship! welcome you to the 32nd Part of the miss io n of th e Inverness Club community … is to share our including the go historic golf tre lf community bo where we live an asure with the th near and far d work. There is and the region no better way fo this year’s even al community r us to accompl t … our 7th U SGA champion ish our mission Open brings th ship and our 9t than hosting e best senior go h overall majo lfers, and some to our doorstep r. The US Seni of the greatest and puts them or pl ay er to the most rig s to ever to play will enjoy 14 ho orous test of go the game, urs of live, inte lf on the Cham rnational netw at Inverness or pions Tour. We ork coverage on on TV, we know ESPN and NBC you will enjoy . Whether live watching the ac As you know, th tio n! is Championsh ment. It is durin ip is being cond g times like thes ucted in a chal lenging econom e that we really community. Th ic environobserve the co e response has mmitment and been terrific. Bu in to help! We support of our sinesses and in are indebted an di d thankful for viduals alike ha individual ticke the su ve pitched t buyers, media , government offi pport of the many corporat who have stepp e sponsors, cials and busin ed up and decla ess and comm red “this is impo unity leaders rtant for our co Special recogniti mmunity!” on must go to m their time and or e th an 2500 volunteers energy. We exten who have given d our gratitude so generously of and thanks to all We are also ve of you. ry proud of ou r relationship wi manages the Ja mie Farr Toled th the Toledo Clas o Classic presen sic, the organiza our mutual agre ted by Kroger, O tion that ement, 25% of wens Corning an the net proceeds ties. Judd Silverm d O-I. Through from the Cham an and his staff pionship will go have done a wo our Champion to area charinderful job in he ship. We apprec lping us promot iate the decisio look forward to n to have the Ja e and manage the LPGA retu mie Farr event rning to Highlan take a year off an d Meadows in So thank you fo d 2012! r coming out an to be your host. d being a part of this great Cham pionship. We ar e delighted

Michael P. Bell Mayor July 25, 2011 Dear Fans: ectators, staff and ome the players, sp elc o w y t pp ha m izens I a On behalf of our cit n to Toledo. 11 U.S. Senior Ope volunteers of the 20 al ayers in profession e most talented pl al f th ion e o ess om s s rof n p ase ent showc , a club steeped i This week’s tournam e them to Inverness om elc e w t w es. ha urs is t olf co golf. How fitting it ountry’s greatest g laimed one of the c golf history and proc Tigers. iate of the Detroit ns, the Triple‐A affil He d the ud ke M ran do as ole , w e T ns to th ome of the Mud He , h Toledo is also home eld Fi ird Th 2). 00 ifth n Toledo, F ek Magazine (2 Located in downtow d States by Newswe allpark in the Unite e B gu ea r L no Mi st Be do Museum ties, world class Tole d recreational facili ud to be an pro rks is pa do ur ole n o . T e i oo We take great prid tre and our Toledo Z ea of Th ts ne oin nti y p ale an , V vilion ime to visit our m of Art and Glass Pa ou can take some t e y op e h d w an nt host to this eve interest. visitors, please , and to all of our xciting week of golf n e r a fo ers ay pl Best wishes to the oledo. enjoy your time in T Sincerely,

Bob May

Co-General Ch airman

Marc Stockwell Co-General Ch airman

Tom Geiger, Jr

. President, Invern ess Club

Michael P. Bell Mayor

On

Toledo, ter – Suite 2200 – e Government Cen

5-1370

5-1001- Fax 419-24

.A. – Phone 419-24

Ohio 43604 – U.S

WELCOME ALL U.S. SENIOR OPEN VISITORS NTURA’S VE

• 27TH 27 7TH A ANNIVERSARY NNIVERSARY •

THE ORIGINAL MEXICAN RESTAURANTE & CANTINA IN TOLEDO

419-841-7523

7742 W. Bancroft (1 Mi. West of McCord)

Mon. – Sat. from 11 a.m. Closed Sundays & Holidays

Toledo’s Most Popular Mexican restaurant for over 26 years! U.S. Senior Open lunch and dinner specials all week long!

n A21


u.s. senior open 2011

A22 n Toledo Free Press

JULY 24, 2011

THE BACK 9

W

here the PGA has the FedEx wins $300,000, fourth takes home Cup, the Champions Tour $200,000 and the fifth-place finisher has the Charles Schwab gets $100,000. Top-10 finishers and ties in all ofCup, a season-long, points-based competition launched in 2001 to determine ficial tournaments earn points based on the money distribution for each the Champions Tour’s leading player. tournament, with every Consistency and $1,000 earned being the Top-10 finishes are reequivalent of one Schwab warded week in and Cup point. week out at Champions Points are doubled Tour events. at the Champions Tour’s Nick Price trails curfive major championships rent Schwab Cup points and to the entire 30-player leader Tom Lehman by field at the season-ending a mere 450 points. With Schwab Cup Championthree wins and seven in November. top-10 finishes in 11 starts Fred ALTVATER shipWith double points on in 2011, Lehman has had an outstanding year on the Champions the line for the winner of the U. S. SeTour. One of his wins came at the Re- nior Open at Inverness and only seven gions Tradition, one of the Champions events remaining to earn Schwab Cup points before the season-ending Charles Tour’s major tournaments. Allen Doyle won the first Charles Schwab Cup Championship, ChamSchwab Cup in 2001 and since then pions Tour players have an extra incenHale Irwin, Tom Watson, Jay Haas and tive to finish inside the Top 10 in Toledo. Keep an eye on the tournament inLoren Roberts have each won it twice. Bernhard Langer won the Cup in 2010. side the tournament; we’ll see who will There is a lot to play for: $1 mil- make a leap up the Schwab Cup points lion goes to the winner of the Charles list, qualify for the season-ending Schwab Cup at the end of the year, Charles Schwab Cup and capture a $1 second place earns $500,000, third million bonus. O

Associated Press

Double Schwab Cup points on the line for Open winner

n

TOM LEHMAN LEADS THE CHARLES SCHWAB CUP race by 450 points.

Battle of the Saxes

®

Jazz Café & Fine Dining Restaurant

fo

OP

EN

ll M r Su enu nd . B ay ar op Din ens ne at r 4p .m.

Fu

Live Jazz Five Nights a Week Upcoming Schedule

This Fri & Sat, July 22nd & 23rd

Morgan Steiger

Gunnar Mossblad

Friday, August 5-6th

Friday August 19th-20th

Friday August 12-13th

Friday August 26th-27th

Gene Parker & Dan Faehnle Clifford Murphy & Claude Black

Zac Kreuz

Lisa Lynn Group, Featuring Jason Quick

Now Open at 5 p.m. — No Cover Tuesday & Wednesday

301 River Road at The Historic Commercial Building Maumee

Jesse Coleman

Doug Horn

July 29th & 30th Shows 6-7 p.m. • 8-9 p.m. • 10-11 p.m. Ticket Price $12.00 Make Reservations Now Includes 10% off Special Dinner Menu-Before & After Show Drinks & Appetizers Available in Cafe during Performance Limited Seating — Ask Server for tickets

419-794-8205

degagejazzcafe.com

Hours:

Tuesday-Thursday .............................5-12 a.m. Friday-Saturday ..................................5-1 a.m. Sunday .................................... 5-9 p.m. Dinner


u.s. senior open 2011

JULY 24, 2011

Visit www.toledofreepress.com

n A23

U.S. Senior Open — the basics

Let us help you

celebrate summer.

Whether it’s an indoor BBQ or picnic, our space is perfect for making the most of the best time of year. Our patio provides an opportunity to bask in the glow of summer. Call today for your personal tour and menu package!

O Course: Inverness Club, 4601 Dorr St., Toledo O Schedule: July 25-27: Practice rounds, gates open at 6:30 a.m.; July 28-29: First and second rounds, gates open at 6:30 p.m., players tee off of No. 1 and No. 10 throughout the day; July 30-31: Third and final rounds, gates open at 7 a.m., players tee off of No. 1 throughout the day, trophy presentation on 18th green immediately following play. O Tickets: Daily grounds tickets ($35 at Kroger, $50 at the gate), weekly grounds tickets ($125 at Kroger, $130 at gate), weekly upgrade tickets to the S.P. Jermain Pavilion ($250 at Kroger, $260 at gate). Also available: S.P. Jermain Pavilion packages ($2,000-$5,600). O Youth: Age 17 and younger are admitted free with a ticketed adult (up to nine youth per adult). O Parking: Free O Do not bring: Cell phones, cameras (except during practice rounds), noisemakers, signs, coolers, bags bigger than 8 inches x 8 inches x 8 inches, food, beverages, chairs, pets or bicycles. O Field: 156 golfers O Tournament: Practice rounds will be played July 25-27. Championship play will be conducted July 28-31, with 18 holes of stroke play each day. After 36 holes, the field will be cut to the low 60 scorers (and ties) and any player within 10 strokes of the leader. O Tiebreaker: If the championship is tied after four rounds, a three-hole playoff will take place immediately following the conclusion of the fourth round. If the playoff results in a tie, play will immediately continue hole-by-hole until a champion is determined. O Purse: $2.6 million (Winner gets $470,000) O Trophy: The Francis D. Ouimet Memorial Senior Open Championship Trophy O TV coverage: First round 3-7 p.m. July 28 (ESPN2), second round 3-7 p.m. July 29 (ESPN2), third round 3-6 p.m. July 30 (NBC), fourth round 3-6 p.m. July 31 (NBC) O More information: (419) 536-2011 or www.ussenioropen.com — Source: U.S. Senior Open spectator guide

Cigar & Executive BELLE Wine & Martini Lounge | CASA DE MONTECRISTO FineSmoking Lounge

Live Music Every Week

Tuesday, July 26th Ryan Dunlap. Wednesday, July 27th

Band of Brothers

Patio Now Open!

Thursday, July 28th

Jason Hudson

Friday, July 29th

Band of Brothers Saturday, July 30th

Ryan Dunlap

Come C ome relax relax iin no our ur Martini Lounge and full service bar.

3145 HOLLISTER LANE (Next to Fat Fish Blue ), Perrysburg, OH Located at Levis Commons

419-874-4555

CASADEMONTECRISTOLOUNGE.COM

Upcoming Event Monday July 25th: Wine & Sushi Tasting with Nagoya Restaurant For more info call 419-874-4555. RSVP Needed

Check out Fat Fish Blue & Tre Belle Lounge’s “Free” shuttle bus! Free pick up and drop off up to 5 mile radius. Call tonight for more information 419-874-4555

Check out our weekly event lists at Tres Belle Wine & Martini Lounge.


u.s. senior open 2011

A24 n Toledo Free Press

JULY 24, 2011

Local economy could be real winner in U.S. Senior Open By Duane Ramsey

TOLEDO FREE PRESS SENIOR BUSINESS WRITER dramsey@toledofreepress.com

toledo free press photo by joseph herr

More than 150 golfers will compete in the U.S. Senior Open at Inverness Club the week of July 25-31, but the real winner may be the entire region as the tournament is expected to generate $16 million to $20 million in economic impact. “It’s the largest economic impact of any single event in Toledo this year,” said Rich Nachazel, president of Destination Toledo Inc., the area’s convention and visitors organization. Officials expect 125,000 to 150,000 people to attend the U.S. Senior Open events. Each person will spend $100 to $105 per day based on tourism research conducted in Ohio, Nachazel said. The primary beneficiaries are local hotels, restaurants, retail and other businesses involved in tourism. The Toledo area is also host to a Jehovah’s Witnesses convention and several baseball tournaments the weekend of the Senior Open, so many hotels will be filled to capacity and restaurants will be busy, Nachazel said.

Jim Koen, general manager of the Crowne Plaza Hotel Downtown, said rooms are already sold out several nights in a row starting on July 26 of that week for golf officials and guests of local companies. The Hilton Toledo is sold out for the week of the Senior Open, said Beverly Laughlin, corporate sales manager at the hotel. Gus Mancy expects booming business for the four restaurants in the Mancy Restaurant Group during the Senior Open, with many golfers, media members and reservations for companies bringing out-of-town guests to eat. Mancy said golfer Tom Watson ate at Mancy’s Steak House five nights in a row so as not to change his routine during his run at the last Senior Open hosted by Inverness Club, in 2003. Watson finished second to Bruce Lietzke. “It’s good for our business and the entire area, putting Toledo in the national spotlight,” Mancy said. About 150,000 fans attended the 2003 U.S. Senior Open, which generated an estimated economic impact of $20 million for Northwest Ohio. There are no title sponsors for

the U.S. Senior Open as there are with LPGA events but it has received plenty of corporate support from local companies, said Judd Silverman, championship director of the 2011 U.S. Senior Open. Silverman said 150 local companies are participating by purchasing advertising, hospitality and ticket

Has Life » » » »

packages for the Open. Event organizers have reached their goal for advertising and hospitality packages and expect to reach their goal for ticket sales. Silverman reported all 23 of the hospitality units have been sold for the Jack Nicklaus and Arnold Palmer Village tents located on the golf course.

tHrown you for a Loop ?

There are still a few available tables in the Terrace Room of the clubhouse and an air-conditioned tent behind the first and 10th tees. “Each hospitality location offers its own array of amenities and attractions for the sponsors and their guests,” Silverman said. n ECONOMY CONTINUES ON A25

we Can HeLp!

Are you or a loved one depressed? We can help. Are you stressed over all the pressures in your world (finances, relationships, busy schedules, children)? We can help. Are you suffering from a recent loss (job, divorce, death) and do not know where to turn? We can help. Do you often have feelings of anxiety, fear or anger and would like to talk to someone? We can help. We offer flexible payment methods, multiple locations, convenient hours, and strict confidentiality.

e r m io ! co en rs el S to W .S. isi lU V al pen O

Premium Comedy, Great Food and the Best in Live Music

ALEX REYMUNDO

Bad Boys of Comedy, Comedy Central, Showtime

July 21-24

BERT KREISCHER

Last Comic Standing, Comedy Central, Star of Travel Channel’s “Bert the Conqueror”

July 28-31

Levis Commons » Perrysburg, OH » n Marc Stockwell, left, and Robert May, U.S. SENIOR Open co-general chairmen.

GUY TORRY

Comedy Central, BET’S Comic View, Showtime

August 4-7

419-931-3474

www.toledofunnybone.com


u.s. senior open 2011

JULY 24, 2011 n ECONOMY CONTINUED FROM A24 The U.S. Senior Open championship magazine sold out of local and national advertising. More than 30,000 copies will be distributed during the tournament. Advertising also sold out for the Daily Pairings Guide with 125,000 to be distributed free to attendees. Silverman said there will be 2,300 volunteers coming from 15 different states to work at the Open, with the

most from Northwest Ohio. Between 75 and 100 USGA officials from outside the Toledo area will serve at the tournament, he said. The Senior Open will bring 156 players, their caddies and families to Toledo from around the world. Many of the players will stay at The Hilton Garden Inn in Perrysburg and other local hotels, Silverman said. About 150 media professionals will work the Open, including crews from ESPN and NBC. ESPN will televise

the rounds on July 28, and July 29, with NBC airing the final two rounds July 30, and July 31. “It’s great exposure for the entire community with 14 hours of live national coverage in the U.S. and 160 countries around the world,” Silverman said. Hosting the U.S. Senior Open or any major professional championship means a lot of prestige, exposure and revenue for the host club. Marc Stockwell and Dr. Robert

With more than 100 years of insurance industry experience,

Great Lakes Insurance Partners has created a company that is prepared ared to meet the needs of today’s fastpaced businesses. Our experience will work to your advantage in providing your insurance solutions.

Visit www.toledofreepress.com May are co-general chairmen of the 2011 U.S. Senior Open on behalf of the board of directors of Inverness Club. They also shared the co-general chairmanship for the 2003 U.S. Senior Open at Inverness. “We worked well in 2003 so we kept the team together for 2011,” Stockwell said. “It’s a big commitment but we’re passionate about it for the Inverness Club, the U.S. Senior Open and the game of golf.” Stockwell said there is a budget of $6 million to $8 million to manage the 2011 Senior Open at Inverness. Revenues will cover expenses and generate a modest profit for the club after 25 percent goes to the Toledo Classic organization to support local charities, he said. Work contracts are awarded to local unions and vendors whenever possible, May said. “This is truly a community event,” he said. “It’s sponsored by Inverness and we’re a benefactor, but the community is a benefactor too. It’s a big boost for the

n A25

economy to hold a huge event like this. We just try to keep the entire community involved so that the local people get a lot of the business that gets generated from a big event like this.” It’s part of Inverness Club’s mission to showcase the club by hosting major championships such as the 2011 U.S. Senior Open, Stockwell said. “Toledo has supported these great events at Inverness over the years. Our goal is to host another U.S. Open. We continue to talk to the USGA about holding another U.S. Open at Inverness,” Stockwell said. The last U.S. Open held at Inverness was in 1979. Since then, Inverness has hosted the PGA Championships in 1986 and 1993 and the U.S. Senior Open in 2003 and now 2011. Stockwell is a principal of Findley Davies Inc. of Toledo, a human resources consulting firm. He is a former president and board member of Inverness Club. Both May and Stockwell have served on the board and been members for many years. O

Corporate Office

5215 Monroe Street, Suite 15 Toledo, OH 43623

Tel 419.841.2000 Fax 419.841.2022 glipinc.com Licensed in Ohio, Michigan, Indiana.

We’re Making Loans Always Have...Always Will Our F&M Professionals have over 300 years of Commercial and Agricultural Financial Service experience. From the smallest to the largest business or farm, F&M nancial professionals are ready to assist you.

good day. sunshine

www.ShopLevisCommons.com

fm-bank.com

From glitter to gazpacho. Hot brands to cold brews. Fine arts to fundraisers. There’s something for everyone this summer at Levis Commons. The area’s premier shopping, dining and entertainment destination. Eat, shop and play at the ultimate everyday getaway.

800.451.7843

Ohio: Archbold, Bryan, Deance, Delta, Hicksville, Montpelier, Napoleon, Perrysburg, Stryker, Swanton, Wauseon and West Unity Indiana: Angola, Auburn and Butler Member FDIC

Serving Northwest Ohio and Northeast Indiana for over 114 years.

3201 Levis Commons Blvd.

Perrysburg OH

43551

419-931-8888


u.s. senior open 2011

A26. n Toledo Free Press

JULY 24, 2011

Unforgettable day

By Mike Bauman

TOLEDO FREE PRESS STAFF WRITER news@toledofreepress.com

For years, The Ohio State University alum Rod Spittle put on his suit and tie, worked in insurance and spent time with his wife Annie and their three kids, all the while maintaining his golf game. That changed in October, when Spittle’s boyhood dream of being a fulltime professional golfer crystallized during the final tournament of the year. Spittle won the AT&T Championship in San Antonio to capture his first Champions Tour victory, earning an exempt card to participate in all Champions Tour tournaments in 2011, including the U.S. Senior Open at Inverness Club in Toledo on July 25-31. “I played well on Friday and Saturday; we stayed close on Sunday and I birdied [holes] 15, 16, 17, got in a tie and then won in the first hole of sudden death,” Spittle told Toledo Free Press. “It happened so quickly. My wife wasn’t there. None of my family was there. Of course, I’m 1,000 miles away from Ohio. It just happened that fast.”

Annie, Rod’s wife of 19 years, was not at the AT&T Championship because it would have broken a family tradition. “We have one granddaughter that’s 4-and-a-half,” Annie said. “Her name is Callie, and I have gone home for trick-or-treat every year since she was born. Wherever we are, I have gone home, so I went to Cincinnati for trick-or-treat, which was the day Rod won. The blessing was that I was with our son and daughter-in-law and our granddaughter, and then our other daughter and son-in-law were there with us, and so we all got to watch it on the computer. “It still gives me chills when we watched the scores.” Annie and the kids kept hitting the refresh button on the computer that day to get the updated scores. Their oldest son, Steven, who shares the same passion for golf as his dad, noticed Spittle had birdied late in the tournament and was in a tie. “To not be there but to watch on the computer was so exciting,” Annie said. n SPITTLE CONTINUES ON A27

TIME IS SHORT! ^8 DAYS LEFT!

LEXUS CERTIFIED SALES EVENT!

1.9% APR

Available On All Pre-Owned Certied Lexus Up To 48 Months

2.9% APR Available Up to 60 Months

Associated Press

Hot Rod: OSU alum Rod Spittle is living the dream

n

Rod Spittle won the AT&T Championship in San antonio in october.

LEXUS CERTIFIED CREDIT AN ISSUE? WE CAN HELP! — VEHICLES — 3 YEAR/100,000 MILE WARRANTY

’08 ES 350 SMOKY GRANITE, 36K .................................................................$27,550 ’08 ES 350 BLUE, 44K ...........................................................................................$27,250 ’08 ES 350 BLACK, 35K........................................................................................$28,995 ’08 ES 350 SMOKY GRANITE, 28K .................................................................$27,750 ’08 ES 350 SMOKY GRANITE, 45K .................................................................$27,495 ’07 LS 460L BLACK, 60K, NAVIGATION........................................................$44,895 ’08 LS 460 SMOKY GRANITE, 53K, NAVIGATION ....................................$44,395 ’08 LS 460 SILVER, 37K, NAVIGATION...........................................................$43,795 ’08 IS 250 BLACK, 35K, AWD ............................................................................$29,795 ’08 IS 250 WHITE, 36K, AWD ...........................................................................$31,195 ’08 IS 250 BLACK, 33K, AWD ............................................................................$29,495 ’06 GS 300 BLUE, 52K, AWD/NAVIGATION ...............................................$24,995 ’07 GS 350 BLACK, 44K, AWD .........................................................................$31,795 ’05 GX 470 BLUE, 53K, AWD/NAVIGATION ..............................................$28,995 ’08 GX 470 BLACK, 66K, AWD/NAVIGATION...........................................$33,995 ’08 GX 470 BLACK, 41K, AWD/NAVIGATION...........................................$40,395 ’08 RX 400H BAMBOO, 47K, HYBRID/NAVIGATION.............................$36,795 ’08 RX 350 BLACK, 59K, AWD/NAVIGATION ...........................................$27,995 ’08 RX 350 SAGE, 57K, AWD/NAVIGATION.............................................$31,495 ’08 RX 350 BLUE, 46K, AWD ............................................................................$32,195

BEST CERTIFIED WARRANTY IN THE INDUSTRY

• Stringent 161 Point Inspection & Reconditioning • New Vehicle Finance/Lease Rates & Terms • Lexus Loaner Vehicle

• 3-Year, 100,000 Total Vehicle Mile Limited Warranty • Complimentary Weekly Car Wash • Pick Up & Delivery Service • Complimentary First Oil Change

CARS YOU’LL LOVE WITH THE CREDIT YOU NEED! 2003 JAGUAR S TYPE ..................................................... $11,695 2004 LEXUS ES 350 ........................................................... $13,250 2004 LEXUS RX 330.......................................................... $18,995 2006 NISSAN MAXIMA................................................. $14,895 2007 TOYOTA CAMRY.................................................... $15,525 2008 CHEVY IMPALA ...................................................... $16,695 2008 PONTIAC G6 ............................................................. $16,995 2009 HONDA ACCORD ................................................. $18,295 2009 MERCURY MILAN.................................................. $18,225 2006 LEXUS IS250 NAVIGATION.................................. $19,795

OTHER GREAT VALUES

’02 TOYOTA CAMRY ...........................................................................................$9,695 ’01 LEXUS RX300 112K MILES ...................................................................... $10,495 ’00 LEXUS RX300 71K MILES ......................................................................... $11,695 ’01 LEXUS RX300 83K MILES ......................................................................... $12,295 ’04 LEXUS GX470............................................................................................... $22,495 ’08 HONDA CR-V ............................................................................................... $22,695 ’07 LEXUS RX350 AWD ................................................................................... $25,295 ’10 BUICK LACROSSE CXL ........................................................................ $27,195 ’07 BMW Z4 CONVERTIBLE................................................................................. $27,995 ’07 MERCEDES BENZ ML350 .................................................................. $27,495 ’05 LEXUS LX470 AWD.................................................................................... $28,595

7505 W. Central Ave. at King Rd.

OF TOLEDO

1-800-453-9874 419-841-3500


u.s. senior open 2011

JULY 24, 2011 n SPITTLE CONTINUED FROM A26 “We’re standing around as a group, pushing these buttons. And then he went into a playoff, and the scoring was kind of delayed and you couldn’t tell what was happening, and we were standing with my son’s iPod in the front yard. My granddaughter’s in a butterfly costume. It’s Halloween, and you’re just kind of saying, ‘Is this really happening?’ “Then Steven looked at me and said, ‘They just moved Dad’s picture up to the top of the page.’ And we looked at each other and just started screaming because there was no other reason to move his picture up on the scoring sheet than he had won, but the score still didn’t show that for about probably two or three minutes. We were all crying

and screaming. The neighbors came over to see if something was wrong or somebody had just found out they were pregnant, one or the other, because we were literally celebrating, and screaming, and crying and laughing all at the same time.” Annie said that though she would have loved to have ANNIE SPITTLE been on the 18th green that day with Rod, being able to share that moment with their kids was the best alternative. “They have been our biggest cheerleaders, our biggest supporters the

whole time,” Annie said. “I wish I had been there to see his face when he won, but I was with our kids and it was great.” Now a member of the PGA Champions Tour, Spittle plays in tournaments comprised of the top senior golfers in the world. “The best part about it moving forward is it just begins to open doors for us now to have the chance to come play full-time, and hopefully we can do this as long as possible,” Spittle said.

All in the family

While golf is an individual sport, Spittle uses “we” in reference to his journey to professional status because it has always been a family affair. His dream started in his hometown of St. Catharines, Ontario, Canada, where his father, Jack, was one of the

io! on Pat ne st Di ’s Be o led To

Welc Welcome lcome aallll U U.S. .S. O Open pen F Fans ans ns

JJust ust 5 mi ust m minutes inutes nutes ffrom rom IInverness rom nverness C nvern County ounty C ounty Club lub

Open 7 days a week for dinner at 4 p.m. Happy Hour 7 days a week from 4-7 p.m. Party room available for business meetings, rehearsal dinners and private functions.

5375 Airport Hwy. Toledo, OH 43615 (419) 381-2100 lascolaitaliangrill.com

Visit www.toledofreepress.com owners of a local golf club, giving Spittle and his friends an opportunity to hone their skills. “We played hockey as kids in the wintertime and we played golf in the summer,” Spittle said. “It’s just something that’s always been part of what we have been, and it’s just been a blast.” Spittle went on to attend The Ohio State University, where he was part of coach Jim Brown’s first recruiting class and earned All-Big Ten honors in 1977 and 1978, serving as a Buckeyes captain his senior year. During the summers of his junior and senior campaigns at OSU, Spittle won back-to-back Canadian Amateur Championships. He graduated from Ohio State in 1978, with a degree in business administration and went on to work in insurance. In 1992, Spittle and Annie got married and settled in Dublin, Ohio, to raise their kids together. Prior to meeting Rod, Annie did not know much about golf. “Rod played a lot of golf in the amateur end of things through his work because it was health insurance, and so he did a lot of his business on the golf course, but that was really my only exposure to it,” Annie said. “Knowing that when he turned 50 he really wanted to try this, we just kept thinking, ‘OK. We’ll do that if we can.’” When Spittle was 49, he quit his job in insurance after 25 years and

n .A27

Annie quit her job in corporate commercial real estate. With the kids older and out of the house, the couple sold their home and moved in with Annie’s sister, putting together a five-year financial plan to pursue Spittle’s dream. “We had to give up our dog, which was a hard thing to do,” Annie said. “That was probably harder than the house, but our oldest son took our dog. When we decided to do this, I think we really looked at it as a great adventure, a little bit of an early type of retirement — like stopping what we have been doing all our lives to do something different.” After starting his professional career as a Canadian Tour member in 2004, seven years later Spittle is establishing himself as one of the Champions Tour players to keep an eye on. Through 14 events this year, Spittle has averaged a score of 69.93 and posted eight top 25 finishes and four Top 10 finishes, including tying for second place at the Allianz Championship and third place in the Principal Charity Classic to rank 12th on the money list. While Spittle’s goal took longer than he wanted, it finally came to fruition in October. “I think you can tell already, we have absolutely no regrets whatsoever and we wouldn’t have done it any other way because there just wasn’t an option,” Spittle said. n SPITTLE CONTINUES ON A28

More than just a sign in your yard.

Thee P Th Place lace ffor or IItalian talian F Food ood

Gorgeous G orgeous L orgeous Lounge ounge ou ge avai aavailable vail ilab able ffor or H Happy appy H appy Hour our

Stella’s Restaurant

104 Louisiana Ave., Perrysburg

» Are you thinking about selling your home? Do you know how it should be priced in today’s market? Want statistics on how many homes are for sale in your price range and area?

Featured homes for sale ... Your home could be here next week!

NEW LISTING IN SYLVANIA! 7716 Sylvan Oaks Way » $204,900 Spectacular home - open floor plan, great master suite, walk-in closet, large kitchen. 4 bedrooms, 3 full baths. All appliances included. Fenced. Call for a private showing.

419-873-8360

4121 Talwood $129,900 Washington Local, 3 Bed, 1-1/2 Bath, Family Room, New kitchen, wooded lot.

1034 Clymena $59,900 3 Bed, NEW kitchen, windows, carpet, bath, finished basement. Just move in!

Contact me for my FREE Buyer’s Guide! Mary Ann Stearns » 419.345.0071 Realtor® » Life Member TBR Million Dollar Club Email: MaryAnn.Stearns@iscg.net www.MaryAnnStearns.com

3450 W. Central, Suite 334 Toledo, Ohio 43606


u.s. senior open 2011

A28 n Toledo Free Press n SPITTLE CONTINUED FROM A27 Annie is glad she and Rod made the decision to pursue his dream when he was 49 and in good health rather than wait until he was 65, an option they had considered. “I think it was just kind of a ‘Why not?’” Annie said. “What’s the worst thing that can happen? We’ll try this, and if it doesn’t work we’re still employable. We’re still healthy. We’ll survive. It will be fine, and we’ll still probably have some good stories to tell if it doesn’t work out.” Spittle is also glad he waited until his kids were older. Having been teammate to fellow Champions Tour members John Cook and Joey Sindelar at OSU, Spittle saw the challenges his friends had balancing their families and professional careers. “One of the reasons that I’ve always had respect for John and Joey [is] they got married, raised their kids and were still able to play full time,” Spittle said. “It’s just so hard. It’s hard to be away from your family, and that was just a decision that Annie and I made that we weren’t going to do once upon a time. “I’d like to play for another five years or maybe longer with God’s help. We’ll play as long as we can as hard as we can, and we are having a blast every day. We say our prayers every day.”

Return to Ohio

For Spittle to have the opportunity to win the U.S. Senior Open in the same state he received his college education, raised his family and still resides in for part of the year is more than he could have imagined. “I can’t even make it up,” Spittle said. “To have the Senior Open in Ohio, we just couldn’t make that up. Everybody knows the history that goes along with the club. It has to be on everybody’s short list of great courses in Ohio. Any tournament — particularly this summer to play in Ohio — is just more than we scripted. We couldn’t script it any better. It’ll be a week of partying, that’s for sure.” To this day, Annie is still amazed at how far they have come. “You still just kind of laugh and say, ‘Look where we are; look what you have done,’” Annie said. “It truly is amazing, and I’m just so proud of him to keep going even when it felt like it was impossible to do what he did. As I said, he’s the one that the glass is always half full, and he’s the one that always keeps smiling and saying, ‘I’m getting better. This is great. Let’s go.’ So it’s fun to watch.”

Remembering his roots

While Spittle has achieved a lot of success within the past year, it has not changed who he is at his core.

When he takes to the course at Inverness, Spittle will still mark his putts with a Canadian dime and carry his father’s yellow golf ball in his bag, constant reminders of where and how he got his start in the sport. The latter is especially important for Spittle, whose father passed away a year ago this May. “Rod’s dad passed in May [2010],” Annie said. “Three weeks later, our oldest child — our daughter — got married in June, and then our youngest son got married in September, so we had quite the year from the time that Rod’s dad passed away. So by the time we got to October, it had been a little bit hard with his dad, but then it had been great with the two weddings.” An engineer, Jack Spittle always wore his engineering ring on his little finger and was buried with it when he died. “I say that Grampy died in May, and when he got up to Heaven he told the guys up there who were trying to line up the stars for Rod to win that they were doing it wrong, and

Mark your calendars! Don’t miss the fun and education at Woodcraft of Toledo. August 6 • 1-3pm Traditional Cabinet Building, Part 2

August 13 • 1-2pm Sharpening: Hand vs Power

August 20 • 1-3pm Traditional Cabinet Building, Part 3

August 27 • 1-2pm

he got it straightened out because he knew how to do everything perfectly,” Annie said. “So he got up there and he got it straightened out. We know he’s with us all the time and without his dad, Rod wouldn’t have become the golfer that he did. It’s a huge deal.” Though Spittle misses his father, he believes the things he carries keep him near. “I got started playing with my dad

JULY 24, 2011 like a lot of guys do,” Spittle said. “It’s just been an amazing joy. It’s just one more piece of that puzzle that you just can’t even think of. I guess the one thing that I’ve tried to impart upon my kids is that I don’t think anything happens by accident. I believe in destiny, and I truly believe that this is what I was supposed to do at [56] years of age. “I miss my dad a lot and wish that he could be here this week or

could’ve been in San Antonio, but again — I choose to believe that because I carry his yellow golf ball that he walks every step with me on the golf course. That’s just the way I was brought up. It’s just one more reason why this whole journey is so special. It’s almost beyond words at this stage of the game, but that’s a pretty important part of it. There’s no doubt about it, in my opinion.” O

SUPERSTORE

Monroe

WWW.MONROESUPERSTORE.COM

Chrysler 200 C New N eew w2 2011 011

Touring Tourin o g Edition Ed

mo.*

for EVERYONE!

No employee number needed. No lease loyalty required.

Zero Down

Sign S Sig i & Drive

Monroe Superstore Chrysler 200 Facts

O Down Sign & Drive Imported from Detroit Great Warranty Nicely Equipped

This Deal is FOR EVERYONE! Enjoy 31 MPG! No Charge: First 4 Oil Changes Only 222 a mo.!

What is EWT?

SUMMER CLEARANCE SALE August 19-29

*This deal is for EVERYONE! Zero down. In stock units only! 39 month lease, 10,000 miles per year with approved credit plus tax, title and doc. fees. Includes all rebates. Offer ends Saturday, 7/30/11. Must present this TFP ad to receive these deals.

5311 Airport Hwy. Hwy Toledo, OH 43615

419.389.0560

www.stores.woodcraft.com/toledo

15160 S. Monroe St. • Monroe, MI 1-877-284-5107

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


u.s. senior open 2011

JULY 24, 2011

Visit www.toledofreepress.com

n A29

By Chris Schmidbauer

TOLEDO FREE PRESS SPORTS EDITOR cschmidbauer@toledofreepress.com

Since 1984, the Jamie Farr Toledo Classic has gone from an unknown minor tournament on the LPGA’s yearly schedule to one of the more prestigious stops on the tour. The entire operation has been routinely lauded for the beauty of the course, the purse amount and the fantastic support from the Toledo community. The success that tournament — now known as the Jamie Farr Owens Corning Classic (JFOCC) — has established during the past two decades plus in the Glass City didn’t come by accident. The man at the center of that success is Judd Silverman. Since 2003, Silverman and his company Toledo Classic Inc. have turned running a golf tournament into a full-fledged profession. During the last U.S. Senior Open at Inverness in 2003, Toledo Classic was asked by the brass at Inverness to bid for the rights to help run the operational side of the tournament.

“When the 2003 Open occurred, we were asked to put in a bid to help run the tournament,” Silverman said. “We put together a competitive bid, and we were ultimately rewarded with the contract.” The 2003 Senior Open went off without a hitch, and Toledo Classic was asked to return to help run the 2011 U.S. Senior Open, which will be held July 25-31 at Inverness. Silverman thought the success of the tournament in 2003, coupled with other factors, helped secure the rights again. “We have a number of things going for us. We are local, and we have an established base of sponsors that we have a good relationship with,” Silverman said. “Most of the others who put a bid in were outof-town companies, and most don’t know the area like we do.” When preparing to assemble and operate a tournament, there are many things Silverman said the company must take into account. “The Open is just like the Farr [tournament] except on a little bit of a grander scale,” Silverman said. “There is a significant amount of additional

construction that must be done. There are more bleachers, tents, merchandise pavilions, food stands, etc. Everything is bigger.” To run such an operation means there must be a large number of volunteers, something that runs true to Silverman’s grander scale. “With the JFOCC, we only need about 1,200 volunteers for the tournament; for this Open, we are going to need 2,200 to 2,300 people to volunteer,” Silverman said. The volunteer pool has drawn people from 15 different states to staff the tournament, Silverman said. When planning a U.S. Senior Open, all the plans for setup must be approved by the United States Golf Association (USGA), which hosts several tournaments every year. “The entire site plan has to be approved by the USGA before the tournament. The placement of our food tents or bleachers is all subject to review. We make suggestions to them, but ultimately they have to approve anything we do,” Silverman said. While assisting in running the U.S. Senior Open has been fun, it has come

at a cost. The highly publicized decision to postpone the Farr was a result of working on the Senior Open. “There were a myriad of reasons why we decided to postpone the Farr, but the main one was financial concerns,” Silverman said. The board at Toledo Classic Inc. felt running two golf tournaments in Toledo would have put a tough financial strain on the tournaments. “We looked at it and just realized that running both would have been tough,” Silverman said. “We were concerned that our sponsors might be in a spot where they had to choose one tournament or the other to sponsor. The board didn’t want to put our corporate sponsors in that position.” The Farr will be back in 2012, and Silverman said attention will soon turn to planning for the LPGA tournament. For now, though, Toledo Classic and Silverman’s collective scope is focused solely on the 2011 U.S. Senior Open. “It has been a real thrill to work with the USGA and Inverness again this year,” Silverman said. “We are re-

Toledo Free Press photo by joseph herr

Senior Open compared to Jamie Farr: ‘Everything is bigger’

n

Judd Silverman

ally excited for the tournament and looking forward to another successful tournament in Toledo.” O

ULTIMATE FAN PLAN Season ticket* only

$59

Free FOOD $24 in concession vouchers Free UT GEAR $20 Rocket Shop gift card Free PARKING $30 season pass *See utrockets.com for details on the Ultimate Fan Plan and ticket availability.

See YOU at the GAME!

facebook.com/UTRockets

UTRocketsDotCom

419.530.GOLD (4653)

utrockets.com


A30. n Toledo Free Press

u.s. senior open 2011

JULY 2

Stone Oak Busines

Luxury Storage Wareh

— EXPERI

MANC

You Have To See The

Ideal For: • Retail / Small Business • Personal MANCAVE • Large Boats & RV’S • Collections / Hobbies • Cars, Hot Rods, Classics • Cycles, Snowmobiles • Clubhouse / Meetings For Sale or Lease • 1,000-45,000 SF flex space • Amish Quality Built • Turn Key ownership • Zoned C-2 • Affordable Financing

Located @ Airport H

Just minutes away from St

Call for your private tour

419-865

MANCAVECO


24, 2011

u.s. senior open 2011

ss Condominiums

house Condominiums

IENCE —

Visit www.toledofreepress.com

Phase 1 SOLD OUT

Accepting Orders

in Phase II Now!!

CAVES

em To Believe Them!

Standard Features: • 2nd Floor Lofts • Bathroom & Showers • Super Insulated • Climate controlled • Cathedral ceilings with Fans • Living Room quality drywall interiors • High-speed Internet & Cable • 6” thick concrete with drains • 14x14 O/H doors with remote

Hwy and Albon Rd.

tone Oak and The Quarry.

5-6500

ONDOS.COM

A Unique new concept for Toledo!

n A31


u.s. senior open 2011

A32 n Toledo Free Press

JULY 24, 2011

Recovering Bernhard Langer aims to defend title By Chris Schmidbauer

TOLEDO FREE PRESS SPORTS EDITOR cschmidbauer@toledofreepress.com

No one knows about the test the Open provides every year quite like Bernhard Langer. Last year, the German golfer won both the Senior British Open at Carnoustie in Scotland and the Senior Open in Sahalee, near Seattle. LANGER “It was very taxing last season,” Langer said of pulling off the rare feat of back-toback major wins in consecutive weeks. “It is a very difficult stretch, especially when you factor in the regular British Open is played the week prior to the Senior British as well. Some of us are

playing in three consecutive major tournaments. “I was very fortunate and blessed to be at the top of my game, to be able to win the Senior Open last year.” Defending that title will prove to be just as difficult this season. Langer is fighting his way back from a torn thumb ligament, which has sidelined him for most of the golf season. Langer sustained the injury while riding his bicycle. The incident occurred when Langer pressed the button at a crosswalk to change the traffic light. “People thought I had really hurt myself, but I must’ve just pressed the button wrong or something,” Langer said during a visit to Toledo in May. “By the time we come to Inverness, I hope to be playing at full strength.” Langer is no stranger to success. The defending U.S. Senior Open champion won the Masters in 1985

and 1993 and has played for the European Ryder Cup team 10 times. He said he will use those experiences to deal with the challenging schedule again this season. “With my Ryder Cup experience and some of the other experiences I

have had in my career, I am going to use those to prepare for the challenges I will face again this year,” Langer said. Langer said he is looking forward to the challenge Inverness will provide him and the other competitors during the 32nd U.S. Senior Open.

“I am going to spend the little time we have studying and looking at the course to get familiar with it,” he said. He played at Inverness in 1993 during the PGA Championship. “This is going to be a tough course and I am going to do the best I can to be ready for it.” O

e or om eni rs! elc S to W .S. visi lU n al Ope

Two 6 oz. Lobster Tails Only $2199 This Weekend Only, July 22, 23, 24. Not valid with any other promotion.

Prime Rib – Every Wednesday – $1499

Simply a great place to be!

Not valid with any other promotion.

Tap into the Maumee Bay Brew Pub, home to the cold crafted Maumee Bay Brewing Co., producer of award winning ales and Toledo’s own Buckeye Beer!

Not valid with any other promotion.

out Ask abrivate our Pg Rooms n Meeti Catering and rvices. Se

Black Pearl

Taste tradition at Rockwell’s elegant steakhouse & lounge, offering guests the finest cuts of aged USDA Prime beef, fresh seafood, and so much more. Experience outdoor dining at The Café, delicious pastries and coffee choices at Petit Fours Patisserie, or evening entertainment at Mutz.

SSpecializing pecializing iinn P Prime Rib & The Freshest Seafood

Appetizers • Salads • Pastas • Sandwiches • Desserts Full Bar • Great Wine List

419.380.1616

4630 Heatherdowns (across from the Stranahan) blackpearltoledo.com Monday Tuesday Wednesday Thursday

3:30 - 9:00 11:30 - 9:00 11:30 - 9:00 11:30 - 11:00

Friday 11:30 - 11:00 Saturday 11:30 - 11:00 Sunday 11:30 - 9:00

Come in and see us at 27 Broadway • Toledo, ohio 43604 Call 419.243.1302 or visit us on the web.

www.theOliverHouseToledo.com

friend us on


JULY 24, 2011

u.s. senior open 2011

Visit www.toledofreepress.com

n A33


u.s. senior open 2011

A34 n Toledo Free Press

JULY 24, 2011

Portion of Senior Open profits to benefit local charities By Kathryn Milstein

TOLEDO FREE PRESS STAFF WRITER kmilstein@toledofreepress.com

Seven charities and a scholarship fund will benefit from the U.S. Senior Open golf tournament in Toledo. The charities, handpicked by a committee, will provide volunteers in exchange for a percentage of profit gained from the tournament, said Heather Warga, WARGA the championship volunteer coordinator. “What will happen is 25 percent of our net proceeds will go to these charity recipients,” Warga said. “So when they actually applied to be a charity, which there is a process to that, they had to include how much money they were requesting and what they wanted to use that for.” This year’s charities are Adopt America Network, Autism Model School, Children’s Rights Council, Toledo Area Ministries, Toledo Basketball Academy, Ronald McDonald House and Veggie U. The scholarship

fund is the Jamie Farr Owens Corning Classic Scholarship Fund. Each selected charity is required to provide a few volunteers to perform shifts during the tournament. The shifts include running the volunteer tent, directing parking and welcoming volunteers during the volunteer party. After the tournament, charity volunteers will help clean the golf course. To be selected, charities are asked to submit their proposal one year in advance. A preselected committee read through the proposals, which numbered about 50 this year, and narrowed charities down to about 15. Committee members then interviewed the charities, presented their case to the committee and then voted. The tournament also sponsored local charities the last time the U.S. Senior Open was hosted in Toledo in 2003. Warga said there is rarely trouble coming up with volunteers from the charities. “We usually have a really good response with our charities,” Warga said. “A lot of people enjoy themselves so much, like helping out and volunteering, that we are usually able to attract some people from that that will come back the next year and vol-

unteer on their own. “Maybe they didn’t know, prior to, exactly what it was all about, and they

didn’t want to do it. But once they get out there, they meet a bunch of people and do things. Even though some of

[the jobs] don’t sound like they’re that much fun, they always have a great time working with everybody.” O

Design. Build. Maintain.

General Contractors (419) 241-5000

www.rlcos.com

Specialty Contractors (419) 666-6554

TOLEDO HIBERNIAN IRISH FESTIVAL THERE WILL BE DANCING & DRINKING ON THE STREET CHILDREN PLAY TIME: SATURDAY 4 - 6 FREE Clowns and Games: Bring the kids! Admission ENTERTAINMENT HOURS: 7 ~ Midnight on Friday & Saturday $5 Admission

IRISH DANCERS Ardan Academy of Irish Dance Molly’s Irish Dancers

IRISH MUSIC Brigid’s Cross (BC2) Paul & Peggy y Extra Stout Roger Drawdy & The Firestarters The Bloody Tinth

AUG. 12 & 13 • DOWNTOWN TOLEDO HURON STREET BETWEEN THE BLARNEY & PIZZA PAPALIS


u.s. senior open 2011

JULY 24, 2011

Visit www.toledofreepress.com

n A35

Volunteers make U.S. Senior Open possible “Honestly, we wouldn’t be able to run the tournament without volunteers because they do so many of the jobs on the course,” Warga said. “We’re required to have water on every tee for the players, so we depend on volunteers to put all that out, keep that all filled. Picking up the players

volunteers from across the country. The volunteers will be split into about 60 committees, the largest being marshals, said Heather Warga, championship volunteer coordinator. There are also committees to clean the golf course, keep player scores and provide transportation to and from the airport.

By Kathryn Milstein

TOLEDO FREE PRESS STAFF WRITER kmilstein@toledofreepress.com

More than 2,300 volunteers will work the U.S. Senior Open golf tournament July 25-31, from local residents to Inverness Club members to

STANFORD-ALLEN of Monroe WILL SAVE YOU DOUGH! DURING THE 2011

U.S. SENIOR OPEN WEEK!

at the airport, all of these things; there is just not a staff big enough to do all of those types of things. So we really do rely and count on our volunteers to help us to make the event successful.” Each volunteer is asked to work three shifts throughout the week, between four and six hours per shift and pay a fee of $125. In exchange, he or she will get a credential for the tournament, which means free admission, free parking, a uniform, a volunteer party involving 10 percent off merchandise in the merchandise tent and access to a S.P. Jermain Pavilion tent, a $260 ticket value. When Toledo hosted the U.S Senior Open in 2003, there were about 2,300 volunteers, said Warga, who worked the same three-shift requirement. “Anytime that they’re not working, they can come out, they can get in the tournament. They don’t have to pay; they can use their credential and park for free and watch golf all day long,”

Warga said. “So the time requirement versus the amount of time that they can actually come out and watch is a really good deal.” There is a volunteer tent on-site so volunteers can eat free before or after their shifts. Volunteers will have two different uniforms: the marooncolored logo shirt for marshals and a “straw” or white-yellow shirt for members of other committees. Each volunteer receives two shirts, a jacket and a hat or visor, which they are allowed to keep after the championship. Youth volunteers are between 13 and 17 years old and are put into several different committees. With a fee of $50, youth volunteers receive every benefit of an adult volunteer except they only receive one shirt. “It’s kind of funny because often, I’ll see people around town with that kind of stuff on from the previous tournament,” Warga said. O

2CA0M1AR1OES! OPEN MONDAY & THURSDAY TIBL

9 A.M.–9 P.M.

R CHOOSE CONVETO M

5 FRO

2011 MALIBU

Stk.#113121 Buy For

MSRP $22,990 Lease For

2011 CRUZ

Stk.#113337 Buy For

MSRP $18,655 Lease For

Memorial Golf Tournament

2011 EQUINOX 1LT 2011 TRAVERSE Stk.#114341 APR as low as

MSRP $26,110 Lease For

Stk.#114226

MSRP $30,964 Lease For

289 Sale Price$199 $266 Sale Price$196 2.9%Sale Price$324 0% Sale Price 309

WITH $0 DOWN

*

39 months

WITH $0 DOWN

18,758 WITH $0 DOWN

$

*

17,435

$

39 months

*Auto Trans, Power, Keyless Remote, OnStar

2011 SILVERADO EXT CAB 4X4

2011 IMPALA LT

MSRP $35,090 Lease For

Stk.#113200

24,950

$

WITH $0 DOWN

*Power Windows/Locks/Mirror, Cruise, Keyless Remote, XM Radio

Stk.#114065

*

MSRP $25,350

Rebate as High as

$

*

APR for 60 months $

39 months

WITH $999 DOWN

26,378

39 months

*8 Passenger Seating, Power Windows, XM Radio, Keyless Remote,100,000 Warranty

2011 CTS AWD

2011 SRX LUXURY

Stk.#113219

MSRP $39,605 Lease For

Stk.#114414

MSRP $40,070 Lease For

APR for 60 months $

26,998

39 months

WITH $999 DOWN

*All-Star Package, Seats, Bed Liner, Trailing, Steering Wheel Radio Controls

APR for 72 months $

19,298

*30 MPG Highway, Power Windows/Locks, Keyless Remote, XM Radio

APR for 60 months $

34,032

*

APR Available $

39 months

37,492

WITH $999 DOWN

39 months

WITH $1999 DOWN

*Leather Seating, Keyless, Sunroof, Alum Wheels, 4Yr/50,000 Free Maintenance

*Keyless Entry, Leather Package, All Wheel Drive

*REBATES DEDUCTED FROM SALE PRICE. GM DISCOUNT REQUIRED.MALIBU & CRUZE LEASE REQUIRE 800 CREDIT SCORE. ALL LEASE WITH APPROVED CREDIT. 1ST PAYMENT, TAX, DOC FEE DUE AT SIGNING, ALL LEASE ARE 10,000 MILES PER YEAR.

Names you can trust. . Rd

w.

Tele

gra

ph

uba

Hy ie

d.

Dix 125

ain

Hu

Alb

ll R

S.

15180 S. Dixie Hwy. Monroe, Mich. 48161 866-826-2281 www.StanfordAllen.com

E. D

Rd.

r Rd

.

Laplaisance Rd.

STANFORD-ALLEN of Monroe

Monday, August 29, 2011

WITH $999 DOWN

0% Sale Price$299 0% Sale Price $6,500 0% Sale Price$329 0% Sale Price$399 *

*

*Remote Car Starter, Back up Camera, All Weather Mats, Power Seats

S.

$

*

*

Presented by

Belmont Country Club 29601 Bates Road Perrysburg, Ohio

Get Over It — Get On With It! The Nate Brahier 797 Foundation will continue to celebrate our friend Nate with scholarships to young people with his passion and drive to better themselves!

Sponsorship & Team Registration Form online at www.theblarneyirishpub.com


u.s. senior open 2011

A36 n Toledo Free Press

Indulge your taste with

RALPHIE’S

5 NEW WING

SAUCES!

Kentucky Bourbon Asian Ginger Caribbean Jerk Korean Sweet Habanero Barbecue

More U.S. Senior Open coverage at www.toledofreepress.com Visit www.toledofreepress.com for ongoing coverage of the 2011 U.S. Senior Open at Inverness Club and these online exclusive stories: O “A history of Inverness Club” by Mike Bauman O A look at the food options at the

Senior Open by Patrick Timmis O A walk through the groundskeeping efforts at Inverness Club O “Four local teens translate caddying jobs into college scholarships” by Sarah Ottney O Fred Altvater “Back 9” columns

Mention this ad and save $500 off your purchase Friend me on Facebook. Send me a referral through Facebook & I’ll send you a $10 gift card.

Heather Downs Country Club

2011 SUMMER RATES

18 HOLES WITH CART

• Monday- Friday $30.00 • Saturday & Sunday $35.00

SENIORS

• Monday- Friday $22.00

419.385.0248 • www.heatherdowns.com 3910 Heatherdowns Blvd., Toledo, OH

JULY 24, 2011 ENJOY Ralphie’s Patio Specials every Mon - Thurs! Corn-Hole OREGON 419.693.2500 Courts SPRING MEADOWS 419.866.1344 available PERRYSBURG 419.874.8979 at some SYLVANIA 419.882.6879 www.ralphies.com locations! www.facebook.com/RalphiesFun


JULY 24, 2011

u.s. senior open 2011

Visit www.toledofreepress.com

n A37

E M N O S. E C U. P S! EL L O R W AL IORTO N ISI SE V

ili Chil n e k c ic i h C e t it i h W Famo us Chow der m la C d n la g n E New s Ho mema de So up hes ic w d n a S d le il r G Panini

LIVE MUSIC! MONDAY & FRIDAY 6 P.M.-10 P.M.

HOLLAND LOCATION ONLY!

MONDAYS GE A M A D E R FIR O N I M A ATION DUE TO ATERVILLE LOCC OSED L W Y L R I U R O PORA M E T E B APPY H WILL N A H T ORE NU M E E M B E L T I L I R WE W E YOUR FAVO ND A V L L R E O S H O R T OU Y. ITEMS ATON AIRPORT HW LOCATION S ON U W O L L FO TES A D P U R FO 7723 Airport Highway • Holland

419.491.0098

FRIDARYCSH DINNER

www.chowdersnmoor.com

PE

AW L S & S FRIE

14.99

$

312 South Street • Waterville

419.878.9105


u.s. senior open 2011

JULY 24, 2011 toledo free press photo by jason mack

A38. n Toledo Free Press

Play Hard.

We’ve got you covered.

n

David Graf is head golf pro at Inverness Club.

Toledo Orthopaedic Surgeons Golf shop serves as Specializing in Sports Medicine, Joint Replacements and Spinal Surgery

Stephen R. Saddemi, M.D. • Anthony D. Frogameni, M.D. • Paul J. Fenton, M.D. Thomas G. Padanilam, M.D. • Luke M. Ragan, M.D. • David C. Ervin, M.D. • Ashok Biyani, M.D. For an appointment, ment, please call

419-578-7200

Physical Therapy • 419-578-4200

Wildwood Medical Center • 2865 Reynolds Road, Building A • Toledo, Ohio 43615

‘high-end boutique’ By Jason Mack

TOLEDO FREE PRESS STAFF WRITER jmack@toledofreepress.com

The start of the 2011 U.S. Senior Open at Inverness Club includes a new logo featured on everything from hats to oversized Styrofoam golf balls. There will be Senior Open merchandise for sale at each entrance to the course. The main entrance off Hill Avenue will feature a 7,000-squarefoot structure with 10 cash registers and $750,000 worth of merchandise. The bag room in the golf shop will be converted into a 2,300-square-foot retail outlet. “Day to day our golf shop works like sort of a high-end boutique, and for the week of the Senior Open we’re more like a Walmart,” said David Graf, head golf professional at Inverness Club. “We need an outside vendor to handle the point of sale, the computers and back office stuff. They also supply historical data as

far as what has sold at other venues, helping you purchase the right mix of items.” The mix of items includes a wide array of apparel and souvenirs. The pro shop started carrying Senior Open merchandise in 2009. This year, it is all they have ordered. “We have everything from shirts, hats, T-shirts, chairs, divot repair tools, mugs, shot glasses and everything you can imagine,” Graf said. “Probably 80 percent of our sales are in hats and T-shirts and 20 percent is in more souvenir items. We have large Styrofoam golf balls that kids can get autographs on. We have Senior Open flags. That’s another popular item to get autographed. It’s anything that relates to the golf tournament we can put the logo on.” The logo for the tournament features the grandfather clock from the clubhouse at Inverness. The clock was a gift from Walter Hagen and other professional golfers in 1931. n SHOP CONTINUES ON A40


u.s. senior open 2011

JULY 24, 2011

Visit www.toledofreepress.com

mexico

BRINGING THE FLAVORS OF

to north w e s t o h i o

experience the

Northwest Ohioans have always enjoyed the hot flavors of Mexico, and our warm hospitality. Come to one of our restaurants and experience a delicious dining adventure tonight!

Loma-Linda’s

“BIEN VENIDOS AMIGOS”

Specializing in Mexican Food since 1955

419-865-5455

10400 Airport Hwy.(1.2 Mi. East of the Aiport) Lunch & Dinner, 11 a.m. to Midnight Closed Sundays & Holidays

BARRON’S CAFE

Everything Mexican From Tacos to Enchiladas to Delicious Burritos

419-825-3474

13625 Airport Hwy., Swanton (across from Valleywood Country Club) Mon. - Thurs. 11-11 p.m. Fri. - Sat. 11-12 a.m. Closed Sundays and Holidays

• 20TH ANNIVERSARY •

THE ORIGINAL MEXICAN RESTAURANTE & CANTINA IN TOLEDO

419-841-7523

7742 W. Bancroft (1 Mi. West of McCord) Mon. - Sat. from 11 a.m. Closed Sundays & Holidays

ARTURO’S

FRITZ & ALFREDO’S Original Recipes from Both Mexico and Germany

419-729-9775

3025 N. Summit Street (near Point Place) Mon. - Thurs. 11-10 p.m. Fri. - Sat. 11-11 p.m., Sun. 3-9 p.m. Closed Holidays

Casual Dining • ALL MAJOR CREDIT CARDS ACCEPTED

n A39


u.s. senior open 2011

A40 n Toledo Free Press

About half the field will store their clubs here overnight. We convert our caddy shack into a miniature bag room. When we had the tournament in 2003, Ben Crenshaw and Jack Nicklaus left their clubs here overnight. That was kind of cool.”

Ben Crenshaw and Jack Nicklaus left their clubs here overnight. That was kind of cool.” Graf said working the 2003 Senior Open has made this year’s preparation run smoother. “It’s been easier for us than 2003, because we all have experience and know what to expect,” Graf said. “In 2003, everybody was new so it was ev-

JULY 24, 2011

erybody’s first go-round. Now all the pieces are still in place. We know it’s going to be busy and there’s a lot to do, but we know what to expect.” Despite preparations running smoother, Graf expects to see lower sales than in 2003 due to economic conditions. “It’s a different environment now,” Graf said. “The economy is

far worse. Our corporate hospitality sales and ticket sales are down a little. We expect there to be some decline in merchandise sales as well. The landscape is different than what it was in 2003. On the other side of the coin, Toledo has always been great. The Greater Toledo community has supported all of the tournaments out here.” O

— David Graf n SHOP CONTINUED FROM A38 It was given in recognition of the 1920 U.S. Open when Inverness became the first to allow professional golfers into the clubhouse. “You can bring something different in with the Senior Open crest,” Graf said. “It not only creates excitement for the event, but it’s another merchandising opportunity because it’s a one-time shot. I think it’s an outstanding crest for the Senior Open. The logo incorporates

the grandfather clock. It’s a landmark at Inverness.” The pro shop has four main responsibilities during the tournament. These include running the practice facility, starting the players in practice rounds, running the merchandise operation and storing player bags. “About half the field will store their clubs here overnight,” Graf said. “We convert our caddy shack into a miniature bag room. When we had the tournament in 2003,

You’ll save more than time with our competitive pricing For over 75 years, LaSalle Cleaners has been providing Northwest Ohio with courteous service and quality cleaning. As the area’s largest office pick-up and delivery service, we never lose sight of what is most important — providing a convenient, quality and cost-conscious program to all. And we are more than just a dry cleaner. We are a dedicated business partner and participant in community and corporate events, and are achieving a goal set with each new day; to make your life easier.

Isn’t it time that you “Hang With The Best?”

Life looks good from here ... “Living at Swan Creek Retirement Village is a gift I have given myself and my family. I feel secure, content and involved. I have great neighbors, and the services provided are second to none!”

For more information about our Assisted Living, contact us at 419-865-4445 www.swancreek.oprs.org 922 Jefferson Ave., Toledo • 419-242-2391 One Seagate, Toledo • 419-242-4141 Levis Commons, Perrysburg • 419-874-4872 www.lasallecleaners.com

Ask about our office pick up and delivery.


JULY 24, 2011

u.s. senior open 2011

Visit www.toledofreepress.com

n A41


A42. n Toledo Free Press

u.s. senior open 2011

JULY 24, 2011


Business Link

JULY 24, 2011

Visit www.toledofreepress.com

n A43

LEGAL

By Duane Ramsey

TOLEDO FREE PRESS SENIOR BUSINESS WRITER dramsey@toledofreepress.com

An attorney with Advocates for Basic Legal Equality, Inc. (ABLE) in Toledo is conducting a Microenterprise Legal Assistance Project to provide free legal services to local entrepreneurs who can’t afford an attorney. “The project aims to help people achieve greater economic stability with their own resources. We fill in the missing pieces by providing legal counsel,” said Anneliese Gryta, an attorney with ABLE, who developed and now leads the project. Gryta said it is the only program of its type in Ohio. It is funded by special grants from the Stranahan Foundation of Toledo, Ohio Legal Assistance Foundation and Equal Justice Works, a national organization that funds innovative legal services projects across the country. Gryta said ABLE is working in partnership with the Griffin-Hammis Microenterprise Demonstration Project of the Ohio Rehabilitation Services Commission (ORSC). It provides business technical assistance to disabled individuals who wish to pursue self-employment. “I learned so much from this program. It’s just priceless information. I’m taking full advantage of the free services this area has to offer,” said Teresa Jo “Tracy” Perry, a local artist and entrepreneur. Perry recently started her own business, Renditions by ResaJo, in Toledo to sell her art and custom designed jewelry. She needed legal help with contracts, copyrights, and other issues. Perry was referred to the project by the ORSC after developing a disability from a back injury. She retired after working 20 years in the nursing profession due to mobility issues. The ORSC told Perry it could help her find another job or go back to school. She decided to return to college and graduated with a fine arts degree from BGSU in 2009. “I had always created, designed, decorated and made things. Now I’m feeding my family while feeding my

creative soul. It doesn’t always work in business,” Perry said. Perry went to a legal clinic on copyrights conducted by ABLE and said it was “an exceptional clinic.” She worked directly with Gryta through the microenterprise project on legal issues for her new business. Perry submitted a selection of her work for the 93rd Annual Toledo Area Artists Exhibition at the Toledo Museum of Art in August. One item is a lotus cup chalice Perry made with an etching from DaVinci’s “Last Supper” that was inspired by the movie, “The DaVinci Code.” ABLE receives referrals for the project from business assistance providers, including the Small Business Development Center at the Toledo Regional Chamber of Commerce, Arts Commission of Greater Toledo, Assets Toledo, United North and the Women’s Entrepreneurial Network. Another client, LaVerne Greene Cunningham visited one of the legal clinics seeking advice on drafting an agreement for her services. “I had a need for a good solid contract to use with clients and employers. With the contract, people take me more seriously,” Cunningham said. She is a work force development professional who lost her job at The Source and decided to start her own firm, Connected 4 Biz, an employment coaching and placement agency. Cunningham received pro bono advice that “you have to know when to walk away from some business” from Brad Hubbell, an attorney at Cooper & Walinski, who helped her. Gryta said the project has helped clients such as a dog groomer with a liability release, a mural artist on a commission agreement, small barbeque caterer on a contract with a sports arena, trademark guidance for a graphic artist and other legal advice for a new cleaning company and a small grocer in a central city neighborhood. “We want to be sure that everyone who needs legal help knows that we’re out there for them,” Gryta said. “One way we provide assistance

toledo free press photo by jason mack

ABLE helps entrepreneurs with legal assistance project

n

Anneliese Gryta holds a chalice made by Tracy Perry who received legal services from her.

to clients is through a series of legal clinics staffed by volunteer attorneys from local law firms.” The law firms include Cooper & Walinski; Eastman & Smith, MacMillan, Sobianski & Todd; and Shumaker, Loop & Kendrick have helped staff the clinics. Members of the Intellectual Property Committee of the Toledo Bar Association under the leadership of Dave Purdue of Purdue Law Offices are present at the clinics. The next legal clinic will be Aug. 17, but applicants need to preregister for it with Gryta at ABLE at agryta@ablelaw.org.

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

Gryta leads a steering committee that is working on a micro-loan fund to provide financing for small entrepreneurs who can’t get funding from traditional sources. With the support of local businesses and economic development agencies, they hope to offer loans to entrepreneurs in the legal assistance project. Gryta grew up in Buffalo, N.Y., trained as a classic violinist and gave lessons as an entrepreneur. She experienced many of the same issues her clients now have, such as how to protect her music compositions. Gryta graduated from the Univer-

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

sity of Akron’s School of Law in 2008 and began working with the Equal Justice Works AmeriCorps Legal Fellowship to help small businesses with legal aid and clinics. She attended a national job fair in Washington, D.C., where she connected with ABLE in Toledo. She now works with other attorneys who perform pro bono work. “I believe in the economic vitality of cities like Toledo and helping people to succeed here,” Gryta said. For more information about the microenterprise project, visit the website microenterprise.ablelaw.org. O

KeyBank


Business Link

A44 n Toledo Free Press

TREECE BLOG

A

s the clock ticks down to Aug. 2, the debt ceiling debate has grown more heated. As it turns out, doubt in the “full faith and credit” of the United States’ federal government can actually inject quite a bit of fear into the world’s financial markets. This fear has led to a substantial rise in volatility as investors focus increasingly on gossip and headlines instead of levelheaded rationality. Much of the debate has become focused on entitlement programs like social security — at least ever since President Obama made his now-famous threat to cut off benefit checks to veterans and the elderly on Aug. 3 if no agreement is reached to prevent a government shutdown. This offhanded comment has been a favorite among political pundits, though it was obviously a scare tactic and a complete bluff. Sadly, it seems many Americans have taken the bait. Many have fallen in line since Obama’s threat and opened up to the idea of raising the debt ceiling, showing their flagrant need for the nanny state. Unfortunately, this is precisely the wrong lesson to have learned. Rather than acquiescing to the government’s desired role as wetnurse to the governed, Obama’s threat should have reminded the American people of our president’s shameless-

JULY 24, 2011

Social Insecurity

When Social Security was begun ness and willingness to threaten and/ or hurt this country’s citizens to ac- in the ‘30s, the vast majority of elderly or disabled complish political ends. Americans lived with Just as significantly, their families. Nursing the entire debate surhomes were not a rounding social security thriving industry back has highlighted a comthen, though there were plete misunderstanding some facilities operated by the American people by local church groups of how the program is and other charities. structured and what At its core, Social purpose it serves. Security was developed The Social Security Act was passed in 1935 Dock David TREECE to keep its beneficiaries from becoming a drain — some may recall that the United States economy was in the on their caretakers. It was a way middle of a minor slump back then, of helping their families pay utility commonly known as the Great De- bills and put food on the table. Hardly what one would call a pression. At that point in time the average life expectancy was almost a full “retirement plan.” Social security was never meant 20 years shorter than it is now. Jobs were harder, medicine was less ad- to improve Americans’ lifestyles vanced, and many aspects of modern after they retired — which in the life were luxuries reserved exclusively 1930s really meant you were incapable of working anymore. It wasn’t for the ultra-wealthy. Consider one quick example. In even supposed to allow those unable 1936 a ticket to fly between Germany to work to extend the lifestyle they and New Jersey cost roughly $400, al- enjoyed while earning wages. Somost a quarter of the average Ameri- cial security wasn’t going to pay for can’s annual wages at that time. For cruises or new cars, these were luxucomparison, $400 in 1936 would be ries enjoyed by very few, anyway. Somewhere, somehow between worth more than $6,000 today, given inflation. And this ticket didn’t even get 1935 and now, Americans have let you on an airplane — that was the price politicians twist the role of social sefor traveling on the Hindenburg, not curity; they’ve allowed the government to make Social Security sound exactly a quick (or safe) undertaking.

like a retirement plan, when it isn’t. Now many Americans are upset because they might need to save for retirement above and beyond their contributions to Social Security. Well duh! Anyone who hasn’t been saving in addition to Social Security has much more serious problems than not understanding government bureaucracy. (Heck, maybe they should run for office!) Worse than the fact that Americans have been lied to about programs like Social Security is that they’ve actually taken the bait. Voters were dumb enough to believe Al Gore when he said he was going to put the money “in a lockbox.” They were dumb enough to believe that there was actually money sitting in a fund somewhere to pay retirees. Why don’t the American people get it? Why are they so willing to see things the way they want, rather than as they are? A lie is a lie, no matter how much one wants to believe it. Social Security is broke — there is no

4235 Secor Road, Toledo

Conveniently located just north of Sylvania Avenue Mon. – Fri.: 5 – 11 p.m. • Sat. – Sun.: 8 a.m. – 4 p.m.

419-720-3989

Welcome U.S. Open Golfers

TOLEDO, OH

When You Want the Best Call Beltone at...

Special development incentives are available in select markets for experienced food service operators. For more information, call

or email Shawn Caric at

Shawn.Caric@dunkinbrands.com

Dock David Treece is a discretionary money manager with Treece Investment Advisory Corp and is licensed with FINRA through Treece Financial Services Corp. He has appeared on CNBC and numerous radio programs, and also serves as editor of financial news site Green Faucet. The above information is the express opinion of Dock David Treece and should not be construed as investment advice or used without outside verification.

For life’s little urgencies...

ENJOY SOME TASTY PERKS

1.877.9.DUNKIN (1.877.938.6546) or visit www.dunkinfranchising.com

money. What’s more, this isn’t by accident, but by design. Social Security is a legal, government-sponsored Ponzi scheme — the only one in the world, in fact. Now, with the deadline to Aug. 2 closing in, the American people are being fed still more lies by the socalled “Gang of Six” in the Senate. The question is, how many more lies can the American people swallow? How long until the dumbing down of America ends and people in this country start waking up smarter than the day before? O

Dunkin’ Donuts continues to expand with single and multi-unit opportunities and no minimum unit requirements. FREE Hearing Screenings CALL

Minimum financial requirements for Single Unit Development Opportunities are $250K liquid assets and $500K net worth. Single unit opportunities vary by market. ©2011. DD IP Holder LLC. All rights reserved. Dunkin’ Brands, Inc., 130 Royall St. Canton, MA 02021

139830

Sec11

1-855-ALL-HEAR 7/18/11

11:12:42 AM


Business Link

JULY 24, 2011

Visit www.toledofreepress.com

n A45

the Retirement guys

What the debt deal means to investors E

nvision a scene of an old town in the Wild West. The dry desert heat is everywhere and at first glance it appears the town is empty except for two guys standing out in the street. One might think it is Clint Eastwood or Billy the Kid. Yet, upon looking closer it’s just Porky Pig and Wile E. Coyote on the other end of town, getting ready to face off in a shootout, waiting for the other to draw. Porky’s stutter makes it hard for him to talk intelligently while the Coyote has his next best contraption, which never really works, in his pocket. A similar standoff is happening right now in real life as Republicans versus Democrats square off over raising our national debt. We’ll let you be the judge of which one is Porky Pig and which one is Wile E. Coyote. The important part of this battle is to not get caught in the crossfire. Looking at the website www.us debtclock.org, everyone should be concerned as our national debt has grown from $5.7 trillion back in July 2000 to more than $14.5 trillion today. And our current unfunded liabilities are now more than $114 trillion dollars when you consider Social Security, the Prescription Drug Program and Medicare. This is now more than $1 million in liabilities per taxpayer. Even for those who pay no taxes, it

line tios Dead r regist1e5, 2011 t Augus

is time to take notice as it could be a long-term burden for all Americans. Short-term, don’t make an emotional move. A common question we have been hearing lately from investors is, “Should we get out until they figure this all out?” Our answer is to be rational, not emotional, when it comes to making financial decisions. According to Dalbar Inc., a company that studies investor behavior versus stock market performance, hisMark tory has shown making emotional Nolan decisions cost investors substantially. “For the 20 years ending 12/31/2009 the S&P 500 Index averaged 8.2 percent a year. The average equity fund investor earned a market return of only 3.17 percent.” Remember, if an investor listens to the news headlines, there is always a reason to buy or sell, avoid this emotional urge. Ask the right questions. Investors often focus only on the bottom line. Although the bottom line is important, understand what the objective is. Let’s say a retiree has plenty of cash to cover current income for

the next several years, plus money set aside for a pay raise in the future. The stock market ups and downs of today become less relevant. In contrast, a younger investor saving and investing for the future could look at a stock market decline as a buying opportunity. Remember buy low and sell high. Focus on what you can control, although it is important to stay up-todate and involved in our national economy it is often beyond an invesCLAIR tor’s control. Every American should BAKER vote and voice their opinion to our political leaders. Don’t dwell on what you can’t control; instead, focus on your financial situation. Get out of debt, minimize taxes and make every dollar saved work in the most efficient manner. Long-term, watch out for tax increases. Only 43.4 percent of Americans had to pay any taxes in 2010 according to the Tax Policy Center. They go on to point out by looking at history, “between 1950 and 1990, the number of owe-no-money federal tax returns averaged 21 percent.” According to the IRS’s own

Emceed by Jay Berschback from

Friday, August 26, 2011 | Bedford Hills Golf Course | 6:00 pm to 1:00 am Proud Sponsors

Costs: $400 per 5-some $90 per person Cash bar and beer tickets available all night! Price of ticket includes:

• Steak or chicken dinner provided by Texas Roadhouse - On site grilling! • Greens fees for 6 holes of Glow Golf • Musical entertainment by Flyte 66 • Admission to After Glow Party

Largest mental health agency in NW Ohio.

Make your reservation today.

For more information please call 419.475.4449 x1246

research if every U.S. taxpayer who filed a tax return paid $100 in taxes in 2008 an additional $5.2 billion in taxes would have been collected. Taxes could have a bigger impact on more people in the future and be at a higher rate for current taxpayers. Have a plan today for tax increases in the future and talk with an accountant about how an increase could affect you. Take a moment and step back. Look at what the plan is, nationally and for yourself personally. Realize the difference between what can and cannot be controlled. Make decisions based on facts that are consistent with the long-term plan and avoid the urge to make gut calls when investing. As Warren Buffett said, “Your money is like soap, the more you touch it, the less you have.” 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. (419) 842-0550.

Focus on what you can control, although it is important to stay upto-date and involved in our national economy it is often beyond an investor’s control. Every American should vote and voice their opinion to our political leaders. Don’t dwell on what you can’t control; instead, focus on your financial situation. Get out of debt, minimize taxes, and make every dollar saved work in the most efficient manner.” Big Ugly Warehouse 5405 Telegraph Road

419 478-8770

Our Warren Thomas Communications Special Offer Take an additional 5% off our already low, low prices on Any Kitchen or Window Order of $2,500 or More. New Orders Only

Our Warren Thomas Communications Special Offer

Just Cuts, LTD 1506 Reynolds Road in Maumee

419-482-5594 WE NOW DO HI-LITES! forHair yourCut appointment GetCall One at Regularand Price receive OFF and Get the $5.00 Second for 1/2 Off.

a service of $30.00 Only. or more! New Customers By appointment notAny on Monday or Tuesday. Not Validonly With Other Offer.


A46. n Toledo Free Press

Business Link

JULY 24, 2011

MEDIA WATCH

Cumulus takes ratings gamble with new Andrew Z show

Most cities, including Toledo, have stations that play the same artist. The perfect example would be Taylor Swift; she can be heard on KISS FM, Star105, K100, MY983 and The River 101.5. The one thing that separate the Taylor Swift stations are the morning shows.”

you to find the station by using a still have to find what was built first. Andrew Z should have believed in radio with a dial. The adage of “If you build it, they himself and not leaned on a corpo2973 Devers_MB_TFP_24_Layout 1 7/21/11 2:43 PMOPage 1 rate partner. will come; should apply here, but you

Jeremy Baumhower is a media expert who writes and produces for morning radio shows across the country. Follow him on Twitter @jeremytheproduc.

F

ollowing his legal troubles and to have extra money to buy music, many reportedly failed nego- an iPod, a smartphone or a newer tiations with various media car with satellite radio. Why would outlets, Andrew Zepeda aka Andrew anyone wait through songs they do Z inked a deal with Cumulus Broad- not like — and commercials — when casting. After a six month sit out due they can play their favorite music off to a noncompete clause with his pre- their iPod? Smartphones have apps vious employer, Clear Channel, An- like Pandora, where you can play the drew Z returned to morning radio music you want commercial free. The equalizer that brings people July 18 on the 100 Watt HD station with extra cash back to terrestrial radio 100.7 The Vibe. With technology changing media tends to be the personalities, aka DJs. and how consumers get our favorite Most cities, including Toledo, have shows, Andrew Z had some pretty stations that play the same artist. The perfect example would creative options and be Taylor Swift; she can this signing was combe heard on KISS FM, pletely unnecessary. Star105, K100, MY983 When the Andrew and The River 101.5. The Z “mess” happened, one thing that separates he was King of the Tothe Taylor Swift stations ledo Morning Airwaves, are the morning shows. hosted a No. 1 Show, was Andrew Z’s show played Lucas County’s Weight no music and was No. 1, Czar and was a media darling. Through all the Jeremy BAUMHOWER meaning people with and without cash listened. negative press, Andrew Z This is where Andrew’s return is has maintained the maximum limit of 5,000 friends on Facebook and a “fan” flawed. Andrew Z should have invested page with more than 2,000 “likes.” These in himself and his show by launching a numbers prove the power of his show. In comprehensive, interactive website and a town where radio ratings are not made a smartphone application to distribute public, Andrew Z can demonstrate to his show. This would take a lot of faith clients a 7,000-member loyal, dedicated but little cash. He would have owned fan base he is reaching on a daily basis. his show, been his own boss and more Showing advertisers the amount of importantly, had full creative control. people your show and their commercials Andrew Z would argue that he has a reach is key— it’s how the game is played. website and an app you can hear his To some, 7,000 people is not a lot, show on, but it is not the same thing; especially when Andrew’s previous au- Andrew Z now has a boss. Andrew has the ability to show dience was around 25,000 to 40,000 people. I would disagree; 7,000 people advertisers the true size and loyalty of who own a computer — and more im- his listeners. Andrew Z has tarnished portantly, disposable income — is a great his name, but Toledoans always love marketable number. The more powerful the underdog and the controversial. aspect is that his fan base will grow as his Remember, Toledoans voted Carty Finkbeiner as mayor three times. show improves and word gets out. Ultimately, Andrew Z felt he The problem with Top 40 radio today is the listeners who must be needed to broadcast his show on a targeted to get ratings. Top 40 stations station with a frequency to be sucplay around 40 songs, which means cessful. If Andrew Z’s new show they play same song every 60-90 min- makes a dent in the ratings, it will utes. That’s why it seems your one fa- be a huge upset win for Cumulus. vorite song is always on. What does 100.7 The Vibe was not even on the this mean? It simply means Top 40 sta- map two weeks ago and the journey tions target people who are less likely ahead will not be easy — I challenge

The 2011 C300 4MATIC Sport Sedan $369 FIRST MONTH’S PAYMENT * $2,825 CAPITALIZED COST REDUCTION FOR A 33 MONTH LEASE $795 ACQUISITION FEE $3,989 CASH DUE AT SIGNING

369

$

1.9**% APR

FOR 24 TO 36 MONTHS

Now through August 1, 2011

5570 MONROE ST.• SYLVANIA

419-885-5111

www.vindevers.com *Available only to qualified customers through Mercedes-Benz Financial Services at participating dealers through August 1, 2011. Not everyone will qualify. Advertised 33 most. lease payment based on MSRP of $40,360 less a suggested dealer contribution resulting in a total gross capitalized cost of $38,626. Dealer contribution may vary and could affect your actual lease payment. Includes destination charge and Premium 1 Package. Excludes title, taxes, registration license fees, insurance dealer prep and additional options. Total monthly payments equal $12,177. Cash due at signing includes $2,825 capitalized cost reduction, $795 acquisition fee and 1st month’s payment of $369. No security deposit required. Total payments equal $15,797. At lease end, lessee pays for any amounts due under the lease, any official fees and taxes related to the scheduled termination, excess wear and use plus 25¢/mi. over 27,500 and a $595 vehicle turn-in fee. Purchase option at lease ed for $25,830 plus taxes (and any other fees and charges due under the applicable lease agreement) in example shown. **Rate applies only to select Mercedes-Benz model year 2011 vehicles. 1.9% APR financing for 24 months at $42.50 per month, per $1,000 financed or 1.9% financing for 36 months at $28.60 per month , per $1,000 financed. Excludes leases and balloon contracts. Must take delivery of vehicle by August 1, 2011. Not everyone will qualify. See dealer for complete details. ©2011 Authorized Mercedes-Benz Dealers


wheels

JULY 24, 2011

Visit www.toledofreepress.com

n A47

development

By Duane Ramsey

Toledo Free Press Senior Business Writer dramsey@@toledofreepress.com

The Toledo-Lucas County Port Authority recently unveiled the master plan for redevelopment of the Jeep Parkway property. “We’re here to celebrate the kickoff for the redevelopment of the new Overland Park Development. This project has been embraced by everyone in the community and will fill a much-needed hole in this community,” said Paul Toth, president and CEO of the Port Authority, on July 7. The 111-acre brownfield site will be redeveloped into a commercial and industrial complex with 30 acres for an urban park along the Ottawa River. The Overland Park Development will occupy 70 acres of the site and offer from 900,000 to 1 million square feet of manufacturing and warehouse space in several buildings. The master plan was developed with a focus on manufacturing and could become the home to new energy technologies or automotive suppliers with the potential expansion of the Chrysler Jeep plants, Toth said. State Paper and Metal Company, which is located on Central Avenue at the west end of the site, purchased 15 acres for expansion. It plans to build a 45,000 square-foot addition that would create 22 jobs, according to Port Authority officials. “Toledo has a rich manufacturing history and this site is a prime location for industrial and commercial development. We’ve already had some serious inquiries about the site,” Toth said.

Port Authority officials and Toledo Mayor Mike Bell cited the collaboration of local, state, federal officials, local companies and the University of Toledo in helping to move this project forward. Toth said contractors could break ground along the railroad bordering the site yet this year. The Jeep Parkway Redevelopment Master Plan was developed in conjunction with TRACE, the Toledo Regional Architects, Contractors and Engineers coalition. TRACE was established to leverage the combined experience and expertise of local architects, contractors and engineers. Toth said the Port Authority engaged TRACE to help it develop the master plan for the site. Twenty-four 24 local companies were involved in the development of the master plan by TRACE. The leadership group included four companies — Mannick & Smith, The Collaborative, SSOE Inc. and TTL Associates Inc. The Jeep Parkway property has benefited from state and local remediation funds, most recently receiving two Clean Ohio Revitalization Fund grants totaling $4.9 million. Work is expected to begin later this year on the remediation of the site, Toth said. The Port Authority also received a $1.3 million Economic Development Initiative grant from the U.S. Department of Housing and Urban Development to cover expenses related to the purchase of the site. The Port Authority officially acquired the site for $95,000 on Oct. 3. The master plan concept and property details are available at www. toledoportauthority.org/jeep. O

toledo free press photo by duane ramsey

Master plan unveiled for redevelopment of Jeep property

n

Paul Toth of the Port Authority unveils the master plan for the Jeep property.

FFRANKLIN RANKLIN PPARK ARK VVALUE ALUE LLEADERS! EADERS!

NEED A CAR, TRUCK OR VAN? N

Ø DOWN DELIVERS! ’91 TOYOTA CAMRY.................................$1,295 ’95 JEEP GRAND CHEROKEE.................$1,595 ’02 CHEVY BLAZER..................................$3,385 BAD CREDIT, NO CREDIT, NO PROBLEM

’99 LINCOLN NAVIGATOR .....................$4,385 ’11 FORD FOCUS ....................................$17,865 ’10 MERCURY MARQUIS......................$17,865 ’08 MOUNTAINEER NICE!.......................$18,985

CALL CALL NOW!! NOW!!

419-882-7171 FRANKLIN FRANKLIN PARK PARK USED USED

AFFORDABLE CARS UNDER $10,000

2000 FORD F-150 4X4 Supercab......................................Now $7,821 2005 DODGE CARAVAN 7 Passenger ...............................Now $8,807 2006 FORD FREESTYLE SEL AWD, Loaded, Leather .........Now $10,262 2004 CHEVY TRAILBLAZER 4X4 Loaded ......................Now $10,607

BRING IN THIS AD FOR ADDITIONAL

500 SAVINGS

$

MANAGER’S SPECIAL:

2005 NISSAN MAXIMA 64K miles Luxury, Leather, Moon .......$13,384 84

2004 BUICK LASABRE LIMITED Loaded with Leather, Low Miles ....Now $10,824 2004 BUICK RAINER CXL Loaded, Luxury.......................Now $12,373 2006 DODGE MAGNUM 66K Miles, Moonroof ...................Now $12,997

5744 W. CENTRAL AVE. TOLEDO, OHIO 43615 • 419-536-3040


wheels

A48 n Toledo Free Press

JULY 24, 2011

Bicycle tour offers opportunity to explore Toledo nice surprise for everybody to enjoy the inner city. We went through a lot of inner city streets and we had no problem whatsoever.” Tucholski has participated in rides in New York City, Detroit and Chicago and enjoyed seeing the cities

from a cyclist’s perspectives. Those experiences inspired him to try something similar in Toledo. The ride was nostalgic, he said. Eighteen riders participated, including Maumee police officers, Metropark volunteers and people who

ALL NEW 2011 ChrysLEr ALL NEW 2011 DoDgE

200 touring Avenger

greAt FueL MiLeAge!

MAinstreet

0% AvAiLAbLe

chat with

live out of town and had not visited Toledo in years. For many of the riders, the tour was a fresh experience.

“We got to see a lot of parts of Toledo that a lot of guys had never seen,” Catlow said. O — Patrick Timmis

photo courtesy Bill Tucholski

Maumee teacher Bill Tucholski recently hosted his second bicycle tour, Explore Toledo, which he hopes to repeat annually. “The whole ride couldn’t have gone any better,” said Jay Catlow, a Metropark volunteer. “It was a very

n

Eighteen riders joined the explore toledo tour in early july.

us online at

groganstowne.com

For up to 72 Mos.*

2011 ChRYSLER toWn & Country touring

MSRP: $29,895

Formerly Southwestern College...New Name. New Success Stories!

Hands-on Training for a Better Career Start Your New Career In:

EVERYONE CAN LEASE FOR

$199/mo for 39 mos.

$17,984

*

MSRP: $22,295

*

MSRP: $21,995

Price and includes rebate of $2,500

2011 DODGE rAM sLt

2011 JEEP Liberty

QuAD CAb • 4x4

MSRP: $33,330

sport • 4x4

MSRP: $25,660

LeAse For

LeAse For

LeAse For

LeAse For

with Lease Loyalty

without Lease Loyalty

with Lease Loyalty

without Lease Loyalty

* * * * $219/mo $189/mo OR $245/mo OR $215/mo plus tax for 39 mos. plus tax for 39 mos. plus tax for 39 mos. plus tax for 39 mos.

LeAse For

$265/mo* plus tax for 39 mos.

2011 JEEP WrAngLer sport • 4x4

MSRP: $26,805

LeAse For

LeAse For

with Lease Loyalty

without Lease Loyalty

*Prices shown are for Chrysler Employees and Eligible family members with approved credit through Ally. All lease prices & payments with 10,000 miles per year, 25¢per mile there after. Lease is for 39 months. All payments figured with $1,495 due at signing. All prices & payments plus tax and title. To qualify for lease loyalty, you must be a customer currently leasing or returning from a current Chrysler Group lease which expires between Nov. 1, 2009 - Jan. 3, 2012. 0% financing on Avenger is in lieu of rebate. Employee price is for Chrysler employees and eligible family members. See dealer for details.

www.groganstowne.com

facebook.com/GrogansTowne

Lincoln is a partner in your success and offers: • Convenient day, afternoon, and evening classes • Financial aid for those who qualify • Resume writing and interview techniques Upon graduation, Lincoln will help you with: • Connections to professional networks • Career placement assistance

* * $185/mo OR $211/mo plus tax for 39 mos. plus tax for 39 mos.

6100 N. Telegraph Rd. • 419-476-0761

Medical Administration • Medical Assisting • Business Management • Medical Coding & Billing

Make Lincoln Your Success Story!

Call Now! (800) 617-8741 www.LincolnCollegeOfTechnology.com

5203 Airport Highway, Toledo, OH (08-11-1885B) Programs vary by campus. Associate degree status available for select programs. Microsoft is a trademark or registered trademark of Microsoft Corporation in the United States and/or other countries.

54/88010310

TFP_LCT_Toledo_111.indd 1

12/29/10 12:26 PM


JULY 24, 2011

wheels

Visit www.toledofreepress.com

n A49


wheels

A50 n Toledo Free Press

JULY 24, 2011

DEALERSHIPS

Monroe Dodge features charity Jeep driven by Harrison Ford By Zach Davis

Toledo Free Press Staff Writer zdavis@toledofreepress.com

The Spirit of Liberty Jeep Foundation’s “Crossing of America” charity drive is coming to Monroe. On July 27 at 10 a.m., two Jeep Wranglers, covered in an American flag paint scheme with a bald eagle on the hood, will stop at the Monroe Dodge Chrysler Jeep Ram Superstore on their drive across the nation. Among those who have driven the Jeeps on the journey include actor Harrison Ford and astronaut Alan Bean. The Jeeps left the USS Midway in San Diego on May 27, just prior to Memorial Day weekend, and will travel more than 12,700 miles through 43 states more than a span of 105 days. The trip will conclude on Sept. 11 at

the Intrepid Aircraft Carrier in New York to commemorate the 10-year anniversary of those who lost their lives in the terrorist attacks of that day. “This effort will raise awareness of these American heroes and their families and bring attention to their needs and raise funds that are so greatly needed,” said Richard Rovsek, chairman of marketing firm M2000 which is leading the promotion. The Jeeps are traveling across the country to help raise donations for the Spirit of Liberty Foundation, whose goal is to raise money for “wounded warriors, fallen heroes and their families.” To drive a mile of the journey in one of the jeeps, contact the Monroe Dodge Superstore and bring in a donation of $250. Donations of other amounts also are encouraged. The

two Jeeps will also be available for purchase following the trip. “Everyone will be given the chance to drive one of these Jeeps and show their love for our country by helping

those who have sacrificed so much,” Monroe Dodge Superstore co-owner Ralph Mahalak Jr. said. “The entire five-star team here at the Monroe Superstore is proud and excited to give

The new class of world class

– OR –

Save up to$1/gal. at Shell

See store for details. Fuel savings are limited to 35 gallons of fuel per purchase. Points earned in the current month are available for use through the end of the following month.

During U.S. Senior Open Week ...

Save some dough!

When you shop Groulx in Monroe

– OR –

✓ SALES ✓ SERVICE ✓ BODY SHOP

when you earn up to1,000 pts. from Kroger.

It’s easy to use your Kroger Plus Card for fuel savings at Shell. When you earn up to1,000 points at Kroger, you’ll save up to $1/gal. every day on quality Shell Nitrogen Enriched Gasolines. Pick up a brochure at your participating Shell station for more details. Start saving today! www.shell.us/kroger

back to our American heroes who have given us so much.” For more information about the campaign, contact Mahalak at charity@monroedodge.com. O

FOREIGN & DOMESTIC

GMC BUICK GMC +BUICK

888-320-3705

15435 S. Dixie Hwy.

www.groulxbuickgmc.com 1. Not available with some other offers. Monthly payment is $16.67 for every $1,000 you finance. Example down payment: 15.8%. Some customers will not qualify. Take retail delivery by 9/6/11. See dealer for details. 2. For the first 90 days from date of purchase through Ally and at participating dealers only. May require down payment at signing. Not available in Washington D.C. Length of contract limited. Not available with some other offers. See dealer for details. Take retail delivery by 9/6/11. 3. Example based on National Average vehicle selling price. Each dealer sets its own price. Your payments may vary. Payments are for a 2011 Enclave CX with an MSRP of $36,675.39 monthly payments total $15,561. Option to purchase at lease end for an amount to be determined at lease signing, plus $350 or turn in vehicle and pay a $395 termination fee. Mileage charge of $.18/mile over 39,000 miles. Lessor must approve lease. Take delivery by 9/6/11. Lessee pays excess wear and tear charges. Payments may be higher in some states. Not available with other offers. Residency restrictions apply. 4. Length of contract limited. Not available with some other offers. Take retail delivery by 9/6/11. See dealer for details. 5. Example based on National Average vehicle selling price. Each dealer sets it’s own price. Your payments may vary. Payments are for a 2011 LaCrosse CXL with an MSRP of $32,570.39 monthly payments total $12,441. Option to purchase at lease end for an amount to be determined at lease signing, plus $350 or turn in vehicle and pay a $395 termination fee. Mileage charge of $.18/mile over 39,000 miles. Lessor must approve lease. Take retail delivery by 9/6/11. Lessee will pay excess wear and tear charges. Payments may be higher in some states. Not available with other offers. Residency restrictions apply. 6. Not available with some other offers. Monthly payments is $16.67 for every $1,000 you finance. Example down payment: 24.1%. Some customers will not qualify. Take retail delivery by 9/6/11. See dealer for details. 7. Example based on National Average vehicle selling price. Each dealer sets it’s own price. Your payments may vary. Payments are for a 2011 Regal CXL with an MSRP of $26,995.39 monthly payments total $10,101. Option to purchase at lease end for an amount to be determined at lease signing, plus $350 or turn in vehicle and pay a $395 termination fee. Mileage charge of $.18/mile over 39,000 miles. Lessor must approve lease. Take retail delivery by 9/6/11. Lessee will pay excess wear and tear charges. Payments may be higher in some states. Not available with other offers. Residency restrictions apply.


ARTS Life

JULY 24, 2011

Visit www.toledofreepress.com

n A51

MUSIC

By Jason Mack

Toledo Free Press Star Staff Writer jmack@toledofreepress.com

Kyle White put her autobiography to music with her second album “On With the Show,” which she is debuting at a CD release party July 24. The album is heavily influenced by White’s family. It features a variety of instruments such as violin, trumpet, dobro and mandolin. White’s father Don plays the banjo on three songs. “He’s been a huge influence on me musically,” she said. “I’ve been surrounded by live music my entire life. My dad’s friends are all musicians. My grandfather [Robert White] is on the wall at the SeaGate Centre for the Lake Erie West Hall of Fame. My dad is an exceptional banjo player and a great bass player, guitar player and singer. It was great to have him on the CD. It’s something I’ll always have.” The album was also heavily influenced by White’s sister Tamara. White wrote the song “Forever Friend” for her sister when she was sick. “The album would have been done a lot sooner, but all of 2009 my sister was really sick,” White said. “We didn’t know exactly what was going to happen. I was sad and just wanted to write a tribute to her. She had to have a bone marrow transplant. There’s only a 20 percent chance a sibling will be a match, but luckily I was, so I was her donor. Out of the entire bone marrow floor at the Cleveland Clinic, only her and one other person made it. All of that was going on when I was planning on recording. I was driving to Cleveland every few days.” Tamara made a full recovery. “You would never even know anything was wrong with her now,” White said. “They said they’ve never seen anybody’s stem cells graft as fast as mine. I blamed it on all the Guinness I drink because it’s full of iron.” The title track, “On With the Show,” was written as a not-so-subtle hint to her fiancé before they got engaged. “We didn’t get engaged until we were together for five years,” White said. “I wrote that about a year and a half ago. It was kind of a message to him. It worked.” Every song on the album comes from experiences in White’s life. “I wrote a song about the river and sitting on my boat,” she said. “There’s a song called ‘August in Ohio’ about just hanging out on the front porch. I only write about my personal experiences. I’ve been writing for the past couple of years. I write sporadically. When a song

photo courtesy kyle white

Kyle White CD features original songs, local flavor

n

kyle white is touring to support her second album, ‘on with the show.’

comes to me, I just write it.” The CD also includes White’s composition “Glass Cities,” a top three finalist in the 2009 Toledo Free Press “Songs of Toledo” contest. Writing is still a relatively new experience for White. Her first album “Blue Holes in a Gray Sky” was released in 2009. “I played covers for eight years before I ever wrote a song,” White said. “Singing so many different kinds of music hones you in to what’s going to come out of you.” White might have never started a career in music if she hadn’t participated in a karaoke contest years ago. “When I was 19, I worked at Primetime and they had karaoke on Sundays,” White said. “I used to sing ‘Me and Bobby McGee’ and win the contest. The prize was $50 to the bar, so I would get pizza and pop for my friends. When the cover band Tito Slack was starting out, my friend said,

‘My boyfriend has a band. Why don’t you come sing with them in the basement?’ I sang a couple of songs and I was in the band.” After joining the band, White decided to take up an instrument. “I didn’t just want to be a singer, so I started teaching myself guitar,” she said. “I played for a couple years before I played guitar at a show.” White graduated from the University of Toledo with a degree in psychology. If she hadn’t participated in the karaoke contest, she might have been a school psychologist today. “I was going to go back and get my master’s in school psychology,” White said. “I decided to play music for a couple years and see how it goes. It never slowed down. I’m playing more and more. I’m lucky to be able to do something I love for a living.” Along with her solo career, White also plays in a cover band called Johnny Rocker and the Hitmen. The

band’s biggest claim to fame is playing at a John McCain rally. “It’s a complete 180 from my solo gigs,” White said. “It’s so much fun. We play ’60s, ’70s and ’80s and we do costume changes for each era. Sometimes people don’t even know it’s me because I’m in a big blonde afro and a disco costume. They are really fun to play with.” She also plays covers in her solo act and is happy to take requests. She learns two or three covers every week and has built a catalog of between 200 and 300 songs. “I’ve always had the kind of memory where if I took notes in school, I never had to look at them again,” White said. “I just kind of remember things. I have a really good memory, especially for music.” White has been playing in Toledo for 14 years and plans on sticking around, but she does love to travel. She has been to all but four of

the 50 states and has traveled across Europe several times. The last time she went to Europe, she caught a surprise performance. “We were jamming with these people at a bar in Amsterdam and Sublime showed up,” White said. “We didn’t know it, but they were playing at a place right next door to our hotel. They showed up to this open jam with only about 30 or 40 people and played a half hour set. I was jamming with the house band right before Sublime took the stage, so that was pretty cool.” White’s CD release party starts at 7 p.m. July 24 at Mulvaney’s Bunker located at 4945 Dorr St. There is no cover, and the show features 17-year-old Claire Cooper as the opening act. “I like giving younger people experience playing in front of people,” White said. “She’s a natural. It’s crazy. She is never the least bit nervous.” O


ARTS Life

A52 n Toledo Free Press

FAMILY PRACTICE

K

JULY 24, 2011

MoveOn.edu

nowledge has expanded so within the time constraints of a quickly and so exponen- human life. As dear and romantially in the past century ticized as our old learning styles that schools can only cover so much and topic areas may still feel to us, ground in a year and can only ex- the whole point of education is to plore individual topics to a minimal open ourselves up to new ideas and ways of life. Only extent. As much as I keeping the educaenjoy the fuzzy feeling tion machine idling I have when my childefeats the purpose of dren are learning the its existence. same thing I learned Cursive writing is in school, I realize that not alone on the shelf constant updating of of our antiquated the curriculum is neceducational ideas. essary to provide them As our children conwith the skills they tinue to learn inches, will need in an everShannon SZYPERSKI gallons and Fahrenchanging world. A recent decision by Indiana to drop heit in a meters, liters and Celsius cursive writing from its curriculum world, the U.S. is becoming more requirements is a timely example of and more like that one friend you an education system’s willingness to have to invite to events via email because she’s still waiting to be move forward. The announcement of cursive convinced of Facebook’s value. At writing’s imminent demise in In- some point, the world may just stop diana, however, was met with im- remembering to invite the U.S. to mediate expressions of sadness and the party altogether. As much as we’d like to convince disappointment by those who consider its elimination an affront to ourselves that the decision to focus the educational process. Of course, on only one language is a sign of the widespread lamenting I came our unity and patriotism, we may be upon was done from keyboards all passing up the chance for our chilacross the country without a stroke dren to reap the cognitive benefits of written cursive in sight. As impas- of bilingualism. Perhaps more imsioned as the pleas to give cursive a portantly, the world may also realize stay of execution are, prolonging one day soon that English is not the its existence in schools would ulti- most widely spoken nor the easiest language to learn as they continue mately not stave off the inevitable. It will no doubt seem odd to to teach their own children a backup those of us who grew up with the from the early years on. Regardless of individual curpractice when up-and-coming generations cannot produce their own riculum adjustments, the most imsignatures. However, it is also un- portant job our educational system likely that future generations will has in this ever-expanding age of ever have a need to authenticate a information is producing enthusidocument with something other astic, lifelong learners who possess than a PIN number, a thumbprint, the tools and the drive to continua scan of an iris or a swab of DNA. ally take their own educational Although I understand and be- lives to the next level. It is no longer lieve in the wax-on/wax-off phi- possible at this point to teach all losophy that learning one thing that is available to be absorbed, may lead to the comprehension of but it is still possible to create a and ability to do another, the po- legion of learners willing to inditential breadth of knowledge avail- vidually do the absorbing. As our able today is just too great not to educators strive to accomplish this continuously shed some of the old feat, we, as parents, must assume to make room for the new. Just equal responsibility. It is sometimes difficult to pack as math is no longer taught using units of bushels and pecks, styl- up only the essentials and move on, ized handwriting must move out so taking a moment to mourn our to make way for more useful and curriculums of the past is an appropriate and respectful gesture. long-lasting skills. We now live in a world of such However, we must also be willing vast and detailed learning opportu- to find and celebrate the bright nities that even the most educated side of a new academic life. Even among us can only excel in lim- though the computer age may be ited areas of the knowledge-sphere squelching the handwritten word

and forever changing our vernacular, things like text messaging and social networking have actually resurrected the typewritten word once endangered by the advent of the telephone.

Although via keyboard, I now write more in a day than I likely did as a teenager with a telephone stuck to my left ear. The world keeps moving in new and unfamiliar circles, and we must

do our best to keep up and try to enjoy the ride. O Shannon and her husband Michael are raising three children in Sylvania. Email her at letters@toledofreepress.com.

NO MORE HUNGER.

Toledo made the top ten list, but not one we want to be on! Did you know that Toledo is ranked #10 for poverty in the U.S per capita? Feed Lucas County Children is home to the largest hot meal summer program in the state of Ohio. We are trying our best to address the huge need in Lucas County, but we need your support. More than a quarter of our children our living below the poverty line. The need is clearly there. We welcome you to visit our website or our building and see for yourself the obstacles we are facing. We welcome any contribution, large or small, that can help us continue to fulfill this most basic need. Won’t you help us Feed Lucas County Children?

www.feedlucaschildren.org

This institution is an equal opportunity provider.

Our s facilitieing are gon! gree


ARTS Life

JULY 24, 2011

Visit www.toledofreepress.com

n A53

TRAVEL

By Art Weber

Toledo Free Press Travel Editor aweber@toledofreepress.com

Granville, Ohio, is one of those classic communities that’s always fun to visit. “We’re just so darn cute,” said local historian Jeff Gill. “We’re Currier and Ives at Christmastime and Norman Rockwell on the Fourth of July.” Americana personified. Granville is sedate, dignified, beautiful, and festooned with flowers this time of year. It’s home to Dennison University and some of Ohio’s best-known inns, including the Granville Inn and, right across Main Street, Buxton Inn. It’s all just minutes east of Columbus, and even closer to Newark with its Hopewell Culture earthworks, the Works Museum and the headquarters for Longaberger Baskets, which always makes first-time viewers exclaim that the structure looks like a picnic basket. Granville itself has all the ameni-

48 HOUR

ties and sometimes something extra. Buxton Inn is rife with stories of guests experiencing, um, paranormal activity. Usually in the form of Major Buxton himself, the Lady in Blue or even her cat, which reputedly curls up at the feet of some guests. Orrville Orr and his wife Audrey have owned the inn since 1972. He’s a quietly engaging man in his 70s. If his demeanor isn’t enough to elicit trust, then his divinity school training should cinch it. He struggles a bit with the notion of ghosts permeating his establishment. Yet his own experiences, none of them unpleasant, have brought him to say, “I don’t try to explain these things, they just happen. They just appear as real people.” The night clerk, who roams the empty old halls without the benefit of comforting companionship, has a litany of experiences, including checking out frantic guests rattled by middle-of-the-night experiences. “The last one was already on the

road headed out of town when he called,” the clerk said. “He said he and his wife had left and they didn’t care what we did with their credit card.” Gill talked about ghosts to a group that was dining at the Buxton, reassuring them that the encounters have been friendly and mostly restricted to several of the oldest rooms. Bonnie Bounell, an owner who died in one of those rooms, is also called the “Lady in Blue” and her ghostly visits are often preceded by the strong fragrance of gardenias, her favorite. “You may experience that,” Gill said. “I think I already have,” said one of the guests, suddenly turning to his companion. “Earlier today I thought it was odd you were wearing such a strong perfume, and I almost said something to you.” It turned out his companion was neither wearing perfume, nor did she smell it herself, though she was right there. “Good luck,” Orr said, as the couple went upstairs to bed. O

SALE

SALE EXTENDED THRU THE END OF THE MONTH! Showroom Only Savings!

20 OFF %

Champion Windows & Siding*

OR 60 Month Special Financing†

toledo free press photo by art weber

Granville visit offers cute thrills, ghostly chills

Getting There

Granville is located about 160 miles from Toledo, a three-hour drive via I-75 and US23 to the Columbus area and then via several routes to choose from. For information on the Buxton Inn call 740-587-0001 or visit the website www.BuxtonInn.com. To plan a route, use 313 East Broadway, Granville, 43023. Searching the Web for the inn will yield numerous sites referencing stories from the inn. For area attractions contact the Greater Licking County Convention and Visitors Bureau, 800-589-8224 or visit www.lccvb.com. O

15 OFF %

Patio Rooms* WE ALSO DO • PORCH ENCLOSURES • SCREEN ROOMS • PATIO COVERS

When you compare and choose Champion, you win every time.™

Call for FREE in-home estimates

1-888-851-8597 ChampionFactoryDirect.com Visit Our Showroom: 6214 Monclova Road •

MAUMEE

Showroom Hours: M-Th 9-8; F-Sa 9-5; Su 11-5 Bring in your window measurements, or photos and patio measurements for special on-the-spot pricing

This Weekend Champion will DOUBLE the donation!

Tax Credits Available**

*Minimum purchase of 3 windows, 600 sq. ft. of siding, or 140 sq. ft. patio room required. All prices include expert installation. Sorry, no adjustments can be made on prior sales. See store for complete warranty. Cannot be combined with other offers. Offers expire 7-31-11. †See store for details. **See your tax consultant for details. MILIC#2102183197 Offer Code: 12846 © Champion Window Mfg. & Supply Co., 2011


ARTS Life

A54 n Toledo Free Press

JULY 24, 2011

BOOKS

Toledo Museum of Art releases new book about artifacts By Zach Davis

Toledo Free Press Staff Writer zdavis@toledofreepress.com

The Toledo Museum of Art has published a new book about its Egyptian artifacts collection, “Egypt in Toledo: The Ancient Egyptian Collection at the Toledo Museum of Art.” “The idea had been to produce one of our books on our Egypt collection with more of a thematic presentation with just a few highlights,” Curatorial Projects and Publications Manager Paula Reich said. “It sort of morphed into something a little more substantial, a larger book that really highlighted more of the collection.” Ancient Egyptian art has been a fixture at the Toledo Museum of Art since 1903 when a mummified cat, the first item donated that wasn’t a painting, was brought to the museum. In 1906, founders Edward Drum-

mond Libbey and Florence Scott Libbey shipped 11 crates of artifacts from Cairo to Toledo to help begin the museum’s collection. During the next two decades, the Libbeys collected more Egyptian artifacts to send back to the museum. “Without the art of ancient Egypt the Toledo Museum of Art might not have grown so swiftly in the hearts of its community,” writes Museum Director Brian Kennedy in the book’s forward. The book was originally proposed more than a decade ago by Curator of Ancient Art Kurt T. Luckner before his death in 1995. He suggested William H. Peck as the author. Peck is an archaeologist and former curator for the Detroit Institute of Arts. Sandra. E. Knudsen and Reich also contributed to the book. “Egypt in Toledo” is a 112-page book which includes an essay by Peck on Egyptian art and culture and examinations of more than 80 objects

NOW’S THE THE TIME TIME TO TO BUY! BUY! NOW’S Letme merepresent representyou youon onyour yoursale saleor orpurchase purchase Let

8171 8171Quarry QuarryView View Monclova Monclova22Bed Bed22Bath BathRanch RanchVilla Villa

WOW WOW $175,000 $175,000

145 S. St. Clair #11 Great Downtown Condo 3 Beds 2 Baths Rooftop Views $169,500

145 S. St. Clair #11 Great Downtown Condo 3 Beds 2 Baths Rooftop Views $169,500

2201 Townley

Lovely Brick 3 Bed Ranch Off River Road

$159,900

1723 Woodhurst Park Forest 4 Bed 2 ½ Bath Family Room

Only $149,900

2201 Townley

Rob Ludeman

419-290-0201 Rob Ludeman 419-866-8888 419-290-0201

419-866-8888

Lovely Brick 3 Bed Ranch Off River Road

$159,900

1723Glen Woodhurst Park Forest Bed 2Ranch ½ Bath– Lovely! Family Room Only $144,900 $149,900 1854 Ellyn Brick 3 Bed 24 Bath 1854Midlawn Glen Ellyn Spacious Brick 3 Bed 2 Bath RanchRoom – Lovely! $144,900 2246 3 Bed – Family – Maumee Schools $124,000 3075 Byrne 2246S.Midlawn

Totally Remodeled 2 Bath WOW Spacious 3 Bed –Beverly FamilyBrick Room3 Bed – Maumee Schools $144,900 $124,000

3075 S. Byrne

Totally Remodeled Beverly Brick 3 Bed 2 Bath WOW $144,900

111 Woodside

Swanton 3 Bed 2 Bath Ranch – Great Lot!

$119,900

925 Shadow Lane Sharp 2 Bed 2 Bath Villa By Inverness Reduced $99,900

111 Woodside

932 Askin

Swanton 3 Bed 2 Bath Ranch – Great Lot!

Maumee New Listing 4 Beds 2 Baths

$119,900

JUST $89,500

925 Shadow Lane Sharp 2 Bed 2 Bath Villa By Inverness Reduced $99,900

For more of my listings, contact Maumee New Listing 4 Beds 2 Baths JUST $89,500 www.robertludeman.danberry.com E-mail: For morerob.ludeman@bex.net of my listings, contact

932 Askin

Life Member TBR Million Dollar Club www.robertludeman.danberry.com

E-mail: rob.ludeman@bex.net

Life Member TBR Million Dollar Club

spanning 5,000 years. The book retails for $24.95 in the Museum Store and is also available

online at www.TMAStore.org. “It looks beautiful,” Reich said. “We wanted something that wasn’t

FOLLOW Us!

Want to know what's happening at Walt Churchill's Market?

so academic looking and was a little more dynamic and we used color and I think it turned out great.” O

FRIDAY NIGHT EvENTs MauMee is going K-BoB Krazy

Every Friday in July from 4-7 p.m. • Each week will offer a selection of 3 Kabobs for you to mix or match. - 1 Kabob - $5.99 - 2 Kabobs - $9.99 - 3 Kabobs - $13.99 - Corn on the Cob - $1.50 All AmericAn night! • You Choice: Beef, Chicken or Shrimp K-Bobs on the Grill • Served with Grilled Corn on the Cob and Mojo Sauce

Follow us on twitter @ waltchurchills

Follow us on Facebook @ waltchurchillsmarket

PerrysBurg is grilling out Every Friday in July from 4-7 p.m. • Choose from Tall Grass Hamburgers, Tanks Hot Dogs, Tanks Hungarian Sausage, Marinated “Italian” Chicken Breast, BBQ Ribs.

NEW AT WCM in Maumee! Featuring Made to order suBs & sandwiches

last chance!

Sandwich and Sub Bar Open 11-6 Daily

• FRESH Baked Artisan Breads • Thumann’s Lunch Meats • Wide assortment of Cheeses, Toppings & Condiments. Having a party? Call ahead to place your order 419-794-4000

www.waltchurchillsmarket.com (Visit our website for this weeks Walt’s Weekly Specials.)

26625 N. Dixie Hwy., Perrysburg Follow us on twitter @ waltchurchills

419.872.6900

Hours: Mon-Sun 7 a.m.– 10 p.m.

3320 Briarfield Blvd., Maumee

419.794.4000

Hours: Mon-Sat 7:30 a.m.–9 p.m. Sun 8 a.m.–9 p.m.

Follow us on Facebook @ waltchurchillsmarket

Effective 7/25/11 - 7/31/11 | We reserve the right to limit quantities. | No sales to vendors. | Not responsible for pictorial or typographical errors.


TV Listings

JULY 24, 2011 Sunday Morning ABC 13 CBS 11 FOX 36 NBC 24 PBS 30 A&E BRAVO COM DISN ESN FAM FOOD HGTV LIF MTV TBS TCM TNT USA WTO5

8 am

8:30

MOVIES

9 am

9:30

1 pm

1:30

11 am

11:30

July 24, 2011 12 pm

12:30

2 pm

2:30

Daytime Afternoon 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

2:30

3 pm

3:30

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 Dog Dog CSI: Miami Varied Programs Movie Phineas Phineas Phineas Deck SportsCenter Report Football My Wife My Wife ’70s Show ’70s Show 30-Minute Ingred. Fix Cooking Secrets Varied Programs Project Runway Project Runway Varied Programs Raymond Jim Jim The Office Movie Varied Programs Cold Case The Closer Varied Programs Wendy Williams Show The Tyra Show

4 pm

4:30

5 pm

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

5:30

The Sopranos

News News News at Five How I Met Raymond The Dr. Oz Show Cyberch’e Criminal Varied

RENO 911! Good NFL Live ’70s Show 30-Minute

South Pk Tosh.0 Shake It Wizards SportsNation Secret-Teen Contessa Paula

Futurama ANT Farm Jim Rome ’70s Show Giada

Cold Files Varied Made Friends Friends Law & Order Friends

Friends

3:30

4 pm

4:30

5 pm

5:30

6 pm

6:30

7 pm

7:30

8 pm

8:30

9 pm

9:30

6:30

News ABC News News News TMZ News News NBC News News NewsHour The First 48

Scrubs Scrubs Phineas Good SportsCenter Still Stnd Still Stnd Iron Chef America First Place First Place Mysteries Varied Programs ’70s Show ’70s Show ’70s Show ’70s Show Raymond Raymond King King Movie Varied Law & Order Varied Programs NCIS Chris Chris Fam. Guy Fam. Guy

July 24, 2011

MOVIES

3 pm

6 pm

n A55

10 pm 10:30 11 pm 11:30

Insider Paid We Have a Dream Brothers & Sisters Game Show Expedition Imp. News ABC Funny Home Videos Extreme Makeover Castle “Countdown” Body of Proof (CC) News Carpet Criminal Minds (CC) 2011 Tour de France PGA Tour Golf RBC Canadian Open, Final Round. (N) (Live) (CC) News CBS 60 Minutes (N) (CC) Big Brother (N) (CC) Same Name (N) CSI: Miami (CC) News Criminal Formula One Racing Paid Outdoors The Unit “Play 16” The Closer “Slippin”’ Bones (CC) Mother Mother American Burgers Simpsons Cleveland Fam. Guy American News Recap Office Office To Be Announced FINA Aquatics World Championships (CC) Pantech Action Sports (N) (S Live) (CC) News News Dateline NBC (CC) America’s Got Talent (CC) The Marriage Ref (N) News Paid Workshop Woods. Kitchen Sewing POV (CC) Independent Lens Make ’em Laugh Austin City Limits NOVA (CC) (DVS) Nature (CC) (DVS) Masterpiece Mystery! (N) (CC) World Lit Great Performances ››› A Time to Kill (1996, Drama) Sandra Bullock. (CC) Criminal Minds (CC) Criminal Minds (CC) Criminal Minds (CC) Criminal Minds (CC) Criminal Minds (CC) Criminal Minds (CC) The Glades (N) (CC) The Glades (CC) Rocco’s Dinner Party Flipping Out (CC) Flipping Out (CC) Flipping Out (CC) Housewives/NYC Housewives/NYC Housewives/NYC Housewives/NYC Housewives/NJ Housewives/NJ Happens Jersey Scrubs Scrubs ›› Accepted (2006) Justin Long. (CC) ›› Beerfest (2006) Jay Chandrasekhar. ›› Year One (2009) Jack Black. (CC) › Joe Dirt (2001) David Spade. (CC) Tosh.0 Futurama Ugly Super Good Good Shake It Shake It ANT Farm Phineas Fish Phineas Good Prank Random ANT Farm Vampire Wizards Shake It Good ANT Farm Random Wizards Shake It Good Random Golf 2011 ESPY’s (CC) Soccer SportsCenter (N) Baseball Tonight (N) MLB Baseball Atlanta Braves at Cincinnati Reds. (Live) SportsCenter (N) ››› Back to the Future Part III ››› Harry Potter and the Prisoner of Azkaban (2004, Fantasy) ››› Harry Potter and the Goblet of Fire (2005) Daniel Radcliffe, Rupert Grint. ››› Harry Potter and the Order of the Phoenix (2007, Fantasy) Restaurant: Im. Extreme Chef Diners Diners Meat Candy Cupcake Wars T. Cook Best Food Network Star Challenge (N) Food Network Star Iron Chef America Extreme Chef First Pla. First Pla. Property Property Get, Sold Get, Sold House Hunters For Rent For Rent Unsella House Hunters Cash, Holmes Holmes Holmes Inspection House Hunters Design Star (CC) Project Runway (CC) Project Runway (CC) Project Runway (CC) Project Runway (CC) Sins of the Mother (2010) Jill Scott. (CC) Magic Beyond Words: J.K. Rowling Story Drop Dead Diva (N) The Protector “Beef” The Protector “Beef” Teen Awkward. ›› Honey (2003, Drama) Jessica Alba. ›› You Got Served (2004, Drama) Disaster Awkward. Teen Mom (CC) Teen Mom (CC) Teen Mom (CC) The Challenge The Truth Below Sahara MLB Baseball (CC) ›› The Man (2005, Comedy) › Blue Streak (1999) Martin Lawrence. (CC) ›› The Replacements (2000) Keanu Reeves. (CC) ›› The Replacements (2000) ››› Gidget (1959) ›› Top Secret Affair (1957), Kirk Douglas ››› Will Success Spoil Rock Hunter? ››› The Miracle Worker (1962) (CC) (DVS) The Thing From Another World ››› Land of the Pharaohs (1955) Jack Hawkins. Librarian: Return to King Solomon’s Mine The Librarian: Curse of the Judas Chalice Leverage (CC) Leverage (CC) Leverage (CC) Leverage (CC) Leverage (N) (CC) Falling Skies (N) Leverage (CC) ››› The Bourne Ultimatum (2007) Matt Damon. (CC) Indiana Jones and the Kingdom of the Crystal Skull Law & Order: SVU Law & Order: SVU Law & Order: SVU Law & Order: SVU In Plain Sight (N) White Collar (CC) Bridget Jones Made Scrubs Cold Case (CC) Friends Friends Chris Chris Two Men Two Men Heartland (CC) (DVS) Heartland Ty returns. ›› Teen Wolf (1985) Michael J. Fox. Cold Case (CC)

Monday 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

10:30

Good Morning News This Week-Amanpour Conklin Bridges Roundtabl Preview Your Morning Sunday CBS News Sunday Morning (N) Nation Leading Mass Paid Prog. Paid Prog. Paid Prog. Paid Prog. Fox News Sunday Paid Prog. Makeover Paid Prog. Paid Prog. Formula One Racing Today (N) (CC) Meet the Press (N) Van Impe Paid Prog. Cash Flow Paid Prog. To Be Announced Sid Cat in the Super Dinosaur Radar Toledo Globe Trekker Antiques Roadshow Celeb. Ghost Stories The Sopranos (CC) The Sopranos (CC) The Sopranos (CC) The Glades “Gibtown” Housewives/NJ Happens Housewives/NYC Happens Rocco’s Dinner Party Rocco’s Dinner Party ›› Tenacious D in: The Pick of Destiny (2006) ›› Balls of Fury (2007) Dan Fogler. (CC) Scrubs Scrubs Mickey Pirates Phineas Phineas Good Shake It Random Random Wizards Wizards SportsCenter (N) (CC) Outside Reporters SportsCenter (N) (Live) (CC) Golf ››› Back to the Future (1985) ››› Back to the Future Part II (1989) Michael J. Fox. Back-Future III United Hook, Line Dinners 30-Minute Hungry Guy’s Barbecue Cooking Chopped Block Holmes Holmes Inspection Decked Disaster Yard House H. House Hunters Hour of Power (CC) J. Osteen Meaning Project Runway (CC) Project Runway (CC) Project Runway (CC) Awkward. True Life True Life True Life Teen Mom (CC) Teen Mom Home Imp. ›› The Mummy Returns (2001) Brendan Fraser. ›› Sahara (2005) Matthew McConaughey. (CC) ›› The Girl Most Likely (1957) Jane Powell. ››› The Canterville Ghost (1944) (CC) ››› Gidget (1959) Franklin & Bash (CC) Leverage (CC) Falling Skies (CC) ›› The Librarian: Quest for the Spear (2004) Paid Prog. J. Osteen Royal Pains (CC) Necessary Roughness “Pilot” In Plain Sight (CC) Bourne Paid Prog. Paid Prog. Old House For Home Paid Prog. Paid Prog. Paid Prog. Raceline Bridget Jones’s Diary

Sunday 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

10 am

Visit www.toledofreepress.com

7 pm

7:30

MOVIES

8 pm

8:30

9 pm

9:30

10 pm

10:30

July 25, 2011 11 pm

11:30

Ent Insider The Bachelorette (N) (CC) Extreme Makeover News Nightline Wheel Jeopardy! How I Met Mike Two Men Mike Hawaii Five-0 (CC) News Letterman The Office The Office Hell’s Kitchen (N) (CC) MasterChef (N) (CC) Fox Toledo News Seinfeld King/Hill Jdg Judy Jdg Judy America’s Got Talent Law Order: CI Harry’s Law (CC) News Jay Leno NewsHour Business Antiques Roadshow Antiques Roadshow Abraham-Mary Charlie Rose (N) (CC) The First 48 (CC) Hoarders (CC) Hoarders “Ron; Carol” Intervention (N) (CC) Intervention “Erin” Matchmaker Housewives/NJ Housewives/NJ Housewives/NYC Housewives/NJ ›› Blue Collar Comedy Tour: The Movie (CC) Sunny Sunny Sunny Sunny Daily Colbert Phineas Phineas Random Shake It ›› Ella Enchanted (2004) (CC) Fish Phineas Vampire MLB Baseball Pittsburgh Pirates at Atlanta Braves. (Live) (CC) Baseball Tonight (N) SportsCenter (N) (CC) Secret-Teen Secret-Teen Switched at Birth (N) Secret-Teen The 700 Club (N) (CC) Chopped Unwrap Candy Diners Diners T. Cookies T. Cookies Challenge Hunters House House Hunters Design Star (N) (CC) Novogratz House H. House Hunters ››› Abducted (2007) Abandoned (2010) Brittany Murphy. (CC) Vanished, Beth How I Met How I Met True Life True Life MTV Special Teen Wolf (N) Teen Wolf Seinfeld Seinfeld Fam. Guy Fam. Guy Fam. Guy Fam. Guy Fam. Guy Fam. Guy Conan (N) ›› The Last Frontier ››› I Accuse! (1958) Jose Ferrer. (CC) ›››› The Ox-Bow Incident (1943) They Wnt Law & Order The Closer (CC) The Closer (N) (CC) Rizzoli & Isles (N) The Closer (CC) NCIS “Legend” (CC) NCIS “Legend” (CC) WWE Monday Night RAW (N) (S Live) (CC) Suits “Bail Out” (CC) Two Men Two Men Gossip Girl (CC) One Tree Hill (CC) Entourage Curb Scrubs Scrubs

SAVE ON EVERYDAY SERVICE Motorcraft® Premium Synthetic Blend Oil & Filter Change

$1995

Using the oil recommended for your vehicle helps save fuel.

Up to five quarts of Motorcraft® oil and Motorcraft oil filter. Taxes, diesel vehicles and disposal fees extra. See Quick Lane® Manager for vehicle applications and details. Offer valid with coupon. Expires: 12/31/11.

PLAY IT SAFE

FREE

Brake Inspection

SAVE ON BRAKE SERVICE WITH THE EXPERTS. Inspect brake friction material, caliper operation, rotors, drums, hoses and connections. Inspect parking brake for damage and proper operation. See Quick Lane® Manager for vehicle exclusions and details. Expires: 12/31/11.

Tuesday 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

7 pm

7:30

Ent Insider Wheel Jeopardy! The Office The Office Jdg Judy Jdg Judy NewsHour Business Jewels Jewels Flipping Out (CC) Daily Colbert Phineas Phineas E:60 (N) Pretty Little Liars (CC) Restaurant: Im. Hunters House Pawn Pawn Awkward. Teen Mom Seinfeld Seinfeld Elvis Mitchell: Under Law & Order Law & Order: SVU Two Men Two Men

MOVIES

8 pm

8:30

9 pm

9:30

10 pm

10:30

July 26, 2011 11 pm

11:30

Wipeout (CC) Game Show Combat Hospital (N) News Nightline NCIS (CC) (DVS) NCIS: Los Angeles 48 Hours Mystery (CC) News Letterman Hell’s Kitchen (N) (CC) MasterChef (N) (CC) Fox Toledo News Seinfeld King-Hill It’s Worth What? (N) America’s Got Talent (N) (S Live) (CC) News Jay Leno History Detectives (N) Mammoth Cave Frontline (N) (CC) Charlie Rose (N) (CC) Family Jewels Family Jewels Family Jewels Family Jewels Flipping Out (CC) Flipping Out (N) (CC) Flipping Out (CC) Housewives/NYC Futurama South Pk Tosh.0 Tosh.0 Tosh.0 (N) Work. Daily Colbert Good Shake it ›› Eloise at the Plaza (2003) (CC) Good Phineas Vampire World, Poker World, Poker Baseball Tonight (N) SportsCenter (N) (CC) Pretty Little Liars (N) Nine Lives Pretty Little Liars (CC) The 700 Club (N) (CC) Cupcake Wars (N) Chopped Chopped (N) T. Cookies Unwrap First Place First Place Property Property House Hunters For Rent Property American Pickers (CC) American Pickers (CC) Roseanne Roseanne Dance Moms (CC) Teen Mom (CC) Teen Mom (CC) Teen Mom (N) (CC) Awkward. Teen Mom The Office The Office The Office The Office The Office The Office Conan (N) ››› Five Graves to Cairo (1943, War) (CC) › The Black Tent (1957, War) Anthony Steel. Rizzoli & Isles (CC) Memphis Beat (N) HawthoRNe (N) (CC) Memphis Beat (CC) Law & Order: SVU White Collar (N) (CC) Covert Affairs (N) (CC) Necessary Roughness 90210 (CC) Shedding for Entourage Curb Scrubs Scrubs

GET WIPERS THAT DO THE WORK FOR YOU

Motorcraft® Premium Wear Indicator Wiper Blades Under

$20 Installed

With Wear Indicator that signals when to replace.

Per pair, installed. Taxes extra. See Quick Lane® Manager for vehicle applications and details. Offer valid with coupon. Expires: 12/11/11.

FREE

Car Wash with any purchase or service!

Quick Lane at Brondes Ford Toledo 5545 Secor Road, Toledo, OH 43623

419-471-2969 10” x 10.25” ad


TV Listings

A56 n Toledo Free Press Wednesday 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

7 pm

7:30

MOVIES

8:30

7 pm

7:30

9:30

10 pm

10:30

MOVIES

8 pm

8:30

9 pm

9:30

10 pm

10:30

July 27, 2011 11 pm

11:30

News Nightline News Letterman Seinfeld King-Hill News Jay Leno Charlie Rose (N) (CC) Billy Billy Rocco’s Dinner Party Daily Colbert Phineas Vampire SportsCenter (N) (CC) The 700 Club (N) (CC) Diners Diners House Property How I Met How I Met Challenge Challenge Conan (N) ››› The Nanny (1965) Franklin & Bash (CC) Burn Notice (CC) Scrubs Scrubs

1 pm

1:30

2 pm

2:30

Thursday 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

July 29, 2011 11 pm

11:30

Ent Insider Shark Tank (CC) Primetime: What 20/20 (CC) News Nightline Wheel Jeopardy! Flashpoint (N) (CC) CSI: NY (CC) Blue Bloods (CC) News Letterman The Office The Office Bones (PA) (CC) House (PA) (CC) Fox Toledo News Seinfeld King-Hill Jdg Judy Jdg Judy Who Do You Dateline NBC (N) (CC) News Jay Leno NewsHour Business Wash. Deadline American Experience Need to Know (N) (CC) Charlie Rose (N) (CC) Criminal Minds (CC) Criminal Minds (CC) Criminal Minds (CC) Criminal Minds (CC) The Glades (CC) Jerseylicious Platinum Hit (N) ›› How to Lose a Guy in 10 Days (2003) Kate Hudson. How Lose Daily Colbert Tosh.0 Tosh.0 Comedy Comedy Gabriel Iglesias: Fat John Pinette Wizards Shake It Good ANT Farm Phineas Vampire Vampire Random Good ANT Farm X Games From Los Angeles. (N) (Live) (CC) SportsCenter (N) (CC) Funniest Home Videos Funniest Home Videos Funniest Home Videos Funniest Home Videos The 700 Club (N) (CC) Diners Diners Diners Diners Diners Diners Heat See. Best Thing Chocolati. Chocolati. Hunters House Hunters Hunters Hunters Hunters Hunters Hunters Hunters Hunters Reba (CC) Reba (CC) Reba (CC) Reba (CC) Reba (CC) Reba (CC) The Protector “Beef” How I Met How I Met Jersey Shore (CC) Jersey Shore (CC) Jersey Shore (CC) Jersey Shore (CC) Jersey Shore (CC) Seinfeld Seinfeld Fam. Guy Fam. Guy ›› Legally Blonde (2001) Reese Witherspoon. Legally Blonde 2 › Cynthia (1947) Under Mexicali Stars ›› The Last Musketeer (1951) Two-Gun Man Harlem Law & Order ›› Deep Impact (1998) Robert Duvall, Tea Leoni. (CC) ››› Patriot Games (1992) (CC) NCIS (CC) NCIS “Jet Lag” (CC) NCIS “Double Identity” CSI: Crime Scene Royal Pains (CC) Two Men Two Men Nikita “Echoes” (CC) Supernatural (CC) Entourage Curb Scrubs Scrubs

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

9 pm

Ent Insider Middle Family Family Happy Primetime Nightline Wheel Jeopardy! Big Brother (N) (CC) Criminal Minds CSI: Crime Scene The Office The Office So You Think You Can Dance (N) (S Live) (CC) Fox Toledo News Jdg Judy Jdg Judy Minute to Win It (N) America’s Got Talent Love in the Wild (N) NewsHour Business NOVA “Lizard Kings” NOVA (CC) (DVS) American Experience The First 48 (CC) Storage Storage Storage Storage Storage Storage Rocco’s Dinner Party Housewives/NJ Flipping Out (CC) Rocco’s Dinner Party Daily Colbert Chappelle Chappelle South Pk South Pk South Pk Jon Phineas Phineas Good Prank Wizards ANT Farm Random Good MLB Baseball Teams TBA. (N Subject to Blackout) (Live) (CC) Baseball Tonight (N) Georgia Melissa Melissa Georgia ›› Jersey Girl (2004) Ben Affleck. Premiere. Cupcake Wars Heat See. Best Thing Food Network Star Restaurant: Im. Hunters House Property Income Income Property Brothers (CC) Hunters Pawn Pawn Pawn Pawn Roseanne Roseanne Dance Moms (N) (CC) Sil. Library Awkward. MTV Special The Challenge: Rivals The Challenge: Rivals Seinfeld Seinfeld Browns Browns Payne Payne Payne Payne ››› Picnic (1955) ››› Sitting Pretty (1948) Premiere. ›› Kathleen (1941, Drama) The Mentalist (CC) The Mentalist (CC) Franklin & Bash (N) Bones (CC) NCIS (CC) NCIS (CC) Royal Pains (N) (CC) Necessary Roughness Two Men Two Men America’s Next Model America’s Next Model Entourage Curb

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

8 pm

JULY 24, 2011

7 pm

7:30

8:30

9 pm

9:30

10 pm

8 am

8:30

MOVIES

9 am

9:30

10 am

10:30

3:30

4 pm

4:30

5 pm

5:30

6 pm

July 28, 2011 11 pm

11:30

11 am

11:30

July 30, 2011 12 pm

12:30

Good Morning News So Raven So Raven Hannah Suite Life School Repla Your Morning Saturday Doodlebop Trollz (CC) Horseland Horseland Memory Paid Prog. 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 Willa’s Pearlie (EI) Sid Cat in the Super Dinosaur MotorWk Our Ohio Wild Ohio Michigan Nature (CC) (DVS) Fast Times Sell House Sell House Sell House Sell House Flipping Vegas (CC) Flipping Vegas (N) Tabatha’s Salon Take Matchmaker Matchmaker Matchmaker Housewives/NJ Comedy Entourage ›› Bill & Ted’s Bogus Journey (1991) (CC) ›› Police Academy (1984) Steve Guttenberg. Mickey Pirates Phineas Phineas Buttowski Fish Random Random Wizards Wizards SportsCenter (CC) SportsCenter (CC) Golf RICOH Women’s British Open, Third Round. (N) (Live) ›› Now and Then (1995) ››› Fried Green Tomatoes (1991, Drama) Kathy Bates, Jessica Tandy. Overboard Day Off Guy’s Aarti Party Mexican Cooking Ingred. Fix Paula Home Secrets 30-Minute Makeover Property Income Yard Yard Yard Crashers Crashers Bath Bath Look Sexy Paid Prog. Paid Prog. Paid Prog. Paid Prog. Paid Prog. Will/Grace Project Runway (CC) Jersey Shore (CC) Jersey Shore (CC) Jersey Shore (CC) Jersey Shore (CC) Jersey Shore Prince Prince ›› Mamma Mia! (2008) Meryl Streep, Pierce Brosnan. Legally Blonde 2 ››› Rembrandt (1936) (CC) ››› Snowfire (1958, Drama) Zorro Zorro Tarzan-Devil Law & Order HawthoRNe (CC) Rizzoli & Isles (CC) The Closer (CC) Law & Order Paid Prog. Paid Prog. White Collar (CC) Covert Affairs (CC) Burn Notice (CC) Suits (CC) Sonic X Sonic X Yu-Gi-Oh! Sonic X Dragon Dragon Yu-Gi-Oh! Yu-Gi-Oh! Dog Tales Green

MOVIES

3 pm

10:30

Ent Insider Wipeout (N) (CC) Expedition Impossible Rookie Blue (N) (CC) News Nightline Wheel Jeopardy! Big Bang Rules Big Brother (N) (CC) The Mentalist (CC) News Letterman The Office The Office So You Think Glee (CC) Fox Toledo News Seinfeld King-Hill Jdg Judy Jdg Judy Commun Parks The Office 30 Rock Law & Order: SVU News Jay Leno NewsHour Business Radar Toledo Masterpiece Mystery! (CC) (DVS) Sun Stud Charlie Rose (N) (CC) The First 48 (CC) The First 48 (CC) The First 48 (CC) The First 48 (CC) The First 48 (CC) Housewives/NYC Housewives/NYC Housewives/NYC Housewives/NYC Happens NYC Daily Colbert South Pk South Pk Futurama Futurama Futurama Ugly Amer Daily Colbert Phineas Phineas Good Shake it ›› 16 Wishes (2010) Debby Ryan. Good Phineas Vampire X Games From Los Angeles. (N) (Live) (CC) SportsCenter (N) (CC) ›› Bruce Almighty (2003) Jim Carrey. ›› Evan Almighty (2007) Steve Carell. The 700 Club (N) (CC) 24 Hour Rest. Battle 24 Hour Rest. Battle Chopped Extreme Chef (N) Iron Chef America Hunters House First Place Selling NY Selling NY Novogratz House Hunters House Hunters Project Runway (CC) To Be Announced Project Runway (N) (CC) Dance Moms (CC) How I Met Disaster Disaster Teen Mom (CC) Teen Mom (CC) Jersey Shore Jersey Shore Seinfeld Seinfeld ›› Bedtime Stories (2008) Adam Sandler. (CC) Fam. Guy Fam. Guy Conan (N) When’s-Birth. ››› Princess Tam-Tam (1935) ››› The Band’s Visit (2007) ››› Rana’s Wedding Bones (CC) Bones (CC) Bones (CC) Bones (CC) CSI: NY (CC) NCIS “Power Down” NCIS “Child’s Play” Burn Notice (N) (CC) Suits (N) (CC) Covert Affairs (CC) Two Men Two Men The Vampire Diaries Plain Jane (CC) Entourage Curb Scrubs Scrubs

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

MOVIES

8 pm

6:30

7 pm

7:30

8 pm

8:30

9 pm

9:30

July 30, 2011

10 pm 10:30 11 pm 11:30

› Bad Company (2002) Anthony Hopkins. Expedition Imp. X Games 17 From Los Angeles. (N) (CC) News ABC Insider Lottery ››› Harry Potter and the Chamber of Secrets (2002) (CC) News Anatomy Paid Skin Next on the Tee PGA Tour Golf Greenbrier Classic, Third Round. (N) (Live) (CC) News News Wheel Jeopardy! The Mentalist (CC) 48 Hours Mystery 48 Hours Mystery News America ›› Stick It (2006) Jeff Bridges. McCarver Base MLB Baseball Regional Coverage. (N) (S Live) (CC) Simpsons Simpsons Cops Cops Fam. Guy Cleveland News Seinfeld Fringe (PA) (CC) FINA Aquatics World Championships (CC) Golf U.S. Senior Open Championship, Third Round. (N) (CC) News News Senior Open Who Do You Law Order: CI Law & Order: SVU News SNL This Old House Hr John Quilting Great Performances (CC) Getaways Travel Steves Rudy Lawrence Welk Keeping Score Antiques Roadshow As Time... Vicar Adder Ohio Jewels Jewels Family Jewels Family Jewels Hoarders (CC) Hoarders (CC) Hoarders “Claudie” Hoarders (CC) Hoarders (CC) Hoarders (CC) Hoarders (CC) Hoarders (CC) Housewives/NJ Housewives/NJ Housewives/NJ Housewives/NYC Housewives/NYC House “Last Resort” House (CC) House “Painless” House “Big Baby” House (CC) House “Unfaithful” Scrubs Scrubs Scrubs Scrubs › Black Sheep (1996) Chris Farley. (CC) ›› Waiting... (2005) Ryan Reynolds. (CC) Gabriel Iglesias: Fat Daniel Tosh: Serious ›› Jackass: Number Two (2006) (CC) Jackass 2.5 (2007) Good Good Shake It Shake It Deck Deck Deck Deck Good ANT Farm Random Shake It ANT Farm ANT Farm ANT Farm Good Random Vampire Vampire Vampire Shake It ANT Farm SportsCenter (N) X Games From Los Angeles. (N) (Live) (CC) SportsCenter (N) NASCAR NASCAR Racing Nationwide Series: Kroger 200. (N) X Games From Los Angeles. (N) (Live) (CC) ›› Overboard (1987, Comedy) Goldie Hawn. ››› Hook (1991, Fantasy) Dustin Hoffman, Robin Williams. ››› The Parent Trap (1998) Lindsay Lohan, Dennis Quaid. ›››› Beauty and the Beast (1991, Fantasy) ›› The Goonies Contessa Giada Food Network Star Chopped Diners Diners Iron Chef America Challenge Flay Flay Diners Diners Diners Diners Diners Diners Iron Chef America Room Cr. Makeover Block Novo Buck Summer Candice Sarah 101 Design Star (CC) Favorite House Hunters Candice Block Secrets Room Cr. Color Spl. Novo House Hunters Hunters › New Best Friend (2002) Mia Kirshner. ›› Terror in the Family (1996, Drama) (CC) Confined (2010) David James Elliott. (CC) ›› Family Sins (2004) Kirstie Alley. (CC) The Client List (2010) Jennifer Love Hewitt. Confined (2010) (CC) Jersey Shore Jersey Shore (CC) Jersey Shore (CC) Jersey Shore (CC) Jersey Shore (CC) Jersey Shore (CC) Jersey Shore (CC) Jersey Shore (CC) Jersey Shore Jersey Shore (CC) Jersey Shore (CC) Legally 2 ›› Legally Blonde (2001), Luke Wilson (CC) Jim Raymond Raymond Raymond Raymond Seinfeld Seinfeld King King ›› Miss Congeniality (2000) Sandra Bullock. (CC) ›› Miss Congeniality (2000) Tarzan ››› Alexander the Great (1956) Richard Burton. ››› Ivanhoe (1952) Robert Taylor. (CC) ›› Boy on a Dolphin (1957) Alan Ladd. ›››› All Quiet on the Western Front (1930, War) (CC) ››› Young Dr. Kildare (1938) ››› Clear and Present Danger (1994) Harrison Ford. (CC) ››› Air Force One (1997) Harrison Ford. (CC) ››› Patriot Games (1992) Harrison Ford. (CC) ›››› The Last Samurai (2003) Tom Cruise. Premiere. (CC) ›› The Golden Compass (2007) (CC) ››› The Chronicles of Narnia: Prince Caspian (2008) (CC) NCIS “Missing” (CC) NCIS “See No Evil” NCIS (CC) NCIS “Ravenous” NCIS (CC) In Plain Sight (CC) Icons Career Payne Browns Without a Trace (CC) American American Fam. Guy Fam. Guy Two Men Two Men Minor League Baseball Syracuse Chiefs at Toledo Mud Hens. (N) Entou Curb American American

Great Drinks.

You’re only a hops, skip, and jump a whey from the barley and a good time. a

Great Time.

We Have

WI-FI

NOW ! OPEN Blarney Bullpen

www.theblarneybullpen.com

601 Monroe St.

Right Across from Fifth Third Field

FFriday, id JJuly l 29th 29 h

Nine Lives

H HAPPY HOURR Mon-Fri 4-7 pm Live Entertainment Thurs-Fri-Sat

Good luck

HENS!

Saturday, July 30th

Beg to Differ

n Kitchete on a l open kends! wee

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

10” x 10.25” ad theblarneyirishpub.com


ComicS

JULY 24, 2011 Solution, tips and computer program at www.sudoku.com

Games

Visit www.toledofreepress.com

n A57

BIFF & RILEY

BY JEFF PAYDEN

DIZZY

BY DEAN HARRIS

n ANSWERS FOUND ON A58

Third Rock

Almanac

n ANSWERS FOUND ON A48

By Elizabeth Hazel

Your Tarotgram and Horoscope

JULY 24-30, 2011

Venus enters Leo and Mercury enters Virgo (28th); New Moon in Leo (30th) Aries (March 21-April 19)

Libra (September 23-October 22) Soul music. Reconsider your self-identity and image this

Flocks and swarms. Independent efforts go well this week, but there are mixed results when others are involved. Thursday presents roadblocks in one area, while another flourishes. People are strange creatures Friday. Renew old friendships Saturday.

week — is this based on inner promptings or what others expect? After Wednesday, inspiring messages help you work through inner challenges. True strengths are apparent as you interact with others Saturday.

Taurus (April 20-May 20)

Scorpio (October 23-November 21)

Offers and favors. Anxieties can mobilize or immobilize you as the week starts. Examine fears. Trust instincts and intuitions midweek — if things seem off to you, something’s wrong. Friday brings delays and conflicts. Learn and share new things Saturday.

Foreign and local. Some truths are comprehensive — some truths are specific to the individual. After Wednesday, you and people near you reveal inner truths through words and actions. Different truths don’t necessitate conflicts, but do require acceptance.

Gemini (May 21-June 21)

Sagittarius (November 22-December 21)

Bold initiative. Situations are magnified or minimized and get either too much or too little attention. Look for the middle ground Thursday and stay there. Extremes are prevalent in Friday’s discussions. Seek pleasure through music, dance and parties Saturday.

Migratory instincts. There’s too much on your plate and people demand results. You may have spurts of good luck and good timing Wednesday and Thursday. Consider both sides of situations Friday to resolve conflicts. Saturday is playful, gratitude returns.

Cancer (June 22-July 22)

Capricorn (December 22-January 19)

Dragon’s lair. The heat is on as the week begins. Stabilize a personal matter Tuesday. People near you may shift loyalties or interests after Wednesday: social, political and possibly feminist topics dominate discussions. Rebalance priorities Saturday.

Swap and haggle. Divergent ideas about methods present opportunities to test and prove effectiveness. Avoid prejudging results, as what works best may surprise you midweek. Be cautious with cash and keys Friday. Loved ones get rewards or results Saturday.

Leo (July 23-August 22)

Aquarius (January 20-February 18)

A rare breed. Emotional storms settle down by midweek, when excellent fiery energies give you a boost of confidence and freedom. Ties to others are helpful and profitable Thursday. Watch for confrontations Friday. Cultivate inner peace Saturday.

Deep mind diving. There’s an intense focus on relationships this week. People walk away from disappointments and seek new outlets for ambition. Reality checks test enthusiasm and commitment after Thursday. Dedicate face time to loved ones Saturday.

Virgo (August 23-September 22)

Pisces (February 19-March 20)

Recycling bin. People want you to adapt their priorities as the week begins. You find what you need Tuesday, but mix-ups and crossed wires can stall progress Thursday and Friday. Discussions with upbeat, sensible people restore confidence Saturday.

All too human. People can overcompensate as the week starts and may be trying to impress you. Amazing midweek events can change situations dramatically, but there may be a tense wait for old to give way to new. Everyone has a fish tale to share Saturday.

Elizabeth Hazel is a professional tarotist-astrologer and author. She gives readings every Wednesday at Attic on Adams above Manos Greek Restaurant. She may be contacted at ehazel@buckeye-express.com (c) 2011

“Eating Out”

TFP Crossword

by Dave DeChristopher

ACROSS

1

2

3

4

5

6

7

8

9

10

1. Some sleepwear 4. Levis Commons eatery with an upstairs patio 11. Quaker grain? 12. Judge Lance 13. Playbill 14. (----)-Salem, NC 15. Airport Highway eatery with Asian fusion cuisine and karaoke on Saturdays 18. Downtown mainstay with live music most evenings 22. Notice 25. “The Greatest” 27. Coming up soon 28. Heatherdowns eatery whose patio overlooks the Stranahan Theatre 30. TVs and live music are featured on the patio of this South End eatery 35. Piggy 37. The Treasure State 38. St. ---- de Sales High School

11

12

13

14

15

16

17

18

19

20

21

22

23

24

25

26

27

28

29

30

31

32

33

34

35

36

37

38

39

40

41

42

43

44

41. Captain’s diary 42. Wapiti 43. The patio is in the center of this multi-restaurant downtown spot

DOWN

1. 2. 3. 4. 5.

Pontiff Jam holder Bend low Brick makings ---- glance

6. Katie’s hubby 7. Hawkeye 8. Lincoln moniker 9. Old strings 10. World-weariness 16. Bottom line 17. Sign of the future 19. Old horse 20. Chicken/king link 21. Comfy recess 23. Little green legume 24. Tattled 26. It started in the 1950s 29. Holdings, collectively 30. Disney pachyderm 31. Rhodes of talk radio 32. Heavy weight 33. Stretch (for) 34. Aspect 36. “---- silly question...” 38. C old cousin 39. Russell of vintage Hollywood 40. ---- de France n ANSWERS FOUND ON A58


CLASSIFIED

A58 n Toledo Free Press

community

employment

legal notice

Education

THE FOLLOWING STORAGE UNITS WILL BE SOLD AT PUBLIC AUCTION BY LOCK-IT-UP, LLC ON OR AFTER 8-17-11 AT LEONARD’S AUCTION SERVICE 6350 CONSEAR RD OTTAWA LAKE, MI RICHARD LEONARD AUCTIONEER.

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

6424 MEMORIAL HWY OTTAWA LAKE MI 49267 2028 ANDRIA KREAIS 5431 JEFFS DOTY HOUSEHOLD. 3105 KURT HIATT 5253 WHITEFORD RD SYLVANIA HOUSEHOLD. 9609 PATRICIA KOEHLE 4033 BOYNTON SYLVANIA HOUSEHOLD. 4601 JACKMAN TOLEDO 43612 1023 PRESTON STEWART 4437 BEAVER POND CT LOGANVILLE GA HOUSEHOLD. 1031 JEFFREY PERRY 241 CALIFORNIA HOUSEHOLD. 2304 RAYMOND WORLEY 146 JENNINGS ROSSFORD HOUSEHOLD. 4410 ANNISE PRICE 1225 FLAIRE DR HOUSEHOLD. 802 S REYNOLDS TOLEDO 43615 1308 JEREMIAH KOPROSKI 601 OLYANDER HOLLAND HOUSEHOLD. 3218 JOSHUA COX 2417 CHEYENNE #47 HOUSEHOLD. 4017 RYAN BALSER 340 S REYNOLDS #151 HOUSEHOLD. 7002 RELDA GRIFFITH 2530 W VILLAGE DR HOUSEHOLD. 12400 WILLIAMS RD PERRYSBURG 43551 2003 KIM MICHAEL 505 JEFFERSON AVE #1002 HOUSEHOLD. 4017 JEFFREY JOHNSON PO BOX 337 BRADNER HOUSEHOLD. 3032 AIRPORT HWY TOLEDO 43609 2631 ALEXANDRIA GONZALEZ 430 COLBURN HOUSEHOLD. 5405 EVELYN PRESSLEY 309 BRANDWHITLOCK HOUSEHOLD. 5702 SELINA PERRYMAN 1811 BROWNSTONE BLVD #601HOUSEHOLD. 7132 LARON LLOYD 614 GAWAIL HOUSEHOLD. 5401 TELEGRAPH RD TOLEDO 43612 1017 JENNIFER AVALOS 3328 CHERRY ST #9 HOUSEHOLD. 2402 MARY HOY 6255 TELEGRAPH RD #353 ERIE MI HOUSEHOLD. 2503 DANIEL HOY 6255 TELEGRAPH RD #353 ERIE MI HOUSEHOLD. 4033 KEITH KREMPA 6034 MORNINGSIDE HOUSEHOLD. 4102 LISA GARZA 5725 SILVERSIDE #12 HOUSEHOLD. 5004 LATOYA GILMER 2547 ROSEDALE HOUSEHOLD. 6045 ASHLEY ORRA 282 E MANHATTAN HOUSEHOLD. 7024 HEATHER FRY 245 FAIRFAX ERIE MI HOUSEHOLD. 1046 S BYRNE TOLEDO 43609 1030 TEARESSA SMITH 531 WILLIAMSDALE DR #6 HOUSEHOLD. 1034 LATASHA DIGGS 3321 ARLINGTON AVE #107 HOUSEHOLD. 2016 KIONNA GRAY 1435 HAMILTON ST HOUSEHOLD. 2021 CHRISTOPHER MACK 935 ORCHARD ST HOUSEHOLD. 2030 CHRISTINE BRIGGS 3565 E MANHATTAN #14A HOUSEHOLD. 5003 HAJAMI FASHION & DANCE STUDIO 1061 PROSPECT HOUSE/BUS. 3605 S EBER RD MONCLOVA 43542 2024 GINA CANTU 10256 MAUMEE-WESTERN HOUSEHOLD. 5104 JASON MASSINGILL PO BOX 1081 HOLLAND HOUSEHOLD. 27533 HELEN DR PERRYSBURG 43551 1054 JACOB LOPEZ PO BOX 462 LUCKEY OH HOUSEHOLD. 3316 DUSTIN RD OREGON 43616 5003 COLEEN BRILLHART 2854 PICKLE RD #217 HOUSEHOLD. 5028 CHRIS LAWRENCE 3151 NAVARRE #1D HOUSEHOLD. 8059 RAEANN ALLISON 1314 BROADWAY #A HOUSEHOLD. 6387 SOUTH AVE TOLEDO 43615 4027&4029 RICHARD BALAS PO BOX 331 HOLLAND OH HOUSEHOLD. 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.

Gemeral

Masons and Laborers.

Commercial experience only need apply. Full-time at Port Clinton school project. Email jcbrick@ wowway.com or call 586.726.1166 to apply. HIRING NOW! TRAVEL Today! Seeking Sharp Guys/Gals, Rock-n-Roll Atmosphere, Blue Jean Environment! $500 Sign-on Bonus. Lorraine 877777-2091.

for sale household items

JULY 24, 2011

CARLSON’S CRITTERS

Max needs a home

“Your Personal Gardening Service” Specializing in landscape and garden bed maintenance and detailing. Celebrating 10 Years Servicing NW Ohio and SE Michigan!

419.727.8734 Fully Insured and BBB Accredited

Max is an 8-month-old black domestic shorthair. He is a curious young cat who likes to see what kind of things he can get into. Max was brought to the Toledo Area SoHumane ciety because his owners were moving and couldn’t have a pet in their new home. Max likes to spend his time climbing the perches in the cat rooms at the

White metal bunk beds like brand-new; top mattress is twin; bottom is full futon; includes 2 sets of sheets per bed; 2 blankets total; 1 pillow; and a table with candle lamp. Have truck and will take down and deliver to home. $525 OBO. Heather Glen, 419-865-4226.

real estate homes 8 BED 4 bath home! $250 own and $203 a month! 3126 Warsaw St., Toledo, OH 43608. Owner Financing! Call 419-318-2137.

INTERESTED BIDDERS: TOLEDO PUBLIC SCHOOLS – JESUP W. SCOTT HIGH SCHOOL FURNISHINGS AND EQUIPMENT PACKAGE Home of “Charlie the Pool Guy”

Inground Pool Specialists Vinyl-lined inground pools, liner replacements, fiber-optic lighting, pool heating & plumbing. Call for your appointment today and beat the rush!

419.297.6525 Call 419.241.1700, Ext 230 to place a Classified Ad!

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.

Sealed bids will be accepted by the Board of Education of the Toledo Public School District until 1:00 p.m. on August 10, 2011, at the Toledo Public Schools Treasurers’ Room 3, 420 E. Manhattan Blvd., Toledo, Ohio 43608, for all labor, material and supervision necessary for the Scott HS FF&E package, as more fully described in the drawings and specifications for the project prepared by SSOE Group and will be opened publicly and read immediately thereafter. Bid Documents for the project may be examined at the F.W. Dodge plan room in Columbus, Builders Exchange in Toledo, University of Toledo – Capacity Building, E.O.P.A. – Hamilton Building, Northwest Ohio Hispanic Chamber of Commerce, and The Plan Room in Ann Arbor, Construction Association of Michigan, Toledo Regional Chamber of Commerce and Ohio Construction News. Bidders may obtain copies of the documents starting Wednesday July 20th, 2011 which can be purchased from Becker Impressions, 4646 Angola Road, Toledo, Ohio 43615, phone: (419) 385-5303. Drawings may be obtained on CD-ROM for no cost with the purchase of the specifications. A PREBID CONFERENCE is scheduled for July 29, 2011 at 11:00 a.m. at Toledo Public Schools Board Room, 420 Manhattan Blvd, Toledo, Ohio 43608. If you have any questions or a need for additional information, please direct all questions in writing to Patrick Stutler at Patrick.Stutler @lgb-llc.com , by phone at (419) 776-5600, or (fax) (877) 281-0784. Bid Item #1 School Desk & Chairs Package Bid Item #2 Tables Package Bid Item #3 Office Desk & Chairs Package Bid Item #4 Music Package

$ 479,325.00 $ 239,660.00 $ 545,895.00 $ 66,570.00

Total Estimate:

$1,331,450.00

humane society and sleeping in the fluffiest beds in the room. He loves attention and likes the feeling of having a person nearby. When he naps he will choose a place that is close to where you’re sitting and if you’re working on something in a room, he will choose to perch in a spot where he can keep an eye on what you’re doing. If you’re looking for a constant companion, Max may be your match made in heaven. Max 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. O

n CROSSWORD ANSWERS FROM A57 1

P 11 O 13 P E

2

3

4

5

6

7

8

J S F A T F I S H 12 A T I T O O O 14 R O G R A M W I N O O E A E 15 16 S P I C Y T U N A S 17 O L O T 18 19 20 21 M A N H A T T A N S 25 26 E A Y A L I S 27 28 N I G H B L A C k P 29 E H A 30 31 32 33 d O R R S T R E E T C 35 U A T O E E 37 38 39 M O N T A N A F R A 41 B d T C L O G 43 O L I v E R H O U S E

9

10

B L U E U N S T O N E U U S H I

22

23

24

S P O T E O E A R L d 34 A F E 36 A A 40 N C I S 42 E L k 44 T E A

n ANSWERS FROM A57


JULY 24, 2011

Visit www.toledofreepress.com

n A59


A60 n Toledo Free Press

JULY 24, 2011

©2011 RE/MAX, LLC. All rights reserved. Each RE/MAX® real estate office is independently owned and operated. 110453


Issuu converts static files into: digital portfolios, online yearbooks, online catalogs, digital photo albums and more. Sign up and create your flipbook.