Toledo Free Press - July 25, 2010

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A2 ■ TOLEDO FREE PRESS

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OPINION

JULY 25, 2010

Visit www.toledofreepress.com m

■ A3

LIGHTING THE FUSE PUBLISHER’S STATEMENT

Bowled over by racial divide Meeting Maryellen

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t’s not too early to start thinking about the November elections, although that thought might make some readers’ lemonade seem a bit more sour. As the statewide races heat up, politicians are crisscrossing Ohio, meeting voters and media. On July 19, we had the pleasure of hosting Secretary of State candidate Maryellen O’Shaughnessy for an hour of talking politics, development, ethics and how those concepts are faring in Northwest Ohio. O’Shaughnessy, a Democrat running against Sen. Jon Husted, replaced State Rep. Jennifer Garrison on the ballot in February. O’Shaughnessy may not have the funds Husted is working with, but she has racked up an impressive list of endorsements: Gov. Ted Strickland, the Ohio AFL-CIO, the Ohio Education Association and several others. O’Shaughnessy, the clerk of Franklin Thomas F. POUNDS County Court of Common Pleas, has served as a three-time Columbus City Council member and owns a small business, her family’s fourth-generation funeral home. She is running on a platform that is inclusive and comprehensive, if not trailblazing. She understands how the secretary of state office can impact economic development by making it easier (or more difficult) for businesses to register to do business in Ohio and navigate its resources. We talked at some length about Lucas County specifics, in broad terms of economic challenges and in specifics about the integrity of the voting process in Lucas County. It is no secret that the Lucas County Board of Elections, local party O’SHAUGHNESSY leaders and affected politicians operate under a dysfunctional cloud that rains everything from questionable influences to charges of outright illegalities. O’Shaughnessy, or her opponent Husted, will quickly learn that Lucas County offers unique challenges that will occasionally require a decision from Columbus. If one of her primary concerns is ethics and protecting the integrity of the election process, she will have her hands full when it comes to Lucas County. O’Shaughnessy was personable, well-informed and energetic as she discussed her goals for the secretary of state office. It may be too early to endorse a candidate or decide which one to vote for, but it is never too soon to start the education process. Our thanks to O’Shaughnessy for sharing her time and thoughts. We will have further conversations with her, to share with local voters, as the election season approaches. Thomas F. Pounds is president and publisher of Toledo Free Press and Toledo Free Press Star. E-mail him at tpounds@toledofreepress.com.

A publication of Toledo Free Press, LLC, Vol. 6, No. 30. Established 2005. EDITORIAL Mary Ann Stearns, Design Editor mastearns@toledofreepress.com James A. Molnar, Lead Designer Brandi Barhite, Associate Editor bbarhite@toledofreepress.com Kristen Rapin, Special Sections Editor krapin@toledofreepress.com ADMINISTRATION Pam Burson, Business Manager pburson@toledofreepress.com

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From kindergarten to the middle of my freshman year, was scrubbing the underside rim of the master bedroom toilet recently when my mind whispered, “I bet Johnny I attended school in the Walbridge and Lake systems. There Depp isn’t spending his Saturday morning cleaning bath- were not many black students in the classrooms. Midstream in my freshman year, I transferred to Libbey High School, room porcelain.” where black and Hispanic students were the That is not to malign Depp or imply he majority. I assimilated fairly quickly, but I is too snooty, stuck-up or lazy to clean his will always remember one hallway incident own home; I am just guessing that with his that left me rattled. During a between-class millions of dollars and scores of creative prehallway rush, as students pushed through occupations, he has someone else using the narrow gaps between bodies and navigated toilet brush and a bottle of Lysol Deep Reach the gauntlet, one black student shook his Toilet Cleaner to keep the Chez Depp bathbookbag in frustration and said, “I hate room winter-minty fresh and the unsightly white people!” stains off Johnny’s john. We made eye contact as he said it, and Once a certain financial station is reached, while I was speechless and shocked into a person can be expected to say goodbye to such mundane chores. Can you imagine Leon- Michael S. MILLER standing still in the middle of the rush, his gaze burned into mine with a “yes, ardo DiCaprio, Russell Crowe or Meryl Streep on their hands and knees, sanitizing the potty, especially you” look as he shoved past. I was plunged back into that memory recently as some one being used as a training site for a 2-year-old boy and an aiming range for a 4-year-old boy? I can’t. I can picture Steve of the WSPD talk radio shows repeatedly played an audio Carrell still getting down and dirty to keep the can clean, but cut of Minister King Samir Shabazz, also known as Mauthat’s just because he seems like such a nice, ordinary, average, rice Heath, the New Black Panther Party’s Philadelphia leader, saying, “You want freedom? You’re gonna have to multimillionaire household-name type of guy. My first thought as an example of a celebrity who may kill some crackers! You’re gonna have to kill some of their still maintain his own facilities was Cuba Gooding Jr. But I babies! I hate white people — all of them! Every last iota of thought, “If I give examples of four white people who don’t a cracker, I hate ’em.” While I give Shabazz credit for speaking his views in clean their own toilets, then toss out one example of an actor who does, and that sole illustration is a black person, public without the obscuring benefit of a white sheet or any other tool of anonymity, the quick and easy response is that will that look racist?” What an odd thought to derail such a whimsical train if any white person stood up and expressed reverse sentiof thought. But sensitivity to race and how one communi- ments, he or she would be rightfully escorted into the hall cates about racial issues are intellectually crucial — albeit of shame and exile. Ask Mel Gibson and Michael Richards how open racism has helped their careers and lives. creatively inhibiting — concerns. But Shabazz’s seething hatred, so reflective of that young The radio on my desk is tuned to news all day, so I can keep up with anything that breaks. That means bouncing Libbey student’s back in 1984, has galvanized conversation back and forth between WSPD 1370 and WGTE 91, with for many of the wrong reasons. Instead of examining the an occasional detour through Shores & Steele on K100 or anger for inroads to communication and insight, it seems Andrew Z on 92.5 KISS FM. For the past two weeks, one of it is being used to inspire fear and alienation, which just the main topics on WSPD’s midday schedule has been race cycles back to the original seeds of hatred. No Pollyanna blindness here; I know Shabazz is not going to sit across and its use as a dividing factor in politics. I never invoke the concept of innocence when choosing from Glenn Beck, listen intently and say, “Well, I had you self-descriptive words, but I do not understood the human folks all wrong. My bad. Wanna grab a beer?” It is sad and disheartening that in the first term of our impulse to categorize and despise based on race. Without going all “Ebony and Ivory” on you, it has never country’s first black president, the racial divide seems to be made sense to me to judge and dismiss an entire group of growing, with jagged tears along a fault line of distrust and outright fear. people based on the supposed behavior and traits of a few. Maybe it seems exaggerated to me because I spend so I might understand racism if, for example, there were a race of green people whose only reason for existing was to much time with my ears to the radio and eyes on news webkill and eat all other people. If all green people made homi- sites, but it strikes me that an honest discussion about race cide and cannibalism their imperative, I would understand in America is like scrubbing a toilet; you have to be willing if everyone else said, “I don’t like green people. Can’t stand to face some ugly truths, and it is not a job for the weak of them and I am afraid of them. They kill and eat the rest of stomach. us, you know.” That version of racism I would understand, as it would Michael S. Miller is editor in chief of Toledo Free Press and Toledo Free Press Star. E-mail: mmiller@toledofreepress.com. be based on empirical evidence, not emotional prejudice. Thomas F. Pounds, President/Publisher tpounds@toledofreepress.com

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OPINION

A4 ■ TOLEDO FREE PRESS

SHREDDING THE CURTAIN

GUEST COLUMN

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D

JULY 25, 2010

Patterns of precedents Protect sources, protect the public

ne union contract signed to get a legal clarification. She said a in the late 1990s started the ruling, if sought, would not happen chain of events for pension until August. Collins said this was important to pickup by the City of Toledo; it became a standard for all of its union know so Council would be aware of the ramifications of recontracts. On July 20, jecting the fact finding the City of Toledo took report. Additional another step backward concerns about City by accepting the fact Council not having its finder’s report for AFown legal representaSCME Local 3411. tion were raised. It was It’s another step stated several times that back because Local 92, the law department was the union representing representing the Clerk Toledo’s firefighters, will be paid back its Lisa Renee WARD of Courts on this issue temporary give-back of 3 percent and a conflict of interest could be of pension pickup. Precedent could created if they advised Council. An be argued by other bargaining units attempt by Webb to delay voting on rejection until legal counsel could be and accepted by future fact-finding. The approximately 74 workers sought failed. Mayor Mike Bell asked Council who work for the Municipal Clerk of Courts and are represented by to reject the fact finder’s report. He Local 3411 were paying 1.5 per- said the city can not afford this concent toward their pension pickup. tract and “we are going to be in the The bargaining unit was seeking a same position we were at the begin3.5 percent raise in the final year of ning of this year.” Bell also raised concerns about the contract and no increase in the the precedent this factfinder’s report pension contribution. Toledo as a city was seeking a 1.5 could create. The cost factor and the precedent percent smaller raise and a 1.5 percent increase in the pension contri- were raised several times by membution as concessions. The fact finder bers of Council and the administradecided for the city on the raise but tion during the discussion. On the vote to reject the fact findfor the union on the pension pickup. Members of Toledo City Council er’s report, McNamara, Sarantou, had several options before them on Waniewski, Brown and Martinez July 20 — accept the fact finder’s re- voted yes. Steel, Webb, Ashford, Coport, reject the fact finder’s report or peland, Collins, Craig and Ludeman do nothing. If it was not rejected or ap- voted no. Since eight yes votes were proved, the terms would automatically needed, the legislation to reject the go into effect at 11:59 p.m. July 21. fact finder’s report failed. On the question of accepting Those who voted “no” created the the fact finder’s report, Council same outcome as if they had voted members Joe McNamara, George “yes” on the legislation to approve Sarantou, Tom Waniewski, Wilma the fact finder’s report. It ended the Brown, D. Michael Collins, Mike process there, barring some later atCraig and Adam Martinez voted no. tempt at a contract re-opener. Steve Steel, Lindsay Webb, Michael It will make it more difficult for Ashford, Phil Copeland and Rob discussions with other bargaining Ludeman voted yes. units when it comes to concessions The question raised by Collins of related to pension pick up. It also whether Local 3411 was defined by makes it less urgent to obtain anOhio’s State Employment Relations swers as to the strike or nonstrike Board (SERB) as a strike or non- status of Local 3411. strike unit created lengthy discusThe Bell administration did sion. An unsigned document from not get the support it needed from 1993 stated an agreement was made Council; Council was given an issue that would make it a nonstrike unit, to decide without access to indepenwhich could create a different dis- dent legal counsel. pute process. No mention was made of the lobThis 1993 document was re- bying by the union or who promised vealed to the law department and to support the union. to the administration July 19. They were not aware of its existence. SERB Toledo Free Press contributor Lisa was contacted by Ellen Grachek of Renee Ward operates the political blog the city’s law department to attempt Glass City Jungle.

uring the course of its investigation into the Gulf of statute or common law in 49 states to the national governMexico oil spill, The Associated Press was given in- ment. Without it, stories focusing on the federal government formation from the then-office of Mineral Manage- will not be told because reporters are faced with threats of jail time and fines if they do not turn on their sources. ment Services that was not making a lot of sense. Subpoenas against the press numbered As millions of gallons of crude spewed more than 3,000 nationwide in 2006 with 335 into the Gulf waters and the oversight by issued by federal prosecutors seeking the idenMMS officials on BP’s well was being called tities of news sources, according to a survey into question, an anonymous source in that conducted by a Brigham Young University law office told reporters far different stories than professor. More than a few journalists have what they had been initially told. This anonyspent time in jail, and some have been forced mous source set the record straight by coming out of the profession altogether by heavy fines forward and speaking out and suddenly the that crippled them financially. These are all world knew that this was more than a meheavy-handed tactics to elicit the names of chanical failure; it was a full-system failure. people who can then be identified and retaliThe people hired to keep these events from Kevin Z. SMITH ated against. Media companies large and small occurring were ignoring their responsibilities. faced with the enormous expenses of fighting At times, anonymous sources provide crucial information to the press. Stories of oil disasters may be such legal battles to protect sources are turning their backs the latest, but without citizens coming forward and sharing on compelling stories. The clock is ticking as Congress will recess in August. vital information, Americans would not know about steroids in sports, excessive military spending, or food and drug haz- Tell your senator to have the bill moved to a full Senate vote as soon as possible and support its passage. ards. We would never have been told about Watergate. Without this bill, stories that affect lives, like the oil spill in A bill in the U.S. Senate will help assure such stories continue to reach the public. Senate bill 448, The Free Flow the Gulf, will never get the detailed attention they need to bring of Information Act, will protect the sources that journalists about change. Without this bill, your government has a better rely on from having their identities exposed in all but a few chance of operating in darkness or lying its way out of trouble. circumstances, including where national security concerns Help bring this to an end by voicing support for Senate bill 448. Only when there is a free flow of information from the are raised. Five years in the making, the current version of this bill is supported by more than 50 journalism organiza- government to its people can we truly appreciate the beauty tions, the White House, the Justice Department and most and power of a democracy. of your congressional delegation. Most states have laws that can protect a source’s identity Kevin Z. Smith is the 2009-2010 national president of the Sofrom overzealous prosecutors and judges, but there is no ciety of Professional Journalists (SPJ). Reach him at ksmith@ such protection yet at the federal level. Senate bill 448 would spj.org. For more on SPJ’s work to improve and protect jourchange that, extending the same protections offered through nalism, see www.spj.org.

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OPINION

JULY 25, 2010

Visit www.toledofreepress.com m

■ A5

GUEST COLUMN

Hospital tax puts jobs, Ohio economy at risk “Your Personal Gardening Service” Specializing in landscape and garden bed maintenance and detailing.

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hioans have long felt the effects of the and although you didn’t get paid, we’re going downturn in our state’s economy. With to tax you on it as if you received a paycheck.” unemployment in the double digits for Gov. Strickland is also taxing Medicaid and the 14th consecutive month, the vitality of our Medicare reimbursements, which barely cover the cost of supplies in many cases. communities is being challenged and Additionally, he is taxing private the well-being of our families comcitizens, those without coverage, empromised. ployers and employees with health Even in the midst of all this fiscal insurance plans. strain, many lawmakers in Columbus So when your health insurance still believe “taxing our way out” is the plan increases in cost, thank Gov. path to economic success. Strickland for the new tax. A new $150 million hospital tax It is irresponsible public policy was added to the state operating to burden one of the top employers budget for fiscal year 2010-2011 as in the state while in the same breath a way to help balance a poorly orBarbara SEARS touting a focus on job creation. The ganized budget championed by Gov. Ted Strickland and the House Majority Demo- tax-and-spenders have created a backward incrats. If you only listen to the “sound bite” and not centive system, penalizing the hospitals for top the entire story, it might make sense. You tax the performance in the economy. They especially hospitals, take the revenue collected, send it to the penalize urban hospitals that provide a large federal government where it is matched 2.77-to-1, amount of uncompensated care to our community’s uninsured residents. bring it back to Ohio, and fund Medicaid costs. Ohio cannot afford to punish an economic But here is the rest of the story that you might not have heard. Gov. Strickland is taxing sector that is so crucial to the well-being of our the cost of uncompensated care. Yes, that’s right families and communities. This is why I have put — your hospital is being taxed on care they are my full support behind House Bill 497, legislanot getting paid for. That’s like saying to a family tion aiming to minimize this hospital franchise that does volunteer work, “Thank you for your fee. This bill, co-sponsored by Representatives help, but the work you did has a value of $1,000 Terry Boose (R-Norwalk) and Troy Balderson (R-

Zanesville), would subtract the cost of uncompensated care, as well as the costs of Medicare and Medicaid, from the tax base. Additionally, it would reduce the tax base from 1.61 to 1.5 percent. I also continue to urge consideration of House Bill 240, which I introduced more than a year ago to address waste, fraud and abuse within Ohio’s Medicaid system — saving the taxpayers millions of dollars each year. This legislation would reduce the government bloat and eliminate the temptation to nickel-and-dime our constituents when they are least able to afford it. If we make an effort to financially revitalize Ohio’s health care sector, we can also revitalize our state’s economy. However, we cannot succeed with the overtaxed hospital system that is slowly smothering much-needed jobs. Ohio has had a bad turn in the economy, but with fiscal discipline and common sense, my colleagues and I in the House Republican Caucus are making strides to restore Ohio’s bright economic future. Rep. Barbara Sears may be reached by calling (614) 466-1731 or by writing to: Rep. Barbara Sears, 77 S. High Street, 10th Floor, Columbus, Ohio 43215. You may also e-mail her at district46@ ohr.state.oh.us.

Local Emergency Planning Committee 2144 Monroe Street Toledo, Ohio 43604 Phone: (419)213-6527 Fax: (419)213-6520 - www.lucascountyoh.gov

Meetings are held in the EMS Building at 2144 Monroe St. in the third floor conference room. Free parking is available adjacent to the building. 2010 Meeting Schedule - 9/16/10, 11/18/10. The meeting time is 12:15pm to 2:15pm.

What is a Local Emergency Planning Committee? The Local Emergency Planning Committee (LEPC) is a county board charged with designing and maintaining a hazardous materials plan for Lucas County. The creation of LEPCs is a component of the Federal Emergency Planning and Community Right-to-Know Act (EPCRA), which was enacted in 1986. Chapter 3750 of the Ohio Administrative Code is Ohio’s implementation of EPCRA.

Chemical Release Reporting Requirements Look for the LEPC article in August for information about transportation incidents and release reporting!

The LEPC has many responsibilities under EPCRA. These include maintaining records of chemical releases, collecting chemical inventory data from industry, and developing and annually exercising the Hazardous Materials plan for Lucas County. The responsibilities are met through partnerships with members of the response community, government agencies, and Industry representatives. Government

2010 LEPC Member Agencies

• • • • • •

Current LEPC Officers Chairman - Ryan Grant Vice-Chairman - Tony Sloma Secretary - Patekka Bannister Information Coordinator - Vacant Emergency Coordinator Michelle Hughes-Tucker

Lucas County Emergency Management Agency Lucas County 911 City of Toledo-Division of Environmental Services Ohio Air National Guard OSHA Ohio Environmental Protection Agency

• • • • • • •

30 Minute Spill Reporting Requirements Within 30 minutes of discovery of a spill or release, you must notify: 1.

Jurisdictional Fire Department (9-1-1 if emergency)

2.

Ohio EPA-ER (800) 282-9378

3.

Lucas County LEPC (419) 936-3550 (24 Hour) [Option 8] (419) 213-6527 (Day)

Whitehouse Fire Department Swanton Fire Department Springfield Township Fire Department Toledo Fire & Rescue Monclova Township Fire Department Oregon Fire Department Toledo/Lucas County Health Department

Ohio State Highway Patrol • Whitehouse Police Department • Lucas County Sheriff’s Office • Maumee Fire Department • Toledo Police Department • Industry/Non-Government • • • •

Marsulex Westway Terminal Company Johns-Manville BP Husky Refinery

30 Day Written Spill Report Requirements Within 30 days of discovery of a spill or release, you must submit a written follow-up report to both addresses below: 1. Ohio EPA, DERR-ER, Lazarus Government Center 50 West Town St., Suite 700, P.O. Box 1049, Columbus, OH 43216-1049 Attn: ER Records Mgmt. SERC Report 2. Lucas County LEPC, 2144 Monroe St., Toledo, Ohio 43604 Attn: Michelle Hughes-Tucker, Emergency Coordinator

• • • • • • • • •

American Red Cross Hospital Council of Northwest Ohio Arclin USA, Inc. BASF Corporation Benchmark Engineering Group Sunoco Toledo Refinery The Andersons Perstorp Polyols Medcorp Ambulance Co.


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Kasich makes Toledo appearance Ohio gubernatorial candidate John Kasich told supporters outside the Lucas County Republican Party headquarters on July 21 that the state needs to work as a team to create jobs, a goal that crosses party lines. Taxes should be lowered, better regulations should be put in place so government doesn’t get in the way of small business and universities need to work with businesses to share innovation and ideas, he said. — Kristen Rapin

A6

POLICE AND COURTS

By Michael Stainbrook TOLEDO FREE PRESS STAFF WRITER news@toledofreepress.com

On a hazy and overcast Friday afternoon, Officers Neil Brokamp and Cory Hartman patrolled Maumee Bay on a 26-foot law enforcement boat. They approached a vessel for a spot check to determine if there were two life jackets suitable for the two men aboard. But before Hartman could utter a word, one of the men told him his boat had been stopped and inspected just the previous week. After assuring him they were just checking for life jackets, the man complied with the officer’s request and Brokamp steered the boat toward Downtown Toledo. A boat inspection sticker on the starboard side of the stopped vessel confirmed the United States Coast Guard had boarded the ship sometime in 2010. The officers said they would not have stopped the boat if they had seen the sticker sooner.

TOLEDO FREE PRESS PHOTO BY CHARLIE LONGTON

River enforcement draws questions from boaters

Staying off the Maumee Brokamp and Hartman work for the Division of Watercraft, a part of the Ohio Department of Natural Resources and one of multiple law enforcement agencies that have jurisdiction on Northwest Ohio waterways. This was not the first time the officers have stopped a boat that had been recently inspected by the Coast Guard — it happened again just a few minutes later during another spot check. No Coast Guard boats were in the area at the time. “We see a lot of complaints because of their boardings,” Hartman said. Local boaters have raised concerns about the multiple agencies patrolling the Maumee River and surrounding area. Some say boaters are staying off the river to avoid the chance of being stopped. That chance is very high, according to Harbor View Yacht Club Commodore Dean Reamsnyder. “Boaters will tend now to either stay in port and go to their own club functions or go toward Michigan,” he said. “Most boaters are of the opinion that some time this year you’ll get pulled over.”

MASTER CHIEF PETTY OFFICER AARON ZIMMER, LEFT, AND FIREMAN CODY LOCKLEAR OF THE COAST GUARD PATROL THE MAUMEE RIVER.

(Over?) enforcement Federal, state, county and local agencies have concurrent jurisdiction on the Maumee River, and they can all site boaters for similar infractions. This has led boaters to question the number of law-enforcing bodies on the river. “There are currently too many individual law enforcement agencies functioning independent of one another where people can drive down the river and be stopped four times,” said Jim Ragan, who managed the Glass City Marina in 2009. “Traditionally, [the Maumee River]

has been more of a place to relax. People are unable to do that when they’re stopped every 10 minutes.” One boater described an experience he had in June 2007, when he was stopped and inspected by three different agencies in one day. He said the Coast Guard originally cited him for his expired registration and the Division of Watercraft inspected him later in the day. A third entity, whose identity he could not recall, then boarded his boat. “The other two entities wanted to do their own inspection,” he said. “To me that was overemphasis on safety.” Many boaters believe the agencies

are not communicating effectively. Reamsnyder said communication could save officers and boaters the hassle of inspections. “It seems like in the modern age they would be able to keep your boat number on a database,” he said, adding that such a system would allow officers to see if a boater has outstanding warrants. But Master Chief Petty Officer Aaron Zimmer of the Coast Guard said boating enforcement depends largely on circumstances. For example, he said, place-of-use regulations require different equipment in

different waterways. “If you’re stopped by Rossford, the equipment you need on your boat is different than West Sister Island,” he said. “We want people to have fun, but also to be safe. Inspecting and stopping a boat are vital parts of that.” The Division of Watercraft tries to stagger its shifts so it is not patrolling the same area as the Coast Guard. Brokamp said he typically spends half his shift on the Maumee River. “When we see violations is when we stop. We don’t stop boats for the heck of it,” he said. ■ RIVER CONTINUES ON A7


COMMUNITY

■ RIVER CONTINUED FROM A6 Once an inspection has been completed, an agency will give the boater some evidence that the boat has been stopped. This can range from a report of the inspection to a sticker to put on the outside of the boat. Zimmer said keeping the report on hand might dissuade other agencies from stopping the boat.

Authority and responsibility Five separate law enforcement agencies have jurisdiction on the Maumee River. No two authorities share identical boundaries, but several overlap on sections of the river and Lake Erie. The Coast Guard operates out of Station Toledo, located at 3900 N. Summit St. along the riverbank. This entity has jurisdiction on any navigable, federally maintained waterway from Marblehead to the Detroit River Light. The station employs several patrol boats to cover the area. “We have a large area to patrol with a limited amount of resources,” Zimmer said. The Coast Guard’s mission centers on safety. That mission is carried out through law enforcement and search and rescue. On a law enforcement stop, the Coast Guard may board a boat and check for proper safety equipment, such as flotation devices, a fire extinguisher and distress indicators, such as flares or a sound-producing device. “We have many missions that we’re responsible for,” Zimmer said. “We have to balance safety and security.” The ODNR Division of Watercraft also has broad jurisdiction. The Maumee Bay office covers eight counties in Northwest Ohio and has authority on all area rivers, inland lakes and some of the Ohio portion of Lake Erie. The Division of Watercraft is responsible for boating laws and marine safety, unlike the Division of Wildlife, which has authority on fishing and game. It also teaches a boating education course, which is required for any boater born after January 1, 1982. “We’re very specialized in what we do. There are very few DNR agencies that have a watercraft division,” said area Supervisor Chad German. German and three other officers staff the Maumee Bay office. One officer may patrol smaller bodies of water, such as the Auglaize River, but officers patrol larger waterways in pairs. Most patrols take place during the weekend. The Division of Watercraft also funds operations for narrower jurisdictions. Lucas County Sheriff ’s Office Marine Patrol received nearly $25,000 from ODNR this year and Perrysburg Twp. Marine Patrol obtained just more than $14,000. Lucas County Sheriff ’s Office Marine Patrol has jurisdiction on water-

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■ A7

TOLEDO FREE PRESS PHOTO BY MICHAEL STAINBROOK

JULY 25, 2010

OFFICER NEIL BROKAMP OF THE OHIO DEPARTMENT OF NATURAL RESOURCES WRITES A WARNING TO A MAUMEE BOATER ON JULY 11.

ways within the county, including the Maumee and Ottawa Rivers and a part of Lake Erie. Capt. Robert McBroom said the Marine Patrol rarely navigates the two rivers. “We are in charge of enforcing watercraft rules within Lucas County, but primarily, our duties are on Lake Erie,” he said. Another county-owned boat is operated through the Northern Border Initiative (NBI), a federally funded project designed to combat illegal immigration and drug trafficking to and from Canada. Officers from the city of Oregon and Monroe County operate the boat with Lucas County officers. McBroom said the NBI boat patrols the Maumee River when lake conditions are subpar. “It’s hard to separate the two [entities] when the same boat’s being used,” he said. On weekends, Perrysburg Twp. Marine Patrol operates an ODNRfunded vessel on a part of the Maumee River. The municipality only has jurisdiction on water within township limits, between Rossford and Toledo city limits, and this part of the river has no commercial boating. Officers manning the single patrol boat are primarily concerned with water devices such as jet skis, Sgt. Joe Christy said. ■ RIVER CONTINUES ON A8

Maumee River Law Enforcement Data Sheriff’s Office 2007: July 4 — 4 contacts with boaters Aug. 6 — 3 Contacts (McBroom believed this was during the Rib-off) Sept. 2 — 1 contact/citation for repeat no wake violation (Labor Day weekend) 2008: May 2 — Answered disabled vessel call on river July 4 — 13 contacts, no citations Aug. 17 —1 contact somewhere on Maumee 2009: 2 contacts, no citations … somewhere near Harbor Light and Harbor View Yacht Club 2010: July 4—5 contacts, 1 citation after warning for breaching safety zone

Coast Guard 2007: 2008: 2009: 2010:

226 boardings 243 boardings 350 boardings (6 repeat boards) 140 boardings (as of July 18)

No further breakdown available. Boarding is basically a stop, as it can mean anything from a routine inspection with no violations to an arrest and commandeering of a boat.

Perrysburg Twp. 2007: 17 spot checks, 44 warnings 2008: 158 spot checks, 65 warnings 2009: 45 spot checks, 53 warnings It stops more boats than this, but if no official check is conducted or warning is given, no paperwork is filed.

Toledo Police Pending FOIA request, but not currently patrolling due to budget cuts.

ODNR Div. of Watercraft See chart on page A8

Source: Contributing organizations


COMMUNITY

A8 ■ TOLEDO FREE PRESS

JULY 25, 2010

■ RIVER CONTINUED FROM A7 “We don’t take our boat out on the lake,” he said. “The big one we do is the personal watercraft.” Toledo Police Department does not operate its Harbor Patrol due to a lack of funding. The department still has jurisdiction on Toledo waterways, but would have to take drastic measures if the need arose, Sgt. Michael McGee said. “We will have enforcement out there,” he said. “We depend on the Coast Guard, unless we commandeer a boat or something … in a matter of life and death.” Oregon only has a presence on the river through NBI. Rossford and Washington Twp. do not have a marine patrol or work with NBI. At other times, the agencies work together, such as Fourth of July weekend. Perrysburg Twp. Marine Patrol joins the others Downtown to help patrol during Toledo’s fireworks. “There’s not one of us that could do it on our own. We pool our resources together,” Christy said. The Lucas County Sheriff ’s Office Marine Patrol safely evacuated nine passengers off a boat that caught fire on the Maumee River during the busy weekend. “Thank goodness we were down there the other night,” McBroom said. “Our boat was there and did a great job.”

Numbers Ragan said law enforcement agencies received grants from the Department of Homeland Security through the Port Security Grant Program after the Sept. 11, 2001, terror attacks. He said this has led to more stops on the water. “Since the boats are out there, [officers] said, ‘geez, guys, we need some paperwork to justify using the fuel’,” Ragan said. “It has squelched down the usage of boats on the waterway.” Zimmer highlighted the number of boats the Coast Guard stopped in 2009. Of the 31,000 boats registered in the four counties in which Station Toledo has jurisdiction, the Coast Guard boarded 350 in 2009. Six of those stops involved a boat

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ODNR Div. of Watercraft Citations — Misdemeanors Grand Rapids to Independence (0056R) Independence to Indiana Line (0057R) Lake Erie to Maple Street (0054R) Maple Street to Grand Rapids (0055R) Other (0022R) Scenic River Area (0011A) All (Combined)

Citations — Felonies Grand Rapids to Independence (0056R) Independence to Indiana Line (0057R) Lake Erie to Maple Street (0054R) Maple Street to Grand Rapids (0055R) Other (0022R) Scenic River Area (0011A) All (Combined)

Operating Under the Influence Grand Rapids to Independence (0056R) Independence to Indiana Line (0057R) Lake Erie to Maple Street (0054R) Maple Street to Grand Rapids (0055R) Other (0022R) Scenic River Area (0011A) All (Combined)

Warnings Grand Rapids to Independence (0056R) Independence to Indiana Line (0057R) Lake Erie to Maple Street (0054R) Maple Street to Grand Rapids (0055R) Other (0022R) Scenic River Area (0011A) All (Combined)

2006 22 3 42 0 0 0 67 2006 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 2006 3 1 8 0 0 0 12 2006 221 9 467 307 107 0 1111

2007 24 3 47 16 0 0 90 2007 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 2007 1 0 7 4 0 0 12 2007 276 12 488 236 0 0 1012

2008 22 2 34 3 0 0 61 2008 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 2008 4 0 4 0 0 0 8 2008 186 42 562 255 0 0 1045

2009 33 2 30 10 0 0 75 2009 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 2009 1 0 4 0 0 0 5 2009 225 10 289 506 6 0 1036

2010 (YTD) 1 0 12 7 0 0 20 2010 (YTD) 0 0 2 0 0 0 2 2010 (YTD) 0 0 1 1 0 0 2 2010 (YTD) 47 0 170 319 0 0 536

Physician FOCUS

Summer Injuries Summer is the time for fun in the sun, but sometimes activities can lead to injury. How can you tell if an injury is serious enough to see a doctor? Here are some common warning signs and what they mean. Joint Pain – The knee, ankle, elbow and wrist are not protected by muscle; therefore, pain in these areas rarely has a muscular source. Pain lasting longer than two to three days requires a physician’s diagnosis. Swelling – Occasionally an area can feel swollen but show no outward signs. Elevate the injured or sore area and apply ice. If the swelling increases, consult your physician. Reduced Motion – Significant swelling or injury can reduce joint range of motion. For proper treatment of any injury that results in reduced motion, consult your physician.

Source: ODNR the Coast Guard had boarded earlier in the year. “We don’t unnecessarily go out and stop people’s trips,” Zimmer said. “We try to inspect the boats, but also try to minimize impact on the boater.” On the Maumee River last year, Division on Watercraft issued 1,036 warnings, 75 citations (all for misdemeanors) and took five boaters off the water for operating under the influence. Division of Watercraft also conducts spot checks.

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Perrysburg Twp. Marine Patrol conducted 45 spot checks and wrote 53 warnings in 2009. Lucas County Sheriff ’s Office Marine Patrol primarily made contact with boaters on the Maumee River during holidays and special events. The entity made two stops in 2009, and the only five stops so far in 2010 took place during the July 4 fireworks Downtown. Only two citations have been

issued on the river by this agency since 2007. Data from Toledo Police Department Harbor Patrol are being processed after Freedom of Information Act requests were filed. “We each have a little bit different focus,” Zimmer said. “Sometimes those focuses overlap, but our ultimate goal is a safe environment for everyone to work in.”

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Weakness – Although it can be difficult to compare sides of the body for weakness, awareness of a difference in strength from one side to the other can indicate a potentially serious injury. If the difference is noticeable, consult your physician. Numbness and Tingling – This is often a sign of nerve compression and should not be ignored. Consult your physician right away. If you experience any of the above warning signs, stop all activity, apply ice and elevate the injured area to prevent further damage. Then, contact your physician when appropriate for proper diagnosis.

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A10 ■ TOLEDO FREE PRESS

JULY 25, 2010

Ohio EPA: Toledo did not violate grant for casino location By Lisa Renee Ward TOLEDO FREE PRESS CONTRIBUTOR glasscityjungle.com

The City of Toledo is in no danger of facing repayment of any portion of the $3 million it was awarded through the Clean Ohio Fund used to remediate the site of a future casino, according to a staff member of the Ohio EPA. Legislation to accept more than $1 million from Penn National Gaming to reimburse Toledo for infrastructure costs was put on hold for two weeks after a July 20 City Council vote. This after concerns regarding the Covenant Not to Sue (CNS) that Toledo entered into with the Ohio EPA, a possible demand for repayment of the grant, and possible liability issues for Toledo were raised at the July 20 meeting by Councilman D. Michael Collins. Vlad Cica, of the Ohio EPA Division of Emergency and Remedial

Response, confirmed July 21 to Toledo Free Press a Jan 4, 2010, e-mail in which he stated to Darla Peelle, public involvement coordinator for the Ohio EPA: “Based on my review of the information, Ohio EPA did not err in issuing the CNS, and no further action is needed by our Agency.” Cica told Toledo Free Press on July 21 via phone, “The CNS was issued for a specific end use, Toledo did not violate the grant. When we issue a CNS it does not mean the property is clean; there may be stuff remaining but as long as they manage it properly, it’s fine. It’s designed specifically for an end use. They are going to run into contaminated soil and they will have to work with the EPA.” While the CNS transfers from property owner to property owner, since the specific end use of the project has changed, Cica said Penn National Gaming might have to seek an amendment to the CNS. When asked if this

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could create any delays for the project, Cica said, “Not necessarily. It’s fairly routine. They (EPA) do a variety of different end uses, which can vary using engineering controls or other controls.” Louie Bauer, former Mayor of Rossford, had raised concerns in communications with Mayor Mike Bell’s ad-

ministration, according to documents obtained by Toledo Free Press. A July 20 e-mail to members of Toledo City Council included a copy of a July 16 email written to Bell, where Bauer wrote in part, “I believe that the Clean Ohio grant was ‘closed out’ by the Ohio Department of Development as the result

of the misrepresentation by the city. If it is determined that the City of Toledo has not fully complied with the terms of the grant agreement, Toledo should rightfully be required to return the $3 million grant.” Cica told Toledo Free Press that is inaccurate.


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JULY 25, 2010

For 100 years, Flower Hospital has been making a difference and changing lives. Please join us as we celebrate our centennial anniversary and pay tribute to the people who have made our legacy possible – you.

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■ A11

Share Your Flower Hospital Story How do you remember Flower Hospital? Whether it’s a fond memory about the people you met or a cherished story about the care you received, we’d like to hear from you. If you’re a current or former patient, doctor, employee, volunteer, or a nursing school graduate, please visit www.promedica.org/100years and share your experiences today.

You’re invited to help us celebrate A Century of Changing Lives! Community Celebration Sunday, October 10 • 2 – 4 p.m. Harroun Barn on the Flower Hospital campus Walking Tours • Food and Refreshments Health Screenings and Literature • Centennial Cookbooks Commemorative Pine Tree Saplings

www.promedica.org/100years © 2010 ProMedica Health System


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A12 ■ TOLEDO FREE PRESS

JULY 25, 2010

HEALTH CARE

Treatment possible for debilitating illness PAD By Michael Stainbrook TOLEDO FREE PRESS STAFF WRITER news@toledofreepress.com

About 15 years ago, ex-Marine Gary Rexroad noticed cramping in his calves. He blamed the hard concrete floors of the tool and dye shop where he worked, but his pain increased as his mobility declined. The cramping slowly climbed his legs, working through the thighs before making it to the buttocks. It was REXROAD then that he finally sought medical help. “I didn’t have a clue what it was,” he said. “You can blame it on 10,000 things.” Two years after the cramping began, Rexroad visited Toledo Clinic, where newly hired cardiologist Dr. Ghiath Yazji diagnosed him with Peripheral Arterial Disease (PAD). PAD is a condition in which noncoronary arteries become congested, limiting blood flow to the extremities. It occurs most frequently in the legs, but the arms also can be affected. Most cases of PAD form from atherosclerosis, the same process that blocks coronary arteries and can lead to a heart attack. Blood carries oxygen throughout the body. When circulation is limited, oxygen flow is hindered, eventually causing muscles to cramp below the blockage site. Over time, the blockage may become extensive, leading to gangrene and possibly amputation. In its early stages, PAD may exist without any pain or symptoms, and most people do not visit a doctor until cramping develops. Blockages often appear in a similar location in both legs. “Many of the patients that I see are patients who have gotten to the point where they’re significantly limited in their lifestyle,” said Dr. Mark Burket, director of vascular medicine at University of Toledo Medical Center. “They try to walk and their leg tightens up, and they can’t do what they would normally do.” Burket uses several techniques to detect PAD. A pulse test on the back of the ankle and top of the foot can determine the strength of blood flow reaching the lower leg. Diminished or absent pulses typically indicate PAD. A Doppler probe is slightly more advanced and produces an audible pulse if an artery is open. A magnetic resonance angiogram and CT scan are more advanced techniques. Once detected, treatment has two objectives: addressing the known

blockage and preventing other cardiovascular incidents, such as heart attack and stroke. “Anytime that we find PAD, we know that person is at risk for other cardiac and vascular events,” Burket said. Aspirin and cholesterol-reducing drugs, such as statins, may lower the risk of heart attack and stroke. Statins may also inhibit the expansion of a blockage in the leg, delaying symptoms and prolonging mobility. Once pain develops, several courses of treatment are possible. One is atherectomy, in which the doctor scrapes away and removes the buildup in the artery. Stents may also be used to reline a blood vessel. In more severe cases, surgical bypass may be required. Rexroad underwent two atherectomies in each leg — one set in 1997 and another last year — to remove blockages in his femoral and iliac arteries. Burket assisted Yazji the first time and led the effort on the latest procedures. Each leg is done separately. The femoral artery in Rexroad’s left leg burst during his latest round of procedures, but Burket stopped the bleeding right away. Rexroad has nearly a foot of stents in each leg “I can’t thank the man enough,” Rexroad said. “He’s the reason I’m walking. I’m hearing pulses in my feet I haven’t heard in 20 years.” Burket said about 70 percent of patients with PAD are stable or show improvement over five years. Of patients diagnosed after cramping develops, about 5 percent will go on to an amputation within five years. Sometimes, he said, aggressive atherosclerosis will force an amputation, which doctors “avoid like the plague,” even when the patient has done everything possible to avoid it. “In that case, though, usually the amputation has been delayed,” he said. “Many times when we treat people we realize at some point we may have to give up and do an amputation.” Several risk factors contribute to PAD. Diabetics and African-Americans have a greater risk of developing the condition, and a family history of atherosclerosis also increases its likelihood. Because the disease develops over time, age is another determining factor. U.S. Census Bureau data and the American Heart Association show that more than 360,000 Ohioans will likely develop PAD by 2015, including one-third of Ohioans older than 50. Like many circulatory conditions, the No. 1 cause is cigarette smoking. “To avoid developing peripheral arterial disease, far and away the

most important thing is to not smoke cigarettes,” Burket said. “And then the general efforts to maintain a healthy lifestyle are also important.” Treatment for PAD is covered by

most insurance plans, Burket said. With coverage and treatment available, Rexroad encourages patients to do all they can to fight back. “There’s a lot of people that are

afraid to have it done,” he said. “I tell them when I die I plan on leaving skid marks on the ground. As long as there’s a chance that you can fix something, why not?”

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JULY 25, 2010

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■ A13

SPECIAL SERIES: STORMING BACK

Editor’s note: Toledo Free Press will follow the Blank family of Millbury for the next year as they rebuild their lives after a June 5 tornado destroyed their Main Street home. By Brandi Barhite TOLEDO FREE PRESS ASSOCIATE EDITOR bbarhite@toledofreepress.com

The Blanks and Bihnss have found a routinee after living together forr seven weeks. Monday nights are forr watching “The Bachelor-ette.” Wednesdays are forr BLANK “Big Brother.” When Julie Blank goess to the grocery store, shee calls to see if Becci Bihn n needs anything. When n Becci does laundry, shee does a load for her guests, s, too. She is like a second d mom to 15-year-old Casey Blank, just as Julie is to her three children, Connor, 11, Ethan, 7, and Maci, 5. The families even cook and eat together when possible. “We like the same foods, we eat the same stuff,” Becci said. “My kids look up to Casey and adore him, and Casey adores my kids.” When the initial chaos quieted, it started to feel like the families were on

vacation, something they do anyway. Becci, principal of Eisenhower Middle School, has been off since July. The Blanks took them to Myrtle Beach earlier this month to thank them. “It has been fun,” Becci said. “There hasn’t ever been a moment where I am like, ‘When are these people leaving’?” She never even discussed the living arrangements with her husband Steve, who was out of town, the w night of the tornado. The n ffamilies became friends yyears ago when because SSteve and Ed played on a ssoftball league. Hours before the torFAMILY: nnado, Becci and Maci were at the Blanks house w ffor Casey’s birthday party. They left at 9:30 p p.m. because Maci was p ggetting tired and the sstorm was coming. Becci was in the basement of her Perrysburg Township home gathering items to wait out the storm when she thought of the Blanks. She knew they were probably cleaning up from the pool party and called to let them know about the storm. When Julie didn’t answer her phone, she called Ed. When Ed didn’t answer his phone, she called Casey. And when Casey didn’t answer, she called the home phone. Still, no answer.

TOLEDO FREE PRESS PHOTO BY CHARLIE LONGTON

Perrysburg family opens home to Blanks

STORMING

back

Becci comforted herself by saying they knew the storm was coming and it was not going to be that bad. But it was. Julie’s sister’s called with the news. The Blanks lost everything. “I didn’t know what to expect,” Becci said. “I was like, ‘for gosh sakes, there has to be something left there.’ I couldn’t imagine the house being gone. I was just there.” Becci called her mom who hap-

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pened to be in Walbridge and asked her to go pick up the Blanks. As she waited, she was a nervous wreck, not knowing if they were cut and bleeding. “I made an egg casserole and I got the coffeemaker out; we are not coffee drinkers, but they are,” she said. “When they came in, they were mud from head to foot. Pitiful. I was just staring. I was in awe. They were crying and in shock.” Becci took charge. “I told them, ‘You guys have nothing to worry about, you guys are staying here’.” And she told stubborn Ed, “Don’t argue with me.” Ed and Julie would sleep in Ethan’s room; Ethan would sleep with Connor; and Maci would sleep with her parents, so Casey could have her room. The night of the tornado, Becci had them take showers; she washed their soiled clothes and she insisted they sleep in her king-size bed. For that night, she wanted them to be together. By 7 a.m., everyone was up and no one knew what to do. “It wasn’t like you got a phone call to come back to their house,” Becci said. “They kind of took their time, but I think they took their time because they were scared of what it was going to be.” When they got to the neighborhood, the Bihns weren’t initially allowed in. “Just being at the corner of Ayers and Main Street, I cried the entire time. It looked like a war zone, it truly, truly did.” They all assumed roles. Steve, who

works in commercial construction, made sure the adjustors were doing their job. Becci’s mission was to find Julie’s jewelry, so she could bring it to her in the hospital. Julie suffered minor heart damage after the tornado. When searching the site behind the neighboring Walters’ property, Becci happened to look down and see a wad of jewelry. One of the first things she saw was a circle necklace that she had given to Julie for her birthday. Later, when a wall from the Walters’ house was being lifted, Becci found an emerald ring, which had belonged to Ed’s mother. Three of the four members of the Walter family died in the tornado. The Blanks first reaction was to not rebuild at the same site because of all the bad memories. Becci and her husband talked it through with them. Eventually, they reconsidered. Meanwhile, they are moving into a condominium in August. “We were trying to take pressure off of them, and there were things we would suggest that no one else would suggest to them,” Becci said. “I don’t think they ever felt like we were telling them what to do.” The Bihn children have also learned about compassion. “It has taught them to be more giving and to help people,” Becci said. “My husband took them to the scene. I think they appreciate and value things a little bit more. They take better care of their stuff. “We will miss them when they leave,” she said. “It will be weird not having them around.”


REAL ESTATE

A14 ■ TOLEDO FREE PRESS

JULY 25, 2010

COMMERCIAL SPACE

BRINGING THE FLAVORS OF

By Gail Burkhardt

TOLEDO FREE PRESS STAFF WRITER news@toledofreepress.com

When the 18-screen cinema on Conant Street in Maumee closed July 11, it became the fourth vacant theater in the Toledo area. The Franklin Park Cinemas on Monroe Street and Showcase Cinemas on Secor Road have been closed since May 2005, and Super Cinemas in Spring Meadows has been closed since April 2008, according to an e-mail from Rachel Lulay, a spokeswoman for National Amusements Inc., which owns the three theaters. Rave Motion Pictures bought the Conant Street theater from National Amusements for about $4.7 million in December 2009, according to the Lucas County Auditor’s Real Estate Information System. Rave also took control of National Amusements theaters at the Shops at Fallen Timbers in Maumee, inside Westfield Franklin Park Shopping Mall in Toledo and at Levis Commons in Perrysburg, but did not buy the theaters because they are owned by the shopping centers, said Jeremy Devine, vice president of marketing for Rave. Rave will try to sell the approximately 98,000-square-foot Conant Street building, Devine said. The company is 10 years old and has never sold a theater building before, he said, adding that he hopes the building can be repurposed into something else, such as a health club or a church. Steve Serchuk, the marketing agent for National Amusements, is trying to sell the Secor Road and Spring Meadows theaters. National Amusements is not actively marketing the Monroe Street theater because the company also owns the shopping center behind the cinema and is trying to lease empty spaces in the shopping center first, said Serchuk, who works for real estate company, Signature Associates. People have expressed interest in using the Secor land for medical offices, hotels and fast food restaurants, and others have expressed interest in using the Spring Meadows property for hotels and retail stores, he said, adding that no contracts have been signed and the properties are still up for sale. Serchuk said he thinks the buildings will be torn down because they

don’t convert well to other facilities. “They are divided into a lot of theaters and each theater has loadbearing walls and fire walls and you cannot open them up easily,” he said. It is not unusual to have large buildings on the market for five years, but the economy has not helped, Serchuk said. County Commissioner Ben Konop also attributed the empty buildings to the poor economy and called the theaters a “blight on the community.” The many other empty buildings and commercial properties for sale might make it harder to sell the buildings, said Ford Weber, the president and CEO of the Lucas County Improvement Corporation. “I think it’s going to be a bit of a challenge [to sell the properties] right now because there is a surplus of commercial property on the market and it’s very expensive to renovate a theater,” he said.

TOLEDO FREE PRESS PHOTO BY CHARLIE LONGTON

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■ Super Cinemas Address: 1301 East Mall Dr., Holland Year Built: 1988 Building Size: 50,076 square feet Total Land: 14.208 Acres Value for Land and Building: $4.44 million ■ Rave Cinemas Maumee 18 Address: 1360 Conant St., Maumee Year Built: 1997 Building Size: 98,480 square feet Total Land: 21.232 acres Value for Land and Building: $5.35 million

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JULY 25, 2010

Visit www.toledofreepress.com m

■ A15

Thank You Toledo For Making the #1 Most Trusted Brand ',#-&

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NOTE: This bar graph combines the “sold” listings of all office locations and independent offices of each multi-office or franchise organization identified, which listings were sold by such organization itself, or with the aid of a cooperating broker, according to data maintained by the Local Board or Multiple Listing Service for the geographic area indicated. The bar graph compares all those listings that were “sold” by each organization during the period 01/01/10– 06/30/10. This representation is based in whole or in part on data supplied by the Northwest Ohio Real Estate Information Systems, Inc. (NORIS) and the Toledo Board of REALTORS and their Multiple Listing Service. Neither the Associations nor its MLS guarantee or are in any way responsible for its accuracy. Data maintained by the Associations may not reflect all real estate activity in a market. ©2010, RE/MAX Central and Northern Ohio Region. Each RE/MAX® office is independently owned and operated. 100289


BUSINESS LINK

A16

FAMILY BUSINESS

By Duane Ramsey TOLEDO FREE PRESS SENIOR BUSINESS WRITER dramsey@toledofreepress.com

Toledo Ticket Company is celebrating 100 years as a family-owned business that has become a worldwide brand in the parking industry by printing millions of tickets daily at its manufacturing facilities in Toledo and other locations. A Toledo City Council resolution and a proclamation from Mayor Mike Bell “congratulated and recognized Toledo Ticket Company as a fifth generation family business on the occasion of its 100th anniversary” with ceremonies in City Council chambers July 20. The company also celebrated its centennial at a special evening event July 17 at the Inverness Club with its employees and more than 200 customers who came from across the country at their own expense, according to Roy Carter, chairman and CEO of his family’s firm. “Printing and shipping tickets is our business. We print and ship millions of tickets daily,” Carter said. The family owes its success to seeking new niche products and services in the commercial printing and parking industry markets, he said. “One of our goals has been to extend our reach in our current markets by partnering with collaborative companies to expand. We’ve stayed one step ahead of industry changes with the use of computers and technology,” Carter said. Toledo Ticket provides tickets and security credentials for the parking, transportation, entertainment, education, health care, recreation and sports markets. It prints and ships tickets to commercial parking facilities at major airports and in cities located in all 50 states and 30 countries around the world. “Somebody will use something we’ve manufactured every day worldwide,” said Roy’s son Tom Carter,

TOLEDO FREE PRESS PHOTO BY CHARLIE LONGTON

Toledo Ticket Company celebrates 100 years

THE FAMILY OF TOLEDO TICKET COMPANY ACCEPT A PROCLAMATION AND A RESOLUTION FROM TOLEDO CITY COUNCIL MEMBERS AND MAYOR MIKE BELL ON JULY 19.

president and chief operating officer of the company. The company is certified to meet the specifications for printing tickets used in parking “spitter” machines manufactured worldwide. It designs and produces tickets and cards with bar coding, magnetic strips and radio frequency identification for security credentials, hotel key cards, retail gift cards and other applications. The new radio frequency ID cards and tags last longer and improve security with new laser scanning technology that saves money and helps prevent counterfeiting, Tom said. The company still provides rolls of tickets for drawings and raffles sold at carnivals, festivals, high

schools, colleges and universities. It has printed tickets for Major League Baseball and National Football League teams, UT and BGSU athletics, the Jamie Farr LPGA Classic and the Toledo Mud Hens . The business was originally founded as the American Ticket Company in Toledo by Grant Northrup in 1910. It was housed in a two-story building Downtown and later renamed the Toledo Ticket Company which is now located on Catawba Street off Sylvania Avenue. Northrup was a Swanton native who worked in the printing trade for the former Swanton Enterprise newspaper. He later served on Toledo City Council and as vice mayor of Toledo.

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His son, Lowell, joined the family business after graduating from The Ohio State University in 1929. Lowell continued to work for the company until he was nearly 90 years old. Grant’s grandson, Reeves Northrup, joined the business in the mid-’50s and served as general manager. Roy Carter, husband of Grant’s granddaughter Robin Northrup Carter, joined the firm in the ’60s to work with Reeves. Roy helped to increase the parking ticket market for Toledo Ticket with his involvement in the National Parking Association. The company was the first to provide bar-coded tickets to the parking industry, Roy said. Tom joined the firm in 1994 after

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graduating from the UT. He works with his father Roy and brother, RoyGrant Carter, who serves as plant manager. The founder’s great, greatgrandson, Trevor Carter, has begun training as the fifth generation in the family business. Toledo Ticket has 100-plus employees and representatives, four manufacturing facilities and 18 sales offices located across the U.S. It recently hired a salesperson to develop parking ticket markets in Central and South American countries. The company provides ticket and security products to more than 6,500 parking customers and 2,000 sports and entertainment clients in more than 30 countries around the world.

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UPCOMING EVENTS ) Kelly’s Island Swim for Make-A-Wish, Golf Cart Poker Run July 31st – Aug. 1st Portside Marina, Kelly’s Island, OH ) Perrysburg Car Show Aug. 7th Downtown Perrysburg, OH ) Placers Car Club Super Cruise Car Show Aug. 12th Toledo Speedway, Toledo, OH ) Northwest Ohio Tractor Pull Aug. 20th – 22nd Wood County Fairgrounds, Bowling Green, OH

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■ A17

TREECE BLOG

Glenn Beck-onomics and (inflated) rusty gold

R

ecently, I read Ayn Rand’s Russian Bank, according to reports novel “Atlas Shrugged,” from the International Reserve which got me thinking about Payment System (presented on Zethe source of value in currency, roHedge.com). (For those readers among other things. The other who aren’t metallurgists, gold does day I came across an interesting not rust. Hence, rust appearing on article from Steve Saville (“Econo- gold coins issued by a central bank indicates obvious fraud, mists don’t understand as the coins clearly are money”), which got me not minted of gold.) thinking further about For those still unthis issue. convinced of the perils Money, in modern of owning or trading society, is globally acin gold bullion — the cepted as a medium of oldest useless currency exchange. The fact that it in the world — conis so commonly accepted sider the recent ABC in commerce breeds within its users a desire Dock David TREECE News article “Gold Coin Sellers Angered by to possess ever-increasing New Tax Law” by Rich Blake. Acquantities. However, few people remember cording to the article, the trading that this medium of exchange, in and of gold coins will soon come under of itself, has absolutely no intrinsic increased government scrutiny value. Its value in exchange is based thanks to a little-known provision upon the fact that people want it and in Obama’s new health care bill. Thanks to Obamacare, at the is determined by its users. Currency the world over has ab- start of 2012, Americans will be resolutely no practical value in society. quired to submit to the IRS 1099s It doesn’t satisfy a single basic human for all purchases in excess of $600, need, meaning that one can’t eat it, including both goods and services. drink it, sleep on it or use it for shelter. This means that there will be (or Even in our complex economy, it has should be) a Form 1099 produced no real functional use in manufac- and submitted to the federal government every time a single ounce turing or production. The single, solitary use for money of gold trades hands after Jan. 1, is as a store of wealth, which can be 2012, (assuming gold stays more used whenever the owner wishes to than $600/oz). Gold is undoubtedly a good investexchange it for something he considers more valuable, namely a good ment solution for some investors and special situations. or service. However, given the metal’s limited How funny it is then that this precise argument, so commonly em- functionality or practicality in modern ployed by fear mongers, inflation society, its current price seems to be hawks and political pundits like Glenn likely inflated. A good number of investors Beck, can also be applied to the object would be wise to ignore the hype surof their affection: Gold. For decades, conspiracy theo- rounding gold and spend some time rists and doomsday subscribers researching the dynamics of its spehave been peddling gold as an eco- cialized market to better understand nomic panacea. They continually the risks involved. point to poor monetary policy and economic depravity as reasons to Dock David Treece is a discretionary store accumulated wealth in “more money manager with Treece Investment Advisory Corp. (www.Treecetangible assets.” Odd indeed that their choice of Investments.com) and a stockbroker assets for storing wealth is among licensed with FINRA. He works for the world’s oldest currencies, and Treece Financial Services Corp and also one of the first to ever suffer also serves as editor of the financial from their most disparaged ailment: news site Green Faucet (www.GreenFaucet.com). The above information debasement. For evidence of fraud in pre- is the express opinion of Dock David cious metals, look no further than Treece and should not be construed as the recent story of rust appearing on investment advice or used without out.999 gold coins issued by the Central side verification.


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THE CHEAP SEATS

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hen the 2010 baseball son’s bleak outlook for Frazier, and it season began, Mud Hens seemed like he was in store for more first baseman Jeff Frazier bad luck. “Coming in on Opening Day this was one of several players caught in a crammed outfield. The Hens broke yyear and not seeing my name in the lineup was difficult. camp with five outWe had all these upfielders on its roster, and and-coming guys, and with only three spots I knew I just had to available and several star take advantage of any prospects ahead of him, chance I got.� it looked like at-bats for Frazier got his Frazier might be few and chance that first game, far between. when outfielder Casper “I just kept telling Wells was injured sliding myself I would get a into second base. chance,� he said. “I just Chris SCHMIDBAUER “I was put in as a knew when I got that opportunity that I needed to make the pinch runner and, in my only at bat, I got a single, and I haven’t been out of most of it.� Being the “odd man out� has been the lineup since,� he said. What has ensued since that the theme of Frazier’s career. After being drafted by the Tigers in 2004, fateful at bat has been Frazier’s most the New Jersey native has had to prove complete season in professional baseball. Moving from the outfield himself several times. He was traded to the Seattle Mari- to first base, Frazier has hit the cover ners in 2007, then traded back to off the baseball. He ranks second on the team in Detroit in 2008. After spending the majority of 2008 at Double-A Erie, batting average (.274), and he leads Frazier was poised to begin his 2009 the team in home runs (20), RBI (61), season with Toledo. But those hopes and slugging percentage (.516). Frazier’s surge of power at the were dashed after the Tigers signed plate can be attributed to some tips Johnny Damon prior to last season. After getting called up to Toledo in from Hens hitting coach Leon “Bull� May 2009, he went on a tear in July, Durham and manager Larry Parrish. “Both Bull and LP were watching hitting .353 throughout the rest of the season. He hit 11 HR with the club the way I was swinging through the and drove in 54 RBI. With such a pro- ball, and they said if I dropped my ductive season under his belt, Frazier hands I would be able to get some felt he would be ready to help lead the lift on the line drives I was hitting. I took their advice and the ball Hens in 2010. “I thought doing what I did in To- started carrying over the wall.� Frazier’s fantastic first half earned ledo last year, I thought that would mean that I would easily be a starter the first baseman an All-Star slot for International League team and he somewhere,� he said. Throw in the start of this sea- was also selected to participate in the

Triple-A Home Run Derby. Both were great honors for the 27-year-old. “The whole experience was great,� he said. “It was pretty close to my hometown and I had a bunch of family and friends in the stands. The crowds were great and everything was first class all the way. I just had a blast out there.� While the fanfare is nice, Frazier has more pressing issues to deal with. Frazier is in the final year of his contract with Detroit, and with the season more than halfway through, time is running out for Frazier to prove his worth. “This is a huge year for me and it is so important for me to finish strong. I am going to keep doing what I have been so that I can find a place to play next year.� Some might crack under such intense pressure to perform, but Frazier uses it as motivation. “I use it to drive me every day, and I keep trying to prove that I am worth taking a chance on,� he said. No matter what the future holds, Frazier said he is still focused on getting the Hens back to the winning ways from earlier in the season. “We went on a little bit of a slide there for a bit,� he said, “but stuff is starting to come back together for us. I am going to keep doing what I can to help this team win, and I know the other guys are too.� Chris Schmidbauer is sports editor for Toledo Free Press and Toledo Free Press Star. Contact him at cschmidbauer@toledofreepress.com. He also can be heard every Tuesday at 11 a.m. on the Odd Couple Sports Show on Fox Sports Radio 1230 WCWA.

PHOTO COURTESY TOLEDO MUD HENS

Frazier’s hard work paying off for Hens

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A20 ■ TOLEDO FREE PRESS

BACK TO SCHOOL

JULY 25, 2010


BACK TO SCHOOL

JULY 25, 2010

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■ A21

By Michael Stainbrook TOLEDO FREE PRESS STAFF WRITER news@toledofreepress.com

After the June 5 tornado left Lake High School in shambles, a top priority was finding a new location for the quickly approaching graduation ceremony. But administrators also had to deal with a larger problem: the high school would clearly not be ready for classes by fall. That’s when Owens Community College stepped in. “We started working with Lake High School almost immediately after that event happened,” said Larry McDougle, Owens president. Graduation was originally scheduled for June 6, but was postponed because of the disaster. Owens offered to host the commencement on June 8 at its Student Health and Activities Center. McDougle said the graduation was a “wonderful ceremony.” Then the focus turned toward the 2010-11 school year. “We began to talk with the superintendent, members of their board,” McDougle said. “They were saying, ‘What are we going to do? Where are we going?’” The president met with his administrative team to discuss their options. They decided to vacate an academic building in Northwood and lease it to Lake until a new school could be built. “They’ve allowed us to take over the physical usage of it and make it our own,” said Jim Witt, Lake Local superintendent. “They’ve been absolutely terrific throughout the entire process. I don’t know that we could ever say thank you enough to match their generosity.” Owens leased the nearly 55,000 square-foot building on Tracy Road

to Lake for $3 per square foot. Owens will move its state-tested nursing assistant, heating, ventilation, air conditioning and electrical/electronic technologies programs to its main campus in Oregon. “Academically, we are totally out of the building,” said Renay Scott, Owens interim provost and vice provost. She said about 200 Owens students, many of whom took night classes at the building, will be affected by the move. Lake is faced with the challenge of turning a college building into a fully equipped high school in less than three months. Witt has no doubts that academics will transition nicely. “We have an outstanding staff and we have terrific kids. Even though it won’t be at the building here on campus, it will still be Lake High School,” he said. Witt said most sports will continue to be played on Lake’s campus. The basketball teams will practice and play at Owens. Students will still be able to earn college credit through post-secondary enrollment options and classes at Penta Career Center, where 141 Lake juniors and seniors were enrolled last school year. The district’s middle school and two elementary schools will change their start times to accommodate changes in busing routes. The Northwood building is about six miles from Lake’s original high school. Other details still need to be resolved. Lake salvaged some teaching materials, but needs to replace others, and the Northwood building does not have a cafeteria. “We’re working on that on a daily basis. We don’t have it all ironed out for sure, but there will be a place for [students] to eat,” Witt said.

TOLEDO FREE PRESS PHOTO BY CHARLIE LONGTON

Lake prepares for freshman year at Owens building

LAKE GRADUATES CELEBRATE AT THE JUNE 8 CEREMONY AT OWENS.

Lake and Owens have not agreed to any educational initiatives between the two schools, although neither Witt nor Scott ruled out that possibility in the future. Because Owens and Lake have a lessor-lessee relationship, they will share maintenance and upkeep responsibilities, Scott said. The current contract expires after the 2010-11

school year, but Lake will have the option of renewing it. “Those rooms are well-equipped and we’re prepared to let them have it for two years if they need it, because it’s not likely that they’ll have any facilities constructed any sooner than that,” McDougle said. A new, permanent Lake High School will be built on the original

Sunday, August 1, 2010 1p.m. – 6p.m. 2727 Kenwood, Toledo, Ohio • 419-475-6620

campus, Witt said, but plans are preliminary as Lake continues discussions with its insurance company. In the meantime, he said, location is not as important as community. “What we’ve received has been positive, mainly, from the aspect that our kids will all be together in the same facility,” Witt said. The first day of school is Aug. 26.


BACK TO SCHOOL

A22 â– TOLEDO FREE PRESS

JULY 25, 2010

Dundee High School recovering from tornado

“

Our [football] press box is gone. It doesn’t exist anymore.� — Bryan Schroeder, Dundee H.S. principal

By Mary Petrides TOLEDO FREE PRESS STAFF WRITER mpetrides@toledofreepress.com

Even though the June 5 tornado moved graduation to Eastern Michigan University, Dundee High School’s doors will be open this fall. The tornado damaged the school’s roof and ripped the vent and duct work off, said Bryan Schroeder, the principal. The building wasn’t damaged structurally, but the power went out for four days.

Additionally, 94 trees on school property were destroyed and needed to be replaced. The worst of the damage was the football field, Schroeder said. “Our press box is gone. It doesn’t exist anymore,� he said. Schroeder said the press box was slammed into the middle of the football field. Debris, some of it embedded in the ground, had to be cleared from the field as well. The school is awaiting approval from the state on its plans for a new

press box, Schroeder said. Schroeder said despite the damage, the building and field will be ready to go in the fall — and the tornado will

be a learning experience. “We don’t get the hurricanes, we don’t get the earthquakes, but this is definitely an opportunity for us to

learn more about tornadoes,� he said. “You’ve got to take the enthusiasm of whatever happens in the world to use it as a teaching moment.�

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JULY 25, 2010

By Gail Burkhardt TOLEDO FREE PRESS STAFF WRITER news@toledofreepress.com

While many public schools across the country are cutting art programs, the Toledo School for the Arts (TSA) is in its 12th year of offering extensive theater, dance, visual arts and music programs to its students and producing first-class artists, including Crystal Bowersox. The charter school serves about 560 sixth-through-12th-grade students from 27 different school districts in the area, said Dave Gierke, development director for the school. Each year, the school’s waiting list ranges from 130 to 200 students. “I think we are a school where kids that don’t fit in at other schools feel they belong,” he said. Gierke called the school a “diverse learning community,” with about half of the students coming from a minority background. Students in sixth through eighth grade take classes in music, dance, visual arts and theater. TSA teachers also integrate art as much as possible into their lessons. About 90 percent of the teachers have a background in art, Gierke said. Once students enter ninth grade,

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world experience while raising money, Gierke said. The high number of performances gets students accustomed to performing in front of large audiences, Saygers said. Janelle Nunnally, a 16-year-old music major who plays with the Glass City Steel Ensemble, agrees. “If you want to be a musician, you’ll have to have tough enough skin to perform,” she said. Saygers said he thinks the practice performing at TSA helped Crystal Bowersox become the runner-up for “American Idol.” Bowersox attended TSA and Saygers said she has made the community more aware of what the school does. “Hopefully, it will affect not just fundraising, but also show how close some of our other students are to success,” he said. One student has music on the MTV show “The Hills” and another has danced in Broadway shows, he said. Still, not every student will pursue a career in the arts. TSA, which was rated excellent by the state of Ohio in 2006, ’07 and ’08, sends about 80 percent of its students to college, many pursuing majors in non-art fields.

they choose one of the disciplines as a major and study it more intensively as they take a college preparatory course load, Gierke said. “They’re not exactly tap dancing their way through high school,” he said, adding that the average TSA high school student has about three hours of homework a night. Tori Tredway, a 16-year-old incoming freshman, said she does her homework backstage to balance school and performances. Students put on about 120 performances a year, including a musical. This year’s is a double feature of “Little Shop of Horrors” and “Zombie Prom.” The band plays alongside the 555th Air Force band; the modern dance troupe puts on an exhibit at the Valentine Theatre, and the top artists in the school showcase their work at the end of the year during Kaleidoscope, also at the Valentine, said artistic director David Saygers. Because the school does not receive as much funding as other public schools, it relies on fundraisers to stay open. Many of these involve students’ artwork. Some students make visual art to sell in the summer, while others perform in the area raising funds for the school. The students gain real-

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‘AMERICAN IDOL’ RUNNER-UP CRYSTAL BOWERSOX ATTENDED TSA.

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BGSU faculty will decide whether to unionize By Christy Mesaros-Winckles SPECIAL TO TOLEDO FREE PRESS news@toledofreepress.com

BGSU faculty will decide this fall if they want to form a union. Faculty can mail in secret ballots to the State Employee Relations Board (SERB) office in Columbus between Sept. 28 and Oct. 12, according to BGSU President Carol Cartwright. On Oct. 20, SERB officials, in front of a representative from the university administration and the BGSU Faculty Association, will count the ballots. Before a June 17 meeting, BGSU had resisted allowing both tenuretrack and nontenured-track faculty to be in the same collective bargaining unit. But along with setting a date for the election, the SERB hearing resulted in allowing one collective bargaining unit at BGSU. Part-time and adjunct faculty members are ineligible

to join the union. All BGSU full-time faculty who are employed by the start of the fall semester will be eligible to vote in the election. While the administration does not support the idea of a faculty union, Cartwright said open communication between faculty and administration before the election will be crucial. “It is important that the faculty is very well informed and understand how CARTWRIGHT important it is to vote,” Cartwright said in a phone interview July 14. “This is a very important issue for Bowling Green State University because it could create a significant change in the culture,” she said.

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Through information posted on the university’s website and e-mails to the campus community, the administration has expressed concern that a faculty union will affect the community atmosphere and will not help enhance the university’s academic reputation. “We’re not out to wreck the institution, this idea that collective bargaining is greedy professors trying to take all the money and JACKSON run the place into the ground is just false. It hasn’t happened and it can’t,” said David Jackson, president of the BGSU Faculty Association. Some of the concerns of the prounion faculty include high attrition rates among faculty members, low salaries and lack of protection of the current benefits offered to full-time employees, according to the faculty association. From 2005 to 2008, BGSU faculty left the university at the average age of 42, according to the 2008-2009 BGSU Faculty Welfare Review Report. Jackson said this is the time in faculty members’ careers when they are most marketable and productive, which results in losing employees with careers in which BGSU has invested time and money. Since the 1983-1984 academic year, BGSU has ranked in the lower half of average faculty salaries among Ohio public universities. The BGSU administration is aware

that faculty salaries are the reason some want a union. To try to meet the needs of the faculty, BGSU announced at the end of the 2009-2010 academic year that a small salary increase would be given to faculty in 2010-2011. “The administration is aware that past promises to faculty about salary increases have not been honored and that while staff salaries are competitive, faculty salaries are not,” Cartwright said. “In a very difficult budget, we have found money to invest in faculty salaries.” BGSU is searching for a new university president and, according to Jackson, faculty believe a collective bargaining unit is necessary to ensure that promises to the faculty are kept. “President Cartwright has less than a year remaining. She may pledge a commitment, but how do we know the next president is going to keep that? Well, I’ll tell you how we’d know, if we had a contract,” Jackson said. Not all BGSU faculty members are in favor of forming a union. In April, an opposition group called Advocates for Academic Independence published a newsletter urging faculty to vote against a collective bargaining unit. That group did not respond to interview requests, but according to its newsletter, it believes that “if it should be adopted, collective bargaining will add another bureaucratic structure to an already bureaucratic institution that will change only through confrontation every few years when the contract comes up for negotiation.” As fall semester approaches, both the BGSU Faculty Association and ad-

ministration have promised to step up communication. “It is important that the faculty is very well-informed and understand how important it is to vote,” Cartwright said. She said the administration believes BGSU has become a target for the American Association of University Professors (AAUP), which would represent the faculty collective bargaining unit. Cartwright cites a June 18, 2009, Chronicle of Higher Education article that states BGSU is part of the AAUP’s most recent efforts to expand membership. According to the 2009 Chronicle article, the AAUP only represents 4 percent of college faculty nationally. “When only 4 percent of national university faculty are represented by the American Association of University Professors, you have to ask what faculty will gain from joining,” Cartwright said. “It’s abundantly clear that the central administration at the university does not want the faculty to vote in favor of collective bargaining,” Jackson said. “Nothing that happened in terms of reaching a settlement on the collective bargaining unit and election date changed that. “The administration has promised to make aggressive arguments against collective bargaining as the election approaches, and we expect them to do that,” he said. “We are disappointed that their insistence on doing this, it feels sort of reflexive instead of well thought out, just this automatic assumption on the part of the administration that a union can’t be but a bad thing for faculty.”

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Owens Community College is working with four-year institutions to offer its students an easier, cheaper path to a bachelor’s degree. “We are going to provide a mechanism by which students can seamlessly transfer from getting their associate to earning a baccalaureate degree,” said Tamara Williams, interim vice provost at Owens. “Our goal is to preach what we teach by helping further students’ education.” Owens began a partnership with Lourdes College and created an integrated business degree. The degree will offer students experience in all facets of business, including marketing, administration and finance, giving them a wellrounded experience before entering the workplace. “The partnership will develop a very clear set of pathway agreements that would let [Owens] students seamlessly transfer to Lourdes,” said Dean Ludwig, chairman and professor of business and leadership studies at Lourdes. “We see the degree as an outright extension of our mission statement: ‘Integrated, personal, values-centered educational journey.’” Since both Lourdes and Owens take pride in their small class sizes, which Ludwig assured would not be threatened, the transfer would be “seamless” for the student. Plans for the new degree will be discussed further by

Owens and Lourdes faculty Aug. 2. Officials at both schools detailed their excitement to get the program ready for spring of 2011. “We are articulating our programs to give our students access to the very best education in the state,” said Renay Scott, interim provost at Owens. With partnerships with many four-year institutions, including UT, BGSU, Heidelberg University, Franklin University, Walsh University and Ohio University, Owens gives its students access to a variety of higher education opportunities. In 2009, Owens formed a partnership with OU for students with an interest in earning their degree in technical and applied studies or criminal justice, or receiving a BS in nursing. “The program also allows students to dual enroll at both OU and Owens so they don’t have to give up their jobs and families in Northwest Ohio, but can still get the four-year college experience,” Williams said. “The great thing about this program is that it costs only $153 per credit hour to Owens students and is substantially cheaper than OU’s normal tuition.” Students enrolled in the program would complete general coursework at Owens and finish their degree, approximately 12-13 courses, online via OU, Williams said. — Jacob Corkins


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JULY 25, 2010

Parents should prepare kids to deal with bullying By Betsy Woodruff TOLEDO FREE PRESS STAFF WRITER bwoodruff@toledofreepress.com

When Bill Voors was young, he had rheumatic fever and an overbite. As a small, scrawny elementary school student, he got picked on and was nicknamed “Squirrel.” “That was hard to deal with,” he said. His parents taught him to be kind and compassionate and to turn the other cheek, but not how to stand up VOORS for himself. So he grew up feeling unathletic and abnormal. Those insecurities made it harder for him to develop healthy relationships with kids his age. As an adult, Voors became a therapist and asked his clients if they had been bullied when they were young. “They were glad I was finally asking them, because no one had ever asked,” he said. He learned that about one-fourth of them could trace their problems with relationships, depression and anxiety back to experiences being bullied as children. Today, he is the director of the Midwest Bullying Prevention Project and works to help keep other children from facing the same hardships he and his clients struggled with as children.

A form of abuse Voors said many parents and teachers believe myths about bullying, including that it is a normal part of childhood. “That’s just ridiculous,” he said. “Being abused is never OK period.” “We know now that bullying is a form of abuse, just like child abuse or domestic violence,” he said.

Especially when girls bully each other, adults look the other way, saying, “That’s the way girls are,” or “Girls are just catty,” Voors said. It bothers Voors to hear such things because it’s gender stereotyping, he said. “What a ridiculous notion. Let’s not buy into that; let’s not call disrespectful or mean behavior normal in any sense.” Lynn Carder, the program coordinator for Victim’s Forum, a local group that helps schools prevent bullying problems, said there is a difference between an occasional hurtful word and regular intimidation, namecalling and violence. “When feelings are hurt over a period of time, that’s no longer teasing,” she said. Many bullies grab their victims’ clothing, call them names and push them around every day. “That’s not a joke,” she said. “That’s a consistent pattern of behavior.”

Long-term effects Voors said though most bullies stop targeting victims by high school, the damage can last for years. Social Anxiety Disorder, one of the leading psychiatric diagnoses of American adults, is often present in people who were bullied as children. People diagnosed with this disorder feel nervous around their peers and uncomfortable in social situations. Bullies’ victims also face higher rates of depression than average, according to Voors. Carder said adults who were bullied as children are more likely to develop problems with substance abuse. They rarely forget their childhood trauma, she said. “They carry that in the back of their mind,” she said. “It can be a lifelong journey.” People who were bullies as children are also more likely to use drugs and alcohol as teenagers, according

to Voors. They are also more likely to commit dating violence and to abuse their children and spouses. “We need to realize that kids don’t necessarily grow out of it,” he said.

Parents and prevention Because of the recession, many schools are understaffed. This lack of supervision can lead to higher rates of bullying, according to Voors. It is a significant problem for middle school students, so parents of rising middle school students should be vigilant about any significant changes in their children’s behavior. If kids come home with torn clothes, ask for money more often than usual, have inexplicable bruises, feign illness to keep from going to school, withdraw from social situations or seem depressed, they may be bullies’ targets. Carder said any significant change in a child’s behavior could point to a bullying problem; children who are generally reserved, for instance, may become unusually chatty if they are being bullied at school. Parents should talk with their child about the problem he or she may be facing, Carder said. She encourages parents to ask open-ended questions to foster conversation. If the child does not want to talk about bullying, parents should look for opportunities to bring up the topic. For example, if an instance of bullying comes up on a TV show, the parent could ask, “What do you think about that? What could he have done differently?” This can help kids open up about struggles they face away from home. Parents should also be careful not to overreact, which could frighten their child, and they should not teach their child to respond to bullying with violence. “Two wrongs don’t make a right,” Carder said, and added that because

Other back-to-school safety tips

(ARA) — ■ Food safety: When packing a lunch for your child, make sure you keep items that need to be cold (like cheese or yogurt) at the proper temperature by storing them in an insulated container. Products that keep foods and beverages at the proper temperature for longer inhibit the growth of potentially dangerous bacteria. ■ Transportation safety: Make sure to check with the school on approved walking or biking routes. Many schools are making efforts to communicate with parents about this issue to encourage active lifestyles, while also keeping kids safe. If you are buying a new bike helmet for your child before school, make sure it fits correctly and refer to the helmet wearing instructions to ensure the safest ride. If you bike with your kids, wear a helmet to set a good example.

Also, remember that safely crossing the street is not always such an easy task for children. Find out if the school has crossing guards on your child’s route to school. ■ Product safety: Make sure any products, from art supplies to lunch boxes, are certified under the U.S. Consumer Product Safety Improvement Act. ■ Playground safety: Playgrounds are fun areas for kids of all ages, but they can be dangerous. Take a look at how much protective surfacing is under equipment. There should be at least 9 inches of mulch, and it should be replenished or re-spread as needed to ensure that the depth is maintained. Encourage kids to play with the existing play structures and to never add jump ropes or other toys because they may introduce a strangulation risk.

the Toledo Public Schools system has a zero-tolerance policy on violence, children involved in physical fights could be suspended or expelled from school. Instead, parents should encourage their children to talk to a trusted adult at school, whether it is a teacher or a lunch lady. Children should give specific details about the bullying. “We’re lucky that our school system here is responsible enough to take action,” Carder said. Parents should explain the difference between tattling and reporting. Voors said that tattling is intended to get somebody in trouble, while reporting helps get children out of trouble. Carder said parents should encourage their children to walk confidently and look other students in the

eye, rather than shuffling with their heads down. Praising children’s abilities can also help them develop confidence. Carder said she encourages parents to enroll their kids in sports so they have something to do. Often, she said bullying arises when bored kids just hang around instead of being involved in productive activities. Parents should also watch for signs that their child may be bullying others. If children comes home with valuable new possessions they would not have been able to buy —like a jacket or iPod — they may have taken it from another student. Parents should immediately address the issue with their children. Parents should explain to their children that bullying is never proper behavior, Carder said.

THE NEED GOES ON. AS DOES OUR DEDICATION TO BETTER SERVE THE COMMUNITY. TARTA extends sincere thanks to all who considered and supported our recent sales tax proposal. Although the outcome means we can’t expand TARTA services into all areas of Lucas County at this time, we pledge to continue providing the best service we can to the greatest number of passengers – going to work, the doctor, family outings, shopping and school. And we ask for continuing support of public transit funding to benefit those who need it, in all of our communities.

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Catholic Charities ministries served 25,000 people in the Diocese of Toledo last year. This included helping 144 families and providing over $72,000 in rent/ mortgage assistance, referral services, workshops, and lead education awareness programs.

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We also provide adoption and adoption support to more than 90 couples and 20 women a year, as well as workshops for family life, marriage preparation, divorce and separated and Natural Family Planning for more than 900 individuals. All across the 19-county Diocese of Toledo, we’re helping people like you. People like your neighbors. Catholics. Non-Catholics. Young. Old. For the little things. For the big things. Find help and hope right here.

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It’s what’s inside that counts. It’s not just what’s in their heads. It’s what’s in their hearts. Enroll at a Toledo diocesan Catholic School nearby and see the difference in your child.

Visit www.cyss.org for a school near you!

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A28 ■ TOLEDO FREE PRESS

JULY 25, 2010

By Mary Petrides TOLEDO FREE PRESS STAFF WRITER mpetrides@toledofreepress.com

Parents, who home school their children, face unique challenges when getting ready for the fall. “We don’t just walk in the school and there’s the textbook,” said Cheryl Horton, who home-schools her kids. “We have to start a lot earlier.” “Summer always goes way faster than we thought.” She said she goes to back-to-school sales to purchase notebooks and pencils like everyone else, but she also has to purchase textbooks and curricula. Mary Clark, who also home-schools her kids, said she looked through about 10 different companies and sampled about three curricula. Most of the decision-making was trial and error. “Once we found the company we liked, I’ve stayed with them,” she said. Curriculum costs vary from company to company, but Horton said home schooling is still less expensive than private school tuition. Mothers in most home-schooling families stay home to teach the kids and this can put a financial strain on

some families. “It’s a huge commitment,” Horton said. “It’s a lot of work. It’s a tremendous amount of work.” In the end, though, she said the experience is rewarding. “I’m seeing the fruits of my labors,” she said. “I wouldn’t trade it for the world.” “I don’t have as much free time as a parent; I focus most of my attention on my kids, but it’s very rewarding,” Clark said. “You get to really know them. You’re not sending them off to school and day care, then spending a couple hours with them at night.” Horton said she can usually save money by re-using the older kids’ textbooks for her younger kids — but not always. “Kids have their own learning style and part of home schooling is tailoring to their own learning style,” she said. “You can gear your studies to each child individually,” Clark said. “You can see their strengths and weaknesses.” Clark’s oldest son went to school for a few years before she began home schooling. His experience there helped her decide to home school. ■ HOME CONTINUES ON A30

PHOTO PROVIDED BY HORTON FAMILY

Home-schoolers prepare differently for ‘Back to School’

THE HORTON FAMILY AND FRIENDS.


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A30 ■ TOLEDO FREE PRESS

■ HOME CONTINUED FROM A28 “So much time in the classroom was wasted. He would even say it as a second grader. ‘We watched a movie today and we had recess twice and soand-so acted up,’ and it sounded like a lot of wasted time,” she said. “So we decided to try home schooling.” Clark and Horton said many

people don’t know how beneficial home schooling can be. “They think we’re lazy,” Clark said. “They think we’re not socialized and that the kids are backwards.” But that isn’t usually the case, according to these parents. “If I give my kid a 4.0 and he gets an 18 on the ACT, then they know I

Why do parents home school? ■ ■ ■ ■ ■ ■ ■ ■ ■ ■

48.9 percent believe that they can provide a better education at home 38.4 percent cite religious reasons for home schooling 25.6 percent believe there is a poor learning environment at traditional schools 16.8 percent cite family reasons 15.1 percent home-school to develop morals and character in their children 12.1 percent object to what is taught in traditional schools 11.6 percent believe traditional schools don’t challenge their child 11.5 percent cite they don’t like the available schools 9.0 percent cite behavior problems 8.2 percent have a child with special needs — Trinity University

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lied,” Horton said. Non-home-schoolers often wonder about kids’ social lives, but the home-schooled kids are often involved in scouts, sports, debate teams, church groups and “social groups galore,” Horton said. She said home-schoolers even have an advantage in developing so-

JULY 25, 2010

cial skills because they interact with people of all ages. Though home-schooled kids do not always have regular school opportunities like prom and Friday night football games, the sacrifice is worth it, Horton said. “The things that they miss are so small compared to what they get,” she

said. “I’ve seen very few kids who are home-schooled and flop.” “They’ve been able to develop themselves without peer pressure, without following the trends and what all the other kids are doing,” Clark said. “They’ve had to be more responsible and more disciplined, and I think they’re more mature.”

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O

Safety tips from

*HW WR VFKRRO VDIHO\ • Does your child know how to ride the bus or cross the street? • Do younger children have an older child or adult to walk with? • Does your child know not to talk to strangers?

,V \RXU FKLOG UHDG\ WR VWD\ KRPH DORQH" • Would he or she know what to do in case of emergency? • Is your child alone, or caring for other brothers and sisters? • Is a neighbor or other adult available in case of emergency? • Is the child responsible for other household duties? • How long will your child be home alone? • Does your child have a way to check in when he/she returns home?

+RZ ZHOO GR \RX NQRZ \RXU VLWWHU" • How much experience does your sitter have with children? • Have you checked his/her background and references? • Is your sitter’s home or day care facility safe for your child? • Are you welcome to drop by and check up on your child?

Learn more about your responsibilities as a parent at www.lucaskids.net. Report suspected child abuse or neglect at 419-213-CARE.

Maumee Valley focuses on the success of each student in a premier college prep program. Students are inspired to be resilient, self-motivated, and creative in an accepting and collaborative learning environment. At each grade level we teach our students “how to learn,” not just “what to learn.” A Maumee Valley education prepares children to engage with the world. Find out how Maumee Valley can open your child’s mind to a world of knowledge and open doors to a world of possibilities. Call 419.381.1313 to set up your personal tour and visit www.mvcds.org for more information.

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JULY 25, 2010

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■ A31

GUEST COLUMN

TPS welcomes new superintendent, faces budget challenges

I

n a couple of weeks, another school year will begin. It hardly feels like there has been a break. I want to take this opportunity to welcome back all of the families, students, teachers and staff for another year at Toledo Public Schools (TPS). This year will be unlike others because of the impact the recent budget cuts made by the board will have on you and your children. We also have a newly appointed superintendent. Those two factors will make the beginning of the school year somewhat more challenging. Most of our anxiety will be from not knowing how the budget cuts affect each individual. All of our families will not be affected in the same way because our children are in different grades and have different needs.

When you need a Pediatrician, where do you turn?

Before, I introduce you to the new Mr. Foley had given his resignation, superintendent I want to acknowledge he worked the same long days and weekends as if he were going to work Mr. John Foley Mr. Foley has dedicated his adult for TPS for a long time into the future. I know he didn’t do this life and career to Tofor the board or himself, ledo Public Schools and but for our children, parshould be commended ents and staff. for his service. During It wasn’t something the short time I have that he had to think been on the board I have about; this is just the come to know Mr. Foley way he has always appretty well. proached his job, his life. When we evaluate He had to make some people we usually refer to Bob VASQUEZ tough decisions and he them by the position they didn’t try to shirk his hold or the job they have. However, more important to me is the responsibility. He truly cares about kind of person they are and in that re- your children. I know we are all saddened by the departure of Mr. Foley gard Mr. Foley is at the top of my list. This past year has been a difficult and we will miss him. The new superintendent is Dr. Jetime for all of us at TPS. Even though rome Pecko, who has a three-year contract and comes from the Akron area. Dr. Pecko has a considerable amount of experience working in all aspects of education. He has a reputation for being well -liked and respected by his staff, principals,

Turn to a trusted Mercy physician

teachers and parents. He has some real challenges ahead of him and I hope he can count on your support. He is eager to get started and very much wants your TPS experience to be a good one. I ask for your patience. The key will be communication. If PECKO you experience a problem, please communicate with school personnel first and then the administration. The same goes for good, positive experiences; please support your TPS teachers and staff. Lastly, I want to be clear that many of the variables affecting the recent decisions regarding the budget, as well as other things, are a result of decisions that have been made in the past, as well as conditions as they exist today. These are trying times and the board is working on coming up with

solutions. I do not regard the recent actions we have just taken as the solution. We need to rethink how we approach our responsibility of educating our children. This too may require many changes, but, hopefully, changes that will help us restore the kind of services you and your children deserve, with working conditions for the teachers that they deserve. Behind the scenes, board members are working with different segments of the community so that some services might be restored and asking for help finding long-term solutions. I feel the sense of urgency that exists, but unfortunately this takes time and again I ask for your patience. It is my goal to take this crisis and turn it into an opportunity. I can’t tell you how strongly I believe that TPS will come out of this crisis to become the premier school district that you deserve. Bob Vasquez is Toledo Public Schools Board of Education president.

Stautzenberger promotes 18-month practical nursing program By Gail Burkhardt TOLEDO FREE PRESS STAFF WRITER

At Mercy, our large selection of local doctors makes it easy to find one who fits the needs of you and your family.

Turn to Dr. Colleen J. Olson for your child’s medical needs. Mercy Family Physicians and Specialists 1657 Holland Road, Suite A Maumee, Ohio 43537 419.794.2180

news@toledofreepress.com

Board certified by the American Board of Pediatrics, Colleen J. Olson, MD, FAAP, believes in treating you and your child with a caring approach, while providing the highest quality health care. Dr. Olson offers the entire spectrum of general pediatric services including sports physicals, allergy, asthma and ADHD behavior care, and illness visits.

Call 419.794.2180 to schedule an appointment with Dr. Olson or visit mercyweb.org to find other Mercy physicians in your area.

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In April, the first round of practical nursing students at Stautzenberger College will receive their degrees. Most practical nursing programs last a year, but Stautzenberger’s program takes 18 months to give students more practice and make classes less stressful. “They practice certain procedures multiple times,” said Susan Hahn, the director of the medical technology program. Students practice on machines that simulate procedures, such as inserting an IV. They also have classroom instruction and participate in clinical practice in Northwest Ohio health care facilities. The program is less packed than other programs, allowing students more flexibility, Hahn said. “Some students have even said, ‘I can’t imagine trying to fit it all into a year,’” said Karen Fitzgerald, director of admissions and marketing. Melissa Foster, 28, went through Stautzenberger’s medical assisting program in 2007 and 2008, and has come back to the school to pursue practical nursing. She called the program a “stepping stone” to continue her career. “The staff was so great and helpful the first time around,” she said, explaining her decision to return to Stautzenberger. Many students choose Stautzenberger for the small class sizes and personal attention, said Fitzgerald of the college’s 1,000 students. “Many of our students have come from other schools where it was too big or overwhelming,” she said. Although class sizes are small, Stautzenberger offers a variety of certificate and associate degree programs in medical technology, business technology, health and wellness, information technology, legal technology, veterinary technology and real estate. Along with labs and practice rooms for the nursing and

STAUTZENBERGER COLLEGE other medical technology students, the college, located in Arrowhead Park in Maumee, has a veterinary lab where veterinary technology students help spay and neuter pets ,as well as groom them to go to shelters. Students earning a diploma or associate degree in massage therapy gain practical experience in the school’s massage clinic, which offers massages at discounted rates to the public, Fitzgerald said. Students also give free massages at the Glass City Marathon and at the Great Maumee River Dragon Boat Festival, said Stacy Lammers, who runs the student massage clinic. Lammers, 25, has an associate degree of applied science in massage therapy and a diploma in personal fitness from Stautzenberger. She said the two programs go handin-hand because it is important to be fit to be a massage therapist, but it is also important to take care of the body during exercise. Like Foster, Lammers’ degree and diploma are serving as “stepping stones” as she pursues her bachelor’s degree in sports management online from the California University of Pennsylvania.


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A32 ■ TOLEDO FREE PRESS

JULY 25, 2010

Robotics enthusiast gears up for senior year By Michael Stainbrook TOLEDO FREE PRESS STAFF WRITER news@toledofreepress.com

TOLEDO FREE PRESS PHOTO BY CHARLIE LONGTON

Josh Lynch always wanted things done right. He never settled for anything short of perfection. He took the lead role in grade school group projects, although he would have preferred just to work by himself. “He didn’t tolerate the other kids who would say, ‘Now whatever, that’s good enough.’ Good enough wasn’t good enough for him,” said his mother, Sharon Lynch. Josh began the high school search as a seventh grader and visited several area schools, including Toledo Technology Academy (TTA), a Toledo Public School (TPS) with less than 200 students that focuses on manufacturing technologies

and industry. At first, he was not too excited about a school where students often worked in groups, so he looked elsewhere. But when he took a closer look, he began to like what he saw. “When I really thought about what TTA does as far as building robots and automation and industry and stuff like that, it seemed more appealing as I went on,” he said. Something was different about the students at this school than others he considered: They all wanted to learn. With a learning environment in tune with his needs, Lynch immersed himself in his new community. He joined the school’s FIRST Robotics team based on the advice of two seniors and has not looked back since. Now entering his senior year, Lynch is glad he took their advice.

JOSH LYNCH ATTENDS THE TOLEDO TECHNOLOGY ACADEMY.

“It’s a great experience. I was always interested in building things,” he said. FIRST (For Inspiration and Recognition of Science and Technology) was founded by Segway inventor Dean Kamen and presents students with a new objective every year. Upon learning of the new challenge in January, students have to build a robot from scratch and be ready to compete with it in six weeks. The 2010 game was similar to soccer, but the robots had to navigate obstacles to score goals and earn points. Lynch was a “driver” for the TTA robot during his sophomore and junior years. Math teacher and robotics coach Dale Price said Lynch’s role is vital to the team’s success. “By being a driver, Josh naturally stepped into a leadership position,” Price said. “It garnered natural respect

from the freshmen and sophomores. It’s like being the quarterback on a football team.” Lynch logged 135 hours of work on the robot this year. The team met three days a week early in the planning process before working six days a week during crunch time. TPS restrictions only allow students to use school premises during certain hours, so the team spent much of its time working with mentors at Dana Holding Corp. Dana employees guided students to find solutions to their own problems. “You really get to learn how to work, not only with other people but really learn how to do stuff yourself,” Lynch said. “The mentors are going to show you how to do it but they’re not going to do it for you.” Price said Lynch will likely be

valedictorian or salutatorian when he graduates next spring. He plans to major in mechanical engineering while taking computer science classes. He is considering attending the University of Akron, University of Cincinnati, Miami University or The Ohio State University. “I’m excited for him, but it’s also really hard because he’s my last one and that’s a little emotional,” Sharon Lynch said. “He’ll be my first to actually go away to school.” In his 25 years with TPS, Price has seen his fair share of bright students, and after working with Josh for three years, he has no doubt he has another one on his hands. “Josh is in that batch,” Price said. “He’s going to be a big success when he gets out of college.”


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JULY 25, 2010

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■ .A33

THE RETIREMENT GUYS

Get educated about details of college planning T he teachers have started the daily countdown, while the kids are still having fun enjoying the wonderful summer, not thinking about what is right around the corner.

The start of another school year is quickly approaching. As a parent or grandparent, the checklist has probably already started; new backpack and supplies, shopping for the hot new

clothing trends and trying to sneak in one last long weekend with the family. If you’re not planning for the children, it could be you or your spouse going back to college, looking to

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change a career in what has been a rough economy. Either way, before the bell rings, take some time to learn about planning for college before it’s too late. One great way for a young person to grow up is to consider joining the military reserves. I, Nolan, left two days after graduating high school to become one of the few and the proud by enlisting in The United States MaMark rine Corps. I was Nolan like most 18-yearolds and needed to grow up and become a man. My decision to join the military, along with my parents’ support, gave me many of the tools I still use today in business and in my personal life. Along with my service, I received the Montgomery GI Bill. According to www.goarmy.com the Montgomery GI Bill and Army College Fund can provide as much as $83,448 in college expenses. Military service can be valuable on only in life, it can also provide a tremendous amount of support for college costs. For a complete list of all of the college funding programs available, contact a local recruiting office.

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Start taking time to find out about earning scholarships. This is free money, so it doesn’t get any better than that. The problem is, it takes some homework to find out what is out there. Waiting until the last minute can mean missing out on thousands of dollars. Start the search on the Internet using many of the free services like www.fastweb.com. Many of the online services will act as matchmaker beCLAIR tween scholarships BAKER and students. Don’t forget to search locally as well. Your sons or daughters could have been part of Junior Achievement (JA) years ago, but didn’t realize they can apply even if they aren’t active in JA. For the five years I was a volunteer, we were able to raise about $85,000 in college scholarships for local youths. Lastly, check with the college or university to see what scholarships they offer. This can be done by scheduling an appointment with their financial aid office. Remember to ask, ask and ask some more to find the acres of diamonds that are out there. Grants are another form of free money. One source of grants is the Free Application for Federal Student Aid, known as FAFSA. The Federal Student Aid program is part of the U.S. Department of Education. The website at www.fafsa.ed.gov provides an estimator tool to help determine how much assistance a family can expect. Before applying, we recommend families meet and talk with a financial professional who specializes in college planning. The goal would be to design a plan to best structure both the parents’ and the child’s assets to increase the chances of success when applying for both federal and state funds. A few small changes could go a long way to becoming eligible for grants. Giving is the ultimate gift, but it gets even better when there are tax benefits as well. This option is called a 529 Plan. If the withdrawals are used for qualified higher education expenses, all withdrawals, including profits, are tax free. Plus, the person who makes the deposit can receive state tax benefits as well. Each state’s plan varies a bit, so start by doing some research on www.collegesavings.org. ■ RETIREMENT CONTINUES ON A34


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A34. ■ TOLEDO FREE PRESS ■ RETIREMENT CONTINUED FROM A33 In Ohio, www.collegeadvantage. com is a great site to learn about the advantages of the plans offered here locally. Most plans start as low as $25 a month and one-time contributions are also an option. We hope you are having a wonderful summer. Enjoy every minute of it. Just remember, before time gets away, make it a point to look into college planning. Remember, most of the programs we discussed have deadlines you cannot afford to miss. For more information about The Retirement Guys, tune in every Saturday at 1 p.m. on 1370 WSPD or visit www.retirementguysradio. com. Securities are offered through NEXT Financial Group Inc., Member FINRA / SIPC. The Retirement

Guys are not an affiliate of NEXT Financial Group. The office is at 1700 Woodlands Drive, Suite 100, Maumee, OH 43537. Investments in 529 college savings plans involve investment risks. Although plans are established and maintained by states, the states do not provide guarantees against investment loss, except in certain very limited cases. As with any investment in a mutual fund or other equity security, an investment in a 529 college savings plan can decrease in value. Furthermore, although the past performance of available investment options in a 529 college savings plan may be one of several appropriate factors to consider in choosing an investment, such past performance is not necessarily indicative of how a particular investment vehicle will perform in the future.

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Tips for packing healthy lunches for your kids (ARA) — ■ Color, color, color: Kids love color so make it a point to pick a different color for each day/week and add it to your child’s lunch in fun ways. For example, on a purple day pack a small plum or handful of grapes. ■ Portion control: Finding pre-portioned snacks can help save time and calories. Instead of reaching for bags of chips that can be higher in fat, try low-fat pretzels or 100-calorie snacks instead.

■ Fun surprises: Change it up and do something unexpected. For example, ever thought of making breakfast for lunch? Why not? Pack two or three small whole-grain pancakes with fruit and yogurt for toppings. A knock-knock joke or little stickers can add even more fun. ■ Plan ahead and save: Make Sunday a preparation day for the week ahead. By planning ahead, you’re less tempted to give in to packing more expensive, quicker options.

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â– A35

Knight Academy offers eighth graders advanced credit opportunities By Kristen Rapin TOLEDO FREE PRESS SPECIAL SECTIONS EDITOR krapin@toledofreepress.com

The Knight Academy, a local charter school, will offer eighth graders the chance to earn high school credits starting this school year.

“What we’re doing is challenging our best and brightest, so that those kids don’t get bored,� said Tom Baker, executive director of the Knight Academy. “They also have the chance to earn five credits and, in some cases, can graduate early.� The school tests students three

times a year to gauge what needs to be worked on for the Ohio Achievement Assessments, and students interested in the accelerated courses must have shown proficiency on these tests in the past. Baker said students must also complete an application and paper to enter the accelerated classes.

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“This is very serious. Students will have to be well-advanced and go beyond what is expected to receive credits,� he said. Students who previously found classes to be easy will face a challenge, Baker said. Each student will have more homework, more projects and more hands-on activities, he said. “We’re excited about this new program putting an emphasis on academics and challenging our best and brightest.� The Knight Academy, opened in 2008, is for middle school students, grades fifth to eighth. Also new this year is the addition of curriculum for fifth-grade students. The academy added the fifth grade at the request of parents, Baker said. The Knight Academy offers an extended school day, from 8 a.m. to 4 p.m. and an extended school year with approximately 200 days, Baker said. Classes start Aug. 16. For more information, visit www. theknightacademy.org.

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After meeting all the qualifications, a committee of teachers, guidance counselors and the student’s parents will discuss the student’s entrance into the program, Baker said. Students who are accepted into accelerated classes will take all five course areas: science, social studies, math, Spanish and language arts. Students only qualify for the high school credit within an academic area if they do well on a final exam and their teachers believe they meet certain requirements. Students in the accelerated classes can earn up to five high school credits, though some many only earn a few, Baker said. “In the accelerated class, if they do what is required and if the teacher feels the student has adequate knowledge beyond the ninth grade, instead of taking freshman math, the student can bypass and go into 10th grade math,� Baker said. “If that teacher doesn’t feel they have advanced beyond the ninth grade, they might not get the credit.�

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Hooman Harooni, M.D., is the newest associate to join the Vision Associates team. He specializes in corneal diseases and surgery, refractive surgery, and comprehensive eye care. He is a graduate of Cincinnati College of Medicine and is coming to us following the completion of his Refractive and Cornea Fellowship at the Cleveland Clinic, Cole Eye Institute in Cleveland, Ohio.

Don’t You Want To SEE the Very Best? Michelle Ariss, M.D., offers the region’s first fellowship trained M.D. who provides truly comprehensive pediatric ophthalmology services. She received her training at Ohio State University, Medical College of Ohio, The Friedenwald Eye Institute in Baltimore, and completed her fellowship at the Cleveland Clinic, Cole Eye Institute. Pre-school vision screening now being scheduled.

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A36 ■ TOLEDO FREE PRESS

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JULY 25, 2010

FAMILY PRACTICE

S

Your children’s first teacher: a primer

chool preparation starts long be- cards required to give your child an fore the day it’s time to buy that first introduction to how the world works. 4. Be your child’s corrections officer oversized, never-actually-going-toIt’s not always easy to reverse put-anything-in-it preschool backpack. It starts the minute our child graces us course when you don’t have something with his or her worldly presence. I am quite right. Correcting your children’s not talking about Baby Einstein flash- pronunciation, grammar and other cards or “Your Baby Can Read” DVDs. mistakes as soon as they make them is Things like flashcards usually end up not interfering; it’s your job, Mr. Kotter. 5. Old dogs can learn new tricks bent beyond recognition, chewed up and One of the best ways to be your spit out or lost altogether in a house like children’s first teacher ours. I’d like to justify it by is to illustrate for them saying that my children firsthand how to be are just so brilliantly cregood students. Educaative that they see beyond tion should span a lifethe surface, but in reality time and openly modthey just like to destroy eling your own curiosity perfectly nice things for about the world around no good reason. you is a great way to pass Despite our little along lifelong learning problem keeping home to the next generation. educational materials in Shannon SZYPERSKI 6. Let them learn proper working order, my husband and I seem to have found a through what they love Repeatedly going through maps decent formula for getting our children and math facts could never have given excited about and ready for school: our son the leg up that watching the 1. Incessant chatter Begin a conversation with your chil- World Cup and playing FIFA World dren the first minute you lay eyes on Cup Soccer on the Wii did. He quickly them and don’t stop, ever. My husband and excitedly learned 32 countries and and I are not well-versed in baby talk, their flags plus rules, strategy and how so a full-sentence, full-immersion, stan- a bracket works. Academic basics are dard American English program is all hidden in all children’s interests; they just we offer in our home at this time. We’d need our assistance in discovering them. 7. It’s time to take from that village like to add a second language, but, conNot quite sure how to be your sidering neither of us speaks one, that is child’s first teacher? Most of us aren’t unlikely to happen anytime soon. sure, so find a mentor or two. My 2. Expect the unexpected Don’t just talk at your children; own playbook has come from years expect them to respond. Our ques- of paying attention to whose children tions are followed with enough pause speak well, listen well, learn well and for an answer, whether our child is 5 behave well. Recognizing which parweeks old or 5 years old. We also offer ents have a knack for teaching certain them an expectation to follow our di- things and adopting their secrets to rections, even when that expectation success can give quite a boost to your own teaching qualifications. being realistic is still months away. 8. Rah rah sis boom bah 3. Learn something new every day Your job as your children’s first There is a learning opportunity around every corner of good ol’ ev- teacher doesn’t end once you send eryday life. Putting on a onesie? them off to school. Presenting school Count the number of snaps out loud. in a positive light and continuing to asPlunging the toilet? Walk your poten- sist in their education throughout their tial future plumber through the pro- school years are key to your children’s cess step by step. There are no flash- continued achievement. Have faith Warren Thomas Communications Presents

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in their teachers, get to know some other parents, volunteer and become an all-around fan of their school. Your children think that you are the end-all, be-all, so if you love it and put forth the extra effort, they most likely will too.

Molding your child into a vessel that can take in all that the rest of the world has to offer is much more important to his or her long-term success than school supplies or any one piece of academic knowledge. Showing your

child how to be a learner for a lifetime is the single best lesson you can offer. Shannon and her husband Michael are raising three children in Sylvania. Email her at letters@toledofreepress.com.


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JULY 25, 2010

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†Offer limited to select Pantech phones. *AT&T imposes: a Regulatory Cost Recovery Charge of up to $1.25 to help defray costs incurred in complying with obligations and charges imposed by State and Federal telecom regulations; State and Federal Universal Service charges; and surcharges for government assessments on AT&T. These fees are not taxes or government-required charges. Mobile broadband not available in all areas. Coverage is not available in all areas. See coverage map at stores for details. Offer available on select phones. Limited-time offer. Other conditions & restrictions apply. See contract & rate plan brochure for details. Subscriber must live & have a mailing addr. within AT&T’s owned wireless network coverage area. Up to $36 activ. fee applies. Equipment price & avail may vary by mrk & may not be available from independent retailers. Phone Return Policy/Early Termination Fee: None if cancelled in first 30 days; up to $35 restocking fee may apply to equipment returns; thereafter $150 or $325 depending on device (check att.com/equipmentETF). Agents may impose add'l fees. Subject to change. Unlimited voice services: Unltd voice svcs are provided solely for live dialog between two individuals. No additional discounts are available with unlimited plan. Offnet Usage: If your mins of use (including unltd svcs) on other carriers’ networks (“offnet usage”) during any two consecutive months or your data use during any month exceed your offnet usage allowance, AT&T may at its option terminate your svc, deny your contd use of other carriers’ coverage, or change your plan to one imposing usage charges for offnet usage. Your offnet usage allowance is equal to the lesser of 750 mins or 40% of the Anytime mins incl’d with your plan (data offnet usage allowance is the lesser of 24 MB or 20% of the KB incl’d with your plan). AT&T Promotion Cards: PANTECH LINK prices before AT&T Promotion Card; with 2-year wireless service agreement on voice & minimum $20/mo data plan required per phone are $39.99 and $29.99 respectively. PANTECH REVEAL prices before AT&T Promotion Card; with 2-year wireless service agreement on voice & minimum $20/mo data plan required per phone are $69.99 and $49.99 respectively. Allow 60 days for fulfillment. Card may be used only in the U.S. & is valid for 120 days after issuance date but is not redeemable for cash & cannot be used for cash withdrawal at ATMs or automated gasoline pumps. Card request must be postmarked by 9/23/2010 & you must be a customer for 30 consecutive days to receive card. 30-Day Guarantee: If phone is returned within 30 days in like-new condition with all components, early termination fee will be waived. Up to $35 restocking fee applies. All other charges apply. Sales tax calculated based on price of unactivated equipment. ©2010 AT&T Intellectual Property. Service provided by AT&T Mobility. All rights reserved. AT&T, the AT&T logo and all other marks contained herein are trademarks of AT&T Intellectual Property and/or AT&T affiliated companies. All other marks contained herein are the property of their respective owners.

■ A37


A38 ■ TOLEDO FREE PRESS

BACK TO SCHOOL

JULY 25, 2010


WHEELS

Honda factory in Ohio hits milestone with 10 million cars MARYSVILLE, Ohio (AP) — A Honda Motor Co. factory in Ohio has made its 10 millionth vehicle, the first Honda plant outside Japan to reach that milestone. Honda says the vehicle — an Accord sedan — rolled off the assembly line July 20 in Marysville, about 30 miles northwest of Columbus. The factory opened in 1982 and is Honda’s oldest auto plant in the United States. The first vehicle produced there also was an Accord sedan.

A39

INDUSTRY

mainly by revamped or completely new models from Ford Motor Co. and General Motors Co., J.D. Power said. Much of the increase came because the U.S.-based automakers have replaced older models that had low appeal scores with vastly improved new models, said David Sargent, vice president of global vehicle research at J.D. Power. “When new-vehicle buyers go through the shopping process, vehicle appeal, along with price and perceptions of quality, is of major impor-

DETROIT (AP) — Cars and trucks from the Detroit Three outperformed foreign brands for the first time since 1997 in a widely followed survey of how appealing vehicles are. The annual survey by J.D. Power and Associates found that the U.S.based automakers scored an average of 787 on a 1,000-point scale, 13 points higher than the score for brands from Europe or the Asia-Pacific region. Scores by the U.S.-based automakers have been rising steadily during the past four years, driven

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A40 ■ TOLEDO FREE PRESS

WHEELS/TRANSPORTATION

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WHEELS/TRANSPORTATION

JULY 25, 2010

Visit www.toledofreepress.com m

■ A41

RAIL

Ohio project aims to add Toledo, Pittsburgh By Matt Leingang ASSOCIATED PRESS WRITER

Toledo and Pittsburgh are among

the next cities that Ohio wants to connect as part of its developing passenger rail project, state transporta-

tion officials said July 15. The state has signed a $7.8 million contract with an engineering

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firm to study new routes that would branch off from Ohio’s marquee federal stimulus project — a $400 million rail system with 79 miles per hour trains connecting Cleveland, Columbus, Dayton and Cincinnati beginning in 2012. The contract with AECOM, a Los Angeles-based company that has worked on California’s planned high-speed rail system, will determine routes for a future 110 mph service on four corridors: Detroit-Toledo-Cleveland, Cleveland-Pittsburgh, ToledoColumbus and Cleveland-ColumbusCincinnati. The federal government requires this kind of preliminary environmental impact study before funding can be approved. The study would likely take about a year, said Matt Dietrich, executive director of the Ohio Rail Development Commission. President Barack Obama announced in January that he would give $400 million to Ohio for the 79 mph startup service from Cleveland to Cincinnati, part of $8 billion in stimulus grants for rail projects in the U.S. Ohio has yet to spend the money. The state is waiting for the Federal Rail Administration to sign off on $25 million that will complete engineering and design work — information that will identify track upgrades, pinpoint operating speeds along the route and set departure schedules. Dietrich said he hopes to get federal approval in a few weeks. The Federal Rail Administra-

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tion on July 19 approved $20 million for North Carolina to refurbish passenger coaches and locomotives, the first installment of $525 million in stimulus money to help that state increase top speeds to 90 mph on trains between Raleigh and Charlotte and double the number of round trips. Ohio Gov. Ted Strickland, a Democrat running for re-election, has billed his state’s rail project as something that can create hundreds of construction jobs and spark new economic development in cities with train stations. But there is some political uncertainty around the project. Even if Strickland wins in November, he will need support from Senate Republicans on the state Controlling Board, a sevenmember panel that approves major construction spending and equipment purchases. Republicans, including GOP gubernatorial candidate John Kasich, have criticized the rail plan, questioned ridership estimates and complained that the initial service would be too slow. About 6 million people live along the Cleveland-Cincinnati route, making it one of the most heavily populated corridors without rail service in the Midwest. Early estimates predict 478,000 riders in the first year of operations, annual ticket sales at $12 million and the state responsible for an additional $17 million operating subsidy, according to an Amtrak study released last year.

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A42 ■ TOLEDO FREE PRESS

WHEELS/TRANSPORTATION

JULY 25, 2010

RETAIL

Government watchdog criticizes handling of car dealers By Ken Thomas ASSOCIATED PRESS WRITER

WASHINGTON (AP) — The Treasury Department failed to consider the economic fallout when it told General Motors and Chrysler to quickly shutter many dealerships as part of government-led bankruptcies, a federal watchdog found. A report released July 18 by the special inspector general for the government’s bailout program raised questions about whether the Obama administration’s auto task force considered the job losses from the closings while pressuring the companies to reduce costs. Treasury didn’t show why the cuts were “either necessary for the sake of the companies’ economic survival or prudent for the sake of the nation’s economic recovery,’’ said the audit by Neil Barofsky, the special inspector general for the Troubled Asset Relief Program, the $787 billion stimulus program known as TARP. “Treasury made a series of decisions that may have substantially contributed to the accelerated shuttering of thousands of small businesses,’’ investigators said. Those decisions resulted in “potentially adding tens of thousands of workers to the already lengthy unemployment rolls — all based on a theory and without sufficient consideration of the decisions’ broader economic impact,’’ the report said. Treasury officials said they strongly disagreed with many of the findings and said the companies have rebounded because of the government’s efforts. Herbert M. Allison Jr., Treasury’s

assistant secretary for financial stability, said the administration’s actions “not only avoided a potentially catastrophic collapse and brought needed stability to the entire auto industry, but they also saved hundreds of thousands of American jobs and gave GM and Chrysler a chance to re-emerge as viable, competitive American businesses.’’ The audit also found that General Motors “did not consistently follow its stated criteria’’ for reducing its dealer network and noted that Chrysler failed to offer an appeals process. The report, sought by lawmakers critical of the dealership closings, was seized upon by Republicans who have questioned the administration’s dealings with private industry during the economic downturn. Rep. Darrell Issa, R-Calif., said the audit “should serve as a wake-up call as to the implications of politically orchestrated bailouts and how putting decisions about private enterprise in the hands of political appointees and bureaucrats can lead to costly and unintended consequences.’’ GM’s initial plan submitted to the government in February 2009 called for the gradual reduction of 1,650 of its 5,750 dealers by the end of 2014. Chrysler pointed to plans to trim its network from 3,181 dealers to about 2,000 dealers by 2014. After Treasury rejected those earlier plans, the two companies released accelerated efforts to cut their dealership ranks. Chrysler said it would quickly close 789 dealers by June 2009 and GM said it would slash its dealer ranks by 1,454 by October 2010. Following a fierce lobbying cam-

paign by car dealers, Congress approved legislation last year requiring arbitration for closed dealers. GM said it would reinstate more than 660 dealers it had threatened with closure,

reducing the number of dealers planning to appeal. Chrysler also agreed to restore about 80 franchises. In a statement, GM said the events described by the report “have since been

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WHEELS/TRANSPORTATION

JULY 25, 2010

Visit www.toledofreepress.com m

■ A43

SAILING Celebrate

Customer Appreciation at the

SECOR RD.

Pirates to invade Toledo Yacht Club It’s going to be one heck of a weekend p-arrgh-ty at the Toledo Yacht Club.

By Mary Petrides TOLEDO FREE PRESS STAFF WRITER mpetrides@toledofreepress.com

The club is hosting the Pirates Regatta July 30-31. It’s open to anyone and includes live music, food and a

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costume contest. Kris Henninger, club manager, said she expects up to 1,000 people to attend. Gates open at 6 p.m. both nights, and there’s a $5 cover charge. MZ Tantrum will play 8 p.m. to midnight July 30 and Boffo will play at the same time July 31. Both bands are pop/rock and local to the Toledo area, Henninger said. On July 31, Henninger said, “we take it up a notch.” When partygoers arrive July 31, they will be asked which yacht club they belong to. The club with the most attendees will win a 4-foot pirate trophy to display at its club for the year — and a year worth of bragging rights. Two years ago, Ottawa River Yacht Club won with about 35 attendees; last year, Lake Erie Offshore Performance Association (LEOPA) won with about 75. “This year, we’re anxious to see if Ottawa River’s gathering their troops to steal it back,” Henninger said. Saturday is also a costume party. Attendees should dress as pirates, wenches or in military attire from that era, Henninger said. Andrea Trainer, a Toledo Yacht Club member of about four years who helped plan the party, said she’s seen all sorts of costumes, including a parrot, an octopus-like Davy Jones, Cap’n Crunch and a ghost ship. “They pretty much wipe out all the costume shops around Toledo for this party,” Trainer said. To keep with the pirate theme, the winner of the costume contest will receive $50 in gold coins. “That’s how you would have gotten paid back in the day with the pirates,” Henninger said. Saturday afternoon, area commodores and past commodores will attend a reception with their wives and flag officers. A commodore’s job is similar to that of an organization’s president — “basically, the buck stops with him,” Henninger said — and area commodores often see each other on a weekly basis. When commodores retire, they often lose contact with each other. The reception will give them an opportunity to catch up. Henninger said the Toledo Yacht Club has also invited Mayor Mike Bell to participate in the event.


A44

SMOKE ON THE WATER

MiniKiss to smack Toledo at ribs event By Vicki L. Kroll TOLEDO FREE PRESS STAFF WRITER vkroll@toledofreepress.com

Gene Simmons, “The Demon” of Kiss who breathes fire and spits blood, is an imposing figure. Imagine being 4 feet 4 inches tall and impersonating the bass player — right next to the 6 foot 6 inch rock god. Joey Fatale of MiniKiss and his little people tribute band mates took on the larger-than-life characters and performed with the legends for a Dr Pepper commercial that debuted during the Super Bowl. “Oh, man, it was so cool. We did that commercial from 6 in the morning until midnight, and Gene, he’s a great guy. He actually sat with us. We had a really great conversation,” Fatale, who plays “mini-Gene,” said. “I asked him, ‘Listen, I can’t help this, but about a half hour before I go on, I have to be alone, I have to be in my own world, and I can’t let anyone bother me.’ “And he said, ‘Joey, that’s exactly how I am; until this day, I’m the same way. I have to be in my own world, and I don’t want anyone to bother me because I get nervous.’ And he even said if you feel like that, that means you really care and you have a lot of love for what you’re doing. That was cool to hear that because what I’m doing means a lot — and it means a lot to him — so it was really great to know that.” MiniKiss has performed a private concert for Simmons and appeared on his reality TV show. “We’re on the ‘[Gene Simmons] Family Jewels,’ and every day we are shown on TV as we speak with our Dr Pepper commercial. That’s been really big and helped us a lot through this tour,” Fatale said during a call en route to a gig in Iowa. Fatale has been a Kiss fan since he was a kid. “I really like their look — that’s really what got me into Kiss. I love their style, the outfits, the craziness, the blood and all that — that’s what really turned me on.” The bassist, guitarist, keyboardist and drummer played in a few bands, but then had to get a real job. When he was moving in 1996, Fatale came across a Kiss album. “And I just looked at my album, and I thought this would be so frickin’ cool, man: four little people dressed

JOEY FATALE up as Kiss. And boom! MiniKiss popped in my head,” he said, adding that he owns the band name. Since then, Fatale has taken on the personas of Paul Stanley, Ace Frehley, Peter Criss and Simmons, who is his favorite to play. “The funny part about me being Gene is I’ve always loved the character and, I’m not bragging but everybody even says it: I have a long tongue like him, not as long, of course, but for a little person, it’s a pretty long tongue.” Twenty-two members have been in MiniKiss. “I can’t believe that, wow. Just like the real Kiss,” he joked. MiniKiss will perform at Smoke on the Water — Ribs for the Red Cross presented by Columbia Gas of Ohio at 8:45 p.m. July 30 in Promenade Park. The Polka Floyd Show will open at 7 p.m. Admission is $5 and free for children 12 and younger. Tickets are

available in advance for $4 at Meijer. The Gin Blossoms play July 31 and Kentucky Headhunters play Aug. 1. “We do all Kiss things — the blood, the fire,” Fatale said. “And the past couple of years, we’ve also been doing a few ’80s songs — we do some Van Halen, Guns n’ Roses.” He said the group does use backtrack music. “We’ve done a couple shows totally live and it’s not good; we’ve got to do the backtracks only because it’s really a high-energy stage performance,” Fatale said. “It’s hard to do a stage show while we’re doing live, you know, because we’re little people and even the real Kiss I see when they play it’s hard to do all the chords and run around on stage and light the fire and the whole nine yards.” Regardless, he said, the response has been great. “Me being little all my life, kids always stared at me,” Fatale said.

“When I’m in that MiniKiss gear, at first people have that look to them, but then they come up and they love it. They love what we’re doing.”

On the web visit www.minikiss.com and click on links for more information.

Meet the band, win free night at Smoke on the Water! Win a free night at Smoke on the Water — Ribs for the Red Cross and meet MiniKiss! One Toledo Free Press reader will win four tickets to the July 30 Smoke on the Water event, four VIP tent passes, a meet-and-greet session with MiniKiss and a ribs dinner with a drink and 2 side dishes courtesy of Swanton’s Baldy-Q. To enter, visit the Toledo Free Press FaceBook page (www. facebook.com/ToledoFreePress) and post on our wall the name of your favorite Kiss song or a great rib sauce recipe by July 28. A winner will be chosen and notified by July 29.


JULY 25, 2010

SMOKEON THE WATER

Visit www.toledofreepress.com m

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SMOKEON THE WATER

A46 ■ TOLEDO FREE PRESS

Event benefits Red Cross, spotlights local rib vendors By Mary Petrides TOLEDO FREE PRESS STAFF WRITER mpetrides@toledofreepress.com

Up to 20,000 people are expected at Smoke on the Water — Ribs for the Red Cross presented by Columbia Gas of Ohio July 30 to Aug. 1 in Promenade Park. General admission is $5, or $4 if tickets are purchased in advance at Northwest Ohio Meijer stores. Kids 12 and younger are free. Admission July 30 is free until 4:30 p.m.; members of the military are free Aug. 1. The fundraiser includes live music, a play area for kids — and, of course, TIENVIERI ribs and fresh side dishes. “The ribs are the stars,” said Jodie Tienvieri, communications manager for the American Red Cross Greater Toledo Area Chapter. Ten rib vendors will be at the festival this year — reduced from last year’s 12. The 10-vendor limit increases competition and allows each vendor to profit more, Tienvieri said. Famous Dave’s Pulled Pork Eating Contest will take place July 31, and Judges’ and People’s Choice Awards for Best Ribs will be presented Aug. 1 Music includes Toledo School for the Arts (TSA) Steel Drum Band, Chris Shutters Band, Polka Floyd, MiniKiss, Jason LaPorte, Faux Paus, More Than Me, Kentucky Chrome, Gin Blossoms, TSA Urban Jazz Collective, 9 Lives, Melanie May and Kentucky Headhunters. “I think we’ve got some great headliners this year, but we’ve also got some great local bands,” Tienvieri said. Festival food will include ribs, roasted nuts, grilled

corn, elephant ears, blooming onions, fries, smoothies, steaks, hamburgers and hot dogs — “it’s a little bit of everything,” Tienvieri said. “For those more picky kids who don’t like ribs or barbecue, there’ll be something for them,” she said. Aug. 1 is Family Day and Military Appreciation Day. Sunday’s bands will be closer to country music than hard rock music — “I’d say they’re a little bit tamer,” Tienvieri said — and there will be a kids play area from 1 to 4 p.m. that day as well. Last year, more than 10,000 people paid admission, Tienvieri said. That’s not a total count of attendees, though — kids 12 and younger get in free, and members of the military get in free Aug. 1. “We know it was over 10,000; we just don’t know how much over 10,000 it was,” Tienvieri said. Interviews with Gin Blossoms and Kentucky Headhunters, along with more information on the weekend’s events, will appear in the July 28 Toledo Free Press Star.

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Recycling efforts The event will feature recycling receptacles for the second year in a row. “We need to keep as much out of the landfills as we can. It’s important to help Mother Earth,” said Philomena Caratelli, one of two Red Cross volunteers who collect recycling throughout the event. “It’s a great way to involve more volunteers with the event and a great way to help our environment,” Tienvieri said. The receptacles will be used to collect plastic bottles throughout the event. Materials the vendors use, such as cardboard, will also she said. lso be recycled, rec

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SMOKEON THE WATER

JULY 25, 2010

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By Michael Stainbrook and Gail Burkhardt TOLEDO FREE PRESS STAFF WRITERS news@toledofreepress.com

Vendors will serve ribs throughout Smoke on the Water — Ribs for the Red Cross presented by Columbia Gas of Ohio, but they are hoping to save some of the best for last. The three-day festival will wrap up with the Judge’s Choice contest, where local personalities will taste and rate each vendor’s ribs. The winners take home a trophy, bragging rights and exposure that might lead to increased business. The panel of judges comprises two politicians, six media members and four other area professionals. Toledo Mayor Mike Bell, K100 personality Gary Shores and a Toledo Mud Hen will all be on hand to help determine the ultimate grill master. The judges will convene for the tasting at 3 p.m. Aug. 1, just behind the stage at Promenade Park. Winners will be announced an hour later. The judges are given a sample of each of the 10 vendors’ ribs and are asked to make a decision based on taste, sauce, texture and appearance. Once each judge has tasted each variety, the field is cut to six and the process repeats. The top three vendors are then chosen from the narrowed field and the judges get one last taste of the top contenders’ masterpieces. That’s a total of 19 samples in an hour. But local sports radio personality Norm Wamer is not concerned. “Eating has never been a problem,” he said with a laugh. Wamer enjoys making his own ribs and worked seven years at Damon’s Grill. This is his first year judging at Smoke on the Water. “I’ll just go and enjoy it with an open

mind because there’s a lot of different ways to get to the end product,” he said. But even with an open mind, vendors should expect judges to adhere to the basic dogma of ribbing. “You look for tenderness, whether they’ll fall off the bone,” Wamer said. “Generally, the slower you cook them, the more tender they will be.” One vendor who touts a number of trophies is two-time defending Judge’s Choice champion and self-coined “regional favorite” Big Moe’s BBQ & Catering from Kalamazoo, Mich. Moe Pritchett employs a generations-old family recipe for his barbecue sauce to court the judges. “We do taste testings every week,” Pritchett said. “It’s amazing when I look in people’s eyes every time they taste it.” Pritchett and his grilling team keep a special eye on the ribs designated for the judges. Even with the sauce, a little extra pampering can’t hurt, he reasons. “You have to manicure them, make sure that they’re the best you’ve cooked for the day,” Pritchett said. People’s Choice voting also takes place throughout the weekend. AJ’s Doolittles won the honor last year, and owner Brad Jennings has noted a spike in business. His competitive edge is his dry rub technique, which he keeps top secret. “I’ve got a certain way I do them, but there’s two people that know how to do it,” he said. The field also includes four newcomers. John Coulston of Twist & Shout Family Restaurant in Carey would like to claim a trophy at Smoke on the Water, but publicity is his primary goal. Like Pritchett, Coulston puts his money where his sauce is. “This guy I bought out, we compared our sauce to his sauce. No comparison. I wouldn’t eat his sauce,” he said.

No ribs. Great bread. Come taste for yourself. All are welcome.

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TOLEDO FREE PRESS PHOTO BY CHARLIE LONGTON

Champs, rookies prepare for Smoke-filled ribs battle

BRAD JENNINGS, OWNER OF AJ’S DOOLITTLES, WILL TRY TO DEFEND HIS 2009 ‘PEOPLE’S CHOICE AWARD.’

When the smoke disperses, only one vendor will win over the hearts and stomachs of the judges. Pritchett was confident enough to give advice to his grilling foes. “Use my sauce, cook the way we do and you might have a better chance of winning,” he said with a laugh. “Every time we’re in a competition, we want to win. It’s just like sports.”

Local contenders Six Toledo-area vendors will join four other out-of-town restaurants to sell their ribs at Smoke on the Water. ■ AJ’s Doolittles Sports Bar and Restaurant, Lambertville, Mich. After last year’s “People’s Choice” competition, the owners of AJ’s Doolittles had to come back, said owner Brad Jennings. “All that hard work, it makes you feel like it pays off when people are happy with your product,” he said. The restaurant was founded in 2003 and along with ribs serves steaks, seafood, sandwiches, burgers and more. Rib dinners range from $11 to $17. “You name it, we’ve got it,” Jennings said. ■ Baldy-Q Rib Shack, Swanton Baldy-Q will enter the event for the first time this year to gain publicity. The restaurant opened in January, but before that its owner traveled around selling ribs for two years, said owner Tye “Baldy” Hightower. The restaurant’s specialty is southern-style ribs that use a Mem-

phis-style dry rub, he said. Rib prices range from $11.50 to $19.50. “We are traditionally a noncorporation barbecue restaurant. We make everything in house from scratch on a daily basis,” said Hightower, who has been a chef for 30 years. ■ Famous Dave’s, Toledo Famous Dave’s, which has 192 locations around the country, has been in the Toledo area for about four years, said Matthew Kinner, general manager. Kinner said he enjoys the atmosphere at Smoke on the Water and will continue to go back to the event. “It’s a great time. We do very good with sales,” he said, adding that he enjoys working with the Red Cross. The restaurant’s prices range from $5 to $20 for ribs, which have a seasoning and special rub, as well as “zesty” barbecue sauce, Kinner said. ■ P & D’s Sports Page Bar & Grill, Toledo P & D’s has competed in other events such as chili cook-offs, but this will be the first time the restaurant has participated in Smoke on the Water. “We’ve got good ribs, they’ve been telling us for years that we should do it,” said Pat Smith, one of the restaurant’s owners. “The sauce makes the ribs different,” Smith said. The restaurant, which has been open for 12 years, also serves crab legs and steak. Rib prices range from $8 to $13. “We’ve got a huge, huge menu,” Smith said.

■ Sidelines Sports Eatery and Pub, Lambertville and Toledo Sidelines has participated in all three Smoke on the Water festivals, and co-owner Eric Sitter said his restaurant will continue to participate “as long as they do it.” “The people at the Red Cross work really hard on it. I’m in contact with them year-round,” he said. The restaurant uses baby back ribs from Chicago and a special braising technique to make their ribs tender and moist, Sitter said. Rib prices range from $10 to $19. Sidelines has a locations on Laskey Road and Mellwood Avenue, across from the Huntington Center Downtown, and on Secor Road in Lambertville. ■ Texas Roadhouse, Toledo Texas Roadhouse takes three days to make ribs, cooking them for nine hours to make them tender, said Scott Schraeger, managing partner for the restaurant. This is the second year Texas Roadhouse has participated in Smoke on the Water. Schraeger said he enjoys the atmosphere with other ribbers and customers eating and enjoying themselves. “We thought the Red Cross would be a good thing to get involved with and being down on the water is always a nice atmosphere,” he said. Texas Roadhouse has been in Toledo for about eight and a half years and also specializes in steak. Rib dinner prices range from about $12 to $17, Schraeger said.


DEATH NOTICES

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11 pm

11:30

Wipeout Couples tackle the obstacle course. Primetime: Fam News Nightline NCIS “Obsession” NCIS: Los Angeles The Good Wife (CC) News Letterman Hell’s Kitchen (N) (CC) MasterChef (N) (CC) Fox Toledo News Seinfeld King-Hill Breakthrough America’s Got Talent (S Live) (CC) News Jay Leno Nova (CC) (DVS) Faces of America POV (CC) Charlie Rose (N) (CC) Jewels Jewels Jewels Jewels Twisted Twisted Twisted Twisted Housewives/NJ Housewives/NJ Kathy Griffin: My Life Kathy Griffin: My Life Tosh.0 Futurama South Pk South Pk South Pk South Pk Daily Colbert ›› The Shaggy Dog (2006) Tim Allen. (CC) Sonny Sonny Hannah Hannah 2010 Poker 2010 Poker Baseball Tonight (CC) SportsCenter (CC) Pretty Little Liars (N) Make It or Break It (N) Pretty Little Liars (CC) The 700 Club (CC) Cakes Cakes Cupcake Wars (N) Chopped (N) Good Eats Unwrap First Place First Place House Estate House House For Rent First Place Reba (CC) Reba (CC) Cheerleader Nation Cheerleader Nation Will/Grace Will/Grace If You Really Teen Mom (CC) Teen Mom (N) (CC) If You Really Fam. Guy The Office The Office The Office The Office The Office Lopez Tonight ›› The West Point Story (1950), Virginia Mayo ››› The Winning Team (1952), Doris Day Bones (CC) HawthoRNe (N) (CC) Memphis Beat (N) HawthoRNe (CC) Law & Order: SVU White Collar (N) (CC) Covert Affairs (N) (CC) Psych (CC) One Tree Hill (CC) Life Unexpected (CC) Scrubs Scrubs Friends Bernie

BRAKES

$20

OFF COMPLETE BRAKE SERVICE Save on brake service with the experts. Quick Lane®-installed retail Motorcraft® brake pads or shoes only, on most cars and light trucks. Front or rear axle. Includes machining rotors or drums. Taxes extra. Offer valid with coupon. See Quick Lane Manager for vehicle applications and details. Expires: 08/31/10.

FREE Car Wash with any purchase or service!

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

419-471-2969


TV LISTINGS

A50 ■ TOLEDO FREE PRESS Wednesday Evening 7 pm ABC 13 CBS 11 FOX 36 NBC 24 PBS 30 A&E BRAVO COM DISN ESN FAM FOOD HGTV LIF MTV TBS TCM TNT USA WTO5

7:30

8:30

9 pm

9:30

10 pm

10:30

11 pm

7 pm

7:30

Ent Insider Fortune Jeopardy! The Office The Office Jdg Judy News NewsHour Business The First 48 (CC) America’s Next Model Daily Colbert Good Hannah X Games (Live) (CC) Funniest Home Videos Challenge House House Reba (CC) Reba (CC) Teen Mom (CC) Seinfeld Seinfeld Bad-Beautiful Bones (CC) NCIS “Skeletons” (CC) Two Men Two Men

8:30

9 pm

9:30

Wife Swap (N) (CC) Primetime: What 48 Hours Mystery (CC) Medium (CC) House “Knight Fall” Bones (PA) (CC) Friday Night Lights (N) Dateline NBC (CC) Wash. Need to Know (N) (CC) Deadline Criminal Minds (CC) Criminal Minds (CC) America’s Next Model Housewives/NJ Tosh.0 Futurama South Pk South Pk Deck Wizards Phineas Phineas

10 pm

10:30

11 pm

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

1:30

News Nightline News Letterman Seinfeld King-Hill News Jay Leno Green Builders (CC) Charlie Rose (N) (CC) Criminal Minds (CC) The Glades (CC) Housewives/NJ Housewives/NJ South Pk South Pk Katt Williams Deck Deck Deck Wizards SportsCtr Funniest Home Videos Funniest Home Videos Funniest Home Videos The 700 Club (CC) Chopped Diners Diners Chefs vs. City Good Eats Rachael Outdoor Block Sarah Color House House Design Star (CC) Reba (CC) Reba (CC) Held Hostage (2009) Julie Benz. (CC) How I Met How I Met The Real World (CC) Jersey Shore (CC) › Joe Dirt (2001, Comedy) David Spade. Fam. Guy Fam. Guy ››› Forrest Gump (1994, Drama) Tom Hanks, Robin Wright. ››› Let the Good Times Roll (1973) (CC) ››› Elvis on Tour (1972) Elvis Presley. ›› Walking Tall (2004) The Rock. ›› Walking Tall (2004) The Rock. Memphis Beat (CC) Law & Order: SVU Law & Order: SVU Law & Order: SVU › Good Luck Chuck Smallville (CC) Supernatural (CC) Scrubs Scrubs Friends Bernie

2 pm

2:30

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

20/20 (N) (CC) Flashpoint (N) (CC) Fox Toledo News

7:30

8:30

Saturday Morning 8 am ABC 13 CBS 11 FOX 36 NBC 24 PBS 30 A&E BRAVO COM DISN ESN FAM FOOD HGTV LIF MTV TBS TCM TNT USA WTO5

July 29, 2010

MOVIES

8 pm

9 pm

9:30

10 pm

8:30

3:30

4 pm

4:30

5 pm

5:30

6 pm

11 pm

11:30

July 31, 2010

MOVIES

9 am

9:30

10 am

10:30

11 am

11:30

12 pm

12:30

Good Morning School Repla So Raven So Raven Hannah Suite Life Rangers Rangers Your Morning Saturday Doodlebop Strawberry Sabrina Sabrina Paid Prog. Paid Prog. Pets.TV Hollywood Saved/ Paid Prog. Marketpl Marketpl Marketpl Marketpl NASCAR Paid Prog. Today (N) (CC) Paid Prog. Paid Prog. Turbo Shelldon Penguins! Babar (EI) Willa’s Jane Word Sid Super Dinosaur Seeing, Searching Yoga-Arthritis Elaine Paige Sell House Sell House Sell House Sell House $100 Sell House Flip This House (CC) Drill Team “Christine” Bethenny, Married Bethenny, Married Bethenny, Married Bethenny, Married Work of Art Bert Kreischer The Naked Gun: Police Squad ›› The Naked Gun 2 1/2: The Smell of Fear M. Mouse M. Mouse Phineas Phineas Phineas Phineas Deck Deck Wizards Wizards SportsCenter (CC) SportsCenter (CC) Golf RICOH Women’s British Open, Third Round. (Live) ››› Beetlejuice (1988) Michael Keaton. (CC) ››› Edward Scissorhands (1990) Johnny Depp. (CC) Back-Futr Lee Grill It! Tyler’s Ult. Mexican 30-Minute Chef Home Paula Cooking Ingred. Fix Hammer Sweat Holmes Holmes Disaster Prof. Crashers Income Designed To Sell Paid Prog. Paid Prog. Paid Prog. Paid Prog. Paid Prog. Paid Prog. › Christina’s House (2000) Brendan Fehr. (CC) Made “Prom Queen” If You Really I Was 17 I Was 17 I Was 17 10 on Top Teen Mom (CC) ››› Father of the Bride (1991) Steve Martin. (CC) ›› Father of the Bride Part II (1995) (CC) Forrest David Cpr ›› About Face (1952) Gordon MacRae. › Bowery Battalion (1951) ›› Firecreek (1968) Law & Order HawthoRNe (CC) Rizzoli & Isles (CC) The Closer (CC) Forensic King Kong Paid Prog. Paid Prog. Psych (CC) ››› Jurassic Park (1993, Science Fiction) Sam Neill, Laura Dern. (CC) Sonic X Sonic X Teenage Teenage Sonic X Yu-Gi-Oh! Yu-Gi-Oh! Dinosaur ››› Shanghai Noon

July 31, 2010

MOVIES

3 pm

10:30

Ent Insider Shark Tank (CC) Rookie Blue (N) (CC) Boston Med (N) (CC) News Nightline Fortune Jeopardy! Big Brother (CC) CSI: Crime Scene The Mentalist (CC) News Letterman The Office The Office Glee “Wheels” (CC) So You Think Fox Toledo News Seinfeld King-Hill Jdg Judy News Commun 30 Rock The Office Parks Law & Order: SVU News Jay Leno NewsHour Business Craft in America Sher. Holmes Soundstage (CC) Charlie Rose (N) (CC) The First 48 (CC) The First 48 (CC) The First 48 (N) (CC) Aftermath (CC) Aftermath (CC) Bethenny, Married Bethenny, Married Bethenny, Married Bethenny, Married Bethenny, Married Daily Colbert Tosh.0 Tosh.0 Futurama Futurama Futurama Futurama Daily Colbert Wizards Hannah ›› Underdog (2007) (CC) Deck Sonny Sonny Hannah Hannah 30 for 30 (N) X Games From Los Angeles. (Live) (CC) SportsCenter (CC) Funniest Home Videos Funniest Home Videos Funniest Home Videos Funniest Home Videos The 700 Club (CC) Challenge Good Eats Good Eats Iron Chef America Cakes Cakes Good Eats Unwrap House House First Place My First Selling Buck House House House House ›› Legally Blonde (2001) Reese Witherspoon. Project Runway (N) (CC) Road Will/Grace Will/Grace Jersey Shore (CC) Jersey Shore (CC) Jersey Shore (CC) Jersey Shore (N) (CC) Jersey Shore (CC) Seinfeld Seinfeld ›› Step Up 2 the Streets (2008, Drama) (CC) Browns Browns Lopez Tonight ››› Life With Father ›› Rock, Rock, Rock! (1956) ›› Rock Around the Clock (1956) ››› Bye Bye Birdie Bones (CC) Bones (CC) Bones (CC) ›› Starsky & Hutch (2004) Ben Stiller. (CC) Burn Notice (CC) Burn Notice (CC) Burn Notice (N) (CC) Royal Pains (N) (CC) White Collar (CC) Two Men Two Men The Vampire Diaries Moonlight (CC) Scrubs Scrubs Friends Bernie

11:30

Saturday Afternoon / Evening 1 pm

7 pm

July 30, 2010

MOVIES

8 pm

Thursday Evening

11:30

Ent Insider Middle Middle Family Cougar Castle (CC) News Nightline Fortune Jeopardy! Big Brother (N) (CC) Criminal Minds (CC) CSI: NY “Pot of Gold” News Letterman The Office The Office So You Think You Can Dance (S Live) (CC) Fox Toledo News Seinfeld King-Hill Jdg Judy News Minute to Win It (CC) America’s Got Talent Law & Order: SVU News Jay Leno NewsHour Business Paul McCartney in Performance American Masters (CC) Charlie Rose (N) (CC) Billy Billy Billy Billy Billy Billy Billy the Exterminator Billy Billy Top Chef (CC) Top Chef “Cold War” Top Chef (N) (CC) Work of Art Top Chef (CC) Daily Colbert Chappelle Chappelle Futurama South Pk South Pk Tosh.0 Daily Colbert Wizards Hannah Motocrossed (2001) Alana Austin. Phineas Sonny Sonny Hannah Hannah MLB Baseball Teams TBA. (Subject to Blackout) (Live) (CC) Baseball Tonight (CC) SportsCenter (CC) ’70s Show ››› Charlie and the Chocolate Factory (2005) (CC) Funniest Home Videos The 700 Club (CC) Challenge Food Network Star Flay Flay 24 Hour Rest. Battle Good Eats Unwrap House House Property Property Holmes on Homes House House Renovatn First Place Reba (CC) Reba (CC) Reba (CC) Reba (CC) ›› P.S. I Love You (2007) Hilary Swank. (CC) Will/Grace Will/Grace Teen Mom (CC) Teen Mom (CC) The Real World (CC) The Real World (N) The Real World (CC) Seinfeld Seinfeld Payne Payne Browns Browns Browns Browns Lopez Tonight Earthwrm Parade ›› Yesterday’s Enemy (1959) Stanley Baker. ››› Fail-Safe (1964, Suspense) Henry Fonda. Bones Heart failure. Law & Order “Acid” Law & Order Law & Order “Pledge” CSI: NY “On the Job” NCIS (CC) NCIS “Judgment Day” NCIS “Judgment Day” Psych (N) (CC) Burn Notice (CC) Two Men Two Men America’s Next Model Plain Jane (N) (CC) Scrubs Scrubs Friends Bernie

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

July 28, 2010

MOVIES

8 pm

JULY 25, 2010

6:30

7 pm

7:30

8 pm

8:30

9 pm

9:30

10 pm 10:30 11 pm 11:30

Paid Paid Paid Paid Wipeout (CC) ESPN Sports Saturday (N) News ABC Entertainment ’Night ›› Flightplan (2005) Jodie Foster. Rookie Blue (CC) News Monk Paid Paid Paid Paid PGA Tour Golf Greenbrier Classic, Third Round. (Live) (CC) News News Fortune Lottery The Bridge (N) CSI: Crime Scn 48 Hours Mystery (N) News CSI: NY ›› The Wild (2006, Adventure), Eddie Izzard McCarver Base MLB Baseball Regional Coverage. (S Live) (CC) Simpsons Simpsons Cops (N) Cops Amer. Most Wanted News Seinfeld Wanda Sykes To Be Announced Golf Golf U.S. Senior Open Championship, Third Round. (S Live) (CC) News Paid Persons Unknown Law Order: CI Law Order: CI News SNL This Old House Hr America’s Home Cooking: What’s for Dinner? (CC) Rick Steves’ Mediterranean Mosaic (CC) Lawrence Welk: Milestones and Memories (CC) As Time... Keep Up The Vicar of Dibley Billy Billy Exterminator Twisted Twisted Criss Angel Angel Criss Criss Angel Criss Angel Criss Angel Criss Angel Criss Angel (CC) Exterminator Work of Art Work of Art Top Chef (CC) Top Chef (CC) Top Chef (CC) House (CC) House “Euphoria” House “Euphoria” House “Forever” House (CC) House “No Reason” ›› Naked Gun 33 1/3: The Final Insult (CC) Scrubs Scrubs Scrubs Scrubs ››› American Pie (1999) Jason Biggs. (CC) ›› Waiting... (2005) Ryan Reynolds. (CC) South Pk S. Park S. Park South Pk ›› First Sunday (CC) Good Sonny Hannah Hannah Good Good Good Good Wizards Wizards Hannah Hannah Deck Wizards Hannah Deck Jonas Jonas Deck Wizards Jonas Jonas SportsCenter (CC) X Games (Live) (CC) SportsCenter (CC) X Games From Los Angeles. (Live) (CC) SportsCenter (CC) ››› Back to the Future (1985) (CC) ››› Back to the Future Part II (1989) Michael J. Fox. ››› Back to the Future Part III (1990) Michael J. Fox. ››› Grease (1978, Musical) John Travolta. (CC) ›› Grease 2 (1982) (CC) Giada Contessa Food Network Star Chopped 24 Hour Rest. Battle Iron Chef America Challenge B. Flay Flay Unwrapped Best Best Best Best Iron Chef America Unsella Get Sold Block Design Colour Buck D. Design Sarah Dear Color To Sell To Sell House House Divine Sarah Gene Block Color House House House ›› The Dark (2005) Maria Bello. (CC) The Haunting of Sorority Row (2007) (CC) The Secret (2007) David Duchovny. (CC) ›› The Eye (2008) Jessica Alba. (CC) Within (2009) Mia Ford. Premiere. (CC) Army Wives “AWOL” Teen Mom (CC) Jersey Shore (CC) The Real World (CC) I Was 17 I Was 17 Teen Mom (CC) Teen Mom (CC) Jersey Shore (CC) The Real World (CC) Fantasy Fantasy Berger Berger Jersey Shore (CC) ››› Forrest Gump (1994) Tom Hanks. Premiere. Jim Raymond Raymond Raymond Raymond King King Fam. Guy Fam. Guy ››› My Big Fat Greek Wedding ›› Runaway Bride (1999) Julia Roberts. (CC) ›› Firecreek (1968) ››› The Rounders (1965) (CC) ››› Gunfight at the O.K. Corral (1957) (CC) ›››› The Searchers (1956, Western) John Wayne. ››› Bad Day at Black Rock ›› Convicts Four (1963) Ben Gazzara. Never ››› King Kong (2005) Naomi Watts. A beauty tames a savage beast. (CC) ››› The Matrix (1999) Keanu Reeves. (CC) ››› The Matrix Reloaded (2003) Keanu Reeves. (CC) ›› The Matrix Revolutions (2003) Keanu Reeves. (CC) ››› Pirates of the Caribbean: The Curse of the Black Pearl (CC) ›› Pirates of the Caribbean: Dead Man’s Chest (2006) Johnny Depp. (CC) ›› Pirates of the Caribbean: At World’s End (2007) Johnny Depp. (CC) Royal Pains (CC) ››› Shanghai Noon Bernie Payne Lost “The Incident” Lost “The Incident” Comedy.TV (CC) Two Men Two Men Minor League Baseball Pawtucket Red Sox at Toledo Mud Hens. Fam. Guy Fam. Guy Desp.-Wives

Great Drinks.

WI-F

www.theblarneybullpen.com

601 Monroe St.

Right Across from Fifth Third Field

Great Time.

FFriday, id JJuly l 30th 30 h

Dave Pfenning

Monday-Friday 4-7 pm M

Live Entertainment Thurs-Fri-Sat

Good

HENluSc!k n Kitchete on a l n ope kends! wee

HAPPY HOUR

ave We H I

NOW ! OPEN Blarney Bullpen

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

SSaturday, d JJuly l 31st 31

The Bloody Tinth Irish Rock Night

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

theblarneyirishpub.com


CLASSIFIED: DEALS ON WHEELS

JULY 25, 2010

Visit www.toledofreepress.com m

■ A51

2007 HONDA ELEMENT SC 28K, Well Equipped, $17,897 Call Brown Mazda-Mitsubishi 419-536-3040 www.brownautomotive.com

2004 KIA SORENTO LX, PM4235 4WD, 79K Miles $9,039.00 Call Brown Mazda-Mitsubishi 419-536-3040 www.brownautomotive.com

2004 CADILLAC CTS, PM4304 Clean, Only 54K Miles $13,809.00 Call Brown Mazda-Mitsubishi 419-536-3040 www.brownautomotive.com

2003 MAZDA TRIBUTE ES, M109090B AWD 83K Miles, 1 Owner $9,287.00 Call Brown Mazda-Mitsubishi 419-536-3040 www.brownautomotive.com

2005 CADILLAC DEVILLE, PM4302 Hurry won’t last only 78K miles $11,853.00 Call Brown Mazda-Mitsubishi 419-536-3040 www.brownautomotive.com

2002 SUZUKI XL-7, PM4216B 4WD, 97K Miles $8,380.00 Call Brown Mazda-Mitsubishi 419-536-3040 www.brownautomotive.com

2002 FORD MUSTANG SALEENE 1 Owner, 13K Miles, 5 Spd, Air $23,900 Call Brown Mazda-Mitsubishi 419-536-3040 www.brownautomotive.com

2000 DODGE DAKOTA SPORT, B100044C 4WD, Crew Cab 4.7L Engine $6,858.00 Call Brown Mazda-Mitsubishi 419-536-3040 www.brownautomotive.com

2005 MAZDA6 S SPORT Fully Loaded, 6 Speed Auto Sport $10,688 Call Brown Mazda-Mitsubishi 419-536-3040 www.brownautomotive.com

2002 JAGUAR X6 Fully Loaded Everything $5,995 Call Brown Mazda-Mitsubishi 419-536-3040 www.brownautomotive.com

2004 DODGE NEON SE, PC4123 Priced to Sell, 93K Miles $4,846.00 Call Brown Mazda-Mitsubishi 419-536-3040 www.brownautomotive.com

2000 PLYMOUTH VOYAGER BASE 3D Passenger Van, 4 Cyl, FWD $3,340 Call Brown Mazda-Mitsubishi 419-536-3040 www.brownautomotive.com

2000 LEXUS ES 300 Fully Loaded, Black $10,968 JIM WHITE TOYOTA 419-841-6681

2008 FORD F-150 #14071, Well Equipped KISTLER FORD 419-531-9911

2006 BUICK LUCERNE Fully Loaded, Leather, 3800 v6 $10,500 TOLEDO AUTO FINANCE CENTER 419-476-5600

2004 HONDA ACCORD LX Well Equipped, Black $11,298 JIM WHITE TOYOTA 419-841-6681

2009 CHEVROLET MALIBU LT Loaded, Magnesium $15,987 JIM WHITE TOYOTA 419-841-6681

2008 CHEVROLET IMPALA LT Fully Equipped, Gray $15,987 JIM WHITE TOYOTA 419-841-6681

2007 BUICK RENDEZVOUS CX FWD, Well Equipped, 30K, Luggage Rack $16,148 KISTLER FORD 419-531-9911

2006 CHEVROLET HHR Auto, Air, Loaded $6,995 TOLEDO AUTO FINANCE CENTER 419-476-5600

NEED A CAR, BAD CREDIT, NO CREDIT, SUPERCENTER TRUCK OR VAN?

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COMICS

A52 ■ TOLEDO FREE PRESS

GAMES

JULY 25, 2010 ■ ANSWERS FOUND ON A54

Third Rock

Almanac

YOUR TAROTGRAM AND HOROSCOPE

SOLUTION, TIPS AND COMPUTER PROGRAM AT WWW.SUDOKU.COM

JULY 25-31, 2010

BY ELIZABETH HAZEL

Full Moon in Aquarius (25th); Mercury enters Virgo (27th), Mars enters Libra (29th) Aries (March 21-April 19)

Leo (July 23-August 22)

Sagittarius (November 22-December 21)

Unanswerable questions. Important decisions face compulsive haste as the week begins. Relationships can swing the balance in goals and outcomes. You may feel quarrelsome after Thursday. Target the true culprit and protect innocent bystanders.

Mystic moments. This is a watershed week. Breakthroughs and opportunities coincide with endings. Keep attention focused on the future —the past is a land of broken dreams. Embrace Zen-like detachment, as verbal darts can’t pierce a nonexistent ego.

One now, the rest later. People are surprised by you this week. Your special talents are on open display and others can’t quite take it in. Friends or loved ones face turbulent issues after Thursday, while your creative side surges to a loud roar.

Taurus (April 20-May 20)

Virgo (August 23-September 22)

Capricorn (December 22-January 19)

Horn of plenty. People on your “marginal” list push hard enough to merit a boot out the door. You may be pushing back, too. By Friday, the gloves are off and hard words are unleashed. Blind spots and resistance to change make you vulnerable.

The last word. Money, jobs, dwelling, and skills are in transition this week. Where ever you land, a big commitment will be required and puts heavy responsibilities on your shoulders. Exit like you mean it and start as you mean to go on.

Curious and curiouser. Detectives uncover things, but this doesn’t mean what’s found will be pleasant. Sudden events force changes in leadership or circumstances with others turning things upside-down. Move and drive cautiously all week.

Gemini (May 21-June 21)

Libra (September 23-October 22)

Aquarius (January 20-February 18)

Bad gamble. Tricks with money, the law and paperwork are exposed in the bright light of day. Judgments are overturned, decisions reversed or revoked. Battles are immanent on Friday as fiery emotions hit the surface. Justice is blind and accepts bribes.

Animal crackers. Did someone paint a big red target on your head? If chaos and emotional upheaval occur, admit your role in facilitating it and get to work fixing the details to your satisfaction. Personal losses are hard but open a door to freedom, too.

Eagle eye. The full moon amplifies events and projects already in progress. People may be stunned by your abilities. If they see a new side of you, you may have to see new sides of other people, perhaps in a forcible way. Take it in and ponder.

Cancer (June 22-July 22)

Scorpio (October 23-November 21)

Pisces (February 19-March 20)

Light vs. dark. If the world goes crazy, kindness and nurturing are the remedy. Seek comfort from a like-minded person on Wednesday. External upheavals or chaos assault your inner balance after Friday. Meddle if you’re willing to see it all the way through.

Exit this way. A problematic relationship reaches a crossroad this week. Do you keep it or shove it off the boat? If the practical doesn’t match the ideal, seek friendly advice on Wednesday. Get some distance from confusing situations over the weekend.

Headlong rush. Sentimental ties are delaying exits and movement into new activities. Ready or not, this week’s events loosen your grip and catapult you into the next chapter. Consider ways to make relationships more equitable.

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) 2010

Join us for our 4th Annual

PARTY AT THE PARK SUMMER CONCERT SERIES Every Saturday through Labor Day! Party at the Park starts at 4 p.m. Come on out with your friends and enjoy live music from some of Toledo`s best bands while watching live racing action!

For a complete list of bands & dates check out our website!

THIS SATURDAY

JULY 31ST:

Band - Noisy Neighbors

Dollar Day Every Sunday during live racing is Dollar Day from open ‘til close!

You can enjoy: $1 Admission $1 Programs $1 Hot Dogs $1 Sodas $1 Popcorn $1 Nachos

Plus many more dollar specials that are added weekly!

5700 Telegraph Road 419.476.7751 www.racewayparktoledo.com


COMICS

JULY 25, 2010

BY SCOTT MCKIMMY

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WHAT A BLAST ACROSS 1 Studio sites 5 Make smooth 10 Vermiel’s 2000 Super Bowlers 14 Stench 15 Dashboard speed device 16 Like a villian 17 Blasts 20 Caustic substance 21 Poet’s frequency 22 Dwelt 23 Informal assent 24 Senses 27 Can 30 Fair 32 Hit 36 Brings in a fish 38 Graduation accessories 40 Women’s rights org. 41 Blasts 44 Nonprofit for term. patients 45 “___, Mine and Ours” 46 Steed 47 Jets’ place, once 49 Canada, for example 51 Buffet need 52 Leafy vegetable 54 Sun’s org.

56 Glower 59 Airport abbr. 60 Kimono sash 63 Blasts 68 Chows 69 Ear area 70 Herb 71 Address to a lass 72 York and Allen 73 Dwarf from Tatar mythology DOWN 1 Dirty 2 Jumpy 3 Word with “ring” or “dial” 4 __ Lanka 5 Ready-made structure 6 End 7 Adorn 8 Congressional vote 9 European sea eagle 10 Neglectful 11 Tel __ 12 Bit amount 13 Downhill transport 18 Foot extension 19 Brand of laundry detergent 23 Shriek 24 Astonished 25 Stamp

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Leered Tapestry Type of tree Let Disputer Monkey’s cousin Where Sharks and Penguins meet 35 Sticky 37 T ricky 39 Fast-fading thoughts, abbr. 42 Meditation 43 Small particle 48 On the other side 50 Invades, perhaps 53 Cut 55 T- or pry 56 Plant trunk 57 Viet Cong neighbor, once 58 Branch of learning 59 Apple garden? 60 Off-Broadway award 61 One way to buy, with “in” 62 Bonita, accroding to Elton 64 Perch 65 Card game 66 Compass point 67 Publications revenue

■ ANSWERS FOUND ON A54

CARLSON’S CRITTERS

Fortunate Son needs a home Fortunate Son, whose barn name is “Sonny,” is a 3-year-old gelding. Sonny is an Appaloosa and quarter horse cross. Sonny currently measures 14.1 hands (57 inches), which puts him into pony category. He is a rich red sorrel with a dark mane and tail. Sonny was severely starved and injured at the time the humane society confiscated him from his owner. As a result, Sonny has old scarring and pressure sores, which resulted from lying down for extended periods of time. At the time he was confiscated, Sonny was unable to stand. Today Sonny is an energetic colt. He is started under saddle and lunges well. His ground manners

are still not the best, as he tends to be mouthy and somewhat pushy, especially when being led. He is handled daily and ridden five days a week and his behavior will blossom with consistent handling by an experienced horse person. Sonny rarely spooks and tends to show curiosity rather than a flight response to new things. He bathes, clips, ties, cross ties and trailers easily and enjoys being groomed and vacuumed. He stands well for hoof cleaning and the farrier. He is easy to worm and vaccinate. Sonny’s small stature and fine bones will not lend him to great weight carrying and he is most appropriate

for a woman or teenager. He is not a beginner horse and will need a solid intermediate rider with good ground handling skills. He shows movement and courage that with professional training could make an excellent driving pony. Because of the need to stable him off-site, Sonny’s care is a large drain on the resources of the Toledo Area Humane Society and its anxious to find him a permanent home. Sonny is currently residing at Walnut Hill Farm in Maumee and will be shown at the Lucas County Fair in Maumee. For adoption information call (419) 891-0705 Ext. 316 or e-mail Sheryl Brown at sbrown@toledoareahumanesociety.org. 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.


CLASSIFIED

A54 ■ TOLEDO FREE PRESS

COMMUNITY

EMPLOYMENT

EMPLOYMENT

ADOPTIONS

DRIVER / DELIVERY / COURIER

GENERAL

ATTN: NEW DRIVERS, TRAINCO AND OWENS COMMUNITY COLLEGE TRUCK DRIVING SCHOOL DAY-EVE-WEEKEND CLASS • CDL Testing on site • UAW Welcome • Lifetime Job Placement Assistance • Ohio Job and Family Services Approved • Company Paid Training PERRYSBURG, OH 419-837-5730 TAYLOR, MI 734-374-5000 Train Local Save Hassle www.traincoinc.com

BE YOUR OWN BOSS!

*ADOPTING YOUR newborn is life’s greatest treasure. Endless love, security, happiness awaits your precious baby. Maryann & Matt 888-2257173.

PUBLIC NOTICE THE FOLLOWING STORAGE UNITS WILL BE SOLD AT PUBLIC AUCTION BY LOCK-IT-UP SELF STORAGE ON OR AFTER 8-11-10 AT LEONARD’S AUCTION SERVICE 6350 CONSEAR RD OTTAWA LAKE, MI RICHARD LEONARD AUCTIONEER 6424 MEMORIAL HWY OTTAWA LAKE 49267 4194 WILLARD GIBSON 10711 ARROWHEAD CIR JEROME MI HOUSEHOLD. 10148 & 10151 BRIAN REBER 4932 BRINTHAVEN HOUSEHOLD. 4601 JACKMAN RD TOLEDO 43612 1094 CARRIE THEIS 1105 MONTROSE HOUSEHOLD. 2303 SHERRY MARTIN 728 NEBRASKA HOUSEHOLD. 3204 JOSEPH REICHARD 1040 CO RD 1714 JACKSONVILLE TX HOUSEHOLD. 3210/3209 TAMMY MAYS 4140 BERWICK HOUSEHOLD. 4003 JOHN GOLEC 230 13TH ST HOUSEHOLD. 6106 JARED CLEMENS 2247 PORTSMOUTH HOUSEHOLD. 1080 JACQUELINE MCCASKEY 4145 MONROE HOUSEHOLD. 802 S REYNOLDS RD TOLEDO 43615 4008 GWENDOLYN SIMON 3229 ELMVIEW COMM CLEANING EQUIP. 5002 GREGORY BALL 6627 W BANCROFT #78J HOUSEHOLD. 7014 DIANE STOWERS 2250 PERRYSBURG HOLLAND RD #A13 MAUMEE HOUSEHOLD. 8022 PATRICK THOMAS 1202 ROCHELLE HOUSEHOLD. 8201 ROBERTA SOTO 1647 SOUTH COVE BLVD #3C HOUSEHOLD. 8305 JANICE LAIRSON 1945 OTTAWA DR #2 HOUSEHOLD. 12400 WILLIAMS RD PERRYSBURG 43551 9044 ALISHA SHIELDS 2408 MCKINLEY HOUSEHOLD. 3032 AIRPORT HWY TOLEDO 43609 2104 ELIZABETH HARRIS 1072 NORWOOD HOUSEHOLD. 2419 JOHN PERRY 659 HIGHWAY 321 NEWPORT TN HOUSEHOLD. 4219 ANTHONY GLOVER 921 COLLINS HOUSEHOLD. 8136 ROGER GARZA 755 PROUTY LOWER HOUSEHOLD. 5610 CHRISTINA VILLAGOMEZ 211 EASTERN HOUSEHOLD. 5401 TELEGRAPH RD TOLEDO 43612 1507 DAVID RODRIGUEZ 5957 BLOSSMAN HOUSEHOLD. 4105 KIM OLEARY 6519 SAMARIA OTTAWA LAKE MI HOUSEHOLD. 7010 JENNIFER DIXON 17813 VALLEY VIEW CLEVELAND HOUSEHOLD. 1046 S BYRNE RD TOLEDO 43609 2035 ANGELA HAHN 860 GENEVA HOUSEHOLD 27533 HELEN DR PERRYSBURG 43551 2204 ANDRZE MAKOWSKI 2229 TOWNE BLVD OAKVILLE ON HOUSEHOLD 10740 AIRPORT HWY SWANTON 43558 4028 JEREMY BARROR 30 DORCAS #6 TOLEDO HOUSEHOLD/TERRY BARROR 7623 HIDDEN SPRINGS HOLLAND HOUSEHOLD. 7037 RONALD VAHEY 205 RAYMOND ST WALBRIDGE HOUSEHOLD. 3316 DUSTIN RD OREGON 43616 2011 APRYL POCSE 103 BLAIR #2 WALBRIDGE HOUSEHOLD. 4012 JAMIE JONES 1008 LLOYD ST MORRISTOWN TN HOUSEHOLD.

Call 419.241.1700, Ext 233 to place a Classified Ad!

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.

This GREAT opportunity comes with SUPER SECURITY and UNLIMITED Earning Potential. This is YOUR opportunity to work with the #1 Home Improvement Center!! Contact: Scott, Nick, or Steve @ 715-876-4000

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

PROFESSIONAL SERVICES

DAY/TIME

Toledo

Sunday 2-4

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E D G Y

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S T E M

T H A I

T S P L O R R A Solution: N I T E S E O F T Y E A L E B A E L S R A L L Y G S Y O U E A G E C H A R A R E R O W S U T S I N S S T O

A N E D A R D Y N A L F E E L L M Y O B E S O O D T R S M E S E D N B E T A N D E R N E R W N S

R E M I S S

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L E I M O U T R A O A B D I S E

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INTERESTED BIDDERS: TOLEDO PUBLIC SCHOOLS – LONGFELLOW ELEMENTARY SCHOOL Sealed bids will be accepted by the Board of Education of the Toledo Public School District until 1:00 pm August 18, 2010, at the Toledo Public Schools Treasurers’ Room, 420 E. Manhattan Blvd., Toledo, Ohio 43608, for all labor, material and supervision necessary for the Longfellow Elementary School, as more fully described in the drawings and specifications for the project prepared by Munger Munger + Associates Architects Inc. and will be opened publicly and read immediately thereafter.

CASH FLOW Investor pays cash for ownerfinanced mortgages, court settlements, annuities, and lottery payments. 1-866-866-9302.

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.

■ ANSWERS FROM A52

Bidders may obtain copies of the documents starting July 21, 2010 which

WANT TO PURCHASE

FROZEN SPECIALTIES, INC., a Frozen Food manufacturing company, corporate office located in Holland, Ohio, has an opportunity for a motivated professional in the following position: Marketing Analyst This position would support all product commercialization functions from market(s) identification to sale of product and continued customer synchronization. These functions would include but are not limited to: Product ideation; inform sales department of product function/benefits; website development or understanding of website management; willingness to understand manufacturing/sourcing complexities; capable of formalizing procedures and maintaining “track and measure” databases. Candidate must have excellent organizational analytical, and oral and written communication skills. Above average proficiency in the use of Microsoft Office applications; ability to work with little supervision; ability to interact professionally with all levels of management. Apply in confidence by sending your resume to: paula.gleckler@frozenspecialties.com. Or mail your resume to: Frozen Specialties, Inc., Corporate Office, 1465 Timberwolf Dr., Holland, OH 43528 Attention: Paula Gleckler/ Vice President of Human Resources. No phone calls please. Frozen Specialties, Inc. is an Equal Opportunity Employer

AREA

■ CROSSWORD ANSWERS FROM A53

MENARDS in Holland has a great opportunity for an individual with a Class “A” CDL wanting to start their own business by becoming an owner/operator.

GENERAL TRAVEL, TRAVEL! $500 Sign-on Bonus. Seeking Sharp Guys/ Gals, Rock-n-Roll Atmosphere, Blue-Jean Environment! Diane 877-724-3386, Nick- 888-890-2055.

JULY 25, 2010

can be purchased from Toledo Blueprint, 6964 McNerney Road, Northwood, Ohio 43619, phone: (419) 661-9841. Drawings may be obtained on CD-ROM for no cost with the purchase of the specifications. A MANDATORY PREBID MEETING will be held on August 6, 2010 at 2:00 pm at Toledo Public Schools Board Room, 420 E. Manhattan Blvd, Toledo, Ohio 43608. If you have any questions or a need for additional information, please direct all questions in writing to Olivia.Beebe@lgb-llc.com , by phone at (419) 776-5600, or fax (877) 281-0784.

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.

ADDRESS 4437 Pennfield

DESCRIPTION 3 BR, 1 Bath, 1481 sf, 1 Car Gar

Sealed bids will be received for: Bid Item No. 1 – Site Work Bid Item No. 2 – Concrete Paving and Curbs Bid Item No. 3 – Asphalt Bid Item No. 4 – Landscaping and Grass Bid Item No. 5 – General Trades Bid Item No. 6 – Metal Studs and Drywall Bid Item No. 7 – Acoustical Ceilings Bid Item No. 8 – Painting Bid Item No. 9 – Flooring Bid Item No. 10 – Fire Protection Bid Item No. 11 – Plumbing Bid Item No. 12 – HVAC Bid Item No. 13 – Electrical Bid Item No. 14 – Technology

Estimates $1,046,985.00 $111,979.00 $183,720.00 $71,616.00 $4,297,542.00 $447,692.00 $105,921.00 $80,147.00 $260,800.00 $140,400.00 $534,300.00 $2,264,500.00 $1,349,200.00 $653,441.00

Total

$11,548243.00

PRICE $89,900

LISTED BY Assist2Sell

AGENT Robin Morris

PHONE 419-310-3272


JULY 25, 2010

Visit www.toledofreepress.com m

â– A55


A56 ■ TOLEDO FREE PRESS

JULY 25, 2010

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