Toledo Free Press – Jan. 2, 2011

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Publisher’s statement A publication of Toledo Free Press, LLC, Vol. 7, No. 01. Established 2005.

Thomas F. Pounds, President/Publisher tpounds@toledofreepress.com Michael S. Miller, Editor in Chief mmiller@toledofreepress.com EDITORIAL Mary Ann Stearns, Design Editor mastearns@toledofreepress.com James A. Molnar, Lead Designer jmolnar@toledofreepress.com Brandi Barhite, Associate Editor bbarhite@toledofreepress.com Kristen Criswell Special Sections Editor krapin@toledofreepress.com ADMINISTRATION Pam Burson, Business Manager pburson@toledofreepress.com STAFF WRITERS news@toledofreepress.com Jim Beard John Dorsey Vicki L. Kroll Jeff McGinnis Duane Ramsey Dave Woolford Chris Schmidbauer, Sports Editor Lisa Renee Ward, Social Networking Manager Chris Kozak, Staff Writer Emeritus COPY EDITORS/PROOFREADERS Lisa Renee Ward Brandi Barhite Darcy Irons Sarah Ottney ADVERTISING SALES Renee Bergmooser, Sales Manager rbergmooser@toledofreepress.com

2010 Newsmakers: really good, really bad

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eople in the news business will Elton John, The Eagles and scores of tell you there is no such thing other concerts and family events to as “too much news,” but local Toledo. The Toledo Zoo had blessed readers could be forgiven if 2010 news with the birth of Siku the polar bear and grim news when longtime pushed the limits of that viewpoint. elephant keeper Don The emotional RedFox was attacked roller coaster ride that is and seriously injured just rolling to a stop deby Louie the elephant. livered some amazing Tim Beckman led highs and lows. the University of Toledo We watched a local football team to its first “farmer’s daughter” bowl game in five years. rise from humble oriThe Dec. 26 Little Caegins to national fame sars Pizza Bowl at Ford as Crystal Bowersox Field did not have a made an amazing run Thomas F. Pounds happy ending for Rockets on “American Idol.” Our friends and partners at FOX To- fans, but that gutsy two-point converledo allowed us to share access to the sion call that gave the team a brief lead Bowersox journey as the Elliston na- with a minute to go in the fourth quarter tive brought the best kind of attention summed up everything you need to to our region. Bowersox dominated know about Beckman’s approach to the the local discussion so strongly that game and his faith in his team. The news seemed to bring shock she made the cover of Toledo Free Press more times in one year than just after shock this year; the police about anyone else has in our six years shooting death of Linda Hicks; the trial of publishing (she gets one more for and acquittal of Lucas County Sheriff good measure as her “Newsmaker” James Telb for events following the profile leads the issue of Toledo Free death of inmate Carlton Benton; the missing Skelton boys in Morenci. Press Star distributed in this issue). The early June tornadoes took Other entertainment highlights included the inaugural year for the seven lives and destroyed homes, Huntington Center (also profiled in schools and businesses in Lake Townthis week’s Star), which experienced ship, Northwest Ohio, Dundee and some growing pains by not sched- Monroe. We have been privileged uling enough events to keep all the to chronicle one family’s journey as neighboring businesses happy, but they rebuild from the tornado with still brought Carrie Underwood, the yearlong “Storming Back” series,

in which Associate Editor Brandi Barhite has followed the Blank family from their initial days of survival to their triumphant move back into their rebuilt home. Attention turned to education as Toledo Public Schools (TPS) struggled with budget woes, two failed levies, closing Libbey High School and the hiring of a new superintendent, Jerome Pecko. Next week, Toledo Free Press will announce a major education initiative partnership with a local nonprofit that will keep TPS issues in the spotlight. On the political front, we have watched Toledo Mayor Mike Bell settle into his new job, clash over the city’s budget with unions and City Council, trave to China to seek business and brin a more accessible approach to One Government Center. May and November elections saw levies passed and defeated while Lucas County voters ignored the state and nation’s GOP sweep. But the biggest newsmaker of 2010 was Rich Iott, the former Food Town owner who mounted a major challenge to longtime Congresswoman Marcy Kaptur. Iott galvanized local conservatives and made the most serious run at Kaptur in her 15-term career, only to see poor campaign management and an international controversy derail his more than $2 million self-financed campaign. As we look forward to beginning

our seventh year of covering local news, we also look back on our own busy year. In March, we launched the city’s only entertainment-themed weekly newspaper, Toledo Free Press Star, which has quickly grown a connection with local artists and performers, such as Jerry Gray, Rachel Richardson, Jim Beard and Dustin Hostetler, while also capturing interviews with national stars such as Usher, Joel McHale, Rob Schneider ... and, of course, Bowersox. For the second year in a row, Toledo Free Press was named best weekly newspaper in our 100,000+ circulation class by the Ohio chapter of the Society of Professional Journalists, an honor we aim to defend as best as we can moving forward. That challenge is possible thanks to the small but dedicated team of journalists, salespeople and circulation and delivery folks who work to make our vision a reality. We are also indebted to our advertisers, who make it possible for us to offer a more open, fair and accurate look at local news than most readers are accustomed to. We thank you for joining us on our 2010 trek, and look forward to seeing what 2011 has in store. Happy New Year and God bless our city and its people in 2011. Thomas F. Pounds is president and publisher of Toledo Free Press and Toledo Free Press Star. E-mail him at tpounds@toledofreepress.com.

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In preparation for the 2010 Newsmakers issue, I e-mailed Rich Iott and asked if he would meet me for an interview. I offered to publish a straight question-and-answer transcript to preclude any concerns that I would edit his answers or interject any opinion into the story. Iott responded with a curt “No, thank you,” for which none of his many supporters will blame him. “Why should Iott talk to someone who, in the height and heat of his campaign against Rep. Marcy Kaptur, called for him to drop out of the race?” they will say. I would point out that for Iott’s supporters to criticize Kaptur for avoiding critics, such as those at WSPD and the Children of Liberty, and then cheer him on for avoiding me is hypocritical and indicative of their emotions trumping their intellects. I had dual motivations for asking for Iott’s time. First, I once liked Iott. I admired his self-financed entry into politics and his lack of polish. I respected that he spoke his mind without qualifiers and buzzwords. When Toledo Free Press Publisher Tom Pounds and I left our endorsement interview with Iott, there was little question we planned to endorse him for the office. Then, the wheels came off. The weekend of Oct. 9, The Atlantic website released photos of Iott in a Nazi uniform, during what Iott called a “historical re-enactment.” Between that moment and Iott’s November defeat, nearly every major news organization on the planet reported on the Nazi photos. The vast majority of the reporting and attendant commentary was incredulous; how could a U.S. congressional candidate not know how damaging such photos would be? How could he not display an iota of contrition or offer

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any semblance of apology? ed Iott and his campaign o Fr ee Pr mishandled the controversy in epic fashion, allowing the political newbie to swim with FREE since 2005 national TV sharks, which reA Toledo tradition sulted in exactly the bloodyred waters anyone else would JANUARY 24 2010 have predicted and prevented. When we learned that Iott had an apparent problem remembering his occupation on campaign finance forms and that those forms mostly detail contributions to some of the most left-leaning Democrats who breathe Lucas County’s Maumee River-tainted oxygen, it was clear Iott was not going to be our next congressman. Kaptur. seat Marcy On Oct. 14, I published an seek to unStor Page A6 y by Kristen Rapin, Iott and Jack Smith rd ha Ric opinion column, “Iott should MINN FLYING FRO exit, stage Reich,” which in sumEAPO LIS-SA M TOLEDO E INT PA I was president and mary said the region was suffering UL INTXPRESS (TO ERNA L TIONA ) to L (MSP Here are those unedited comments, CEO of Food Town our sales an enough embarrassment from the ) TOLED O Nazi uniform controversy and that so Toledo Free Press Newsmaker of the profits increased (per the TOLEDO shareholders PORT LUCAS COU AUTH NT Y IT Y if who could bailORout the BLADE study). the only way Iott could salvage his Year Rich Iott can have the last word. Fact: The year prior to the merger deal went badly, as an officer of the Posted by “Kathy,” Nov. 12, 2010 dignity and legacy was to bow out. with Spartan Stores was the most prof- company I could not sell any shares Hundreds of calls, e-mails, snail at 1:55 p.m.: Mr. Iott and his son Rich were the itable in the company’s history (per for three years. When things began mails, threats and delivery cancelto go south, shareholders sold out. I lation requests accompanied the majority share holders after the sale the TOLEDO BLADE study). Fact: Food Town was a publicly could not. I rode the stock down from scores of feedback messages in agree- and son Iott was on the board of direcment. As late as Dec. 28, WSPD “Eye tors. He in fact ran Food Town into the held company. The merger with $16 a share to $0.99 a share. I ended up on Toledo” host Fritz Wenzel and ground along side the other members Spartan could only happen with the selling most of it for between $8 and his callers were still bemoaning the of the board after he cashed out.Iott approval of the Board of Directors $13 a share. I lost millions on the deal stance I took. I understood then, casts himself as a job creator. Also false. first, and then the approval of the that other shareholders did not. Fact: Food Town was destined to and am more convinced now, that Until he has created the thousands of shareholders. Fact: Percent of ownership had no fail because changing market conthe column provided people who jobs he destroyed he cannot make that had placed great hope in Iott with claim.His weekend hobby was not the bearing on the Board’s vote. Each di- ditions. The Board and I saw that an outlet for their frustration at his issue, it was his remarks subsequent. rector has one vote. If it was a bad idea coming. The regional supermarket chains destroyed the local grocers in sudden — unquestionably Demo- Admiring the individual Nazi soldiers it could have easily been defeated. Fact: Food Town was not sold. It the 50s and 60s. Now the mega-chains was his downfall.this is not a man who crat-engineered — implosion. merged with Spartan. If it had been (and non-union chains like WalMart) The second reason I wanted to give should walk in the halls of congress. Posted by Rich Iott, Nov. 14, 2010 sold, there would have been a lot of have destroyed the regional chains. Iott a forum to voice his thoughts was Fact: My father was still Chairman money change hands and the future of that while I maintain I was right in at 11:34 p.m.: Kathy, I was going to call you a Food Town would have had no effect on of the Board and the largest single suggesting he bow out, I agree with the people who say he got a raw deal, from moron but I will, instead, refer to my pocketbook. That was not the case. shareholder (but not the majority media and the Republican machinery. you as part of the unfortunately mis- I — like every stockholder — received shareholder) at the time of the merger. In early November, Iott began com- guided and uninformed masses whose one share of Spartan stock plus five dol- He founded the company. If he hadn’t menting on Toledo Free Press website opinion is shaped by the media or lars cash for every share of Food Town agreed with the merger and thought it stories, seeking to clarify what he felt unions and who never bother to do stock surrendered. That was it; no buy was in the best interest of the company, it would not have happened. out, no golden parachutes. were many misconceptions about his objective research for themselves. Fact: Unlike most Food Town Fact: In each of the years that past and his campaign. n IOTT CONTINUES ON A5

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january 2, 2011 n IOTT CONTINUED FROM A4 Fact: My Congressional opponent chided me for ‘selling’ a profitable business. She displayed her total ignorance of real business: one sells a business when times are good! Who wants to buy a failing business? Democrats, I guess… Fact: The nearly 5,000 Food Town employees are not unemployed. Spartan sold many of the stores to independent operators who kept the employees on (in a non-union status, of course, which I guess menas that they are “unemployed”….). Rite-Aid acquired all The Pharm stores as well as the employees. Fact: I served on the Spartan board for three years following the merger and I argued against operational decisions which I thought were wrong. By the time I was proven right (and we had sacked the Chairman of the Board who was the root of the problem) it was too late. Fact: It was the right decision at the right time; the successor failed to continue to do the right things. Lastly, I do NOT admire individual Nazi soldiers. I am enough

of a student of history to admire the military accomplishments of a single country which took the combined efforts of the entire free world to defeat. For your information, WWII German tactics are a large part of required study of every major military force in the world today — including the US. And these were NOT Nazis — in fact, it was against German army regulations to belong to an active political party — they were German soldiers serving a Nazi Government. But they didn’t have a lot of options. I do not condone or support the objectives of that government, but I recognize the fact that the war DID happen and that ordinary people served on both sides. That is the same approach I have taken to the American Civil War or WWI where I have reenacted both sides. And most of my WWII reenacting has been as an American. Hmmm.. wonder why my opponent didn’t want to talk about that? I forgot one thing. Our polling showed that ten days after the Kaptur campaign’s release of the “Nazi bomb”,

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I was 1/2 point HIGHER in the polls than before. People got it. They understand reenacting for what it is and they understand politics for what it is. It had no effect on the election. I find it humorous now that the most senior woman in the House who “sits right next to the gavel” has not even been considered for any Minority leadership positions. Yep, NW Ohio is going to be proud of its representation…. Posted by “Kathy,” Nov. 15, 2010 at 5:35 p.m.: I’ve seen all your “facts” in your ads throughout the campaign ad nauseum. I would describe them more as splitting hairs than factual. FACT: The SEC warned you about “merging” with Spartan. FACT: the Kaptur campaign did not release your Nazi “bomb”, nor did she hold a gun to your head forcing you to pose for the photo op. I stand by my remarks. As to your added comment regarding Rep. Kaptur’s leadership consideration, you simply don’t understand Congress or politics. You must recognize the NUMBERS, both in the districts and the House of Representatives ... That little act during the TFP/FOX debate where you turned to her claiming your years of friendship and how she knew you as though you two had dinner once a week was quite a show. I found you and your campaign’s attacks on that hard working, respected member of congress and good woman terribly offensive. Be well Mr. Iott. Posted by Rich Iott, Nov. 15, 2010 at 11:58 p.m.: Well Miss Kapturite, please note the following: Fact: The Lucas County Democratic Party set up the “Rich Iott Nazi”

Visit www.toledofreepress.com web site in March of 2010 but did not release it until October. Fact: The Atlantic reporter was a “plausible denial” setup. He called to “talk about the campaign” and then dropped the ‘Nazi bomb”. I did not deny having worn a German uniform on occasion but explained my 30 years of reenacting in mostly various American, sometimes Confederate, sometimes German, uniforms. I sent him dozens of photos; he printed only one. And he talked about only one aspect of the whole sphere of historical reenacting. Fact: While Kaptur denied any responsibility or knowledge, the Ohio Democratic Party Chairman on the Wednesday before the release revealed to the Ohio Republican Party Chairman that they “had the goods” to “bury your boy in the 9th district”. Curiously, Kaptur’s ad campaign suddenly switched three days before the release to her talking to WWII veterans. Coincidence, eh? My “act” on Fox? Kaptur praised Food Town for being one of the largest employers in the region. If she was such a good representative, why had she never met the president and CEO of such a significant company in her region? She actualy asked me to serve on her Military Academy Selection Board in the 80s… but I guess she never met me, eh? And she said she knew little about the OHMR… but in fact, she visited its Annual Training, was briefed by the Commanding General, and was made an honorary captain in the OHMR. And I was the liaison officer who set it all up!. I have several of photos from the event if you’d like to see them. Would yo like to see the newsletter articles about it?

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She consistently lied to make her point. End of discussion. Maybe I was foolish for not making them public; but I was trying to stick to the issues: her voting record and my positions. She was trying to deflect any and all attention for those two points. After all, that is the Democratic way, right? Saved myself some money? Hell, no! The money I spent was an INVESTMENT in America. You see, I BELIEVE in this country and I am willing to up my money where my mouth is. I don’t spend union or PAC money to get my message out there; I believe in this country. Look at the FEC reports. Tell me how much Washington PAC money Kaptur raises versus money from the real people. Most of her funding comes from out-of-state. And so who really owns her? Lastly, your comments about the SEC warnings are laughable. If you have ever read any merger document (how many have you read?) you would know that is simply boilerplate legal nonsense that is put in there by lawyers on both sides as a CYA. It has nothing to de with the actual deal being made. But then, you have probably never managed the merger of two multi-million dollar companies, have you? So I guess your ignorance is to be expected. :-) I shall be well, thank you. My other businesses will continue to thrive. We have provided a large number of (union) construction jobs in the area when no one is building anything. And we are about to start on Phase II. My movie production business is thriving (we just won at the Toronto International Film Festival and are closing worldwide distribution deals). It is the people of NW Ohio that will suffer from two more years of Kapturism.

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2010 Newsmakers

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In medieval times, people prayed for a knight in shining armor to come to their rescue. In 2010, many Toledo-area residents believed a charismatic former fire chief, known for his Harley, was Toledo’s salvation. Instead of slaying dragons or rescuing maidens, Mike Bell had a harder task — attempting to manage the city while trying to appease businesses and residents who did not services cut or taxes increased. Rather than knights of the Round Table, Bell had 12 City Council members to face. His promise early on to be more proactive in attending Toledo City Council meetings is one that he has kept; he has attended more of the

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Vote for Toledo’s consolidation of city departINSIDE: Free, glos sy “Vote fo ments. She said Toledo had r Crystaweindow poster: l Bdowers held discussions with Lucas ox” P r BEnSTEWWSpEEapkErly o Fr in oh ee County on joint consolidaio tion efforts and that recent legislation approved by 18, A Toledo tradition since 20 Council to separate the 05 Division of Building InFREE spection/Code Enforcement from the Department of Neighborhoods would, “allow the department to better interface with sister departments like the Plan Commission and Economic DeThe triu mphs an velopment to ensure d mistake s ... so fa Stor y by Kristen r. more streamlined service.” Rapin, Pa ge A5 Sorgenfrei said the electronic business center “remains something to cemeteries maintained which the Mayor is committed,” but throughout the summer; leaves the city’s computer system is not cur- collected in the fall and streets plowed rently capable of providing electronic and salted after it snows in the winter; we’ve demolished 350 blighted houses permitting. Mayor Bell said, “We are cur- this year and we still had a street resurrently on track to end the fiscal year facing program. “With good financial management with a balanced budget — something that has not been accomplished in we can provide the basic services that many years. It seems like it should people want. That’s not to say the decibe common sense not to spend more sions we face now are easy or popular, money than you have, but in practice because many of them aren’t, but they it’s something that the City has failed are the decisions we need to make to get Toledo back on track.” to do for several years running. Will Bell receive more huzzahs “We have lived within our budget for 2010 and have not laid off police than hisses from the populace in 2011? officers or firefighters; the parks and We’ll learn that during the next 365 cemeteries are maintained; trees are days — for 2010, the mayor’s armor trimmed in the spring; parks and is a little worn, but not yet tarnished.

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sions; one came away with only temporary concessions. Trash collection is a hotly debated issue in Toledo. The automation process that Bell did not support — but inherited — created changes in the trash fee and the elimination of weekly bulk pickup. Now the Bell administration is proposing completely removing Toledo from the business of collecting trash and turning it over to Lucas County. During 2010, the former Finkbeiner administration was blamed for many of the city’s woes. The most recent instance related to the four-year scheduling of utility rates. The Bell administration stated the reason for the large increase was failure of the past administration to generate the amount of revenue needed to repair and maintain water services, sanitary sewer and storm water systems. Prior to taking office, Bell said he would accomplish three goals in the first 30 days of his administration: hire a Business Advocate, initiate a plan to consolidate all city departments responsible for permits, inspections, business incentives into a single location; and to create an electronic business center. A year later, one of those goals has been met in full, as Bell hired Dean Monske for the position of Deputy Mayor for External Relations. On Dec. 20, Jennifer Sorgenfrei, public information officer, said via email that Bell was still working on the

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meetings and committee meetings than any mayor in recent history. Bell’s once hopeful tone of working with Council as a team has turned to expressions of frustration. Accusations that his administration is not transparent when it comes to communication have come from some in the community and by more than one member of Council. A Dec. 27 media release stated that due to the inaction of Council, the mayor was seeking to re-open contract negotiations with Toledo’s collective bargaining units to fill a potential $3.2 million budget hole; the release took Council members by surprise. The budget in 2010 was rife with discussion related to exigent circumstances. In the end, with the exception of one union that is still fighting the city, some unions made minor conces-

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that.” However, Pecko said one thing that surprised him ed was how poor a perception o F r eBEnEeSTinWWPSpEEaprklEry many people had of the 31 ohio , A Toledo state of affairs within TPS, tradition since 20 05 something he hopes to FREE change with more transparency and dialogue with the community. Vasquez and Sobecki both said Pecko’s heart for children is obvious. Vasquez said he watched Pecko get Can ‘S upe emotional listening help t rman’ and Comm he 7.8 entary to a student talk from Je -mill T the United W rome Pe PS lev cko, Bi ll Kits y pass ay about TPS, while on, St even Fl ? agg an d Micha Sobecki said Pecko el S. M iller works tirelessly and sees the good in against Pecko every child. Vasquez said Pecko has a lot of pa- but against the search tience: “I have pushed him very hard process. Pecko was the only canand he has never gotten angry with didate remaining after another fime,” Vasquez said. “He doesn’t react nalist, Tom Watkins, withdrew. Despite the challenges ahead, impulsively to anything.” Pecko, who began his career Pecko said he is still glad he came to teaching English at an inner-city Toledo. “I am still very excited,” Pecko said. Akron junior high before moving into administration, was offered “I have a period of time to be able to the superintendent job in July after demonstrate that I can help make a a 4-1 vote in which board member difference in the school district and Larry Sykes said his vote was not that’s what I’m focused on.”

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Toledo Public Schools (TPS) Superintendent Jerome Pecko can often be found walking the hallways of the city’s schools, interacting with students. It’s what he does when the stresses and challenges of his administrative role start to distance him from the true reason for what he does. School Board PECKO President Bob Vasquez calls it Pecko’s “kid time.” “One of the things I really like best about Dr. Pecko is he has students at the center of his thinking,” Vasquez said. “Sometimes the things we do as a board, especially financial issues, are so far removed from the students that he likes to go in and remind himself, because he believes they are why we are doing what we are doing. He has that built in. He had that when he first came to the district.” When Pecko came from the Akron area to take the reins of TPS in August,

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uary whether to pursue another levy. “As I reflected at the time, the notion was in my head that had we gotten started a month earlier we might have been able to have been successful.” School Board Vice President Lisa Sobecki said she understands why voters were apprehensive, but suspects Pecko had higher expectations of support for TPS. “I think where he came from, people had always rallied behind the schools, maybe not always agreed with decisions, but had always supported public education. I think maybe it was an eye-opener for him, a disappointment for him, that maybe he didn’t see that in Toledo,” Sobecki said. Even so, Pecko said Toledo has more interest in its school district than any other place he has served. “That’s been very impressive to me,” Pecko said. “Everybody wants to lend a hand. Whenever I think about that, it brings a smile to my face because I think we obviously don’t have a lot of resources available to us. To have so many different organizations and agencies out in the community who have legitimate services to provide that will benefit our students, reaching out with their hands and offering to help us, it doesn’t get any better than

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Toledo Free Press Staff Writer

he inherited a system with declining enrollment and a nearly $40 million deficit poised to ask voters for the largest levy in decades. A smaller levy had failed only months before, prompting TPS to cut middle-school and freshman sports, lay off crossing guards and cut bus service to state minimum levels, angering many parents. When $824,000 in extra funds were discovered days before school started, the crossing guards were hired back, but the district has shed more than 400 employees and closed Libbey High School. When 59 percent of voters rejected November’s 7.8-mill levy, which would have raised roughly $21.6 million a year, Pecko handled the defeat with his characteristically even-keeled demeanor, conceding that voters had spoken and it was time to move on. Pecko said TPS’s budget crisis is challenging, but he has faced similar situations before and knew what he was getting into. Although proud of the campaign waged, he admits the defeat has been the low point of his tenure so far and wishes he would have started sooner and done more. “Momentum was starting to build right at the end,” said Pecko, who said the school board will address in Jan-

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Waiting for ‘Superman’: Dr. Jerome Pecko By Sarah Ottney

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sounded, but 0 he didn’t think a tornado FREE since 2005 would hit his A Toledo tradition neighborhood. 13, “You have ed feelings of guilt By Brandi Barhite o Fr ee Pr that you made it Toledo Free Press Associate Editor and your neighbbarhite@toledofreepress.com bors didn’t,” Ed Even though Ed Blank and his said in June. The night family ended their year in triumph, they know rebuilding and healing will of the tornado started out as a not end in 2010. “It took six months, 11 days and 12 celebration. His son, Casey, was hours, but we are back,” Ed said. Ed said it feels great to return to turning 15, and rs ath of deadly twiste Bickley face afterm their Millbury neighborhood in such they were hosting Residents like Max a short amount of time, although the a party. Parents can help. ut Medicare? Humana S chools, view from their newly built house will began to pick up Turning 65 and have questions abo 6 2-5 -56 00 1-8 audience00that NA today:the assured Lake High their kids at about never be the same. Talk to HUMA His son’s school, Lake High 10 p.m. Ed told those who drove to School would be together in some hurry home because the fashion by the start of school. School on Lemoyne Road “By sticking together and taking weather looked bad. in Lake Township, was He told his wife, care of each other, this school disdestroyed in the June 5 though, “Don’t worry trict and this community will be even tornado that killed seven about it honey. They never stronger,” Witt said. people, including alumna Owens would become a lifeline hit us.” Bailey Bowman and three This time, a tornado for Lake. The community college of the four members of the Walters family. The BLANK FAMILY: did, and it took the placed Lake students and teachers in a building on Tracy Road. Before the Blanks’ home with it. Walters lived next door The tornado also hit a first day of school, a Lake High School to the Blanks. neighborhood in Moline, sign was erected to welcome anxious “The Walters’ house as well as the Delta area students to the new location. is gone,” Ed said. “There The building came with logistic and Southeast Michigan. is a picture of the four of In Dundee, Cabela’s, problems. It had no cafeteria, so a them in the yard facing both ways. We will have to see that. the Splash Universe water park and makeshift one was created. It also had no lockers, so those were installed. The That is going to be different. The view Dundee High School were damaged. Millbury suffered the greatest loss building has no gymnasium either, so is going to be difficult.” Ed remembers the last time he of life. In addition to the Walters, athletes practice at Lake elementary talked with them. It was the night the another victim was Ted Kranz. His and middle schools, which survived the F-4 tornado tore through the com- daughter, Katie, the valedictorian, tornado with mostly roof damage. Casey plays basketball and his team munity and destroyed and damaged was scheduled to graduate at the high has been practicing at the Lake Middle school June 6. dozens of structures. By June 8, Katie and her classmates School and East Broadway Middle Ryan and Mary Walters said they were tired and going to bed when were graduating at Owens Commu- School. His games are played at the StuEd saw them come home. Ed wishes nity College. Amid tears and cheers, dent Health Athletic Center at Owens. When it came to football, what he had woken them when the sirens Jim Witt, superintendent of Lake Local was left of Lake’s football field was turned into a state-of-the-art stadium with artificial turf. It was ready in time for the first home game Sept. 3. Lake also received good news when it won $500,000 through a national contest sponsored by Kohl’s Department Store. That money, along with Lake’s $19.1 million disaster insurance claim and a $4.8 million commitment from the Ohio School Facilities Commission, could help the district achieve its goal to rebuild the school for the 2012-13 school year. If that goal is met, Casey will start his senior year at the new school. Ed said Casey didn’t show much emotion until they moved home Dec. 17, reinforcing the notion that rebuilding and healing takes time. “He posted some things on Facebook that he was glad to be back and n A thank-you sign from the Walters family next to the Blanks’ home. loves his new house,” Ed said. Editor’s note: Toledo Free Press will follow the Blank family of Millbury for one year as they rebuild their lives after the June 5 tornado destroyed their Main Street home.

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“I don’t know if eleed phants have best o Fr ee Pr friends, but if they do, they’re best friends,” Baker said. Louie has gotten along well with others lately, despite the attack this summer. Zookeeper Don RedFox entered the elephant enclosure alone July 1. The two reportedly didn’t know the other was present. Louie, startled, charged RedFox and punctured his lungs and broke some of his ribs. RedFox spent about a month in the hospital and is still recovering at home, Baker said. Baker previously told the press that Louie was not supposed to be in his enclosure during that time. A review committee could not decipher why Louie was there and said RedFox didn’t normally enter alone. Now, Louie is in protective contact with Twiggy, which means zookeepers interact with him from behind a training wall. Zookeepers were already starting to phase Louie into that because growing male elephants tend to get more aggressive as they age, Baker said. “What we learned is that, quite honestly, our policies and our protocols are good and they’re there for a reason,” Baker said. “When they’re not followed, it can have bad consequences.” The elephants will continue to make some noise in the upcoming years. Renee, Louie’s mother, is pregnant again. The zoo is also constructing the newer, larger elephant exhibit to be finished in 2012. Toledo Zoo techniques include showing the public how keepers care for the animals, and also changing up terrains and activities for the elephants, Baker said. “We’ve really focused not just on the space in our exhibit but on the complexity of the space,” Baker said.

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Local zoo animals made quite the ruckus this year, but the humans on scene are preparing to unveil even bigger news in the upcoming year.

about what’s happening in the wild,” said Dr. Randi Meyerson, curator of mammals for the zoo. Not only has climate change shrunk natural habitats, but mothers in the wild could have fewer offspring because of declining health. Polar bears breed between February and May but the female’s embryo goes dormant until August or September. This happens because the mother has to be healthy for the embryo to implant, to avoid birthing cubs when there is not enough nutrients for them, Meyerson said. Triplets have become rare as a result, she added. Siku’s mother has had twins before, but this time gave birth to Siku and a stillborn cub. Now Siku, weighs more than a couple hundred pounds and is in training. After about another year he will have to move to another zoo, to mimic the natural order of polar bear interaction in the wild, Meyerson said. The other big addition was Twiggy, a 25-year-old female elephant who came from a circus in Indiana. The United States Department of Agriculture confiscated her because she was mistreated, said Anne Baker, director of the zoo. Twiggy was underweight and had bad skin when she arrived. She had poor muscle tone because she spent most of her life standing in one place, Baker said. “She had spent her life alone,” Baker said. “Her first couple of days she was just standing in a corner and finally realized, ‘Hey, I can move here,’” Baker said. Getting her comfortable with the resident elephants took some time. One of the techniques zookeepers use to help is called “howdying” — they can see, smell and hear each other but cannot touch. By now she has blended in. Louie, the 7-year-old bull, is her favorite.

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cub born in a zoo that year. The little cub who started out about the size of a stick of butter never had to make a sound to raise awareness. “We really want to try to link polar bears in the wild with polar bears in zoos because they really are the ambassadors to make people care

To

Toledo Free Press Staff Writer

The Toledo Zoo rang in last year debuting the polar bear cub, followed with a new female elephant named Twiggy, then made national headlines after the young male elephant Louie attacked a zookeeper. Siku, the polar bear cub born December 2009, was the only polar bear

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Grim and bear it: The Toledo Zoo By Caitlin McGlade

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Siku the polar bear was a major attraction for the zoo during 2010.


2010 Newsmakers

january 2, 2011

Lucas County Republican Party Chairman Jon Stainbrook overcame controversy in 2010 and said he has since worked to move the local party forward But for roughly six months, the leadership of the Lucas County Republican Party (LCRP) was in question. On Dec. 21, 2009, during STAINBROOK a LCRP central committee meeting an intra-party battle broke out. Two separate factions declared they were leadership of the party; one with Stainbrook as chairman, the other with Jeff Simpson as chairman. Both men acted in the forthcoming months as if they were head of the party. A number of court cases were filed regarding the dispute and on Feb. 11, a judge found that neither Stainbrook nor Simpson were head of the LCRP. The ruling also stated the Lucas County Board of Elections (BOE) was required by law to forward the two competing factions’ list of central committee members to the Ohio Republican Party to decide the true chairperson. The leadership battle raged through the May primaries and in June, with assistance from the state party, the LCRP’s

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the house Republican leader, for breaking the national single-day 27 phone call record. The phone bank made 18,685 calls on behalf of the Republican Party on Sept. 25, beating the previous record by 1,000 calls. “We wouldn’t be recognized by a visit from John Boehner unless we had done something that deserved merit,” Stainbrook said. Individuals who made phone calls at the bank were tracked by a barcode, Stainbrook said. The majority of the calls were made by individuals Stainbrook brought in, he said. Tom Waniewski, Toledo City Councilman and Republican candidate for state senator District 11, said regardless who won in June, Republican candidates would have faced the same problems. Waniewski did the majority of his campaigning on his own, but did receive support from the party dropping literature, he said. Republican George Sarantou said Stainbrook and the party were very involved in the elections locally and statewide. The party assisted Sarantou by passing out literature and sending volunteers to attend events with him.

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BOE to replace Olman. Neither Stainbrook’s nor Simpson’s recommendation for the position were considered due to the dispute. Since being declared chairman of the LCRP, Stainbrook has been helping the party raise money and get out the vote for candidates. Stainbrook has also assisted and met with statewide candidates when they came to the county. In Lucas County, Barbara Sears and Steve Yarbrough were the only Republicans to win. At the state level Republicans swept the election, but not one nonjudicial candidate won in the county. Despite not carrying any elections for the statewide candidates, Stainbrook said he felt the local party assisted the Republicans statewide. “It’s so hard when you have the Democrat machine to work against,” he said. “To win you have to have a vehicle these candidates can run through. You can’t just put candidates on the ballot and not have any volunteers with literature, or infrastructure. I believe we delivered on that.” For the county it’s always been about “stopping the bleeding” against the Democratic Party, Stainbrook said. For many of the races, more votes came in for candidates than the total number of registered Republicans in the county. Volunteers did a number of different literature drops for candidates as well as made phone calls on their behalf, Stainbrook said. The LCRP phone bank was honored with a visit from John Boehner,

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By Kristen Criswell

central committee hosted a meeting to elect new leadership. On June 10, Stainbrook was elected to his second term as LCRP chairman by a standing vote. During that meeting Meghan Gallagher was elected chairwoman of the LCRP central committee. Gallagher defeated Paul Hoag, of the Simpson faction, by a vote of 147 to 111, in a secret written ballot. “My leadership was never in question because we always had the vote and support,” Stainbrook told Toledo Free Press in a telephone interview. Stainbrook said the dispute was caused by the BOE wanting to cast doubt on the party’s leadership so it could to keep appointments from going through to the board. “I made it very clear that there was corruption at the Lucas County BOE,” Stainbrook said. “After all this mess and all the scandals, someone had to step up and say enough is enough.” Stainbrook had previously accused Lynn Olman, former member of the BOE, of bringing members to the December meeting to try and defeat the fact that you need to have petitions to get on the ballot. At the time, Olman said the accusation was “laughable.” “Never have I gotten so much credit for doing so little,” he said. “I wasn’t the person who planned the event and I didn’t make any motions, I just happened to be there.” On March 1, during the leadership dispute, Secretary of State Jennifer Brunner appointed Ben Marsh to the

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JEFF SIMPSON leadership stakes his claim to GOP. of the Lucas County

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The Chairman? Stainbrook and the LCRP are currently helping the Toledo city councilman with his contest of the election. “There is absolutely no way I wouldn’t stand beside [Sarantou] when I feel he was wronged,” Stainbrook said. Sarantou, candidate for Lucas County Commissioner, filed a Contest of Election Dec. 13 in regard to the outcome of the November commissioner’s race. Sarantou was originally declared Lucas County commissioner by 1,376 votes but lost the election to Carol Contrada by 191 votes after provisional ballots were counted. “They’re assisting me with a lot of research in the questions we’ve raised,” Sarantou said. “So far they’ve been very, very helpful.” Sarantou’s next court date is Jan. 3.

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Carol Contrada faces court action for her commissioner seat.

tiple pages and I need to work on that,” Contrada said. Contrada said the most frustrating thing people say to her as an elected official is “How could you even consider such a thing?” “That drives me crazy. Because I think it’s our duty to consider everything,” Contrada said. “Consider does not mean vote. It means gathering data. I don’t think that I personally, or that the three members of the board, adequately explained to the public, all we’re doing is looking at it.” Contrada said the extent of budget cuts area public school systems are facing is “disturbing” and was her biggest disappointment of 2010. Fellow Sylvania Township Trustee John Jennewine said in an e-mail that Contrada was always professional, never losing her cool even while working with two new trustees with wide-ranging opinions. “Carol was able to keep the meetings on point and moving forward. She was well-prepared and did her

homework,” Jennewine said. “One of the most impressive qualities about her is her communication skills. She responds to every resident who has a problem or question in a very timely manner.” Trustee Kevin Haddad said that, while he and Contrada had their differences, they “always came up talking” and that Contrada was encouraging as he and Jennewine learned the ropes. Contrada, who expects to make a seamless transition to commissioner, said she hopes people in Sylvania Township will remember her as a trustee who delivered essential services at a reasonable cost to the taxpayer in economic times both good and bad. Looking back on the year, Contrada said no political victory has been as special as time spent with her family. “I truly enjoy public service and I had a lot of great moments as a township trustee, but I have to say, my greatest moments have been private moments with my family,” Contrada said. “I treasure them.”

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It bothers Carol Contrada when the term “career politician” is used as a derogatory label. “It is a career — an honorable one,” said Contrada, as she wraps up a seven-year term as a Sylvania Township trustee and prepares to take office as a Lucas County commissioner Jan. 1. Contrada said she doesn’t believe she was cheated out of the electionnight pomp she missed when her opponent, George Sarantou, was declared the winner, only to have a recount including provisional ballots flip the results a month later. “The election-night excitement was there regardless of the outcome,” Contrada said. “I was disappointed in the outcome for sure, but I didn’t feel that I was missing any kind of party. And I had work to do. I had a township trustee meeting the next day and I was immediately turning to the job I hold.” Contrada, who operates the Sylvania law firm Contrada and Associates with her husband, Charles, declined to comment on the pending Contest of Election Sarantou filed after the recount, but said she respects the right of the courts to make a ruling. She said the unusual and unexpected

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turn of events is part of the stress of being a public official and that, being an attorney, she has learned to live with a certain level of uncertainty. Contrada said townships are the form of government closest to the people. “It is where the rubber meets the road,” Contrada said. “You have direct and frequent interaction with the citizens of your community and that’s something that I embrace.” Doing more with less is a mentality Contrada said she honed as a trustee. “The idea of budget work sends chills I think through some people’s hearts, but I know how to do it and there are ways to do it and actually improve service,” Contrada said. Of accomplishments the past year, Contrada said she is most proud of the opening of the first of three planned fire stations, all of which will use alternative energy. Her low points were times she wished she had communicated the board’s thought process better to the public, such as the decision to discuss a controversial mandatory recycling and refuse program, which was later rejected. It’s difficult to explain complex ideas in a world of sound bites, Contrada said. “As a lawyer, I think and talk in paragraphs and sometimes in mul-

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january 2, 2011

news@toledofreepress.com

associated press

When it comes to football coaches, the Average Joe often pictures slightly potbellied, middle-aged men with the patience of drill sergeants that incessantly yell at their players and pace the sidelines to badger officials. What often gets lost in translation on TV is the relationship that goes on behind the scenes between coaches and players in practice, film study and team activities. While second-year Toledo head coach Tim Beckman is as intense, energetic and animated as football coaches come, his relationship with his players is more akin to father-son than coach-player. “It’s more than just about x’s and o’s in this program,” Beckman said in an interview with Toledo Free Press. “It’s about building men.” That father-son relationship is illustrated by a framed picture of a former player in Beckman’s office at Larimer Athletic Complex. The player in the photo is former Ohio State standout and current New Orleans Saints’ starting free safety Malcolm Jenkins, whom Beckman coached while he was with the Buckeyes from 2005-06. Jenkins, who won a Super Bowl ring in his first NFL season last year with the Saints and is starting to establish himself as one of the better defensive backs in the league, sent an

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Toledo Free Press Staff Writer

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said. “We don’t have to worry about egos in this program because none of us have them, from [the] coaching staff down. Their willingness to do what we ask them to do, it’s hard. They’ve fulfilled our expectations of this plan that we’ve set in place.” Part of that plan was dubbed “Operation Ford Field” by Beckman and his staff, a slogan featured on the players’ wristbands representing the team’s goal to end up in the MAC Championship Game Dec. 3. While a 65-30 loss at Northern Illinois Nov. 9 prevented that from happening, the Rockets still made it to Ford Field— albeit 23 days later—with an invite to the Little Caesars Pizza Bowl Dec. 26. Even though Toledo fell short in a 34-32 loss to Florida International that night, this year’s team more than exceeded its preseason expectations of a fourth place finish in the MAC West Division by the MAC News Media Association. The Rockets 7-1 conference record tied for the best since the 2004 season and the second-best in program history. The only other Toledo team to finish better was the 7-0-1 squad in 1995. Considering that this year’s group only had 13 seniors, the young Rockets have built the foundation for what’s to come. “We’re going to battle back from this,” Beckman said after the Little Caesars Pizza Bowl. “When we get back on Jan. 10, they’re going to be ready to talk about it and ready to get to work for next football season.”

l

By Mike Bauman

autographed photo to Beckman to thank his former coach for what he has meant to his life and his career. “This is what it’s all about,” Beckman said as he held the picture. Jenkins’ fondness for Beckman and his family runs much deeper than that photograph. When Jenkins was recognized as the nation’s top defensive back and received the Jim Thorpe Award in 2008, his mother was unable to attend the award ceremony with him. In her place, Jenkins asked Beckman’s wife, Kim, to accompany him. “She was in tears,” Beckman said. For a former standout college player at one of the best football programs in the country who is likely on his way to a Pro Bowl to show that kind of respect and appreciation for Beckman and his family, then it’s easy to understand how quickly Beckman has made the connection with his current players. His passion and energy for the game has injected life back into the Toledo program as his core values of family, competition, community and accountability have translated into success out on the gridiron. After a 5-7 (3-5 Mid-American Conference) campaign in his first season in 2009, Beckman led the Rockets to an 8-5 (7-1 MAC) finish this year and their first bowl appearance since 2005. Beckman said that the players’ willingness to change was one of the more impressive aspects about the Toledo football program this season. “They’re all humble,” Beckman

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Rockets’ red glare: Tim Beckman

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SpapEr r o FnEW e ioP rineoh BEST WEEkly 2009, 2010 ohio Society of professional Journalists awards

DEC.

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TIM BECKMAN leads the Rockets to the Little Caesars Pizza Bowl in Detroit .

Stor y by Mike Bauman ,

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UT running back Adonis Thomas (24) breaks down field for a touchdown during the Little Caesars Pizza Bowl.

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Owens athletic director died Dec. 27 From Staff Reports Owens Community College Athletic Director Michael Rickard died unexpectedly Dec. 27. Rickard was an 1982 Owens graduate and member of the school’s alumni association board. He was a 1984 University of Toledo graduate with a bachelor’s degree in education and recreation/sports management, he was named “Athletic Director of the Year” for 1995-96 and 1999-2000 by the Ohio Community College Athletic Conference (OCCAC). Rickard was associated with the Owens athletic teams since the 1979-80 season, serving as a scorekeeper, statRICKARD istician and assistant coach at times. From 1999-2001, he served as the Commissioner of the OCCAC, according to the Owens Community College website. The college sent out an e-mail to the campus members notifying them of Rickard’s death. Owens Director of Public and Media Relations, Brad Meyer, said via e-mail, that visitation will take place at Walter Funeral Home, located at 4653 Glendale Avenue in Toledo from the hours of 2 to 8 p.m. on Dec. 30. Funeral services for Rickard will take place at Trinity Lutheran Church, located at 4560 Glendale Avenue in Toledo at 11 a.m. on Dec. 31.

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january 2, 2011

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health zone

january 2, 2011

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n A15

(ARA) — It makes sense to take care of your feet at any age and any health level — after all, they’re the foundation on which we walk through our daily lives. For people with diabetes, however, caring for their feet takes on a new importance, as diabetes-related complications prompt the amputation of more than 1.5 million feet and legs every year. More than 60 percent of nontraumatic, lower-limb amputations in the U.S. are performed on people with diabetes, according to the American Podiatric Medical Association (APMA). If you or someone you love lives with the disease, knowing how to take care of your feet, and how to recognize signs of diabetes-related complications, is an important element of successfully managing the disease. “Research has shown that up to 25 percent of people with diabetes will develop a foot ulcer in their lifetime,” said Dr. Kathleen Stone, president of the APMA. “Foot ulcers and infections are the most common reason for hospitalization of those with the condition. However, these problems are largely preventable.” Common foot problems related to diabetes include neuropathy, skin

changes, calluses, foot ulcers, poor circulation and infections. Because diabetes can cause nerve damage in extremities, a person with the disease may not immediately be aware of, or feel pain from, an injury or ulcer. Small wounds or cuts on the foot that are slow to heal can develop into ulcers, which, if left untreated, can become infected and lead to partial or full amputation of the foot or lower leg, according to the APMA. However, regular care from a podiatrist can reduce amputation rates 45 to 85 percent. People with diabetes should inspect their feet daily and be vigilant for these warning signs of ulcers, the most common type of diabetes-related foot complication: n Irritation n Redness n Cracked or dry skin (especially around the heels) n Drainage on socks Ulcers can appear anywhere on the foot or ankle, but are typically found on pressure points on the foot, like the ball of the foot or bottom of the big toe. If you discover an ulcer or have any symptoms, see a doctor immediately. In many cases, the foot can be saved with early treatment by a

podiatrist working as a member of the health care team caring for a person with diabetes. In addition to examining your feet every day, and keeping your blood glucose in your target range, make sure to follow these foot health tips: n Trim toenails straight across and file the edges. n Never go barefoot. Shoes should be comfortable and fit well (the APMA website, www.apma.org, offers guides on how to choose footwear that fits properly). Check the inside of shoes before putting them on to be sure there is nothing inside the shoe that will irritate or harm your feet. n Since diabetes risk can be hereditary, people with diabetes should talk to their families about monitoring their own blood sugar and foot health. n When sitting, elevate your feet. Wiggle toes and move your ankles several times a day for five minutes. n Diabetes is a hereditary disease, and is often passed down from parent to child. Families affected by diabetes should openly discuss the hereditary nature of diabetes and its negative physical effects. To find a podiatrist in your area, visit www.apma.org.

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january 2, 2011

Cherry Street Legacy Plan added to Toledo 20/20 Plan By Kristen Criswell

Toledo Free Press Special Sections Editor krapin@toledofreepress.com

The Cherry Street Legacy Plan, a community partnership designed to create a stronger and safer neighborhood, has been added to The Plan Commission’s Toledo 20/20 Comprehensive Plan. The project is a public and private partnership led by Mercy St. Vincent’s with collaboration from the community and city of Toledo. “I think we have 155 years investment in this community and the way we see it is this is a mission imperative — our mission is to advance the health of our community,” said John T. Schaeufele, president and CEO of Mercy Children’s Hospital. “Plus a positive interaction between us and our neighborhoods clearly improves the environment

for everyone involved.” The partnership is a positive example of what can be done when the public and private sectors find ways to collaborate, said Mayor Mike Bell. The Cherry Street Legacy Plan has already been working within the community for a couple months. As part of the plan, Mercy has worked with the city to pass legislation to provide more lighting in the neighborhood as well as resurface Bancroft Street, Schaeufele said. The Legacy Plan has also worked with the Department of Neighborhoods to focus on the demolition of vacant homes around Scott High School, said Karen Rogalski, Cherry Street Legacy coordinator. “It’s helped clean out and stabilize the neighborhood, as well as support the investment that is already going in,” Rogalski said. The plan has helped the city iden-

tify and demolish 30 vacant homes in the area surrounding St. Vincent. In addition to working with the government, the Cherry Street Legacy Plan has worked with citizens, providing space for block watch meetings at Mercy as well as providing off-duty policing. “Knowing that we have a perma-

nent space and are not turning around having to move, everyone feels great because they know where they need to be every meeting,” said Carole Martin, co-leader of the area block watch. St. Vincent has also assisted the block watch print informational fliers and helps the neighborhood identify

hot spots of criminal activity. The plan is something that will help change the perception of the neighborhood and change it back to a place that is “safe, livable and marketable,” said Gregory Kane, co-leader of the block watch who also sits on the Cherry Street Legacy board.

Eat hEalthy, slEEp morE and gEt moving!

Screen Time What does watching TV or playing video games have to do with your child’s health? Children are spending more time in front of a screen (screen time) and less time getting the exercise they need to stay fit and healthy. Doctors suggest limiting the time children spend watching TV, playing video games or using computers for reasons other than schoolwork to no more than 2 hours per day. Parents find themselves so busy these days it’s sometimes tempting to use the TV or computer as a babysitter. As part of our ongoing mission to improve the health and wellness of children throughout our community, Mercy Children’s Hospital and Kohl’s Department Stores are proud to offer the Kohl’s Kids in Action program – designed to provide parents and other caregivers with practical advice on raising healthy children. Kohl’s Kids in Action offers support and guidance for individuals to foster positive behaviors in the health and nutrition of children. Our approach is centered on four steps critical to raising healthy children: good nutrition, increased physical activity, proper water intake and good sleep habits.

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• Ask a friend or relative to play with the kids while you get your work done. • Team up with family or adult neighbors to spend one day a week supervising play activities for the kids.

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Want to achieve your New Year’s resolution? Make it a ‘must’ (ARA) — A fresh cycle starts fresh every year on Jan. 1. We promise ourselves we’ll start eating better, work out, save more money or otherwise improve upon the way we live our lives. However, statistics show that by mid-January, most people don’t follow through on their resolutions and give up. This happens often but it’s not always easy to understand why. Peak performance coach and human behavior expert Tony Robbins says that when someone isn’t achieving their goal, it’s often because they haven’t made it a “must.” “People give up on achieving their goals because they are ‘shoulds’ and not ‘musts,’” Robbins said. “But when something becomes an absolute must for you, when you cut off any other possibility in your mind, then you will do whatever it takes to achieve your goal.”

Too often, people set unrealistic ways to reach their goals, feel disappointed when they have a setback and give up too soon. If you need to lose ROBBINS 50 pounds but haven’t exercised in three years, going out for a 10-mile run isn’t a good way to get started — you’ll only be discouraged. Instead, start with goals that are achievable. You’ll enjoy consistent successes that add up to create the momentum needed to get you to your goal. When faced with a setback, look at it as just a step along the way to your goal. When something doesn’t work, try another approach and always keep your end goal fresh in mind.

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friends, acquaintances or someone in the public eye, find role models who inspire you and are achieving the results you want. Often, by watching and following what they do, you’ll get the same results. This can be an intimidating step, but it can make a real difference — reach out to those people and tell them what you admire. Ask them about the steps they took to achieve success — this can provide you with a clearer idea of how to reach your goal. Waiting for the calendar to turn to begin working on your goals shouldn’t be part of your plan; get a head start now. If you’re starting out with questions, don’t worry — you’re not alone. Tony Robbins is scheduled to appear on QVC Jan. 14 and 15 to offer the Ultimate Edge program. During the broadcast, Robbins will give his inside tips and tricks to success. For more information, visit www.QVC.com.

states that met goals for increasing coverage of children under Medicaid. Ben Johnson, a state human services spokesman, said a key accomplishment for Ohio was speeding up benefits for people who were presumed eligible but who hadn’t completed all the paperwork yet. About 1.2 million Ohio children are enrolled in Medicaid, with another 100,000 or so who are potentially eligible but not signed up.

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detail, what your life is like right now in the area you want to change. Be specific. For example: “I can’t fit into any of my clothes and keep buying bigger sizes pretending I am not getting heavier.” n Develop a vision that excites you and the habits you need to make it real. “Knowing what you want is important, but you need to know why you want it and to have a clear vision — that is what will keep pulling you toward your goal,” Robbins said. Instead of setting a goal to lose 10 pounds, make it more compelling by concentrating on the effects of losing weight, like transforming your body or feeling younger and stronger. Write it down, using language that excites you and the habits you will need to achieve your goal — again, be honest, specific and realistic. n Find role models. Whether it’s

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Getting started is the biggest step you’ll take. Having some guidelines can help you begin working toward your goals. Robbins offers these tips from his popular personal development program, Ultimate Edge. n Raise your standards. To find real personal fulfillment, you must continue to grow by challenging yourself and raising the standards by which you live your life. “Most people fail in life because they major in minor things,” says Robbins. Start by painting a mental picture: Who do you want to become as a person? Then, ask yourself what standards you would need to set to be that person — what would you have to believe or do; how would you have to dress, talk or walk? n Drop the story and tell yourself the truth. Honest assessments can be hard to make, but it’s an essential step to lasting change. Write down, in

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3:30

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

4 pm

4:30

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

5 pm

Tosh.0

3:30

4 pm

4:30

5 pm

5:30

6 pm

6:30

7 pm

7:30

8 pm

6 pm

6:30

News ABC News News News TMZ News News NBC News BBC News NewsHour The First 48 Real Housewives Scrubs Scrubs

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

SportsCenter Still Stnd Still Stnd Varied 30-Minute Income Designed Unsolved Mysteries Unsolved Mysteries Chris Chris MTV Spec ’70s Show ’70s Show ’70s Show Friends Friends Raymond Raymond King King Movie Varied Programs Movie Varied Law & Order Law & Order Law & Order Friends

Friends

Chris

8:30

9 pm

9:30

Chris

Fam. Guy

Fam. Guy

January 2, 2011

MOVIES

3 pm

5:30

News News News 11 at 5:00 How I Met Raymond The Dr. Oz Show Cyberchas Dog Dog

n A19

10 pm 10:30 11 pm 11:30

Emperor Repla Makeover Paid Paid Paid Wipeout (CC) Wipeout (CC) News ABC Funny Home Videos Extreme Makeover Desp.-Wives Brothers & Sisters News Carpet NFL Football Regional Coverage. (Live) (CC) NFL Football San Diego Chargers at Denver Broncos. (Live) (CC) 60 Minutes (N) (CC) CSI: Miami (N) (CC) Undercover Boss (N) CSI: Miami “Fallen” News Criminal NFL Football Regional Coverage. (S Live) (CC) NFL Football Arizona Cardinals at San Francisco 49ers. (S Live) (CC) The OT Simpsons Cleveland Family Guy (CC) News Recap Office Office Paid CarMD Sheer Paid Paid Paid Golf ADT Skills Challenge, Day 2. (Taped) News News Football Night NFL Football St. Louis Rams at Seattle Seahawks. (S Live) (CC) News Workshop Woods. Kitchen Sewing Independent Lens (CC) Growing The Clinton 12 (CC) Austin City Limits (N) NOVA (N) (CC) (DVS) Nature Bald eagle. Masterpiece Classic (CC) (DVS) World Lit MI-5 (CC) World of Harry Potter Harry Potter Billy Billy Billy Billy Billy Billy Billy Billy Billy Billy Billy Billy Billy Billy Billy Billy Billy Billy Housewives/Atl. Housewives/Atl. Housewives/Atl. Housewives/Atl. Housewives/Atl. Housewives/Atl. Housewives/Atl. Housewives/Atl. Housewives/Atl. Housewives/Atl. Matchmaker ››› Little Miss Sunshine (2006) › Superhero Movie (2008) Drake Bell. (CC) ›› Trading Places (1983, Comedy) Dan Aykroyd. (CC) › Good Luck Chuck (2007) Dane Cook. ›› The Heartbreak Kid (2007) Ben Stiller. Premiere. Futurama Star Hannah Forever Hannah Wizards Wizards Wizards Phineas Phineas Phineas Shake it Shake it Shake it Shake It Sonny Camp Rock 2: The Final Jam (2010) Deck Phineas and Ferb Strong Strong Strong Strong Strong Strong Strong Strong Strong Strong Strongest Man SportsCenter (Live) (CC) SportsCenter (Live) (CC) SportsCenter (CC) Can’t Buy ›› Two Weeks Notice (2002), Hugh Grant ›› The Wedding Date (2005), Amy Adams ›› The Notebook (2004) Ryan Gosling, Rachel McAdams. ››› Enchanted (2007) Amy Adams, Patrick Dempsey. Home Videos Home Guy’s Best Best Diners Diners Food Cakes Cupcake Wars Dinner: Impossible Chopped Iron Chef America Worst Cooks Iron Chef America “Super Chef Battle” My First First Pla. Estate Selling Buck Get, Sold House Hunters Dream Home 2011 To Sell To Sell Hunters House Holmes Holmes Holmes Inspection House Hunters Income Income › Coyote Ugly (2000) Piper Perabo. (CC) Who Is Clark Rockefeller? (2010) (CC) Unanswered Prayers (2010) Eric Close. (CC) The Client List (2010) Jennifer Love Hewitt. ›› Sister Act 2: Back in the Habit (1993) Sister Act 2: Back Jersey Shore (CC) Jersey Shore (CC) Jersey Shore (CC) Jersey Shore (CC) Jersey Shore (CC) Jersey Shore (CC) Jersey Shore (CC) Jersey Shore (CC) Jersey Shore (CC) Jersey Shore (CC) I Used to Be Fat ››› Lethal Weapon 3 (1992, Action) Mel Gibson. (CC) ›› Lethal Weapon 4 (1998) Mel Gibson. (CC) (DVS) ››› Bad Boys (1995) Martin Lawrence. ›› The Longest Yard (2005) Adam Sandler. ›› The Longest Yard (2005) Adam Sandler. ››› Boys’ Night Out ›››› Singin’ in the Rain (1952) Gene Kelly. ››› My Favorite Year (1982) Peter O’Toole. ›››› Forbidden Planet (1956) (CC) (DVS) ››› No Highway in the Sky (1951, Drama) ››› Fate Is the Hunter (1964) Glenn Ford. ›› The Last Castle (2001) (CC) ›› Righteous Kill (2008) Robert De Niro. ›››› Saving Private Ryan (1998, War) Tom Hanks, Edward Burns. (CC) ›› Shooter (2007) Mark Wahlberg, Michael Peña. (CC) ›› Shooter (2007) (CC) Law & Order: SVU Law & Order: SVU Law & Order: SVU Law & Order: SVU Law & Order: SVU Law & Order: SVU Law & Order: SVU Law & Order: SVU Law & Order: SVU Law & Order: SVU Law & Order: SVU ›› Major League: Back to the Minors Made Scrubs Friends Friends Chris Chris Two Men Two Men Heartland (CC) Heartland (CC) ›› The January Man (1988) Kevin Kline. Made in Hollywood

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

10 am

Good Morning News This Week-Amanpour Conklin Bridges Roundtabl Coffee Your Morning Sunday CBS News Sunday Morning (N) Nation Mass Paid Prog. The NFL Today (CC) Paid Prog. Paid Prog. Fox News Sunday Paid Prog. Paid Prog. Paid Prog. 90 Days! Fox NFL Sunday (CC) Today (N) (CC) Meet the Press (N) Van Impe Paid Prog. Paid Prog. Report Paid Prog. Money Sid Cat in the Super Dinosaur Toledo Stories (CC) Food Sense Antiques Roadshow Biography Toby Keith. Private Sessions (CC) The Sopranos (CC) The Sopranos (CC) Harry Potter Matchmaker Matchmaker Matchmaker Housewives/Atl. Housewives/Atl. Scrubs Scrubs Scrubs Scrubs ››› Ghostbusters (1984) Bill Murray, Dan Aykroyd. (CC) Sunshine Mickey Mickey Fish Fish Fish Fish Deck Deck Starstruck (2010) SportsCenter (CC) Outside Reporters SportsCenter (CC) Sunday NFL Countdown (Live) (CC) ›› The Cutting Edge ››› Dirty Dancing (1987) Jennifer Grey, Patrick Swayze. ›› Can’t Buy Me Love (1987) Chef Nigella Rachael Ray’s Giada Giada Cooking Aarti Party Cooking Dinners Bathtastic! Sweat... Holmes on Homes Disaster House Yard Income House Hunters Hour of Power (CC) J. Osteen Paid Prog. Chris Chris Bond of Silence (2010) Kim Raver. (CC) Jersey Shore (CC) Jersey Shore (CC) Jersey Shore (CC) Jersey Shore (CC) Jersey Shore (CC) › Bait ››› Lethal Weapon (1987) Mel Gibson. (CC) ››› Lethal Weapon 2 (1989, Action) Mel Gibson. (CC) ››› Blue Skies (1946, Musical) Bing Crosby. ›› On Moonlight Bay (1951) Doris Day. ››› Boys’ Night Out Law & Order ›› The Recruit (2003) Al Pacino, Colin Farrell. (CC) ›› The Last Castle (2001) (CC) Cook Paid Prog. Law & Order: SVU Law & Order: SVU Law & Order: SVU Law & Order: SVU HomeFinder Old House For Home New Math Paid Prog. Foods Paid Prog. Planet X Raceline

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

January 2, 2011

MOVIES

9 am

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7 pm

7:30

MOVIES

8 pm

8:30

9 pm

9:30

10 pm

January 3, 2011

10:30

11 pm

11:30

Ent Insider The Bachelor (Season Premiere) (N) (CC) Castle “Nikki Heat” News Nightline Wheel Jeopardy! How I Met Rules Two Men Mike Hawaii Five-0 (N) (CC) News Letterman The Office The Office House (PA) (CC) Lie to Me “Honey” Fox Toledo News Seinfeld King/Hill Jdg Judy Jdg Judy Chuck (CC) The Biggest Loser “Where Are They Now?” News Jay Leno NewsHour Business Antiques Roadshow American Experience (N) Old West Charlie Rose (N) (CC) The First 48 (CC) Intervention “Amber” Intervention “Erin” (N) Hoarders (N) (CC) Hoarders (CC) Real Housewives Housewives/Atl. Housewives/Atl. Tabatha’s Salon Take Tabatha’s Salon Take ›› The Heartbreak Kid (2007) Ben Stiller. (CC) Sunny Sunny Sunny Sunny Daily Colbert Wizards Wizards ›› The Game Plan (2007), Madison Pettis (CC) Good Good Wizards Wizards College GameDay Pregame College Football Discover Orange Bowl -- Stanford vs. Virginia Tech. From Miami. Pretty Little Liars (CC) Pretty Little Liars (N) Greek (N) (CC) Pretty Little Liars (CC) The 700 Club (CC) Cakes Best Thing Unwrap Unwrap Diners Diners Best Thing Best Thing Good Eats Good Eats Hunters House Property Property House Hunters Cash, Cari Hunters First Place First Place My Family’s Secret (2010) Nicholle Tom. (CC) The Craigslist Killer (2011) Jake McDorman. Craigslist Killer World 16 and Pregnant (CC) True Life True Life (N) Vice Vice Seinfeld Seinfeld The Office The Office Fam. Guy Fam. Guy Fam. Guy Fam. Guy Conan ››› The Safecracker ››› Shanghai Express (1932) ››› Morocco (1930) Gary Cooper. Crime and Punishment The Closer (CC) The Closer (CC) The Closer (N) (CC) Men of a Certain Age The Closer (CC) NCIS (CC) NCIS (CC) WWE Monday Night RAW (S Live) (CC) Royal Pains (CC) Two Men Two Men 90210 (CC) Gossip Girl (CC) Entourage Curb Scrubs Scrubs

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

7 pm

7:30

MOVIES

8 pm

8:30

9 pm

9:30

10 pm

January 4, 2011

10:30

11 pm

11:30

Ent Insider No Ordinary Family V “Red Rain” (N) (CC) Detroit 1-8-7 (N) (CC) News Nightline Wheel Jeopardy! Live to Dance (Series Premiere) (N) (CC) NCIS (CC) News Letterman The Office The Office Glee “Auditions” (CC) Million Dollar Fox Toledo News Seinfeld King/Hill Jdg Judy Jdg Judy The Biggest Loser (N) (CC) Parenthood (N) (CC) News Jay Leno NewsHour Business NOVA (CC) (DVS) Shakespeare Frontline (CC) (DVS) Charlie Rose (N) (CC) The First 48 (CC) The First 48 (CC) The First 48 (CC) The First 48 (CC) The First 48 (CC) Matchmaker Matchmaker Matchmaker The Fashion Show (N) Matchmaker Daily Colbert Steve Byrne Tosh.0 Tosh.0 Tosh.0 Tosh.0 Daily Colbert Wizards Wizards Wizards of Waverly Place Fish Good Good Wizards Wizards College GameDay Pregame College Football Allstate Sugar Bowl -- Arkansas vs. Ohio State. (Live) Funniest Home Videos ›› The Notebook (2004, Romance) Ryan Gosling, Rachel McAdams. The 700 Club (CC) Cakes Best Thing Challenge Cupcake Wars (N) Chopped (N) Cakes Cakes Hunters House First Place First Place House Hunters House Hunters Property Property How I Met How I Met Reba (CC) Reba (CC) Wife Swap (CC) Wife Swap (CC) How I Met How I Met Teen Mom Teen Mom 2 16 and Pregnant (CC) 16 and Pregnant (N) 16 and Pregnant (CC) Seinfeld Seinfeld Fam. Guy Fam. Guy Fam. Guy Fam. Guy Glory Daze (N) Conan ›› Let’s Do It Again Our Gang Our Gang Our Gang Our Gang Our Gang Our Gang Our Gang Our Gang ››› Gladiator (2000) Russell Crowe, Joaquin Phoenix. (CC) Southland (N) (CC) Memphis Beat (CC) Law & Order: SVU ›› Welcome Home Roscoe Jenkins (2008, Comedy) (CC) ›› Semi-Pro (2008) Will Ferrell. Two Men Two Men One Tree Hill (CC) Life Unexpected (CC) Entourage Curb Scrubs Scrubs

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TV Listings

A20 n Toledo Free Press Wednesday Evening ABC 13 CBS 11 FOX 36 NBC 24 PBS 30 A&E BRAVO COM DISN ESN FAM FOOD HGTV LIF MTV TBS TCM TNT USA WTO5

7 pm

7:30

7 pm

7:30

9 pm

9:30

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11:30

Ent Insider Wheel Jeopardy! The Office The Office Jdg Judy Jdg Judy NewsHour Business Criminal Minds (CC) Real Housewives Daily Colbert Shake it Shake It SportsCtr NBA Funniest Home Videos Cakes Best Thing Hunters House How I Met How I Met 16 and Pregnant (CC) Seinfeld Seinfeld ››› Cat Ballou (1965) Bones (CC) House (CC) Two Men Two Men

8:30

1 pm

1:30

9 pm

9:30

10 pm

10:30

11 pm

11:30

Supernanny (N) (CC) Primetime: What 20/20 (N) (CC) News Nightline Medium (N) (CC) CSI: NY (N) (CC) Blue Bloods (N) (CC) News Letterman College Football AT&T Cotton Bowl -- LSU vs. Texas A&M. From Arlington, Texas. News Minute to Win It (CC) Dateline NBC (CC) News Jay Leno Wash. Deadline American Experience Need to Know (N) (CC) Charlie Rose (N) (CC) Criminal Minds (CC) Criminal Minds (CC) Criminal Minds (CC) Criminal Minds (CC) ››› The Green Mile (1999, Drama) Tom Hanks, David Morse. Green Ml Tosh.0 Tosh.0 Comedy Presents Comedy Comedy Comedy Presents Deck Wizards Fish Good Good Shake it Shake it Shake it NBA Basketball Houston Rockets at Orlando Magic. (Live) NBA Basketball: Knicks at Suns Funniest Home Videos Funniest Home Videos Funniest Home Videos The 700 Club (CC) Chopped Diners Diners Food Best Thing Unwrap Unwrap Property Property Hunters Hunters Hunters Hunters Hunters Hunters Reba (CC) Reba (CC) Reba (CC) Reba (CC) Reba (CC) Reba (CC) How I Met How I Met I Used to Be Fat Jersey Shore (CC) Texas Chainsaw Massacre - The Beginning ›› The Wedding Planner (2001) Jennifer Lopez. (CC) The Office Glory Daze ››› The Fastest Gun Alive (1956) Glenn Ford. ››› State Fair (1945) Jeanne Crain. (CC) ››› Forrest Gump (1994) Tom Hanks, Robin Wright. (CC) ››› The Terminal (2004) (CC) ››› Inside Man (2006) Denzel Washington. (CC) ››› No Country for Old Men (CC) Smallville “Supergirl” Supernatural (CC) Entourage Curb Scrubs Scrubs

2 pm

2:30

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

January 7, 2011

MOVIES

8 pm

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

January 5, 2011

MOVIES

8:30

Ent Insider Middle Better Family Cougar Primetime (N) (CC) News Nightline Wheel Jeopardy! Live to Dance (N) (CC) The 37th Annual People’s Choice Awards News Letterman The Office The Office Human Target (N) (CC) Fox Toledo News Seinfeld King/Hill Jdg Judy Jdg Judy Minute to Win It (N) Law & Order: Special Victims Unit (N) (CC) News Jay Leno NewsHour Business Master-Arctic Great Performances at the Met Donizetti’s comic opera. E Street The First 48 (CC) Dog Dog Dog Dog Storage Storage Storage Storage Top Chef (CC) Top Chef Top Chef Top Chef (N) (CC) Top Chef (CC) Daily Colbert Chappelle Chappelle South Pk South Pk South Pk Tosh.0 Daily Colbert Wizards Wizards Hannah Shake It Sonny Deck Good Good Wizards Wizards High School Football Under Armour All-America Game: Red vs. White. SpoCenter NBA Basketball: Lakers at Suns Funniest Home Videos Funniest Home Videos Funniest Home Videos Funniest Home Videos The 700 Club (CC) Cakes Best Thing B. Flay B. Flay Worst Cooks Dinner: Impossible Diners Diners Hunters House Cash, Cari Property Disaster Disaster House Hunters Vanilla Vanilla How I Met How I Met Reba (CC) Reba (CC) ›› She’s the One (1996) Jennifer Aniston. How I Met How I Met True Life True Life I Used to Be Fat I Used to Be Fat (N) I Used to Be Fat Seinfeld Seinfeld Browns Browns Payne Payne There There Conan Our Gang Our Gang ››› Mr. Holland’s Opus (1995) Richard Dreyfuss. (CC) ››› An Affair to Remember (1957) Bones (CC) Bones (CC) Bones (CC) Bones (CC) Southland (CC) NCIS (CC) ››› The Bourne Ultimatum (2007) Matt Damon. (CC) ››› Ocean’s Thirteen (2007) (CC) Two Men Two Men Hellcats (CC) Hellcats (CC) Entourage Curb Scrubs Scrubs

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

8 pm

january 2, 2011

7 pm

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January 6, 2011

10:30

11 pm

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11 am

January 8, 2011

11:30

12 pm

12:30

Good Morning News So Raven So Raven Hannah Suite Life Emperor Repla Your Morning Saturday Sabrina Sabrina Busytown Busytown Paid Prog. Paid Prog. Pets.TV Hollywood Eco Co. Mad... Marketpl Marketpl Marketpl Marketpl Kids News Paid Prog. Today (N) (CC) Paid Prog. Paid Prog. Turbo Shelldon Magic Bus Babar (EI) Willa’s Pearlie Sid Cat in the Super Dinosaur MotorWk Our Ohio Wild Ohio Michigan Nature Bald eagle. Sell House Sell House Sell House Sell House Sell House Sell House Flip This House (CC) Flip This House (CC) America’s Next Model America’s Next Model America’s Next Model America’s Next Model America’s Next Model Comedy Presents Presents Jim Breuer ›› Idiocracy (2006) Luke Wilson. (CC) Major Lea. Mickey Mickey Phineas Phineas Phineas Fish Deck Deck Wizards Wizards SportsCenter (CC) SportsCenter (CC) SportsCenter (CC) NFL Countdwn College Football Dennis the Menace ›› Sky High (2005) Michael Angarano. ›› The Flintstones (1994) John Goodman. Big Daddy Giada Day Off Mexican 30-Minute Ingred. Fix Paula Paula Secrets Secrets Bathtastic! Sweat... Holmes on Homes Disaster Disaster Crashers Income Designed To Sell Paid Prog. Faces Paid Prog. Paid Prog. Paid Prog. Paid Prog. Last Exit (2006) Kathleen Robertson. (CC) Sweet Sweet Sweet Sweet MTV Special MTV Special I Used to Be Fat Yes, Dear Yes, Dear ››› Father of the Bride (1991) Steve Martin. ›› Father of the Bride Part II (1995) (CC) Humoresq ››› The Glass Key (1942) Brian Donlevy. (CC) ›› Spy Chasers (1955, Comedy) ››› Another Thin Man Law & Order Law & Order “Bait” Southland (CC) The Closer (CC) Law & Order Paid Prog. Paid Prog. ››› Matchstick Men (2003, Comedy) Nicolas Cage. (CC) ›› Miami Vice (2006) Colin Farrell. Sonic X Sonic X Yu-Gi-Oh! Sonic X Dragon Dragon Yu-Gi-Oh! Yu-Gi-Oh! Dog Tales Green

MOVIES

3 pm

10 pm

Ent Insider Wipeout (N) (CC) Grey’s Anatomy (N) Private Practice (N) News Nightline Wheel Jeopardy! Big Bang Dad Says CSI: Crime Scene The Mentalist (N) (CC) News Letterman The Office The Office Million Dollar Bones (PA) (CC) Fox Toledo News Seinfeld King/Hill Jdg Judy Jdg Judy Commun 30 Rock The Office Outsource The Office The Office News Jay Leno NewsHour Business Toledo Stories Midsomer Murders Music Sun Stud Charlie Rose (N) (CC) The First 48 (CC) The First 48 (CC) The First 48 (N) (CC) The First 48 (CC) The First 48 (CC) Real Housewives Real Housewives Real Housewives Real Housewives Happens Real Daily Colbert Futurama Futurama Futurama South Pk South Pk South Pk Daily Colbert Wizards Wizards Princess Protection Program Deck Good Good Wizards Wizards Quarterback College Football GoDaddy.com Bowl -- Miami (Ohio) vs. Middle Tennessee State. SportsCtr ›› Bruce Almighty (2003) Jim Carrey. ›› Evan Almighty (2007) Steve Carell. The 700 Club (CC) Cakes Best Thing Iron Chef America Iron Chef America Cakes Unwrap Chopped Hunters House Selling Selling Selling Selling House Hunters Cash, Cari Hunters How I Met How I Met Reba (CC) Reba (CC) Deadly Relations (1993) Robert Urich. (CC) How I Met How I Met Jersey Shore (CC) Jersey Shore (CC) Jersey Shore (CC) Jersey Shore (N) (CC) Jersey Shore (CC) Seinfeld Seinfeld ›› Failure to Launch (2006) (CC) Fam. Guy Fam. Guy Conan ››› Paula (1952) ›››› I’m All Right, Jack (1960, Comedy) (CC) ››› Heavens Above! (1963) Peter Sellers. Bones (CC) NBA Basketball: Thunder at Mavericks NBA Basketball: Nuggets at Kings House “Unwritten” ›› National Treasure (2004) Nicolas Cage, Hunter Gomez. (CC) ›› Jurassic Park III Two Men Two Men The Vampire Diaries Nikita “One Way” (CC) Entourage Curb Scrubs Scrubs

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

MOVIES

8 pm

6:30

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January 8, 2011

10 pm 10:30 11 pm 11:30

Hannah Suite Life Paid Paid Paid Paid ESPN Sports Saturday Sports anthology. News ABC Entertainment ’Night Wipeout (CC) The Bachelor (CC) News Anatomy Off Road Racing Women’s College Basketball Women’s College Basketball News News Wheel Lottery Blue Bloods (CC) CSI: Crime Scene 48 Hours Mystery News America ››› Meet the Robinsons (2007, Adventure) Seinfeld McCarver The Unit (CC) The Closer (CC) Bones (CC) Simpsons Simpsons Change of Plans (2011) Brooke White. News Seinfeld The Good Guys (CC) High School Football U.S. Army All-American Bowl. (S Live) (CC) Football NFL Football AFC or NFC Wild-Card Game: Teams TBA. (S Live) (CC) NFL Football AFC or NFC Wild-Card Game: Teams TBA. (CC) News SNL This Old House Hr Pepin Quilting Phil Collins Great Performances Getaways Art Steves Rudy Lawrence Welk Chihuly Fire & Light Antiques Roadshow TimeGoes Vicar Blckadder Ohio The First 48 (CC) The First 48 (CC) The First 48 (CC) The First 48 (CC) The First 48 (CC) The First 48 (CC) The First 48 (CC) The First 48 (CC) The First 48 (CC) The First 48 (CC) The First 48 (CC) Top Model Top Model Top Model Real Housewives Real Housewives House “Birthmarks” House (CC) House “Joy” (CC) House “The Itch” House (CC) House “Last Resort” ›› Major League (1989) Tom Berenger. Scrubs Scrubs Scrubs Scrubs ›› Idiocracy (2006) Luke Wilson. (CC) ›› First Sunday (2008) Ice Cube. (CC) Ralphie May Katt Williams: Pimp Lisa Lampanelli Good Shake It Hannah Hannah Fish Fish Fish Fish Wizards Wizards Hannah Hannah Deck Deck Wizards Deck Fish Shake It Hannah Hannah Deck Wizards College Football: BBVA Compass Bowl College Basketball Connecticut at Texas. Basketball Harlem Globetrotters. SportsCenter (Live) (CC) Poker Poker Stars (Taped) Poker Stars SportsCenter (CC) ››› Ice Age (2002) Voices of Ray Romano. ››› Happy Feet (2006) Voices of Elijah Wood. ››› Willy Wonka and the Chocolate Factory (1971) ››› Aladdin (1992), Robin Williams ›› Cheaper by the Dozen (2003, Comedy) Contessa Contessa Worst Cooks Chopped Cupcake Wars Iron Chef America Challenge B. Flay Food Iron Chef America Iron Chef America Iron Chef America Iron Chef America Unsella Get Sold Block Design Colour Buck D. Design Sarah Dear Color Spl. Designed To Sell Hunters House Candice Color Spl. Dear Block House House Hunters Hunters Fatal Desire (2006) Anne Heche. (CC) Selling Innocence (2005) Mimi Rogers. (CC) Personal Indiscretions (2007) (CC) The Boy She Met Online (2010) (CC) The Craigslist Killer (2011) Jake McDorman. Craigslist Killer True Life Jersey Shore (CC) Moving In Moving In Moving In Moving In I Used to Be Fat I Was 17 I Was 17 I Was 17 I Was 17 Jersey Shore (CC) True Life True Life True Life ›› The Wedding Planner (2001) Jennifer Lopez. (CC) Jim Raymond Raymond Raymond Raymond King King Seinfeld Seinfeld Nick and Norah ›› Legally Blonde (2001), Luke Wilson (CC) Glory-Dz Another Thin Man ››› Them! (1954) James Whitmore. (CC) ›› Kissin’ Cousins (1964) Elvis Presley. ›› Clambake (1967) Elvis Presley. (CC) ››› Road to Morocco (1942) ››› The Prince and the Showgirl (1957) The Swan ››› The Terminal (2004) Tom Hanks. (CC) ›› Lakeview Terrace (2008) Samuel L. Jackson. (CC) ››› Forrest Gump (1994, Drama) Tom Hanks, Robin Wright. (CC) ››› A Time to Kill (1996, Drama) Sandra Bullock. (CC) ›› Miami Vice (2006) (CC) ››› Ocean’s Thirteen (2007) George Clooney. (CC) ›› National Treasure (2004) Nicolas Cage, Hunter Gomez. (CC) ››› Terminator 3: Rise of the Machines ›› Street Kings (2008) Keanu Reeves. (CC) Icons Career Payne Browns Without a Trace (CC) Cold Case “Wings” American American Fam. Guy Fam. Guy Two Men Two Men › Stigmata (1999) Patricia Arquette. Entou Curb American American

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Call Brown Mazda-Mitsubishi 419-536-3040 www.brownautomotive.com

2005 FORD F-150 4X4

White, Reg/Cab, 8 ft. Box $14,988 Call Brown Mazda-Mitsubishi 419-536-3040 www.brownautomotive.com

Visit www.toledofreepress.com

BAD CREDIT, NO CREDIT,

NO PROBLEM!! NO MONEY DOWN! NO MONEY DOWN! CALL

419-882-7171 FRANKLIN PARK USED 2007 ENVOY SLT 4X4

#PM4297, Loaded, 41k, $18,994

Call Brown Mazda-Mitsubishi 419-536-3040 www.brownautomotive.com

2004 MINI COOPER

Sunroof, 5 Speed, Manual $9,998 GROULEX GMC • BUICK 734-241-3704 / 888-320-3705 15435 S. Monroe St. www.groulxgmc.com

2007 JEEP LIBERTY 4X4 SPORT #PM4226, Well-Equipped, $13,941

Call Brown Mazda-Mitsubishi 419-536-3040 www.brownautomotive.com

2008 BUICK ENCLAVE CX

Cloth, Car Fax 1 Owner Vehicle $25,886 GROULEX GMC • BUICK 734-241-3704 / 888-320-3705 15435 S. Monroe St. www.groulxgmc.com

2010 TOYOTA YARIS

2008 LEXUS RX350

3 Dr. Lift/Back, Buy Brand New $12,980 JIM WHITE TOYOTA 419-841-6681

Loaded, Gray $28,765 JIM WHITE TOYOTA 419-841-6681

2007 HONDA ELEMENT EX

2004 MAZDA 6S

Black, Well-Equipped $18,490 JIM WHITE TOYOTA 419-841-6681

Loaded, Burnt Orange $10,850 JIM WHITE TOYOTA 419-841-6681

2010 TOYOTA COROLLA LE

2007 HONDA CR-V EXL

Auto, Air, Buy Brand New $15,980 JIM WHITE TOYOTA 419-841-6681

!

IT’S THE MOST MAGICAL TIME OF THE YEAR. 7505 W. Central Ave. at King Rd.

OF TOLEDO

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

K LOO 4X4

2003 FORD SUPER CREW

Black, Auto W/OD $22,355 JIM WHITE TOYOTA 419-841-6681

!

K LOO

FIND THE PERFECT HOLIDAY GIFT, EVEN IF IT’S FOR YOU.

Recipient of the “Elite Award of Excellence” for Sales and Service

n A21

4X4 Black Beauty, King Ranch Edition $14,988 Randy Shirk’s NorthPointe Auto Sales,LLC 419-729-2688 // www.NorthpointeAutoSales.com

4X4 2006 FORD EXPEDITION

Eddie Bauer, Fully Loaded 4X4, Moonroof $15,488 Randy Shirk’s NorthPointe Auto Sales,LLC 419-729-2688 // www.NorthpointeAutoSales.com


death notices / CLASSIFIED

A22 n Toledo Free Press MOORE, Philip J. “PJ� Swanton, OH www.weigelfuneralhomes.com

DEC. 28 CLUTTER, Michelle age 54 www.newcomertoledo.com PIPER, William B. age 77 Holland, OH www.berstickerscottfuneralhome.com RAVIN, Louis C., M.D. age 98 Toledo, OH YOUNG, Alma L. (Dupuis) age 80 Toledo, OH www.egglestonmeinert.com

MOSINIAK, Richard Alan age 54 Swanton, OH www.weigelfuneralhomes.com Rollman, Richard “Dick� age 81 Oregon, OH www.freckchapel.com

DEC. 25

BROOKOVER, Rebecca Lynn age 16 Sylvania Township, OH www.walkerfuneralhomes.com JAMBOR, Mary Ann age 67 Toledo, OH www.coylefuneralhome.com McCarren, Janet L. (Bauer) age 80 W.K. Sujkowski & Son Funeral Home MIEKISZAK Frank W. age 90 Toledo, OH www.sujkowski.com RICKARD, Michael W. age 60 www.walterfuneralhome.com WOODRUM, Betty J. age 79 Perrysburg, OH www.witzlershank.com

JACOBSON, Lawrence D. “Jake� age 87 www.bakerhazelsnider.com RIFE, George Herbert Sr. age 89 Toledo, OH www.blanchardstrabler.com DEC. 24 CRAWFORD, Joan K. age 58 Toledo, OH www.walterfuneralhome.com ELLERBROCK, Martha age 88 Toledo, OH www.pawlakfuneralhome.com KLEMPNER, June E. age 87 Toledo, OH www.walkerfuneralhomes.com

DEC. 26

KOTT, Wayne Michael age 55 Wisniewski Funeral Home

CARROLL, Wiley, Jr. age 79 www.bennettfuneralhome.net

T

H

O

M

A

S

I

H O M E

I N C .

WISNIEWSKI F U N E R A L

community adoptions ADOPTION IS an act of love. We admire your courage. Your baby will be given love, secure future. Jane & Paul 866-530-8291. Expenses Paid. Call evenings if possible. classes & workshops

ART INSTRUCTION – PERRYSBURG

Group, private, gift certificates. Contact Edgerton Art at 419.290.OILS (6457) for details.

employment

WILSON, Jennifer D. age 54 Toledo, OH

DEC. 27

2 4 2 6 N . R e y n o l d s R o a d Tol e d o, OH 4 3 6 1 5

(419) 531-4424

We value traditions and incorporate new ideas to serve families at their most difficult times.

Announcing

MD’z

FLOORS LOORS & MORE M

Specializing In

* Floor Stripping and Waxing * Refinishing all Hardwood Floors * Carpet and Upholstery Cleaning

“We do it Right�

419-902-4913

Our Mission: “While providing excellent and professional services our mission is to serve our customers with reliable and honest work ethic by guaranteeing exceptional work at a fair affordable price.�

january 2, 2011

general 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.

FT Case Manager/Women’s housing program. BS or 2 yrs w/exper. CDCA preferred. Knowledge of homelessness/recovery preferred. Salary commensurate w/educ & exper. Benefits provided. Send cover letter, resume, salary reqs and refs to: Personnel Dept., 1035 N. Superior St, Toledo, OH 43604 NO PCs or PERSONAL CONTACT. EEOC

“Reliable, affordable service with a touch of Perfection.â€? •Flexible Hours •Over 10 yrs of experience •Referrals available

Angela Short (419)283-8840

EARN EXTRA MONEY We are recruiting individuals to deliver phone books in the following communities:

• Toledo • Sylvania • Maumee • Oregon • Perrysburg

Must be 18 years of age Must have valid driver’s license Insured dependable auto EOE ET CALL MONDAY THRU FRIDAY 8:30 am to 8:00 pm

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

RENTALS APARTMENTS Newly Renovated Gated Community. 1, 2, & 3 Bedrooms. Starting at $400/mo. Heat & Water Included. Move In Specials & Low Security Deposits. 419.386.8578

1.800.373.3280

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

Need a Good Car?

500 With this ad* $

OFF

Bring this ad to J.D. Byrider, buy a vehicle before January 31, 2011 and we’ll knock $500 OFF BadCredit.NoCredit.Repossession.Wecanhelp! Also available, an optional 36 month / 36,000 Mile Extended Service Agreement

CALL (419) 842-1655

"" ĂŠ ,-ĂŠ ",ĂŠ* "* ĂŠ7 "ĂŠ ĂŠ , /°

,IMITED OFFER WITH APPROVED CREDIT AT PARTICIPATING DEALER #OUPON MUST BE PRESENTED

AT TIME OF CREDIT APPLICATION IN ORDER TO QUALIFY 3EE PARTICIPATING DEALER FOR FULL DETAILS


january 2, 2011

Visit www.toledofreepress.com

n A23


A24 n Toledo Free Press

january 2, 2011

VisitDirectAir.com | 877-432-DIRECT *Flights are Public Charters operated by XTRA Airways, Vision Airlines, Inc. Aviation Advantage/Sky King & Dynamic Air. Advertised fares are one-way and include Federal Excise Tax of 7.5%. Fares do not include Flight Segment Tax of $3.70 per person. Passenger Facility Charges (PFC) of up to $4.50 per person, September 11th Security Fees of $2.50 per person, $5.00 Reservation Department Fee per person, and $10.00 Convenience Fee per person per segment. Limited availability. See Operator Participant Agreement.


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