Toledo Free Press - Feb. 21, 2010

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THE ‘R-WORD’ Is receivership the answer to our budget woes? Who pays? pays? What does it mean to you? Story by Michael Brooks, Page A A6

Plus: ■

‘Sharing the responsibility’ responsibility’ by Toledo Mayor Mike Bell Bell,, Page A A77

‘Only Toledoans can save Toledo Toledo’’ by City Councilman D. Michael Collins, Page A A4

Kaptur and Latta on the federal stimulus by Kristen Rapin, Page A10 A10


A2 ■ TOLEDO FREE PRESS

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OPINION

FEBRUARY 21, 2010

Blast off, splashdown

Revisiting a capital idea

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n September, Toledoans were asked to change the rules governing the Capital Improvement Program to help balance the city budget. Then-mayor Carty Finkbeiner rallied union money and mounted a loud campaign to defeat the proposal. Like a lot of short-sighted things Finkbeiner did, that effort has hindered Toledo. As Toledo City Councilman George Sarantou told Toledo Free Press in September, “We are in a fiscal emergency, and we would like permission from voters to use capital improvement funds for safety.” I again believe Toledo voters should give council that permission by voting “yes” on the CIP issue on May 4. The current division of funds from the three-quarter percent income tax spread money equally among police and fire resources, the general fund and the CIP, which is used for infrastructure such as streets and bridges. The Thomas F. POUNDS proposed change to this system would increase the general fund to one-half of that, with onethird remaining with police and fire and one-sixth going to CIP. As explained by City Councilman Joe McNamara, “The three-fourths percent income tax is governed by a specific formula mandating how the money may be spent. The formula for the three-fourths percent for years 2004-08 was more flexible than the formula for years 2009-12. The previous flexible formula allowed city council to move funds from the CIP to the public safety budget. This flexibility was repeatedly needed to balance the budget.” Mayor Mike Bell sees the value in this move and is supporting it as it goes before voters. With more focused and rational leadership on the 22nd floor of One Government Center, reworking the CIP is a tough but viable option to bring the city’s budget into line. E-mail president and publisher Thomas Pounds at tpounds@toledofreepress.com.

LETTER TO THE EDITOR

Clothing drive brought community together event, that helps make our community strong. And, of course, I would be remiss if I didn’t recognize all of the organizations that helped make the collection and distribution a success. Thanks to our partners: Cherry St. Mission; Fifth Third Bank; HOT Printing and Graphics; K100 Radio; LaSalle Cleaners; Pro-Pak Industries; Toledo Free Press United Way of Greater Toledo; WTOL-11; YMCA/JCC. And, thanks to all of our customers who came out and enabled us to contribute 31 truckloads of goods to the cause. It is our customers, the residents in this area, who enable us to fulfill our mission to support our communities. MIKE ANDERSON CEO, The Andersons, Inc.

A publication of Toledo Free Press, LLC, Vol. 6, No. 8. Established 2005. EDITORIAL Brandi Barhite, Associate Editor bbarhite@toledofreepress.com Kristen Rapin, Special Sections Editor krapin@toledofreepress.com Bret Guthrie, Design Editor bguthrie@toledofreepress.com ADMINISTRATION Pam Burson, Business Manager pburson@toledofreepress.com

ADVERTISING SALES Renee Bergmooser, Sales Manager rbergmooser@toledofreepress.com Casey Fischer cfischer@toledofreepress.com Brittany Roberts broberts@toledofreepress.com Matt Mackowiak mmackowiak@toledofreepress.com

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LIGHTING THE FUSE

PUBLISHER’S STATEMENT

TO THE EDITOR, We live in a great community! Once again people from around this great city came together to donate more than 85 tons of clothes and goods to those in need during the Clothing Your Community drive. We should all be proud to know that 6,000 individuals — our neighbors and friends — were given a hand up with clean, gently used clothing and goods. I have no doubt that a good number of the folks who donated have experienced some level of financial strain recently, but it’s that very sense of community and helping one another that makes the Toledo area so special. It is outstanding community members such as Gary Resnick of LaSalle Cleaners, who had the vision for this

Visit www.toledofreepress.com

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s our son Evan speeds toward zine I need to get through writing his fourth birthday, the par- about Evan’s daredevil exploits). Those parameters were fully tested enting challenges are piling up faster than torn Trojan wrappers back- during a recent visit to the Splash Universe waterpark in Dundee. We spent stage at a Lady Gaga concert. the weekend at the park Standards of approwith friends of ours priateness are a daily who have two wonstruggle, as you can tell. derful children a few What we used to be years ahead of ours. able to slip by Evan’s During the first day sharp little eyes and ears at the park, Evan went now fills a minefield of from a tentative expotential bad examples. ploration of the Little I used to be able to get Squirt Pool slides to a away with having “The Simpsons” on in the Michael S. MILLER full-on assault of the Water Adventure Tree background if Evan was playing, coloring or otherwise House slides, allowing his slender distracted, but now he seems to be frame to be whipsawed around the radar-tuned to every expletive, act of corners and twists and shot into the violence and scene showcasing child troughs of water. By the end of the first day, escorted on each trip by one of our endangerment. D’oh. We recently invested in a new vehicle friends’ kids at the top of the slide and from our friends at Monroe Dodge, and me at the bottom of the slide, Evan was during an innocent demonstration of a veteran of the orange, yellow and blue the satellite radio system, a quick sta- mid-size slides. At some point during the day, he tion scan found a rap song that cheerily invoked a word that describes inappro- became aware of the big boy slides in priate maternal fornication (not that the corner of the park. A wooden staircase winds to near there is an appropriate kind, although I understand it’s a useful tool for Greek the top of the 60-foot-high ceiling, tragedies and daily newspaper general ending in two Goldmine Adventure Slides. Both are monster corkscrews managers). D’oh. In addition to behavioral and that hurtle the body on an inner tube at role model issues, Evan is testing the high-rush speeds up and down the sides boundaries of his physical limits. The of the slide (at one point the yellow slide toddler who needed to hold my hand tunnel leads outside the building and to descend the stairs now wants to see twists back in; those few seconds are in how many stairs he can leap from to pitch black. The green slide is entirely the floor before mommy or daddy encased in blinding darkness). The whole ride is over in a minute, burst a blood vessel. Evan’s thrillseeking has been but it takes a while for one’s lungs to modest. He’s not chasing cars or huffing catch up with the rest of one’s body as fresh Play-Doh. The balance for us as it exits into a wide receiving pool 60 parents is to let him experiment with feet below, life guards on duty. Evan pain and consequence without letting finally noticed the monster slides and him cripple or kill himself. We do not asked if he could go on them. “You’re not tall enough yet,” I said. want him to ever be afraid to try new things, but until he learns to fully ap- “Maybe next year.” But as it turned out, Evan was tall preciate gravity, transfusions and fullbody casts, we need to help him set enough, by about an inch and a half. parameters (Evan’s little brother Sean We discovered that on the second day is showing signs of being even more when Evan ran up to a wooden cutout aggressive, but I am unable to contem- of a cartoon beaver (there is a lot of plate that while processing the Thora- beaver on display at Splash Universe) Thomas F. Pounds, President/Publisher tpounds@toledofreepress.com

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

and stood against its outstretched arm to show me he did make the cut. I ride the Goldmine Adventure Slides every chance I get, but I could not imagine taking Evan on the ride. Me on an inner tube hurtling behind Evan would surely make him feel like Indiana Jones being chased by the giant boulder. I figured once we made the actual climb, Evan would see the heights and change his mind. He did not. So, I put him in the front of the inner tube, wrapped my shins around him and told him sternly that he had to hold on no matter what. “Blastoff!” he shouted, and we did. But at the halfway point, cascading down the yellow slide, I changed my mind. I doubted Evan could hold on when we hit the bottom, so as we began to exit the chute, I lunged forward to grab him in my arms. That graceful maneuver ended up flipping the inner tube upside down, and Evan was torn from my grasp as we went under water. I had him in hand and back in the air before he knew what hit us, but he wasn’t happy we “sunk,” as he put it. And that was the end of that. Until an hour later, when Evan asked if we could go again. “We sunk last time,” I said. “That’s because you didn’t let me hold on,” he said. So, we climbed the staircase again, looked down 60 feet and climbed into the inner tube. This time, fighting every fiber of instinct, I kept my lower legs wrapped around Evan but trusted him to hold on, and did not try to grab him as we shot off the slide. The inner tube took air from the chute, hit the pool ... and calmly sailed to a stop without so much as an errant ripple. Having learned a lesson in trust and letting go just a little bit, I pulled Evan out of the inner tube. He did not quite have the temerity to say, “I told you so,” but I could see it in his eyes as he took my hand and started pulling me back to the foot of the giant slide. D’oh. Michael S. Miller is Editor in Chief of Toledo Free Press. E-mail him at mmiller@toledofreepress.com.

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

STAFF WRITERS news@toledofreepress.com Jim Beard • Michael Brooks • John Dorsey • Mike Driehorst • Lori Golaszewski Aya Khalil • Vicki L. Kroll • Jeff McGinnis • Duane Ramsey • Jennifer White • Dave Woolford Chris Schmidbauer, Sports Editor Chris Kozak, Staff Writer Emeritus COPY EDITORS/PROOFREADERS Lisa Renee Ward, Brandi Barhite, Joshua Stanley

Toledo Free Press is published every Sunday by Toledo Free Press, LLC, 605 Monroe St., Toledo, OH 43604 Phone: (419) 241-1700 Fax: (419) 241-8828 www.toledofreepress.com. Subscription rate: $100 /year. Reproduction or use of editorial or graphic content in any manner without permission is strictly prohibited. Copyright 2010 with all rights reserved. Publication of advertisements does not imply endorsement of advertisers’ goods or services.


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GUEST COLUMN

FEBRUARY 21, 2010

TOLEDO, INK

CHAD-MICHAEL SIMON

Reinventing Toledo

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The charlatans who operate beoledo’s future will be determined within the next 24 hind the scenes are ever present. months. The opportunity to There are certain personalities who save our city is before us, and if we thrive on their ability to manipulate Toledo residents fail to take the nec- the visible leaders. They operate essary steps to save our city, we will “under the radar” and leave no evilose it. The long-term consequences dence of their presence. Their comfort zone is playing both of fiscal emergency would sides against each other be an embarrassing legacy. and never being identiThere exists no simple or fied. painless solution. We did Perhaps the worst not get into this fiscal root cause is that we are a nightmare overnight and city where hardly anyone we will not get out of votes. Only 16 to 22 perit instantaneously. Our course must be long-term D. Michael COLLINS cent of the registered voters determine who with measured steps and discipline. If we have the will to see will lead us. The outcome in too it through, I honestly believe Toledo many cases is cronyism and sophocan rise to even greater heights than moric political gamesmanship. But it is not too late for Toledo we have ever experienced. Let us begin with the root to recover. I have confidence that causes for our current state of af- Toledoans can “connect the dots” fairs. Toledo residents lost pride in as to the root causes of the decline our city and for the past 50 years and rise above the problems. First, have been moving to the suburbs, let’s remember our identity as thus relinquishing their identity Toledoans. We must now capture as Toledoans. The Toledo city a sense of pride in our community government looked down on the and commit to the goal that failure suburban communities as small is not an option. Toledoans must take an active and unworthy of respect and recognition. The population of Toledo part in selection of elected officials declined from a peak of 383,818 by “speaking with their feet” and in 1970 to an estimated 310,000 going to the polls. The leadership in Toledo, public in 2005. My question is: “Does this sound like the identical path and private, must step up and have Cleveland took in the 1970s and the vision to see Toledo’s potential. In a world of international comDetroit is following now?” The political process in Toledo merce, we must compete by having has been stifling and both political the insight to reinvent Toledo and parties are to blame. Our city has partner with our sister communities. experienced and continues to ex- This can be done if we have honest perience a political dominance that communication built on respect serves the officeholder first, the party and relationships built on trust. No second and lastly, if there is room, responsible business will come to the constituents. I have seen how Toledo until there is stability in the some of the elected officials from To- municipal government. We must see a new level of buyledo have an attitude that the citizens are fortunate to have them as office in from the local news institutions. holders, and believe the constituents Toledoans deserve fair and balanced must give them the respect and adu- reporting; that is, news that is free of sensationalism and political bias. lation they deserve. Toledoans will determine the Toledo has lost its major manufacturing base, which was estab- future of Toledo; if we lose our city, lished in the early 1900s when we the failure will be on us. To save Totransitioned from an agriculture- ledo, all of the stakeholders, private based society. Toledo blossomed and public, must commit to a disbecause of this transition, in which ciplined and ego-free strategy. The the corporate giants took a direct outcome can be a Toledo our chilhand in shaping Toledo as a stable dren and their children’s children will be proud to call home. municipality. Today, the corporate giants are gone and we are struggling to D. Michael Collins is a Toledo City representing Distransition to a new paradigm: tech- Councilman nology-based and knowledge-based trict 2. E-mail him at dmichael. collins@toledo.oh.gov. paradigms in a global economy.

SHREDDING THE CURTAIN

Cutting to the heart of the problem

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s I ruffled through the pages, these sentences caught ticing. I’m surprised at the green lawns and the water features at business, residential and shopping entrances since my attention: “I hope the council would publicly state that this is a desert region. We have heard so much about our they support the tax increase because we can’t afford to cut water needing to be sold to the West at some point. “It’s a sign of affluence,” my oldest daughter any more public-safety officials.” said, as I point out water display after water dis■ “It’s really hard to listen to people explay. She is quick to point out her employer does pressly advocate when they are not really not have such a display and does the opposite. talking to council. They are campaigning.” They have a water reclamation facility that re■ “He’s hired cronies rather than qualified turns water to the City of Chandler, Ariz. people. He’s wasted money.” The visit to Arcosanti, an experimental ■ “The agency’s deputy director immedimodel of how urban environments of the future ately called a staff meeting and warned that no could be, a community without cars, energy one was to talk to this newspaper.” efficient with a focus on self sufficiency, gives ■ “Records show the agency’s waiting list (for housing) has thousands of names on it Lisa Renee WARD a first impression of hope that quickly turns to disappointment. Arcosanti is barely alive in part — that list is only growing.” These clips were taken from Gilbert Republic and due to mismanagement. Only 18 percent of its power is self generated. The rest they have to buy from the power grid. The Phoenix New Times, in Arizona, not Toledo, Ohio. While the climate may be completely different, the chal- bakery is closed, leaving their main source of income being lenges shared in the pages of these weekly papers are strik- the sale of chimes with bells made from clay and metal. It’s normal to rail against the local system — it is what ingly familiar. Dinner conversations at local eateries fixate on personalities involved in local issues, laying blame on impacts us most in our daily lives. People often threaten to move to a different area out of frustration. people rather than the process. It may seem easier to just move someplace else, but There is a lack of transparency and delays in getting public information requests, with those involved being many problems being faced by communities all over our nation are similar, differing only on the degree of the afwarned to not talk to certain media outlets. Tax increases are discussed for May ballots, with the fectation. We need to find solutions to the shared problems community divided on the issue of where cuts should be communities are facing. Focusing on the process instead of the personalities made. Revenue streams for education and additional cuts would be a start. are being sought. Most of those in power have been for some time; the Toledo Free Press contributor Lisa Renee Ward operates the lack of fresh perspective is lamented. As an outsider to the Phoenix area, the weather is en- political blog Glass City Jungle.


COMMUNITY OPINION

FEBRUARY 21, 2010 A4 ■ TOLEDO FREE PRESS

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COMMUNITY

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Owens forms Success Program in Hancock County Owens Community College is partnering with The Findlay-Hancock County Community Foundation to provide scholarships for high school students in Hancock County. The Success Program provides financial assistance for those who otherwise couldn’t afford to go to college. The Findlay-Hancock County Community Foundation gave a $15,000 challenge grant to the university to create a new Success Program Fund. Owens will raise $15,000 to match those funds.

CITY OF TOLEDO

Bell considers receivership a last-ditch option By Michael Brooks TOLEDO FREE PRESS STAFF WRITER news@toledofreepress.com

On a day when most Toledoans were digging out from a foot of snow, Toledo City Councilman George Sarantou worked on another form of excavation: the mountain of municipal debt that threatens Toledo’s financial stability. “There is no question that SARANTOU the city faces a fiscal emergency,” said Sarantou in a meeting Feb. 9 in his 21st floor office at One Government Center. “What we need to be concentrating on is finding long-term solutions and not just shortterm fixes to the budget.” The City of Toledo faces a projected $48.2 million budget deficit for 2010, a figure that includes approximately $12.77 million in deficits inherited from 2009, the last year of the Carty Finkbeiner administration. The deficit represents approximately onefifth of the projected revenues in the 2010 budget. While publicly Mayor Mike Bell and his staff discuss the need for budget cuts and tax hikes to solve the city’s budget woes, behind closed doors there is increasing talk that the only solution to the budget deficit is to have the state step in and put the city into receivership. Toledo Free Press obtained a copy of an eight-page internal memorandum from acting law director Adam Loukx to deputy mayor Stephen Herwat outlining the processes and conditions by which Toledo might make use of insolvency mechanisms to address its budget woes. The memo details the background, definitions and possible resolutions of Fiscal Watch and Fiscal Emergency. Bell reiterated in an interview that he considers receivership a last resort. “Our expectation is that cooler heads will prevail,” the mayor said in reference to ongoing discussions with

city unions. “It is in no one’s best interest for the state to become involved in Toledo’s financial difficulties, and to focus on doom-and-gloom scenarios might cause unwarranted panic that Toledo will run out of money.”

When cities go broke Though infrequently used, there exists a legal mechanism by which municipalities might declare bankruptcy. Under the United States Bankruptcy Code Chapter 9 Title 11, municipalities can file for bankruptcy protection with provisions similar to those found in the forms of bankruptcy filed by individuals and corporations. An important consideration for Bell will be the fact that an attempt by the City of Toledo to file for bankruptcy would necessitate approval by the State of Ohio. Chapter 9 requires that any municipality seeking bankruptcy protection must first secure “specifically authorized” before commencing the process. This clause is because states retain considerable authority over municipalities within their borders due to restrictions under the 10th Amendment and the so-called contract clause in the U.S. Constitution. Ohio Revised Code 118 provides an additional mechanism by which the state can intervene and prevent a municipal bankruptcy. Under this law, which was adopted in response to the 1979 financial collapse of Cleveland, the state can place a municipality in one of two categories: “fiscal watch” or “fiscal emergency.” Sarantou indicated that state intervention to help a struggling municipality is preferable to bankruptcy. “Investors are reassured when the state steps in to help municipalities restructure debt,” he said. “It would be disastrous for the city’s credit rating to file bankruptcy.” For a municipality to fall under fiscal watch status, the existence of one of a number of possible scenarios must be confirmed. In Toledo’s case, fiscal watch status would occur if the projected general fund deficit exceeds one-twelfth of the previous year’s rev-

enues. Toledo could be declared a fiscal emergency if the projected general fund deficit exceeds one-sixth of the previous year’s revenues. The current projection of a $48.2 million deficit exceeds both criteria, Sarantou said. “There will have to be a lot of changes — some of them painful — to get through the current crisis,” Sarantou said. “While the city has not yet defaulted on any major obligations, it is clear that this will not be the case by the middle of the fiscal year.” Bell called “speculative” any attempt to project a date as to when cash flow problems would occur for the city. “If we found that the city did not have the ability to raise the necessary revenue, we would make adjustments,” he said. “It will never get to the point where the City of Toledo would not be able to pay its bills.”

Insolvent municipalities There is a lengthy history of American municipalities and other government entities whose financial woes exceeded their ability to solve shortfalls through normal budgetary measures. Most noteworthy of these is the 1994 case of Orange County, a wealthy California region that was overwhelmed by the sudden collapse of an investment scheme created by its county treasurer. The losses from the implosion of the investment pool totaled $1.64 billion, and Orange County officials chose Chapter 9 bankruptcy protection to avoid a run on the available revenues that had not been lost in the scheme. In 2008, the city of Vallejo, Calif., joined a list of municipalities choosing bankruptcy protection to solve their budget woes. At the time of filing for bankruptcy, this city of more than 120,000 people spent approximately 80 percent of its general fund revenues on salaries and benefits to public safety employees. Since the bank-

ruptcy, the city has been forced to cut hundreds of jobs and slash services, and the number of police officers has been reduced by almost 50 percent. Dozens of Ohio municipalities have made use of state provisions under ORC 118 to avoid filing bankruptcy and to take advantage of the state’s power to assist in debt restructuring. One of the most noteworthy examples was Cleveland, which remained in the category of fiscal emergency from 1980 to 1987. The largest Ohio municipality to fall under the category of fiscal watch was the city of Youngstown, which remained in fiscal watch from 1996 through 1999. Sarantou noted the advantages of bringing in the state to help solve Toledo’s budget crisis. “The state can step in and unilaterally restructure union contracts,” he said. “As it stands now the city has

to rely on the unions to make any concessions.” Sarantou bristled at the suggestion that the city has been financially irresponsible in prior fiscal years. “There is a perception that Toledo has somehow been spending money like drunken sailors,” he said. “But I have been working on every budget since 2002, and every year we have been faced with cutbacks — the focus the last seven years is on ways to cut the budget.” Sarantou said that contract agreements with city unions in the 1990s have come back to haunt Toledo. “The city convinced unions to take increased pension payments in place of wage increases,” he said. “This made short-term financial sense, but in the long run the city is now paying a steep price for this negotiating tactic.” ■ RECEIVERSHIP CONTINUES ON A7


COMMUNITY

FEBRUARY 21, 2010 ■ RECEIVERSHIP CONTINUED FROM A6 Unlike a bankruptcy case, in which an outside receiver is appointed to oversee disbursements, the City of Toledo would retain a considerable amount of autonomy in any restructuring under the state of Ohio’s fiscal watch or fiscal emergency provisions, Sarantou said. “In these cases the state acts more like an advisor than anything else,” he said. “The local government is still in charge of its day-to-day operations.”

Avoiding receivership The preferred outcome for the City of Toledo, according to Sarantou, is that the city is able to solve its budget woes at the local level, and he praised Bell for his efforts to bring attention to and solve the financial crisis the city faces. “This mayor has been very transparent, and this mayor is trustworthy,” he said. “Mayor Bell has been working diligently to generate ideas on how to fix the situation.” Sarantou outlined a number of

proposals that will reduce the city’s budget shortfall, including more stringent collection efforts on tax receipts. “We have $21 million on the books in uncollected city income taxes,” he said, adding that some of these debts date back to the late 1970s. “Realistically, $6 million of this debt is collectable.” Another potential source of revenue for the city is the sale of cityowned properties, such as The Docks and land in Monclova Township. “This might represent $7 million in revenue,” Sarantou said, adding that these funds would revert back to the capital improvements budget and would also need approval to shift these funds to general revenues. Sarantou also pointed to the city’s red light camera system as another source of uncollected revenue. “Violators currently owe the city about $5 million in fines for red light camera infractions,” he said, noting that the compliance rate on paying these tickets is only 44 percent. ■ RECEIVERSHIP CONTINUES ON A8

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■ A7

Sharing responsibility for the future

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great deal of discussion has taken place in the media and economic development. Pursuing these long-term about Toledo’s current budget situation. Since taking goals will help not just to solve this current problem, but office on Jan. 4, my administration has worked to ex- also put the city on the right track for future fiscal health. Our working group comprised of council members, amine, line by line, the expenditures and revenues that make up the city budget. We’ve looked for places to cut costs, to city directors, transition team and citizen task force members continues to meet on Wednesday mornings and our improve efficiency and collect revenue that is owed us. Working with the transition team, our union leaders, citizen task force continues to meet on Wednesday aftercity council and the citizen’s task force, we have identified noons to continue determining the feasible options for resolving the immediate budget deficit and more than $25 million in budget reduction setting in place a long-term system of finanmeasures — without increasing taxes. These cial planning. measures include greater employee contriFinally, citizen input is just as imbutions to health insurance, eliminating portant as the professional and expert pension pickups, pursuing delinquent taxes voices we hear each day and I welcome and fees so that everyone is contributing the constructive ideas that you have to their share, reducing nonpersonnel costs in improve our city. There are multiple ways all departments and more. These measures to submit your thoughts on the budget: are rarely covered in mainstream media be■ E-mail your suggestions to cause they’re not as emotional as taxes and budget2010@toledo.oh.gov; fees, but they are equally important to getMayor Mike BELL ■ Call the city at (419) 245-3212; or ting our fiscal house in order. ■ Participate in an online forum at www.futureoftoSome of these ideas are unpopular, but they are necessary. I have likened the city budget situation to a sinking ledo.org, where you can find background information ship. We are all in this together, so when people tell me about the budget, surveys rating the importance of city that I’m facing one heck of a dilemma with the budget, I services and areas where we can make cuts, and opportuliken it to telling the captain of a sinking ship that he has nities to offer direct suggestions. Comments from each of one heck of a dilemma — when the water is rising around these outlets are directed to my office. I pledged to you that as mayor I would apply good manall of our feet. We must all play a role in bailing water and agement principles to get our budget under control while patching the leak if we are to survive this crisis. Resolving a budget with a potential $48 million short- preserving our city services and we are working not only fall in revenues is a delicate balancing act, especially for a to change how we manage operations, but the mindset new mayor. I don’t want to pay more taxes, so I imagine of the people who do the work of the city. Increasingly, the citizens of Toledo don’t, either. And we do our commu- employees are encouraged to take initiative in finding sonity a disservice by cutting vital services for which they are lutions to resolve the problems within their own departalready paying. Eliminating some of our optional services ment, provide more efficient service to our residents, and can also do harm as we look to make Toledo an attractive be accountable for goals that they have helped to set. All of these changes will develop a better, more responsive local location for business growth and development. My goal is to preserve a quality of life that does not government for the community we serve along with real alienate the people who currently call Toledo home or dis- pride in being a Toledoan. This is a difficult time in our city’s history, but we have suade potential employers from relocating here. But as I have admitted all along, the mayor cannot do it alone. This an opportunity now to work together in the same direcjob requires constructive advice and input from stake- tion to change the look of our own future. I ask not just holders around the community. It is with these thoughts for your patience and trust, but also for your participation as we work through this challenge. We are all affected by in mind that we are driving the 2010 budget process. Our short-term focus is balancing the 2010 budget by the success or failure of this community and we can all be March 31, and I have pledged to send council by March 1 a part of the solution. multiple balanced-budget scenarios for their consideration. Long term, we continue to examine opportunities for re- Mike Bell is Mayor of Toledo. gional collaboration, increased efficiency, reduced costs E-mail him at mayor.toledo@toledo.oh.gov. .'#&(#&-)'8

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A8. ■TOLEDO FREE PRESS ■RECEIVERSHIP CONTINUED FROM A7 “The city has the legal authority to boot [immobilize] vehicles for which the owners do not pay their fines, and the police department is starting to target some of the most serious violators with unpaid fines.� Bell agreed that enhanced collection efforts on tax receipts and traffic fines is a “key component of the city’s strategy to address the budget deficit.� Yet ultimately the city’s budget problems revert back to personnel costs, Sarantou said. He outlined approximately $14 million in sav-

COMMUNITY ings that could be achieved through items like having city employees pay 20 percent of health care costs, an elimination of the city’s pickup of employee pension contributions, and deferring payouts for one year from the comp time accrued by police and firefighters. “Roughly two-thirds of the annual budget is consumed by components like salaries and benefits,� Sarantou said. “We can achieve some budget reductions through deferring purchases of items like police cars, but the most significant savings can only be achieved in personnel expenditures.�

The mayor described initial conversations with the city’s unions as “an amenable situation.� “We have removed employee salaries off the table, and this makes any contract changes an easier sell for the unions,� he said, adding that changes to pension and benefit contributions will meet less resistance by city employees than across the board wage cuts. Sarantou said he believes that a combination of budget cuts and a temporary increase in the city’s income tax can balance the budget, but he added that “all sides have to sacrifice in order to make this work.�

Mayor pulls income tax proposal By Kristen Rapin TOLEDO FREE PRESS SPECIAL SECTIONS EDITOR krapin@toledofreepress.com

Toledo Mayor Mike Bell asked Toledo City Council to remove his proposed one-fourth percent income tax increase from consideration during a committee of the whole meeting Feb. 16. Instead of a proposed tax increase, Bell urged council to approve measures that would allow Toledoans to vote on how funds are currently allocated between the Capital Improvement Program (CIP) and General Fund. Under city charter, a set amount of incoming taxes are placed in the CIP. If placed on the ballot, citizens can vote to allow city council and the mayor to allocate that funding to the general fund, creating a balanced budget without raising taxes. The proposal was on the ballot in September but was staunchly opposed by then-Mayor Carty Finkbeiner and was defeated. Additionally, Bell presented city council with a new

2010 budget that contained significant revisions. The revised plan includes concessions from the city’s unions, an elimination of pension pickups and employees covering 20 percent of medical costs. Bell suggests an elimination of the tax credit for those who live in Toledo but work elsewhere. The plan also includes sales of assets estimated a $5 million and implementation of an event tax and eliminates the budget for the annual July 4 fireworks. The mayor has withdrawn his request for unions to concede a 10 percent pay cut. The new plan does not address the $12.77 million carryover deficit from 2009, but proposes a $1.17 million surplus between income and cost for 2010. With that surplus, the city still has a $11.6 million deficit from 2009 to address. In a letter to council, Bell stated, “There are no easy solutions to this budget crisis. I am confident that by working together we can meet this challenge and continue to provide the services our citizens expect and deserve.� Council must pass a balanced budget by March 31.

FEBRUARY 21, 2010

PHILANTHROPY

Reynolds Corners Rotary donates to Haiti relief By Kristen Rapin TOLEDO FREE PRESS SPECIAL SECTIONS EDITOR krapin@toledofreepress.com

The Rotary Club of Reynolds Corners (RCRC) donated $10,000 to Rotary International to help with relief efforts in Haiti. “We’re always looking for people in need. Rotary’s motto is service above self. Under that motto, we want to be able to give it to people who need it the most,� said Tamara Riggs, president of RCRC. RCRC member, Ford B. Cauffiel, gave a $5,000 donation, which the club of 45 members then matched, she said. “We’re all humans and they’re human. If children were starving to death in this room, how could you stand to have a nice lunch and not help the starving children? This is a terrible calamity,� Cauffiel said. “We all have feelings because we’re human and this was something we should do quickly. I’m willing because I’ve been successful in life, and have everything I need to donate $5,000 and I asked the club to match me.� The donation provided funds for tents, food rations and other aid in Haiti that was dispersed by Rotary International. Cauffiel has a history of giving through the 20-year program Students for Other Students (SOS), which he founded. SOS pays students $8 an hour to tutor other “at-risk� students. Rotaries around the state are matching funds to help fund the project that helps 15 school districts throughout Ohio, he said.

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COMMUNITY

A10 ■ TOLEDO FREE PRESS

FEBRUARY 21, 2010

ECONOMY

Kaptur, Latta agree: Despite stimulus, there is work to be done By Kristen Rapin TOLEDO FREE PRESS SPECIAL SECTIONS EDITOR krapin@toledofreepress.com

It has been one year since the American Recovery and Reinvestment Act of 2009, the “stimulus bill,” was signed into law and area Congress members think there is still work to be done. The bill granted $787 billion in spending throughout the United States to KAPTUR jump-start the economy and create jobs. Congresswoman Marcy Kaptur (D-Toledo) voted to pass the bill, while Congressman Bob Latta (RBowling Green) voted against it. According to recovery.gov, Ohio has been awarded approximately $6.4 billion in funding for loans, grants and contracts. The state has received about $1.7 billion, as of Feb.17. Congressman Latta said the American Recovery and Reinvestment Act was passed too quickly by Congress and has failed to create jobs. President Barack Obama promised the unemployment rate would not rise to more than 8 percent if the bill was passed, but the unemployment LATTA rate reached 19 percent nationally, Latta said. “A lot of the money flowed to the state instead of helping to create jobs. States used the funding to balance their budget,” Latta said. “This money did not do anything it was supposed to do. They raced it through, they spent the money and now we’re in a situation that they can’t give us an accurate figure if they’ve created jobs or if they’ve saved jobs.” With interest, the stimulus bill is costing the American people more than $1.2 trillion, Latta said. “We have a situation out there that the money is gone and now we’re stuck having to figure out how we’re going to pay this back,” he said. Kaptur said while the bill didn’t address the problems in the economy, it helped the United States from falling further apart: “Nationally, we have saved or created 2 million and 2.4 million jobs. Is it sufficient? No. Did it help us from falling further into the recession? Absolutely.” Kaptur said stimulus money helped

the district, which has unemployment rates above the national average, by providing unemployment checks and funding COBRA. The stimulus bill included funding $250 to senior citizens for cost of living, the first-time home buyer tax credit and maintained Medicaid, she said. The stimulus also assisted with “lifeline programs,” by maintaining police, firefighters and teachers. In Toledo it helped rehire approximately three dozen police officers, Kaptur said. Kaptur, however, criticizes the administration for not addressing the true problem that caused this recession; Wall Street irresponsibility and the housing crisis. “Their programs in housing and banking aren’t working. Across the country there is a huge down draft on what the stimulus can do as a result,” she said. The banks inflated the housing market and took risky investments. When they failed, the government bailed them out, Kaptur said. The banks need to be held responsible for the role they played, she said. Additionally, banks have stopped lending to small business and small businesses can’t grow and create jobs, she said. Kaptur has proposed a bill in the house, H.R.4377 Return to Prudent Banking Act of 2009, that would hold banks accountable for their actions and prevent events like those of 2008 from happening again.

much, borrowing too much, taxing too much and regulating too much, he said. All of these things spell “impending doom” for businesses in the United States.

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A12. ■ TOLEDO FREE PRESS

COMMUNITY

FEBRUARY 21, 2010

NEWS BRIEFS

Wake Up Youth nonprofit closing By Kristen Rapin TOLEDO FREE PRESS SPECIAL SECTIONS EDITOR krapin@toledofreepress.com

The board of directors for Wake Up Youth Inc., a nonprofit crisis prevention and intervention program for at-risk women and girls, voted on Feb. 11 to close its doors. “It’s really hard in today’s economy to get fundraising,” said Paula Brown, board president. “It was a hard decision we really believe in the mission. The trafficking of women and children is major in Toledo.” The board’s decision to close follows the resignation of EleSondra DeRomano, executive director, for personal reasons, Brown said. DeRomano led the street outreach and was out from 11p.m. to 5 a.m. in the areas where women were most at risk, Brown said. Wake Up Youth Inc. has notified its partners, Toledo Community Foundation and Shared Hope International of the closing. “It’s a perfect storm right now. In this particular case some leadership issues facilitated by some financial issues,” said Keith Burwell, president of the Toledo Community Foundation. “We have a problem in Toledo with our nonprofits in the sense we have the nonprofit infrastructure that equals Cleveland, Pittsburgh and Cincinnati, but a population base that is much smaller. We’ve been asking people to support something that is much larger. We’ve gotten away with it in the good times but now when times are tough it’s harder.” Brown did not know the annual operating budget for the nonprofit. A I-990, a tax form, for the organization in 2004 listed total assets as zero.

Bell to speak at Haiti benefit

‘Prime Time Live 2010’

Kids Unlimited is hosting a Haiti Relief Benefit from noon to 7 p.m. Feb. 20 at Englewood Peace Academy, 1120 Horace St. near the corner of Bancroft and Detroit Avenue. Guest speakers include Toledo Mayor Mike Bell, along with live music, step shows and concession stands. All proceeds from the event will go to the earthquake relief effort in Haiti, according to a news release. For information, call program coordinator Chantel Clariett at (901) 275-7979.

Hope Church and the Oregon Area Pastors Fellowship are hosting Prime Time Live 2010, a community event for seniors, Feb. 26 and Feb. 27. “There is value in letting seniors know they are still appreciated. They need to know they are still an important part of our community,” said Thom Sneed, Hope Church administrative pastor. Prime Time Live 2010 will feature three different events at Hope Church, 5650 Starr Ave. “I think sometimes we’re the forgotten era. There are a lot of things going on for teens and the youth,” said Betty Metz, 64, member of the steering committee. “This whole weekend centered around and planned for 50, nice to know someone is planning things that would interest and entertain us.” On Feb. 26 at 6 p.m. Hope Church will host a dinner and comedy theater with the Covenant Players Drama Group. The event is open for individuals ages 50 and up and is free of charge. On Feb. 27 a health and wellness fair will be held at 1 p.m. The event will host more than 20 exhibitors and will feature two breakout sessions with doctors discussing common health problems seniors face. At 4 p.m. the same day, a concert featuring Kate Jordan & Soul Venture and Sojourner Quartet, will take place. The Sojourner Quartet is southern style gospel music and Kate Jordan &Soul Venture is more new age and contemporary, Jordan said. Tickets for the concert are $5 and can be purchased at the door or ahead of time at WPOS radio station, Lifeway and Family Christian bookstore or Hope Church. Reservations for the evening should be made in advance by contacting (419) 724-HOPE.

‘Heroes of Diversity’ The Toledo Area Human Resources Association (TAHRA) is hosting the fifth annual Diversity Symposium, “Heroes of Diversity,” on March 5. “The goal of our program is to raise awareness of diversity and promote diversity initiatives in the workplace and community,” said Elizabeth Bergman, TAHRA diversity chair. “Our presenters and emcee will offer a fresh perspective on current diversity issues that human resources professionals face.” The symposium will feature keynote speaker Victor Antonio, discussing new diversity perspectives. Two additional speakers, Mark Butler and Linda Mansour, will discuss diversity in the workplace and seeing beyond someone’s religion. The event is geared towards human resource professionals but is open to everyone, Bergman said. The event will take place 7:30 a.m. to noon at the Pinnacle, 1772 Indian Wood Circle. Registration fees are $75 for TAHRA members, $90 for nonmembers and $50 for students. Discounted rates are available if registered before Feb. 26. Visit www.toledoshrm.org for more.

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FEBRUARY 21, 2010

â– A13

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BashCon, the city’s largest annual gaming convention, celebrates its 25th anniversary at the UT Student Union, starting Feb. 19 and continuing all weekend. BashCon plays host to a wide variety of events with a focus on traditional table-top role playing games, board games, miniatures, computer games and panels with guest speakers. “[We] just try and help bring the gaming community together for a few days, to share and enjoy it,� said BashCon coordinator Nicole Teare. The event is offering a special deal for BashCon’s silver anniversary — attendees who pay $25 will receive a

badge for admission and entry into all tournaments, as well as a commemorative six-sided die featuring the BashCon logo. Teare’s experience with UT Bash — the student organization that runs BashCon each year — goes back to her freshman year at the university, when she worked at the registration desk. Four years later, she said that while the core of BashCon remains the same, it has seen a great deal of evolution in the time she has worked with it. “In recent years, gaming has gotten a lot more mainstream, and that’s reflected in the higher attendance of our membership and at the convention. It seems we get a lot more who are just casual gamers than in the past,� Teare said.

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Kerry Porter, one of the guest speakers at BashCon XXV, has been attending the event for many years as a fan. She said that the influx of casual gamers can be witnessed in the event’s larger focus on video games. “It’s progressed with gaming as a whole. It went from the whole classic, you know, ‘Dungeons and Dragons,’ ‘Magic: The Gathering’ card set, to including the likes of the MMO’s (massive multiplayer online games) — ‘World of Warcraft,’ ‘RuneScape’ and others. So it’s really incorporated the digital age,� Porter said. Porter said the smaller size of an event like BashCon makes it a more personal experience than larger events. “Conventions like Gencon, or DragonCon or ComicCon are so big you really can get lost in it, and it’s hard to, as an individual, really get in touch with things,� Porter said. “With a smaller convention, you can sample games easier, you can see games easier. You can be a bystander or participant a lot easier.� Local gaming stores will also be represented at the event. Darryl E. Dean, owner of The Game Room on Sylvania Avenue, said he has been involved in BashCon for 20 years, as a retailer and as a player. One of the positive side effects of BashCon, Dean said, was that “you’re basically helping out the university, and it gets maybe even some of the kids that might even think about going to the university, it gives them a chance to see the place when you get there. “And you get to meet all kinds of new people.� 5228 Monroe Street ~ Spring Meadows ~ 26555 N. Dixie

TOLEDO FREE PRESS STAFF WRITER

5228 Monroe Street ~ Spring Meadows ~ 6945 Central Ave ~

By Jeff McGinnis


HEALTH ZONE

A14 ■ TOLEDO FREE PRESS

FEBRUARY 21, 2010

Facility offers alternative workouts By Kristen Rapin TOLEDO FREE PRESS SPECIAL SECTIONS EDITOR krapin@toledofreepress.com

Toning & Natural Health offers an alternative workout for those individuals who need a nontraditional work out. The facility has 10 therapeutic exercise tables that help tone and stretch the muscles. Each treatment, or class, is five machines for 10 minutes each. “The therapeutic exercise machines move in a repetitive systematic movement, which exercises the appropriate range of motion for the body, whether it’s the arms, the legs or the trunk. It’s just very health promoting,” said Linda Ott, managing director of Toning & Natural Health. The company serves clients from a broad spectrum, Ott said. There are customers who are 88 years old to people who are in their 30s; there are people who are thin and people who are trying to lose weight, she said. “[The tables] really help, especially, during the second treatment that I came

to. I had tripped at home and my back was hurting me really bad. I got on that body bender and it took my pain out,” said Norma Drennan, a second week Toning & Natural Health customer. Class sizes are small, with a maximum of 10 individuals at once. “I really enjoy the stretching and the benefits. It doesn’t look like you’re doing a workout on a lot of them, but you are,” said Ema Jaimez, another customer. “I really enjoy coming here, I’ve seen a good benefit. I want to lose some pounds but mostly just toning up.” Manufacturer studies have found that the tables assist those who have debilitating health problems, such as stroke patients and individuals with multiple sclerosis, Ott said. Additionally, the studies found that two sessions a week was the equivalent of 14 hours working out. “What intrigued me about this is the time issue. The sales point of being able to get in 14 hours worth of exercise in two hours each week,” said Jeff Wenzlick, who was at his first

Health care workshop The Toledo Branch Women in NAACP (WIN) is seeking sponsors for upcoming events, beginning with its first annual Health Care Workshop. The workshop will be WIN’s first event in the area and will feature more than 20 participants, said Kenyetta Jones, event chairwoman and first vice president of WIN. Booths will feature blood screening, H1N1 shots, information on cancer and heart disease, as well as pregnancy outreach. Sponsors are needed to get the product to the public free of charge, Jones said. Additionally, funding is needed for upcoming WIN newsletters as well as an inaugural event in October. The Toledo chapter of WIN was formed three months ago to provide services to women and children in the community, Jones said. “The goal of WIN is to educate and empower woman and children in the community,” Jones said. “If you know better, you do better.” For more information, call Sharon Roach at (419) 932-4196.

visit. “I’m feeling a lot of muscles that I haven’t felt before.” Opened in December, Toning & Natural Health will eventually offer other natural health services, such as bach flower remedies, aromatherapy and reflexology, said Ott, who is a doctor of Naturopathy. Toning & Natural Health offers a free introductory class so individuals can see what the tables have to offer. The first class offers five minutes on each table. “We assume they are coming from the couch, so we do not put them on for a full 10 minutes,” Ott said. “After the first week of placing individuals on for the full 10 minutes and people saying they were sore, we changed it. You’re not supposed to be sore after using the machines.” Toning & Natural Health, 7430 W. Central Ave., is open Monday through Friday from 9 a.m. to 8 p.m. and Saturday from 8 a.m. to 2 p.m. Classes run once every hour. For more information or to make a free appointment call (419) 517-8810.

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HEALTH ZONE

FEBRUARY 21, 2010

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■ A15

Inpatient center opens

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The UT Medical Center (UTMC) opened its new inpatient orthopedic wing, the UT Mobility Disorders, Orthopedics and Rehabilitation Inpatient Center, on Jan. 21. The wing will provide patients and their families a “state of the art facility” to deal with mobility and orthopedic issues, said Mark Chastang, vice president and executive director of UTMC. “The wing was designed for patients and their families to participate in the recovery process,” Chastang said. “It’s like no other treatment program in the area.” “We have a whole comprehensive service menu necessary to treat patients and support them through evaluation, the surgical process and proceed to recovery and daily lives,” he said. “We have a comprehensive, organized team of professionals who are devoted and knowledgeable on these kind of mobility problems.” The inpatient center features an education room with computers that allow doctors to illustrate surgical procedures and mobility disorders for patients, Chastang said. “The education room allows doctors to break down what each problem means, how it happens, what surgery may have to take place and how the recovery process will be,” said Dr. Jeffrey Gold, provost and executive vice president for health affairs and dean of the College of Medicine. “There’s a large focus on education.” In addition to an education room, the wing features a family space with a TV and Internet access, 30 new patient rooms with state of the art computers and larger showers, a conference room and space for patients to walk around without having to go to the rehab center, Gold said. “This is a highly patient centered unit. We spoke with patients and families to see what makes a better

UTMC and the university receive lots of orthopedic cases because it can provide additional service the patients may need. Since it’s located inside a hospital, we can provide all services, vascular, trauma and neurology.” — Dr. Nabil Ebraheim center,” Gold said. UTMC’s new orthopedic center opened in 2007, which eventually led to the expanding of services that makes the center so popular, said Dr. Nabil Ebraheim, professor and chairman of the Department of Orthopedics. “UTMC and the university receive lots of orthopedic cases because it can provide additional service the patients may need. Since it’s located inside a hospital, we can provide all services, vascular, trauma and neurology,” Ebraheim said. “The center is a hospital within a hospital. It is not a free-standing unit with limited services.” The inpatient center’s location on the sixth floor with the rehabilitation services is also convenient for patients, he said. UTMC Orthopedics Department treats a large number of out of state patients, Ebraheim said. The new inpatient center will provide 24-hour access for families who may want to be transferred to the hospital from instate or out of state. For more information about UTMC’s Orthopedic Center, visit utmc. utoledo.edu/centers/ortho/index. html.

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HEALTH ZONE

A16 ■ TOLEDO FREE PRESS

FEBRUARY 21, 2010

NO BONES ABOUT IT

What can you do to alleviate arthritis symptoms?

D

o your knees hurt? Having form of arthritis, whether it be hereditrouble with your hip? Stiff tary, disease or trauma-induced. The neck or back? Are those number continues to rise. By the year 2030, more than 60 milswollen, knobby knuckles lion of us will have been on your hands interfering diagnosed with some with activities? These are form of arthritis. Apall signs and symptoms proximately 31 percent of arthritis. of working-age people Many people, espeare limited in their work cially “baby boomers,” duties due to arthritis. are dealing with some That’s a staggering figure. form and level of it. Many Arthritis can maniuse the term loosely and are not quite certain just Dr. Ken CHISHOLM fest itself in the form of osteoarthritis, post-trauwhat arthritis is. It’s a huge topic, so I will just introduce a matic arthritis, septic (infectious) arthritis, and arthritis caused by certain few concepts. According to the Centers for Dis- autoimmune diseases, such as rheuease Control, more than 40 million matoid arthritis, systemic lupus and people have reported being told by a fibromyalgia. Osteoarthritis is considered the physician that they suffer from some

most common form, affecting more than 25 million people as of 2005. It is also known as the “garden variety” form of the condition. It occurs primarily as a result of the aging process

and wear and tear of the joints. Some people find certain body parts affected more than others. This can be the result of heredity, years of contact sports and occupational activities.

Osteoarthritis can affect any joint in the body, but we hear about it the most when it involves the spine, shoulders, hands, hips and knees. ■ ARTHRITIS CONTINUES ON A17

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HEALTH ZONE

FEBRUARY 21, 2010

Praveen Tamirisa, MD, FACC Cardiologist NWOCC

Health

FOCUS

Know Your Risk Do you know your risk for heart attack, heart disease and stroke? While you cannot change the risk associated with your age, gender or family history, there are many factors that you can control including: • smoking • high blood pressure • high blood cholesterol • diabetes • being overweight or obese • physical inactivity Many people have heard about the risk associated with high cholesterol and blood pressure, but many may not realize that smoking also plays a significant role in one’s risk for heart disease. Smokers’ risk of developing coronary heart disease is two to four times that of nonsmokers. They also have about twice the risk for sudden cardiac death.

■ ARTHRITIS CONTINUED FROM A16 The degenerative process associated with osteoarthritis typically begins with mild symptoms of soreness and aching in the joint(s) after use. This is usually relieved with ice, rest and occasionally some overthe-counter anti-inflammatory medication such as Ibuprofen or Tylenol. In the early stages, there

may be some inflammation of the joint lining, called the synovium. The synovium produces joint fluid that is responsible for the lubrication and nourishment of our delicate, smooth joint cartilage called hyaline cartilage (the white covering at the ends of the bones.) As we age, the hyaline cartilage begins to deteriorate and becomes increasingly brittle.

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In our weight-bearing joints (hips and knees), it begins to wear down like the tread of a tire, becoming thinner and thinner. As this deterioration continues, the body senses this and attempts to battle this ongoing inflammation by producing more synovial fluid and also growing additional bone along the outer margins of the joint. This increased fluid buildup, or ef-

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The more risk factors you have, the greater your chance of developing coronary heart disease. Also, the greater the level of each risk factor, the greater the risk. For instance, the greater your cholesterol, the greater your risk is for heart disease.

“Franciscan Care Center, Sylvania is a residential and rehabilitation facility for the care of the elderly and those in need of extensive rehabilitation services.”

© 2010 ProMedica Health System

fusion, coupled with the development of the marginal bone spurs combine to increase the symptoms of pain, inflammation and now may even begin to affect mobility. As the joint surfaces continue to erode, under-layers of raw, exposed bone become sources of increased pain. There may even be episodes of the joint feeling as if it wants to “give out” due to surface irregularities, with the risk of falling. What are the treatments for this type of arthritis? In the milder forms of osteoarthritis, symptomatic relief is the first line of treatment; this is ice, activity modification and anti-inflammatory medications. As the condition worsens, treatment options such as narcotic pain medications, cortisone injections, “gel” injections and, perhaps, even outpatient arthroscopy to “clean out” the joint (in the case of knee and shoulder arthritis), may be needed. When the arthritic condition becomes too severe for lesser treatment options or what is routinely described as “end-stage,” joint replacement may be the treatment required. This procedure can be life altering for those who suffer from end-stage osteoarthritis. Ken Chisholm’s expertise and experience in orthopedics, surgery and nursing spans more than 30 years. He holds multiple national board certifications in these fields. Visit www.boneand-joint-pain.com for more informa-

Call for a FREE in-home consultation.

If you have questions about your risk for heart attack, heart disease or stroke, contact your primary care physician or call 1-877-303-5558 to be connected to a ProMedica Heart and Vascular Institutes physician.

www.promedica.org/phvi 1-877-303-5558

■ A17

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BUSINESS LINK

A18 ■ TOLEDO FREE PRESS

FEBRUARY 21, 2010

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

Huntington Bank has made a commitment to infuse $360 million into the Toledo and Northwest Ohio economy through loans to small businesses in the next three years. “The ability for small businesses to access credit is vital for economic recovery and the future vitality of our region,” said Sharon Speyer, Northwest Ohio regional president for Huntington Bank. “We have made a commitment to help small businesses grow and directly create jobs in our community that will have a positive impact on the economy in Northwest Ohio.” The bank will provide loans averaging $150,000 to as many as 2,500 small businesses with working capital to expand, add employees, or invest in new equipment to jump start their success and the economy. “Huntington has made small business lending a top priority,” Speyer said, confirming the bank’s current ranking as the top Small Business Administration (SBA) lender in Ohio. The small business program is part of a major $4 billion initiative involving all of Hungtinton’s markets in several states. It is a result of the bank’s strong partnership with the SBA, according to James Phares, vice president of business banking at Huntington. “It allows us to offer clients more

favorable terms and help their cash flow,” Phares said. Aktion Associates Inc. of Maumee is one local company that already has benefited from Huntington’s SBA loan program. The company received a $1.8 million loan from the SBA through Huntington, closing in January after a process in the fourth quarter of 2009. Aktion needed capital for some acquisitions, a partner retiring and the mortgage renewal on the building it owns and occupies, said Scott Irwin, president of Aktion Associates. The firm’s five-year term on the building with Fifth Third Bank was due to expire. “With the current banking situation, our years of profitability and cash flow, we had limited conventional banking options,” Irwin said. “We talked to several banks about funding and received offers from Huntington and Fifth Third. Huntington packaged everything in a SBA loan for 20 years that cost significantly less,” Irwin said. “We considered all options, conventional and SBA, and put together the best package to give the client what works best for them,” said Matt Kerr, a business banker at Huntington who was involved in the process. Aktion had no previous experience working with the SBA before becoming involved with Huntington. Irwin said the firm learned a lot in the process, primarily that SBA funds come through the bank, but are guar-

TOLEDO FREE PRESS PHOTO BY CHARLIE LONGTON

Huntington offers $360 million to small businesses

AKTION PRESIDENT SCOTT IRWIN, RIGHT, SHOWS THE FIRM’S DATA CENTER TO MATT KERR OF HUNTINGTON BANK.

anteed by the federal government. The process paperwork and ongoing reporting was no different than conventional banking. “We got through the process quickly working closely with Jeffrey Banks and a team from Huntington,” Irwin said. Banks is vice president and senior SBA product specialist at the bank’s

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Cleveland office. President Obama’s stimulus package eliminated the SBA fee for guaranteeing the loan, making it more cash-flow friendly and saving substantially for the company, Irwin said. The loan will allow Aktion to maintain its full staff of 75 associates and employees, to grow its business

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and possibly add five or six people in 2010, according to Irwin. “We took 100 percent of our banking to Huntington in the fourth quarter of 2009 after years with Fifth Third Bank,” Irwin said. “We had a good banking relationship with Fifth Third and had no intention of changing banks before this process.”

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■ A19

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A20 â– TOLEDO FREE PRESS

BUSINESS LINK

FEBRUARY 21, 2010

SELLING POINTS

The fallacy behind ‘self-motivation’

I

change. You change. People change. stronger businesses, weave closer Observing how, when and why families and build healthier communities. Creating this positive change occurs can be interesting. While driving slowly to work change requires the ability to stop during the recent snowstorm, I felt our mind chatter long enough to recognize the people protected inside my little with real needs all car. However, the delays around us — needs we from the snow were going can help fulfill. to ruin my entire day, so Now, the last thing I sat worrying, planning people need is another and thinking about how person preaching about I was going to fulfill my the joy of giving. That’s responsibilities. not what we’re talking My thoughts stopped about here. and my priorities We’re talking about changed when I saw a group of men strugTom RICHARD the fact that when we perceive something as just gling to push a snowbound vehicle out of the snow on the a want, we judge, we criticize and we side of the road. Without a second complain. However, when we see a thought, I pulled my car over and person with a real need like a person joined the strangers in the knee-deep stuck on the side of the road, we snow trying to push the vehicle free. change — instantly. What would happen if, instead A minute later another gentleman of judging wants as good or bad, we joined us, then another. Within five minutes, we had five stopped looking at wants and started guys pushing. When the tires finally looking for real needs? What would grabbed the road and the car broke change if we stopped thinking about free under its own power, we looked all of the inconveniences in our life, at each other with smiles of a job well- and we started looking for ways we done. We gave each other the man- can help? Can you imagine the difference nod, made some casual jokes about the snow and with snow-soaked trou- in your next sales call if you stopped worrying about whether or not you sers all, we went our separate ways. For five minutes, nobody was were going to make the sale? What thinking about work; there was no would happen if you could park those worry — no stress. For five minutes, thoughts and treat your customer like a group of strangers, united only by a stranger on the side of the road who a common mission, were completely just needs a helping hand to get back and totally in the moment, helping a on the road? Good things start to happen to person with real needs. People change, but not for the rea- you when you stop wishing for good sons you think. People may be mo- things to happen to you. Sometimes tivated to change because they want you have to let go of the thoughts in something bad enough, but these your head, forget your schedule and motivations of self are never enough just pull the car over and get yourself to produce sustainable results. In fact, soaked with the spirit of helping out the entire concept of self-motivation is where you can. Empty your head of all your worries oxymoronic. Motivation for yourself, alone, is simply not possible; it is not a and simply ask, “How can I help you?� For three examples of how to real motivation. To grow, we must figure out what create a helping state-of-mind in your our real motivations are. No matter business go to www.boltfromtheblue. what we want to do, real change only com and enter the keyword SNOWcomes when other people are involved; BOUND in the blueprint box. this is just simple human nature. Good things happen when we tune Tom Richard is a Toledo-based sales in to the real needs of other people. trainer, gives seminars, runs sales Good things happen because we’re meetings and provides coaching for being true — we’re not fighting what salespeople. For more information, visit www.boltfromtheblue.com, call comes naturally. Thinking, worrying and plan- (419) 441-1005 or e-mail him at ning, alone, will not help us grow tom@tomrichard.com.

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■ A21

RETIREMENT GUYS

Titling accounts incorrectly could be a financial disaster

A

couple of years ago, an elderly lady came in to talk about her estate plan and have her documents reviewed. She had set up a living trust years ago and wanted to make

sure everything was up-to-date. We looked over her documents for her and began to ask her questions about how her accounts were titled. She said that her accounts were all titled in her name.

Mark asked her if she knew that if she died that all of her accounts would go through probate? She was shocked and almost in tears to find this out since the purpose of her living trust was to

avoid probate. She said “you mean to tell me that if I died, my living trust would do nothing to help my assets avoid probate? What good is it?” We then explained how important it is to take the final step and actually fund the trust by changing the title of accounts and real estate to the trust. This lady was smart enough to take the step to set up a trust with the goal of more of her Mark money getting into Nolan the hands of her children, rather than going to lawyers, courts, fees, etc. The problem was that she did not take the important final step. Making sure the accounts were properly titled. Perhaps no one told her what to do. Maybe they did and she neglected to take these steps. This is the biggest mistake people make when setting up a living trust. To avoid probate certain accounts should be titled with the trust as owner. We helped her get things corrected very quickly, but what a shame it would have been if she had paid good money to set up a trust and it ended up not helping her a bit. Here is something else to consider. If you own a 401(k), IRA, annuity,

403(b), life insurance or any other account that has a named beneficiary, listen very closely. A huge percentage of people do not have a correct updated beneficiary form on all of their financial accounts kept at home that they have quick access to. Most trust that the correct information is on file with their custodian. Unfortunately, many will be wrong about this and it will CLAIR be too late. BAKER Here is another story. Mary had been a teacher for 30 years when she suddenly passed away from a heart attack. She had remarried and had been with her current husband for many years. They were truly a loving couple. Some time after Mary’s death, her husband Todd started the process of addressing their financial affairs. He went to the school district and got the paperwork to file a claim on her teacher’s retirement only to find out he was not the beneficiary. Mary had started teaching prior to being married to Todd. When Mary filled out the original paperwork, she listed her brother as beneficiary of her account. ■ RETIREMENT CONTINUES ON A22

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■RETIREMENT CONTINUED FROM A21 Todd went to court and even the children testified that their mother loved Todd and would have wanted him to inherit her retirement account. Unfortunately, with Mary gone, all the court had to rely on was her written instructions. You can guess what happened. Think it couldn’t happen to you and your family? Think again. Here are just a few examples of potential pitfalls. Naming your trust as beneficiary, saying “divided equally among children�, forgetting per stirpes language (bloodline), unintentionally disinheriting grandkids and assuming your financial institution has your form on file. Here is what to do. Review each and every financial, insurance and asset you own and review the titling and the beneficiary designation. For our clients, we use a checklist call our B.O.S.S. system. This system is designed to review the beneficiary, owner, survivor, and spouse of each account. This step-by-step checklist helps provide peace of mind by significantly increasing the odds that the forms are up to date and filled out correctly. Can you put your hands on your beneficiary forms and are they correct? You can get a copy of this helpful checklist by going online to www.retirementguysradio.com and requesting the beneficiary form checklist. When someone passes away, there is no second chance, no “do over,� so get it right now before something happens. Do it today. It is one more step to take that will lead to a happy and relaxing retirement. Got a question for The Retirement Guys? Send your e-mails to letters@toledofreepress.com or you can reach them by calling (419) 8420550. Securities are offered through NEXT Financial Group Inc., Member FINRA / SIPC. The Retirement Guys are not an affiliate of NEXT Financial Group. Their office is located at 1700 Woodlands Drive, Suite 100, Maumee, OH 43537.

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A23

other internal engine parts rest against one another until the engine’s oil pump has delivered enough pressurized oil to create a barrier between the moving

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parts. This can take a few seconds after up and transferred by the oil pump. Therefore, anti-foaming additives are initial engine startup. The amount of internal engine added to the oil to help prevent this wear that can occur during startup is condition from occurring. Detergents and dispersants are added significant. Therefore, manufacturers have recommended the use of thinner to oil to help keep small dirt particles suspended within the luengine oils which reach bricant. If those particles internal engine parts are large enough they sooner after startup. will be trapped by the As long as engine engine’s oil filter as the oil oil is maintained and passes through it. If the no dirt is allowed to suspended particles are build up within it, oil too small to be trapped should perform its by the engine’s oil filter primary tasks quite then they will not be rewell throughout its life moved from the oil until span. Nick SHULTZ the engine oil is replaced. Engine oil has several primary tasks. Various additives This is one of the primary reasons we are mixed into the basic lubricant so should replace our oil on a regular basis. that engine oil can perform multiple Engine oil undergoes thermal breaktasks. Besides acting as a lubricant, down at high engine temperatures. At engine oil also acts as a sealant. It these high engine temperatures, oxygen helps prevent combustion gasses from and oil chemically react with one anentering the crankcase. Oil aids in other and mix with moisture trapped internal engine corrosion resistance. inside the crankcase which then creates Additives within modern engine oils a gummy black mixture called sludge. help prevent an engine corroding Sludge can block oil passages and detefrom the inside. Those very same ad- riorate the engine’s lubrication system to ditives are what cause oil to “stick� to a point where serious engine damage can occur. The detergent additives added to engine parts. Oil has additives which help keep modern oils helps to dissolve the sludge it from foaming within the crankcase. and then suspend it within the engine As the crankshaft spins within the en- oil. It is these suspended dirt and varnish gine and oil is slung inside the crank- particles that make our oil appear black. case the oil has a tendency to foam. Aerated oil cannot be readily picked ■OIL CONTINUES ON A24 ARA CONTENT

L

retically, the only time that any significant engine wear should occur is during engine start up. During cold engine startup, the crankshaft and

ubrication engineers tell us that the moving mechanical parts within our engines should be separated by a thin film of oil. Theo-

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VEHICLES THAT RARELY SEE HIGHWAY USE SHOULD CHANGE OIL EVERY 3,000 MILES.


WHEELS

A24 â– TOLEDO FREE PRESS

modern day engines require engine oil that has a Viscosity Index of 5 W 30. However, check your owner’s manual for the manufacturer recommended oil viscosity. If you have ever heard that short trips are harder on a car than highway driving, you heard correctly. When a vehicle is not driven at operating temperature for any length of time.

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the moisture within the engine never has an opportunity to fully boil out of the engine. The water then mixes with the engine’s oil and creates some very nasty chemicals which can rapidly destroy our engines. Therefore, vehicles that may never be driven out of the city must follow a different maintenance schedule then those cars that have a combination of highway and

plus!

Viscosity by definition is an oil’s resistance to flow. It is basically, although not literally, the thickness or the body of oil. Engine oil must be able to flow in order to lubricate. At very low operating temperatures, oils by nature, do not flow very well. Additives are added to oil to make them flow better at lower temperatures. The Society of Engineers (SAE) and the American Petroleum Institute (API) established guidelines years ago for oil flow performance. Today we simply refer to these established standards as an oil’s viscosity index rating. Most modern engine oils have a number that looks some-

thing like this: 10W30. The first number before the “W� indicates the oil’s flow characteristics at zero degrees and the number after the “W� indicates the oil’s flow characteristics at 212 degrees Fahrenheit. The “W� itself simply means that the oil was tested at zero degrees Fahrenheit and often is referred to as “winter weight� oil. If there is only one number and no “W� is present then the oil was only tested at 212 degrees Fahrenheit. The lower the number is before the “W� the better flow characteristics that oil has at low temperatures. The higher the number after the “W� the better flow characteristics the oil has at operating temperatures. Most

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FEBRUARY 21, 2010

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FEBRUARY 21, 2010 â– OIL CONTINUED FROM A24 For vehicles that are driven a combination of city and highway miles on a regular basis then 5,000 mile intervals should be adequate between oil changes. Finally, for those vehicles that are driven primarily on the highway and very little in town most oil manufacturers rec-

your oil is at temperature you are more likely to purge the engine’s crankcase of unwanted sludge and dirt particles. I have briefly discussed engine oil this week. There is much more to engine oil than I was able to cover in this short piece. I am always available to field any

ommend that the engine oil should be changed every 7,500 miles. Of course, if you operate your vehicle in dusty environments or at extreme temperatures, then you should change your engine oil more regularly. It is also much better to change your engine’s oil when your engine is at operating temperature. When

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â– A25

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#P1202

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ALL YOU CAN EAT LEATHER, DVD, SUNROOF Sale Price

was $31,995

29,186

$

$0 DOWN PAYMENT:

MODEL

with trade-in

$459

WAS

CARS: 2009 2009 2009 2009 2008 2008 2008 2007 2007 2007 2007 2007 2007 2007 2006 2006 2006 2006 2004

CHEVY AVEO.................................. only 1,100 miles ....................................................................$13,995 PONTIAC G6..............................................GT................................................................................$15,995 PONTIAC G6................................. only 3,900 miles...................................................................$16,995 PONTIAC G8.................................... V8, 361hp GT ......................................................................$25,995 CHEVY IMPALA ........................LTZ, leather, sunroof................................................................$19,995 CHEVY MALIBU...............................LS, all power.......................................................................$14,995 CHEVY MALIBU.........................2LT, heated leather.................................................................$18,995 BUICK LaCROSSE........................6 passenger, CX....................................................................$16,995 BUICK LUCERNE..................... loaded, CXL, sunroof ...............................................................$19,995 CHEVY IMPALA ............................leather, sunroof....................................................................$16,995 CHEVY IMPALA .................................sunroof, LT ........................................................................$16,995 CHEVY IMPALA .......................LS, only 25,000 miles...............................................................$14,995 CHEVY HHR.........................................LT, all power .......................................................................$13,995 SATURN AURA.............................leather, sunroof....................................................................$14,995 CHEVY MONTE CARLO.......SS, leather, sunroof ................................................................$17,995 PONTIAC G6............................ sunroof, 32,000 miles ..............................................................$12,995 PONTIAC G6...................................4 cyl., all power.....................................................................$11,995 PONTIAC GRAND PRIX ........leather, sunroof....................................................................$14,995 JAGUAR S-TYPE..........................leather, sunroof....................................................................$13,995

LEATHER, SUNROOF Sale Price

was $18,995

17,684

$

$0 DOWN PAYMENT: with trade-in

w/ TRADE-IN SALE PRICE

$320

$0 DOWN PAYMENT

P1190

$15,967......... $239/mo

C10073A

$24,976......... $390/mo

P1169

C10068A

$18,886......... $289/mo

P1221

$17,883......... $272/mo

P1222

$13,893......... $207/mo

P1156

$15,483......... $231/mo $18,636......... $284/mo $15,997......... $240/mo

P1180

$13,864......... $206/mo

P1208

$13,937......... $207/mo

P1213

$15,951......... $239/mo $11,986......... $174/mo

P1188

P984

$16,983......... $307/mo

P1191

$11,164......... $191/mo

P1203

$12,862......... $225/mo

B10017A

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P1198

P1212

TRUCKS & SUVs: 2008 2008 2006 2005 2003

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$18,642......... $284/mo

C9339A

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C10060A

$18,847......... $287/mo $14,681......... $262/mo $12,496......... $219/mo

P1216

C10140A P1194

UNDER $10,000: 2006 2005 2004 2003 2002 2000 1999

CHEVY CAVALIER.................................4 door............................................................................................. $6,823....................................... C10064A FORD FOCUS .......................................ZX4, SES.......................................................................................... $8,923.........................................P1195A DODGE DAKOTA .......................... 2WD, ext cab ...................................................................................... $8,451....................................... C10141A FORD F-150.......................................XLT, ext cab........................................................................................ $9,961.........................................P1205A BUICK PARK AVENUE.......leather, 89,000 miles............................................................................... $8,387.........................................P1171A BUICK PARK AVENUE.............leather, loaded..................................................................................... $6,971......................................C10069AA FORD F-150...................................... ext cab, 4x4 ....................................................................................... $8,973........................................ C9184B Payments on 2010-2007 ďŹ gured at 5.99% for 72 months with approved credit, plus tax & title. Payments on 2006-2003 ďŹ gured at 6.99% for 60 months with approved credit, plus tax & title. All payments include minimum trade in of $2000. Any clean title, 99 or newer trade qualiďŹ es for $2000 minimum.

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WHEELS

A26 ■ TOLEDO FREE PRESS

FEBRUARY 21, 2010

TECHNOLOGY

TechTown prepares Detroit expansion with ‘TechTwo’ DETROIT (AP) — A former Cadillac dealership will be the second home for a research and technology park that aims to boost job growth and small-business creation, with the first new tenants expected this spring. Wayne State University’s TechTown business incubator is calling it “TechTwo.’’ The 130,000-square-foot Dalgleish Cadillac building is 30,000 square feet larger than TechTown’s current home “TechOne,’’ which opened nearby in 2004. “Several start-up companies are expected to move into the old building,’’ Randal Charlton, TechTown’s executive director, wrote in a blog post about the project. “These

12 city blocks ... will soon be home to new companies in the arts, alternative fuels, life sciences, education, information technology and automotive spinoffs.’’ The school last year agreed to buy the building for $1 million. TechTown expects the building to be handed over March 1. The building was constructed in 1902 to build Cadillacs and the Dalgleish family had been selling Cadillacs there since 1964. It was closed last year as one part of General Motors’ dealer consolidation plans. The “TechOne’’ facility ran out of space earlier this year and has reportedly kept a waiting list of potential tenants.

TechTown deferred plans to renovate another large former Cadillac building nearby as “TechTwo’’ that was known more recently as the

OF RD EA ES! H U N PRI C

Wayne State University Criminal Justice Building. It would cost more than $10 million to renovate.

“It’s a beautiful old building and it will be phenomenal when we ever get it finished, but we can’t do it now,’’ Charlton said.

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Toyota president expected to travel to US in March WASHINGTON (AP) — Toyota’s top executive is expected to visit the United States in early March amid pressure from a House Republican that the company’s leader testify before Congress about the automaker’s safety lapses. Toyota confirmed that Akio Toyoda, Toyota’s president and the grandson of the company’s founder, was expected to visit the U.S. in early March to meet with government officials and members of Congress but said his schedule was still under discussion. The executive had previously said he intended to travel to America to meet Toyota workers and dealers in the aftermath of a global recall of 8.5 million vehicles. Toyoda’s trip is intended to reassure rattled car owners and company employees following the massive recalls, which have hurt the reputation of the world’s No. 1 automaker and raised questions about how quickly Toyota responded to the safety problems. But his arrival in early March would come about a week after hearings by the House Oversight and Government Reform Committee and the House Energy and Commerce Committee.

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2007 FORD FUSION ....................................12,950 2007 SAAB 9-3 TURBO ................................13,972 2007 BUICK LACROSSE ...............................13,990 2007 SAAB 9-3 WAGON ...............................14,925 2006 DODGE CHARGER RT ...........................15,725 2006 CADILLAC DTS....................................19,950 2007 HONDA ODYSSEY LOADED....................19,950 2007 CHEVY TRAILBLAZER SS ......................23,955 2006 CHEVY SUBURBAN Z-71 ......SOLD........26,574 2008 GMC ACADIA......................................26,955 2007 GMC YUKON 4X4 SLE...........................27,250 2008 BUICK ENCLAVE .................................27,972 2008 GMC YUKON XL DENALI .......................34,500

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WHEELS

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■ A27

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A28 ■ TOLEDO FREE PRESS

FEBRUARY 21, 2010

EDUCATION

Career Expo helps engineering students meet employers By Duane Ramsey TOLEDO FREE PRESS SENIOR BUSINESS WRITER dramsey@toledofreepress.com

TOLEDO FREE PRESS PHOTO BY CHARLIE LONGTON

The UT College of Engineering’s Spring 2010 Career Expo will match engineering students seeking cooperative internships with participating companies Feb. 24. The Spring 2010 Career Expo will be held from 11 a.m. to 4:30 p.m. in Nitschke Hall on the main campus. The semi-annual event is conducted by the Career Management Center for the College of Engineering. Another Career Expo will be held Sept. 29. The Career Expo is open to UT College of Engineering students seeking co-op positions and alumni looking for full-time positions. More than 9,530 students have participated in the co-op program since it was initiated in 1999 with 932 students involved in 2009. More than 40 companies will participate in the Spring Career Expo, including major corporations such as General Electric, Kimberly Clark, Sunoco, Marathon Oil, Cooper Tire & Rubber, DTE Energy, First Energy and local firms such as SSOE, Inc. and Plastic Technologies, Inc. All engineering students at UT are required to complete a minimum

of three semesters of co-op education work experience for a bachelor’s degree in Engineering or Engineering Technology. One-hundred percent of engineering undergrads graduate with at least one year of co-op experience. “The program gives students an opportunity to learn about companies in their field while getting paid for the work and the firms have a chance to check out engineering students,” said Vickie Kuntz, director of the Career Management Center for the College of Engineering. “Many firms hire co-op students full time after graduation. Choosing to employ a co-op allows a business to select from a well-prepared pool of employees,” Kuntz said. The students usually begin the coop work in the spring or summer semester of their sophomore year. Once they start with a firm, they continue to rotate working there for one semester and going to school for a semester until they graduate, said Kuntz. Jaryd Motsinger, a UT sophomore from Bowling Green studying civil engineering, is looking forward to his first career day. He hopes to land a co-op position with a company to gain some experience in structural design and project management, his main areas of interest. “It’s a good opportunity for me to

in Findlay but would consider others. He said he would even go to Dubai if he had the opportunity because there is so much construction happening there. The co-op positions are not lim-

get some hands-on experience and boost my confidence,” said Motsinger. He is interested in possible co-op opportunities with First Energy Corp., SSOE Inc. in Toledo and Marathon Oil

ited to the Toledo area or Northwest Ohio. UT students have worked with hundreds of companies in 40 states, Washington, D.C., Puerto Rico and 34 foreign countries.

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A29

EVENTS

By Chris Schmidbauer TOLEDO FREE PRESS SPORTS EDITOR news@toledofreepress.com

Dave Dravecky’s life story is composed of all the things that would make a great Hollywood movie. The former major league baseball pitcher has experienced it all in his 54 years on this earth. “I have been on quite an amazing journey throughout my DRAVECKY life,” Dravecky said, from his home in Denver, Colo. “It is my hope that my experiences will bring comfort and peace to those going through rocky times in their lives.” In 1988, Dravecky was a talented left-handed pitcher with the San Francisco Giants. But in October of that year, doctors discovered Dravecky had a tumor on his deltoid muscle in his left arm. Many medical experts felt that the southpaw’s playing days were over. “When you hear that you have cancer, you are faced with such a different range of emotions,” he said. “I was confronted with my mortality at the age of 32, and it makes you realize you aren’t invincible anymore.” Despite the doctors’ grim prognosis, Dravecky was determined to try and continue to play baseball, a game he has loved ever since he was a boy in Youngstown, Ohio. “I couldn’t allow myself not to try and come back,” he said. “I wouldn’t have been able to live with myself always wondering whether or not I could have pitched again.” On Aug. 10, 1989, just ten months

after doctors had discovered his tumor, Dravecky made a highly publicized return to the major leagues, and he began pitching for the Giants again. He pitched eight solid innings in his first game back, and helped the Giants defeat the Cincinnati Reds, 4-3. “There were so many people who helped me get to that day in 1989,” Dravecky said. “It was such a cool thing, and with God’s help, I was able to do an amazing thing.” However, just five days later in Montreal, Dravecky’s comeback came to a heart breaking end. While facing the Expos, the southpaw broke his left arm, while throwing a fastball to former player Tim Raines. Dravecky collapsed on the field in agonizing pain. “I remember lying on the ground and being in tremendous pain, and I almost went into shock,” he said. “As I began to collect my thoughts, all I could remember was my teammate, Bob Nepper’s words replaying in my head. He told me that it wasn’t my comeback that was the miracle, but the position that God had put me in, so that I could spread his love and message to the rest of the world because of my comeback. Bob’s words have really defined what my wife Jan and I have done with the rest of our lives.” Dravecky’s arm and shoulder had to be amputated in 1991, but that has not stopped him from sharing his story as a motivational speaker. “I have felt that by sharing my story, it gives others comfort and hope, and that is my way of paying it forward to those who are in need,” Dravecky said. It is largely that message that led the Make-A-Wish foundation of Northwest Ohio to select Dravecky as its keynote speaker for the 16th annual Celebrity Sports Auction to take place

ASSOCIATED PRESS

Dravecky to offer message of hope at Make-A-Wish dinner

FORMER MAJOR LEAGUE BASEBALL PITCHER DAVE DRAVECKY WILL SPEAK IN TOLEDO FEB. 24.

Feb. 24 at the SeaGate Convention Centre in Downtown Toledo. “Having Dave Dravecky as our keynote speaker is exciting and sobering,” said Eric Slough, Executive Director, Make-A-Wish Foundation of Northwest Ohio. “His experiences with hope, perseverance and realizing dreams are very similar to what our wish children experience on a daily basis.”

Dravecky is excited to come to the Glass City to share his inspirational story and help raise money for such a special cause. “I am honored and privileged to help the foundation to make a wish come true for a family that is suffering,” Dravecky said. “The foundation’s mission is such a great cause, and anything that I can do to help

encourage the community to see the value in an organization that works hard at putting a smile on a person’s face in their hour of need is an opportunity I couldn’t pass up.”

On the web visit www.northwestohio.wish.org and click on links for more information.


SPORTS

A30 ■ TOLEDO FREE PRESS

FEBRUARY 21, 2010

Toledo Men’s Basketball vs. Western Michigan Wednesday, Feb. 24 at 7 p.m.

Rocket Basketball Doubleheader

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ARTS LIFE

FEBRUARY 21, 2010

Visit www.toledofreepress.com

■ A31

IN CONCERT

Styx rocks on tour with REO Speedwagon, .38 Special Exclusively online at www.toledofreepress.com: An in-depth interview with REO Speedwagon’s Kevin Cronan on the band’s past and future. TOLEDO FREE PRESS STAFF WRITER vkroll@toledofreepress.com

“Can’t Stop Rockin’ ” — it’s the name of the tour and a single featuring

Styx and REO Speedwagon. And that’s no coincidence. “I think it was our manager Charlie Brusco’s idea; all the managers always want to title a tour and it’s usually

corny for the rest of us, but he came up with ‘Can’t Stop Rockin,’ ’ and he said to Tommy [Shaw from Styx] and Kevin Cronin from REO, ‘Why don’t you guys write a song with that title?’ And

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that sounded even more Spinal Tap to me, but we actually embraced it,” said Styx bass player Ricky Phillips. “The song, we didn’t take it too seriously; we just went in and cut it kind of old school, nice and quickly like you used to do records, and it came out sounding great,” he continued during a call from his home in Austin, Texas. “It’s been a lot of fun to close the shows with that song and both bands getting up on stage.” Fans can look forward to that finale when Styx, REO Speedwagon and .38 Special play the Lucas County Arena at 7 p.m. Feb. 28. Tickets range from $37.50 to $57.50. “When you’re doing the big rock show and you’ve got your staging with the drop screens, the LED screens and the big lighting and the big staging, there’s just something about that. It’s something that was awe-inspiring to me when I was a kid, and I used to see bands in the big arena setting like that,” Phillips said. “Some bands aren’t set up to do that, but Styx music and a lot of other bands from that genre cater well to the huge PA system and thousands of people in one big room together.” According to Phillips, the opening band usually plays a shorter set, and Styx and REO each take the stage for about 70 minutes. “You can’t get real deep into the catalog like you would if it was just an evening with Styx, but in 70 minutes, we can play a lot of hits,” he said. And Styx is known for its string of hits in the late ’70s and early ’80s: “Lady,” “Crystal Ball,” “Blue Collar Man,” “Renegade,” “Come Sail Away,” “Fooling Yourself,” “Babe,” “The Best

of Times” and “Too Much Time on My Hands.” In 1979, Phillips was playing bass in The Babys when the band opened for Styx. “I’ve actually known the guys, geez, 31 years now,” he said. “We had a blast; they were in their heyday, in their prime, and we were kind of the opening act for everybody back in those days. But it was something that turned out to be prophetic, and I never would have imagined at this point in my career I would actually be in Styx.” After four consecutive albums certified multi-platinum by the Recording Industry Association of America — “The Grand Illusion,” “Pieces of Eight,” “Cornerstone” and “Paradise Theater” — Styx broke up in 1984. The group has reformed with different lineups, including its current one with Phillips, singer and guitarist Shaw, original singer and guitarist James Young, drummer Todd Sucherman and keyboardist and singer Lawrence Gowan. Original bassist Chuck Panozzo makes occasional appearances. Phillips said that since he joined the band in 2003, there’s been no talk about reuniting with singer and keyboardist Dennis DeYoung. What about a reunion of The Babys? “It would be so much fun to get together and do that catalog of songs again,” Phillips said. “That was when rock ‘n’ roll was rock ‘n’ roll, man.”

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

PHOTO COURTESY STYX

By Vicki L. Kroll

■ TOP ROW, FROM LEFT, JAMES YOUNG, RICKY PHILLIPS AND CHUCK PANOZZO, FRONT ROW, FROM LEFT, TODD SUCHERMAN, LAWRENCE GOWAN AND TOMMY SHAW.


ARTS LIFE

A32 ■ TOLEDO FREE PRESS

FEBRUARY 21, 2010

PAINTING

TMA exhibition to highlight Whistler works, influences By John Dorsey TOLEDO FREE PRESS STAFF WRITER jdorsey@toledofreepress.com

The Toledo Museum of Art will soon showcase the work of one of the art world’s most celebrated figures. Its latest exhibition, “Whistler: Influences, Friends and the Not-So-Friendly,” is set to open Feb. 26 in the Works on Paper Gallery. The show examines a number of etchings and lithotint prints by famed painter/printmaker James McNeill Whistler, as well as works by those who greatly influenced his life and artistic style. The exhibit, which features 60 of Whistler’s works, is drawn from the museum’s private collection, and of-

fers patrons a rare treat. “This is the first time, since I think around the 1960s, that we as an institution have offered an exhibit that highlights Whistler. We had acquired a piece by another artist of Whistler and that’s one of the things that got us thinking about a show of his work,” said Assistant Curator, Tom Loeffler. “It was just time. We have around 100 pieces of his work in our private collection. We chose the pieces in the exhibit, first because of the quality of the prints, certain pieces had been damaged over the years, and secondly, because of how they relate to the other artists on display. To fully understand Whistler’s work, the viewer must consider the impact of

the people — both friends and those he alienated — around him.” The exhibit also features by artists such as Henri Fantin-Latour, Sir Francis Seymour Haden, Charles Emile Jacque, Alphonse Legros, Charles Meryon and Joseph Pennell. “One of the things Whistler’s printmaking work offers patrons that his paintings do not is the line work, you simply won’t get the same quality of line,” Loeffler

said. “Whistler etched, rather than painted, when his finances were in trouble because he was more successful in selling his etchings. Working on this exhibit helped me take something new from Whistler’s work, I don’t think I ever really understood before what he was trying to get across in his work the way I do now. I really would like everyone to know that if they’re coming in expecting pieces like Whistler’s Mother, they are in for

a surprise, this show is something very different.” Whistler was born in Lowell, Mass., in 1834. He died in London in 1903 at the age of 69. He is known today for his association with Tonalism. “Whistler: Influences, Friends and the Not-So-Friendly” will remain on display through May 30, and is free and open to the public. For more information, visit www. toledomuseum.org.

Does Toledo Have Talent? Hell Yeah! Sidelines at the Arena is giving you every Wednesday to prove it at our Open Mic Night. Ever wanted to be a comedian or do an acoustic act in front of an audience? Come on down-tell some jokes, sing a song, read a poem, or just tell a story.

Now is your chance to have 5 minutes of fame on stage. Those who qualify will perform with professional comedians at our monthly Comedy Night, or be paid by Sidelines to perform your acoustic act at one of our 3 locations. We will be selling Drafts for a buck, and our House Shot of the Night:

Liquid Courage for $1.00 We invite our friends from the neighboring bars and restaurants to come and enjoy great drink specials in a fun atmosphere.

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TV LISTINGS

FEBRUARY 21, 2010 Sunday Morning 8 am ABC 13 CBS 11 FOX 36 NBC 24 PBS 30 A&E BRAVO COM DISN ESN FAM FOOD HGTV LIF MTV TBS TCM TNT USA WTO5

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One Life to Live General Hospital As the World Turns Let’s Make a Deal Judge Mathis The People’s Court The Doctors XXI Winter Olympics Varied Programs The Sopranos CSI: Miami Varied Programs Movie Varied Programs Varied Programs SportsCenter Lines Baseball Sabrina Sabrina Full House Full House Lee Boy Grill Guy’s Tyler’s Ult. Dime Challenge Colour Color Wife Swap Housewives Varied Programs Cribs Cribs Raymond Raymond Payne Jim Movie Varied Programs Cold Case Cold Case XXI Winter Olympics Varied Programs Payne Payne The Tyra Show

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Ellen DeGeneres News News Oprah Winfrey News 11 at 5:00 Seinfeld Raymond Deal-Deal Smarter The Dr. Oz Show Electric Cyberchas Cold Case Files The First 48

News ABC News News CBS News TMZ News News NBC News BBC News NewsHour The First 48 Real Housewives Presents Varied Married... Married... Scrubs Scrubs Phineas Deck NFL Live Burning Around Interrupt SportsCenter What I What I Gilmore Girls 8 Rules 8 Rules Cooking Italian Contessa Home Cooking 30-Min. Varied Programs Divine Get It Sold Holmes on Homes Housewives Housewives Grey’s Anatomy Sil. Library Sil. Library Parental Going Going Made Raymond King King Friends Friends The Office Movie Varied Programs Movie Varied Law & Order Law & Order Law & Order NCIS The Tyra Show Wendy Williams Show Fam. Guy Fam. Guy

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NBA Basketball Cleveland Cavaliers at Orlando Magic. NBA Basketball Boston Celtics at Denver Nuggets. News ABC Funny Home Videos Extreme Makeover Desperate House. Brothers & Sisters News At-Movies College Basketball PGA Tour Golf WGC Accenture Match Play Championship, Final. (Live) (CC) News CBS 60 Minutes (N) (CC) Amazing Race Undercover Boss (N) Cold Case (N) (CC) News CSI: NY Truth Abt Cats NASCAR Racing Sprint Cup: Auto Club 500. From Auto Club Speedway in Fontana, Calif. (S Live) (CC) ’Til Death ’Til Death Simpsons Cleveland Fam. Guy American News Recap Office Office XXI Winter Olympics Hockey, Skiing, Biathlon. Hockey: Russia vs. Czech Republic; freestyle skiing; biathlon. News NBC XXI Winter Olympics Figure Skating, Speed Skating, Freestyle Skiing, Bobsled. (CC) News Olympics Workshop Woods Kitchen Sewing Viewers’ Choice Popular programs. Sessions Tuba U Soundstage (N) (CC) NOVA “Extreme Ice” Nature (N) (CC) Masterpiece Classic (CC) (DVS) Theater Austin City Limits I Survived (CC) ››› The Green Mile (1999, Drama) Tom Hanks, David Morse. (CC) CSI: Miami “Rush” CSI: Miami (CC) CSI: Miami “Burned” Criminal Minds (CC) Criminal Minds (CC) Criminal Minds (CC) Criminal Minds (CC) Shear Match Matchmaker Matchmaker Mill. Matchmaker Mill. Matchmaker Law Order: CI Law Order: CI Law Order: CI Law Order: CI Law Order: CI Law Order: CI Barbershop 2: Back ››› Beverly Hills Cop (1984) Eddie Murphy. (CC) › How High (2001) Method Man. (CC) ››› Scary Movie (2000) Shawn Wayans. Chris Rock: Kill the Messenger Sinbad: Where U Been? (N) (CC) Chris Hannah Montana Starstruck (2010) (CC) Montana Montana Montana Montana Montana Montana Montana Montana Montana Montana Montana ›› The Color of Friendship Montana Wizards Montana PBA Bowling Strong Spanish Primera Division Soccer Poker - Europe SportsCenter (Live) (CC) NBA NBA Basketball: Hawks at Warriors NBA Basketball Prince The Prince & Me 2: The Royal Wedding Another Cinderella Story (2008) (CC) ›› The Notebook (2004) Ryan Gosling, Rachel McAdams. (CC) ›› Step Up (2006) Channing Tatum. Premiere. (CC) Home Videos Home Daddy Diner, Drive-In Diners Diners Best Best Cakes Cakes Chefography Challenge Challenge Iron Chef America Chopped Flay B. Flay First Property Buck Buck Income Income House House Get Sold Unsella To Sell To Sell Income House Outdoor Block House House Holmes on Homes For Rent Income They Shoot Divas, Don’t They? (2002) (CC) Intimate Stranger (2006) Kari Matchett. (CC) Ann Rule’s Everything She Ever Wanted (2009) Gina Gershon, Ryan McPartlin. (CC) Ann Rule’s Too Late to Say Goodbye (CC) Too Late-Say Sweet Lil’ Mama America’s Best Dance Crew Taking Life, Liz Life, Liz Lil’ Mama Sweet The Real World (CC) South Pk S. Park America’s Best Dance Crew Taking 16 and Pregnant Life, Liz Life, Liz ››› High Fidelity ›› The Ringer (2005) Johnny Knoxville. › The Sweetest Thing (2002) ››› Hitch (2005) Will Smith, Eva Mendes. (CC) ›› American Wedding (2003) ›› American Wedding (2003) Jason Biggs. Sweetest Lust Life ›››› The Bridge on the River Kwai (1957) William Holden. (CC) ››› Doctor Zhivago (1965) Omar Sharif, Julie Christie. (CC) (DVS) ›››› On the Waterfront (1954, Drama) (CC) ›››› North by Northwest (1959) (CC) (DVS) ›› Resident Evil: Apocalypse (2004) (CC) ›› Deep Impact (1998) Robert Duvall, Tea Leoni. (CC) ›› The Chronicles of Riddick (2004) Vin Diesel. (CC) ››› Independence Day (1996) Will Smith. (CC) ››› Independence Day (1996) ››› Casino Royale ››› Ocean’s Thirteen (2007) George Clooney. (CC) ›› Pirates of the Caribbean: At World’s End (2007) Johnny Depp. (CC) ››› Pirates of the Caribbean: The Curse of the Black Pearl (CC) House (CC) ››› The Missing (2003, Western) Tommy Lee Jones. Payne King Scrubs Fam. Guy Fam. Guy Two Men Two Men Brian McKnight ›› Road House (1989) Patrick Swayze. Made in Hollywood Comedy.TV (N) (CC)

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

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

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Good Morning News This Week (N) (CC) Conklin Bridges Roundtabl NBA Your Morning Sunday CBS News Sunday Morning (N) Nation Mass Naked College Basketball Paid Prog. Makeover FOX News Sunday Paid Prog. Anxiety Paid Prog. Paid Prog. Truth Abt Cats Today (N) (CC) Meet the Press (N) Van Impe Paid Prog. Paid Prog. Paid Prog. XXI Winter Olympics Word Sid Super Dinosaur Toledo Toledo Plugged-In Sessions Antiques Roadshow Biography (CC) Private Sessions (CC) The Sopranos (CC) The Sopranos (CC) The Sopranos (CC) Real Housewives Real Housewives Happens Shear Genius (CC) Shear Genius (CC) Shear Presents Hart: Grown Little Man ›› Barbershop (2002, Comedy) Ice Cube. (CC) Barbershop 2: Back in Business Agent Oso Manny Mickey Mickey Movers Handy Phineas Phineas Montana Montana SportsCenter (CC) Outside Reporters SportsCenter (Live) (CC) ›› Stick It (2006) (CC) ›› Legally Blonde (2001) Reese Witherspoon. ›› The Prince & Me (2004) Julia Stiles. (CC) Chef Ingred. Fix Cooking Giada Contessa Grill It Guy’s 30-Min. Money Dinners Curb App’l Block Yard Holmes on Homes Unsellable Designed Get It Sold House House Hour of Power (CC) Paid Prog. Health Will-Grace Will-Grace ›› The Proposal (2000) Jennifer Esposito. Life, Liz Taking America’s Best Dance Crew Sweet Sweet Sweet Sweet Sweet › Boat Trip (2003) Cuba Gooding Jr.. (CC) ›› The Mexican (2001) Brad Pitt. (CC) ››› High Fidelity (CC) Bachelor in Paradise ›››› Citizen Kane (1941) Orson Welles. ›››› Lust for Life (1956) Kirk Douglas. Law & Order “Killerz” Law & Order “DNR” Law & Order “Merger” Law & Order “Justice” Law & Order In Touch White Collar (CC) Burn Notice (CC) ››› Casino Royale (2006) Daniel Craig. (CC) Paid Prog. Paid Prog. Paid Prog. Paid Prog. Paid Prog. Paid Prog. Paid Prog. Paid Prog. Missing Old House

Visit www.toledofreepress.com

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Ent Insider The Bachelor: On the Wings of Love (N) (CC) Castle (CC) News Nightline Wheel Jeopardy! How I Met Purpose Two Men Big Bang CSI: Miami (CC) News Letterman The Office The Office House (PA) (CC) 24 (N) (PA) (CC) Fox Toledo News Seinfeld King-Hill News News XXI Winter Olympics Figure Skating, Freestyle Skiing, Ski Jumping. (S Live) (CC) NewsHour Business Antiques Roadshow Patsy Mink: Ahead American Masters (CC) Yellows Criminal Minds (CC) Intervention “Danielle” Intervention “Rob” Hoarders (CC) Paranor Paranor Real Housewives Real Housewives Real Housewives Kell on Earth (N) (CC) Kell on Earth (CC) RENO 911! RENO 911! RENO 911! RENO 911! Tosh.0 Futurama Futurama South Pk Daily Colbert Wizards Montana ››› Akeelah and the Bee (2006, Drama) Phineas Montana Wizards Deck College Basketball College Basketball Oklahoma at Kansas. (Live) SportsCenter (CC) Secret-Teen Secret-Teen Make It or Break It (N) Greek (N) (CC) The 700 Club (CC) Challenge Good Eats Good Eats Unwrap Unwrap Diners Diners Good Eats Unwrap House House Property Property House First Place House For Rent Unsellable First Place Grey’s Anatomy (CC) Grey’s Anatomy (CC) › The Messengers (2007) Kristen Stewart. Will-Grace Will-Grace Sweet America’s Best Dance Crew True Life (N) Buried Life, Liz Buried Life, Liz Seinfeld Seinfeld Fam. Guy Fam. Guy Fam. Guy Fam. Guy Fam. Guy Fam. Guy Lopez Tonight Sunset Boulevard (CC) ››› Five Graves to Cairo (1943) ››› The Fighting Sullivans (1944) (CC) It Happen Bones (CC) Men of a Certain Age Men of a Certain Age Men of a Certain Age The Closer (CC) NCIS “In the Dark” NCIS “Trojan Horse” WWE Monday Night RAW (S Live) (CC) White Collar “All In” Two Men Two Men One Tree Hill (N) (CC) Life Unexpected (N) Scrubs Scrubs Friends Bernie

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

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HEALTH NOTIFICATION–Are You Hard of Hearing? Beltone wishes to field test a remarkable new digital hearing instrument. This offer is FREE of charge and you are under no obligation. These revolutionary 100% digital instruments are the latest technology to comfortable and almost invisibly help you hear more clearly. If you wish to participate, you will be required to have your hearing tested in our office FREE OF CHARGE to determine candidacy. Benefits of hearing aids may vary by type and degree of hearing loss, noise environment, accuracy of hearing test and proper fit.

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11:30

Ent Insider Lost “The Substitute” Lost “Lighthouse” (N) the forgotten (N) (CC) News Nightline Wheel Jeopardy! NCIS (CC) NCIS: Los Angeles The Good Wife (CC) News Letterman The Office The Office American Idol (S Live) (CC) Fox Toledo News Seinfeld King-Hill News News XXI Winter Olympics Figure Skating, Bobsled, Freestyle Skiing. (S Live) (CC) NewsHour Business NOVA (CC) (DVS) Frontline (N) Independent Lens (N) (CC) e2 (CC) Criminal Minds (CC) Criminal Minds (CC) Criminal Minds (CC) Criminal Minds (CC) Criminal Minds (CC) Mill. Matchmaker Mill. Matchmaker Mill. Matchmaker Mill. Matchmaker Mill. Matchmaker Daily Colbert Scrubs Scrubs S. Park S. Park South Pk South Pk Daily Colbert Wizards Montana Up, Up and Away (2000) (CC) Phineas Phineas Montana Wizards Deck College Basketball Illinois at Michigan. (Live) College Basketball Tennessee at Florida. SportsCenter (CC) Funniest Home Videos Funniest Home Videos Funniest Home Videos Funniest Home Videos The 700 Club (CC) Challenge Cakes Cakes Unwrap Best Thing Chopped Good Eats Unwrap House House First Place First Place House Buck House House Property First Place Grey’s Anatomy (CC) Grey’s Anatomy (CC) ››› The Pelican Brief (1993) Julia Roberts, Denzel Washington. (CC) True Life S. Park S. Park 16 and Pregnant 16 and Pregnant (N) 16 and Pregnant Seinfeld Seinfeld The Office The Office The Office The Office The Office The Office Lopez Tonight ››› Topper (1937) ››› Ruggles of Red Gap (1935) ››› One Hour With You (1932) ›››› Gigi (1958) Bones (CC) Bones (CC) Bones Block party. Southland “Derailed” CSI: NY “On the Job” Law & Order: SVU Law & Order: SVU Law & Order: SVU White Collar (N) (CC) Psych (CC) Two Men Two Men 90210 (CC) Melrose Place “June” Scrubs Scrubs Friends Bernie

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TV LISTINGS

A34■ TOLEDO FREE PRESS

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

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February 27, 2010

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Good Morning Emperor Replace So Raven So Raven Montana Suite Life Rangers Rangers Your Morning Saturday Busytown Sabrina Busytown Noonbory College Basketball Pets.TV Hollywood Saved-Bell Paid Prog. Weekend Weekend Weekend Weekend NASCAR Paid Prog. Today (N) (CC) Paid Prog. Paid Prog. Turbo Shelldon Penguins! Babar (EI) Willa’s Jane WordWrld Sid Super Dinosaur MotorWk America Wild Ohio Michigan Nature (CC) Business Business Sell House Sell House Sell House Sell House Flip This House (CC) ››› Shanghai Noon Shear Genius (CC) Shear Genius (CC) Shear Genius (CC) Shear Genius (CC) Kell on Earth (CC) ›› National Lampoon’s European Vacation › Superstar (1999) Molly Shannon. (CC) Married... Married... Agent Oso Handy M. Mouse Mickey Movers Handy Phineas Phineas Read It and Weep SportsCenter (CC) SportsCenter (CC) SportsCenter (CC) College GameDay College Basketball ’70s Show ’70s Show ’70s Show ’70s Show ’70s Show ››› My Girl (1991) Anna Chlumsky, Macaulay Culkin. (CC) Lee Krieger Tyler’s Ult. Mexican 30-Min. Chef Home Paula Cooking Ingred. Fix Hammer Carter Can Holmes on Homes Holmes on Homes Head Sweat To Sell Curb Paid Prog. Paid Prog. Paid Prog. Thin Paid Prog. Paid Prog. ›› Footloose (1984, Drama) Kevin Bacon. (CC) Life, Liz Life, Liz Taking the Stage (CC) Taking Taking Taking Taking Turn the Beat Around Yes, Dear Yes, Dear Yes, Dear Yes, Dear ›› Corrina, Corrina (1994) Whoopi Goldberg. (CC) Cookout Tom Saw. ››› Dick Tracy (1990) Warren Beatty. (CC) ››› The Manchurian Candidate (1962) (CC) From Here Law & Order Law & Order Leverage (CC) The Closer (CC) Mission: Impossible III Paid Prog. Paid Prog. NCIS “Ex-File” (CC) Psych “Think Tank” Psych (CC) XXI Winter Olympics Rollbots Dinosaur Yu-Gi-Oh! Yu-Gi-Oh! Sonic X Sonic X Turtles Chaotic Planet X King

February 27, 2010

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Ent Insider The Deep End (N) Grey’s Anatomy (CC) Private Practice (CC) News Nightline Wheel Jeopardy! Survivor: Hero The Mentalist (CC) CSI: Crime Scn News Letterman The Office The Office American Idol (CC) Past Life (N) (CC) Fox Toledo News Seinfeld King-Hill News News XXI Winter Olympics Figure Skating, Freestyle Skiing. (S Live) (CC) NewsHour Business Toledo Stories (CC) Masterpiece Mystery! (CC) (DVS) Life Charlie Rose (N) (CC) The First 48 (CC) The First 48 (CC) The First 48 (CC) Manhunter Manhunters: Fugitive Manhunter Real Housewives Real Housewives Real Housewives Real Housewives Real Housewives Daily Colbert Aziz Ansari: Intimate Nick Swardson Martin Sarah Daily Colbert Wizards Montana Starstruck (2010) Sterling Knight. Phineas Phineas Montana Wizards Deck College Basketball Teams TBA. (Live) College Basketball Teams TBA. (Live) SportsCenter (CC) ’70s Show ’70s Show ›› Nancy Drew (2007) Emma Roberts. (CC) Funniest Home Videos The 700 Club (CC) Challenge Iron Chef America Iron Chef America Cakes Cakes Good Eats Unwrap House House First Place First Place House House House House Property First Place Grey’s Anatomy (CC) Grey’s Anatomy (CC) Project Runway (CC) Project Runway (CC) Models Runway The Real World (CC) Taking America’s Best Dance Crew America’s Best Dance Taking Dance Seinfeld Seinfeld › The Whole Ten Yards (2004) Bruce Willis. Fam. Guy Fam. Guy Lopez Tonight Hail the Hero ›››› The Killers (1946) Burt Lancaster. (CC) ›››› The Man Who Shot Liberty Valance Bones (CC) NBA Basketball Cleveland Cavaliers at Boston Celtics. NBA Basketball NCIS (CC) House “Frozen” (CC) House “Locked In” Burn Notice (N) (CC) White Collar (CC) Two Men Two Men The Vampire Diaries Supernatural (CC) Scrubs Scrubs Friends Bernie

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

February 25, 2010

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Ent Insider ››› Blades of Glory (2007) Will Ferrell. (CC) 20/20 (CC) News Nightline Wheel Jeopardy! Ghost Whisperer (CC) Medium (CC) NUMB3RS (CC) News Letterman The Office The Office The 41st NAACP Image Awards (S Live) (CC) Fox Toledo News Seinfeld King/Hill News News XXI Winter Olympics Speed Skating, Skiing, Bobsled. (S Live) (CC) News NewsHour Business Wash. Deadline Bill Moyers Journal (N) NOW, PBS Plugged-In Charlie Rose (N) (CC) Criminal Minds (CC) Criminal Minds (CC) Criminal Minds (CC) Criminal Minds (CC) Criminal Minds (CC) Real Housewives Real Housewives Real Housewives ››› A League of Their Own (1992) (CC) Daily Colbert Tosh.0 Martin Presents Presents Presents Presents Comedy Comedy Deck Deck Wizards Deck Phineas Phineas Wizards Montana Phineas Deck NBA Basketball Dallas Mavericks at Atlanta Hawks. (Live) NBA Basketball Orlando Magic at New Orleans Hornets. Funniest Home Videos Funniest Home Videos Funniest Home Videos Funniest Home Videos The 700 Club (CC) Challenge Chopped Diners Diners Best Thing Best Thing Good Eats Rachael House House Property Property House Buck House House Unsellable First Place Grey’s Anatomy (CC) Grey’s Anatomy (CC) Project Runway (CC) Project Runway (CC) Models Will-Grace Taking America’s Best Dance Crew America’s Best Dance Turn the Beat Around (2010) Romina D’Ugo. Seinfeld Seinfeld Fam. Guy Fam. Guy ›› Diary of a Mad Black Woman (2005) Kimberly Elise. I Think ››› Victor/Victoria ››› Thoroughly Modern Millie (1967) Julie Andrews. ›››› Ordinary People (1980) (CC) Bones (CC) Bones (CC) ›› The Longest Yard (2005, Comedy) Adam Sandler. (CC) Replacemt NCIS “Family” (CC) NCIS “Ex-File” (CC) ›› Final Destination 2 (2003) Ali Larter. (CC) ›› The Skeleton Key Two Men Two Men Smallville (N) (CC) Smallville “Crossfire” Scrubs Scrubs Friends Bernie

1 pm

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February 26, 2010

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Ent Insider Family Middle Family Middle Cougar Cougar News Nightline Wheel Jeopardy! Christine Gary Criminal Minds (CC) CSI: NY “Epilogue” News Letterman The Office The Office American Idol (S Live) (CC) Fox Toledo News Seinfeld King-Hill News News XXI Winter Olympics Freestyle Skiing, Bobsled, Speed Skating, Skiing. (CC) News NewsHour Business Faces of America The National Parks: America’s Best Idea Charlie Rose (N) (CC) Criminal Minds (CC) Bounty Hunter Bounty Hunter Bounty Dog Seagal Seagal Mill. Matchmaker Mill. Matchmaker Shear Genius (CC) Shear Genius (N) (CC) Shear Genius (CC) Daily Colbert Chappelle Chappelle Futurama Futurama South Pk Tosh.0 (N) Daily Colbert Wizards Montana Life Is Ruff (2005) Kyle Massey. Phineas Phineas Montana Wizards Deck College Basketball NBA Basketball Los Angeles Lakers at Dallas Mavericks. SportsCtr. ’70s Show ›› Step Up (2006) Channing Tatum, Jenna Dewan. (CC) Funniest Home Videos The 700 Club (CC) Challenge South Beach Flay B. Flay Dinner: Impossible Good Eats Unwrap House House Property Property House House Holmes on Homes Income First Place Grey’s Anatomy (CC) Grey’s Anatomy (CC) ››› The Jane Austen Book Club (2007) (CC) Will-Grace Will-Grace 16 and Pregnant S. Park S. Park The Real World (CC) The Real World (N) The Real World (CC) Seinfeld Seinfeld Payne Payne Browns Browns Browns Browns Lopez Tonight Indiscretion ››› The Diary of Anne Frank (1959) Millie Perkins. (CC) ››› Alfie (1966) (CC) Bones Heart failure. Bones (CC) Talladega Nights: The Ballad of Ricky Bobby Leverage (CC) NCIS “Angel of Death” NCIS “Recoil” (CC) NCIS “About Face” Psych “Think Tank” Burn Notice (CC) Two Men Two Men Life Unexpected (CC) Gossip Girl (CC) Scrubs Scrubs Friends Bernie

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

February 24, 2010

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9:30

10 pm 10:30 11 pm 11:30

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ARTS LIFE

FEBRUARY 21, 2010

Visit www.toledofreepress.com

■ A35

‘Storytime’ unites Nick Jr. superstars Dora, Kai-lan By Michael S. Miller TOLEDO FREE PRESS EDITOR IN CHIEF mmiller@toledofreepress.com

Grown-up music fans may consider this summer’s Lollapalooza tour, with its rumored lineup of Lady Gaga, Green Day and Soundgarden, to be 2010’s hottest ticket, but the preschool set has its own superstar tour to look forward to. Nickelodeon and Broadway Across America have teamed-up to present “Storytime Live!” a stage show that unites DADAP Dora the Explorer, The Wonder Pets!, The Backyardigans, Kai-lan and hosts Moose A. Moose and Zee. The show will stop at Toledo’s Stranahan Theater at 7 p.m. Feb. 22 and 10:30 a.m. and 7 p.m. Feb. 23. The 70-city tour is described as a stage performance that “takes kids and their families on brand-new adventures, from leaping into FaiMELE rytale Land with Dora and Sleeping Boots, journeying through Filthingham with The Backyardigans, hopping into Wonderland with the Wonder Pets! or jumping on clouds with Kai-lan and the Monkey King.” In anticipation of the show, Dora will be at Imagination Station from 11 a.m. to 12:30 p.m. and at Books-AMillion in Levis Commons from 2 to 3 p.m. on Feb. 20. Two of the shows actors, Peej Mele, who plays host Moose A. Moose, and Laura Dadap, who portrays Kai-lan, took a break from rehearsals Feb. 12 to speak by phone with Toledo Free Press from a York, Pa., coffee shop. Both young actors have appeared in several regional theater productions, and were excited about embarking on

their first national tour. Toledo Free Press: Kai-lan is a pioneering character for Chinese culture, much like Dora was for Hispanic culture. Moose is the main teacher on Nick Jr. How familiar were you with the impact of these characters when you took the role? Laura Dadap: I have a lot of little friends who love Kai-lan, friends’ kids who are so excited to see it. This format is like a rock concert that brings all the kids’ favorites together. You can’t make an exact replica of what you see on TV, but it’s close. Chinese was my first language, so I know how authentic the show is with the Mandarin language and culture. My grandmother loves that I am using my Chinese skills. Peej Mele: I am starting to realize how big a star Moose is. Kids just jump up and down for him. Moose is a wonderful, unique character. The role is exciting and funny for kids and parents. They do a great job with the songs. TFP: It must be a physical challenge, acting, dancing and singing as you work through the choreography with actors in full costume and the puppets. Dadap: We are very aware of their presence; a lot of the actors communicate through their voices and body language. It is amazing how intricate the costumes are. My parents say I’ve been singing since I came out of the womb, so this is my love. Mele: Most of the animal characters are wearing suits perfectly adapted from the cartoons; the engineering is amazing. It’s not as overwhelming as one would think, because it’s so well choreographed. As actors, we assimilate into the characters and it becomes real while we are on stage. TFP: Kai-lan is a preschool age girl. How do you inhabit that on stage and still play to parents in the audience? Dadap: There’s something in the show for everyone. This is important, because it will be the first many of these kids have seen any kind of theater, and we want to inspire them to go again. We are careful to be real with the kids; we don’t talk down to them. Parents know we are trying to

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pets really take on a life of their own and are wonderfully expressive. I love being onstage with Zee. All the characters get along well. Dadap: Everyone in the show has been wonderful. There haven’t been any backstage issues; we all know the

mission is for the kids. Tickets for “Storytime Live!” in Toledo can be purchased by calling (419) 4741333, visiting the Stranahan Theater Box Office or ordering online at the Web site www.ticketmaster.com.

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DEATH NOTICES

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FEBRUARY 21, 2010 Our Warren Thomas Communications Special Offer

ANGELA’S ANGELS

OBITUARY

F. Russell Motter, 1929 - 2010 F. Russell Motter, of Genoa, passed away Feb. 10 in the Perrysburg Care Rehabilitation Center. Motter was a former Toledo Free Press deliveryman. MOTTER “Russ could start a conversation with anyone. He

loved engaging people and making them laugh. I know he treasured his job with Toledo Free Press. Dropping off newspapers meant he had the opportunity to tell someone his latest, greatest joke. He’ll sorely be missed by his family, friends and all the people who knew him,” said Rebecca Booth, his stepdaughter. Motter worked for 37 years as an accountant for Marathon Oil. He was an active member of the Elks Lodge, a Boy Scouts leader and high school

football referee. He is survived by his wife Rose Booth-Motter, sons Richard, James, William and John Motter, step daughters Booth and Julie Humbarger, six grandchildren and his first wife Ruth Burner. The family is requesting donations be made to St. John’s United Church of Christ in Genoa where Motter served as a Deacon and on Consistory for many years. — Kristen Rapin

FEB. 16

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ARNOLD, Dorothy J. “Jean” age 63 Toledo, OH www.cbrownfuneralhome.com DAUER, Mary H. age 90, Toledo, OH W.K Sujkowski & Son Funeral Home KAZMIERSKI Michael E. age 42 Toledo, OH www.newcomertoledo.com KURUCZ Charlotte P. age 81 Waterville,www.peinertfuneralhome.com PARSE, Cindy L. age 53 Oregon, OH www.egglestonmeinert.com

BAUM, Jacqueline E. age 82 Toledo, OH www.blanchardstrabler.com BURGERMEISTER, Raymond J. “Burger” Metamora, OH www.weigelfuneralhomes.com DANKO, Rose M. age 97 Toledo, OH www.walterfuneralhome.com GOCHENOUR, Catherine A. “Murr” age 67 www.newcomertoledo.com

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Partners

Thank you community for your generous support! Because of you and your willingness to share clothes that you no longer wear, we were able to collect over 85 tons of clothes. This is one of the area’s most successful drives. During our community distribution event, your donation provided clothing for over 6,000 individuals. Your contributions will continue to serve countless others in need through Cherry Street’s ongoing Community Shop Days. If you would like to continue to volunteer for Community Shop Days or if you are in need of clothing, please contact Cherry Street Mission Ministries: 419-242-5141, ext. 100 or csmm@cherrystreetmission.org.

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CLASSIFIED

FEBRUARY 21, 2010

EMPLOYMENT

EMPLOYMENT - GENERAL

COMMUNITY – GARAGE SALE

DRIVER/DELIVERY/COURIER

GENERAL LABOR Assistant needed for upholstery/canvas shop. Parttime to start, possible full-time. Call (419) 215-1093.

Downtown Sylvania Sidewalk/Garage Sale. Saturday, May 22. 9am-3pm. If you would like to participate in this sale, spaces are approximately 9 ft x 12 ft. $35 per space. Contact Lisa, First Impressions, (419) 824-4153 or 419-882-2653.

TRAVEL, TRAVEL, TRAVEL! $500 Sign-on bonus. Seeking sharp guys and gals, Rock-n-Roll Atmosphere, Blue Jean Environment! Jan 1-888-361-1526, Dianne 1-877-724-3386.

GENERAL LABOR Boy Scouts of America. –Program Aide. The primary job responsibility will be acting as the school’s Cubmaster or Scoutmaster in the extended day programs. You must be 21 years of age, be responsible, have good communication skills, be punctual, and serve as a consistent role model for the boys. Leadership Training is provided. Resumes to: erieshores@bsamail.org. Fax (419) 241-6769 ESC, Scoutreach Division PO Box 8728 Toledo OH, 43623-0728

OCEAN CORP. Houston, Texas. Train for New Career. Underwater Welder, Commercial Diver, NDT/Weld Inspector. Job placement and financial aid for those who qualify, 1-800-321-0298.

PROFESSIONAL SERVICES CLEANING SERVICE Experienced, thorough house cleaner looking to clean your home regularly. Many happy clients/references. 3 Hours/$50. (419) 475-1894. cassmorrissey@yahoo.com

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CLASSIFIED

A38 ■ TOLEDO FREE PRESS

FEBRUARY 21, 2010

THE FOLLOWING STORAGE UNITS WILL BE SOLD AT PUBLIC AUCTION BY LOCK-IT-UP SELF STORAGE ON OR AFTER 2/24/10 AT LEONARD’S AUCTION SERVICE 6350 CONSEAR RD OTTAWA LAKE, MI RICHARD LEONARD AUCTIONEER

1087 SPUDS AUTO PARTS INC 418 E DUDLEY MAUMEE HOUSEHOLD 2052 THOMAS FOWLER 2960 W CENTRAL #120 HOUSEHOLD

6424 MEMORIAL HWY OTTAWA LAKE 49267

2631 BRENDA BAKER 705 BELMONT HOUSEHOLD 4203 STEPHEN COKER 1745 WINSTON HOUSEHOLD 4208 LASHAWNA COPELAND 1212 FOUR SEASONS #5 HOUSEHOLD 6104 DENNIS MATHIS 2101 ARLINGTON #309 HOUSEHOLD 6125 VIVIAN HANNAH PO BOX 241 HOUSEHOLD 6222 TRAVES SINGER 1365 KIRK HOUSEHOLD

3032 AIRPORT HWY TOLEDO 43609

5215 DAVID MATILE 4962 BURKEWOOD CT #204 HOUSEHOLD 4601 JACKMAN RD TOLEDO 43612

1051 IRENE HERRON 6 HERALD DR BETHLEHEM, GA HOUSEHOLD 2004 BRANDI HORTON 4734 WILLYS PKWY #202 HOUSEHOLD 4006 BRENT NIERMAN 5853 DOUGLAS HOUSEHOLD 4507/4508 BRADLEY SEMPLE 914 SOUTHOVER HOUSEHOLD 802 S REYNOLDS RD TOLEDO 43615

1057 MICHAEL KIRKWOOD 4954 NEW ENGLAND #102 HOUSEHOLD 2012 JAMES CHAMPION 419 N ST CLAIR #417 HOUSEHOLD 3302 KEYNA COLEMAN 5543 GREENRIDGE HOUSEHOLD 3310 CHARLES WELCH 513 ADAMS #515 HOUSEHOLD 4025 BEVERLY FRYMAN 525 LIME CITY ROSSFORD HOUSEHOLD 8022 PATRICK THOMAS 1202 ROCHELLE HOUSEHOLD 12400 WILLIAMS RD PERRYSBURG 43551

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WEST TOLEDO SU O ND PE AY N 13!

5401 TELEGRAPH RD TOLEDO 43612

4026 RICARDO DEANGELO 6657 HAZELDELL TEMPERANCE HOUSEHOLD 6010 TORRIE YARGER 263 FAIRFAX CT ERIE HOUSEHOLD

OPEN SUNDAY 2/21 • 2-4. 1206 Sawyer. Open floor plan, spectacular hardwood floors in living room, dining room and bedrooms. Large kitchen w/ceramic floors. Updated bath. Newer windows. All appliances stay. Patio, fenced, oversized garage. $73,900. Dorr between Reynolds & Holland-Sylvania.

7840 SYLVANIA AVE SYLVANIA 43560

1007/1052 JULIE YOUSSEF 2135 HILLVIEW DR LAGUNA BEACH CA HOUSEHOLD 3261 ZINA BEN OMAR 14651 PENROD DETROIT MI HOUSEHOLD

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4110 POSM ENT 6109 WILLOWVALE DR BUSINESS 5021 ELIZABETH DEMECS 1140 ROCHELLE HOUSEHOLD 6002 TAMARA BELANGA 4121 CARTHAGE HOUSEHOLD

2821 Powhattan. Nearly brand new in beautifully established neighborhood! Jetted tub in Master, Open floor plan; Huge back deck, Finished basement; 15’ x 17’ rec room in basement! Just move in! $129,900.

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2627 Meadowwood Drive Great price on this brick colonial in the center of Old Orchard. Lots of charm, newer mechanicals. North of Kenwood. $179,900

2536 Lambert Lovely 3 bedroom home located in Elmhurst School District. Arched Doorways, Refinished hardwoods, and fresh exterior add to the charm. Expansive lower level with updated mechanicals and plenty of storage. $98,900

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AREA

DAY/TIME

ADDRESS

DESCRIPTION

Perrysburg

Sunday 2-4

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Waterville

Sunday 2-4

155 Lexington

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SU O ND PE AY N 24!

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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.

Looking to make an

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4538 Brittany. Exceptional ravine setting with lower level walkout! Gorgeous kitchen-new cabinets, granite countertops, and appliances overlook spacious living room w/striking fireplace. Expansive deck opens to beautiful and extraordinary views. $299,000.

2451 Edgehill Wonderful Updates & addition by Berman. Estate property over 1.5 acres, beautifully maintained. Cathedral ceilings & rich built-ins enhance the family rm. 1st floor master suite. Granite Kitchen w/fireplace. $575,000

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FEBRUARY 21, 2010

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