091009 Edge

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SEPTEMBER 10 ISSUE

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What’s Inside 3

Patty Cakes

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Without a Face

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Highland baker to appear on TLC.

One man and his music.

"Extract"

New film is a bit bland.

15 Know before you go Travel guides make trips easy.

18 Creativille at 10 Design firm looks to boost EAC.

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"Phantom"

The classic returns to the Fox.

23 "Hey, Mom" After-school snacks.

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What’s Happening Thursday September 10_____ Curious George Live! -Chaifetz Arena, St. Louis, Mo. 10:30 a.m., 2 p.m., 5:30 p.m. Moonlight Paddleboat Picnics for Two -Boathouse, Forest Park, St. Louis, 314-367-2224 Fall Fun Festival weekend, Single in Agriculture -Carlyle Lake, www. singlesinag.org.

Friday September 11_____ Curious George Live! -Chaifetz Arena, St. Louis, Mo. 1 p.m., 4:30 p.m. Bob Zany, Mike Armstrong and Lynne Koplitz -Argosy Casino, Alton Greater St. Louis Hispanic Festival -Soldier’s Memorial Park, Market and 14th Sts., free St. Louis Fall RV Show and Sale -South County Shopping

Center, 10 a.m. to 8 p.m., free

Saturday September 12_____ Polo Match to benefit Therapeutic Horsemanship, www.thstl.org, -Spirit Valley Farms, 17879 Wild Horse Creek Rd., Chesterfield, Mo. Miss River City Pageant -Florissant Civic Center Theatre, #1 James J. Eagan Dr., Florissant, Mo. 3 p.m. Miss Metro St. Louis -Florissant Civic Center Theatre, #1 James J. Eagan Dr., Florissant, Mo. 7:30 p.m. Bob Zany, Mike Armstrong and Lynne Koplitz -Argosy Casino, Alton Greater St. Louis Hispanic Festival -Soldier’s Memorial Park, Market and 14th Sts., free 25th Annual Great Fire Engine Rally -St. Louis Riverfront, free St. Louis Fall RV Show and Sale -South County Shopping Center, 10 a.m. to 8 p.m., free

City of Troy Fall Festival and city wide garage sale -Tri Township Park, Troy, 9 a.m. – 2 p.m.

Sunday September 13_____ Creed -Chaifetz Arena, St. Louis, Mo. Greater St. Louis Hispanic Festival -Soldier’s Memorial Park, Market and 14th Sts., free St. Louis Fall RV Show and Sale -South County Shopping Center, 11 a.m. to 5 p.m., free

Wednesday September 16_____ Open Mic w/ the Duck Tape Trio, -Stagger Inn, Edwardsville

Who We Are ON THE EDGE OF THE WEEKEND is a product of the Edwardsville Intelligencer, a member of the Hearst Newspaper Group. THE EDGE is available free, either through home delivery or rack distribution. FOR DELIVERY INFO call 656.4700 Ext. 20. FOR ADVERTISING INFO call 656.4700 Ext. 35. For comments or questions regarding EDITORIAL CONTENT call 656.4700 Ext. 30 or fax 659.1677. Publisher – Denise Vonder Haar | Editor – Bill Tucker | Lead Writer – Debbie Settle | Cover Design – Desirée Bennyhoff

September 10, 2009

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People

Patty Cakes

Highland cake decorator to appear on TLC program By DEBBIE SETTLE Of The Edge

September 10, 2009

Pastry chef Pat Jacoby was on her way, driving to a cake show in Virginia when her cell phone rang. A representative from The Learning Channel (TLC) was on the other end requesting that Jacoby take part in a new show called “Ultimate Cake Off.” After some thought, Jacoby accepted the challenge and was off to compete in the confectionary competition. She is the owner of Patty Cakes, which has been in business for 30 years and at the 1018 Laurel Street location in Highland for 28 years. In the episode, Jacoby faces off against two other contestants in a challenge to create an edible masterpiece in hopes of winning $10,000 and to have her cakes featured in a marquee event. With only nine hours, the competitors must make cakes that are at least five feet tall and are creative enough to win the taste of the client and the the ultimate prize. This episode the cake is in competition to be featured at The Ronald Reagan Presidential Library’s Fourth of July Celebration. The episode is scheduled to air on TLC (check local listings for the channel in your area), on Monday, Sept. 14, at 9 p.m. (Central Time). The series is hosted by chef Michael Schulson, owner of Atlantic City’s Izakaya. Joining him are judges Margaret Braun, an acclaimed sugar artist based in New York, and Leigh Grode, owner of Los

Angeles’ Cake Divas bakery. This is a new series that was maybe inspired by some of the shows on the Food Network like “Ace of Cakes,” which is actually a fierce competition in which the contestants are some of the nations most talented pastry chefs. Although Jacoby cannot reveal the contents of the episode, especially the outcome, she can say what a great time she had participating. “It was amazing! I previously had participated in a similar competition for the Food Network, and this was even more exciting than that.” said Jacoby. “I was the “helper” on the previous show, where this time I am the lead chef for my competition group.” Patty Cakes is not your typical bakery. They specialize in “designer” style cakes, where everything is special ordered. “You are not going to find your ready made sheet cake at our shop. We make approximately 10 customer designed wedding cakes per week and many all occasion cakes, all that are pre-ordered and designed especially for the occasion it is intended for,” said Jacoby. Recently, Jacoby’s daughter, Leah Jacoby, graduated from culinary school and joined her mom in the cake business. Patty Cakes is located at 1018 Laurel Street, in Highland, and can be reached at 654-8180. To learn more about Patty Cakes or to see more of their specialty designs, visit www.pat-t-cakes. com.

Above are three recent designs by Patty Cakes. Photos for The Edge. The Edge – Page

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People People planner 10th Annual Harvest WineFest scheduled One of Edwardsville and Glen Carbon’s most popular social events – Harvest WineFest – will be held for the tenth time this year welcoming Erato on Main as its new retail co-host. The event, which features more than 200 wines from around the world, champagne, beer and culinary treats from the finest restaurants in the area, will be held on October 8, 2009 from 6 p.m. to 9 p.m. at Lewis & Clark Community College’s Leclaire Room at the N. O. Nelson Campus in Edwardsville. H e l d e a c h y e a r t o b e n e f i t t h e A l l i a n c e o f Edwardsville & Glen Carbon, Harvest WineFest will b e o rg a n i z e d w i t h t h e a s s i s t a n c e o f E r a t o o n M a i n for selections of the wine tasted at the event and fulfillment of orders placed at a discounted rate that evening.

Erato on Main will also participate for the first t i m e a s a f e a t u re d re s t a u r a n t a l o n g w i t h f i r s t - t i m e participant Fond. Neruda, which has participated since the beginning of Harvest WineFest, and multiyear participants Bella Milano and Sweetie’s are also among the featured restaurants at the event. According to Erika Kennett, executive director of T h e A l l i a n c e o f E d w a rd s v i l l e & G l e n C a r b o n , “ We are so pleased to be celebrating the 10th anniversary of Harvest WineFest by welcoming Erato on Main as our new co-host and the other participants that are guaranteed to add to a wonderful evening of food and wine.” Tickets are $35 per person and may be purchased at Erato on Main or by calling The Alliance at 618-6567601. Each ticket includes a $5 voucher good towards the purchase of wine ordered at the event. Tickets are limited. All proceeds from ticket sales help fund the many

p ro g r a m s o f T h e A l l i a n c e o f E d w a rd s v i l l e & G l e n Carbon in their efforts to attract and retain jobs in the two-community area. Sponsorship opportunities and advertising space in the wine ordering booklet are also available. For more information, please call The Alliance at 618-656-7601. The Alliance of Edwardsville and Glen Carbon is a notfor-profit organization that works with each community in marketing and promoting the area for new business investments and economic growth and development. The Alliance receives the majority of direct funding support from the public sector. The City of Edwardsville, Village of Glen Carbon and Edwardsville Township are the principal financial partners in The Alliance, providing nearly 60% of the annual operating budget. Additionally, The Alliance relies upon the business community to provide funding support through annual contributions. For more information about The Alliance, please call (618) 656-7601 or visit the website at www. edglenalliance.com.

B���ness Spot�ig��

Johnson’s Hearing Center

The Johnson’s Hearing Center tradition began more than 35 years ago when Ralph E. Johnson became a hearing instrument specialist so he could help others overcome the limitations of hearing loss. Since Mr. Johnson had already lost much of his own ability to hear, he truly understood the needs and frustrations associated with hearing loss. Until Mr. Johnson passed away in 2008, he and his wife, Erline, who is still the office manager, worked together providing better hearing to thousands of patients throughout the years. During that time the Johnson’s daughter, Barbara Well, joined the family business and has worked there as a boardcertified hearing instrument specialist for over 20 years. Barb’s daughters, Tiffany Well and Jennifer Volle, have also joined the business as licensed hearing specialists. Together, they uphold the tradition started by Mr. Johnson and continue to provide their patients with outstanding, personalized care. The specialists at Johnson’s utilize the most advanced testing equipment in the industry. All patients are given an exam with a video otoscope to check their ears for wax buildup and abnormalities, so patients will have a chance to see inside their own ears. There is also a machine that performs speech mapping, which allows patients to “see what they hear” while enabling the specialists to fit patients more precisely than ever before. Johnson’s always offers the latest digital technology to their patients. Recently, they introduced the be™ hearing instrument from ReSound, which features a new design called Remote Microphone Technology. This new design virtually disappears in the ear and is suitable for almost all hearing losses. Plus, it eliminates problems like wind noise while providing a natural sound quality. Johnson’s also offers several other lines of hearing instruments to fit everyone’s hearing loss, lifestyle, and budget. Because they are committed to excellent service and satisfaction, they offer a Risk-Free Trail on hearing instruments. That means patients will receive a full refund of their down payment if they are not completely satisified.

To start your risk-free trial,

Call (618) 259-0700

to schedule an appointment for a free hearing test today! September 10, 2009

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September 10, 2009

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People People planner MOBOT hosting “Carver Day” Explore the life and legacy of famed Missouri-born scientist and educator Dr. George Washington Carver with “Carver Day” at the Missouri Botanical Garden, Saturday, Oct. 17 from 10 a.m. to 3 p.m. Carver was born into slavery in 1865 in Diamond Grove, Mo. and rose to become “the plant doctor,” an internationally-renowned scientist, teacher, humanitarian and advocate for productive, sustainable agriculture. He is credited with introducing crop rotation and plant diversity to the farm field and is well-known for the many uses of peanuts, sweet potatoes, soybeans and black-eyed peas that he developed. He is the inspiration behind the Missouri Botanical G a rd e n ’ s o n e - a n d - a - h a l f - a c re George Washington Carver Garden, dedicated in 2005 and the first of its kind at a botanical garden. Begin your Carver Day journey with a stop at the Jesup Wagon in the upper level of the Ridgway Visitor Center. Carver designed the original Jesup Agricultural Wagon, a moveable school-on-wheels, to bring teaching directly into communities. In the same fashion, the Garden’s J e s s u p Wa g o n w i l l b e f i l l e d information and an introduction to some of the plants that Carver studied. Continue your learning with a walk outside to the George Washington Carver Garden, where a Germination Station staffed by Garden educators will offer a deeper exploration of Carver ’s agricultural endeavors. Take a seat in the small outdoor amphitheater to listen to the story, “A Weed is a Flower: The Life of George Washington Carver,” read at 10 a. m., 11 a.m., noon and 1 p.m. New this year, reserve your spot for a special Carver Garden stroll with Dr. George Washington Carver himself, as portrayed by Paxton Williams. Chat with “Carver” about his life, trials, tribulations, and his ultimate triumphs. See how native plants and flowers inspired a young George, and how they taught him valuable lessons about the human condition. Learn how art, nature, music and poetry influenced Carver ’s scientific endeavors, and enjoy the chance to explore your own creativity! Paxton Williams is the director of outreach for the George Washington Carver Birthplace Association. He has portrayed Carver nearly 300 times across the U.S. and in England. He will be joined by a Garden educator on each walk. Advance reservations for the Carver walks are required by Oct. 14 and space is limited. Teachers, register for the educators’ Carver walk from 10 to 11:30 a.m. by emailing tracie.cain@mobot.org. A visitors’ Carver walk for the general public will be held from 12:30 to

September 10, 2009

Interstate 44 at the Vandeventer exit. Free parking is available onsite and at two blocks west at the corner of Shaw and Vandeventer. For general information, visit www.mobot.org or call the recorded event line at (314) 577‑9400 or tollfree 1 (800) 642-8842.

2 p.m.; register by e-mailing julia. gaussoin@mobot.org. Back inside the visitor center, watch the 45-minute movie, “Modern Marvels Tech: George Wa s h i n g t o n C a r v e r, ” s h o w n continuously from 10:30 a.m. to 1:30 p.m. in the Shoenberg Theater. Stop by the Sassafras café to dine on Carver-inspired lunch specials including a Carver Monte Cristo sandwich with side of sweet potato fries; apple, sweet potato and pumpkin bisque; and peanut butter brownies. Cap off your Carver Day experience with the joyful singing of the New Sunny Mount Baptist Chancel Choir, performing at 2 p.m. in the Carver Garden. Carver Day activities are included with general Garden admission ($8 adults, free children ages 12 and under; St. Louis City and County residents, free before noon and $4 thereafter). Garden members are free. Advance reservations are required for the Carver walks; all other activities are drop-in. The Missouri Botanical Garden is located at 4344 Shaw Blvd. in south St. Louis, easily accessible from

MOBOT hosts “Style Your Sole” Become a shoe designer and help a child in need, all within one afternoon at the Missouri Botanical Garden. The Garden and TOMS Shoes have teamed to host the St. Louis-area’s first public “Style Your Sole” event on Saturday, Oct. 24 from 1 to 5 p.m. Guests can purchase and customize a pair of TOMS shoes with designs by visiting artists, or put paint to canvas to create their own unique look. With every pair of TOMS purchased from the Garden Gate Shop, TOMS will give a pair of new shoes to a child in need. The party is included with Garden admission. “TOMS is excited to be working with the Missouri Botanical Garden

CHICKEN DINNER - BUFFET STYLE

St. Jerome Catholic Church 507 S. Main St., Troy, IL

SUNDAY, SEPTEMBER 13th Noon - 5:00 pm CARRY-OUTS AVAILABLE Cash & Quilt Raffles

for the first Style Your Sole event in St. Louis,” said Blake Mycoskie, founder and Chief Shoe Giver of TOMS. “They have been great supporters of TOMS Shoes and seeing their passion for the One for One movement is always inspiring. We look forward to being a part of this unique event hosted by the Missouri Botanical Garden, and sharing the same vision to help the earth and others.” “The Garden conducts ongoing science and conservation work in some of the countries served by TOMS Shoes, including South Africa and Argentina,” said Jan Simons, vice president of retail operations at the Garden. “It’s certainly a fitting partnership for our organizations to bring this event to St. Louis, and we invite everyone to join us for an afternoon of fun and fashion with a purpose.” Choose from a wide assortment of TOMS Shoes available for advance order from the Garden Gate Shop from Aug. 24 through Oct. 5. Visit www.mobot.org/TOMS to view men’s and women’s styles, colors

and sizes available and call (314) 577-0865 to place an order, or stop by the Garden Gate Shop to browse an in-store catalog. Orders placed by Oct. 5 will guarantee your shoe shipment by the event. A limited selection of shoes will also be available the day of the party. Prices range from $48 for canvas to $105 for wrap boots. “Style Your Sole” with stencils, markers, paint or pens to create a unique look, or select a pattern or design to have your shoes enhanced by one of several visiting artists. A “Sole Seeker” representative from TOMS Shoes will be on hand to answer questions about their One for One movement. Enjoy piped music, entertainment and a cash bar as you mix and mingle. The “Style Your Sole” event will be held in the upper level of the Ridgway Visitor Center at the Missouri Botanical Garden, located at 4344 Shaw Blvd. in south St. Louis and easily accessible from Interstate 44 at the Vandeventer exit. For general information, visit www.mobot.org.

Immanuel United

Methodist Church (618) 656-4648 8 0 0 N . M A I N S T R E E T • E D WA R D S V I L L E

The Church with the Prayer Garden

Journey’s Inn Praise Service 9 am Traditional Worship 10 am • Sunday School 11:15 am Join Our New Children’s Sunday School 11:15 am Rotation Workshop Model Joseph & His Brothers www.immanuelonmain.org

Religious Directory Bahá’í Faith 618-656-4142 P.O. Box 545, Edwardsville, IL 62025 Bahai.Edwardsville@sbcglobal.net Solutions to today’s problems are found in God’s Message for today.

Episcopal ST. ANDREWS EPISCOPAL

Hillsboro At North Buchanan Edwardsville, IL 656-1929 The Rev. Virginia L. Bennett, D. Min. Sunday Services: 8:00 a.m. Holy Eucharist Rite I 9:00 a.m. Adult Education 9:00 a.m. Church School 10:00 a.m. Choral Eucharist Rite II Nursery Provided www.standrews-edwardsville.com

ST. THOMAS EPISCOPAL Summit at School Street, Glen Carbon, IL 288-5620 Fr. Eugene A. Stormer Sunday: Christian Education 9:30 a.m. Holy Eucharist 10:30 a.m. St. Thomas Child Care Center Now enrolling infants through Pre-K Call 288-5697 “Worship in the warm hospitality of a village church.”

To Advertise: Call 656-4700, Ext. 46 Deadline: Tuesday @ 10:30 am The Edge – Page

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People Saint Louis Zoo offers a variety of fall programs The Saint Louis Zoo’s education department offers a wide variety of classes and programs for all ages including families, young children, youth, adults, home school students, scouts and youth groups. Families can explore nature together

on the “Nocturnal Overnight Safari” which includes a hike, games and live animal encounters. “Furrific Families” tours showcase Zoo animal families at River’s Edge, The Wild and Red Rocks. The “Extreme Animals” tour highlights amazing animal abilities.

Young children can go on a stroller safari with their parent, learn about apes, slither like a snake, make holiday critter crafts, meet live animals and more. Adults can sign up for a “Breakfast with the Primates,” brush up on their

photography techniques, or attend a guest lecture on one of the many wildlife conservation programs connected to the Saint Louis Zoo. Science education programs are also available at the Zoo for home school students and include live

animals, biofacts, and observation and investigation activities. Program fees vary. All proceeds support the Saint Louis Zoo. For more information and registration, visit www.stlzoo.org/education or call (314) 646-4544.

Tired of NECK PAIN? Frustrated with your STIFF, ACHING BACK? Read the Astonishing HEALTH SECRETS That Thousands of Grateful Patients Swear By!

“I Was In Agony!”...True-Life Healing Stories! PLUS...an INJURED DOCTOR Shares His Amazing Discovery For Fast Pain Relief...And Lets You “Test-Drive” It FREE...With An Unheard-Of TRIPLE SATISFACTION PLEDGE!! How My EMBARRASSING ACCIDENT May Eliminate Your Pain FAST...Maybe Even Today! The accident was embarrassing and totally my fault...but that didn’t stop the stabbing pain in my neck the next morning. I’ll tell you what I did in a minute, but first I want you to know that because of my macho antics a few years ago, I’ve been able to eliminate literally thousands of neck, back, shoulder and wrist problems, just like yours…not to mention headaches. So let me explain... Hi. My name is Dr. Timothy A. Peck, D.C. I’m the Director of Glen Carbon HealthSource Chiropractic™, and I know what it’s like to be desperate, in pain and have no clue where to get help. When I hurt myself, I felt...

The Poor Man’s Arnold Schwarzenegger!

Why I Still Get Upset!

The next morning, I couldn’t lift my head off the pillow. It was agony! My wife still laughs at the story and about the “Arnold” I was trying to be. To cut to the chase, I went to medical doctors, took buckets of cover-up pills ’till my stomach ached and went to therapy. Nothing worked, ‘til finally I went to a chiropractor who was able to relieve my agony. It was a miracle! Not only that, the accident started my career as a chiropractor! Since then, I’ve learned one HUGE LESSON, and that is…

Because you’ll probably get better faster than I did. But that’s great for you. Now it’s so much easier and faster to get rid of your stiffness, sharp pain and aching...and to get your flexibility back! Just look at the coupon and my TRIPLE SATISFACTION PLEDGE. There’s absolutely NO RISK and you can check us out FREE. There’s nothing to lose but your pain. We’re not promising a cure or claiming to be superior, we simply like to believe that our clinic is built on helping people feel better. Call us NOW!

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Community Service Screening

“As Dumb as a Bag of Hammers!”

“A great way to find out about your pain...”

It happened years ago when I was lifting weights. My “spotter”, the guy who comes to your rescue if you can’t handle the weight, was sick and I was determined to try my biggest “bench-press”…but I couldn’t do it!! I got stuck half-way...dumb! I couldn’t get the weight off my chest. And what’s really funny is even when I was lying there being crushed, the thought that went through my mind was just like my patients who’ve fallen or tripped: “I hope nobody sees me like this!” Yet somehow I managed to wiggle out from under the bar by lifting one side with both hands, but not without a lightning bolt of pain in my neck. That’s what I get for being:

Whether or not you feel pain right now, let our team of doctors find out for sure with a 19-point, detailed service screening (a $189 value) that’ll identify even the smallest of problems. We’ll even throw in the X-rays if we feel you need them. Just bring in this coupon, and we’ll take care of the costs.

Copyright © 2009 HealthSource

September 10, 2009

THERE’S NO OTHER OBLIGATION. Just call 692(PHONE HERE) 9100 and you’re guaranteed to get in today! Once we track down your pain, we’ll work on getting you back to doing the things you love—FAST! Make your appointment TODAY! 692-9100 (PHONE HERE) P.S. It’s Time to STOP wondering “What If,” and time to START putting the confidence back in your body and your life. There’s ABSOLUTELY nothing to lose. CALL RIGHT NOW! (PHONE 692-9100HERE) P.P.S. Be one of the first 7 people to call and receive a relaxing 1/4-hour massage. Start on your road towards recovery TODAY!

I insist on a TRIPLE SATISFACTION PLEDGE when you choose HealthSource Chiropractic™ for relief... because I don’t want you to suffer like I did. Here’s what MUST happen—right from the get-go—when you call us: � Same-day appointment! You get in the same day you call, or your first treatment is absolutely FREE! � If you do in fact qualify for treatment, and are not cheerfully greeted by our warm and friendly staff, then your treatment is FREE! � If you ever find a PLEDGE like ours, you’ll get a week of free treatment...no questions asked!

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Dr. (NAME A. HERE) D.C. D.C. Dr. Timothy Peck,

/ PHONE GlenCITY Carbon / 692-9100

This offer does not apply to federal insurance beneficiaries and ACN participants,

SHOWME_HP_092809

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Music One-man riot to appear at The Pageant By DEBBIE SETTLE Of The Edge

W i t h o u t

a F a c e

“Without a Face” will be opening for “Building Rome’s” CD release show at The Pageant, 6161 Delmar Blvd., in the Loop, in University City, on Friday, Sept. 18, at 7 p.m. Advance tickets are on sale now at The Pageant Box Office, Suite 100, or at all ticketmaster outlets. Charge by phone at 800-745-3000. Tickets are $10 in advance or $12 on the day of the show. There is a $2 surcharge for minors, show is for all ages. “Without a Face” bio gives some explanation as to how they became a “hidden” band: “After realizing that having band members consistently not show up for gigs or not “show up” for gigs, singer and songwriter Henry Dillard decided that going it alone was not only easier, it was also the inspiration behind his “band’s” debut album. The band, Without a Face, is now ready to show itself to the world with “Worst Debut Album Ever,” set for release on popular rock band Ludo’s Redbird Records on Oct. 6. While that might sound like a negative statement to make for a debut, you have to get to know Dillard to understand what it all means.” “The album title is my way of saying I don’t need validation or criticism from anyone else in the first place,” he says. After going out on his own, Dillard found that he was able to play more shows and develop more of a following both at those shows and on the Internet. After recording the tracks in 2008, Dillard decided he was going to release it on his own unless he could find a proper label. Enter Ludo’s Tim Convy, who discovered the band and wanted to release the debut: “Worst Debut Album Ever” includes 11 songs (and 1 prank call), and is chock full of Dillard’s sarcastic and quirky spirit, calling to mind artists like They Might Be Giants, Violent Femmes, and The Dead Milkmen. The fairly ridiculous “Lactose Intolerance” inherently pokes fun at heavy metal (and dairy products) while “Without a Myspace” implies that a certain social networking site might be a bit overrated. Both “The Band Broke Up (Intro)” and “The Band Broke Up (Part 2)” offer insight into why Henry is Without a Face’s sole member. “Anchorbabe Stalker” is about a local news anchorwoman from Henry’s hometown of Houston, Texas, and “Fratford Bratford ‘06” is about Henry’s high school days. “Druggie Love” addresses the criteria that certain women look for in a man while “31” is a love song to an older woman from a boy who’s just “eight years too late.” Everything on the album, which consists primarily of vocals and acoustic guitars, was performed by Henry with the exception of the dog barks which were performed by a dog. To read more about “Without a Face,” visit www.myspace.

Band Bio: Exit 12 By DEBBIE SETTLE Of The Edge Exit 12 Lead Vocals and Keyboard: Jack Desse Rythym Guitar: Zack Galbierz Drums and Vocals: Brenden Heaton Bass Guitar and Vocals: Michael Romann Lead Guitar and Vocals: Randy Romann This group of young men, those of which are still mostly in middle school, are making a name for themselves by rocking out at a number of local venues and events. A mighty sound is coming out of these young dudes who began performing publicly back in June of 2008 and have come a long way since then. They have a good size play list of cover songs that are of the likes of AC/DC, Pink Floyd, Red Hot Chili Peppers, Green Day and more. For more about Exit Twelve, visit www.exittwelve.com.

September 10, 2009

For The Edge

Shaman’s Harvest The Edge – Page

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Music Tuning in “Nutcracker” auditions planned Nearly 120 young St. Louisarea dancers will be cast in Dance St. L o u i s ’ “ N u t c r a c k e r a t t h e Fox” starring The Joffrey Ballet, during auditions starting at noon on Sunday, September 20, at the Touhill Performing Arts Center, University of Missouri-St. Louis. Boys and girls ages 9 to 14, between 4 and 5 feet tall, who have at least one year of dance training, will play the roles of Christmas party guests, mice, soldiers, and angels when Dance St. Louis and AmerenUE present Nutcracker at the Fox in six performances December 3-6 at the Fox Theatre. Children do not need to prere g i s t e r. F o r m o re d e t a i l s o n audition requirements, contact Dance St. Louis Director of Operations & Education, Janet Brown, at 314-289-4105 or check dancestlouis.org. Children should arrive a half hour before their audition time. Auditions are as follows: • Noon: 4 feet-5 inches to 5 feet tall, ages 11-14, with five or more years ballet training

• 2 p.m.: 4 feet-5 inches to 5 feet tall, ages 9-14, with one to four years ballet training • 4 p.m.: 4 feet to 4 feet-5 inches tall, ages 9-14, with one to four years ballet, modern or jazz dance training Dancers must be at least 9 years old by September 20, 2009. Age 14 is the recommended maximum. Girls should wear a dark leotard, pink tights, and ballet slippers (no pointe shoes). Boys should wear a plain white T-shirt, dark tights, and ballet slippers. If possible, children should bring a non-returnable photograph to the audition. A dance photograph is not necessary; an ordinary photograph such as a school picture is fine. Rehearsals for Nutcracker at the Fox will be held every weekend except Thanksgiving beginning September 25 at Alexandra Ballet in Chesterfield and the Center of Creative Arts (COCA) in University City. The Joffrey Ballet’s Nutcracker has roles for 59 local children, and Dance St. Louis is seeking to double-cast the show to give even more young St. Louisarea dancers the opportunity to perform on the stage of the Fox Theatre with one of the world’s

greatest dance companies. Dance St. Louis’ mission as a not-for-profit dance presenting organization is to provide the St. Louis region with the world’s best dance and to develop an appreciation of dance as an art form through dance presentation, creation, and education outreach. Founded in 1966, Dance St. Louis is supported by the Arts and Education Council, Missouri Arts Council, Regional Arts Commission, Mid-America Arts Alliance, National Endowment for the Arts, National Endowment for the Arts–American Masterpieces, New England Foundation for the Arts, and other sources. American Airlines is the official airline.

Take 6 to perform at Powell Hall T h e a c a p p e l l a j a z z g r o u p Take 6 belongs not only to the rich traditions of doo-wop and gospel sounds of the 1950s, but also to the jazz and pop styles that have emerged since the 1990s. Multiple Grammy winners, the Hunstville, Alabama natives have performed with such artists as

Quincy Jones, Ella Fitzgerald, Stevie Wonder, Aaron Neville, George Benson and Al Jarreau. The sublime acoustics of Powell Hall will be make a perfect holiday home for the harmonyrich vocals of Take 6. The concert is at 7:30 p.m. on

Dec. 17 at Powell Hall. Tickets range from $25 to $70 a n d m a y b e p u rc h a s e d o n l i n e at www.slso.org, or by phone at 314-534-1700, or in person at the Powell Hall Box Office, 718 N. Grand Blvd. For group sales call 314-286-4155.

Full Scope of Family Medicine •Accepting New Patients •Same Day Appointments

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• Local Fresh Produce • Fine Arts • Specialty Products Demonstrations and Live Music Downtown Edwardsville, IL Next To Courthouse www.goshenmarket.org

Troy Fall Fest and City Wide Garage Sale Saturday, September 12 Garage Sale throughout Troy and at Tri-Township Park (7:00 a.m. - 2:00 p.m.) (Maps available on www.troymaryville.com)

Fall Fest at Tri-Township Park (9:00 a.m. - 2:00 p.m.)

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Entertainment all day including Elizabeth Lakamp, Troy Community Band, McArthur’s Tae Kwon Do, Prodigy Dance Directions: Tri-Township Park is located in Troy. (Take Highway 55 to Exit #18 and two miles west)

For more information, contact the Troy/Maryville/St. Jacob Chamber of Commerce at 667-8769 or visit the Chamber’s website at www.troymaryvillecoc.com

September 10, 2009

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9


Music Tuning in PLAY:stl Music Festival & Conference returns to St. Louis From September 17 to 19, 2009, over 100 local, regional, national and international bands will converge on the Delmar Loop for the third annual PLAY:stl Music Festival & Conference. In addition to providing great live entertainment, festival organizers aim to further raise the profile of St. Louis area as a musical hub, rich with talent and fans. Performing artists will find a broader audience, as well as educational and networking opportunities to increase their career success. Behind the PLAY:stl Music Festival & Conference is PLAYBACK:stl, the more than seven-year-old, St. Louis-based online music and entertainment magazine founded and run by local husband-and-wife team, Laura Hamlett and Jim Dunn. More than just a collection of words, PLAYBACK:stl has long

been involved in the music scene, drawing attention to the local music community and independent artists for many years. “Once again, we are proud to shine a light on St. Louis and its long-standing appreciation for music,” says Hamlett. “In addition to the over 100 local, regional and national bands, we will also have a respectable showing of international bands.” This year’s headliners will include The Hood Internet, The Antlers, Owen, Samantha Crain & the Midnight Shivers and more. The music festival will feature over 100 acts on 10 stages over 3 nights. Venues include Cicero’s, Blueberry Hill (both the Duck and Elvis Rooms), Desmond Lee, Brandt’s, Racanelli’s Cucina, Vintage Vinyl and others. The conference portion will be geared toward musician education and networking, with panels featuring industry professionals discussing such topics as booking and touring, promotion, and the business of music. A d m i s s i o n t o a l l P L AY: s t l F e s t i v a l showcases will be via three-day wristbands ($15), available August 15 throughout the

Loop at such merchants as Vintage Vinyl, Cicero’s, Brandt’s and Subterranean Books, on campus at Webster and Washington Universities, and online at www.playstlfest. com. For full artist lineup and schedule as well as complete information on attending, sponsoring or volunteering for the PLAY:stl Music Festival & Conference, keep an eye on www.playstlfest.com.

SLSO ready to roll “Swing, Swing, Swing” - Big Band hits from Duke Ellington, Woody Herman, and Glenn Miller. Guest conductor Victor Vanacore & members of A Tall Order Dance Company join the Saint Louis Symphony Orchestra for this concert. The performance will be at 7:30 p.m. Oct. 9 at Powell Hall, 718 N. Grand Blvd., St. Louis. Tickeets are $75-$20 and may be purchased online at www.slso.org, or by phone at 314-5341700, or in person at the Powell Hall Box Office, 718 N. Grand Blvd. More SLSO Presents for 2009-2010 – the series

of concerts presenting popular music with the SLSO and featured artists expands, as Powell Hall continues to become the place to be for all kinds of music for every audience. “The Blue Planet Live!” at 7:30 p.m. on Sept. 19 and 2 p.m. on Sept. 20 The undersea world will amaze you—on a giant screen at Powell Hall. The music will overwhelm you—as performed live by the SLSO. And the environmental message will inspire you. Swim with sharks. Dive with dolphins. The Movie Music of John Williams will be performed at 7:30 p.m. Nov. 7 and 2 p.m. Nov. 8. Hear the film scores of one of the masters of recent cinema. You’ll hear many of John Williams most celebrated compositions performed live by the SLSO, including music from Star Wars, E.T., Schindler’s List and the Harry Potter series. The Magical Music of Disney will be presented at 7:30 p.m. on Jan. 2 and 2 p.m. on Jan. 3 See the Disney images on the Powell Hall screen as the SLSO plays music from The Lion King, Beauty and the Beast, Mary Poppins, The Little Mermaid and more.

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September 10, 2009

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Music Music calendar

• Light the Night, Upper Muny Parking Lot, Forest Park, St. Louis

• Brian Regan, The Pageant, St. Louis, 7 p.m. and 9:30 p.m. • Raven Moon, 23rd Annual Manchester Homecoming, 359 Old Meramec Station Rd., Manchester, Main Stage, Paul Schroeder Park, 1 p.m. to 4 p.m.

• Open Mic w/Butch Moore, Stagger Inn, Edwardsville, 9:30 p.m. • Brian Curran, Villa Marie Winery, Maryville, 3 p.m. to 7 p.m. • Beyond the Ashes, Wanda United Methodist Church, Roxana, Ill. • Nick Rhodes, Lau-Nae Winery, Red Bud, Ill. • 3JC, Cicero’s, St. Louis, Mo. • R S Bryan, The Duck Room, University City, Mo.

Monday, Sept. 14 • Madahoochi and Friends, Cicero’s, 9 p.m., Delmar/The Loop • Soulard Blues Band, Broadway Oyster Bar, St. Louis, 9 p.m. • Truman, Washington University, St. Louis, Mo.

Tuesday, Sept. 15 • Brandi Carlile, The Noises 10, The Pageant, St. Louis, Mo. • Kinch, Dear and the Headlights, The Firebird, St. Louis, Mo. • Glass Teeth, CBGB, St. Louis, Mo. • The Lucky Old Sons, Donatelli’s Bistro, St. Louis, Mo.

Wednesday, Sept. 16 • O p e n M i c w / D u c k Ta p e Duo Trio, 9:30 p.m., Stagger Inn, Edwardsville • Kinder Konzerts, The Young

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Person’s Guide to the Orchestra, Powell Hall, 9:30 a.m. and 11 a.m. • Chuck Berry, The Duck Room, Blueberry Hill, University City-The Loop

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Saturday, Sept. 12

Sunday, Sept. 13

• Peter Mayer Group, The Duck Room, Blueberry Hill, University City-The Loop

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• The Gaslight Anthem, Murder by Death, The Loved Ones, Pop’s, Sauget • Chippewa Chapel Traveling Guitar Circle, Medicine Show and Open Mic, Iron Barley, South CitySt. Louis, Mo., 8 p.m. • Open Mic Night at Cleo’s, Edwardsville, 7 p.m. to 11 p.m. • Rob Caudill, Lumiere Place, St. Louis, Mo. • Groupthink, Cicero’s, St. Louis, Mo. • James McMurtry, The Ususal Band, The Duck Room, Blueberry Hill, University City-The Loop • J a c k Tw e s t e n , 8 p . m . t o midnight, Stagger Inn, Edwardsville

• Brotha’ D. & The Woo-Daddies, Grafton Windery and Brewhaus, Grafton • Threshold, Six Flags, Eureka, Mo. • Rob Caudill, Lumiere Place, St. Louis, Mo. • B r i a n H e n k e - Wi z a rd s o f A c o u s t i c G u i t a r, We s t H i l l s Community Church, Town and Country, Mo. • Peter Mayer Group, The Duck Room, Blueberry Hill, University City-The Loop

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• Butch Moore/Jordan Harper, Villa Marie Winery, Maryville, 6 p.m. to 10 p.m. • Sick Puppies and Hurt, The Pageant, University City, Mo. • Mark Ginsberg, Branica Wine Bar, St. Louis, Mo. • Casey Govero, The Ten Mile House, Affton, Mo. • Stillwater, Here’s Johnnies, St. Peters, Mo. • Fivefold, Cicero’s, St. Louis, Mo. • Thronechild, Just Bill’s Place, Overland, Mo. • Guilty Pleasure, Baha Rock Club, St. Charles, Mo. • Brian Henke, 5 p.m. to 8 p.m.; Marcel Strong, 10 p.m. to 2 a.m., Stagger Inn, Edwardsville

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11


Movies

“Big Fan”

Jim Rome urges his listeners (or “clones,” as he so lovingly calls them) to have solid takes, to bring it, when they dial into his sports talk radio show. Patton Oswalt’s character in “Big Fan,” Paul Aufiero, ensures that his takes are solid because they are his raison d’etre. A portly Staten Island parking garage attendant stuck in his childhood home with his mother at age 35, Paul lives and dies for the New York Giants, and spends each day at work in his little metal box honing the arguments he’ll make about his beloved football team during his favorite sports talk radio show each night. Paul Aufiero feels completely believable in the hands of Robert Siegel, writer of the equally stripped-down and realistic “The Wrestler,” who wrote the script and makes his directing debut here. Siegel has captured a very specific fan: the kind who refers to his team as “we,” who derives confidence from walking around the neighborhood in his puffy red-and-blue jacket and prepares all week for a few hours on Sunday. You could describe him as pathetic in his arrested development, his lack of perspective. But Oswalt, best known for his comedy and his starring voice work in the animated “Ratatouille,” brings enough depth to the character to make you feel sorry for him. This is especially true once Paul and his best friend Sal (Kevin Corrigan) have a run-in with the Giants’ star linebacker, Quantrell Bishop (Jonathan Hamm), on a night in Manhattan that quickly shifts from veneration to violence. RATED: R for language and some sexuality. RUNNING TIME: 85 min. ASSOCIATED PRESS RANKING: Three stars out of four.

“The September Issue”

Anna Wintour ’s eyes are green, we learn from this documentary in which she actually takes off her trademark, oversized sunglasses and even lets a smile slip loose from time to time. But that doesn’t mean the notoriously icy editor in chief of Vogue magazine ever truly puts down her guard. Director R.J. Cutler and his crew spent eight months roaming the halls of the Conde Nast publication and accompanying Wintour to meetings, fashion shows and glamorous events with designers and celebrities. We also see her at home with her daughter, Bee Shaffer. While that kind of intimate access

September 10, 2009

provides a glimpse at some juicy showdowns, it never really allows us to understand what inspires this enormously influential figure. Wintour is quickly decisive but seems to operate on the whim of her preferences in dictating what’s in style and what isn’t; if that process is maddening for us during a brief time, imagine what it must be like to work for her every day. (To her credit, though, she acknowledges her businesslike nature — and she doesn’t seem as withering as the fashion magazine editor in “The Devil Wears Prada,” a character supposedly modeled after her.) What we do come away with is an appreciation for clothing and photography as art forms and the kind of work and emotion that go into each issue, especially the September issue, the largest each year for its fall fashion features. Cutler follows the creation of the September 2007 Vogue, the title’s most voluminous edition ever — which makes the film seem like a time capsule now that magazines are struggling financially. RATED: PG-13 for brief strong language. RUNNING TIME: 88 min. ASSOCIATED PRESS RANKING: Three stars out of four.

“Taking Woodstock”

They aren’t words you hear very often: an Ang Lee comedy. He hasn’t really made one since he directed “The Wedding Banquet” and “Eat Drink Man Woman” back-to-back in 1993 and 1994. And so, on the heels of the emotionally heavy “Brokeback Mountain” and “Lust, Caution,” Lee lightens up — and the result is actually too lightweight. He approaches the fabled concert from an outsider’s angle, which is innovative; truly, the significance of Woodstock has been chronicled ad naueseam, especially lately upon its 40th anniversary. But in telling the story of the people who inadvertently launched the event, Lee leaves out the substance. Rather, he ambles amiably among these motley figures, with civic leader Elliot Teichberg (comic Demetri Martin) at the center. When Robert Altman used this structural tactic — and he did it often — it still felt cohesive, like an intricate but subtle dance. “Taking Woodstock,” by comparison, feels scattershot and incomplete. The script from Lee’s longtime collaborator James Schamus, based on Elliot Tiber’s book, traces the pieces that fell into place to make Woodstock happen. Elliot, a New York City interior designer, happens to have moved back home with his Russian immigrant parents (Henry Goodman and an overthe-top Imelda Staunton) to help them salvage their run-down Catskills motel. An arts and music festival in a neighboring

town happens to have lost its permit. As president of the Bethel Chamber of Commerce, Elliot thinks it would boost the economy to play host instead — and he just happens to know a guy named Max Yasgur (Eugene Levy) with a 600-acre dairy farm, the perfect place for such an event. RATED; R for graphic nudity, some sexual content, drug use and language. RUNNING TIME: 120 min. ASSOCIATED PRESS RANKING: Two stars out of four.

“World’s Greatest Dad”

This is tricky: How to talk about the latest comedy from Bobcat Goldthwait without giving away all its twists and twisted details? “World’s Greatest Dad” is extremely dark and daring and definitely not for everyone, but it shows that with his third film as writer and director, Goldthwait is honing a unique and fearless voice, and that’s exciting to see. The comic’s first, 1991’s “Shakes the Clown,” was about an alcoholic party clown; his second, “Sleeping Dogs Lie” from 2006, was about a woman who enjoys a sexual dalliance with her pet. This time, Goldthwait explores the ugliest and most selfish human instincts following the death of a teen. Robin Williams stars as Lance Clayton, a loser of a high-school poetry teacher. He’d dreamed of fame and fortune as a novelist; instead, he can only get a handful of students to sign up for his elective course while the young, popular creative writing teacher (Henry Simmons) finds his classroom packed. Lance’s 15-year-old son, Kyle (Daryl Sabara), is among the students who view him with disdain; then again, Kyle is a vile human being. All he cares about are video games and graphic porn, and he bullies the only friend he’s got. A freak accident alters both of their profiles on campus, a social shift that Lance exploits in hideous ways. “World’s Greatest Dad” borrows maybe a bit too obviously from “Heathers,” and it relies on the same joke being told repeatedly. But Goldthwait finds enough clever ways into that joke to make it fresh, and he makes you curious to see how far he’s willing to push it. RATED: R for language, crude and sexual content, some drug use and disturbing images. RUNNING TIME: 99 min. ASSOCIATED PRESS RANKING: Two and a half stars out of four.

The Edge – Page

12


Movies

“Extract” tastes too bland By CHRISTY LEMIRE Associated Press LOS ANGELES (AP) — Ten years ago, Mike Judge satirized the absurdities of the workplace experience from the perspective of put-upon employees with “Office Space.” It didn’t do much when it came out but, as we all know by now, it became a cult favorite on cable and home video, to the point where it changed the way you looked at the common stapler. Now, Judge is back to the daily grind with “Extract,” but this time the writer-director tells his wacky working tales from the boss’ point of view: that of Jason Bateman’s Joel Reynold, owner of a flavor extract factory. It’s doubtful that this comedy will grab its audience in the same way, though. Judge’s characters are so one-note and their misadventures so ridiculous that it’s hard to get attached to them or care about how they turn out. Pretty much everyone in “Extract” is stupid, unlikable, self-destructive or all of the above — and so there are no real surprises. They include: — Step (Clifton Collins Jr.), a doofus who prides himself on being the company’s fastest sorter but dreams of being promoted to floor manager; — Cindy (Mila Kunis), a sexy but sociopathic con artist who weasels her way into Joel’s factory with a scheme to make money off a serious accident; — Rory (T.J. Miller), a piercedand-tatted goth rocker who’s too busy handing out flyers for his latest show to do his job; and — Mary (Beth Grant), an assembly-line worker who complains in a nasally twang about everyone else slacking, even though she’s probably the least productive

Associated Press

In this film publicity image released by Miramax, Jason Bateman stars as Joel, left, and Mila Kunis stars as Cindy in a scene from Extract.” employee of all. As the person responsible for overseeing all these idiots and incompetents, Bateman functions in his patented exasperated everyman mode, similar to his Michael Bluth character on “Arrested Development,” only without the smart, surreal dialogue. Joel is proud of the company he founded but finds himself unhappy at work and thinking about selling to General Mills. At the same time,

his nonexistent sex life with his frosty wife Suzie (a thoroughly underused Kristen Wiig) at his Texas McMansion has him pondering adulterous thoughts about the flirty Cindy. His best friend Dean (Ben Affleck), a suave bartender at a generic hotel sports grill, suggests that Joel hire a gigolo (Dustin Milligan) to sleep with Suzie, thereby giving him license to cheat on her with Cindy. With his Kenny G haircut and

canned mysticism, Dean is probably the most outlandish character of all. But he provides just the latest example of Affleck’s ability to breeze into a movie in some flashy supporting part, steal the scenes he’s in and breeze back out again. (It’s actually a better fit for him than most of his leading-man roles.) On the other end of the freakshow spectrum is Nathan (David Koechner), Joel’s nerdy neighbor

from across the street who keeps hounding him and Suzie about attending the annual Rotary Club banquet with him. (“It’s just a real loose bunch,” he insists.) Over-thetop annoying as he is, Nathan feels more like a real person than pretty much everyone else in “Extract.” We all know someone like him: a guy who drags people into painfully boring conversations, hangs around too long and can’t take a hint to go away.

“Taking Woodstock” proves disappointing By ROBERT GRUBAUGH Of The Edge I was feeling pretty good going into Ang Lee’s tribute to free love and music in “Taking Woodstock.” For three weeks in a row I’d reviewed excellent, four-star movies and I was beginning to think Hollywood could do no wrong (or that my taste was improving). The streak ends here, I’m sorry to say, after I left feeling a little flat from the slow, melancholy movie. The famed Woodstock Music Festival nev e r t o o k p l a c e i n Wo o d s t o c k , N e w York. Everybody knows that. Instead, after several failed locations cleared the hippies out, the concert organizers moved the famed event to Max Yasgur ’s dairy farm in White Lake, a tiny community within the town limits of Bethel, New York. The story is told from the point of view of Elliot Teichberg (comedian Demetri Martin, in a distinctly against-type performance), the

September 10, 2009

“Taking Woodstock”

RATED: R for graphic nudity, some sexual content, drug use, and language. RUNNING TIME: 130 minutes. ROBERT’S RANKING: one and a half stars out of four.

head of the chamber of commerce and an over-serious young man whose off-kilter family runs a ramshackle roadside inn. We find that in early 1969 that Elliot has left the thrill of Manhattan, where he’d hoped to find success with his painting and interior design skills, to bail out his father (Henry Goodman) and mother (the incomparable Imelda Staunton) who are failing in their room-and-board enterprise. Elliot has long-hosted a summer music

jamboree on their motel property, something you do in the Catskills, I suppose. It consisted of playing records in the yard, according to Yasgur himself (played in this movie by Eugene Levy). When he hears of the latest Woodstock cancellation, Elliot calls up Michael Lang (Jonathon Groff), a curly-maned and mellow hippie who has an “in” with the event’s money people. From the minute the soft-spoken Lang shows up, clad in a leather vest with no shirt, we know he’s happy with the decision to come to White Lake, even if the town’s residents aren’t necessarily on board with the idea. My biggest gripe about the movie is how little of the actual concert we see. A distant stage and speaker feedback are all we’re left to view and hear while Elliot is sliding around in the thick mud created by the notoriously rainy week. None of the great musical acts that performed for an estimated 500,000 people make any appearance. The Grateful Dead,

Janis Joplin, Jimi Hendrix, and The Who don’t even appear on the film’s lackluster soundtrack. Talk about disappointing. Someone recently asked me to compare this film to “Almost Famous,” Cameron Crowe’s seminal opus about rock ‘n roll and self-discovery. They’re pretty much the same, except Taking Woodstock is missing any element of cool. When Lee’s last film, “Brokeback Mountain, “was released it led to a media maelstrom that pushed the film to the Oscar brink and led many folks to the Annie Proulx short story on which it was based. Taking Woodstock is also based on a novel, one written by memoirist Elliot Tiber and Tom Monte. I didn’t love the movie, but I curious as to how the novel differs. The vibes put out by the Woodstock Music & Art Fair still sends chills through a lot of people forty years later. It might be a book I’d like to check out.

The Edge – Page

13


Movies

Hollywood's fall lineup takes shape LOS ANGELES (AP) — Hollywood might be telling its own life story this fall, presenting a lineup of liars, phonies, smooth talkers, bloodsuckers and greedy old men. Granted, there are heroes in the mix, including Robert Downey Jr. as the great detective in “Sherlock Holmes” and Morgan Freeman as Nelson Mandela in Clint Eastwood’s post-apartheid drama “Invictus.” Beloved literature and storybook adventures come to the screen with Maurice Sendak’s children’s classic “Where the Wild Things Are,” Disney’s animated fairy tale “The Princess and the Frog” and “Lord of the Rings” filmmaker Peter Jackson’s adaptation of modern favorite “The Lovely Bones.” And audiences will be reunited with absent friends, among them director James Cameron on the sci-fi epic “Avatar,” his first narrative film since “Titanic,” and Woody, Buzz Lightyear and their plaything pals as 3-D versions of “Toy Story” and “Toy Story 2” hit theaters.

Still, rascals, rogues, beasts and baddies abound. Vampires and werewolves form opposing cliques in the season’s supernatural heavyweight, “The Twilight Saga: New Moon,” with Kristen Stewart and Rob Pattinson back for the second chapter of Stephenie Meyer’s vamp-schoolgirl romance. The vampire-werewolf feud makes for a nice exploration of our own psyches, said “New Moon” director Chris Weitz. “I suppose they’re the two most relatable human monsters that we can think of. They nicely encapsulate restraint and passion,” Weitz said. “Vampires are cold-blooded, literally, and werewolves are hot-blooded.” D o w n e y a n d d i re c t o r G u y Ritchie inject some passion into cold-blooded rationalist Holmes with their Victorian-era crime tale inspired by Arthur Conan Doyle’s detective stories, featuring Jude Law as sidekick Watson. Holmes “is a weirdo by any standards,” Downey said. “He has dedicated the entirety of his adult

life to this one purpose, which is being a consulting detective and knowing things that other people don’t take the time to make it their business to know. “That said, there’s something kind of bohemian about him. He also has made no effort to cultivate friendships with anybody, because that would be to the exclusion of his prime mover. So he’s trippy.” Here’s a look at some of the other good, bad and trippy types in store this season: James Cameron’s “Avatar” leads a rush of films featuring humans in phony forms, including Bruce Willis’ “Surrogates,” a murder thriller in a world where people live vicariously through robot replicas, and Gerard Butler ’s “Gamer,” where mindcontrol allows puppetmaster players to toy with real people in lethal games. “Avatar” stars Sam Worthington, Z o e S a l d a n a a n d C a m e ro n ’ s “Aliens” hero Sigourney Weaver in a 3-D saga in which human explorers embody clones of an alien race to

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explore their planet’s fantastic environment. Cameron’s ocean explorations for the documentary “Aliens of the Deep” helped spark his imagination for the life forms of “Avatar.” “I’ve seen some pretty amazing things at the bottom of the ocean. I’ve seen in some cases things that have never been seen or described by science before. So I know there are wonders out there and I know that nature is infinitely more inventive not only than we imagined, but than we can imagine,” Cameron said. Ricky Gervais directs, co-writes and stars as the world’s first fibber in “The Invention of Lying,” featuring Jennifer Garner and Tina Fey in a comedy about an alternate reality where everyone tells the truth — until one man discovers the benefits of dishonesty. Matt Damon and Steven Soderbergh, collaborators on the “Ocean’s Eleven” romps, reunite for the whistleblower tale “The Informant!”, based on Kurt Eichenwald’s book about Archers

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Daniel Midland executive Mark Whitacre, who turned FBI mole in a price-fixing scheme at the agriculture-processing company. The film plays as dark comedy, Soderbergh centering on the absurdity of Whitacre’s deceitful, vainglorious cooperation with his FBI handlers. “Steven really kind of set on this idea of him being the most u n r e l i a b l e n a r r a t o r. T h e r e ’ s information in the book that’s just kind of doled out slowly, where you go, ’Wait a minute, something’s not quite right,”’ Damon said. “It’s sort of the liar who keeps saying, ‘OK, now I’m telling you everything.”’ “Greed is good,” robber baron Gordon Gecko declared in “Wall Street.” As the world reels over the great recession resulting from that philosophy, Hollywood is selling tickets for some moralizing over the price of greed, led by Jim Carrey in a new incarnation of Charles Dickens’ great skinflint, Ebenezer Scrooge.

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Travel

Know before you go Guidebooks can show you the way By DEBBIE SETTLE Of The Edge Most people love to travel, but feel a bit apprehensive about going to a new place and not being familiar with the surroundings. A great tool to have are guide books that you can read, make notes in, use to plan your travel itinerary and then take with you on your excursions. Some great reference guides packed with a huge amount of information on famous destinations come from a company called Tourist Town Guides. Here is an

outline of a couple of their books giving an idea of what they offer. “Ocean City, A guide to Maryland’s S e a s i d e Resort”

by Kim Kash. The book description: “Ocean City is Maryland’s seaside paradise. With a carnival atmosphere on the Boardwalk and quiet natural beauty on the bayside, this resort community has something for everyone. Learn what brings vacationers back year after year, including information about area beaches, the famous Ocean City Boardwalk, area dining, shopping, golfing, water parks and more. Using this comprehensive and completely independent guide, visitors can plan their ideal vacation to Ocean City.” The book includes a simple, yet informative map of Ocean City, complete with street names. Then it begins with an explanation of the best way to use the book, an area orientation-including local services, seasons and temperatures and festivals and events. Next are “The Boardwalk,” “The Ocean,” amusements, golf, parks and museums, shopping and day spas, restaurants, nightlife, accommodations, and finally a

September 10, 2009

list of day trips surrounding Ocean City. “Frankenmuth, A guide to Michigan’s Little Bavaria” by Lynn Marie-Ittner K l a m m e r. T h e book description: “Frankenmuth is Michigan’s “Christmas Town” and a top tourist draw. Family events, u n i q u e shopping and historical significance combine in a natural, smalltown Bavarian-inspired setting. Use this comprehensive and completely independent guide to plan your Frankenmuth vacation. Learn about over 30 annual events, the best places to stay, eat and shop, natural and historical attractions and more. Use this guide to explore and experience what Frankenmuth has to offer, both on and off the beaten path.” The book includes a simple, yet informative map of Frankenmuth, complete with street names. It follows the same guidelines of chaptering as the previous book, an explanation how to best use the book, history of the town, etc. There are a number of other books available that follow this same format, making your trip planning much simpler. Included are Atlantic City, Hershey, Pa., Jackson Hole, Wy., Key West, Fla., Myrtle Beach, S.C., Niagra Falls, N.Y., and more. These books retail for $13.95 to $14.95 and can be purchased at www.touristtown.com. They are much cheaper than hiring a tour guide that you aren’t sure you can trust, and very reasonable for the peace of mind you receive being able to preplan and get to know your destination before your trip.

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Travel briefs Annual art festival coming up in Jackson Hole JACKSON HOLE, Wyo. (AP) — Thousands of art-lovers attend the Jackson Hole Fall Arts Festival each year, scheduled this fall for Sept. 1020.

More than 50 events are on the program, including art shows, music, cowboy poetry and even a Western fashion show. Other events include an exhibition of Western furniture and home accessories, studio tours, a gallery walk, ranch tours, concerts, and a real estate auction. One of the signature events of

the festival is the National Museum of Wildlife Art’s Western Visions fundraiser, Sept. 16-18, which includes a series of shows and sales of work by more than 150 artists, from photography to jewelry to miniatures. Demonstrations of painting and sculpting techniques are also on the program, along with a Wild West

and Leo E. Osborne. The adventure will be led by Wildlife Expeditions, a division of non-profit Teton Science Schools. The cost is $125 for members; $150 nonmembers. Call 307-732-5412 to register. Details at http://tinyurl.com/ pp44w9.

Artist Party, Sept. 17, 6:30 -10:30 p.m., $200. Another element of the fundraiser is a morning photo safari to capture the landscapes and wildlife of Grand Teton National Park, Sept. 17, 6:30 a.m.-11 a.m., in the company of Western Visions artists Lindsay Scott

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Travel briefs Degas exhibit at New Orleans home where he lived NEW ORLEANS (AP) — The New Orleans house where Impressionist painter Edgar Degas lived for a time is hosting an exhibit about his sojourn, including a larger-than-painted reproduction of the most important work he did in the city. The house, now known as the Degas House, was owned by relatives of the artist’s mother and dates to the early 1850s. Degas was 38 and not yet famous when he arrived in 1872 in New Orleans, the city of his mother ’s birth, after service in the FrancoPrussian War. He remained in New Orleans for 4 1/2 months. The exhibit includes re p ro d u c t i o n s o f e i g h t o f t h e 18 paintings he made in New Orleans, some photos of his hosts, Degas and the house; reproductions of letters he wrote home during that time; and other information about his life and work. The reproductions include “A Cotton Office in New Orleans,” which was the first work by Degas to be bought by a museum.

His host family, the Mussons, w e re i n t h e c o t t o n b u s i n e s s , and the scene depicted the office where they worked. The reproduction is about 40 inches across, almost four inches wider than the original, which is owned by the Musee des Beaux Arts in Pau, France. For more information about Degas House, visit http://www. degashouse.com. The house, located at 2306 Esplanade Ave., offers tours and is also a bed and breakfast with rates beginning at $99.

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Report: Caribbean hotel plans will stall due to visitor drop SAN JUAN, Puerto Rico (AP) — A new report offers a bleak outlook for the Caribbean hotel industry. PKF Hospitality Research says the region’s hotels had an average

drop in profits of 16 percent in 2008 and there will be “further profit deterioration” this year. The report finds steep discounts and special offers have not offset a 4 percent decline in visitors to the tourism-dependent area. The report also predicts that about 50 planned hotel projects will likely be delayed because developers are struggling to get financing. It noted a number of hotels have been forced to close, including the Four Seasons on Great Exuma in the Bahamas.

Bon Appetit magazine names 10 top new restaurants NEW YORK (AP) — Restaurants in San Francisco, Cambridge, Mass., Chicago and Austin, Texas, are featured by Bon Appetit in the magazine’s a n n u a l S e p t e m b e r re s t a u r a n t issue. The restaurants appear on Bon Appetit’s list of 10 of the country’s best new restaurants, along with a recommended dish. They are: —Bar Jules, San Francisco, lamb with preserved lemons

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People

Creativille anniversary to benefit EAC By ANN NICCUM Of The Edge Creativille, Inc. will celebrate its 10th anniversary with a bash to benefit the Edwardsville Arts Center (EAC). The company’s President Steve Hartman, also a Director and Vice-President of the Center, said Creativille is hosting a show along with a party at EAC to honor Creativille’s anniversary and help raise money for the Center. The show, “Impressed by Design: Letterpress in the Heartland,” will display the work of five artists – designers and printers: Amos Kennedy, Jim Sherraden, Eric Woods, Brady Vest and Ken Botnick. Hartman, a native of Edwardsville, started his business in St. Louis, but moved it back to his hometown three years ago. The business has become one of the most recognized and respected graphic design firms in the St. Louis region. Clients include: The May Department Stores Company, MasterCard International, SIUE, Madison County and The Market at Busch’s Grove in St. Louis. The business and his role in the design industry has allowed Hartman to make connections with artists/designers across the country. Hartman said having a show featuring Kennedy at EAC was

on a his list of things to do and the company’s anniversary combined with a plan to help EAC collided into one big event showing artists from the design/ printing world. Now, the show has arrived and is currently under way at EAC. Fifty percent of the proceeds from the sale of the artwork from the show and its giftshop and all additional donations will benefit EAC. Artwork includes posters, books, broadsides and greeting cards. The prices range from as little $5 in the gift shop to between $20 to $150 for posters to $1,480 for a wood piece at $1,40. Hartman said the company’s goal is to raise $10,000 for the Center. The artwork is now on display at EAC and it will remain at EAC through Oct. 3. Along with the party, the show will be open to the public during normal EAC business hours. Hartman said exhibit includes artwork that appeals to all ages. “Really impressive,” Hartman said. “Gorgeous work I could hang in any room in my house.” Posters include those with a variety of designs and colors and range from an assortment of designs including those for special events, musical bands like Beck, sports, animals and quotes. Hartman said “Impressed by Design: Letterpress in the Heartland” combines a mix of

Marci Winters-McLaughlin/The Edge

Steve Hartman, curator of the new exhibit at EAC, " Impressed by Design: Letterpress in the Heartland." design and letter press printing from Kennedy’s activism work to Botnick’s craftsman book prints and designs. He said Sherraden, Woods and Vest styles fall in between. Hartman said the artists all have their own style and all are well-known for their work. Kennedy is an internationally

Marci Winters-McLaughlin/The Edge

known printing press artist from Gordo, Ala. His works include a mix of controversial posters and book art. For some of his pieces he uses quotes from well known individuals such as Rosa Parks and Sojourner Truth and even some lesser known quotes from people like his older brother. There is film on You Tube overviewing his work (www.youtube.com/ watch?v=gijH2Dss9Tg) and a trailer for a documentary about Kennedy “Proceed and Be Bold!” at www.brownfinchfilms.com. Sherraden, manager, chief designer and archivist at Hatch Show Print in Nashville, Tenn. – one of America’s oldest surviving show and poster shops – has print clients including B.B. King, Neil Young, Coldplay, The Dead and Alan Jackson; and designs customers such as The New York Times, Wired Magazine, Golf Digest and Anthropologie. Woods operates the Firecracker Press design studio and letterpress printing shop in St. Louis and creates posters, greeting cards, invitations, books and advertisements. Vest, founder of Hammerpress in Kansas City, Kan., began by printing CD and LP packaging for his rock and roll friends and now his work continues his rock and roll ways with other items such as wedding invitations, stationary, custom work for national restaurant chains, corporate identities, posters and art prints.

Botnick, Director of Kranzberg Book Studio at Washington University in St. Louis, designs both trade and small press books while pioneering new directions in the visual communications curriculum. He has also published trade books on art and design to handmade limited editions volumes by well-known literary figures and in the past was a co-proprietor of Red Ozier Press in the 1980s, responsible for design and production of art books at Yale University Press and served as Executive Director of the Penland School of Crafts in North Carolina. The curator for the show is Hartman. He opened Creativille in a one-room office in Clayton, Mo., in 1999. Three years ago Hartman relocated the business back to his hometown and today it resides in a pre-civil war brick colonial on Edwardsville’s Main Street. The firm specializes in financial, employee and strategic communications and brand design and it has become one of the most recognized and respected graphic designers from the St. Louis region. To learn more about Creativille, visit www. creativille.net or EAC www. edwardsvilleartscenter.org. For more information about the letterpress show, purchase tickets or make a donation to EAC, visit The Creativille Tenth Anniversary Web site, www. creativille.net/tenth/ or call Hartman at 659-2861.

A sampling of some of the letterpress works currently hanging for the EAC fundraiser.

September 10, 2009

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The Arts Arts calendar **If you would like to add something to our arts calendar, e-mail it to theedge@edwpub.net.

Thursday, Sept. 10 • Seminar: “The Allure of Antiquity: European Artists Inspired by Ancient Rome,” Each Thursday through Sept 3-24, limited to 20, $80 ($50 members), St. Louis Art Museum, St. Louis • Ansel Adams in Yosemite, St. Louis Art Museum, Forest Park

Wednesday, Sept. 16 • Thomas Struth: Photographs, Pulitzer Foundation for the Arts, St. Louis, Grand Center

Thursday, Sept. 17 • Seminar: “The Allure of Antiquity: European Artists Inspired by Ancient Rome,” Each Thursday through Sept 3-24, limited to 20, $80 ($50 members), St. Louis Art Museum, St. Louis

Saturday, Sept. 19

Friday, Sept. 11 • Ansel Adams in Yosemite, St. Louis Art Museum, Forest Park • Contemporary Art Museum, St. Louis, Mo., Opening Night, 7 p.m. to 9 p.m.

Saturday, Sept. 12

• Thomas Struth: Photographs, Pulitzer Foundation for the Arts, St. Louis, Grand Center

Wednesday, Sept. 23 • Thomas Struth: Photographs, Pulitzer Foundation for the Arts, St. Louis, Grand Center

• Thomas Struth: Photographs, Pulitzer Foundation for the Arts, St. Louis, Grand Center • Ansel Adams in Yosemite, St. Louis Art Museum, Forest Park

• Thomas Struth: Photographs, Pulitzer Foundation for the Arts, St. Louis, Grand Center

Sunday, Sept. 13

Saturday, Oct. 3

• Ansel Adams in Yosemite, St. Louis Art Museum, Forest Park, closing day.

• Thomas Struth: Photographs, Pulitzer Foundation for the Arts, St. Louis, Grand Center

Saturday, Sept. 26

Everyone is Invited to Our Common Ground’s 5th Annual Autumn ArtWalk

ocgart.com

Thanks to Madison Arts Council Illinois Arts Council Greenville Tourism Bureau

• Head Chef: Kevin Williams from Erato’s in Edwardville • Plus Wine and Food Samples • Silent Auction for Autographed T-Shirts and Original Handwritten Lyrics of “Redneck Woman” donated by Gretchen Wilson • Street Theater • Jazz Performances • Art and Sculpture Exhibits

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September 10, 2009

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The Arts Artistic adventures Metabolic City on display at Wash. U. Amidst the cultural and political ferment of the 1960s, avantgarde artists and architects began embracing biological and scientific models as well as the potentials of emerging technologies to explore radical new directions in urban design, developing projects that were at once fanciful, complex and conceptually serious. This fall the Mildred Lane Kemper Art Museum at Washington University in St. Louis will present Metabolic City, an exhibition surveying work by the British collective Archigram; the Japanese Metabolists (whose members include Fumihiko Maki, architect of the Kemper Art Museum); and the Dutch

painter Constant Nieuwenhuys, an early member of the Situationist International. Curated and designed by Heather Woofter, assistant professor of architecture in the Sam Fox School of Design & Visual Arts, Metabolic City will feature approximately 70 drawings, plans, models and conceptual projects, including rarely seen materials drawn from private archives and a sampling of work by influential predecessors. The exhibit runs through Jan. 4, 2010. Organized thematically, the exhibition explores theoretical and conceptual overlaps between these groups, all of which came to view the city as a kind of living organism, in which civil infrastructure forms the basis for social interaction and individual liberty. At the same time, though they articulated their

views in explicitly political terms, each pioneered distinctive — and remarkably prescient — means of architectural representation, often employing techniques and processes that are only now entering mainstream practice. Networks of urban circulation were a major area of focus. Mechanical systems, roadways, pedestrian passages and other built environments frequently were conceived in relation to electronics, media and other immaterial connections. Archigram’s Computer City (1964), for instance, tracks the infrastructures that allow its futuristic Plug-In City (1962-64) to operate. Maki’s Golgi Structures (1968) — named for Nobel Prize-winner Camillo Golgli, who developed techniques for visualizing nerve cell bodies — alternate dense urban areas with unstructured open spaces. Encasing the latter are light-absorbing

cells that facilitate communication, energy distribution and mechanical systems. These figures also shared a belief that adaptable habitats could foster unprecedented levels of freedom and mobility. Archigram’s Walking City (1964) consists of mammoth “pods,� or cities built as ship-like vessels, capable of traversing the earth. Nieuwenhuys’ New Babylon North (1960) suggests a sprawling serpentine structure that could be shaped and reshaped by inhabitants, their labors supported by factories hidden below ground. Wall City (1960), by the Metabolist Kisho Kurokawa, envisions a series of movable plug-in units for living and working, the increased efficiency of which would shorten the workweek and encourage leisure travel. The Mildred Lane Kemper Art Museum, part of Washington

University’s Sam Fox School of Design & Visual Arts, is committed to furthering critical thinking and visual literacy through a vital program of exhibitions, publications and accompanying events. Metabolic City will open with a reception from 7 to 9 p.m. Friday, Sept. 18, and remain on view through January 4, 2010. Both the reception and exhibition are free and open to the public. The Kemper Art Museum is located on Washington University’s Danforth Campus, near the intersection of Skinker and Forsyth boulevards. Regular hours are 11 a.m. to 6 p.m. Mondays, Wednesdays and Thursdays; 11 a.m. to 8 p.m. Fridays; and 11 a.m. to 6 p.m. Saturdays and Sundays. The museum is closed Tuesdays. For more information, call (314) 935-4523 or visit kemperartmuseum.wustl. edu.

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Family

“Phantom of the Opera” Andrew Lloyd Webber’s classic returns to the Fox By DEBBIE SETTLE Of The Edge The dates have been set, and now the players have been cast for the much anticipated return of one of the most popular shows to play at the fabulous Fox Theatre in St. Louis. The Cameron Mackintosh/Really Useful Theatre Company, Inc. production of Andrew Lloyd Webber ’s “The Phantom of the Opera,” directed by Harold Prince, is returning to the Fox Theatre on Wednesday, Sept. 30 and running through Sunday, Oct. 25. The production company has just announced casting for the production. Tim Martin Gleason heads the 36-member company as The Phantom, with Trista Moldovan as the young soprano, Christine, and Sean MacLaughlin as Raoul. Also featured will be Kim Stengel as Carlotta Giudicelli, D.C. Anderson as Monsieur André, Michael McCoy as Monsieur Firmin, Nancy Hess as Madame Giry, John Whitney as Ubaldo Piangi and Jessica Bishop as Meg. At certain performances, Kelly Jeanne Grant plays the role of Christine. Cast members: Ti m M a r t i n G l e a s o n : ( P h a n t o m ) A f t e r completing a record-setting tenure as Raoul with three different American companies of Phantom, Tim returns to the national tour, this time as the masked man. He began his Phantom journey with this very company in 2001 as member of the ensemble. He quickly took over the role of Raoul, which he played for over three years. He then had the honor of playing Raoul for the recordbreaking Broadway Company when Phantom became the longest-running show in Broadway history. Mr. Gleason next originated the role of Raoul for Phantom: The Las Vegas Spectacular. In September of 2007 he rejoined the Broadway cast for an additional year and a half. With his time in all three companies, Mr. Gleason is the longestrunning Raoul in American history, playing the role more than 2,600 times. Mr. Gleason received a BS in psychology from Saint Joseph’s University in Philadelphia and actually pursued a business career for four years before deciding to become an actor. Prior to Phantom, he has originated several roles, including Romeo in Terrence Mann’s musical Romeo & Juliet at Goodspeed and Adam Gernstein in The Rhythm Club at Signature Theatre, a role for which he received a prestigious Helen Hayes Award nomination. Tr i s t a M o l d o v a n : ( C h r i s t i n e D a a é ) i s delighted to join the U.S. National Tour of The Phantom of the Opera. Most recently, she had the honor of working with Julie Andrews in the John Bucchino musical Simeon’s Gift. She also appeared as ‘Cosette’ in the regional premiere of Les Misérables at the Pioneer Theater Company. Off-Broadway/NYC: Sally in Me and My Girl (Musicals Tonight), Rachel in Paul Revere (Theatreworks) and Seffa in Faces of War (Makor Center). Regional credits: Gypsy (Louise), Nine (Carla), Born Yesterday (Billie Dawn), Carousel (Julie) and Cabaret (Sally). Television: “The Guiding Light,” “All My Children” and “As the World Turns.” Trista is a proud graduate of the Baldwin-Wallace Conservatory of Music. Sean MacLaughlin (Raoul, Vicomte de Chagny) is proud to perform the role of Raoul. Broadway: Andrew Lloyd Webber’s The Woman in White.

September 10, 2009

Performed the roles of Vikram in Bombay Dreams” and Armand in Elton John’s Lestat; Off-Broadway: The Audience and Requiem for William. Some favorite regional credits include: The Kennedy Center productions of The Sondheim Celebration: Merrily We Roll Along and Ken Ludwig’s re-tooling of Tom Sawyer; Signature Theatre: the workshop of Michael John LaChiusa’s The Highest Yellow, Forum (Hero), Into The Woods (Rapunzel’s Prince), The Rink (Dino), Grand Hotel (Erik); Flat Rock Theatre: Thoroughly Modern Millie (Jimmy), The Rainmaker (Starbuck), Children of Eden (Cain /Japheth), I Love You, You’re Perfect...( Man 2);

Opera tells the story of a masked figure who lurks beneath the catacombs of the Paris Opera House, exercising a reign of terror over all who inhabit it. He falls madly in love with an innocent young soprano, Christine, and devotes himself to creating a new star by nurturing her extraordinary talents and by employing all of the devious methods at his command. The Phantom of the Opera will play the Fabulous Fox Theatre Sept. 30 through Oct. 25. Performances are Tuesday-Friday evenings at 8 p.m.; Saturdays at 2 p.m. and 8 p.m.; and Sundays at 2 p.m. and 7:30 p.m. There is also a

For The Edge

Tim Martin Gleason in “Phantom of the Opera.” Hangar Theater: My Fair Lady (Freddy). TV/Film: HBO’s “Something the Lord Made” (Dr Swedlin) and appeared in PBS’ Great Performances “South Pacific : In Concert from Carnegie Hall”. Sean thanks his family for their constant love and support. Member of Actors’ Equity since 1999. The Phantom of the Opera has music by Andrew Lloyd Webber and is directed by Harold Prince. Lyrics are by Charles Hart (with additional lyrics by Richard Stilgoe) and the book is by Richard Stilgoe and Andrew Lloyd Webber. Production design is by Maria Bjornson, lighting byAndrew Bridge and sound by Martin Levan. Musical staging and choreography is by Gillian Lynne. Orchestrations are by David Cullen and Andrew Lloyd Webber. Based on the classic novel Le Fantôme de l’Opéra by Gaston Leroux, The Phantom of the

weekday matinee on Thursday, Oct. 1 at 1 p.m. Ticket prices range from $28-$75 and are subject to change. Please visit www.fabulousfox.com for current pricing information. A limited number of VIP tickets are available for $100 or $130 for all performances. Tickets are available at the Fox Theatre box office, all MetroTix outlets, online at www. metrotix.com or by calling 314-534-1111. Group orders for 20 or more may be placed by calling 314-535-2900. The St. Louis engagement of The Phantom of the Opera is presented by arrangement with Fox Associates and is a special offering of the U.S. Bank Broadway Series and sponsored by American Airlines. Visit the official The Phantom of the Opera Web site at www.thephantomoftheopera.com.

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Family Focus

Unstructured playtime has its benefits By ANNE WALLACE ALLEN Associated Press When we chose our house after moving to Boise in 2005, we definitely didn’t go on curb appeal. Built in 1893, the house was clad in fleshtone cedar shingles, and the bathroom was so small that even the dog could hardly turn around in it. Yet the house had one feature we loved: It was set in a neighborhood full of scooters, bicycles, swingsets, and other signs that children lived all around. We were looking for a place where the kids could roam freely, as so many parenting books, blogs, and experts assure us kids don’t get to do nowadays. And in our block, we found it. The kids, now 11 and 9, swing on a tree swing three doors down. They disappear for hours into another neighbor ’s house, emerging with strange crafts they’ve created from scraps of wood in the basement. This week, my daughter and four neighborhood friends spent days in our living room sewing stuffed animals out of mismatched socks, filling them with rice and beans, and selling them to raise money for the Make-A-Wish foundation. It seems that whenever I talk to experts on childhood — be they psychologists, school principals or other parents — they bemoan the way that childhood has been taken up by structured activities. They talk about our children’s over-scheduled, high-pressure lives. Yet I know — or see — many people making a conscious effort to resist that trend. And despite the pressure we feel to help our kids succeed at sports, at music, and at school,

many people manage to make room for play in their kids’ lives. “We have a swing next door, we have scooters, we have bikes, we have skateboards,” said Shaun Hammersmark, a Boise landscape designer who works at home and has made a conscious effort to create an environment where her kids, ages 5 and 11, and others can play. The experts tell us that letting kids play, instead of organizing things for them to do, helps them socially, physically and even academically. Play supposedly promotes creativity and enhances problem-solving skills. The American Academy of Pediatrics says unstructured playtime helps children learn to share, to conquer their fears, to adjust to new situations, and to stick up for themselves. In a 2007 report, the Academy said free playtime and recess are slipping away as schools focus on meeting new academic achievement demands brought about by laws like No Child Left Behind. Hammersmark said the freestyle play in her yard helps kids from ages one year to 12 learn to get along with others. “They learn to work with each other, and what better education can you give your kids?” she said. The academics who study children and childhood tell us kids need to figure out playtime on their own. They don’t need to be directed. “They say, ’I’m bored, I’m bored,’ but guess what, five minutes later you peek in and they’re playing away,” said Brandy Vanderlee, a mother of three in Macedon, N.Y. There are scolds in the blogosphere who tell us that parents who let their children

take risks by being on their own are neglectful. Plenty on the other side say parents overschedule their kids and hinder their development. I don’t know which side is right. But the kids I know seem happier when we just leave them alone to play. “In most cultures and through most of history, people did know that kids needed time to play, but they didn’t feel that adults should play with kids,” said Stephanie

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Coontz, who teaches history and family studies at The Evergreen State College in Olympia, Wash. Until recent decades, “there wasn’t this idea that parents should be intervening constantly to make things a teachable moment and expand their minds,” said Coontz. “Their minds expand a lot better when they pursue things they’re interested in for themselves.” And when they’re playing

on their own, their parents get a lot more stuff done. Sure, the sewing circle of kids in my living room ended up accidentally using someone’s mother ’s $12 socks that weren’t actually mismatched in the course of their stuffed animal creation A small price to pay for the full day of uninterrupted working time that I enjoyed in my office about 8 feet away. Then again, they weren’t my socks.

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22


Dining Delights

Hey, Mom! Getting a handle on healthy after-school snacks By DEBBIE SETTLE Of The Edge “I’m hungry, what do we have to eat?” is the cry of those back to school kids when they get off that bus in the afternoon. There is the ongoing dilemma of what to give them without ruining their dinner, satisfying their bottomless hunger, yet keeping them fairly healthy. Here are some ideas for some quick, yet satisfying snacks that kids will like. “Ants on a Log” This classic snack is cheap and healthy. Just spread one large stalk of celery with 2 tablespoons of peanut butter and place 10 to 15 raisins on top of the peanut butter. Your kids will love it. Grandmas Butter Dips These little buttery, crunchy buns are perfect with a soup or stew. It is cheesy and we love the green onion bits in it. It makes a great after school snacks and finger food for parties. Ingredients 2 1/2 cups all purpose flour 1 tablespoon sugar 3 1/2 teaspoons baking powder

1 teaspoon salt 1/2 cup grated sharp cheddar cheese 3 green onions, finely chopped 1 cup 2% milk 1/2 cup butter Instructions: Preheat oven to 450F. Sift dry ingredients together in a large bowl. Stir in cheese and green onions. Add milk and stir slowly with a fork until dough clings together. Turn the dough onto a floured board, coat the dough with flour and knead lightly about 10 times. Roll the dough out to about 1/2 inch thick. Cut into 1-inch squares. Melt butter in a 450F degree oven in a 8×8 square baking pan. Coat all the sides of the squares in the melted butter. Bake in same pan for 25 to 30 minutes. After baking, flip the little buns over in the pan to coat the top with any remaining butter. Pull apart and serve with soup, chili, salad or a casserole dish. Confetti Snack Mix Courtesy of Taste of HomeSimple and Delicious “I’ve made this party mix for many years and I usually double the recipe,” writes Jane Bray from Temple Terrace, Fla. “It makes a wonderful gift, and everyone always wants the recipe.” Prep/Total Time: 10 min. Ingredients: 4 cups Golden Grahams 1 cup dry roasted peanuts 1 cup dried banana chips

1 cup raisins 1 cup milk chocolate M&M’s Directions: In a large bowl, combine all ingredients. Store in an airtight container. Yield: 7 cups. Sweet Popcorn Snack Mix Courtesy of Taste of HomeSimple and Delicious “Pack a sandwich bag of this treat in each of your children’s lunches and watch their eyes light up.” relates Shirley Glaab of Hattiesburg, Mississippi. Coated with cocoa and cinnamon-sugar, the munchable medley also is a yummy after-school snack. SERVINGS: 10 Prep/Total Time: 30 min. Ingredients: 8 cups popped popcorn 2 tablespoons cinnamon-sugar 1 tablespoon baking cocoa 1 cup honey bear-shaped crackers 1 cup broken thin pretzel sticks 1/2 cup milk chocolate M&M’s Directions: Place popcorn in a large bowl. Combine cinnamon-sugar and cocoa; sprinkle over popcorn and toss to coat. Stir in graham snacks, pretzels and M&M’s. Store in an airtight container. Yield: about 21/2 quarts. Tiny Tortilla Pizzas Courtesy of Parenting.com What you need: Small corn tortillas Salsa

Shredded cheddar cheese Mound a little salsa and cheese on each tortilla. Cook on foil-lined tray in toaster oven until cheese has melted and is brown at the edges. Kids can help: Assemble the “pizzas,” cover the tray with foil Extras: A layer of refried beans under the salsa, cilantro for garnish, a dollop of sour cream or a sprinkle of finely chopped green pepper. Strawberry “Cheesecakes” Courtesy of Parenting.com I have yet to meet a kid who didn’t like cheesecake, and I have yet to meet a parent who wasn’t terrified of having one at arm’s reach. This snack is the perfect way for everyone to have the taste they want without the fat and calories of a whole slice. 3 ounces of cream cheese, softened for 10 seconds in the microwave 3 tablespoons strawberry jam A few sheets of graham crackers, broken into squares or rectangles Mix the softened cream cheese with the jam. Spread a little of the mixture on top of each graham cracker. Either eat right away, or chill for 30 minutes. The grahams will soften and become more like a cheesecake crust, and the topping will firm up. Kids can help: Break up grahams, stir cream cheese and jam Extras: Use different flavors of jam, top with a slice of fresh strawberry.

Above, “Ants on a Log” for The Edge. At left, “Grandmas Butter Dips” photo courtesy of chowtimes.com.

September 10, 2009

The Edge – Page

23


Dining Delights Local food movement continues to grow By JIM ROMANOFF Associated Press When a vegetable patch at the White House eclipses the famed presidential rose garden, it's clear the local food movement has gone mainstream. Direct sales of food from farms grew 49 percent to an impressive $1.2 billion between 2002 and 2007, according to the latest government agricultural census. Yet many local meat farmers are struggling. P a r t o f t h e p ro b l e m , c h e f s and local producers said, is how Americans cook and eat. From pigs, for example, consumers are mostly interested in eating "high on the hog," which describes the choicest cuts. "The loins and racks of a pig, for instance, are easy to sell," chef and meat expert Bruce Aidells said, "but that leaves the legs, shoulders, head and belly, which make up most of the animal." Farmers often end up selling less sought-after cuts at a substantially lower price per pound or, as a fallback, turn them in to ground meat. But turning the meat into processed foods or grinding it into patties or nuggets, as industrial farmers do, is more difficult on a smaller scale. Frank Pace, a trained chef and the meat manager at Healthy Living Market, a large natural food store in South Burlington, Vt., agrees. For the most part, his customers go for loins, chops and steaks because those cuts are suited to the type of quick cooking American's are used to. "Customers that live in areas with lots of farms are more likely to buy a variety of cuts," Pace said, "but for most, it's whatever they can throw on the grill for a fast meal." Shannon Hayes raises chicken, beef, veal, lamb and pork with her family at Sap Bush Hollow farm in upstate New York. To sustain local agriculture, she said, consumers need to have a basic understanding of how to work with each of the different parts of the animal so they can make meal planning decisions based on what the farmer has in stock, "not what the recipe featured in the latest cooking magazine tells us we have to run out and buy." Hayes said she often helps her customers select alternative cuts "either to suit their budget, or to meet their needs with what I happen to have." Each time, she said, they learn to work with something new, their confidence grows and her business benefits. She has even written two cookbooks, "Farmer and the Grill" and "Grassfed Gourmet." The Obamas have helped support the local food movement in other ways, as well. Last spring, they dined at New York City's Blue Hill Restaurant, where award-winning chef Dan

September 10, 2009

Barber's menu showcases local producers as well as meat and produce that the business raises on its own farms. Most top chefs will create their daily specials (or in Barber's case the whole menu) based on what is the freshest and most delicious at the market each day. Learning to eat locally is about learning to work with what is there, Hayes said. When it comes to meat, Barber said it's the more muscular, tougher cuts such as chuck, shoulder and brisket that have the most flavor. Home cooks just need to "reacquaint themselves with the low heat, slow cooking methods that are needed to bring out the tenderness," he said. ••• Pork shanks are a perfect choice for braising, but you may need to ask your butcher to get them for you. Wrapping them in foil before roasting is a great way to slowcook the meat while producing a delicious, intense sauce. If you can't find shanks, the recipe works just as well with chunks or Boston butt or blade-end pork loin roasts. BLACK BEAN-INFUSED FOIL-WRAPPED PORK SHANKS Start to finish: 4 hours 15 minutes (30 minutes active) Servings: 8 8 dried shiitake mushrooms 1 1/2 cups boiling water 1 tablespoon chopped fresh ginger 2 garlic cloves 1/2 cup chopped fresh cilantro 2 tablespoons Asian black bean sauce 1 teaspoon peanut oil 1 teaspoon sugar, plus extra for sauce 2 teaspoons Chinese black vinegar or balsamic vinegar, plus extra for sauce 2 large pork shanks (about 4 pounds total) 1/4 cup dry sherry 1/2 cup chicken broth 1/2 cup thinly sliced scallions 1 teaspoon soy sauce, plus extra for sauce In a small bowl, cover the mushrooms with the boiling water. Let soak for at least 45 minutes, or until tender. Drain the mushrooms and reserve 1/2 cup of the soaking liquid. Cut off and discard the mushroom stems, then thinly slice the caps. Set aside. In the bowl of a food processor, combine the ginger, garlic, cilantro, black bean sauce, peanut oil, 1 teaspoon sugar and the vinegar. Process until the mixture forms a smooth paste. Heat the oven to 325 F. Cut 6 to 8 deep, equally spaced, gashes in the meaty part along the length of each shank. Fill the gashes with the bean and cilantro paste, then rub any remaining paste over the rest of each shank. Place the shanks in a large bowl and set aside. In a small saucepan, combine the sherry, reserved mushroom soaking

to let any of the liquid spill out. Pull the foil tightly up around the shank to seal in the liquid (the bone can be exposed). Place the shanks vertically in a deep casserole or roasting pan. Roast for 2 to 3 hours, or until the meat is almost falling from the bone. Remove from oven. Over a bowl, carefully remove the foil so as not to lose any of the braising juices. Pour the juices into a saucepan, skim away any fat, then season with sugar, vinegar and soy sauce.

liquid and chicken broth. Boil the mixture over medium-high until reduced to 4 tablespoons, about 10 minutes. Add the soy sauce and set aside. Measure two 18-inch pieces of heavy-duty foil. Place half of the scallions and half of the sliced mushrooms into the center of each sheet. Spoon half of the reduced sherry mixture over the vegetables. Place one pork shank on top of each mound of vegetables with the bone vertical. Loosely pull the foil around the shank, taking care not

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August 25

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Workers began takingon Friday afternoon steps historic Madison to demolish the tures down Care Facility County will take weeks, in the latestSheltered about after the way to transformin step on begin haulingwhich Siglock two the Cash lot into them in will Governors’ g the corner in dirt a public There was from the green The 9-acre money promised in the space.Parkway project program. first site will space. going a to fill has been the for Clunkers two other questions.and not be Then what? complete only of Illinois in Costello age shed, overall. undertime for money The state During LaHood, located stimulus of projbling buildings, the recent behind A stor- tion However, briefly before allowing number in getting mayoral LaHood and spoke to store first in the will still the ram- Mayor campaign, electrucks used has started U.S. Hannig door and be used from reporters.better part Gary Niebur Edwardsvi to Buildings funding the questions according ects the and Landsby the county’s the site, which declared lle He had spent with leaders in created, And a said he that Departmen downtown sits just the jobs Costello, D-Belleville. Federal of Friday meeting about transporsouth contains pauper ’s cemetery t. , at 333 should and South Main of Rep. Jerry news from the Missouri about the become that remain Illinois and He praised Hannig St., green space as well. 600 bodies will city. that perhaps added good so well issues. indicates for the The cemetery for doing Rumors Reserve may be over. mem- tation dollars and plaque state of Illinois troubles with the site might have circulated that was also contains stimulus financial spoke briefly U.S. was once that the become a Siglock taken from work. Costello media along with Ray in spending $627 people to said that a city park, but Sheltered the hospital section what the received ion the has never bers of plan. of putting said Illinoisfunds for state of the of Transportat workers Care Home and Hannig been Secretary “We’re from Premier next week Secretary s got not going of St. Louis and Illinois Hannig who million in stimulusgovernment Demolition tables and LaHood of will cut and local on Gary from the have the to have picnic projects. members a projects stone being local problem Transportati Friday with for n plaque up is in place Heavy equipmen place it side of the building met $300 million Capital Bill Siglock here at night and of kids in the cemetery suchad just Council Southwester said. and at the things,” Premier t has been “The Illinois build on these leaders as well. “In fact, the Leadership workers The we can regional rolled in Friday we’ll probably now so said. and Monday will spend off the driveways Illinois and Hotel in Collinsville. to help demolish Hannig providbuildings are proposals knocking as a green but just chain Doubletree on Roundtable discuss cesses,” down in the works rail line the Madison the drivers keep it space. Already a high-speed Hannig will haul and on Tuesday up here Transportati opportunity to Marci Winters-M on County and go They can walk Madison an the debris Sheltered for developing to Chicago. transportati ed them cLaughlin away, etery, they can up to the cemLouis Buildings County Supervisor Care Home. and state the proposals from St. grounds, /Intelligenc walk around some of national be filed I don’t of er Siglock said.and Grounds in the closed said he filed more were to the really issues. and Marty don’t want to The red hear said, will participating bricks, Siglock to come have the care. I just r Leaders session were to ion on Friday be round of By cops have over at Intelligence The task sold. on Monday. be a second kids are 9 o’clock STEVE roundtable Surface Transportat cLaughlin/ of knocking parked because the FAA There will Oct. 2. stevehorrell HORRELL the struc- lot.” in the about the tion Act of 2009, Marci Winters-M @hotmail.c parking the new proposals filed the U.S. Department duty, Jessica om Reauthoriza tion Bill, and said t Act. accept highSee "HOME" LaHood L. on will ing to from Reauthoriza Developmenprovide on campus on Page Madison Hunter, accordMonday HeDeputies to of Transportati By JULIA wall while 5 Capt. Marc Water Resources County have was slated an update speed rail proposals the nation. 25-year-ol or apartment jbiggs@edwBIGGS McLemore Sheriff's LaHood d Worden charged a left the with higharound pori@gmail.co . leaders bar but a dorm room 13 regions that people want threatenin g to man with on-related regional returned Johnson touch on m kill several patrons n. transportati Recovery and said it’s clear a short personal on the put their Bar and inside the Yellowfemale time later. the Northeast Professiona the Americanof 2009, often speed rail transportatio for sale to Saloon. from tions of people in Dog l dancers, nt Act aspiring He threat- es. Johnson Package. of posters The incident the trainhappened “Talk to educators, are told them, dancers, Reinvestmeas the Stimulus about kill you and who take Wednesda ened admirers students, 12:40 a.m. musicians to peruse displays Corridor the charges. all," according "I will y. The bar have spent historians, was information referred to Washington and students Monday. outon between,” Wall b York in pus a Katherine rtende SIUE is at 124 St. began the attending New to the for Illinois at stops panel discussion Also promised r it con- in Worden. East Police again projects the 26th last week on the Dunham Bill. Internationa to get off where classes later you make Kenneth and the Annual on the Dunham SIUE cam- museum about new new State Capital to the able it will L. Johnson said. “If with was asked of gun was determine d of the life l Seminar. The Katherine tours. on-time, the was charged four – counts that Legacy was closed oppor- LaHood efficient and lined in annual event and Repeat actually come The seminar Dunham at TheBANK conduct to and Dunham air pellet of disorderly The seminartalent of this remarkable press leave, said. a 1008 it they will venient, be made is a celebration drew attendees The discussion focused gun, McLemore ns can assault. and three of aggravated McLem a promiseddominated by work. If you build happen.” culminates branches. on then the Creek 3 also from ages ore Contributio e or any of its staging of lution of the Haitian and media and with a gala woman. was that can PageHe The patrons at Silver criminal on said. faces " 6 the wanted Dunham believe a and Cuban afterward live grader Morris University performanc we When to the tonight charges up. It trespass Edwardsvilla second influence convinced Dunham tunity Technique been operating leave reporter who See "STIMULUS possession Hunter to property of and Legacy. on the e the Sunday Troy, had Dunham, Johnson and the Center Meridian all terrain Henry, left locked the bar, after a television when area automobile has established The Katherine beginnings evoand School in a Chicago the after in HORRELL the room Cool Sport present, Johnson of cannabis. which they the door. pher, songwriter, to Carbon. Ballroom. the family of the native, was to receive Elementary By STEVE hotmail.com to ed him Great Gathering,” Dunham entered 110 cc SunL answers Deputies his father after midnight report the the bar a pologist. author, Meanwhile, at the could expect Johnson arrestthe four-wheel his home, withbecame stuck in the across stevehorrell@ educator, dancer, choreogra- from 7 p.m. a black-tieLegacy Gala Dinner, She dealers and a whiskey,and orderedshortly incident the street. Idle Hour Bar, dancer and was world Wednesday celebration, to 9 p.m. vehicle outside apparently to found renowned activist and anthro- Ballroom said. a beer argument will take “The tonight throttle then her managafter the more than They reportedly will be conducted taught by developed the authorities in the when the place who died with the got into an raised keeper’s in the Morris services 10 grams Dunham for her talent as 2.5 but position, er, Johnson his shirt Funeral a 7-year-old boy University SIUE’s Meridian reception areas of certified Dunham bartender Technique, less than a of “acclerated” into a tree. and displayed African-Am at will begin for Tickets Center. Johnson, marijuana on on gun and a Fund. crashed evening for the morning dance anthropolog erican faculty. A dance which is host A legacy tonight at him. knife who lives patrons, a Wall St. gala Memorial modern was drivingdied Saturday icon in the 6 p.m. a table. accordingto four female ATV he founded y, also known dance and in Worden, at 125 East Corporate are $50 per James Henry $500 for Henry at to the the the to the Austin gold sponsors, sponsorship person or $400 was taken in Maryville. Arts at SIUE’sKatherine Dunham as choreology, field of platinum. at 11 a.m. charg- releasedMadison County the Austin Hospital to s are be held Glen Dunham $600 for Center for Anderson after posting Jail and Road, in According East St. Louis service will diamond available for The activities Performing Center. to an and $800 $900 bond. The funeral at 591 Glen Crossing tured a BIGGS will close Performanc for Dunham SIUE news By JULIA with a live gmail.com Irwin Chapel, well as historical Technique release, the Meridian e show from 11 Dunham seminar jbiggs.edwi@ conference film and Technique and classes,fea- Brown Ballroom. For morea.m. to 1 p.m. Sunday video presentation SIUE on through as in the SIU at (618) information, s, a lecture/ www.kdcah west toward contact a one story .com All 453-3069, Traveling Dunham Park Drive, or, visit Mona on North Dynamic proceeds will University off to the right benefit the http:// Museum sits in East St. Katherine building Louis. By NORMA Drive. Research njmendoza@ MENDOZA aol.com

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Sunny, pleasant cloudy Today ay Partly of showers Wednesd Chance Thursday Cloudy Friday Sunny, pleasant Saturday

Bargains galore

People

HORRELL By STEVE hotmail.com stevehorrell@

A tragedy buildoccurred family one-story ordinarythis month, anything in our It’s ancould have display one that doesn’t been but cusing that y by its exterior,prevented inside . extraordinar surely attest that tomers will place everyday. take to ESS Data miracles is the home rt busiA cousin The building a state-of-the-a was severely data whenInc., in recovering burned Recovery the gasoline computer that specializes a fire damaged she drives, nessonto poured burning physically to accelerate phones, thumb flashed r from cell the her. fire types. Intelligence of media hard drives, 3 back Page on cLaughlin/ Yes, – a multitude of See "ESS" on suit" iPods have knowncourse, Marci Winters-M she should dons a "clean better, recklessly Recovery, but people use gasoline ESS Data time. all the See "FIRE" on Page 3

and Marketing of Sales Room lab. Vice President in the Clean Mike Beary, a hard drive while opening

Low 62 High 86 Low 65 High 85 Low 63 High 79 Low 63 High 79 Low 60 High 77

Every Thursday

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weara on Thursday East Hartford suit and holding a from Today (AP) in bathing , Conn. only ing the been stolen that had Sunday wearing toolbox EAST HARTFORD suspect to run from has been truck. him Monday he tried — A burglary swimsuit Police say police dog found after a police a Speedo-style Tuesday in Connecticut and bit him them, but a a car. arrested him down Wednesd hiding behind dog tracked suspect ay on the leg. they spotted the Police say

Chance of rain late Sunny, pleasant Sunny, pleasant Sunny, pleasant Sunny, pleasant

Local mom is going Hollyw ood

Voluntee Boniface rs with St. items for Church arrange rummage sale at the sale inside St. Boniface By DEBBIE Friday. The school gym dsettle@ed SETTLE sale runs wpub.net from 8 a.m. to noon Saturday Shampoo to 1 p.m. and from noon Hollywood for teens and a bargain there will be a big in common?party. What do they have your ownbox sale. Bring anything box or bag and it will be you can fit in People sold for All proceeds $2.50. Sarah Mullican benefit St. Boniface and her of Edwardsvi School. Church and business lle what. Totally Texty, Photo by that’s The new McLaugh Marci Wintersbusiness launched lin. that just less than taken

People

High 82 High 84 Low 61 High 88 Low 65 High 85 Low 70 High 85 Low 66 Low 70

Every Saturday

LAS VEGAS Las Vegas (AP) — Police in say a tamed escaped streets Thursday from a magic act tiger that captured. night. Police has been Police say belongs Lt. Les Lane says the residents to Fernando’s city’s northwest the cat in the magic act. He says seeing Brothers the tiger section reported but “they the got it back cat got loose, wandering The cat into custody.” their backyard. was found in a resident’s

Remove the meat from the bones, then drizzle them with the sauce. Meat can be served as is, or with bread or buns. The flatiron steak, often referred to as a top blade steak, is a marbled cut of beef from the shoulder. It does well in braises such as goulash or Swiss steak but can also be butterflied and cooked quickly on the grill. Here it gets a smoky Southwestern-style marinade, and is accompanied by a relish that would work well with almost any type of grilled beef, pork or fish.

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The Edge – Page

24


Dining Delights Carisillo’s Mexican Restaurant Collinsville 3 1/2 stars A great selection, similar to LaFonda. Good prices and endless chips and salsa. Service is quick and friendly. Not the fanciest, especially on the outside, but don’t judge a Mexican restaurant by its cover! St. Louis Bread Company Edwardsville/Collinsville 4 1/2 Stars OK men, don’t scoff at the rating, but embrace it! Although men look at it as “chick food,” there is something for every taste on their menu. Fantastic soups, sandwiches,

bakery items, coffees, teas, salads, and more. Great place to take a laptop or a book and just kick back and sip a cup of java. Bully’s Smokehouse Edwardsville 3 1/2 stars The food is good at Bully’s, but a little foofoo for a barbecue place. The prices are a little more than typical barbecue fare. Good for business lunch or dinner and nice servings. Pantera’s Pizza Edwardsville 2 1/2 stars Still some of the best pizza around, but the

decor needs a bit of updating, along with the dinner ware. The buffet is good if they keep it full, but that can be an issue at times. You better put on your running shoes to get that hot selection before everyone else beats you to it! El Maguey Mexican Restaurant Edwardsville 3 Stars Good chips and salsa start you off with a nice selection of dishes. Authentic Mexican dishes are delivered promptly to your table. Jimmy John’s Sandwich Shop Edwardsville

4 stars Where sandwiches are concerned, you can hardly beat a good Jimmy John’s. Their Bootlegger Club and The Big John are some of the favorites around here. Their cookies are great also, ask them to heat it up. They really are “freaky fast!” Big Daddy’s Edwardsville 3 stars Typical bar fare of appetizers, sandwiches, salads, and wraps round out Big Daddy’s menu. They offer specials on certain days that are a real value. Service can be a bit slow when they are busy.

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Caulk’s Collision Center 7157 Marine Rd. • Edwardsville 618-656-1093 Hours: Mon-Fri 8am-5pm

MARK

THE TRUSTED MUFFLER PROFESSIONALS

SHOP

Since 1983

Inside & Out!

Floor Design Center & Outlet

ON ALL FLOOR SURFACES

PURCHASE 4 SQ. FT. AND GET THE 5TH...

FEEL BEAUTIFUL Full Service Salon Call Today! 656-2593 Appointments Recommended

ALVAREITA’S COIFFURES

Paula Carlton Owner

12

CARPET

Hours:

333 S. Kansas 8:30 am-4:30 pm Tues, Thurs, Fri, Edwardsville & Sat $ 200 00 Earl y B Spec ird ial

Early Fall SPECIAL!!!

up to CERAMIC

• Cuts • Styles • Perms • Coloring • Highlighting

$1200 REBATE

on select energy systems through 9-27-09

TAX CREDITS MAY APPLY!

eatin in ir a ity r d t

Call 633-2244

MONTHS

FREE

FINANCING AVAILABLE

HOURS:

Mon-Wed.-Fri. 9am-7:30pm Tues.-Thurs. 9am-5:30pm; Sat. 9am-4pm

PROFESSIONAL INSTALLATION

415 East Vandalia Street Edwardsville, IL 62025 618.692.1574 10 am - 5 pm Mon. - Fri. or by appointment www.finishingtouchdecorating.com

B

Floor Design Center & Outlet For All Your Automotive Needs Call

692-0700 September 10, 2009

Mark Vallow Seth Renken

www.vallowfloor.com •

656-7788

1009 Plummer Drive • Edwardsville • (Hwy 157 Across from Bella Milano)

Blinds and Shades • Furniture • Custom Draperies Accessories • Design Services

The Edge – Page

25


Model

Year Price Stock#

Dealer

Phone

ACURA RDX RSX TL

2008 2006 2003

$30,888 T7622 $17,263 T7534 $14,200 6631

A4

2006

$18,934 21298

3 Series 3 Series 3 Series 3 Series 5 Series 5 Series 5 Series 5 Series 5 Series 5 Series 7 Series 7 Series X3 X5 X5

2008 2007 2006 2004 2008 2007 2007 2007 2006 2002 2007 2001 2008 2008 2007

$39,995 $32,995 $20,995 $17,995 $44,995 $38,995 $31,995 $30,995 $26,995 $15,995 $47,995 Call $35,495 $46,995 $44,995

Newbold Toyota BMW Scion Newbold Toyota BMW Scion Underwood Motors

866 617 6146 866 617 6146 866 485 3136

AUDI Weiss Brentwood Volvo

866 801 9462

BMW B7600 B7667 B7299A B7389 B7518 B7592 B7666 B7650 B091645A B7332A B7665 6740 B7555 B7549 B7526

Newbold Toyota BMW Scion Newbold Toyota BMW Scion Newbold Toyota BMW Scion Newbold Toyota BMW Scion Newbold Toyota BMW Scion Newbold Toyota BMW Scion Newbold Toyota BMW Scion Newbold Toyota BMW Scion Newbold Toyota BMW Scion Newbold Toyota BMW Scion Newbold Toyota BMW Scion Underwood Motors Newbold Toyota BMW Scion Newbold Toyota BMW Scion Newbold Toyota BMW Scion

866 617 6146 866 617 6146 866 617 6146 866 617 6146 866 617 6146 866 617 6146 866 617 6146 866 617 6146 866 617 6146 866 617 6146 866 617 6146 866 485 3136 866 617 6146 866 617 6146 866 617 6146

BUICK Century LACROSSE LACROSSE LACROSSE LaCrosse LeSabre LeSabre LeSabre Lucerne LUCERNE Lucerne Lucerne Rainier Regal Rendezvous TERRAZA

2002 2009 2009 2008 2006 2004 2002 2000 2008 2007 2006 2006 2006 2003 2006 2007

$6,904 $22,495 $20,995 $20,995 $15,904 $11,944 $8,404 $4,995 $19,995 $18,495 $16,995 Call $16,684 Call $17,995 $19,995

Allante CTS CTS CTS CTS DeVille DeVille DeVille DeVille DeVille DeVille DEVILLE DeVille DeVille DTS DTS Escalade Escalade E Seville SRX SRX SRX STS STS STS

1987 2006 2006 2005 2003 2004 2004 2004 2003 2003 2002 2002 2000 2000 2007 2006 2007 2007 2000 2009 2006 2004 2008 2006 2005

$5,500 $18,972 Call Call Call $13,860 Call Call $13,900 $11,500 $13,900 $8,789 $7,944 Call $18,900 Call Call Call $7,900 $33,764 Call $15,995 $32,995 $16,988 Call

ASTRO CARG ASTRO PASS Aveo AVEO/LS Blazer C/K 1500 C/K 1500 S CAVALIER Classic Classic COBALT COBALT Cobalt Cobalt Cobalt COBALT

1995 1991 2008 2008 2001 1995 1993 2005 2004 2004 2008 2008 2008 2008 2008 2008

Call Call $10,487 Call $6,450 Call Call $5,995 $7,995 $7,950 $15,995 $15,495 $14,950 $14,404 $13,950 $13,900

R1508 P6832 P6975 P6971 R1520 101640 91761 4200B B2419 T90075A R1546 6776 29364A P2441 P2302 T90175A

Four Flags Motors Pontiac Buick Dave Sinclair Buick Pontiac GMC Dave Sinclair Buick Pontiac GMC Dave Sinclair Buick Pontiac GMC Four Flags Motors Pontiac Buick Four Flags Motors Pontiac Buick Four Flags Motors Pontiac Buick Bob Brockland Pontiac Buick GM Bob Brockland Pontiac Buick GM Dave Sinclair Buick Pontiac GMC Four Flags Motors Pontiac Buick Underwood Motors George Weber Chevrolet Waterloo Ackerman Auto Plaza Ackerman Auto Plaza Dave Sinclair Buick Pontiac GMC

866-438-1169 866-401-2564 866-401-2564 866-401-2564 866-438-1169 866-438-1169 866-438-1169 877-396-5065 877-396-5065 866-401-2564 866-438-1169 866 485 3136 866 496 0381 866-419-2762 866-419-2762 866-401-2564

CADILLAC 6629 21316 6762 6775 097117A 85170 6750 6744 6625 6706 6688 P753S 91772 P2409 6723 6774 29170A 6787 6733 P2100Z 6779 P2249 B2354 Y2033A 6761

Underwood Motors Weiss Brentwood Volvo Underwood Motors Underwood Motors St Louis Honda Four Flags Motors Pontiac Buick Underwood Motors Underwood Motors Underwood Motors Underwood Motors Underwood Motors Victory Lane Ford Four Flags Motors Pontiac Buick Ackerman Auto Plaza Underwood Motors Underwood Motors Underwood Motors Underwood Motors Underwood Motors George Weber Chevrolet Waterloo Underwood Motors Ackerman Auto Plaza Bob Brockland Pontiac Buick GM St Louis Honda Underwood Motors

866 485 3136 866 801 9462 866 485 3136 866 485 3136 877 584 1058 866-438-1169 866 485 3136 866 485 3136 866 485 3136 866 485 3136 866 485 3136 866 576 3845 866-438-1169 866-419-2762 866 485 3136 866 485 3136 866 485 3136 866 485 3136 866 485 3136 866 496 0381 866 485 3136 866-419-2762 877-396-5065 877 584 1058 866 485 3136

CHEVROLET 29351A 29069A Y270 B987 168370 29301A 4138A J61029A B2267A R14681 P6956 P6959 R1472 R1485 R1475 P1491

September 10, 2009

George Weber Chevrolet Waterloo George Weber Chevrolet Waterloo Bommarito Volkswagen of St Loui Victory Lane Ford Four Flags Motors Pontiac Buick George Weber Chevrolet Waterloo Bob Brockland Pontiac Buick GM Royal Gate Dodge of Columbia Bob Brockland Pontiac Buick GM Four Flags Motors Pontiac Buick Dave Sinclair Buick Pontiac GMC Dave Sinclair Buick Pontiac GMC Four Flags Motors Pontiac Buick Four Flags Motors Pontiac Buick Four Flags Motors Pontiac Buick Royal Gate Dodge of Columbia

866 496 0381 866 496 0381 866 377 3110 866 576 3845 866-438-1169 866 496 0381 877-396-5065 877-223-2703 877-396-5065 866-438-1169 866-401-2564 866-401-2564 866-438-1169 866-438-1169 866-438-1169 877-223-2703

Model

Year Price Stock#

Dealer

Phone

COBALT Cobalt Cobalt Cobalt Cobalt Cobalt Cobalt Cobalt COBALT Cobalt COBALT COBALT LT CORVETTE Equinox Equinox Express Ca EXPRESS CO Express Pa HHR HHR HHR HHR HHR LT Impala IMPALA Impala IMPALA IMPALA Impala Impala Impala Impala Impala Impala Impala Impala Impala Impala Lumina Malibu Malibu Malibu Malibu Malibu Malibu Malibu Malibu Malibu Malibu Malibu Malibu Cla MALIBU CLA MALIBU CLA MALIBU CLA MALIBU CLA MALIBU CLA Malibu Cla Malibu Cla MALIBU CLA Malibu Cla Malibu Cla MALIBU LT Monte Carl Monte Carl Silverado Silverado Silverado SILVERADO SILVERADO Silverado SILVERADO Silverado Silverado Suburban TAHOE Tahoe TRACKER Tracker TrailBlaze TRAILBLAZE TRAILBLAZE TrailBlaze TrailBlaze TrailBlaze TrailBlaze TrailBlaze TrailBlaze TrailBlaze Uplander UPLANDER Uplander Uplander Venture

2008 2008 2008 2008 2008 2008 2008 2008 2007 2007 2006 2008 2007 2008 2007 2009 2006 2007 2008 2008 2008 2008 2008 2009 2008 2008 2008 2008 2008 2008 2008 2008 2006 2006 2005 2004 2003 2000 2000 2009 2009 2009 2009 2009 2008 2005 2005 2004 2003 2000 2008 2008 2008 2008 2008 2008 2008 2008 2008 2008 2008 2008 2003 2000 2009 2008 2008 2007 2006 2003 2000 2007 2004 2007 2007 2002 2004 2002 2009 2008 2008 2008 2008 2008 2008 2008 2007 2003 2008 2008 2008 2008 2005

Dave Sinclair Buick Pontiac GMC George Weber Chevrolet Waterloo George Weber Chevrolet Waterloo George Weber Chevrolet Waterloo George Weber Chevrolet Waterloo Four Flags Motors Pontiac Buick Bob Brockland Pontiac Buick GM Bob Brockland Pontiac Buick GM Royal Gate Dodge of Columbia Four Flags Motors Pontiac Buick Koetting Ford Victory Lane Ford Royal Gate Dodge of Columbia George Weber Chevrolet Waterloo Bommarito Volkswagen of St Loui Bob Brockland Pontiac Buick GM Royal Gate Dodge of Columbia George Weber Chevrolet Waterloo Bob Brockland Pontiac Buick GM Underwood Motors George Weber Chevrolet Waterloo George Weber Chevrolet Waterloo Victory Lane Ford George Weber Chevrolet Waterloo Dave Sinclair Buick Pontiac GMC George Weber Chevrolet Waterloo Dave Sinclair Buick Pontiac GMC Dave Sinclair Buick Pontiac GMC St Louis Honda George Weber Chevrolet Waterloo Bommarito Volkswagen of St Loui Jack Schmitt Ford Lincoln Mercur Bob Brockland Pontiac Buick GM George Weber Chevrolet Waterloo Four Flags Motors Pontiac Buick Trust Family Auto Sales George Weber Chevrolet Waterloo St Louis Honda George Weber Chevrolet Waterloo Four Flags Motors Pontiac Buick George Weber Chevrolet Waterloo Bob Brockland Pontiac Buick GM George Weber Chevrolet Waterloo George Weber Chevrolet Waterloo Four Flags Motors Pontiac Buick Ackerman Auto Plaza Underwood Motors St Louis Honda Ackerman Auto Plaza St Louis Honda George Weber Chevrolet Waterloo Dave Sinclair Buick Pontiac GMC Dave Sinclair Buick Pontiac GMC Dave Sinclair Buick Pontiac GMC Dave Sinclair Buick Pontiac GMC Dave Sinclair Buick Pontiac GMC George Weber Chevrolet Waterloo George Weber Chevrolet Waterloo Dave Sinclair Buick Pontiac GMC George Weber Chevrolet Waterloo George Weber Chevrolet Waterloo Victory Lane Ford Jack Schmitt Ford Lincoln Mercur Trust Family Auto Sales Bob Brockland Pontiac Buick GM Four Flags Motors Pontiac Buick George Weber Chevrolet Waterloo Dave Sinclair Buick Pontiac GMC Royal Gate Dodge of Columbia Four Flags Motors Pontiac Buick Dave Sinclair Buick Pontiac GMC George Weber Chevrolet Waterloo Four Flags Motors Pontiac Buick Four Flags Motors Pontiac Buick Dave Sinclair Buick Pontiac GMC Ackerman Auto Plaza Dave Sinclair Buick Pontiac GMC Bob Brockland Pontiac Buick GM George Weber Chevrolet Waterloo Dave Sinclair Buick Pontiac GMC Dave Sinclair Buick Pontiac GMC Bob Brockland Pontiac Buick GM Bob Brockland Pontiac Buick GM George Weber Chevrolet Waterloo George Weber Chevrolet Waterloo George Weber Chevrolet Waterloo George Weber Chevrolet Waterloo Four Flags Motors Pontiac Buick Bob Brockland Pontiac Buick GM Dave Sinclair Buick Pontiac GMC Bob Brockland Pontiac Buick GM George Weber Chevrolet Waterloo Ackerman Auto Plaza

866-401-2564 866 496 0381 866 496 0381 866 496 0381 866 496 0381 866-438-1169 877-396-5065 877-396-5065 877-223-2703 866-438-1169 866-340-8597 866 576 3845 877-223-2703 866 496 0381 866 377 3110 877-396-5065 877-223-2703 866 496 0381 877-396-5065 866 485 3136 866 496 0381 866 496 0381 866 576 3845 866 496 0381 866-401-2564 866 496 0381 866-401-2564 866-401-2564 877 584 1058 866 496 0381 866 377 3110 866-515-4038 877-396-5065 866 496 0381 866-438-1169 866-398-4214 866 496 0381 877 584 1058 866 496 0381 866-438-1169 866 496 0381 877-396-5065 866 496 0381 866 496 0381 866-438-1169 866-419-2762 866 485 3136 877 584 1058 866-419-2762 877 584 1058 866 496 0381 866-401-2564 866-401-2564 866-401-2564 866-401-2564 866-401-2564 866 496 0381 866 496 0381 866-401-2564 866 496 0381 866 496 0381 866 576 3845 866-515-4038 866-398-4214 877-396-5065 866-438-1169 866 496 0381 866-401-2564 877-223-2703 866-438-1169 866-401-2564 866 496 0381 866-438-1169 866-438-1169 866-401-2564 866-419-2762 866-401-2564 877-396-5065 866 496 0381 866-401-2564 866-401-2564 877-396-5065 877-396-5065 866 496 0381 866 496 0381 866 496 0381 866 496 0381 866-438-1169 877-396-5065 866-401-2564 877-396-5065 866 496 0381 866-419-2762

$13,495 $12,712 $12,662 $12,631 $12,558 $12,404 $11,995 $9,995 $10,900 $9,944 $9,990 $11,477 Call $18,624 $15,995 $18,995 $18,995 $14,783 $13,995 $13,500 $12,724 $12,191 $11,397 $17,986 $18,995 $18,769 $17,995 $16,295 $15,883 $15,662 $14,885 $13,990 $13,995 $12,443 $9,995 $6,500 Call Call Call $22,944 $20,612 $19,995 $18,742 $18,583 $17,955 $9,995 Call $9,990 Call Call $14,652 $13,995 $13,995 $13,995 $13,995 $13,995 $13,612 $13,533 $12,995 $12,973 $11,642 $11,920 $8,990 $5,500 $26,995 $33,444 $22,582 $17,995 $21,800 $11,955 $12,995 $15,622 $16,944 $33,444 $31,495 $13,995 $11,995 $5,995 $20,463 $20,995 $20,495 $19,995 $18,995 $18,743 $18,643 $17,829 $15,646 $14,944 $21,995 $17,995 $17,995 $16,712 $8,895

P6996 P2035Z P2045Z P2073Z P2085Z R1473 B2353 B2258 D42021A 9057-1 X5091 B971 J65111A P2083Z Y282 B2362 D64125A 29496A B2400 6755 P2069Z P2093Z B963 P2013Z P7110 P2071Z P7179 P7075 YP1208 P2063Z Y261 P7489 B2359A 29391A R1549 T2807 29536A 096439A P2056ZA R1537 P2051Z B2381 P2057Z P2029Z R1509 P1974 6771 097100A P2425A 097406A P2065Z P7180 P7090 P7029 P7181 P7045 P2052Z P2064Z P7051 P2064Z 29115A B956 J528A T2814 B2423 R1532 P2001Z P7069A D64096B 83042 T10023A P2040Z 91871 R1544 T90219A P2154 Z90185A P3658 P2030Z P7015 P7012 B2398 B2403 P2082Z P2080Z P2094Z 29390A R15071 B2402 P7086 B2399 P2070Z P2049

Model

Year Price Stock#

300 300-SERIES 300-SERIES 300-SERIES 300-SERIES Cirrus Pacifica Pacifica PACIFICA PT Cruiser PT CRUISER PT CRUISER PT Cruiser Sebring SEBRING Sebring Sebring Co SEBRING LX TOWN & COU Town & Cou TOWN & COU Town & Cou TOWN & COU Town and C

2009 2007 2006 2006 2005 1998 2008 2005 2004 2008 2006 2004 2002 2009 2008 2003 2006 2001 2007 2005 2005 2004 2006 2001

$20,995 $16,900 $18,995 $15,995 $13,995 $3,500 $13,990 $12,995 $12,900 $11,995 $8,966 $7,995 $5,990 $15,888 $13,995 $5,995 $10,995 $4,349 $17,325 $11,874 $9,995 $13,900 $12,995 Call

B2408 P1507 D64047A Z90353A C43015A T2741 P6976 P2205 J64011A B2363 B923 D45029B P7528AA P7004 P7095 R1536-1 P2348 B973 B980 29454A D60036A P2032A D91031A 095915A

AVENGER Avenger Caliber Caravan Caravan Challenger DAKOTA Grand Cara Grand Cara Grand Cara Grand Cara Magnum Neon RAM 1500 RAM 1500 RAM 1500 RAM 3500 SPRINTER Stratus

2008 1996 2008 2006 2005 2008 2003 2008 2008 2007 1996 2007 2000 2008 2007 2006 2008 2007 2004

$12,995 $2,995 $11,995 $9,995 $10,843 $43,904 Call $17,988 $16,993 $16,995 Call $19,995 $3,000 $25,900 $20,900 $10,995 $32,995 $26,995 $7,995

D91039A 4074A B2416 3218A 29505A R1521 T90384AA T7637 P6946 Y265 T1126B Jeff1 T2622 D64128A P1518A D64131A D64139B P1449 B2356A

E-350 ECONOLINE Econoline Edge Edge EDGE EDGE SEL A Escape Escape Escape Escape ESCAPE ESCAPE Escape Escape ESCAPE XLT ESCAPE XLT Escort EXPEDITION EXPLORER EXPLORER EXPLORER Explorer EXPLORER Explorer S EXPLORER S F-150 F-150 F-150 F-150 F-150 F-150 F-150 F-150 F-150 F-150 F-150 F-150 F-150 F-150 SPEC F-250 Supe F150

1996 2009 2009 2008 2008 2007 2008 2008 2008 2008 2007 2007 2006 2002 2001 2008 2007 2000 2007 2007 2006 2006 1998 1993 2001 2003 2008 2008 2007 2007 2007 2007 2006 2006 2006 2005 2004 2003 1990 1996 2008 2009

$3,944 Call Call $33,590 $21,944 $22,990 $19,240 $21,990 $19,995 $19,990 $18,990 $17,990 $15,900 $7,944 $8,843 $16,865 $18,011 Call $21,990 $21,990 $22,495 $14,990 Call Call Call $13,995 $28,990 $23,450 $24,990 $23,990 $14,995 Call $24,990 $18,988 Call $18,279 $12,995 Call Call Call $27,995 Call

R1528 T982 P7559 P7519 R1539 P5190 B965 P7552 B2413 J574A P7538 P5223 D60057A R1529 21286A B955 B985 P2068ZA 11741A X5216 B10002A 11709A 29131A 29329A Y267A J94034B P7525 R1547 P7484 X5180 P2421 P7551 P7540 T10189A P7542 X5209 P2074 P3685 29574A 29425A R1548 T981

Dealer

Phone

CHRYSLER Bob Brockland Pontiac Buick GM Royal Gate Dodge of Columbia Royal Gate Dodge of Columbia Dave Sinclair Buick Pontiac GMC Royal Gate Dodge of Columbia Trust Family Auto Sales St Louis Honda Ackerman Auto Plaza Royal Gate Dodge of Columbia Bob Brockland Pontiac Buick GM Victory Lane Ford Royal Gate Dodge of Columbia Jack Schmitt Ford Lincoln Mercur St Louis Honda Dave Sinclair Buick Pontiac GMC Four Flags Motors Pontiac Buick Ackerman Auto Plaza Victory Lane Ford Victory Lane Ford George Weber Chevrolet Waterloo Royal Gate Dodge of Columbia Ackerman Auto Plaza Royal Gate Dodge of Columbia St Louis Honda

877-396-5065 877-223-2703 877-223-2703 866-401-2564 877-223-2703 866-398-4214 877 584 1058 866-419-2762 877-223-2703 877-396-5065 866 576 3845 877-223-2703 866-515-4038 877 584 1058 866-401-2564 866-438-1169 866-419-2762 866 576 3845 866 576 3845 866 496 0381 877-223-2703 866-419-2762 877-223-2703 877 584 1058

DODGE Royal Gate Dodge of Columbia Bob Brockland Pontiac Buick GM Bob Brockland Pontiac Buick GM Bob Brockland Pontiac Buick GM George Weber Chevrolet Waterloo Four Flags Motors Pontiac Buick Dave Sinclair Buick Pontiac GMC Newbold Toyota BMW Scion St Louis Honda Bommarito Volkswagen of St Loui Bob Brockland Pontiac Buick GM Victory Lane Ford Trust Family Auto Sales Royal Gate Dodge of Columbia Royal Gate Dodge of Columbia Royal Gate Dodge of Columbia Royal Gate Dodge of Columbia Royal Gate Dodge of Columbia Bob Brockland Pontiac Buick GM

877-223-2703 877-396-5065 877-396-5065 877-396-5065 866 496 0381 866-438-1169 866-401-2564 866 617 6146 877 584 1058 866 377 3110 877-396-5065 866 576 3845 866-398-4214 877-223-2703 877-223-2703 877-223-2703 877-223-2703 877-223-2703 877-396-5065

FORD Four Flags Motors Pontiac Buick Victory Lane Ford Jack Schmitt Ford Lincoln Mercur Jack Schmitt Ford Lincoln Mercur Four Flags Motors Pontiac Buick Koetting Ford Victory Lane Ford Jack Schmitt Ford Lincoln Mercur Bob Brockland Pontiac Buick GM Jack Schmitt Ford Lincoln Mercur Jack Schmitt Ford Lincoln Mercur Koetting Ford Royal Gate Dodge of Columbia Four Flags Motors Pontiac Buick Weiss Brentwood Volvo Victory Lane Ford Victory Lane Ford George Weber Chevrolet Waterloo Koetting Ford Koetting Ford Dave Sinclair Buick Pontiac GMC Koetting Ford George Weber Chevrolet Waterloo George Weber Chevrolet Waterloo Bommarito Volkswagen of St Loui Royal Gate Dodge of Columbia Jack Schmitt Ford Lincoln Mercur Four Flags Motors Pontiac Buick Jack Schmitt Ford Lincoln Mercur Koetting Ford Ackerman Auto Plaza Jack Schmitt Ford Lincoln Mercur Jack Schmitt Ford Lincoln Mercur Newbold Toyota BMW Scion Jack Schmitt Ford Lincoln Mercur Koetting Ford Ackerman Auto Plaza Bob Brockland Pontiac Buick GM George Weber Chevrolet Waterloo George Weber Chevrolet Waterloo Four Flags Motors Pontiac Buick Victory Lane Ford

866-438-1169 866 576 3845 866-515-4038 866-515-4038 866-438-1169 866-340-8597 866 576 3845 866-515-4038 877-396-5065 866-515-4038 866-515-4038 866-340-8597 877-223-2703 866-438-1169 866 801 9462 866 576 3845 866 576 3845 866 496 0381 866-340-8597 866-340-8597 866-401-2564 866-340-8597 866 496 0381 866 496 0381 866 377 3110 877-223-2703 866-515-4038 866-438-1169 866-515-4038 866-340-8597 866-419-2762 866-515-4038 866-515-4038 866 617 6146 866-515-4038 866-340-8597 866-419-2762 877-396-5065 866 496 0381 866 496 0381 866-438-1169 866 576 3845

The Edge – Page

26


Model

Year Price Stock#

Dealer

Phone

Model

Year Price Stock#

Dealer

Phone

Model

Year Price Stock#

Dealer

Phone

F150 F250 SUPER F250 SUPER F350 SUPER FIVE HUNDR Flex FOCUS Focus FOCUS Focus Focus FOCUS FOCUS FOCUS FOCUS S/SE FOCUS S/SE FOCUS ZX4 Freestar FREESTYLE Fusion FUSION FUSION Fusion FUSION SEL FUSION SPO Mustang Mustang Mustang MUSTANG MUSTANG Mustang MUSTANG MUSTANG MUSTANG Mustang RANGER Ranger Ranger Sport Trac TAURUS TAURUS Taurus TAURUS Taurus TAURUS SES THUNDERBIR THUNDERBIR Windstar

2000 2010 2009 2010 2007 2009 2008 2008 2008 2008 2008 2007 2007 2006 2008 2007 2007 2005 2006 2008 2007 2006 2006 2008 2009 2009 2008 2008 2008 2008 2008 2006 2006 2005 2003 2007 2006 2004 2007 2008 2005 2005 2001 1998 2001 2005 2002 2000

$9,865 Call Call Call $13,990 $27,990 $15,900 $14,990 $14,990 $13,995 $12,611 $14,990 $11,990 $10,990 Call Call $9,496 $5,995 $18,990 $17,990 $14,990 $14,990 Call $16,055 Call $22,990 $23,995 $18,990 $17,990 $15,990 Call $22,990 $14,490 $14,990 $12,995 $13,408 Call $9,777 $24,500 $18,990 $10,990 $7,944 $7,995 Call $4,298 $19,985 $18,900 $4,800

B969S T1008 T958 T1019 11030A P7499 P1490 P7547 P5134 P3633 P2102Z X5208 X5081 11699A B989 B990 B843B P3660 X5210 P7517 X5161 11397A P7553 B986 F1017 P7529 B2269A P7536 P5189 P5191 6773 X5214 X5193 11723A P2198 B944 P7557 P2099ZA Jan1 P5106 X5195 R1535 Z90446A 29508A P768S B917 J65072B T2740

Victory Lane Ford Victory Lane Ford Victory Lane Ford Victory Lane Ford Koetting Ford Jack Schmitt Ford Lincoln Mercur Royal Gate Dodge of Columbia Jack Schmitt Ford Lincoln Mercur Koetting Ford Bob Brockland Pontiac Buick GM George Weber Chevrolet Waterloo Koetting Ford Koetting Ford Koetting Ford Victory Lane Ford Victory Lane Ford Victory Lane Ford Bob Brockland Pontiac Buick GM Koetting Ford Jack Schmitt Ford Lincoln Mercur Koetting Ford Koetting Ford Jack Schmitt Ford Lincoln Mercur Victory Lane Ford Victory Lane Ford Jack Schmitt Ford Lincoln Mercur Bob Brockland Pontiac Buick GM Jack Schmitt Ford Lincoln Mercur Koetting Ford Koetting Ford Underwood Motors Koetting Ford Koetting Ford Koetting Ford Ackerman Auto Plaza Victory Lane Ford Jack Schmitt Ford Lincoln Mercur George Weber Chevrolet Waterloo Victory Lane Ford Koetting Ford Koetting Ford Four Flags Motors Pontiac Buick Dave Sinclair Buick Pontiac GMC George Weber Chevrolet Waterloo Victory Lane Ford Victory Lane Ford Royal Gate Dodge of Columbia Trust Family Auto Sales

866 576 3845 866 576 3845 866 576 3845 866 576 3845 866-340-8597 866-515-4038 877-223-2703 866-515-4038 866-340-8597 877-396-5065 866 496 0381 866-340-8597 866-340-8597 866-340-8597 866 576 3845 866 576 3845 866 576 3845 877-396-5065 866-340-8597 866-515-4038 866-340-8597 866-340-8597 866-515-4038 866 576 3845 866 576 3845 866-515-4038 877-396-5065 866-515-4038 866-340-8597 866-340-8597 866 485 3136 866-340-8597 866-340-8597 866-340-8597 866-419-2762 866 576 3845 866-515-4038 866 496 0381 866 576 3845 866-340-8597 866-340-8597 866-438-1169 866-401-2564 866 496 0381 866 576 3845 866 576 3845 877-223-2703 866-398-4214

Pilot Pilot

2008 2004

$28,990 096955A $15,490 097179M

St Louis Honda St Louis Honda

877 584 1058 877 584 1058

H3

2007

$25,944 R1540

GRAND MARQ MARINER MILAN MILAN Milan Milan MOUNTAINEE Sable

1989 2006 2008 2007 2006 2006 2006 1999

Call $14,937 $17,995 $15,990 $16,990 $14,990 $15,136 Call

George Weber Chevrolet Waterloo Victory Lane Ford Dave Sinclair Buick Pontiac GMC Koetting Ford Jack Schmitt Ford Lincoln Mercur Jack Schmitt Ford Lincoln Mercur Victory Lane Ford Bob Brockland Pontiac Buick GM

866 496 0381 866 576 3845 866-401-2564 866-340-8597 866-515-4038 866-515-4038 866 576 3845 877-396-5065

Accent Elantra Santa Fe Santa Fe SONATA Sonata Sonata Sonata Sonata SONATA

2008 2008 2008 2002 2009 2009 2008 2008 2008 2006

$10,990 $13,190 $17,988 Call $15,995 $15,990 $14,428 $12,995 $12,450 $10,900

Cooper

2005

$18,943 T7517

Eclipse ECLIPSE Galant Galant Galant Galant

2007 2005 2009 2009 2009 2007

$14,988 $10,500 $14,988 $14,988 $11,988 $11,988

T7663 D97120A T7609 T7607 YP1207 T7271

FX35 G35 G35 Sedan

2006 2008 2006

$28,972 21309 $26,763 100064A $23,867 21299

Cherokee Commander COMPASS Compass Grand Cher Grand Cher GRAND CHER Grand Cher LIBERTY Liberty Wrangler

1999 2007 2007 2007 2008 2007 2006 2006 2008 2005 2008

$5,995 $19,587 $14,990 $12,877 $18,995 $18,995 $21,995 Call $19,995 $11,515 $19,990

P2419 Y264 X5170 21180B Y279 T1067A T90288A 29539A P7106 V90339B P7485A

Altima Altima Maxima Maxima PATHFINDER Pathfinder SENTRA Sentra Versa

2005 2005 2006 2001 2007 2005 2006 2004 2008

$13,900 $9,990 $18,637 $7,888 $22,995 $15,990 $9,900 $6,990 $13,990

P1932 096674A 21003A 096857A T90127A 096604B D97105B J489A J255A

CIERA Cutlass Ci Silhouette

1996 1994 2002

Call $2,995 Call

Rio Sedona SORENTO SORENTO EX Spectra Sportage

2006 2006 2005 2008 2007 2001

$6,641 $16,995 $8,900 $16,054 $9,995 Call

29221A P2014 C33052B B978 B2243 P2438

VOYAGER

1994

Call

2500 ACADIA Canyon ENVOY ENVOY ENVOY Envoy XL Envoy XL Jimmy Sierra 150 SIERRA 150 SIERRA 150 Sierra 150 SIERRA 250 VANDURA Yukon Yukon Yukon XL

1984 2008 2008 2009 2008 2005 2006 2005 1998 2008 2006 2005 1994 2008 1994 2007 2006 2005

Call $29,995 $19,482 $25,495 $23,995 $14,990 $19,995 Call Call $18,990 $22,995 $21,995 $2,860 $33,995 Call $36,944 $28,988 Call

29517AA P7078 P2036Z P7109 P7079 X5217 P2310 J645A 29551A P7543 T90373A C13072A 9059-1 T90366A 21007A R1543 T7617 6784

Discovery

2003

$9,750

ES 330 IS 350

2005 2006

$19,888 097470A $29,888 T7595

Continenta LS MKX Navigator Town Car ZEPHYR Zephyr

1997 2004 2008 2005 2004 2006 2006

$2,844 $16,900 Call Call $18,855 $20,990 $16,990

91251 6598 P7555 6763 6620 P5221 J453A

B-Series P MAZDA3 MAZDA6 MAZDA6 MX-5 Miata PROTEGE5 Tribute

1998 2008 2008 2008 1999 2003 2001

$6,990 $13,990 $13,990 $13,294 Call $8,900 $8,995

P7455A P6996 P6995 Y266 P2442 C91025A V90503A

C-Class CLK-Class CLK-Class E-Class M Class

2006 2007 2005 2006 1999

$21,748 $30,881 $27,988 $28,917 $7,000

COUGAR GRAND MARQ Grand Marq GRAND MARQ Grand Marq

1996 2008 2009 2006 2001

Call $15,001 Call Call $4,988

Bonneville BONNEVILLE G5 G6 G6 G6 G6 G6 G6 G6 G6 G6 G6 G6 G6 G6 G6 G6 G6 G6 G6 G6 G6 G6 G6 G6 G6 G6 GRAND AM Grand Am GRAND PRIX GRAND PRIX GRAND PRIX GRAND PRIX GRAND PRIX GRAND PRIX GRAND PRIX Grand Prix Grand Prix Grand Prix Grand Prix Grand Prix Grand Prix Grand Prix GRAND PRIX GRAND PRIX Montana SV

2003 1996 2008 2009 2009 2009 2008 2008 2008 2008 2008 2008 2008 2008 2008 2008 2008 2008 2008 2008 2008 2008 2008 2007 2006 2006 2006 2005 2004 2004 2008 2008 2008 2008 2008 2008 2008 2008 2008 2008 2008 2006 2005 2004 2001 2000 2005

$11,995 Call $15,990 $21,944 $16,995 $14,995 $16,495 $15,995 $15,495 $15,495 $15,495 $14,995 $14,995 $14,995 $14,995 $13,995 $13,995 $13,995 $13,995 $13,995 $13,995 $13,995 $12,888 $13,980 $13,990 $11,644 $9,995 $10,841 $10,990 $7,500 $16,495 $15,990 $15,875 $15,495 $14,995 $14,995 $14,995 $13,995 $13,995 $13,995 $12,944 $11,990 $11,444 Call $6,420 $7,016 $9,995

HUMMER

2007 2007 2007 2006 2006 2006 2006 2006 2006 2006 2006 2005 1996 2007 2005 1998 1997 2007 2003 2007 2006

$18,990 $17,990 $17,490 $20,990 $19,990 $18,990 $18,990 $17,990 $17,990 $16,990 $15,888 $16,995 $4,990 $16,888 $11,888 $5,988 $4,888 $23,995 $12,990 $19,988 $20,990

P6966 P6953 P6970 P6967 P6950 P6965 P6969 P6964 P6949 P6984 096961A T1001A P6858A 097149A P6920 P6878B P6961A Y230A 097229A P6992 P6954

September 10, 2009

St Louis Honda St Louis Honda St Louis Honda St Louis Honda St Louis Honda St Louis Honda St Louis Honda St Louis Honda St Louis Honda St Louis Honda St Louis Honda Bob Brockland Pontiac Buick GM St Louis Honda St Louis Honda St Louis Honda St Louis Honda St Louis Honda Bommarito Volkswagen of St Loui St Louis Honda St Louis Honda St Louis Honda

P6988A Y284 YP1222 P2399 P7036 P7003 T7535 Y258 Y260 J65068A

St Louis Honda Bommarito Volkswagen of St Loui St Louis Honda Ackerman Auto Plaza Dave Sinclair Buick Pontiac GMC St Louis Honda Newbold Toyota BMW Scion Bommarito Volkswagen of St Loui Bommarito Volkswagen of St Loui Royal Gate Dodge of Columbia

877 584 1058 866 377 3110 877 584 1058 866-419-2762 866-401-2564 877 584 1058 866 617 6146 866 377 3110 866 377 3110 877-223-2703

INFINITI Weiss Brentwood Volvo St Louis Honda Weiss Brentwood Volvo

866 801 9462 877 584 1058 866 801 9462

JEEP Ackerman Auto Plaza Bommarito Volkswagen of St Loui Koetting Ford Weiss Brentwood Volvo Bommarito Volkswagen of St Loui Bob Brockland Pontiac Buick GM Dave Sinclair Buick Pontiac GMC George Weber Chevrolet Waterloo Dave Sinclair Buick Pontiac GMC Bommarito Volkswagen of St Loui Jack Schmitt Ford Lincoln Mercur

866-419-2762 866 377 3110 866-340-8597 866 801 9462 866 377 3110 877-396-5065 866-401-2564 866 496 0381 866-401-2564 866 377 3110 866-515-4038

877 584 1058 877 584 1058 877 584 1058 877 584 1058 877 584 1058 877 584 1058 877 584 1058 877 584 1058 877 584 1058 877 584 1058 877 584 1058 877-396-5065 877 584 1058 877 584 1058 877 584 1058 877 584 1058 877 584 1058 866 377 3110 877 584 1058 877 584 1058 877 584 1058

MINI COOPER

George Weber Chevrolet Waterloo Ackerman Auto Plaza Royal Gate Dodge of Columbia Victory Lane Ford Bob Brockland Pontiac Buick GM Ackerman Auto Plaza

P2413

Ackerman Auto Plaza

866-419-2762

877 584 1058 866 617 6146

LINCOLN Four Flags Motors Pontiac Buick Underwood Motors Jack Schmitt Ford Lincoln Mercur Underwood Motors Underwood Motors Koetting Ford Jack Schmitt Ford Lincoln Mercur

866-438-1169 866 485 3136 866-515-4038 866 485 3136 866 485 3136 866-340-8597 866-515-4038

MAZDA Jack Schmitt Ford Lincoln Mercur St Louis Honda St Louis Honda Bommarito Volkswagen of St Loui Ackerman Auto Plaza Royal Gate Dodge of Columbia Bommarito Volkswagen of St Loui

866-515-4038 877 584 1058 877 584 1058 866 377 3110 866-419-2762 877-223-2703 866 377 3110

MERCEDES 21300 21290 T7604 21282 P1964

Weiss Brentwood Volvo Weiss Brentwood Volvo Newbold Toyota BMW Scion Weiss Brentwood Volvo Ackerman Auto Plaza

866 801 9462 866 801 9462 866 617 6146 866 801 9462 866-419-2762

MERCURY 29527A B943 P7545 B90224A P6917A

George Weber Chevrolet Waterloo Victory Lane Ford Jack Schmitt Ford Lincoln Mercur Dave Sinclair Buick Pontiac GMC St Louis Honda

866 617 6146

Newbold Toyota BMW Scion Royal Gate Dodge of Columbia Newbold Toyota BMW Scion Newbold Toyota BMW Scion St Louis Honda Newbold Toyota BMW Scion

866 617 6146 877-223-2703 866 617 6146 866 617 6146 877 584 1058 866 617 6146

NISSAN Ackerman Auto Plaza St Louis Honda George Weber Chevrolet Waterloo St Louis Honda Dave Sinclair Buick Pontiac GMC St Louis Honda Royal Gate Dodge of Columbia Jack Schmitt Ford Lincoln Mercur Jack Schmitt Ford Lincoln Mercur

866-419-2762 877 584 1058 866 496 0381 877 584 1058 866-401-2564 877 584 1058 877-223-2703 866-515-4038 866-515-4038

OLDSMOBILE P2047ZA R1474-1 P2104ZA

George Weber Chevrolet Waterloo 866 496 0381 Four Flags Motors Pontiac Buick 866-438-1169 George Weber Chevrolet Waterloo 866 496 0381

PLYMOUTH 866 496 0381 866-419-2762 877-223-2703 866 576 3845 877-396-5065 866-419-2762

LEXUS St Louis Honda Newbold Toyota BMW Scion

Newbold Toyota BMW Scion

MITSUBISHI

KIA

LAND ROVER 866 496 0381 866-401-2564 866 496 0381 866-401-2564 866-401-2564 866-340-8597 866-419-2762 866-515-4038 866 496 0381 866-515-4038 866-401-2564 877-223-2703 866-438-1169 866-401-2564 866 496 0381 866-438-1169 866 617 6146 866 485 3136

HONDA Accord Accord Accord Accord Accord Accord Accord Accord Accord Accord Accord Accord Accord Civic Civic Civic Civic CR-V CR-V Odyssey Odyssey

866-438-1169

HYUNDAI

GMC George Weber Chevrolet Waterloo Dave Sinclair Buick Pontiac GMC George Weber Chevrolet Waterloo Dave Sinclair Buick Pontiac GMC Dave Sinclair Buick Pontiac GMC Koetting Ford Ackerman Auto Plaza Jack Schmitt Ford Lincoln Mercur George Weber Chevrolet Waterloo Jack Schmitt Ford Lincoln Mercur Dave Sinclair Buick Pontiac GMC Royal Gate Dodge of Columbia Four Flags Motors Pontiac Buick Dave Sinclair Buick Pontiac GMC George Weber Chevrolet Waterloo Four Flags Motors Pontiac Buick Newbold Toyota BMW Scion Underwood Motors

Four Flags Motors Pontiac Buick

29242A P913 P7053 P5222 P7531 P7522 P852A K8009A

866 496 0381 866 576 3845 866-515-4038 866-401-2564 877 584 1058

29360A

George Weber Chevrolet Waterloo 866 496 0381

PONTIAC P2021 29513A X5153A R1527 B2386 B2369 P7176 B2389 P7160 P7164 P7161 P7151 P7174 P7183 P7169 P7100 P7146 P7143 P7186 B2396 P7117 P7168 P6975 P2244A 097005B 29457A Z90480A 29193A X5204 P2425 P7157 X4998 P6858 P7178 P7141 P7092 P7132 B2384 B2392 B2366 R1526 K152A 91512 4421A M1015S B954S K8053A

Ackerman Auto Plaza George Weber Chevrolet Waterloo Koetting Ford Four Flags Motors Pontiac Buick Bob Brockland Pontiac Buick GM Bob Brockland Pontiac Buick GM Dave Sinclair Buick Pontiac GMC Bob Brockland Pontiac Buick GM Dave Sinclair Buick Pontiac GMC Dave Sinclair Buick Pontiac GMC Dave Sinclair Buick Pontiac GMC Dave Sinclair Buick Pontiac GMC Dave Sinclair Buick Pontiac GMC Dave Sinclair Buick Pontiac GMC Dave Sinclair Buick Pontiac GMC Dave Sinclair Buick Pontiac GMC Dave Sinclair Buick Pontiac GMC Dave Sinclair Buick Pontiac GMC Dave Sinclair Buick Pontiac GMC Bob Brockland Pontiac Buick GM Dave Sinclair Buick Pontiac GMC Dave Sinclair Buick Pontiac GMC St Louis Honda Ackerman Auto Plaza St Louis Honda George Weber Chevrolet Waterloo Dave Sinclair Buick Pontiac GMC George Weber Chevrolet Waterloo Koetting Ford Ackerman Auto Plaza Dave Sinclair Buick Pontiac GMC Koetting Ford Dave Sinclair Buick Pontiac GMC Dave Sinclair Buick Pontiac GMC Dave Sinclair Buick Pontiac GMC Dave Sinclair Buick Pontiac GMC Dave Sinclair Buick Pontiac GMC Bob Brockland Pontiac Buick GM Bob Brockland Pontiac Buick GM Bob Brockland Pontiac Buick GM Four Flags Motors Pontiac Buick Jack Schmitt Ford Lincoln Mercur Four Flags Motors Pontiac Buick Bob Brockland Pontiac Buick GM Victory Lane Ford Victory Lane Ford Bob Brockland Pontiac Buick GM

866-419-2762 866 496 0381 866-340-8597 866-438-1169 877-396-5065 877-396-5065 866-401-2564 877-396-5065 866-401-2564 866-401-2564 866-401-2564 866-401-2564 866-401-2564 866-401-2564 866-401-2564 866-401-2564 866-401-2564 866-401-2564 866-401-2564 877-396-5065 866-401-2564 866-401-2564 877 584 1058 866-419-2762 877 584 1058 866 496 0381 866-401-2564 866 496 0381 866-340-8597 866-419-2762 866-401-2564 866-340-8597 866-401-2564 866-401-2564 866-401-2564 866-401-2564 866-401-2564 877-396-5065 877-396-5065 877-396-5065 866-438-1169 866-515-4038 866-438-1169 877-396-5065 866 576 3845 866 576 3845 877-396-5065

The Edge – Page

27


Model

Year Price Stock#

Dealer

Phone

Model

Year Price Stock#

Dealer

Phone

Model

Year Price Stock#

Dealer

Solstice Sunfire Sunfire Torrent Torrent VIBE Vibe Vibe Vibe VIBE VIBE Vibe

2006 2002 2000 2009 2008 2009 2009 2009 2009 2008 2005 2003

$24,995 $6,488 $4,904 $19,995 $17,725 $18,495 $18,450 $17,444 $16,995 $15,995 $9,616 $9,995

6058 T7631A 90261 B2334 P2091Z P7166 R1496 R1538 B2373 P6991 B962 4124A

Four Flags Motors Pontiac Buick Newbold Toyota BMW Scion Four Flags Motors Pontiac Buick Bob Brockland Pontiac Buick GM George Weber Chevrolet Waterloo Dave Sinclair Buick Pontiac GMC Four Flags Motors Pontiac Buick Four Flags Motors Pontiac Buick Bob Brockland Pontiac Buick GM Dave Sinclair Buick Pontiac GMC Victory Lane Ford Bob Brockland Pontiac Buick GM

866-438-1169 866 617 6146 866-438-1169 877-396-5065 866 496 0381 866-401-2564 866-438-1169 866-438-1169 877-396-5065 866-401-2564 866 576 3845 877-396-5065

Bommarito Volkswagen of St Loui 866 377 3110 Bommarito Volkswagen of St Loui 866 377 3110

tC tC xB

2008 2007 2005

$16,988 $12,485 $10,488

T7606A Y196B T7652

866-401-2564 866 617 6146 866 617 6146 866 617 6146 866 617 6146 877 584 1058 866 617 6146 866 617 6146 866 617 6146 866 377 3110 877 584 1058 866 617 6146 877 584 1058 866 617 6146 866 617 6146 866 617 6146 866 617 6146 866 617 6146 866 617 6146 866 617 6146 866 617 6146 866 576 3845 877 584 1058 866 617 6146 866 617 6146 866 617 6146 877 584 1058 866-401-2564 866 617 6146 866 617 6146 866 617 6146 866 377 3110

V90430A Y272

Z90359A B2345 P2092Z B2245A K149A R1531 B950W 29026B P7108 R1518

Dave Sinclair Buick Pontiac GMC Newbold Toyota BMW Scion Newbold Toyota BMW Scion Newbold Toyota BMW Scion Newbold Toyota BMW Scion St Louis Honda Newbold Toyota BMW Scion Newbold Toyota BMW Scion Newbold Toyota BMW Scion Bommarito Volkswagen of St Loui St Louis Honda Newbold Toyota BMW Scion St Louis Honda Newbold Toyota BMW Scion Newbold Toyota BMW Scion Newbold Toyota BMW Scion Newbold Toyota BMW Scion Newbold Toyota BMW Scion Newbold Toyota BMW Scion Newbold Toyota BMW Scion Newbold Toyota BMW Scion Victory Lane Ford St Louis Honda Newbold Toyota BMW Scion Newbold Toyota BMW Scion Newbold Toyota BMW Scion St Louis Honda Dave Sinclair Buick Pontiac GMC Newbold Toyota BMW Scion Newbold Toyota BMW Scion Newbold Toyota BMW Scion Bommarito Volkswagen of St Loui

$18,995 $14,995

$18,495 $17,995 $14,646 $9,995 $5,990 $9,944 Call Call $19,995 $19,904

$19,995 $18,831 $18,831 $19,988 $14,988 $6,490 $20,888 $16,970 $16,442 $14,995 $13,990 $24,995 $11,990 $27,988 $15,211 $19,938 $18,488 $23,988 $21,988 $16,483 $12,988 $9,839 $18,990 $24,965 $20,937 $20,937 Call $24,995 $32,960 $35,988 $19,988 $13,995

2008 2008

2009 2008 2008 2006 2000 2005 1999 1991 2008 2008

2009 2009 2009 2007 2007 2000 2007 2009 2009 2009 2007 2008 2004 2007 2008 2008 2007 2008 2008 2006 2005 2005 2003 2009 2008 2008 2002 2007 2008 2007 2006 2008

New Beetle Rabbit

AURA Aura Aura Ion L-Series Relay SC2 SL VUE Vue

CAMRY Camry Camry Camry Camry Camry Camry Sola Corolla Corolla Corolla Corolla Highlander Highlander Highlander Matrix Prius Prius RAV4 RAV4 RAV4 RAV4 SCION XB Sequoia Sienna Sienna Sienna Sienna TACOMA Tundra Tundra Tundra Yaris

4Runner 4WD PICKUP Avalon Avalon Avalon Camry

2008 1992 2009 2008 2005 2009

$25,988 Call $24,488 $21,988 $19,468 $20,988

T7570 29564A T7656 T7644 T7493 T7647

Jetta Jetta Seda Jetta Seda JETTA SEDA New Beetle

2008 2008 2008 2003 2008

$14,981 $17,995 $14,995 $8,895 Call

S40 S40 S40 S40 S40 S40 S40 S60 S60 S60 S60 S60 S60 S60 S60 S80 S80 V50 V70 V70 V70 XC70 XC70 XC70 XC70 XC90 XC90 XC90 XC90 XC90 XC90 XC90 XC90 XC90 XC90

2008 2008 2008 2008 2008 2008 2006 2008 2008 2007 2006 2006 2006 2006 2006 2007 2007 2006 2008 2006 1998 2007 2006 2006 2006 2008 2007 2007 2007 2007 2007 2006 2006 2006 2006

$23,843 $23,843 $21,443 $19,872 $17,961 Call Call $24,923 $23,623 $16,804 $20,873 $19,876 Call Call Call $24,419 Call Call $24,961 $23,961 $5,916 Call $23,312 $18,877 Call $34,916 $33,887 $33,823 $32,744 $30,961 $27,916 $32,863 $28,746 $27,246 $25,457

21253 21255 21255 21243 21265 21262 21315 21237 21237 21312 21310 21247 21272 21322 21301 21288 21293 21321 21248 21289 21256A 21269 21266 21268 21263 21294 21283 21193 21305 21193 21190 21303 21257 21257 21260

SATURN Dave Sinclair Buick Pontiac GMC Bob Brockland Pontiac Buick GM George Weber Chevrolet Waterloo Bob Brockland Pontiac Buick GM Jack Schmitt Ford Lincoln Mercur Four Flags Motors Pontiac Buick Victory Lane Ford George Weber Chevrolet Waterloo Dave Sinclair Buick Pontiac GMC Four Flags Motors Pontiac Buick

866-401-2564 877-396-5065 866 496 0381 877-396-5065 866-515-4038 866-438-1169 866 576 3845 866 496 0381 866-401-2564 866-438-1169

SCION Newbold Toyota BMW Scion 866 617 6146 Bommarito Volkswagen of St Loui 866 377 3110 866 617 6146 Newbold Toyota BMW Scion

TOYOTA Newbold Toyota BMW Scion George Weber Chevrolet Waterloo Newbold Toyota BMW Scion Newbold Toyota BMW Scion Newbold Toyota BMW Scion Newbold Toyota BMW Scion

866 617 6146 866 496 0381 866 617 6146 866 617 6146 866 617 6146 866 617 6146

Z90356A T7412 T7443 T90883A T7605A 097526A T7594 T7577 T7582 Y273 097564A T7636 096398A T91132A T7465 T7642 T7651 T7614 T7634 T7551A T7625 B977 100038A T7579 T7477 T7547 100112A P6803A T7470 T10047A T7638 Y283

VOLKSWAGEN T7558 V100014A Y281 P7088A 6789

Newbold Toyota BMW Scion Bommarito Volkswagen of St Loui Bommarito Volkswagen of St Loui Dave Sinclair Buick Pontiac GMC Underwood Motors

866 617 6146 866 377 3110 866 377 3110 866-401-2564 866 485 3136

Phone

VOLVO Weiss Brentwood Volvo Weiss Brentwood Volvo Weiss Brentwood Volvo Weiss Brentwood Volvo Weiss Brentwood Volvo Weiss Brentwood Volvo Weiss Brentwood Volvo Weiss Brentwood Volvo Weiss Brentwood Volvo Weiss Brentwood Volvo Weiss Brentwood Volvo Weiss Brentwood Volvo Weiss Brentwood Volvo Weiss Brentwood Volvo Weiss Brentwood Volvo Weiss Brentwood Volvo Weiss Brentwood Volvo Weiss Brentwood Volvo Weiss Brentwood Volvo Weiss Brentwood Volvo Weiss Brentwood Volvo Weiss Brentwood Volvo Weiss Brentwood Volvo Weiss Brentwood Volvo Weiss Brentwood Volvo Weiss Brentwood Volvo Weiss Brentwood Volvo Weiss Brentwood Volvo Weiss Brentwood Volvo Weiss Brentwood Volvo Weiss Brentwood Volvo Weiss Brentwood Volvo Weiss Brentwood Volvo Weiss Brentwood Volvo Weiss Brentwood Volvo

866 801 9462 866 801 9462 866 801 9462 866 801 9462 866 801 9462 866 801 9462 866 801 9462 866 801 9462 866 801 9462 866 801 9462 866 801 9462 866 801 9462 866 801 9462 866 801 9462 866 801 9462 866 801 9462 866 801 9462 866 801 9462 866 801 9462 866 801 9462 866 801 9462 866 801 9462 866 801 9462 866 801 9462 866 801 9462 866 801 9462 866 801 9462 866 801 9462 866 801 9462 866 801 9462 866 801 9462 866 801 9462 866 801 9462 866 801 9462 866 801 9462

• Cars from $1250 and Up • 1700 Vehicles Today • 100,000 Searches Annually Search by: make model mileage transmission price September 10, 2009

ALL LOCAL DEALERS! The Edge – Page

28


Classified

Jewelry

922

John Geimer Jewelry 229 N. Main St. Edwardsville 692-1497

Cleaning

958

Same Day Ring Sizing Jewelry Repair Diamond & Stone Replacement

WE BUY GOLD AND JEWELRY

Call us today for a free quote on a weekly, biweekly or monthly cleaning

(618) 920-0233

931

963

www.pristine-cleaning.biz

Painting

960

JIM BRAVE PAINTING 20 Years Experience!

• Wallpaper • Specialty Painting • Inside or Outside Work • Power Washing • Deck Refinishing FRANCES 618-659-9525 Call: Decks, Pools, & Patios

956

POOL BUTLERS Scheduling Pool Closings & Winterization In Ground & Above Ground Safety Covers Sold & Installed Best Prices In Town! Over 20 Years In Business Insured

CALL FOR PRICING

618-251-0041

967

COMMERCIAL & RESIDENTIAL • • • • • • • • • •

Decks & Patios Siding, Soffit & Facia Windows & Doors Kitchen & Baths Room Additions Basements Concrete Stone Veneer Woodworking General Labor

Exceptional Value Ideal Solutions PIANO LESSONS YOU CAN PLAY THE PIANO! SUCCESS WITH MY GUIDANCE! • 25+ Years Experience • Esic Area Of Edwardsville • 30 Minutes Weekly • Monthly Fees • MBR of MTNA •Recitals & Group Sharing Teach Self Worth •My Patience Builds Confidence In Learners Students of all ages share joys! You CAN add a new dimension to your life! Follow your DREAM to play the piano!

Lawn & Home Care

PRISTINE CLEANING Meeting & Exceeding your Expectations! RESIDENTIAL & COMMERCIAL • Bonded & Insured • Customized Cleaning TRUSTWORTHY, ENERGETIC & PROFESSIONAL

Music

Driveway & Hauling

(618) 654-1349 or cell phone: (618) 444-0293

Roofing & Siding

961

SCHON

CONSTRUCTION, INC. Serving Edwardsville since 1978 • Roofing • Siding • Aluminum soffit & fascia • And etc.

• Mowing • Spring Clean-Up • Fertilizing • Landscape Installation • Landscape Maintenance Insured

656-7725 GatewayLawn.com

Handyman

969

Handyman

BOB’S HANDYMAN SERVICE Remodeling & Repair Drywall Finished Carpentry Painting Ceramic tile Build & Repair Decks Exterior House And Deck Washing Landscaping Blinds & Draperies Light Fixture & Ceiling Fans No Job Too Small Insured Call Bob Rose 978-8697

MASTER CRAFTSMAN Carpentry, 30 Years Decks, Garages, Remodeling, Home Repair Basement Finishing Ceramic Tile Small Jobs Welcome Reasonable Rates Insured Andy 618-659-1161

Plumbing

Foster & Sons LET ME FIX IT! Lawn Service HANDIMAN SERVICE Tree Removal Bush & Shrub Trimming &

Tree Service

966

Removal Landscape Mulching

Garner’s TREE SERVICE INC.

Since 1974 Licensed - Bonded - Insured Tree & Stump Removal Complete Property Maintenance Bucket Truck Track Hoe - Bob Cat

Residential & Commercial

Fully Insured

618-459-3330 618-973-8422 Handyman

969

#1 Handyman Service in the Nation

RON GARNER CERTIFIED ARBORIST

656-5566

970

M J S P l u m b i n g C o. STATE LICENSE # 058-191883 INSURED & BONDED

Lawn Cutting & Trimming 618.406.7650

969

• Water Heater Installation • Carpentry • Pressure Washing • Lighting & Ceiling Fans • Drywall • Painting • Windows & Doors

All estimates are presented work begins.You only pay for the services you want! BEFORE

• 24/7 Emergency Service • Preventative Maintenance • Sewer Lines • Water Heaters • Kitchen & Bath Remodeling

618-792-8663

Call Lee: (618) 581-5154

mjsplumbing@live.com

Rick Mattson Handyman Services

Air Conditioning/ Heating 976

Bonded & Insured

Professional, Safe & Reliable

979

SKILLED CRAF TSMAN

* $30 PER HOUR * • Home Improvements • Remodeling • Custom Woodwork • Small Engine Repair W.R.N. SERVICES SERVICES

(618) 974-9446 Electrical

981

Randy Moore Repair Service, Inc. “24 Hour Emergency Service” 30 Years Experience - Troubleshooting - Service Repairs And Upgrades - All Electrical Items - Install Lights & Fixtures - Complete Rewire

618-656-7405 Cell 618-980-0791

LAWN, TREE, CARPENTRY, REPAIRS, AND..... WE DO ANY TYPE OF JOB YOU NEED!

618-604-7464 Background Checks On All Technicians & 15+ Years Experience

Home Improvements

RICK MATTSON—OWNER 228 N. Meridian Rd. Glen Carbon, IL 62034

Proudly servicing the area for over 25 years.

Senior Citizen Discount In business since 1995!

Free estimates Financing available Repairs and installations

ON TIME. DONE RIGHT. ®

Call us for all of your heating and cooling needs.

618-659-5055

www.mrhandyman.com

656-9386

• Free estimates • Licensed • Bonded

www.garwoodsheating.com

BUYING SELLING BROWSING

656-4520

Buying or refinancing? Take advantage of LOW rates from a trusted source of financing, GCS Federal Credit Union. Call today for current rates!

(618) 797-7993

n

gcsmortgagecenter.com

This credit union is federally insured by the National Credit Union Administration. Membership restrictions apply.

September 10, 2009

The Edge – Page

29


Classified Special Notices Lost & Found INDOOR MULTI-FAMILY YARD SALE SATURDAY, SEPTEMBER 12 7AM-2PM MADISON COUNTY FARM BUREAU 900 Hillsboro Rd, Edwardsville Clothes, Baby-Adult-Plus, Toys, Miscellaneous Household Items... Price To Sell! MOVING/GARAGE SALE SATURDAY, 9/12—9A.M.-3P.M. 112 PRAIRIE MANOR, EDWARDSVILLE (OFF GOSHEN/RIDGEVIEW) Books, Record-albums, Computer-Games, Home Medicalequipment, Igloo Doghouses, Large dog-crates, Some Furniture, Many More Household Items!

125

FOUND (Dropped off @ Hawthorne Animal Hospital): Maltese, white, friendly, male, bad teeth. 288-2639, 288-2638 or 288-3971 FOUND (E30 Mobile Home Park): Pomeranian, red/tan, male, injured could not stand, no collar. 288-2639, 288-2638

Looking for John/Florence Harmeney,Glen/Louise Ackerman or Carl/Doris Acherman. Call Ron Schmit @ 503 6233479

Trucks, Vans, & SUV's

FOUND (near Main St./School): 210 small male beagle mix, black collar, very friendly. 288-2639, 8 Passenger 2001 Montana, 288-2638 extended. 132K, Exc. cond. All LOST: Meridian Rd., Timber- power, CD/Cass/AM/FM, Onwolfe Subdivision. Large Sheltie Star/phone. Auto traction, FWD, (looks like Lassie). 14yrs.-old, newer trans. Documented bineeds medication. REWARD wkly 21mpg, Hwy 25mpg. Ser618-205-3294 vice record. $5495/obo. 618659-9525 (11/20/09)

MULTI-FAMILY SALE HUNTERS POINTE SUBDIVISION (Off Goshen Road) FRIDAY, 7AM & EVENING SATURDAY, 7AM TONS Of Silk Flowers/Ribbon, Lawn Mower, Teaching Supplies, Ping-Pong Table, Baby/Kids’/Maternity Clothing, Dining Room & Other Furniture, Housewares, Kids’ Toys, Bedding... YARD SALE FRIDAY, SEPTEMBER 11TH & SATURDAY, SEPTEMBER 12TH 7AM-2PM 1919 MCKENDREE DRIVE EDWARDSVILLE Many Items!!

PICTURE I T SOLD

Campers, RV's & GoCarts

130

231

2002 Coleman pop-up. Closed 17’, open 22’. Tongue wt. 350lbs. Htr/AC/awning/screen room. Queen, double, single beds. Privacy curtains. Inside/outside propane stove. Front exterior storage, spare tire. $4895/obo. 618-659-9525 (11/20/09)

Help Wanted General

Help Wanted General

305

Experienced full time Teachers for nights & weekends: Eden Child Care, Glen Carbon. Benefits, competitive salary. Loving, caring individuals need apply at 288-4222 Hitz Memorial Home of Alhambra is looking for a PT/FT charge nurse, CNA’s & Office Clerk. Apply in person or fax resume to 618-488-2361 Team Tryouts – Cambridge House of Maryville

305

ACCOUNTS RECEIVABLE DATA ENTRY CLERK. Growing company is seeking a part time employee. 10-15 hours per week for data entry. Experience with QuickBooks a plus. Reply to: opmgr@carmedic.net or fax to 618-255-6055.

656-4700

Cambridge House of Maryville, an affordable supportive lifestyle community in Maryville, IL, is currently having “team tryouts”: Part time Dietary Aide Full time Cook Part time Housekeeper Join our team and make a difference in someone’s life. One year experience preferred. We offer a competitive salary and benefit program. Please apply at 6960 State Route 162, Maryville, IL 62062 or fax to 618-288-2299. EOE.

Lots for Sale LOCATED IN HAMEL, IL 2nd Addition

Just 1/4 mile South of Route 140 and Convenient to I-55

8 Passenger 2001 Montana, extended. 132 K, Exc. cond. All power, CD/Cass/AM-FM, OnStar/phone. Auto traction, FWD, newer trans. Documented bi-weekly 21 mpg, Hwy 25 mpg. Service record. $5495/OBO. 618-659-9525 (11/20/09)

2002 Coleman Pop-Up. Closed 17’, open 22’. Tongue wt. 350 lbs. Htr/AC/awning/screen room. Queen, double, single beds. Privacy curtains. Inside/Outside propane stove. Front exterior storage, spare tire. $4895/OBO. 618-659-9525 (11/20/09)

SELL YOUR CAR FOR LESS! ONLY $39.00 PER LISTING CALL THE “ I ” • 656-4700

September 10, 2009

• LARGE LOTS • CONCRETE STREETS • CITY • SEWER • WATER • ELECTRIC

Properties, Inc.

618-633-2256

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Classified Help Wanted General

305

Pets

450

PT YARD WORK needed: 2 sm. FREE 4yr. old female indoor homes in Glen Carbon: gutters cat. Spayed & shots. 972-3494 cleaned, lndscaping/trees trimd, FREE to good home: Lopleaf removal. 618/972-6935 eared BUNNY: female/2-yearsold, black/white, w/large cage— 4618/659-8631

Furniture

Games & Entertainment

Appliances

Child/Elder Care

504

Home Day Care for children has part time day, evening & weekend openings. 656-2648

414

Air hockey table. Good condition, 435. Call after 4pm. 618210-1902

418

Cleaning

532

House Cleaners, Christian women. We do all! Apts, Offices, Houses. Free Estimates. References Avail. 618-301-1413

426

4’ White Pine Trees: delivered, planted, mulched. $64.50 per tree. Buy 10, get 1 free. Other sizes/shade trees. Call (217)886-2316; leave message. Cut-up firewood, $10 a pick up load, U-load. 656-8529 For Sale: Sony 27” and GE TV’s, $25 each. 444-7167 New Framed PICTURES, $15 each. Krups Programmed COFFEEMAKER, $10. 618/656-7317 New/Large/wood-&-nickel DESK LAMP, $10.00. FLOOR/reading Lamp—$3.00. Small Desk Lamp—$3.00. 6567317 OAK DOOR, 6-panel/30-inches, unused, natural finish. (Paid $200.00.) $90.00. 618/792-6377—p.m.

Apts, Duplexes, & Homes Visit our website www.glsrent.com 656-2230

Apts/Duplexes For Rent

Apts/Duplexes For Rent

710

2 BRs, Glen Carbon, Cottonwood Sub., w/d hk-ups, APTS starting at $625, TH $675, DUP $735 (618)346-7878 www.osbornproperties.com 2BR Townhomes, 1.5BA, w/d hk up, all kit appl. incl. DW, disposal. No pets, $775. 659-2188; 978-2867 3 BEDROOM APARTMENT near SIUE: no pets, no smoking. $930/month. 656-1345

710

Apts/Duplexes For Rent

710

Duplex, close to LeClaire School. Some util. incl. Very priv/quiet: Upper Level Apt., 2 BR, w/d, Pergo flrs, $725. Lower Apt. Walkout, 1 BR, w/d hk up + util. rm, $465. 618-656-1580

Office Space For Rent

725

Homes For Sale

805

Collinsville/Maryville-Hwy. 159 Up to 1080 sq. ft., starting at $525/mo. (618) 346-7878 www.osbornproperties.com

317 Clay, Edw. Charming 2BR, 2BA home. Fenced yard. Applncs incl., $123,000. 110 Maple St., Edw. Great location! 2BR, 1BA $119,000. Duncan Office building in Maryville for Realtors 618-977-2195 rent. 2,800 sq. ft., $1,800/mo. Now Available- 2 bdrm TH’s in Will divide. 618-344-1534 or Cross-Town or Cross-CounEdw. Ask about our specials! try: EdwardsvilleHomes.com. 618-406-8252 Restrictions apply. 618-692Home Buyers Relocation SerOffice space for rent. Close to 9310 www.rentchp.com vices. Exclusively for buyers! courthouse, $600/mo. Call Met656-5588, 800-231-5588 Ready to move in! Large 3 BR, calf Agency: 656-5178 1.5 BA, fin. walkout bsmt & sinLots gle car garage. $840/mo. No pets, family preferred. 656-8306 For Sale 820

Collinsville - 2 Bdrm. W/S/T & heat incl. 1 carport spot, & 1 excellent 3BR, 1200 sq.ft. TH: Kitch. applncs. App. fee, SHARE HOUSE with 3 male persons. Smoking EnvironCollinsville, near 157/70; 12 $550+dep. No pets. 345-6697 min. to SIUE. FP, DW, W/D, ceil- Collinsville: Studio Apt. Kit. ment. $285 plus deposit. Utili- Homes ing fans, cable, sound walls, off- appliances, w/s/t incl. Off-strt ties paid. 656-0498. For Sale 805 st. prkng. Sm pets OK, yr. lse. prking. No pets. $275/mo. + $780/mo. No Sect. 8. 618/345- dep., app. fee. 345-6697 Commercial Space 2 acres, 5875 Wooded Estates 9610: give AM/PM phone. 720 Ln, Edw. Ranch, 3BR, 2-3/4BA, Duplex - Good location, covered For Rent Hamel: 2 Bdrm TOWNHOUSE, 1 parking, full basement. 8302 car attchd gar, 3 car detached bath, appliances included. W/D 5769. Also, large 2 BR, 50 3000 sf office space, Edw, near gar, pool & hot tub. 447-0127 hookup. $565/mo. + 1-mo. de- Devon Ct., some util. pd. 5 min. WalMart: ample prkng, rest rms. posit. Pets OK. 618-960-1384. to SIUE. 656-7337 or 656-4102 8 offices, separate or together. CLASSIFEDS Negotiable. 618/692-1794 GET 1 BR APTS: $630, incl. all util. & carport, in Edw, close to post office, banks, & shopping. 692656-4700 ext.27 9284 leave msg.

WOODED HOME SITES. E’vile school district, all utilities underground, 1/2mi. from Governors Pky, 4mi. to SIU, some walkouts. $68,400 & up. 972-0948

S RESULT

Washer & dryer, $75 each. Good condition. 288-2946

Misc. Merchandise

705

Completely remodeled 2 BDRM 2 BA, 400 S. Fillmore, Edw. $800/mo.+deposit, lease. 618409-4925; 616-1124

410

For Sale: 3-Piece Oak entertainment center w/glass shelves, $250. 444-7167

Houses For Rent

Houses For Rent

705

1 BDRM Apt. for rent. Close to SIU. $490/mo. includes utilities. No dogs. 618-254-1680

1 bedroom bsmt. apt., Edw. 1 BR Loft Apartment & 1 BR Fully furnshd. Utilities, cable, Duplex. CREDIT CHECK. No W/D usage incl; $625/mo.+ $725 pets, non smoking. $550/mo. deposit. No pets. 618/973-0773 $550 deposit. 656-8953. 1 BR upstrs apt, downtwn Edw., 1-2BR, acrss from LeClaire remodeled. $450/mo.+ dep., 1 Prk: aplnces, W/D; ovrsz 1-car yr. lease. Refrences. No pets. gar; no smkng; referncs; must Avail immediatly. 618-781-4444. see! $900+dep. 618/978-9811 2 Bdrm 1.5 BA Apt. in Edw., 2BR, 1BA, $700/mo.+dep., App. $600+dep. No pets. App. fee fee. Frige, stove, w/d hk up. 308 required. Agent owned. 618S. Brown, Edw. No pets. Agent 977-2195 owned. 618/977-2195 2 BDRM LOFT APT in Troy, 2BR, 1BA, Edw: bsmt., renovat- Newly remodeled, nice neighed, w/d, CA, gar; no pets/smok- borhood. Perfect for seniors, ing, wooded. $850/mo w/lawn singles or couples. No pets. care; 1 yr lease; dep. No 1st- $525/mo. 618-830-4183. time renters. 618-691-9066 2 BEDROOM apartment in 3 BR, 1.5 BA, applncs & W/D Glen Carbon. W/D hookups. provided. 1 car gar, area great $700 per month. 618-975-0975. for family. Maint. & lawn care 2 BR, refrigerator & stove furincl. $1075/mo. 618-610-6300 nished. C/A, private garage, quiet Edw. neighborhood. References required. 656-6119

Positions For Hire

Each Office Independently Owned and Operated

PREFERRED PARTNERS One 157 Center, Edwardsville, IL. 618-655-1188

8307 FAIRWAY, COLLINSVILLE BRING YOUR HORSE & SWIMSUIT! Raised ranch on acreage. Beautiful ceramic floors, bubbler tub, stunning kitchen w/island, ceramic backsplash, & stainless steel appl! The fenced paddock is huge & has a one-stall barn. Two koi ponds & two patios. All-seasons sunroom. $139,900

323 O’FARRELL, COLLINSVILLE RANCH w/oversized 2 car carport & FULL basement. 2 beautiful MASONRY fireplaces, HARDWOOD FLOORS, 2 full baths. Updates include kitchen cabinets, new high efficiency furnace, new A/C, & new hot water heater. $144,000

131 E. PENNING, WOOD RIVER CHARMING BUNGALOW w/refinished hardwood floors. Newer vinyl siding & windows. New light fixtures, fully remodeled kitchen features oak cabinets, dishwasher & stove. Airy 9 ft. ceilings. Spacious wood deck off kitchen. Covered front porch. Home Warranty! $79,800

Call SUSAN LANDING 618-779-7777

Call SUSAN LANDING 618-779-7777

Call SUSAN LANDING 618-779-7777

2 OLIVIA LANE, GLEN CARBON BEAUTIFUL, SPLIT LEVEL home is move-in ready. All appliances stay including washer & dryer. New AC & garage doors in ‘07, new H2O in ‘08. Water Softener. Fenced-in backyard with large deck for entertaining. $179,000

757 BOULEVARD DE CANNES, EDWARDSVILLE WITH A GORGEOUS in-ground pool & covered sunroom, this lakeview home offers an open floor plan w/hardwood & ceramic floors. The finished lower level includes a 3/4 bath & large family room. Enjoy all of this and a private backyard. $249,900

23 WASHINGTON PLACE, EDWARDSVILLE TERRIFIC NEW KITCHEN boasts beautiful maple cabinets, dramatic countertop, Jenn-Aire range, microwave, pantry, & custom pass-thru to LR. Full walk-out basement, relaxing screened porch overlooking pleasant yard. Charm w/hardwood floors and arched doorway. $144,000

Call RYAN HIGH 618-889-1777

Call DEBBIE BURDGE 531-2787

Call MARY JANE COLLINS 210-8061

Our mission is to provide opportunities for persons with barriers to employment to work and live more independently in the community. We currently have the following opportunities:

MIS Technician II Location: Aftergut - St. Louis Answer tech support phone monitor & respond to interest/server outages, create/delete/ maintain network. Requires High School Diploma/GED, 2 years experience with hardware & Microsoft Windows.

Car Donations and Media General Office Clerk Location: Aftergut - St. Louis The primary duty of the job is to perform a combination of clerical tasks to support office, business or admin. operations such as: maintaining records, receiving, preparing or verifying documents and communicating in verbal and written formats. Requires High School Diploma; Bachelor’s Degree preferred.

Therapist (PT) Juvenile Transition Program Location: Blewett Middle School Building - St. Louis Therapist will complete treatment plan mental health assessments provide group therapy for JTP consumer families. Complete progress notes participate in staffings and program meetings and all other duties assigned. Masters in Socal Work or Advanced related degree. Missouri License required. Must have experience in adolescents and their families, in addition to substance abuse treatment.

REDUCED!

Acknowledged throughout the area for her professional knowledge and expertise, Susan Jo offers superior service tailored to her client’s special needs. 618-444-2671

6083 TARA LANE, COLLINSVILLE 5 BR/4 BA. Full finished walk-out basement. 3 car garage & screened porch. Custom built. $329,900 Call LINDA RAYHO 779- 2980 or SUSAN LANDING 618-779-7777

OPEN HOUSE SUNDAY, SEPTEMBER 6 2-4 PM 177 SOMERSET, GLEN CARBON $299,900 - DIRECTIONS: Meridian Rd to Somerset

149 OAK LAWN DRIVE, GLEN CARBON CHECK OUT this private wooded backyard! This wonderful atrium ranch has a very nice open floor plan. Basement is partially finished & would not take much for a handyman to complete. Pine 6 panel doors throughout. $225,000

2713 HUNTERS CROSSING, EDWARDSVILLE BEAUTIFUL 3 bedroom/3 bath home. Foyer w/vaulted ceiling. Bike trail right out of the back door leading to one of the largest lots in subdivision. Lots of closet space. $219,900

Call MARY MASTERSON 1-800-566-0608 Ext 1002

Call MARY MASTERSON 1-800-566-0608 Ext 2002

Call MARY MASTERSON 1-800-566-0608 Ext 3002

185 CRYSTAL GATE, GLEN CARBON WELL MAINTAINED 2 story located in Crystal View. Quartz kitchen counters w/undermount sink; French doors in Formal DR, Zoned HVAC, fluted Framed doorways w/Crown Molding. $269,900 Call today for your private tour! Call SUSAN JO COKER 444-2671

OPEN HOUSE

To Apply, please visit us at www.mersgoodwill.org

September 10, 2009

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NO

Through Monday

Interest

LOWEST PRICE SALE

til

2012!!

Lowest Prices in the St. Louis Metro!!!

R E V O D L HE

PLUS...

Simon

Hooker Bedroom 50%

OFF

Digby

$697

$697

Leather Sofa $877

ALL Sizes Same Price

TWIN • FULL • QUEEN • KING

Your Choice

Five Star Plus............................................

$147 Each Piece*

Serta Plush or Euro Top..............

$299 Each Piece*

Serta Vera Wang Firm.........................

Recliner

$299

Entertainment Center $1699

$399 Each Piece*

• FREE DELIVERY • FREE SET-UP • FREE REMOVAL

Showroom Hours: Mon., Thurs., Fri. 9 am to 7 pm Tues., Wed., Sat. 9 am to 5 pm Sunday 12 pm to 4 pm 2.5 miles north of I-270 on Route 157

1091 S. State Rte 157 Edwardsville, Illinois 618-656-5111

www.kettleriverfurn.com

It’s Simple - You See It You Love It, You Get It Most Times, The Very Next Day

Offer good thru 9-14-09. Limited time offer. Prior sales exempt. *Sold in sets only. Free delivery on sets $797 and above in KRF $59 zone. **Financing on approved credit with 30% down payment and $1999 purchase. Although we make every effort to ensure our advertising is correct we cannot be held liable for typographical errors or misprints. Limited quantities on all items.

September 10, 2009

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