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Friday, July 16, 2010 Every issue reaches 28,200 readers and over 71,656 unique monthly visitors online

petoskeynews.com

Council mulls safety codes Ryan Bentley 439-9342 - rbentley@petoskeynews.com

Property-maintenance rules proposed for structures in Petoskey will get continued consideration from city council members when they meet Monday, July 19. Public safety services for the Bay Harbor resort also are on the agenda for the meeting, which begins at 7:30 p.m. Monday at city hall, 101 E. Lake St. Last month, the council began considering possible adoption of the International Property Maintenance Code with some modifica-

tions for l o c a l u s e. petoskey This is one news.com of several Read a recently updatedd model codes version of the proposed developed property maintenance by the In- ordinance ternational Code Council, a nonprofit membership association focusing on building safety and fire prevention. Its members come from various professional associations in fields such as homebuilding and public safety.

Local

LOWDOWN

Venetian Festival

ROOTS

See PETOSKEY COUNCIL on PAGE A14

War chests in place for Allen, Benishek Brandon Hubbard 439-9374 - bhubbard@petoskeynews.com

The Republican primary in the 1st Congressional District race for Congressman Bart Stupak’s seat is heating up both verbally and financially. The Federal Election Commission reported its quarterly find-

ings Friday morning showing that while Dan Benishek, a Republican from Crystal Falls, is no longer making post-health care-vote dollars, he isn’t afraid to drop his own coin in the race. Benishek, a surgeon by trade, made more than $142,000 in can-

NEWS-REVIEW FILE PHOTO

The first Venetian queen and her court in 1935 are Carol Whitley, (from left) Queen Marge Carey, Alice Meyer, Jean Zeitler, Marguerite Hull, Julia Glados, Edna Wyers and Jean Stelter. Rachel Brougham 439-9348 - rbrougham@petoskeynews.com

See FUNDING on PAGE A14 CHARLEVOIX — It began as a simple candle-lit boat parade in 1930. Today, Charlevoix’s Venetian Festival is the city’s highlight of the busy summer season. This year’s festival kicks off on Saturday, July 17, and runs through Saturday, July 24. While tens of thousands attend the festival each year, many don’t know about its rich history. “When the festival started 80 years ago, it was really small and was just a boat parade,” said Joan Miller, who works for the Venetian Festival planning office. “But today, there are so many events and it really just brings the entire community together.” The festival offers everything from the traditional boat and street parade, to fireworks, sporting events, food and

D’Art for Art

live music. “We actually have a tradition of two nights of fireworks,” Miller said. “On Friday (July 23), we have the larger show that is down near Ferry Beach on Lake Charlevoix. Then on Saturday (July 24) we have a smaller, but still impressive, display downtown.” While the fireworks may be one of the highlights of the festival, they were put on hold after a deadly accident in 1997. Nearly 50,000 people were watching when one of the fireworks exploded, killing one and injuring more than a dozen others. “After the accident, organizers tried a laser light show which just didn’t go over well,” said Dean Davenport, long time Charlevoix resident and organizer of the Venetian games. “The community then rallied together and decided See VENETIAN HISTORY on PAGE A14

RACHEL BROUGHAM/NEWS-REVIEW

Art lovers cruise the tables of art on display before the D’Art for Art auction gets under way Thursday. Hundreds of art lovers attended the Crooked Tree Arts Center fundraiser at Walstrom Marine-Building 6 on Hoyt Road in Harbor Springs. Proceeds from D’Art for Art support Crooked Tree Arts Center’s year-round arts education programs. SEE MORE PHOTOS ON PAGE A9.

County holding on to mineral rights Brandon Hubbard 439-9374 - bhubbard@petoskeynews.com

At least for the time being, Emmet County will retain the mineral rights for property throughout its boundaries. In June, the Emmet County Building and Grounds Committee was approached by Western Land Services representatives about the sale of its mineral rights for “all property south of Levering Road.” Among the specific areas mentioned during the meeting was the large plot of land around the Pellston Regional Airport. In total, the county has about

6,000 acres. However, the exact number of acres of mineral rights available would require extensive review, because a large number of county acres were previously owned by the state of Michigan, which retains such rights. On a phone call Wednesday, Emmet County Controller Lyn Johnson reiterated that the Emmet County Board of Commissioners has directed him to take “no action” at this time, including a possible survey of the mineral rights acres available. So, for now, there will be no gas wells sprouting up on county property.

It’s safety first at Venetian ■ Officers will be out in force during the festival Christina Rohn 439-9398 - crohn@petoskeynews.com

CHARLEVOIX — Charlevoix’s Venetian Festival is a highly anticipated event, which draws nearly double the population of Charlevoix each summer. Gerard Doan, chief of the Charlevoix City Police Department, said normally, Charlevoix’s population is around 30,000 during the summer months. However, he says, when the festival hits (July 17-24 this year), the population can spike to around 60,000. With a crowd of this size, in a town that is home to around 3,000 people in the off-season, Doan says things can get pretty tight, hectic and, at times, dangerous. In an effort to handle the crowds and stifle possible crime, Doan said he brings out his entire department — nine

officers — as well as enlists the help of the Charlevoix County Sheriff ’s Department. “Usually we get up to two or four deputies,” he said. “Typically, you can see 10 officers on foot down in East Park for the fireworks ... the mere presence of us deters a lot of problems we might have.” Doan said the most common issue that arises each year during the festival is drunk and disorderly conduct. “This has been deterred over the years, but I think it’s something you’d find at any big festival throughout the state,” he said. “Just be careful on how many alcoholic beverages you partake in — we want to see everyone come here safely and get home safely.” Another primary concern for officers is traffic control and pedestrian safety. See VENETIAN SAFETY on PAGE A14

AROUND THE WORLD IN 60 SECONDS

Warmest June on record, climate scientists say

BP stops oil spewing from Gulf gusher

WASHINGTON (AP) — Last month was the warmest June on record, extending months of record-setting heat. Worldwide, the average temperature in June was 61.1 degrees Fahrenheit (16.2 Celsius), the National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration said Thursday. That was 1.22 degrees F (0.68 C) warmer than average for June. This year has had the warmest average temperature for January-June on record — 57.5 F (12.2 C). Peru, the central and eastern regions of the United States, and eastern and western Asia were warmer than usual last month. Scandinavia, southern China and the northwestern United States were all cooler than normal.

NEW ORLEANS (AP) — The oil has stopped. For now. After 85 days and up to 184 million gallons, BP finally gained control over one of America’s biggest environmental catastrophes Thursday by placing a carefully fitted cap over a runaway geyser that has been gushing crude into the Gulf of Mexico since early spring. Though a temporary fix, the accomplishment was greeted with hope, high expectations — and, in many cases along the beleaguered coastline, disbelief. From one Gulf Coast resident came this: “Hallelujah.” And from another: “I got to see it to believe it.”

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A2

Friday, July 16, 2010 •

GAYLORD

PETOSKEY

Planners recommend sign ordinance update Ryan Bentley 439-9342 - rbentley@petoskeynews.com

Petoskey planning commissioners decided Thursday to suppor t several changes in the city’s ordinance governing signs. “Almost all of these (changes) are trying to clarify what the current text is,� said city CHRIS ENGLE/GAYLORD HERALD TIMES planner Amy Tweeten. Rosco the Clown adorns a reveler with a balloon hat Wednesday during the Alpenfest in The commission decided 6-0 to recommend in favor of Gaylord. The festival runs through Saturday. the changes, with members William Fuller, Ken Horrom and Cynthia Linn Robson absent. The proposed upThis space is reserved each day for corrections or clarifications of news stories. Should you see an dates will be referred to the error, please contact Jeremy McBain, editor, at the Petoskey News-Review, (231) 347-2544. A Thursday story in the Petoskey News-Review about ideas for changing the U.S. 31/ city council for considerPickerel Lake Road intersection on page A1 did not provide the full name of one of the ation. sources quoted. That source was Matt Radulski, a development engineer with the Michigan Department of Transportation.

CORRECTIONS and clarifications

Among the recommended changes are an updated definition of “dynamic displays� — such as electronic and mechanical signs — meant to ensure that the sign rules cover changing technology. Rules for window signs also are proposed to be updated. The new language would specify that any sign put within three feet of a window — including electronic monitors, which increasingly have been used by businesses to convey messages — would be subject to requirements for window signs. Sign-ordinance rules concerning the use of “open�

pennants would be clarified with the updates, as would the standards for signs displayed on awnings. New details would be added to the rules concerning wall signs, providing more specifics as to how the maximum size for these signs should be calculated for buildings with varying setbacks. In moving that the planning commission recommend the changes, commissioner John Murphy noted that the changes reflect “three years of diligent study by the (city’s) sign committee� and that public input was sought in numerous cases.

Open Houses Saturday, July 17

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ON WALLOON LAKE’S NORTH ARM is the location of many of the lake’s original log cottages and now a perfect gem has come on the market! Tucked off on a secluded trail, you experience the best of an original 1928 beauty wrapped in covered and open decks and porches overlooking 125 front feet with dock in place. Packed with “punch�, this original log cottage and guest house are in mint condition with a full log interior, 4+ bedrooms & a great unique kitchen. #426388 $1,800,000

Directions: US 31 S past the Bay Harbor light, left into Crooked Tree, first left, second home on right.

Directions: U.S. 31 south to Lake Grove Road. Left on Lake Grove Road past Morford. Right at Depew onto Lake Grove Trail. Follow to address of 5608.

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3138 TOWNSEND ROAD AN EXCLUSIVE GROUP of six West Arm custom homes comprises the one and only Miller Way. Each features Walloon Lake’s finest architecture set on six spacious 160-170+ front foot lots. Built in 2003, a 5,400’ gem has come on the market. Every room has its own charm...from the open living room, gourmet kitchen, sparkling sun room, master suites up and down, upstairs surprise family room with a petite gym, and storage space equal to three garage spaces for all the toys! #424097 $2,250,000 Directions: South on US-31 past the Bay Harbor light and Lake Grove Road. Left on Townsend Road, straight ahead to Miller Way. Follow private road to lake; stay left on cul-de-sac.

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LOCAL

Bellaire Petoskey Charlevoix Boyne City East Jordan

It pays to belong

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A3

Friday, July 16, 2010 •

BOYNE CITY

WOLVERINE

EAST JORDAN

Two in running for Boyne City superintendent position

Cheboygan County cherry stand robbed at gunpoint

CHEBOYGAN COUNTY — Police in Cheboygan County are on the hunt for a man who they say pulled a gun and robbed a cherry stand in the village of Wolverine Wednesday. The lone suspect, who has been described as a 6foot tall, white male, between the ages of 20 and 30, reportedly approached the cherry stand around 2:40 p.m. on July 14, brandishing a handgun and demanding money. The victim, who was running the stand at the time, complied with the gunman’s request and supplied him with an undisclosed amount of money. According to a release from the Cheboygan County Sheriff ’s Department, the suspect, who is described as having a shaved head, clean shaven face and no visible piercings or tattoos, took the money and then fled the scene on foot wearing a black hooded sweatshirt, blue jean pants and dark sunglasses. Immediately after the report came in, Cheboygan County Sheriff ’s deputies, along with the Cheboygan County Sheriff ’s Department’s K-9 Unit, troopers from the Michigan State Police Cheboygan post and officers from the Tuscarora Township Police Department, canvassed the area in an attempt to locate the suspect, but this was to no avail. The incident remains under investigation. Anyone with information about this crime is asked to contact Sgt. Michael Brege at the Cheboygan County Sheriff ’s Department at (231) 627-3155.

City alliance with chamber questioned

Second interviews to take place on Wednesday, July 21 Rachel Brougham 439-9348 - rbrougham@petoskeynews.com

BOYNE CITY — In its search for a new superintendent, the Boyne City Board of Education narrowed the field to two final candidates. Earlier this week, the board interviewed four candidates to re place outgoing superintendent, Rober t Alger, who in May announced he was leaving for a posi- Alger tion at the Charlevoix-Emmet Intermediate School District. Second interviews have been scheduled for the final two candidates on Wednesday, July 21. — 6:30-7:30 p.m., Susan Wooden, 45, director of curriculum and instruction and assessment from Owosso Public Schools since 2001. — 7:45-8:45 p.m., Peter Moss, 57, superintendent of Hart Public Schools since 2005. David Harwell, an assistant superintendent of Hart Public Schools, withdrew his name from the running on Thursday, July 15. Thomas Dykstra, a high school prin- Schrader cipal and director of technology and career and technical education at Byron Area Schools, was not selected for a second interview. Two other candidates withdrew their names before the first round of interviews. Second interviews are open to the public and will be held in the boardroom of the Early Childhood Building at 321 South Park Street in Boyne City. School board president, Ken Schrader, noted the board had difficulty in narrowing down the candidates for a second interview. “All four candidates we interviewed had very high qualifications and were eager to be our next superintendent,” he said. The Charlevoix-Emmet Intermediate School District has been assisting in the search.

Lottery

Here are the winning numbers selected Thursday in the Michigan State Lottery: Midday Daily 3, 5-3-2; Midday Daily 4, 2-9-9-4; Daily 3, 0-5-7; Daily 4, 7-0-5-7; Fantasy 5, 8-9-2636-38; Keno, 8, 10, 12, 16, 19, 26, 33, 34, 35, 36, 39, 40, 50, 52, 53, 56, 59, 62, 66, 68, 70, 72. Friday’s Mega Millions jackpot is estimated at $64 million. Saturday’s Classic Lotto 47 jackpot is estimated at $2.3 million.

Alice Perrault aperrault@petoskeynews.com

COURTESY SKETCH

The Cheboygan County Sheriff’s Department released this sketch today of a suspect they believe used a handgun around 2:40 p.m. Wednesday to rob a cherry stand in the village of Wolverine. The man is described to be a 6-foot tall, white male, between the ages of 20 and 30, with a shaved head, clean shaven face and no visible piercings or tattoos. The suspect reportedly fled the scene with an undisclosed amount of money wearing a black hooded sweatshirt, blue jean pants and dark sunglasses.

MACKINAW CITY

It’s all about the climb Leon LaHaie, a water operator of the Mackinaw City Water Department, climbs to the top of the 145-foot Mackinaw City water tower Wednesday as part of his maintenance job responsibilities. LaHaie climbs the giant tower on the shoreline of Lake Michigan, approximately 10 times a year. M. CHRIS LEESE/NEWS-REVIEW

Michigan incumbents report healthy war chests Kathy Barks Hoffman Associated Press

LANSING — Democratic U.S. Rep. Gary Peters reported Thursday that he has $1.9 million on hand heading into a tough re-election bid in November. Peters reported raising $2.35 million, including about $330,000 in the past quarter. He and other congressional candidates had to report by the end of the day how much they’ve raised, spent and had on hand as of June 30. The reports could show who has the most financial resources for the final push to the Aug. 3 primary election. Dozens of Michigan candidates filed reports by the deadline, but most reports weren’t available on the Federal Election Commission website by 10 p.m. EDT. Peters, from Oakland County’s Bloomfield Township, will face one of four Republicans running in the 9th District. None of the GOP candidates’ campaign finance reports were on the Federal Election Commission website by Thursday night.

Democratic U.S. Rep. Carolyn Cheeks Kilpatrick reported she has $271,952 on hand as she fights to hold onto her 13th District seat against five primary election challengers. Kilpatrick’s report showed she has raised $499,319 and spent $512,341 in the past 18 months, but had plenty left over from previous campaigns. None of the others in the race had filed late Thursday afternoon. The longtime congresswoman could feel the effect of voter dissatisfaction with her son, former Detroit Mayor Kwame Kilpatrick, who is in prison for a parole violation connected to a text-messaging scandal. The Democratic primary winner is expected to win in November in the district that includes part of Detroit and a few suburbs. In the 2nd District GOP race to replace Republican U.S. Rep. Pete Hoekstra, former NFL player Jay Riemersma of Holland reports that he raised $448,253 and lent his campaign $208,632. His last loan, $100,000, came in late March. He spent $529,588 and had $127,541 cash on hand at June 30. Riemersma is one of seven Republicans in the

race. Hoekstra is stepping down to run for governor. Republican U.S. Rep. Candice Miller, who doesn’t have a primary challenger in the 10th District, reported she raised $595,228, spent $406,234 and had $1.18 million on hand. Democrat Henry Yanez had not yet filed his report. In the 5th District, Republican John Kupiac of Grand Blanc reported raising $23,650 and lending his campaign $33,085. He spent $42,393 and had $14,342 on hand. He’s running against Rick Wilson for the chance to take on incumbent Rep. Dale Kildee of Flint, who is being challenged in the Democratic primary by Scott Withers. No reports were available for the other candidates. In the 1st District, where Democratic Rep. Bart Stupak is retiring, the only report filed so far was for former Democratic candidate Connie Saltonstall, who withdrew from the race in May. The Charlevoix resident reported raising $120,491 and lending her campaign $2,000, which was repaid. She spent $115,632 and had $6,859 on hand.

What’s your favorite Charlevoix Venetian Festival feature?

2

TOP 5

1

CONCERTS CARNIVAL FIREWORKS 11 votes

23%

1 votes

2%

36 votes

75%

Great escape Read our feature on Weathervane Terrace Inn and Suites.

www.petoskeynews.com/lifestyles

1

3 Best of the Northwest

EAST JORDAN — When East Jordan commissioner Tinea Spence questioned the city’s alliance with the city chamber, community members were left wondering why. Chamber president Mary Faculak said she has heard a lot of feedback from the community. “We’ve had a lot of calls from community members. They are concer ned because everyone here is a team,” Faculak said. The chamber is a tremendous service Faculak to the city, she added. When the issue was brought up, Spence asked about the amount of money the city spends every year in chamber dues. “I really think we can create a separate fund and host events ourselves,” she said. Currently, the city pays $3,300 out of its general fund every year. This city has been paying that Spence sum for more than 20 years. Commissioner Ray Fisher said he does not believe the issue will go very far. “The chamber is needed in East Jordan. They do a good job. I understand not spending too much money and wanting to be wise about that, but the chamber is necessary. Everyone in this community has to work together,” he added. City manager Bob Anderson said he hopes the city decides not to cut ties with the chamber, and that the commission only is seeking more information. “There is no plan afoot to cut ties with the chamber. We appreciate all businesses and want more of them in this community,” city manager Bob Anderson said. “I want to assure everyone not to take the matter personally. A commissioner had a legitimate question about an expense; that was it,” he added. Jordan Valley Accounting is one of many chamber members. Owner Lisa Dunneback said, “The function of a chamber is to promote business and that is exactly what the East Jordan chamber does. They do their job very well, and that is why we pay our dues.” “I’ve belonged to many chambers and I think East Jordan’s is one of the best around. I think there are some misunderstandings going on here. The chamber does not control festivals. Perhaps people need to be more educated on exactly what the chamber is supposed to do,” Dunneback added. So far, no motions have been made to end membership with the chamber. The next city council meeting is 7 p.m. Wednesday, July 21, in city hall. The chamber will present information to city council at the following meeting on Aug. 3.

petoskey news.com

LOTS OF REASONS to visit us online today online poll results

No plans to separate

And it’s online!

You voted, we tallied. Read all about your Northern Michigan favorites.

Read, share, comment on your Saturday favorites.

www.thegraphicweekly.com

www.petoskeynews.com

EVENTS Indian River SummerFest Friday through Sunday, July 16-18, in Indian River

North American Art Fair

2

9 a.m.-4 p.m. Saturday, July 17, at the Harbor Springs waterfront

3

9 a.m.-3:30 p.m. Saturday, July 17, in Charlevoix

4

is Saturday through Saturday, July 17-24, in Charlevoix

5

10 a.m.-4 p.m. Sunday, July 18, at the fire hall grounds on Robinson Road, Good Hart For more fun things to do, go to

Street Legends car show Venetian Festival Mini Fair

thegraphicweekly.com


OPINION

A4

Friday, July 16, 2010 •

Our View

Hope amid budget gloom

Don’t miss wonderful voices, dances brought by young performers

Y

oung singers and dancers from Canada, the United States and Vietnam will be the featured performers in what is being billed as a “minifest.” With 150 singers, dancers and instrumentalists performing at least 15 scheduled concerts, this year’s Children of the World in Harmony International Youth Choir & Dance Festival doesn’t quite fit the description of the word “mini.” In comparison to last year’s week-long festival when more than 375 talented young converged on the Little Traverse Bay area for a week of singing and dancing, this year’s festival may be “mini,” but it won’t be any less exciting. Performances are planned Monday through Sunday, July 19-25, in Petoskey, Bay View, Harbor Springs, Charlevoix, Boyne City, Mackinac Island and Beaver Island. The week will provide a a wonderful opportunity to see and hear some outstanding young talent. Some of the concerts will require tickets, while many of the performances will be offered free of charge. A complete listing of scheduled concerts is available on the Voices Without Borders festival website, www.vwbchoir. com. The highlight of the week-long festival will be the Festival Gala Concert at 7:30 p.m. Wednesday, July 21, at the Harbor Springs High School Performing Arts Center. The event will feature all of the singers, dancers and drummers — truly an event not to be missed. Another special event during the festival, will be an African drum circle led by Ehli Kihonia of Wacongo West African Dance Company, from 9:30-11 a.m. Thursday, July 22, on the grounds near Hall auditorium in Bay View. Area residents and churches are rolling out the red carpet for these 150 special visitors by invit-

ing them to stay in their homes and to perform for their congregations. This year’s minifest will bring the following groups to Northern Michigan: — Sol Arts Centre traditional music and dance ensemble from Hanoi, Vietnam, presenting dance and instrumental folk music ensembles and soloists. Singers of the group will join with other choirs in the Voices Without Borders Choir. Sol Arts Center helps pass on traditions and preserves traditional Vietnamese folk music and dance. — Mariachi los Rebeldes of Phoenix returns to the festival for a second year. The group helps young persons of Mexican descent learn about and perform traditional Mariachi music of Mexico. — Afrika Yetu Artistic Youth Ambassadors, an African dance and music ensemble from Pittsburgh, that helps African-American youth learn about the music and dance of Central Africa. — The Winnipeg Children’s Choir from Manitoba, Canada, sings music in several languages from many cultures around the world. Two local groups will also be participating in the festival. Dancers Without Borders of Northern Michigan, directed by Cynthia Anthony, explores the history and tradition of American dance from early folk dance to hip-hop and jazz, including the influence other cultures have had on our own national dance forms. The second local group is the Little Traverse Youth Choir, directed by Heather Marvin. The choir learns music from around the world in several languages to expand their understanding of the music and people of the world — precisely what the Voices Without Borders Children of the World in Harmony minifest aims to do. Through song, dance and music we are really all one people.

David S. Broder The Washington Post

BOSTON — Sometimes you can see events in Washington more clearly when you get out of town. Before I came here last weekend to cover the annual summer meeting of the National Governors Association, I shared the general Beltway view that the National Commission on Fiscal Responsibility and Reform is an exercise in futility. After all, it was almost strangled at birth, when a half-dozen Republican senators who had endorsed the idea of a bipartisan panel to tackle the deficit and debt problem reneged and voted against it, only to see President Obama rescue it by executive order. The odds seemed hopelessly stacked against its finding the needed 14 votes among its 18 members in order to send a package to Congress for the promised up-or-down vote in December. But then I heard the commission co-chairmen, Alan Simpson, a former Republican senator from Wyoming, and Erskine Bowles, a former Clinton White House chief of staff, brief the governors for an hour. I shared the reaction of Mike Beebe, the governor of Arkansas, who said. “I don’t know that I ever heard a gloomier picture painted that created more hope for me.” Together, Bowles and Simpson laid out a scenario of a growing gap between the demands on government and its available resources that “is like a cancer,” as Bowles put it. The commission may be a bad

David S. Broder National political correspondent The Washington Post

joke in Washington, but it was clear that the governors — many struggling already with recession-bred budget crises — take it very seriously. Like Beebe, they found hope in the fact that, however tough the odds, Simpson and Bowles have created an environment in which serious people are grappling seriously with the biggest domestic challenge facing government. What I learned from them — and several commission members interviewed back in Washington — is that they have pooled their very disparate talents: Simpson, cloaking his blunt cowboy directness in good humor; Bowles, a walking-computer of a number-cruncher with the patience and tact of a Southern squire. The trust they have found in each other is increasingly shared among commission members. Republican Rep. Dave Camp of Michigan, who is accustomed to the roughhouse tactics of the House, has been welcomed by Democratic Sen. Kent Conrad of North Dakota. Andrew Stern, the feisty former president of the Service Employees International Union, has found common ground with archconservative Republican Sen. Tom Coburn of Oklahoma in wanting to scrutinize Pentagon spending. And

David Cote, the chairman of Honeywell International, has impressed Alice Rivlin, the brainy Democratic former director of the Office of Management and Budget, with his insistence on action. Sen. Judd Gregg of New Hampshire, a co-sponsor of the bill creating the commission and now a member, told me that many of the Capitol Hill commissioners have been meeting almost weekly, searching for the path forward. Nothing has been negotiated yet, and all kinds of pitfalls loom, but the outlines of possible future agreements are becoming clear. On nondefense discretionary spending, Obama already has proposed a three-year freeze that could set the pattern for a longerterm compact. Social Security has been studied so thoroughly that commission members say “there are 34 ways” to balance the books, once the political trade-offs are accepted. Health care will be the biggest challenge on the spending side, with some Democrats — and apparently the White House — resigned to the fact that the painfully negotiated 2010 law will have to be reopened to strengthen badly needed cost controls, no matter how awful the prospect of resuming that debate. On revenues, Republican members are “keeping an open mind,” rather than repeating their rote objections to any taxes. Bowles is helping them by suggesting that no taxes increase before 2012,

See BRODER on PAGE A5

‘Our View’ represents the opinion of the News-Review Editorial Board: Ryan Bentley, Doug Caldwell, Jeremy McBain, Neil Stilwell, Babette Stenuis Stolz

Obama’s next act Charles Krauthammer The Washington Post

WASHINGTON — In the political marketplace, there’s now a run on Obama shares. The left is disappointed with the president. Independents are abandoning him in droves. And the right is already dancing on his political grave, salivating about November when, his own press secretary admitted Sunday, Democrats might lose the House. I have a warning for Republicans: Don’t underestimate Barack Obama. Consider what he has already achieved. Obamacare alone makes his presidency historic. It has irrevocably changed onesixth of the economy, put the country inexorably on the road to national health care and, as acknowledged by Senate Finance Committee Chairman Max Baucus but few others, begun one of the most massive wealth redistributions in U.S. history. Second, there is major financial reform, which passed Congress on Thursday. Economists argue whether it will prevent meltdowns and bailouts as promised. But there is no argument that it will give the government unprecedented power in the financial marketplace. Its 2,300 pages will create at least 243 new regulations that will affect not only, as many assume, the big banks but just about everyone including, as noted in one summary (The Wall Street Journal), “storefront check cashiers, city governments, small

Charles Krauthammer Pulitzer Prize-winning columnist The Washington Post

manufacturers, homebuyers and credit bureaus.” Third is the near $1 trillion stimulus, the largest spending bill in U.S. history. And that’s not even counting nationalizing the student loan program, regulating carbon emissions by EPA fiat, and still-fitful attempts to pass cap-and-trade through Congress. But Obama’s most far-reaching accomplishment is his structural alteration of the U.S. budget. The stimulus, the vast expansion of domestic spending, the creation of ruinous deficits as far as the eye can see are not easily reversed. These are not mere temporary countercyclical measures. They are structural deficits because, as everyone from Obama on down admits, the real money is in entitlements, most specifically Medicare and Medicaid. But Obamacare freezes these out as a source of debt reduction. Obamacare’s $500 billion in Medicare cuts and $600 billion in tax increases are siphoned away for a new entitlement — and no longer available for deficit reduction. The result? There just isn’t enough to cut elsewhere to preSee KRAUTHAMMER on PAGE A5 NEWSROOM Neil Stilwell design/wire editor

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Letter from our readers Pick a little, talk a little ... Editor: An answer to the guest commentary of July 9 by Anne Billiard of Alanson — where the heck do you find your information? While true that Clinton left office with a $127 billion budget surplus and G.W. Bush (after 8 years in office, a Democrat majority in both houses passing bills, the 9/11 attack on our country with its associated costs, and the devastating costs of Katrina) left with a $482 billion deficit. According to the Washington Examiner, Obama’s 2009 budget deficit will be larger than all budget deficits from 2002-2007 — combined. Obama’s first year

deficit was over twice that of Bush’s entire 8 years and his 2010 deficit will be twice that total once again. So, in his first two years in office, Obama’s deficit will be quadruple Bush”s entire deficit of 8 years. Obama has a spending problem which will leave a huge debt for our grandchildren to pay. Obama is more interested in deficit spending than in deficit reduction. Were Obama to be in office 8 years, the projected new deficit would be $10.6 trillion. America would accumulate more government debt under Obama than under every president in American history, from George Washington to George W. Bush — combined.

Even the chamber of commerce has taken Obama to task for giving no incentives to businesses to expand or hire. We are the laughingstock of a significant portion of the world who have lost respect for America and sees Obama as “weak.” Transparency? Where? This is the least transparent and the most devious administration ever. Finally — let me know in a year or so how much you like your new health care, unless, of course, we are lucky enough to get it repealed. The rest of your talking points were just that — talking points. Judy Willey Charlevoix

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OPINION

Friday, July 16, 2010 •

Lost Korean War battalion awaits U.S. MIA decision Charles J. Hanley AP Special Correspondent

S E O U L , S o u t h Ko re a — Trapped by two Chinese divisions, troops of the 8th U.S. Cavalry Regiment were left to die in far northern Korea, abandoned by the U.S. command in a Korean War episode viewed as one of the most troubling in American military history. Sixty years later those fallen soldiers, the lost battalion of Unsan, are stranded anew. North Korea is offering fresh clues to their remains. American teams are ready to re-enter the north to dig for them. But for five years the U.S. government has refused to work with North Korea to recover the men of Unsan and others among more than 8,000 U.S. missing in action from the 1950-53 war. N ow, u n d e r p re s s u re from MIA family groups, the Obama administration is said to be moving slowly to reverse the Bush administration’s suspension of the joint recovery program, a step taken in 2005 as the North Korean nuclear crisis dragged on. “If I had a direct line in to the president, I would say,’Please reinstitute this program. There are families that need closure,”’ said Ruth Davis, 61, of Palestine, Texas, whose uncle, Sgt. 1st Class Benny Don Rogers, has been listed as MIA since Chinese attackers overran his company — I Company, 8th Cavalry — at Unsan in late 1950. It was one of Rogers’ I Company comrades, Pfc. Philip W. Ackley of Hillsboro, New Hampshire, whose identifying dog tag appeared in a photo the Nor th Koreans handed over at Korea’s Panmunjom truce village in January of this 60th year since the war

started. The North Koreans also delivered photos of remains, a stark reminder that Unsan’s dead still wait to come home. The U.S. “has developed the humanitarian issue into a political problem,” complained a North Korean statement urging resumption of the MIA search project, which earned hard currency for the Pyongyang government. The devastating losses at Unsan, in early November 1950, came as China intervened to fend off a final North Korean defeat. In a last letter home, dated Oct. 30, Rogers told his parents, “It is a lot better over here, but it’s not over yet.” The U.S. command had ignored intelligence reports that China’s army was moving south, and Rogers and the 8th Cavalry had been sent too far north, just 80 kilometers (50 miles) from China, where they stumbled into a closing enemy vise. Higher headquarters rejected requests for a pullback, then refused to send artillery forward to support a rescue effort. Finally, it ordered the rescue force withdrawn. Two of the 8th Cavalry’s three battalions managed to escape, with heavy losses. But only small bands from the five companies of the doomed 3rd Battalion made it out as waves of Chinese infantry attacked their 200meter-wide (200-yard-wide) defense perimeter. The 8th Cavalry’s abandonment at Unsan became an infamous chapter in Army annals — “one of the most shameful and little-known incidents in U.S. military history,” wrote Korean War historian Jack J. Gifford. Some 600 of the 3rd Battalion’s 800 men were lost, about half believed killed and half captured, many of whom died in Chinese-run

prison camps. The U.S. and North Korea established the MIA search in 1996 after lengthy negotiations. Over nine years, working across North Korea, the joint teams recovered 229 sets of remains believed to be those of Americans, including 14 subsequently identified as 3rd Battalion men. But an estimated 260 U.S. dead are still unaccounted for at Unsan, among almost 4,600 U.S. MIAs in North Korea, the Pentagon’s Defense POW/MIA Office says. When then-Defense Secretary Donald H. Rumsfeld suspended the program in 2005, officials cited what they said were concerns about the security of American personnel working on the territory of a longtime U.S. adversary. Richard Lawless, the former Pentagon official who recommended the move, defends it today, telling The Associated Press it was a “prudent decision” because the U.S. field teams “were potential high-value hostages as the North Korean nuclear crisis deepened.” The MIA support groups rejected that rationale, saying they suspected President George W. Bush’s administration instead wanted to break the lone working link with North Korea and pressure Pyongyang in the nuclear showdown. “This safety aspect from the Pentagon sounds like so much hogwash,” said former 3rd Battalion sergeant Robert J. Earl, 82, of Federal Way, Washington. Earl was not at Unsan, having been wounded earlier, and for years he has sought information on his 8th Cavalry mortar platoon, all of whom may have perished. Stepping up their lobbying in Washington last year, the MIA families appear to have made headway with the new

Fax: (231) 348-0653 Toll Free: (800) 950-7371 http://www.house.gov/stupak

9:00 a.m. - 5:30 p.m. http://levin.senate.gov/contact

administration. “I’m in touch with everyone there, and they all support restoring the program,” said Frank Metersky, 77, a Marine veteran of the war and longtime MIA campaigner. Larry Greer, spokesman for the Defense POW/MIA Office, said officials are “evaluating” a possible resumption. Other administration officials have pointedly referred to the recovery program as a humanitarian mission unrelated to political considerations. But the recent furor over North Korea’s alleged torpedoing of a South Korean warship “has stopped everything in its tracks for now,” Metersky said. Nevertheless, U.S. specialists sound ready. “We are prepared to resume operations in (North Korea) and will request access to the Unsan area,” the Joint POW/MIA Accounting Command in Hawaii, home to the field teams, said in its latest annual report. Its forensic experts, meanwhile, continue the laborious work of DNA identification of remains returned years ago, like those of Master Sgt. Roy Earl Head of the 7th Infantry Division, finally identified, brought home and buried June 5 in a family cemetery in Grit Hill, Virginia. “It’s remarkable, after 59 years,” said brother David Head, 71, of Kingsport, Tennessee. All his life he thought daily about Roy, he said. His mind turned sympathetically to others. “There are still a lot more families out there who might not ever find out, or get the closure we will get,” Head said.

On the Web: Pentagon Korean War MIA site: http:// www.dtic.mil/dpmo/korea/

Contact your reps

Rep. Gary McDowell

S1486 House Office Building P.O. Box 30014 Lansing, MI 48909-7514 Fax: (517) 373-8429 Phone: (517) 373-2629 garymcdowell@house.mi.gov

Rep. Kevin Elsenheimer

S-1389 House Office Building P.O. Box 30014 Lansing, MI 48933 Phone: (517) 373-0829 Toll Free: (877) 536-4105 kevinelsenheimer@house.mi.gov

Sen. Jason Allen

P.O. Box 30036 Lansing, MI 48909-7536 Toll Free: (866) 525-5637 Fax: (517) 373-5144 senjallen@senate.michigan.gov

Gov. Jennifer M. Granholm

P.O. Box 30013 Lansing, MI 48909 Phone: (517) 373-3400 Constituent Services: Phone: (517) 335-7858 Fax:(517) 335-6863

U.S. Rep. Bart Stupak

Petoskey Emmet County Building 200 Division St., Suite #178 Petoskey, MI 49770 Phone: (231) 348-0657

Write a letter to the editor on

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U.S. Sen. Carl Levin

Traverse City 107 Cass Street, Suite E Traverse City, MI 49684-2602 Phone: (231) 947-9569 Fax: (231) 947-9518

U.S. Sen. Debbie Stabenow Northern Michigan Office 3335 South Airport Road West Suite 6B Traverse City, MI 49684 Phone: (231) 929-1031 Fax: (231) 929-1520

http://stabenow.senate.gov/email.cfm

White House

1600 Pennsylvania Avenue NW Washington D.C.,20500 Comments: (202) 456-1111 Switchboard: (202) 456-1414 Fax: (202) 456-2461 www.whitehouse.gov/contact

A5 KRAUTHAMMER FROM A4 vent national insolvency. That will require massive tax increases — most likely a European-style valueadded tax. Just as President Reagan cut taxes to starve the federal government and prevent massive growth in spending, Obama’s wild spending — and quarantining health-care costs from providing possible relief — will necessitate huge tax increases. The net effect of 18 months of Obamaism will be to undo much of Reaganism. Both presidencies were highly ideological, grandly ambitious and often underappreciated by their own side. In his early years, Reagan was bitterly attacked from his right. (Typical Washington Post headline: “For Reagan and the New Right, the Honeymoon Is Over” — and that was six months into his presidency!) Obama is attacked from his left for insufficient zeal on gay rights, immigration reform, closing Guantanamo — the list is long. The critics don’t understand the big picture. Obama’s transformational agenda is a play in two acts. Act One is over. The stimulus, Obamacare, financial reform have exhausted his first-term mandate. It will bear no more heavy lifting. And the Democrats will pay the price for ideological overreaching by losing one

or both houses, whether de facto or de jure. The rest of the first term will be spent consolidating these gains (writing the regulations, for example) and preparing for Act Two. The next burst of ideological energy — massive regulation of the energy economy, federalizing higher education and “comprehensive” immigration reform (i.e., amnesty) — will require a second mandate, meaning re-election in 2012. That’s why there’s so much tension between Obama and the congressional Democrats. For Obama, 2010 matters little. If Democrats lose control of one or both houses, Obama will likely have an easier time in 2012, just as Bill Clinton used Newt Gingrich and the Republicans as his foil for his 1996 re-election campaign. Obama is down, but it’s very early in the play. Like Reagan, he came here to do things. And he’s done much in his first 500 days. What he has left to do he knows must await his next 500 days — those that come after re-election. 2012 is the real prize. Obama sees far, farther than even his own partisans. Republicans underestimate him at their peril.

Charles Krauthammer’s e-mail address is letters@charleskrauthammer.

BRODER FROM A4 and that ideally, revenues should be raised and spending should be lowered so they balance at no more than 21 percent of the gross domestic product. Also, he suggested that two-thirds to three-quarters of the savings should come from the spending side, not new taxes; that tax expenditures (loophole closing) could make a major contribution, as they did in the 1986 deal

under Ronald Reagan; and that no value-added tax should be imposed without cutting current levies. Before any decisions are made, an election looms, and then a series of votes testing whether a 14-vote consensus can be found. But contrary to what Washington thinks, there is hope.

David Broder’s e-mail address is davidbroder@)washpost.com.

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A6

Friday, July 16, 2010 •

Obituaries

INDIAN RIVER

Jerry Lynn Joneson, 75 Jerry Lynn Joneson, 75, passed away peacefully in his home overlooking Little Traverse Bay in Petoskey on July 2, 2010, in the presence of family members who loved him dearly. Jerry was born Nov. 17, 1934, in Miami, Fla., to Jonas and Dorothy (Poland) Joneson. Shortly thereafter the family moved to Muskegon. Jerry loved the water and was a lifeguard for five summers on the beach at Lake Michigan. Jerry graduated from Muskegon Senior High School in 1953 and the University of Michigan in 1959 with a degree in political science. After he married the former Nancy Klang in Muskegon in 1959 they lived in Muskegon where Jerry was a caseworker for Muskegon County Social Services. Four years later, he had the opportunity to move to Petoskey to become the director of Social Services for Emmet County, where he worked for 33 years until he retired. His proudest accomplishment as director was to encourage the county board to build a care facility which is now known as Bay Bluffs in Harbor Springs. Jerry always considered moving to Petoskey to be one of the best decisions he ever made. He enjoyed many things in life, including his wonderful community of Petoskey and his home’s amazing view of beautiful Lake Michigan and Little Traverse Bay. He loved the many bodies of water in the area, swimming across Little Traverse Bay twice and the Straits of Mackinac one Labor Day morning. He loved just about every style of music, from Merle Haggard to Brahams’ Requiem. It was a very big part of his life,

having sung in the choir in high school, the Cosmopolitan Male Singers in Muskegon, various different choirs in the Petoskey Joneson area and, most faithfully, the Petoskey United Methodist Choir in which he sang for more than 40 years. Jerry had been a past president of the Petoskey Lions Club, a member of the Methodist Men and the Petoskey United Methodist Church. Jerry is survived by his wife of 51 years, Nancy; his four children, Melissa of Petoskey, Jeff of Harbor Springs, Jennifer (Falaniko Vitolio) of Pago Pago, American Samoa, and Eric (Kathy) of Mason; five extraordinary, adoring grandchildren, Kelsey and Katherine Stark, Evan and Greta Joneson and Punipuao Vitolio who will help to keep his spirit, humor and wit both alive and ever-present; his two sisters, Jone (Norman) Erickson of Muskegon and Julie (Harry) Wierenga of North Muskegon; his brother, Kingsley (Evelyn) of Seattle, Wash.; sister-in-law, Sally (Larry) Robson of East Grand Rapids; and many nieces and nephews. Dr. James Mitchum will lead a memorial service celebrating Jerry’s life at 11 a.m. Saturday, July 31, at the Petoskey United Methodist Church. A reception will follow. Memorial contributions can be made in lieu of flowers to Hospice of Little Traverse Bay or the Petoskey United Methodist Chancel Choir. Family and friends are encouraged to share condolences or memories of Jerry online at www.stonefuneralhomeinc. com.

Sand art

Indian River residents (from left) Cody Ruppert, 5, Kelly Holland, and Monica Holland, 6, work on a sand castle at DeVoe Beach in Indian River, Thursday afternoon in a light drizzle. Behind them other members of their team gather wet sand for the project. They were competing in the sand castle competition as part of the Indian River Summerfest, which continues with events throughout the weekend.

Candidates talk Pure Michigan Brandon Hubbard 439-9374 - bhubbard@petoskeynews.com

CHARLEVOIX — In a state where most of the population and industry are below the 45th parallel, few topics are as Northern Michigancentric as the Pure Michigan tourism campaign. The program, funded at $30 million in 2009, was a sticking point in the Michigan legislature — resulting Henrietta ‘Hattie’ Hoeksema, grandchildren; 91, of Ellsworth, went to be with numerous great- in the ad campaign receiving only about $15 million her Lord on Wednesday, July 14, grandchildren 2010, at Charlevoix Area Hospiand great-great- for fiscal year 2010, drastically narrowing the region tal, just three weeks prior to her grandchildren; the ads cover. 92nd birthday. sisters, Lucille Candidates for the 105th She was born Aug. 4, 1918, in Himebauch and Marion Township, the daughter Hoeksema Frances Ward of House seat, on the ballot for the Aug. 3, primary election, of Henry and Nellie (DeYoung) Charlevoix, and addressed the question in a Potter. Mildred Himeforum earlier this week. On Sept. 30, 1937, she married bauch of East Jordan; sisterSome favored the program, Gerrit Hoeksema in Ellsworth, in-law, Louise Potter of Marion and they made their home in Township. She was preceded by while others called it an unBanks Township. Mr. Hoeksema grandson, Scott Schiever; great- necessary expenditure. The forum question cendied in 1981. granddaughters, April Kirtley Hattie was a member of the and Arrianna Funderberg; sister, tered around what permaEllsworth Christian Reformed Jenny Hoffman; brother, Archie nent funding source (if any) Church. She enjoyed reading, Potter; daughters-in-law, Doro- should be used for the advertisement. baking bread, and doing things thea Hoeksema, Matilda Jean Cheboygan County Drain for others, visiting with friends Hoeksema and Lila Hoeksema; Commissioner Dennis Lenand family and writing letters. and son-in-law, Joe Van Dyke. Surviving are her children, Friends may call 2-4 p.m. and nox, a Topinabee RepubliGeraldine (Henry) Schiever of 6-8 p.m. Sunday, July 18, at Hast- can, started off the question Cedar Springs, James Hoeksema ings Funeral Home in Ellsworth. for the 105th Candidates by saying he thinks it “isn’t the of LaFontaine, Ind., Nancy Van The funeral service will be role of government to be Dyke of Grant, Gary (Beverly) 11 a.m. Monday, July 19, at the funding an ad campaign.” Hoeksema of East Jordan, Rob- Ellsworth Christian Reformed Lennox said the tourism ert Hoeksema of Kalkaska, John Church with the Rev. Carl J. Af-

Henrietta ‘Hattie’ Hoeksema, 91

(Maria) Hoeksema of Alden, Marvin (Judy) Hoeksema of Ellsworth, Vern (Virginia) Hoeksema of Central Lake, Wesley (Cindy) Hoeksema of Bellaire, Evelyn Bullis of Dayton, Ohio, Fred (Candace) Hoeksema of Atwood; 30

man officiating. Burial will be in Atwood Cemetery, Banks Township. For those wishing to make memorial contributions, the family suggests the Ellsworth Christian Reformed Church.

Service Joan E. Nelson, 82

A graveside service for Joan E. Nelson, 82, of Charlevoix, who died on Oct. 31, 2009, will be 11 a.m. Wednesday, July 21, at Brookside Cemetery in Charlevoix. Winchester Funeral Home in Charlevoix is handling the arrangements.

Clean up. Green up. Free up. Free up storage space while cleaning and “greening” your home: drop off your unwanted paints, cleaners, automotive fluids, yard & garden chemicals, etc.

Saturday July 24, [fill in date] 2009 2010

G. RANDALL GOSS/NEWS-REVIEW

Lennox

Dean

dollars had been pushed on the state by hotel companies, chambers of commerce and other tourismbased groups. “I wouldn’t want the state of Michigan funding advertising for computer companies and other sectors of our economy,” Lennox said. Democrat Greg Dean, a self-employed consultant from Elmira, said he agreed with Lennox a “great deal.” “It’s not part of core founding of our government to be supporting specific sectors of our economy,” Dean said. “If we do, we should be looking at all sectors of the economy.” Dean said he would much prefer to see the money spent on “viable” economic development in such areas as skill training. “I think it is the role for government to create a good environment for business and bring more opportunities for this state,” said

Emmet County

MacMaster

Republican Triston Cole, a farmer from Mancelona. Cole said he would support a per manent source for funding, adding that he doesn’t believe it picks “winners and losers.” For mer meteorolo gist Greg MacMaster, of Kewadin, also endorsed a longterm funding source for the program, although neither he nor Cole mentioned a specific source for the funds. MacMaster cited states such as Illinois and Wisconsin having large tourism ad campaigns. “We need to be just as aggressive,” he said, adding that after the initial few years the program would become self-sustaining by the new tax revenues it would produce. “It’s really the branding that’s important,” said Republican businessman Tim Boyko, of Charlevoix. “I think it is essential to have a permanent source

Emmet sheriff’s office offers hunter’s safety courses this fall The Emmet County Sheriff ’s Department is offering two, three-part hunter’s safety courses this fall. The first course begins in September, with three classes taking place Sept. 7, 8 and 11. The second course be gins in October, with classes taking place Oct. 5, 6 and 9. Students planning to en-

roll in these courses must be at least 10 years of age, and are required to attend all class sessions. The courses are free to all, and each has a maximum capacity of 25 students. To register, contact the Emmet County Sheriff ’s Department at (231) 439-8900. — 4-8 p.m., Sept. 7 and 8 Emmet County Sheriff ’s

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of funding, and they have already been discussed in Lans i n g , ” B oy ko said. He refer red to a TIFF proBoyko gram, where a small percentage of increasing property values would be held over to fund the program. A similar proposal was cosponsored by Rep. Gary McDowell, D-Rudyard, in the winter, but ultimately was scrubbed in the Senate for a temporary general fund infusion. “What we are doing is being venture capitalists and creating that spark to get that campaign going,” Boyko said. Lennox responded later during the forum, condemning his opponents for proposing to “increase taxes” to fund an advertising campaign. “Where’s that money going to come from? Michigan is broke,” he said. Republicans Barry Anderson, a Char-Em School Board member from Bay Shore, and Ken Glasser, an Otsego County Commissioner, did not attend the forum.

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BUSINESS

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A7

Friday, July 16, 2010 •

If you have business news, contact Ryan Bentley, business editor, 439-9342 • rbentley@petoskeynews.com

PETOSKEY

HARBOR SPRINGS

Pumping it out

Free credit counseling workshop planned

■ Business offers

septic service Robert White Staff Writer

Owner Ryan Flynn sees R&M Septic Pumping Service as a natural extension of the services his family’s business has offered in the Petoskey area for decades. R&M, based at 340 Maplewood Road, recently began operating alongside Flynn’s Excavating Service. For the past 15 years. Flynn’s has installed septic tanks and drain fields, and has often received inquiries from people needing system

maintenance. In the past, the business had to call on other companies to pump the septic tank so it could do the repair work. Now, said Flynn, “We can do it all.” “We are licensed by the state,” he added. “I had to take classes from the DNRDEQ (agencies which recently merged to become the Michigan Department of Natural Resources and Environment) to get licensed. “Unlike several of the septic pumping services in Northern Michigan, we do not dump the wastes on the ground. We take the wastes to a licensed ‘green’ treat-

ment plant in Charlevoix that screens the waste and eventually releases what is left into the Charlevoix Water Treatment Plant.” Within the next five years or so, Flynn said all service providers will have to take the wastes to a treatment plant. Along with offering septic pumping, R&M also can use a camera that can be inserted into the tank and/or field system to look for a blockage if one is expected. Also, if s septic tank top is buried, the business can install a riser that brings the opening to grade level. “They have come a long way with these risers” Flynn

ROBERT WHITE/NEWS-REVIEW

Ryan Flynn stands near a truck used by his new Petoskey business, R&M Septic Pumping Service. said. “You can have the top look like a rock or the top is green and blends right in the grass. It has a seal and when is fastened down no smells escape into your yard.”

R&M Septic Pumping Service offers 24-hour emergency service to address blockage and/or backup into a home. The business can be reached at (231) 347-6876.

Manufacturing cools as recovery slows

■ Factory output

drops in June

WASHINGTON (AP) — New evidence of a slowing economic rebound emerged Thursday in reports that manufacturing activity is slowing after helping drive the early stages of the recovery. Factory output fell in June, according to a government report on industrial production. It was the sharpest monthly drop in a year. And two regional manufacturing indexes sank this month. Production of automobiles, home-building materials and processed food all fell in June. The data sent stocks falling. Federal Reserve officials took note of the weakening recovery when they met last month and lowered their forecast for economic growth, according to minutes released Wednesday. Manufacturing helped boost the economy last year when the recession ended and has since been one of the strongest sectors in the recovery. June’s decline in output was the first in four months. Overall industrial production ticked up for the month, but that was mainly the result of hot weather that increased demand for electricity from utilities. “Today’s report supports the view that the manufacturing recovery lost some

momentum,” said Peter Newland of Barclays Capital Research. The decline in factory output came as new data offered a mixed picture of the recovery. Applications for unemployment benefits fell to 429,000, the lowest level since August 2008, the Labor Department said Thursday. But much of that was the result of seasonal factors. General Motors and other manufacturers skipped their usual summer shutdowns. Se parately, the Labor Department said wholesale prices fell for a third straight month. Prices were pulled down by a drop in energy costs and the biggest plunge in food costs in eight years. But excluding those two volatile commodities, inflation was nearly flat. The Federal Reserve report on industrial production showed that overall output at the nation’s factories, mines and utilities rose 0.1 percent in June. It was the fourth straight monthly gain. But factory output — the largest component of industrial production — dropped 0.4 percent. Adding to concerns in the manufacturing sector were steep drops reported Thursday in the Empire State and Philadelphia Fed Manufacturing indexes. Economists viewed the reduction in factory output as further evidence that the

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economy is weakening as it enters the second half of this year. “It is pretty clear that a slowdown is in process,” said Brian Bethune, chief U.S. financial economist for IHS Global Insight. “The healing process from a severe recession is still under way, but given the kind of trauma the economy was subjected to, it isn’t going to bounce back on a sustained basis right away.” Bethune said the slowdown in factory production is following similar patterns in the recoveries from recessions in the early 1980s, 1990s and in 2001. The economy gets an initial boost as businesses switch from liquidating inventories to restocking. But the strength from that initial spurt wanes and leads to slower growth. This week, the government reported that retail sales fell for the second straight month. Declining consumer spending keeps businesses from restocking their shelves. That slows fac-

tory production and overall economic growth. Bethune said the overall economy, as measured by the gross domestic product, probably grew at an annual rate above 3 percent in the April-June quarter. But he thinks it will slow to growth of just 2.5 percent in the second half of this year. Consumers are likely to hold back on spending until the employment picture improves. The latest data on jobless

claims looked promising on the surface, as initial claims fell by 29,000. But much of that was the result of temporary seasonal factors. A Labor Department analyst said manufacturing companies reported fewer temporary layoffs than usual this time of year. General Motors said last month that it would forgo its customary two-week summer factory closings, which it uses to retool plants for new car models.

HARBOR SPRINGS — The public is invited to a free credit counseling workshop which Nor ther n Shores Loan Fund Inc. soon will be hosting. The program begins with pizza at 5 p.m. on Wednesday Aug. 4, at the Northern Shores office, 1131 W. Conway Road, Harbor Springs. A workshop will follow from 5:30-7 p.m., with a focus on understanding and rebuilding credit. A limited number of seats will be available at the workshop.Those planning to attend should reserve a space by Wednesday, July 28. For more information, call (231) 347-6753. The workshop will focus on topics such as credit scores, credit reports and whether your credit is helping or hurting you. N o r t h e r n S h o re s i s a nonprofit loan fund with a mission of providing loan funding and development services to Northern Michigan entrepreneurs. The Aug. 4 event is the first of several topic-targeted workshops which Northern Shores will offer in the coming months.

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A8

Friday, July 16, 2010 •

Governor’s race shaped by Michigan’s poor economy Kathy Barks Hoffman Associated Press Writer

LANSING — Michigan’s most wide-open governor’s race in decades has been shaped by the rise of the tea partiers, the unexpected withdrawal of Lt. John Cherry from the Democratic race and, above all, the state’s shaky economy. Five Republicans and two Democrats are running to replace outgoing Democratic Gov. Jennifer Granholm, who’s stepping down after two terms because of term limits. Voters already unhappy about the state’s lack of jobs have been swept up in the national mood of unrest, leading to a volatile race and uncertain outcomes for both parties. It’s the first time in years that a former or current governor or lieutenant governor isn’t among the candidates, and the first time

in nearly a century that a sitting governor or lieutenant governor hasn’t been on the primary ballot. Among the five Re publicans, Attorney General Mike Cox hopes bigtime endorsements from Snyder the Michigan Chamber of Commerce and Right to Life of Michigan as well as hardhitting ads against some of his opponents will win Dillon him the nomination. Former Gateway President Rick Snyder hopes his barrage of largely self-financed TV ads and stance as a moderate political outsider will help him snatch the win if GOP conservatives split their votes among the other Republicans in the race. U.S. Rep. Pete Hoekstra

is counting on the strong west Michigan support he has earned during 18 years in Congress and some help in southeast Michigan from supporters s u c h a s U. S . Re p. Candice Miller of Macomb CounHoekstra ty’s Harrison Township. Oakland County Sheriff Mike Bouchard is relying on h i s p o p u l a rity as a sheriff and for mer state senator Bouchard in one of the state’s biggest vote-getting areas and his choice of a west Michigan running mate, Secretary of State Terri Lynn Land, to nab the win — along with a possible stumble by one of his GOP rivals. State Sen. Tom George, the GOP underdog, is making his mark with catchy one-liners and a willingness

to attack the budget plans floated by his opponents as pie-in-the-sky, noting at a recent debate that “T his is M a ck i n a c I s land, not Fantasy Island.” All but Snyder have been actively courting the tea parGeorge tiers, who have not backed anyone in particular but are pressing candidates to oppose President Barack Oba ma ’s federal health care Bernero changes and oppose raising taxes. On the Democratic side, Lansing Mayor Virg Bernero is hoping support from some of the state’s largest labor unions and an image as a champion of the working people who’s not part of the Statehouse gridlock will bring the party faithful his way. He also notes he’s

the only pro-choice candidate in either party. House Speaker Andy Dillon has better name recognition than Bernero in southeast Michigan, a closer relationship with moderate business and labor Cox groups and a l e g i s l a t iv e record he says shows he thinks outside the box to help make his pitch. But he has to overcome some fear among Democratic voters that he doesn’t represent their values. With unemployment hovering above 13.5 percent, all seven candidates have vowed to cut business taxes and create more jobs. Most voters are cynical about candidates’ promises, however. “I don’t think anybody believes anything they hear,” says Steven Hepker, 55, of Hudson. Many voters in both parties remain u nd ecide d

heading into the final weeks before the Aug. 3 primary election. The Republican candidates held their last debate on July 14, an event Snyder skipped. The Democrats held their last debate on June 28. Michigan AFL-CIO President Mark Gaffney said Democratic turnout could be down because so many voters are discouraged by being out of work and the Democratic governor’s race has been relatively low-key. State Republican Chairman Ron Weiser expects to see a lot of Republicans at the polls, drawn by the fiveway GOP race and dissatisfaction with Democratic President Barack Obama. “Republicans are excited,” Weiser said. All of the candidates except George, who is far down in the polls, plan to put up a barrage of television ads in the final weeks of the campaign. Voters who want to learn more also can check out the candidates’ websites and their Facebook and Twitter sites.

House approves overhaul of flood insurance program

WASHINGTON (AP) — Some subsidies would be ended and a measure of financial health would be restored under a House-approved overhaul of a program that provides flood insurance to more than 5 million homeowners and businesses in flood-prone areas. The legislation, which approves operations of the

National Flood Insurance Program for five years, also allows for some premium and deductible increases as the program tries to recover from Katrina and other 2005 hurricanes that left it some $18.75 billion in debt to the U.S. Treasury. The measure passed 329-90 on Thursday. The flood program, an arm of the Federal Emergency

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PEOPLE

A9

Friday, July 16, 2010 •

If you have people news, contact Babette Stenuis Stolz, people editor, 439-9351 • bstenuis@petoskeynews.com

MSU Extension

HARBOR SPRINGS

How much does your ‘free’ credit report cost?

How do you know when “free” credit reports are actually free? Many of the “free” credit reports offered by companies often come with strings attached: hidden fees or enrollment charges when a “free” trial period ends. In April 2010, a new rule from the Federal Trade Commission went into effect that requires websites advertising “free” credit reports to direct people to the only government-approved site for free credit reports, Ann www.annualcreChastain ditreport.com. Prior to the new rule, other companies and websites offered “free” credit reports packaged with other services, like credit monitoring. You could access a free credit report for a trial period, and then be charged monthly for a credit monitoring service. Unknowing consumers may pay as much as $15 each month for unwanted services. Under the new rule, www. annualcreditreport.com is the only site offering truly free credit reports. All other companies offering credit reports must disclose their fees in advertisements. Here are a few ways to get your free credit report: — Once every 12 months, ask each credit reporting bureau, Experian, Equifax and Transunion, for your credit report. You can access each report through www.annualcreditreport.com — If you are a victim of identity theft or fraud, or if you are unemployed and looking for work, you can request a free report. Potential employers can pull your credit report. — If you have been denied credit or insurance, you can request a free report. What does this mean for you? First, if you’d just like to view your credit report to look for inaccuracies or monitor changes, you can access one report from each bureau, once every 12 months. You can either obtain all three reports, once every 12 months, or request one report from each bureau once every four months. For example, request one report from Experian in January, Equifax in May and Transunion in September. Checking your report every four months is a good way to keep track of any changes or dispute inaccurate information in a timely manner. In addition, if you think you are a victim of identity theft and someone is fraudulently using credit in your name, you can request a copy of your report. If you are denied credit, insurance, or employment, you’re also entitled to a free report — if you request it within 60 days of receiving notice of denial. The notice will give you contact information of the consumer reporting company and tell you how to obtain your report. Finally, according to the Federal Trade Commission, “you’re also entitled to one free report per year if you’re unemployed and plan to look for a job within 60 days ... or if you’re on welfare.” To obtain your report because of unemployment, the commission’s website provides contact information for each of the credit bureaus at http://www.ftc. gov/bcp/edu/pubs/consumer/ credit/cre34.shtm. There are many reasons to obtain your credit report, and knowing how, when and where to access it for free can help keep your credit history on the right track. If you have any questions about how to obtain your report or about the information in your credit report, your local MSU Extension office is there to help.

Ann Chastain is Emmet County Extension Director. The MSU Extension column appears on the first and third Fridays of each month. Chastain can be contacted at the Emmet County Extension office, 3434 Harbor/ Petoskey Road, Harbor Springs, Mich. 49740; telephone 348-1770.

Phil Fisher puts the finishing touches on a watercolor featuring the view from the bluff in Harbor Springs. The painting was one of the featured pieces up for auction at Thursday’s D’Art for Art at Walstrom Marine-Building 6 on Hoyt Road in Harbor Springs.

D’Art for Art News-Review photos by Rachel Brougham Artists (from left) Susan Sheets and Joan Tebo chat with friend Lynne Symons at the Crooked Tree Arts Center fundraiser D’Art for Art. Proceeds from the event support year-round arts education programs.

Crooked Tree Arts Center Executive Director Liz Ahrens (left) and artist Jason Sharp spend time welcoming guests at D’Art for Art in Harbor Springs. The event, which is the largest fundraiser for Crooked Tree Arts Center, was expected to draw in approximately 600 people.

Pat Scharz (left) and Jim Kochensparger, neighbors from Harbor Springs, take notes about all the artwork up for auction at this year’s event. Both have attended D’Art for Art every year.

CHARLEVOIX

Pat Tinney, this year’s Venetian artist ■ Original artwork

to be auctioned July 23 to benefit the festival Steve Zucker Charlevoix Courier Editor

CHARLEVOIX — After roughly three decades living and working here, many in Northern Michigan are familiar with Pat Tinney’s paintings. Many more will be when the 80th Venetian Festival kicks off Saturday, July 17. Tinney, an East Jordan resident and art teacher at East Jordan Schools for the past 27 years, was the artist behind this year’s Venetian Festival art work. For the next week and a half — and well beyond — people will see her design everywhere around Charlevoix. And on Friday, July 23, the original work will be auctioned off following the coronation of Miss Charlevoix with the proceeds going to benefit the festival. Tinney, who is married to local

pediatrician Dr. Rod Tinney, said she sold her first painting when she was 12 years old. She said she was sitting on a beach on the East Coast (where she grew up) painting a lighthouse and a man came along and offered her $15 for the watercolor. She said that first sale gave her the notion that art could be her calling. Since that time, Tinney has gone on to become an accomplished artist, working mostly in watercolors. She currently has a body of her work on display at the Dennos Museum in Traverse City. Tinney describes herself as a plein air painter, which roughly translates to an outside, or on location painter. And that’s exactly how she came up with this year’s Venetian design — she set up her easel along Bridge Street in downtown Charlevoix, looked around, and painted the landmarks she saw. Up next for Tinney is her annual painting visit to Beaver Island and the Portside Art Show in East Jordan on Aug. 7-8.

COURTESY PHOTO

East Jordan artist Pat Tinney poses with the artwork she created for the 80th annual Venetian Festival.


PEOPLE

A10

Friday, July 16, 2010 •

HARBOR SPRINGS

RACHEL BROUGHAM/NEWS-REVIEW

Nathan Clubine, 19, of Boyne City, practices with some of the younger dancers involved in the “Unity” performance. Local dancers, ranging in age from 8 to 19, will perform with other dancers from Africa and Asia. RACHEL BROUGHAM/NEWS-REVIEW

Cynthia Anthony, director of Bravo Productions, leads students including Bow Rudolph, 11, through dance moves in preparation for their “Unity” performance Tuesday, July 20, at Harbor Sprimgs Performing Arts Center.

Local dancers perform with international groups July 20

Anthony’s 34 dancers, who range in age from 8-19 years old, have been working on their performances HARBOR SPRINGS — A for the show since May. performance scheduled Local dancers will perfor Tuesday, July 20, at the Harbor Springs Performing form several numbers, inArts Center will unite danc- cluding an early American hoedown, a 1950s sock hop ers from three continents. and a 1980s theme wedding “Unity” will bring together Northern Michigan’s reception number. “It’s really going to be Dancers Without Borders cool to see all the different led by Cynthia Anthony, styles and cultures come toThe Afrika Yetu dancers gether,” said Bow Rudolph, who will represent Africa 11, of Harbor Springs. and the SolArts dancers of “I’m really excited to meet Vietnam. all the other dancers and “We really want to bring see what their cultures and all these dancers together native dances are like,” addso they can represent their ed Taylor Sydow, 15, also of countries and show their Harbor Springs. “I think it traditional dance styles,” will really all come together said Cynthia Anthony, and be a great show.” director of Bravo ProducDancers will also wear tions. Rachel Brougham

439-9348 - rbrougham@petoskeynews.com

traditional costumes for each number. “We don’t have any time to rehearse together, so it will be a little scary and exciting at the same time because the first time we’ll meet the international dancers is the day of the show. But they’re all very talented and it will all come together just fine,” Anthony said. “Unity” will run about an hour. “The whole goal is to unite these three cultures and bring everyone together. We are all one,” Anthony said. “For the young dancers, they’ll be able to learn about other cultures and see a variety of native dances. It’s just a big celebration of dance.”

“Unity” will begin at 7:30 p.m. on Tuesday, July 20, at the Harbor Springs Performing Arts Center. Tickets for the event may be purchased at the Petoskey Chamber of Commerce, Crooked Tree Arts Center, McLean & Eakin, Booksellers and Horizon Books in Petoskey, and Between the Covers book store in Harbor Springs. Adults are $10, students are $5.

RACHEL BROUGHAM/NEWS-REVIEW

Cynthia Anthony, director of Bravo Productions, leads students through one of their dances that they’ll perform on Tuesday. The show, “Unity,” will bring together dancers from three continents and focus on native dances from each country.

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PEOPLE

Friday, July 16, 2010 •

A11

Four and Five Generations

COURTESY PHOTO COURTESY PHOTO

Sarah A. Kalkofen, 99, of Alanson holds her great-great-granddaughter Makayla L. Turbin, born April 1. Makayla’s father is (front, left) Gavin J. Turbin and her mother is (standing, from left) Amber A. Kerbersky of Petoskey; great-grandmother, Patricia L. Frisbey of Alanson; and grandmother, Sallie A. Turbin of Alanson.

Sarah A. Kalkofen (seated) is the great-great-grandmother of (front, from left) Ella Katreena Strong, Emalee Lu Strong and Eden Jas Strong held by her grandfather Ronald D. Frisbey of Farwell. The girls’ great-grandmother is (from left) Patricia L. Frisbey of Alanson and their mother is Angela C. Strong of Farwell.

COURTESY PHOTO

Camp Daggett seeking kayakers and pledges

The second annual Kayak for a Cause on Walloon Lake will take place Saturday and Sunday, July 24-25. From 9:30 a.m.-5 p.m., Camp Daggett Adventure Center Director Karen Marietti will be kayaking around Walloon Lake

in a fundraising effort for the Adventure Center to raise money for programs and scholarships for participants of the Adventure Education program. Kayakers will follow a specific route around the lake led by Marietti, with scheduled rest stops.

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To join the team, participants should supply your own kayaking equipment and collect a minimum of $200 in pledges. Deadline to sign up is Sunday, July 18. For more information, contact Marietti at (231) 347-9742 or karen.marietti@ campdaggett.org.

To pledge support for kayak team members, go to www.campdaggett.org. The 2010 Kayak for a Cause is sponsored in part by Burt Lake Marina, Walloon Lake Country Club, The Outfitter, Bahnhof Sports and Ryde Marina.

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Michael K. Kalkofen (from bottom) of Houston, Texas, is shown with his greatgrandmother Sarah A. Kalkofen, 99, of Alanson; his dad, Karl K. Kalkofen Jr. of Houston, Texas; and his grandfather, Karl K. Kalkofen of Indian River.

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Emmanuel Episcopal Church 1020 E. Mitchell St., Petoskey - 347-2350 Rector, Rev. Gregory Brown 8:00 am Sunday - The Holy Eucharist, Rite I 10:00 am - Holy Eucharist Rite II Wednesday 5:30-6:30 pm - Informal Eucharist and Bible Study

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Worship: AM s .URSERY 0ROVIDED

1804 E. Mitchell, Petoskey - 347-2733

E.L.C.A.

1450 E. Mitchell Road, Petoskey - 347-5448 e-mail us at crossofc@sbcglobal.net lutheransonline.com/crossofchristlutheranchurch Pastor Sherry McGuffin 8:30 am & 10 am service • 5th Sundays are single services at 10 a.m. nursery provided at second service

Pastor: Chip Sauer Sunday Worship: 8:30, 10:45 3UNDAY 3CHOOL FOR ALL AGES s Nursery Available

SUNDAYS: 8:00 am Early Worship Service, 8:50 am Adult Education 10:00 am Traditional Worship, Children’s Sunday School, Nursery, Coffee Hour 1st & 3rd SATURDAYS: 7:00 pm Contemporary Christian Jam Session featuring THE BRIDGE Praise Band.

Petoskey United Methodist Church

Cross of Christ Lutheran Church

#ORNER OF 53 AND -EECH s #HARLEVOIX s

403 Madison, Petoskey Services at 10:30 a.m., Wed. at 7 p.m. We are a non-denominational church sharing the love and hope of Jesus Christ. John Alexandrowski - Pastor 348-8186

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St. Francis Xavier Church (OWARD 3T s 0ETOSKEY s MASS SCHEDULE: 3ATURDAY PM s 3UNDAY AM Our family of faith welcomes all visitors to their home away from home.

Zion Lutheran Church (Missouri Synod)

7 -ITCHELL 3T 0ETOSKEY s Rev. Douglas G. Kenny, Pastor

Sunday & 10:30 10:30a.m. a.m. SundayMorning MorningWorship Worship8:00 8:00 a.m. a.m. & Sunday 9:15 a.m. a.m. SundaySchool School& & Bible Bible Classes Classes 9:15 Monday 7:07p.m. p.m. MondayInformal Informal Worship Worship 7:07


PEOPLE

A12

Friday, July 16, 2010 •

Smoking in the car with kids in tow could result in ticket Dear Annie: I wanted to comment on the letter from “Disgusted in Pennsylvania,” whose stepdaughter smokes in the car while the children are present. In Arkansas, this is a misdemeanor. Parents smoking in vehicles with small children present may be stopped and ticketed and may face a visit from child welfare authorities. Obviously, our law-

well as several communities, Puerto Rico and large swaths of Canada now have laws prohibiting adults from smoking in cars with young children in tow, and more are pending. Seven states currently prohibit smoking in cars that transport foster children. We are certain this is just the beginning.

makers view this as a form of child abuse. The mother should reconsider reporting the stepdaughter. — Don’t Do Annie’s That in ArkanMailbox sas Dear Arkansas: Actually, four states (Arkansas, Louisiana, California and Maine), as

To find out more about Annie’s Mailbox, and read

features by other Creators Syndicate writers and cartoonists, visit the Creators Syndicate Web page at www. creators.com.

Annie’s Mailbox is written by Kathy Mitchell and Marcy Sugar, longtime editors of the Ann Landers column. E-mail your questions to anniesmailbox@ comcast.net, or write to: Annie’s Mailbox, c/o Creators Syndicate, 5777 W. Century Blvd., Suite 700, Los Angeles, Calif. 90045.

FREE Birthday Meal!

Pow wow

COURTESY PHOTO

Jeremy Zerbe, Grand Traverse Bay Ottawa Chippewa, of Charlevoix, wears his Native American regalia proudly as a participant in the recent 2010 Riverbank Traditional Pow Wow in Lansing. The annual event on the banks of the Grand River helps share, preserve and teach Native American culture.

Bob-In Again would like to help you celebrate your birthday!

Celebrate at Bob-In Again!

PETOSKEY

Senior center offering assistance with forms

Seniors will be offered help completing their Physician Ordered Life Sustaining Treatment forms from 10 a.m.-noon Thursday, July 22, at the Petoskey Friendship Center. The form lets seniors decide what kind of care they do and do not want to receive in the event of a medical emergency.

The Physician Ordered Life Sustaining Treatment form is part of the File of Life program that has been made available county-wide for seniors. This program allows seniors to keep a list of prescriptions, medical information, the POLST form, 5 Wishes, insurance information, etc. all in one easy access packet.

Sign up for any or all of our e-newsletters and receive a free meal on your birthday from Bob-In Again!

Enter at:

nmroffers.com Enter code: ipi

A service of Northern Michigan Review, Inc. 231-347-2544

Petoskey News-Review: Northwest Michigan’s BEST Classifieds!

Thank You! The North Central Michigan College Foundation would like to thank all the people and businesses who donated to this yearʼs event.

$17,000 was raised for the Foundation Scholarship Fund.

Pictured above, Judy Murphy attempts a chip out of the rough. This yearʼs outing was held at the Little Traverse Bay Golf Club.

Pictured above is this yearʼs first place team which had a score of 60. From left to right, Broc Johnson, John Jorgensen, Dave Patterson, and Phil Harrison

Event Sponsor Fifth Third Bank

Thanks to our Prize Donors AmeriGas Tom Barkley Bill & Carolʼs, Inc. Boyne Resorts Charlevoix Screenmasters Cross Village Rug Works Cutlerʼs Tony Dunaske Outdoors Dunmaglas Golf Course Gaylord Area Convention & Tourism Bureau Tracy Haderer Gary Hice Hidden River Golf & Casting Club Huron Distributing La Señorita Lake Superior State University Little Traverse Bay Golf Club Charlie MacInnis Michigan Officeways Murdickʼs Fudge of Petoskey NCMC Board of Trustees OAS Group Odawa Casino Resort Tom Orlow Precision Fit Golf Pro-AM Custom Golf Kevin Whitmore Whitneyʼs

Door Prize Sponsor Tim Bondy Physical Therapy Fantasy Golf Card Sponsor Petoskey News-Review Lunch Sponsor Edward Jones Investments Dan Ledingham, Financial Advisor Hole Sponsors AdWings Media, LLC Allied EMS B. C. Pizza Dry Harbour Marine Bradfordʼs Master Dry Cleaners, Inc. Brewbakerʼs Furniture Brown Motors Bunker, Clark, Winnell & Nuorala, P.C. Burns Professional Building Circuit Controls Corporation Dave Kring Chevrolet Cadillac Fletch's Inc. Graphic Printing, Inc. Hill Schroderus & Co. Holton's LP Gas Integrity Business Solutions MDC Contracting Michigan Officeways NCMC Board of Trustees Nubʼs Nob, Inc. OAS Group Peter Basso Associates The Print Shop SHW Group Smolinski & Christman, P.C.

Fourteenth Annual Event


PEOPLE

Friday, July 16, 2010 •

A13

BAY HARBOR

PETOSKEY

Christ Child Society plans summer fundraiser The Christ Child Society of Northern Michigan will host its annual Summer Party 5-8 p.m. Sunday, July 25, at The Lange Center, Bay Harbor Yacht Club. The event raises awareness and funds for at-risk children in Northern Michigan. Music will be provided by harpist Silvia Norris.

Auctioneer will be Joe Sproles. The red wagon is the symbol of the Christ Child Society, so six themed red wagons will be up for bid in the silent auction: art supplies for grandparents’ home, beach, pampered lady, sports, books for children and adults, kitchen. For ticket information, call (231) 526-7271.

7HY +ISS #ARPET Here’s Why ... COURTESY PHOTO

Ellie and Ozzie Link of Walloon Lake (right) watch as Joseph McGee examines a pocket watch belonging to Ellie’s grandfather. McGee will be offering antique appraisals again this year as a fundraiser for the Petoskey District Library.

Antique Appraisal Day to benefit library programs

The Friends of the Petoskey Public Library will host its third annual Antique Appraisal Day from 9 a.m.-4 p.m. Saturday, Aug. 14, at the Carnegie building in downtown Petoskey.

Local antiques expert Joseph McGee, owner of Joseph’s World in Petoskey, will appraise treasures for $10 per item. Individuals can bring up to three antiques to this event for appraisal, but no

diamonds or dolls. Those with large items, such as furniture, can bring clear photographs. Spectators are welcome. Proceeds from Antique Appraisal Day will benefit library programs.

ANTRIM COUNTY

Antrim artists open studios for Sunday tour

The Antrim Artists’ Studio Tour, presented by Parkside Arts Council, will take place 10 a.m.-4 p.m. Sunday, July 18. The event showcases three painters, three potters, a stained glass artist, a photographer, a sculptor and a writer. The studio tour is a rare chance to see artists at work in their studios and learn about their techniques. Participants can visit all of the studios or select ones of interest. An added bonus will be the gardens around some of the studios, in

particular Ron and Cynthia Tsuchudy’s. Tickets for the studio tour are $8 for Parkside Arts Council members, $10 for non-members, and are available at the artists’ studios on the day of the tour or beforehand by calling (231) 533-6240 or (231) 377-7521. A map of the tour will be provided upon purchase of tickets. More information is available on the Parkside Arts Council website www. parksidearts.org. Artists include: 1. Karen Baker Thumm, painter, Clam Lake

2. Peter Balestrieri, painter, Bellaire 3. Margie Guyot, painter, Eastport 4. Mary Ellen Murphy, stained glass artist, Lake Bellaire 5. Dan Gorno, potter and sculptor; Central Lake 6. Tom Brown, photographer, Central Lake 7. John Unger, sculptor, East Jordan 8. Ron and Cynthia Tschudy, potters, Six Mile Lake 9. Beth Nelson, writer, Island Hill House, East Jordan

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Y NAME IS +EN 2OBERTS *R AND ALONG WITH MY FATHER +EN 3R WE HAVE OWNED AND OPERATED OUR FAMILY BUSINESS +ISS #ARPET FOR YEARS 7HAT DOES THAT MEAN TO YOU THE CONSUMER )T MEANS THAT WHILE OTHERS IN THE AREA ARE OWNED AND OPERATED FROM ELSEWHERE IN THE 5NITED 3TATES WE LIVE HERE WITH ALL OF YOU IN .ORTH ERN -ICHIGAN BECAUSE WE LOVE IT HERE 7E RE EXTREMELY PROUD OF THE RELATION SHIPS WE VE BUILT OVER THESE YEARS AND OUR CUSTOMERS AS OUR EMPLOYEES ARE LIKE FAMILY

+ISS #ARPET INSTALLATIONS ARE &5,,9 WARRANTED AND SHOULD YOU EVER HAVE PROBLEMS DUE TO FAULTY INSTALLA TION WE 7),, REPLACE THE PRODUCT TO YOUR SATISFACTION

/NE OF THE SERVICES THAT WE HAVE BECOME WELL KNOWN FOR IS OUR PRODUCT speciďŹ cation, because we know that MANY 4().+ THEY KNOW WHAT THEY want, but due to location, trafďŹ c or oth ER REASONS THEY MAY HAVE MUCH BETTER CHOICES THAT THEY WERE UNAWARE OF 7E MAKE YOU AWARE OF ALL YOUR OPTIONS TO ALLOW YOU TO MAKE THE VERY BEST CHOICE FOR YOUR HOME AND /UR SOUL PURPOSE !S LONG AS YOU RE PART OF FAMILY 7E WILL EDUCATE IS TO PROVIDE YOU AND PROVIDE THE PROPER THE +ISS #ARPET FAMILY WITH THE PRODUCT THAT WE RE GOING TO TAKE CARE WAYS TO MAINTAIN YOUR WILL BEST SUIT YOUR PRODUCT TO PROLONG THE OF YOU BECAUSE needs, while ďŹ tting LIFE AND MAINTAIN THE YOUR BUDGET AND GO 4HAT S WHAT FAMILY DOES beauty of your ooring, THE EXTRA MILE TO DO ALLOWING YOU TO RECEIVE THE MOST FOR all we can to fulďŹ ll your drEAMS WITH YOUR MONEY REGARDLESS OF YOUR INITIAL THAT BUDGET 7E LL BE UP FRONT WITH INVESTMENT YOU IN EXPLAINING BOTH THE UPSIDE AS 7E WILL MOVE OR FACILITATE THE MOVING WELL AS THE DOWNSIDE OF ANY PRODUCT YOU CHOOSE FOR YOU DESERVE TO KNOW OF ANY AND ALL FURNITURE PIANOS POOL TABLES EVEN 'RANDPA IN HIS RECLINER EXACTLY WHAT YOU RE GETTING AND IT S SO THAT YOU LL NOT BE BURDENED WITH UP TO US TO PROVIDE YOU WITH EXACTLY WHAT YOU RE PAYING FOR .OTHING LESS IS THAT TASK AND REPLACE EACH PIECE EXACTLY WHERE YOU WANT IT 7E CAN ACCEPTABLE COMPLETE YOUR PROJECT WHILE YOU RE 7E LL EXPLAIN WHY WE FEEL THAT THE AWAY LEAVE THE OLD AND RETURN TO INSTALLATION IS MORE IMPORTANT THAN THE NEW 7HY DO WE DO ALL THESE THE PRODUCT ITSELF FOR THE HIGHEST THINGS "ECAUSE WE RE FAMILY OWNED QUALITY PRODUCT WILL FAIL AND WILL NOT FAMILY OPERATED AND FAMILY MEANS BE WARRANTED IF IMPROPERLY INSTALLED EVERYTHING TO US

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FROM PAGE ONE

A14

Friday, July 16, 2010 •

INDIAN RIVER

VENETIAN SAFETY FROM A1

Festival fun

G. RANDALL GOSS / NEWS-REVIEW

Jazzmine, 3, and Adrionna Solean, 7, of Alanson, ride the Jumping Jumbo ride on the carnival midway, Thursday at the Indian River Summerfest. The festival continues with many events scheduled throughout the weekend. SEE PAGE C4 FOR SUMMERFEST EVENT SCHEDULE.

FUNDING FROM A1

d i d at e c o n t r i bu t i o n s t o h i s campaign during the past three months. The amount, plus about $285,264 from other individuals, has the U.P. native claiming to have gathered $427,692 throughout his six-month campaign. However, late race entry Sen. Jason Allen, R-Alanson, who entered in March, has mustered $221,968 in a short period. By contrast, Allen used only $100 of his own money, according to the report.

On the Political Action Committee front, Allen g rabbed $40,898, but Benishek claimed zero. The specific PACs that have donated to Allen’s campaign have not yet been listed. Allen Campaign spokesman Jeremy Hendges said they are happy with the money raised during just a few months, pointing to a strong individual donor amount of $180,970. The Benishek campaign also

was confident with its holdings. “I feel great about what we’ve raised this quarter and our ability to reserve those funds for the final push,” Benishek said in a statement. On the Democratic front, uncontested candidate and state Rep. Gary McDowell, of Rudyard, netted $137,034 in the past quarter. He pulled in $49,534 from individuals, $77,500 from PACs and $10,000 in party money. So, while dollars may not elect

politicians, purchasing power goes a long way in places in the Upper Peninsula where radio and television are the main means for piping news to remote households. With Allen currently holding $177,249 cash-on-hand and Benishek keeping a $280,659 account, those war chests will serve them well in the next two weeks while they buy crucial advertisements and duke it out before the Aug. 3 primary.

Doan said about three years ago one of his officers was struck by a vehicle, and several years before that, a pedestrian was hit. Both sustained minor injuries. Drivers, Doan says, need to be prepared to wait if they’re trying to get through town during the festival. “There’s going to be delays — you’re not going to be able to get through town quickly,” he said. “Also, during the nights of the fireworks, be aware that officers are out at intersections to help people get in and out safely.” As far as pedestrians are concerned, Doan said they also need to be alert when attempting to cross the road. “Always keep an eye out for vehicles,” he said. “I would recommend them to stay on the sidewalks, or cross at the crosswalks.” When it comes to families, Doan said the most important thing is for everyone to stay together, especially if they have small children. “Keep an eye on your kids; a few always somehow get away from their parents,” he said. “Fortunately, we’ve always found all of them.” Doan says another small problem his officers have is when people bring their furry friends to the celebration. “There is an ordinance of no dogs in the park,” he said. “I recommend people not bring their dogs out — all efforts would be greatly appreciated.” For the most part, Doan said he and his men are there to assist the public in any situation. “We’re big ambassadors for the city,” he said. “If people have questions about where to go, or where to eat, we refer them to wherever they need to be. “On our behalf, we look forward to another safe and successful year — we hope people enjoy themselves.”

PETOSKEY COUNCIL FROM A1

On Monday, city staff will ask for the council to continue with its review of the proposal, with the possibility that action could be taken during the meeting. This code’s stated intent is to provide “minimum maintenance standards for basic equipment, light, ventilation, heating, sanitation and fire safety” in the affected properties. It would apply to residential — rental as well as owneroccupied — and non-residential structures within the city. The Inter national Property Maintenance Code wouldn’t mandate that city officials systematically inspect local properties for violations. But city manager Dan Ralley has noted that a code official would have the option of entering a property with a “reasonable cause” showing to inspect and perform duties called for in the code. If the code is adopted locally as proposed, staff have said investigations of potential violations could be triggered in three ways: — if a complaint is received by the city;

— if a code violation is visible on the exterior of a property; or, — if a possible violation is discovered incidentally when a public safety officer is responding to an unrelated complaint at a property. During recent council meetings, several audience members have raised concerns that it might prove costly to bring buildings into compliance with code provisions. But unless the use of a structure changes or conditions are deemed dangerous, the manager has said the code wouldn’t force older structures to comply with modern standards. Violations of the code would be treated as municipal civil infractions, punishable by fines. The city has updated the proposed code to specify that appeals could be made through Petoskey’s zoning board of appeals when violations are found, with the cost for pursuing such an appeal set at $100. In other business Monday, the city manager will provide an update on the proposal for a public

safety station along the Bay Harbor resort corridor. This would be located at the former Western Concrete Products site along U.S. 31 near Bay Harbor’s main entrance. The update will include revised design plans for the proposed station, as well as possible funding options for financing the project. Also on Monday, the council will: — consider an update to the schedule of fines for municipal civil infractions. This would add a list of fines — $100 for first offense, $250 for second and $500 for third — for fire prevention code violations, which were omitted from the last update to the fine schedule. Final action would be taken at a later meeting; and — consider authorizing a traffic order to make the intersection of Jackson Street and Ingalls Avenue an all-way stop. Staff recently put this arrangement in place on a trial basis, and have concluded that the all-way stop designation would be the best solution to make the intersection safer for public use.

Points of clarification Petoskey city staff and legal counsel plan to provide clarification about portions of the International Property Maintenance Code that have generated questions and concerns from the city council and community members. Examples of these areas, and staff responses provided in a memo to the council, are as follows. DEADBOLT LOCKS: The proposed code would require deadbolt locks for dwelling units that are rented or leased, but is silent with regard to deadbolt locks for owner-occupied structures. For emergency egress purposes, it also specifies that such locks be “readily openable” from the inside of the structure without the use of a key or specialized knowledge. ELECTRICAL WIRING: The proposed ordinance states that electrical requirements should be dictated by the size and usage of appliances and equipment inside the home. The code further requires dwelling units must be served by grounded electrical services that are not less than 60 amps in size, and that every habitable space must be served

by two separate receptacle outlets. The code does not require that individual outlets are grounded inside of the home, or specify the type of wiring to be used in the home, other than it must be safe and free from defect or hazard. EXTERIOR STRUCTURE: The proposed ordinance requires that “the exterior of a structure shall be maintained in good repair, structurally sound and sanitary so as not to pose a threat to public health, safety or welfare.” The code states that “all exterior surfaces … shall be maintained in good condition.” The plain language of the code does not suggest that exterior surfaces have to be in perfect condition, only good condition, and the code commentary notes that protective treatments prevent more extensive damage that can result if surfaces are not properly protected from the elements. ROOM SIZE: The proposed ordinance would require bedrooms to be at least 70 square feet in size and living quarters at least 120 square feet in size. The 2006 code

commentary notes that 70 square feet “is barely enough space for a regular-sized bed and dresser.” SMOKE DETECTORS: The proposed ordinance requires smoke detectors in all structures. At a previous meeting, questions were raised about when hardwired smoke detectors would be required. The IPMC does not change the existing standard established by the State Building Code. The Building Code only requires hard-wired smoke detectors in either a new structure or in a building that is undergoing extensive renovations. WINDOWS: The IPMC requires rooms to have windows of a size that are equal to or greater than 8 percent of the floor area of the room. Artificial lighting and mechanical ventilation can be used in lieu of windows to meet this 8 percent standard. Unless the use of a structure changes or conditions are deemed dangerous, the manager has said the code wouldn’t force older structures to comply with modern standards.

NEWS-REVIEW FILE PHOTO

Venetian boat parade and fireworks light up the night in this photo taken circa 1950.

VENETIAN HISTORY FROM A1 they really needed to keep the festival and the fireworks going because it was just a big homecoming and everyone wanted it to continue.” Davenport, who served as Charlevoix’s recreation director for several years, and was a longtime coach and athletic director at Ferris State University, began really working on the festival in the late 1990s in an attempt to bring in more competitive events. He also helped take the festival from just a weekend, to a weeklong event. “At the time, we had a few things going on like the basketball tournament and the road race,” Davenport explained. “But as junior golf director, and being involved in tennis, I helped bring that to the mix, and then added the softball tournament, and so on. We’ve just added so many things over the years it’s hard to even list them all.” One of the most popular sporting events during the festival is the Ryan Shay Memorial Mile. The race is dedicated to marathon runner, Ryan Shay, a graduate of Central Lake High School. Shay died while competing in the 2007 Olympic Marathon trials in New York City. “The name is just so well known in this area, and so many come out to watch the race, it’s really quite a sight,” Davenport said. The race is by invitation only, and prize money is awarded to the winners. This year, three Kenyan runners are scheduled to compete. “We’ve actually had to turn

some very successful collegiate runners away which is always hard to do,” Davenport said. “We’ve had phone calls from coaches asking why their successful runners aren’t able to compete, but we only have so much room.” The festival is run by volunteers. This year, Miller estimates that there are more than 400. “We’ve had some of the same volunteers help year after year,” Miller said. “It really shows that this is a community event and how important it is to the city.” Davenport joked that he has been a festival volunteer since a very young age. “My father was the chamber director when I was little, and he had gone out and sold all this advertising for the festival brochure,” Davenport explained. “We were in his office as the fireworks were going off, and here was the stack of brochures. He forgot to pass them out. So my sister and I ran and handed them to everyone we could. So I guess you could say I’ve been a festival volunteer for a long, long time.” Both Davenport and Miller said it’s that spirit held by hundreds of festival volunteers, that has really kept the festival going all these years. “The volunteers really take pride in all they do and they do it well,” Miller explained. “It’s really what makes this such a great event and brings in thousands of people to our town every year.” For a full schedule of Venetian Festival events, visit www.venetianfestival.com.


A15

Friday, July 16, 2010 •

A Must-See Event! WE’VE GOT MONEY TO LEND. Got a job? Check. Need money for a vehicle?

2010 Michigan PGA

Get A Check!

SENIOR CHAMPIONSHIP Hosted by Charlevoix Golf & Country Club & Loren Musilek, on-site Realtor for Prudential Preferred Properties Network

Locations in Cheboygan, Indian River, and Mackinaw City www.mi-safcu.org

August 1: Michigan PGA Senior players paired with amateurs August 2-3: Michigan PGA Seniors compete on award-winning Jerry Matthews designed championship golf course Major Sponsors: Charlevoix Area Hospital Sports Medicine & Rehab

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SPORTS

INSIDE: TV LISTINGS • COMICS • CLASSIFIEDS • TEA TABLE COMMUNITY NOTES • WEATHER

Friday, July 16, 2010 •

B

Andy Sneddon, sports editor 439-9345 • asneddon@petoskeynews.com ❘ Steve Foley, sportswriter 439-9343 • sfoley@petoskeynews.com

Charlevoix grad Boss shifts gridiron gears

■ Scholarship, new look for

R

Andrews sues hotel chains CHICAGO — Erin Andrews has sued several hotel chains for negligence and invasion of privacy in connection with the secret videotaping of her by an Illinois man. The videos were taken through a modified peephole while the ESPN reporter was undressed in hotel rooms in Nashville, Tenn. and Milwaukee in 2008. Andrews filed the lawsuit in Cook County court in Chicago against Marriott International, Radisson Hotels International and other chains. Also named was Michael David Barrett, who pleaded guilty to interstate stalking.

GOLF

Bettencourt leads, DiMarco one shot back RENO, Nev. — Matt Bettencourt shot a 6-under-par 66 for a one-stroke lead over PGA Tour veteran Chris DiMarco through the first round of the Reno-Tahoe Open. Will MacKenzie, the 2006 Reno champ, is tied with Craig Bowden another stroke back at 4-under 68 at Montreux Golf & Country Club on the edge of the Sierra Nevada. Bettencourt, 35, won the 2008 Nationwide Tour Championship but has never won on the PGA Tour. NEWS-REVIEW FILE PHOTO

Pellston’s Katie Dzedzie, one of the best volleyball players the area has seen, will play in the Michigan Interscholastic Volleyball Coaches Association All-State Classic on Friday, July 30, at Kellogg Arena in Battle Creek.

Calc’s turn?

Celtics minority owner to buy Golden State

NFL

Nancy Armour

Vick may have to pay

AP National Writer

See OPEN on PAGE B3

NBA

OAKLAND, Calif. — Golden State Warriors owner Chris Cohan reached an agreement to sell the franchise for a record $450 million to Boston Celtics minority partner Joe Lacob and Mandalay Entertainment CEO Peter Guber. Lacob and Guber put in a bid that broke the record for the largest sale in league history, topping the $401 million Robert Sarver paid to buy the Phoenix Suns in 2004.

GOLF

ST. ANDREWS, Scotland — This year, it’s Mark Calcavecchia doing the old guys proud. The 1989 British Open champion posted the early low score of the day with a 5-under 67 Friday, his best round ever at the Old Course. He was still five strokes back with first-round leader Rory McIlroy not even at the course, but it’s pretty good for a guy making the shuffle to the senior tour after turning 50 on June 12. “It’s confidence,” Calcavecchia said. “You see a guy like Tom Watson last year almost winning at 60. It doesn’t really matter how old you are if you’re feeling good about what you’re doing.

BASEBALL

BROADCASTING

Diamond all-stars

See SNEDDON on PAGE B2

DETROIT — Defenseman Derek Meech has signed a oneyear contract with the Detroit Red Wings. Meech, 26, played in 49 games for Detroit last season He had two goals and four assists. He has 16 points in 126 career NHL games.

SAN FRANCISCO — The San Francisco Giants signed former 20-game winner Dontrelle Willis to a minor league contract. Willis had been designated for assignment by Arizona earlier this month. Willis was traded from Detroit to Arizona in June. The Tigers are still paying the bulk of his $12 million salary.

be done between now and Aug. 10, the day players report at NMU. “We have a lot of work to get done so I left (Chicago) immediately,” Boss said. “It’s a g good opportunity to get my first fulltime job at a Division II school, espeically at my alma mater, that’s everybody’s dream. Everybody wants to be able to go back.” Boss said leaving the Rush so late in the season, and with a playoff berth looming, wasn’t an easy decision, but it’s the right one for him. “This was a decision I made for my future,” he said. “I accomplished a lot during my playing career and I enjoyed it. Coaching is equally as gratifying for me, teaching these young players the game that I enjoyed so much and that gave me a lot.” Among Boss’ duties, as it is for all college coaches, is recruiting. He said he isn’t sure what his geographical territory will be, but it may include the Northern Lower Peninsula. For now, he is busy with administrative duties, working on late-season recruiting, meeting with the coaching staff and, in particular, the Wildcats’ new offensive coordinator, Chris Ostrowsky. That’s today, tomorrow, and the next day for Boss. Down the road? Who knows. Coaching is a fickle business and those in it generally live a nomadic lifestyle as they climb the ladder. “As far as being a head caoch I think that’s everybody’s dream,” Boss said. “You want to be able to call your own shots. I would like to be successful here and maybe move up to the Division I level and see where it goes. “My goal is just to be successful wherever I’m at.” East Jordan’s Megan Keyser and Boyne City’s Lindsay Clemens were selected to play in the Michigan High School Softball Coaches Association All-Star Game at

Wings sign defenseman

Willis signs with Giants

Northmen soccer program

ob Boss’ football playing days would appear to be over. Boss, a 2002 Charlevoix High School graduate, is the new offensive line coach at Northern Michigan University. Last time we checked — just two weeks ago — Boss had been named the Arena Football League’s Offensive Player of the Week. The Rush, at the time, was on its way to clinching a playoff spot as its regular season wound down. A 68-60 loss at Tampa Bay on July 2 turned out to be Boss’ final professional football game. He left Chicago shortly thereafter for an interview in Marquette with NMU head coach Bernie Anderson. Anderson offered Boss the job on the spot, and he Andy accepted. Sneddon Boss knew when he applied for the job at NMU that he may have to leave the Rush late in the season, but it was something he had to do to secure his longterm future. There are only a few weeks remaining in the Arena League season and, at 10-4, the Rush is headed to the playoffs. The coaching move is the start of what could be a long career on the sidelines for Boss, an NMU grad. He said Thursday Boss that unless an offer from, say, an NFL team comes along, his playing days are finished. “You can definitely coach for a lot longer than you can play,” said Boss, 26, who coached NMU’s defensive line last season while the Arena League suspended operations. At that time, Boss was also finishing his final semester en route to earning a Bachelor of Science in chemistry from NMU. Boss said there is much work to

HOCKEY

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Trevor Wilson of the Petoskey Majors (age 11-12) Little League baseball team strokes a single Thursday in the District 13 tournament championship game at

Cheboygan. Cheboygan defeated Petoskey, 8-7, to move on to the state tournament in Gaylord, beginning Friday, July 23. See page B2.

RICHMOND, Va. — The trustee in Michael Vick’s bankruptcy case is seeking repayment of at least $2 million that the NFL quarterback doled out to friends and family members in the months before he was sent to federal prison for running a dogfighting operation. A complaint filed in U.S. Bankruptcy Court says Vick knew his lucrative career was in jeopardy and that he would be facing huge legal bills, yet he continued to shower friends and relatives with gifts and cash. Those assets, trustee Joseph J. Luzinski argues, should have gone to Vick’s creditors.

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B2

Friday, July 16, 2010 •

LITTLE LEAGUE

BRITISH OPEN

Petoskey ousted from Majors tourney

Oosthuizen maks a name for himself at Old Course

CHEBOYGAN — Cheboygan eliminated Petoskey from the Little League Majors (ages 11-12) District 13 baseball tour nament Thursday with an 8-7 victory. Cheboygan, which went unbeaten in the district, advances to the state tourna-

ment beginning Friday, July 23, in Gaylord. Cheboygan scored two runs in the top of the sixth inning Thursday to seize the lead. Petoskey could not answer in the bottom of the sixth. Nick Mesnard, Jared Byers and Peter Crittenden

The new logos for the Petoskey High School soccer program (boys on the left, girls on the right) include two stars representing the

SNEDDON FROM B1

were the pitchers for Petoskey. Mesnard had eight strikeouts, while Byers and Crittenden had two each. Byers hit a three-run homer to lead Petoskey at the plate, while Mesnard singled and doubled, and Trevor Wilson and Blake Coston each singled.

ST. ANDREWS, Scotland (AP) — The name on his passport — Lodewicus Theodorus — sounds like it belongs in a Wagner opera. His nickname among friends — Shrek — is not much better. Louis Oosthuizen found a better way to make a name for himself Friday at St. Andrews, where he carefully navigated the Old Course through light wind and short spells of rain for a 5-under 67 to take the early lead in the British Open. A long putt through the Valley of Sin on the 18th hole, and the birdie putt from just inside 15 feet that followed, put the 27-year-old South African at 12-under 132. He was three shots clear of Rory McIlroy, who had to face increasing wind in the afternoon. “It’s probably the position anyone wants to be in playing a major on the weekend,” Oosthuizen said. It’s a position he doesn’t know very well. state championships won under now-retired Oosthuizen (WUHST’-hyzen) had played eight macoach Scott Batchelor. The years signify jors when he arrived at St. when the programs began varsity play. Andrews. He missed the cut in seven of them, the excep-

Pellston coach Tim McNitt will coach in the game. It is the fourth time in his 14 years at Pellston he has received in invitational to coach in the classic.

Leadership Award, which has been nicknamed “The Batch,” and a new logo for the Petoskey High School soccer teams. With The Batch comes a $500 scholarship each spring to a soccer player, male or feScholton honored male, who played four years Petoskey graduate Carl in the Petoskey High School Scholton earned his third letter in track and field from program and a minimum of four years in the Petoskey Hope College this spring and was named to the Mich- Youth Soccer Association. That the player must have igan Intercollegiate Athletic Association Academic Hon- “come up through” the PYSA is a nod to the sucor Roll for 2009-10. cess of the program which In order to make the honor roll, a student-athlete for years has served as an excellent feeder for both the must earn a varsity letter Northmen boys’ ang girls’ and maintain a minimum programs — a fact never 3.5 grade point average. lost on Batchelor who is the first to credit the organizaCrazy 8 tion and its myriad volunBellaire has made the teer coaches who provided commitment to play eighthim a pipeline of talent. man football this season, Seed money for the endowleaving its Ski Valley Conment of the scholarship ference opponents — those came from the PYSA and eight who will still play the donars who attended the 11-man game we all know alumni game/reception. and love — scrambling to Anyone wishing to help with fill schedules. Dzedzie chosen the scholarship fund may The two area Ski Valley Recent Pellston graduate contact the Petoskey-Harbor schools, Inland Lakes and Katie Dzedzie will play in Springs Area Community Pellston, have filled the the Michigan InterscholasFoundation, 348-5820. opening created by Beltic Volleyball Coaches AsThe new logo for the laire’s move to eight-man. sociation All-State Classic high school soccer teams Pellston will play a nonon Friday, July 30, at Kellogg league game against Hale on includes the year each beArena in Battle Creek. Saturday, Aug. 28, its season- came a varsity sport — 1983 Dzedzie was named firstfor the boys, ’93 for the girls opener. Inland Lakes will team Class D All-State play host to Ishpeming West- — along with two stars last fall after leading the wich represent the two state wood on Saturday, Oct. 2. Hornets to their first state championships Petoskey Bellaire’s eight-man championship game, where won under Batchelor. they lost to perennial power schedule is comprised of Zach Jonker, who played dates with Akron FairBattle Creek St. Philip. for Batchelor at Petoskey grove, Engadine (twice), Dzedzie, a 5-foot-8 outside and has succeeded him as Traverse City Christian hitter who has signed with the Northmen coach, said Henry Ford Community Col- (twice), Brimley, Owendale it’s a soccer tradition to add lege, is one of the most deco- Gagetown, Posen and Eben stars to a team or organizarated prep volleyball players Junction Superior Central. tion’s logo when it wins its this area has ever produced. ultimate championship, in A three-year varsity starter ‘The Batch’ this case, a high school state and two-year captain, An estimated 200 people title. Dzedzie collected an amazing came out two weeks ago to Jonker enlisted an old 1,458 kills and 296 aces. honor former Petoskey High buddy, Casey Frushour of Over the past three years, School soccer coach Scott Ann Arbor, to design the Pellston has finished 127-32- Batchelor during a recep23 overall, won three district tion after the annual alumni logo. In an ironic twist, Frushand three regional champisoccer match at the Click our played on the Mason onships, and made it to the Road Soccer Complex. state Final Four twice. Among all the handshakes, team beat Petoskey, 2-1 in overtime, in the 1997 DiviThe All-State Classic is hugs, laughter and remision II boys’ state championplayed in conjunction with niscing was the establisheship game. the MIVCA annual meeting. ment of the Scott Batchelor

Ranney Park in Lansing on Wednesday, July 21. All participants in the game are seniors. Clemens, who has signed with Lake Superior State, was a Division III secondteam All-Stater. She hit .405 with a .461 onbase percentage and made just one error in center field all season. Keyser made just two errors — a remarkably Clemens low number for a high school softball second baseman — in helping East Jordan to the Lake Michigan Conference co-championKeyser ship. She hit .292 with a .436 on-base percentage and 27 walks from the leadoff spot.

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I think old guys can hang with the young guys.” And nowhere, it seems, is age merely a number than at the British Open. Two years ago, Greg Norman nearly won his third claret jug at 53, taking a twoshot lead into the final round at Royal Birkdale. Watson’s showing at Turnberry last year was even more amazing. A few months shy of his 60th birthday, he went to the 72nd hole with a one-stroke lead. Both fell short of becoming the oldest major champion in golf history, a title that still belongs to Julius Boros, who was 48 when he captured the 1968 PGA. Now it’s up to Calcavecchia to see if he can finish the senior surge. “It’s a good spot to be in,”

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miscue — if you can call it that — in his bogey-free round Friday came on 17. After eagling the Road Hole on Thursday, he missed an 8footer for birdie Friday. “I always enjoy the Open. Having not played well at St. Andrews in the past doesn’t mean anything to me,” said Calcavecchia, whose previous best round at St. Andrews was a 69 in 2000. “I know the course and I got a few good breaks out there, missed a couple of bunkers by a couple of yards, and it’s a difference of a couple of shots. Your ball rolls into one of those things, and who knows what you’re going to make. “You need a few good breaks out here, and so far I’ve gotten them.”

GOLF FROM B1

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Calcavecchia said. “I didn’t really think about where I was going to be in the tournament, there’s still six hours of tee times left. I’m just happy to have a tee time for tomorrow.” While the monstrous lengths at U.S. Open courses and even Augusta National often take their toll on the senior set — heck, they’re tough on the youngsters, too — nowhere does experience matter more than at a links course, where fickle weather, deceptive greens and fairways filled with humps and bumps make every hole an adventure. Calcavecchia hasn’t played the other majors in two years. But he’s missed only two cuts at the British Open since 1999. The only real

ASSOCIATED PRESS

South Africa’s Louis Oosthuizen plays a shot during the second round of the British Open, Friday, at St. Andrews.

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B3

Friday, July 16, 2010 •

LACROSSE

TOUR DE FRANCE Ron Cogan (center) and Isaiah Kicknosway (left) join other members of the Iroquois Nationals lacrosse team at Battery Park, Thursday, in New York. The American Indian lacrosse team whose Iroquois-issued passports have been at the heart of an international dispute are holding out hope they’ll be allowed into England to compete in a second game set for Saturday. ASSOCIATED PRESS

Iroquois lacrosse team sits in New York, awaits ruling Samantha Gross Associated Press

NEW YORK — There were cheers and hollers aboard the Iroquois Nationals lacrosse team bus as the players geared up for a very different encounter from what they had planned for Day 1 of the World Lacrosse Championships in England. Instead, with the Statue of Liberty in the background, team members got into uniform Thursday and filed out of the bus to pose for a gaggle of journalists and repeat their case for a few TV cameras: They should be allowed into England for the games using their Iroquois-issued passports. Why would the British demand they use U.S. and Canadian passports when they don’t consider themselves citizens of those nations? On Friday, they awaited word of whether they would be granted permission to travel to Manchester, England, in time to play their second tournament game, scheduled for Saturday afternoon. The team defaulted on its first game, against England, when it didn’t arrive in time on Thursday. Negotiators for the team have been pursuing diplomatic channels, and on Thursday team chairman Oren Lyons sounded a hopeful note. “There is movement in our discussions with the U.K.,” the Onondaga Nation chief said in a statement. “We

“For my people, it’s an ongoing battle for us. It’s still htere. It’s always going to be there.” — Jeremy Thompson Lacrosse player don’t know if we can resolve the issues in time for us to make our next game.” But a spokesman for Britain’s Home Office who spoke on condition of anonymity in keeping with ministry rules said later in the day in London that its stance had not changed and that a change was highly unlikely overnight. For the team’s 23 players, it was another day of spending more time on a bus rather than on the field playing the sport the Iroquois helped invent as much as 1,000 years ago. As their bus pulled up to the park housing the ferry boarding point for visitors headed to the Statue of Liberty, one player joked he’d found the easiest way to circumvent all the team’s difficulties: “We’re taking the ferry all the way, boys.” Once the team was out among the tourists, a few passers-by stopped to cheer the players, whose faces have been everywhere except England in the last few days as the dispute over their passports became an international issue. “They ought to let them go,” said Jon Shebar, an avid

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lacrosse fan. What’s at stake, he said, is “the dignity of the people and to be recognized as a nation.” Others stepped in to offer their support as well. A lacrosse club on Long Island invited the team for a barbecue and pickup game. The team, ranked No. 4 in the world by the Federation of International Lacrosse, planned to make use of its field for practice Thursday evening. And film director James Cameron donated $50,000 to help the players cover the ballooning costs of their stay in New York — already extended four days beyond their original flight. On Sunday, U.S. authorities refused to accept the passports issued by the Iroquois Confederacy because they lack security features required for border crossings amid post-Sept. 11, 2001, crackdowns on document fraud and illegal immigration. After days of negotiation, the U.S. cleared the team Wednesday for travel on a one-time waiver at the behest of Secretary of State Hillary Rodham Clinton, who as New York senator once represented some Iroquois lands. But hours later, the British government said the team wouldn’t be allowed in without U.S. or Canadian passports. The Department of State said Thursday it had failed to persuade the British government to allow the team to

travel. Department spokesman P.J. Crowley said U.S. officials made it clear that the team would be allowed to reenter the U.S. when its visit to England was completed. Despite those assurances, the British government decided to disallow entry for the team members, Crowley said. “We did our best from our point of view to satisfy the initial concerns that the U.K. had,” he said. Crowley described the decision as unsurprising, and he said both governments share the view that the Iroquois ultimately must have internationally recognized travel documents. Team lawyer Tonya Gonnella Frichner said the Iroquois have almost completed a transition to higher-security passports. The process has cost the six-nation confederacy more than $1.5 million, she said. For the team, the frustrations of the week and any disappointments still to come will serve a purpose, player Jeremy Thompson said. “We kind of look down seven generations,” he said, repeating a phrase he has heard often from his parents, grandparents and even great-grandparents. “Whatever precedent we set here is going to help generations down the road.” “For my people, it’s an ongoing battle for us,” he said. “It’s still there. It’s always going to be there.”

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Rider booted for head-butting foe BOURG-LES-VALENCE, France (AP) — Mark Cavendish provided a feel-good story when he broke down in tears after winning the 5th stage of the Tour de France a week ago. Cavendish, who also won Stage 6, had his third stage win of this year’s Tour marred by the actions of a teammate. Mark Renshaw was expelled from the Tour for illegally head-butting a rival in a frenzied final sprint in the 11th stage won by Cavendish on Thursday. Andy Schleck of Luxembourg retained the overall lead, cruising into the finish in the pack after riding part of the stage discussing a vacation with his main rival for the title — defending champion Alberto Contador of Spain. Renshaw, Cavendish’s leadout man on the HTC Columbia team, rammed his head three times into the shoulder of Julian Dean — the leadout man for Tyler Farrar on Garmin-Transitions — in an apparent bid to push him out of the way during the final sprint. Dean was leading the pack at the time. “This is cycling, it’s not wrestling,” course director Jean-Francois Pescheux said. He added removing Renshaw was “severe” punishment, and that his violation was “flagrant.” “There are rules to respect,” he said. After reviewing video of the sprint finish, the race jury said Renshaw was “removed from the competition for a particularly serious case.” They also said he was fined 200 Swiss francs (about $192) for a grave case of “irregular sprint.” Cycling’s governing body UCI is based in Switzerland. After feeling three “hits” on his side, Dean said he was “a little bit astounded that this conduct was taking place,” and said he felt “shaken” as he crossed the line in 23rd place. These were two riders almost destined for antagonism: Dean is from New Zealand, Renshaw’s an Australian; they’re both pilots, or lead-out men, for top sprinters; and their two American teams have a simmering rivalry. “Yeah, if you start making

a list of the potential opposites, we have a lot,” Dean told The Associated Press by phone after the stage. A spokeswoman for HTC Columbia didn’t immediately respond to an e-mail and a phone message seeking comment from Renshaw. Cavendish took the 114.6mile stage from Sisteron to Bourg-les-Valence, featuring a mid-grade climb, with a time of 4 hours, 42 minutes, 29 seconds. After the head-butts, Cavendish spurted ahead in the final 300 meters and won in front of Alessandro Petacchi of Italy in second and Farrar in third. Cavendish rushed to Renshaw’s defense, alleging that Dean had tried to elbow the Australian. “Mark used his head to get away,” he said. “There’s a risk when your elbow’s that close (that) the bars are going to tangle. That puts everybody behind in danger. Mark gave us a bit of space which kept everybody upright.” Farrar, America’s leading sprinter at this Tour, said of Columbia: “They don’t need to ride like that. They need to think about the safety of everybody, and let the fastest man win.” He suggested Renshaw’s head-butting was dangerous. “I want to win, but more than that, I don’t want to fall,” said Farrar, who is still looking for his first Tour stage win. “Something like that is more than about winning, it’s really about the health of the riders.” The stage was mainly flat, and thus favored sprinters. The general classification didn’t change, with all the top contenders finishing behind the sprinters in the main pack. Schleck earned the yellow jersey for a third straight day. Contador remained second overall — 41 seconds behind. Fellow Spaniard Samuel Sanchez was third, 2:45 behind. Schleck had an easy — if hot — day, and did a bit of chatting in the peloton. “It was quiet and we can act like normal people,” said Schleck through a translator, adding that Contador was a friend and they had gone on vacation together.

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British Open Thursday, First Round At St. Andrews (Old Course), Scotland Purse: $7.3 million Yardage: 7,305; Par: 72 (36-36) (a-amateur) Rory McIlroy 33-30—63 Louis Oosthuizen 31-34—65 John Daly 31-35—66 Andrew Coltart 33-33—66 Steven Tiley 32-34—66 Bradley Dredge 33-33—66 Peter Hanson 33-33—66 Marcel Siem 32-35—67 Nick Watney 33-34—67 Lucas Glover 35-32—67 Sean O’Hair 30-37—67 Tiger Woods 33-34—67 Fredrik Andersson Hed 32-35—67 Alejandro Canizares 33-34—67 Y.E. Yang 34-33—67 Lee Westwood 31-36—67 Robert Rock 34-34—68 John Senden 33-35—68 Ross McGowan 32-36—68 Trevor Immelman 33-35—68 Oliver Wilson 32-36—68 Ross Fisher 33-35—68 Camilo Villegas 34-34—68 Ryo Ishikawa 33-35—68 Henrik Stenson 33-35—68 a-Jin Jeong 32-36—68 Shane Lowry 34-34—68 Vijay Singh 35-33—68 Ricky Barnes 33-35—68 Paul Lawrie 36-33—69 Steve Marino 35-34—69 Simon Dyson 34-35—69 Robert Allenby 34-35—69 Hunter Mahan 34-35—69 Ernie Els 35-34—69 Mark O’Meara 33-36—69 Bo Van Pelt 35-34—69 Ignacio Garrido 34-35—69 Robert Karlsson 33-36—69 Dustin Johnson 33-36—69 Paul Casey 34-35—69 Retief Goosen 34-35—69 Edoardo Molinari 35-34—69 Martin Kaymer 35-34—69 Danny Chia 32-37—69 Ryan Moore 35-35—70 Thomas Bjorn 37-33—70 Stewart Cink 35-35—70 Justin Rose 35-35—70 Chris Wood 34-36—70 Darren Clarke 34-36—70 J.B. Holmes 33-37—70 Zane Scotland 34-36—70 Tano Goya 36-34—70 Kyung-tae Kim 32-38—70 Mark Calcavecchia 37-33—70 Kevin Na 34-36—70 Toru Taniguchi 33-37—70 Charl Schwartzel 40-31—71 Tim Clark 37-34—71 Ian Poulter 34-37—71 Jason Day 36-35—71 Kenny Perry 35-36—71 Stephen Gallacher 33-38—71 Hirofumi Miyase 34-37—71 Tom Lehman 34-37—71 Graeme McDowell 37-34—71 Steve Stricker 35-36—71 Sergio Garcia 35-36—71 a-Eric Chun 34-37—71 Thomas Aiken 36-35—71 Heath Slocum 34-37—71 Tim Petrovic 35-36—71 Soren Hansen 37-35—72 Todd Hamilton 35-37—72 Seung-yul Noh 35-37—72 Nick Faldo 36-36—72 Soren Kjeldsen 36-36—72 G.Fernandez-Castano 35-37—72 Yuta Ikeda 34-38—72 Matt Kuchar 34-38—72 a-Byeong-Hun An 35-37—72 Michael Sim 37-35—72 Tom Pernice Jr. 36-36—72 Mark F. Haastrup 34-38—72 Colm Moriarty 35-37—72 Scott Verplank 36-36—71 Alvaro Quiros 35-37—72 Miguel Angel Jimenez 36-36—72 Adam Scott 36-36—72 Geoff Ogilvy 37-35—72 Zach Johnson 33-39—72 Ben Crane 34-38—72 Brian Gay 35-37—72 Gareth Maybin 36-36—72 D.A. Points 36-36—72 Thomas Levet 35-38—73 Loren Roberts 34-39—73 Bill Haas 35-38—73 Jason Dufner 36-37—73 Alexander Noren 35-38—73 Padraig Harrington 37-36—73 Tom Watson 38-35—73 Mike Weir 34-39—73 Davis Love III 37-36—73 Gregory Havret 35-38—73 a-Jamie Abbott 36-37—73 Tom Whitehouse 35-38—73 Peter Senior 36-37—73 Jeff Overton 35-38—73 Marc Leishman 33-40—73 Luke Donald 37-36—73 Angel Cabrera 37-36—73 Phil Mickelson 36-37—73 Rhys Davies 37-36—73 Richard S. Johnson 35-38—73 Mathew Goggin 35-39—74 Martin Laird 37-37—74 Others Francesco Molinari 39-35—74 Colin Montgomerie 36-38—74 Bubba Watson 37-37—74 Paul Goydos 36-38—74 Phillip Archer 35-40—75 Sandy Lyle 37-38—75 Jason Bohn 37-38—75 Ben Curtis 36-40—76 Justin Leonard 39-37—76 K.J. Choi 38-38—76 David Duval 38-39—77 Jim Furyk 38-39—77 George McNeill 39-39—78 Jerry Kelly 40-39—79 Rickie Fowler 37-42—79

Weekend TV schedule

PGA Tour Reno-Tahoe Open Thursday, first round At Montreux Golf and Country Club, Reno, Nev. Purse: $3 million Yardage: 7,472; Par: 72 (36-36) (a-amateur) Matt Bettencourt 32-34—66 Chris DiMarco 34-33—67 Will MacKenzie 36-32—68 Craig Bowden 31-37—68 Mark Hensby 33-36—69 J.J. Henry 33-36—69 Jim Carter 33-36—69 Jim Gallagher, Jr. 34-35—69 Craig Barlow 38-31—69 Chad Campbell 33-36—69 Steve Allan 35-34—69 Robert Garrigus 37-32—69 Jarrod Lyle 34-35—69 Todd Fischer 32-37—69 Bob Heintz 34-35—69 Kevin Streelman 35-34—69 John Merrick 34-35—69 Mathias Gronberg 35-34—69 Bill Lunde 34-35—69 John Mallinger 35-34—69 Woody Austin 36-33—69 Steve Elkington 33-36—69 Cliff Kresge 34-36—70 Omar Uresti 35-35—70 Graham DeLaet 33-37—70 Charles Warren 37-33—70 Matt Hill 37-33—70 Scott McCarron 36-34—70 Kevin Stadler 36-34—70 Aron Price 35-35—70 David Lutterus 37-33—70 John Rollins 34-37—71 Alex Cejka 34-37—71 Jonathan Kaye 36-35—71 Paul Stankowski 36-35—71 Rich Barcelo 34-37—71 Garth Mulroy 35-36—71 Roger Tambellini 36-35—71 Kris Blanks 36-35—71 Rod Pampling 37-35—72 James Nitties 36-36—72 Henrik Bjornstad 37-35—72 Nicholas Thompson 36-36—72 Jeff Quinney 36-36—72 Guy Boros 36-36—72 Jeev Milkha Singh 35-37—72 Greg Kraft 34-38—72 Dicky Pride 35-37—72 Seung-su Han 35-37—72 Joe Ogilvie 35-38—73 Marco Dawson 36-37—73

Transactions Thursday’s Sports Transactions BASEBALL National League ATLANTA BRAVES—Activated OF Jason Heyward from the 15-day DL. Optioned SS Brandon Hicks to Gwinnett (IL). Placed LHP Eric O’Flaherty on the 15-day DL, retroactive to July 10. Reclaed LHP Mike Dunn from Gwinnett. ST. LOUIS CARDINALS—Agreed to terms with general manager John Mozeliak on a three-year contract extension. BASKETBALL National Basketball Association BOSTON CELTICS—Re-signed F Paul Pierce to a four-year contract. DENVER NUGGETS—Signed G Anthony Carter and F-C Shelden Williams. GOLDEN STATE WARRIORS—Announced Chris Cohan agreed to sell the franchise to Boston Celtics minority partner Joe Lacob and Mandalay Entertainment CEO Peter Guber. MIAMI HEAT—Signed F Mike Miller to a five-year contract. NEW JESREY NETS—Signed F Derrick Favors and F Damion James. UTAH JAZZ—Agreed to terms with G Raja Bell on a three-year contract. FOOTBALL National Football League NEW ORLEANS SAINTS—Signed DT Al Woods. HOCKEY National Hockey League BOSTON BRUINS—Signed F Gregory Campbell and D Adam McQuaid to two-year contracts and D Andrew Bodnarchuk and F Jeff LoVecchio to one-year contracts. COLUMBUS BLUE JACKETS—Re-signed F Tom Sestito to a one-year contract. DETROIT RED WINGS—Re-signed D Derek Meech to a one-year contract. EDMONTON OILERS—Named Kelly Buchberger and Steve Smith assistant coaches and Todd Nelson coach of Oklahoma City (AHL). MONTREAL CANADIENS—Signed F Alexander Avtsin to a three-year contract and F David Desharnais to a one-year contract. SAN JOSE SHARKS—Signed F T.J. Trevelyan and D Sean Sullivan to one-year contracts. ST. LOUIS BLUES—Re-signed D Tyson Strachan to a one-year contract. TAMPA BAY LIGHTNING—Re-signed C Blair Jones to a one-year contract.

Soccer MAJOR LEAGUE SOCCER EASTERN CONFERENCE W L T Pts GF Columbus 8 3 4 28 20 New York 8 5 2 26 18 Toronto FC 6 4 4 22 17 Chicago 4 5 5 17 18 Kansas City 4 8 3 15 12 New England 4 9 2 14 15 D.C. 3 10 3 12 11 Philadelphia 3 8 2 11 16 WESTERN CONFERENCE W L T Pts GF Los Angeles 11 2 3 36 25 Real Salt Lake 9 3 3 30 28 FC Dallas 5 2 7 22 17 Colorado 6 4 4 22 16

GA 13 17 15 19 19 26 26 25 GA 7 11 13 13

5 a.m. 8:30 a.m. 4 p.m. 4 p.m. 7 p.m. 7 p.m. 7 p.m. 9 p.m. 9 p.m. 7 a.m. 8:30 a.m. 1 p.m. 2 p.m. 4 p.m. 4 p.m. 4:30 p.m. 7 p.m. 7 p.m. 8 p.m. 9:45 p.m. 11 p.m. 11 p.m. 6 a.m. 7:30 a.m. 8 a.m. 12:30 p.m. 1 p.m. 1 p.m. 1 p.m. 2 p.m. 2 p.m. 3 p.m. 4 p.m. 6 p.m. 8 p.m. 12 p.m.

FRIDAY Golf, British Open, second round, ESPN Cycling, Tour de France, Stage 12, Versus NBA summer league, Detroit vs. New York, NBATV Golf, PGA Tour Reno-Taho Open, second round, Golf Baseball, Tigers at Cleveland, FSD Soccer, Manchester United vs. Glasgow Celtic, ESPN2 Auto racing, NASCAR Truck Series CampingWorld.com 200 qualifying (delayed), Speed Auto racing, NASCAR Truck Series CampingWorld.com 200, Speed Boxing, Zab Judah (38-6) vs. Jose Armando Santa Cruz (28-4), welterweights, ESPN2 SATURDAY Golf, British Open, third round, ESPN Cycling, Tour de France, Stage 13, Versus Baseball, Tigers at Cleveland, first game, FSD Golf, Nationwide Tour Chiquita Classic, second round, Golf Baseball, Tampa Bay at N.Y. Yankees, Fox 33 Golf, PGA Tour Reno-Taho Open, third round, Golf Auto racing, NASCAR Nationwide Series Missouri-Illinois Dodge Dealers 250 qualifying, ESPN2 Baseball, Tigers at Cleveland, second game, FSD Baseball, Chicago White Sox at Minnesota, WGN Auto racing, NASCAR Nationwide Series Missouri-Illinois Dodge Dealers 250, ESPN2 Boxing, Alfredo Angulo (18-1) vs. Jochaim Alcine (32-1), junior middleweights; Timothy Bradley (25-0) vs. Luis Carlos Abregu (29-0), welterweights; HBO Auto racing, NHRA Fram-Autolite Nationals qualifying (delayed), Speed Auto racing, AMA Pro Racing (delayed), Speed SUNDAY Golf, British Open, final round, ESPN Cycling, Tour de France, Stage 14, Versus Auto racing, MotoGP World Championship German Grand Prix, Speed Auto racing, IRL Honta Indy Toronto, ABC 29-8 Baseball, Tigers at Cleveland, FSD Baseball, Tampa Bay at N.Y. Yankees, TBS Auto racing, Rolex Sports Car Series NJMP 250, Speed Golf, Nationwide Tour Chiquita Classic, final round, Golf Baseball, Chicago White Sox at Minnesota, WGN Soccer, Glasgow Celtic at Seattle Sounders, exhibition, ESPN Golf, PGA Tour Reno-Tahoe Open, final round, Golf Auto racing, NHRA Fram-Autolite Nationals, final eliminations (delayed), ESPN2 Baseball, Philadelphia at Chicago Cubs, ESPN Auto racing, AMA Pro Racing (delayed), Speed

Baseball AMERICAN LEAGUE East Division W L Pct GB New York 56 32 .636 — Tampa Bay 54 34 .614 2 Boston 51 38 .573 5 1/2 Toronto 44 45 .494 12 1/2 Baltimore 29 59 .330 27 Central Division W L Pct GB Chicago 50 38 .568 — Detroit 48 38 .558 1 Minnesota 46 43 .517 4 1/2 Kansas City 39 49 .443 11 Cleveland 34 54 .386 16 West Division W L Pct GB Texas 51 38 .573 — Los Angeles 48 44 .522 4 1/2 Oakland 43 46 .483 8 Seattle 35 54 .393 16 Thursday’s Games Texas 7, Boston 2 Chicago White Sox 8, Minnesota 7 L.A. Angels 8, Seattle 3 Friday’s Games Detroit (Scherzer 6-6) at Cleveland (Westbrook 5-5), 7:05 p.m. Tampa Bay (J.Shields 7-9) at N.Y. Yankees (Sabathia 12-3), 7:05 p.m. Toronto (R.Romero 6-6) at Baltimore (Bergesen 3-6), 7:05 p.m. Texas (C.Lewis 8-5) at Boston (Doubront 1-1), 7:10 p.m. Chicago White Sox (Floyd 5-7) at Minnesota (Liriano 6-7), 8:10 p.m. Oakland (G.Gonzalez 7-6) at Kansas City (Greinke 5-8), 8:10 p.m. Seattle (F.Hernandez 7-5) at L.A. Angels (Jer.Weaver 8-5), 10:05 p.m. Saturday’s Games Detroit (Verlander 11-5) at Cleveland (Carmona 8-7), 1:05 p.m., 1st game Detroit (Porcello 4-7) at Cleveland (Talbot 8-8), 7:05 p.m., 2nd game Tampa Bay (Niemann 7-2) at N.Y. Yankees (A.J.Burnett 7-7), 4:10 p.m. Toronto (Morrow 5-6) at Baltimore (Guthrie 3-10), 7:05 p.m. Chicago White Sox (Buehrle 8-7) at Minnesota (Pavano 10-6), 7:10 p.m. Oakland (Cahill 9-3) at Kansas City (Chen 5-3), 7:10 p.m. Texas (Cl.Lee 8-4) at Boston (Lackey 9-5), 7:10 p.m. Seattle (Rowland-Smith 1-9) at L.A. Angels (J.Saunders 6-9), 9:05 p.m. Sunday’s Games Detroit (A.Oliver 0-3) at Cleveland (Masterson 3-8), 1:05 p.m. Tampa Bay (Price 12-4) at N.Y. Yankees (Pettitte 11-2), 1:05 p.m. Texas (C.Wilson 7-5) at Boston (Lester 11-3), 1:35 p.m. Toronto (Marcum 7-4) at Baltimore (Matusz 3-9), 1:35 p.m. Chicago White Sox (F.Garcia 9-3) at Minnesota (Blackburn 7-7), 2:10 p.m. Oakland (Mazzaro 4-2) at Kansas City (Bannister 7-7), 2:10 p.m. Seattle (J.Vargas 6-4) at L.A. Angels (E.Santana 8-7), 3:35 p.m.

NATIONAL LEAGUE East Division W L Pct GB Atlanta 53 36 .596 — New York 48 41 .539 5 Philadelphia 47 41 .534 5 1/2 Florida 42 46 .477 10 1/2 Washington 39 50 .438 14 Central Division W L Pct GB Cincinnati 49 41 .544 — St. Louis 48 41 .539 1/2 Chicago 40 50 .444 9 Milwaukee 40 50 .444 9 Houston 36 53 .404 12 1/2 Pittsburgh 30 58 .341 18 West Division W L Pct GB San Diego 51 37 .580 — Colorado 49 39 .557 2 Los Angeles 49 40 .551 2 1/2 San Francisco 48 41 .539 3 1/2 Arizona 34 55 .382 17 1/2 Thursday’s Games Atlanta 2, Milwaukee 1 Chicago Cubs 12, Philadelphia 6 St. Louis 7, L.A. Dodgers 1 San Francisco 2, N.Y. Mets 0 Friday’s Games Philadelphia (Blanton 3-5) at Chicago Cubs (Lilly 3-8), 2:20 p.m. Houston (Myers 6-6) at Pittsburgh (Duke 3-8), 7:05 p.m. Colorado (Hammel 7-3) at Cincinnati (Arroyo 9-4), 7:10 p.m. Washington (Strasburg 3-2) at Florida (Nolasco 9-6), 7:10 p.m. Milwaukee (Ra.Wolf 6-8) at Atlanta (Hanson 8-5), 7:35 p.m. L.A. Dodgers (Billingsley 7-4) at St. Louis (J.Garcia 8-4), 8:15 p.m. Arizona (Haren 7-7) at San Diego (Garland 8-6), 10:05 p.m. N.Y. Mets (Niese 6-3) at San Francisco (Zito 7-4), 10:35 p.m. Saturday’s Games Philadelphia (Hamels 7-7) at Chicago Cubs (R.Wells 4-7), 1:05 p.m. L.A. Dodgers (Kuroda 7-7) at St. Louis (Wainwright 13-5), 4:10 p.m. Houston (Norris 2-6) at Pittsburgh (Ohlendorf 1-7), 7:05 p.m. Colorado (De La Rosa 3-1) at Cincinnati (Volquez 0-0), 7:10 p.m. Milwaukee (Narveson 7-6) at Atlanta (T.Hudson 9-4), 7:10 p.m. Washington (L.Hernandez 6-5) at Florida (Jo.Johnson 9-3), 7:10 p.m. Arizona (R.Lopez 5-7) at San Diego (Richard 6-4), 8:35 p.m. N.Y. Mets (Pelfrey 10-4) at San Francisco (Cain 6-8), 9:05 p.m. Sunday’s Games Colorado (Cook 3-5) at Cincinnati (Undecided), 1:10 p.m. Washington (Stammen 2-3) at Florida (Sanabia 0-1), 1:10 p.m. San Jose 6 4 4 22 18 16 Houston (Oswalt 6-10) at Pittsburgh (MaHouston 5 7 4 19 21 22 Seattle 5 8 4 19 18 24 holm 5-7), 1:35 p.m. Milwaukee (M.Parra 3-6) at Atlanta Chivas USA 4 9 2 14 17 21 NOTE: Three points for victory, one point (D.Lowe 9-8), 1:35 p.m. for tie. L.A. Dodgers (Padilla 4-2) at St. Louis Thursday’s Game (Suppan 0-5), 2:15 p.m. Seattle FC 1, D.C. United 0 Arizona (E.Jackson 6-7) at San Diego (CorSaturday’s Games reia 5-6), 4:05 p.m. Toronto FC at Philadelphia, 3:30 p.m. N.Y. Mets (J.Santana 7-5) at San Francisco New York at Columbus, 7:30 p.m. (J.Sanchez 7-6), 4:05 p.m. Real Salt Lake at FC Dallas, 8:30 p.m. Philadelphia (Halladay 10-7) at Chicago Kansas City at Colorado, 9 p.m. Cubs (Gorzelanny 4-5), 8:05 p.m. Sunday’s Games Los Angeles at D.C. United, 7:30 p.m.

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TENNIS Petoskey sessions The second three-week session of Petoskey Parks and Recreation middle school, high school, adult beginner/intermediate and adult drill-and-play lessons beging Monday, July 19, at the Petoskey High School courts. Costs range from $65 to $150 per player, and drop-in rates are available. Middle school players meet from 4:30-6 p.m. Monday-Thursday; high school from 6-8 p.m. Tuesdays and Thursday; adult be ginner/inter mediate Mondays and Wednesdays from 6-7 p.m.; and adult drill-and-play Mondays and Wednesdays from 7-8:30 p.m. For more infor mation, e-mail bob@bobhartwick. com.

person 18-hole scramble is $80 per player, and includes box lunch, player gift, greens fees and dinner. Registration begins at 12:30 p.m. For more information, visit www.rayderfootball.com.

Mighty Mac outing

Openings remain for the Mighty Mac Golf Outing scheduled for 1 p.m. Tuesday, July 27, at the Mackinaw Club. Cost if $280 per fourperson team which includes greens fees, steak dinner, two drink tickets and prizes. For more infor mation, e-mail Kelly Vieau of the Mackinaw City Chamber of Commerce, kelly@mackinawchamber.com.

HOCKEY Petoskey registration

Registration for the Petoskey Area Hockey Association players age 4 and up is scheduled from 11 a.m.-1 p.m. SOCCER Saturday, July 17, at Griffin Venetian 3-on-3 Registration is under way Arena. For more informafor the Venetian Festival 3- tion, call Alan Budnick, (231) on-3 Soccer Tournament, 881-6569. scheduled for Tuesday and Wednesday, July 20-21. Male FOOTBALL and female divisions are Rayder camp planned for under-age-6, U-8, A Charlevoix Rayder FootU-10, U-12, U-14, high school, ball Camp for players enteradult and over-35. ing grades 4-6 is scheduled Registration for ms are from 6-8 p.m. July 27-28 at available at the Charlevoix Kipke Field. recreation department or at Camp director is Charlewww.venetianfestival.com. voix High School football For more information, call coach Don Jess. The camp Carol Madison, 348-3317. focuses in developing skills including passing, catching, blocking, tackling, pass covBASKETBALL erage, and individual posiBoyne girls camp The Boyne City girls’ bas- tion techniques. Cost is $35 and includes a ketball camp for players entering fifth-eighth grade T-shirt. Proceeds benefit the is scheduled from 5:30-7:30 Charlevoix Pop Warner and p.m. July 19-23 at Boyne City middle school football proMiddle School. grams. Registration forms There is no charge. For can be found at www.rayderm o re i n fo r m at i o n , c a l l football.com/RGC-Events. Boyne City varsity coach html. Jim Brown (231) 675-3962. For more information, call Glen Catt, (989) 370-1018. East Jordan camp The Post-Player Position Camp is scheduled from 9- SOFTBALL 11:30 a.m. July 20-22 at East Cancer fund-raiser Jordan High School. The Team openings remain camp is run by East Jordan for the Fight Back Against High School boys’ basketball Cancer Co-ed Softball Tourcoach Darrin Weber. nament scheduled for July Cost is $30 per player. For 23-25 at the East Jordan and more information, call We- Ellsworth softball fields. ber, (231) 350-8187. Cost is $150 per team and proceeds go to the Charlevoix County Relay for Life, which GOLF is scheduled for Aug. 14-15 at Rayder outing The 2010 Charlevoix Ray- Rotary Park in Boyne City. For more information, call der Golf Outing is scheduled for 2 p.m. Friday, Aug. 13, at Tom Reid Jr., (231) 536-7943 Dunmaglas. Cost for the four- or (231) 590-4972.

I bet you didn’t know... Brought to you by Jim Wilson What would you guess is the record for most number of games a manager and a player have participated in together in Major League Baseball history? Here’s a clue: taking over second place on the all time list were Atlanta Braves third baseman Chipper Jones and his manager, Bobby Cox, who early in the 2010 season took part in game number 2,191 together. But the record – 2,591 games – goes back a hundred years, to Pittsburgh Pirates Hall of Fame shortstop Honus Wagner and manager Fred Clarke (1897-1915). With Cox retiring at the end of the 2010 campaign, the record is still safe. Any of you golf fans ever heard of Fred Corcoran? He never picked up a club on the professional circuit, yet he inuenced the sport as much as anybody. As the tournament manager of the PGA of America in the 1930s and ‘40s, he fathered the modern PGA Tour. He served as a tournament organizer, director and promoter, and was also a player agent to legends such as Gene Sarazen. Corcoran, who died in 1977 at age 72, invented the tournament scoreboard, and he was the ďŹ rst non-player inducted into the World Golf Hall of Fame. Early in the 2010 season, Pittsburgh’s Aki Iwamura endured an 0-for-34 hitting slump, the 10th longest in Major League Baseball history. The longest – a dreadful 0-for-46 – was posted back in 1909 by Bill Bergen of the Brooklyn Dodgers. The modern-day mark, just one behind Bergen at 0-for-45, was set in 1973 by Dave Campbell, who spent most of his career with San Diego. Copyright, CFI

Wilson Insurance Agency, Inc.

Jim Wilson, Owner

“For all your insurance needsâ€? 2073 U.S. 31 N., Petoskey • (231)347-4464 • FAX (231)348-1190 wilins@charterinternet.com

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TV & COMICS

Friday, July 16, 2010 •

Why do they sterilize the needles for lethal injections? PEANUTS

B5

GARFIELD

JIM DAVIS

CHARLES SCHULZ

FOR BETTER OR FOR WORSE

LYNN JOHNSON

FRANK & ERNEST

Horoscope for Monday, July 19

If it’s your birthday July 19: You tend to overestimate your capabilities now. You have great luck, though, when you get in too deep and magically find an excellent escape route. To keep the stress level to a minimum, practice counting to five before you leap into action. Don’t forget details.

To get the advantage, check the day’s rating: 10 is the easiest day, 0 the most challenging.

Aries (March 21-April 19) — Today is a 5 — You wake up with peculiar feelings related to a dream. Write down what you remember to relieve the strangeness and catch any insight. Taurus (April 20-May 20) — Today is a 7 — If stress becomes a problem today, a visit to the massage therapist may be in order. You get more done afterward. It’s worth it. Gemini (May 21-June 21) — Today is a 6 — Ev-

JIM BORGMAN OR JERRY SCOTT

CATHY

CATHY GUISEWITE

RICK KIRKMAN & JERRY SCOTT

DOG EAT DOUG

BRIAN ANDERSON

eryone needs to work on their communication style. Confrontations don’t help anyone. Infuse optimism in every transaction.

the value of short breaks. Then take one. They may follow right along with you.

BOB THAVES

BABY BLUES

ZITS

Virgo (Aug. 23-Sept. 22) — Today is a 6 — Recent stresses take their toll. You need to transform tension into more dynamic, larger movements. Jump, dance or walk really fast.

Cancer (June 22-July 22) — Today is a 7 — Other people cannot detect any tension on your part. If you want them to know how you feel, you have to tell them. Let them contrib- Libra (Sept. 23-Oct. 22) — Today is a 5 — Everyute. one needs a stress release today. Get away from Leo (July 23-Aug. 22) — recent problems and pack Today is a 7 — Associates a picnic. Go somewhere demand hard work and beautiful near trees. little rest today. Point out

Scorpio (Oct. 23-Nov. 21) — Today is a 6 — Today you understand the stress created by demanding cooperation. Draw people in with tantalizing bribes. Someone goes for it. Sagittarius (Nov. 22-Dec. 21) — Today is a 6 — Pay attention to your dreams. Today they’re filled with unusual symbols for creative direction. Use any tension to push communications. Capricorn (Dec. 22-Jan. 19) — Today is a 5 — Take a poll of your group to find

FRIDAY EVENING

CONSUMER NEWS & BUSINESS

CABLE NEWS NETWORK COMEDY CENTRAL COURT TV CW DISCOVERY DISNEY DO-IT-YOURSELF ENTERTAINMENT TV ENTERTAINMENT SPORTS ENTERTAINMENT SPORTS 2 FAMILY CHANNEL FIT TV FOOD NETWORK FOX NEWS CHANNEL FOX SPORTS DETROIT FX GAME SHOW NETWORK HALLMARK HOME & GARDEN HISTORY CHANNEL LIFETIME MSNBC MUSIC TV NATIONAL GEOGRAPHIC NICKELODEON OXYGEN INDEPENDENT TV SCIENCE FICTION SOAPNET SPEED CHANNEL SPIKE TV SUPER STATION TURNER CLASSIC MOVIES LEARNING CHANNEL THE MOVIE CHANNEL TURNER NETWORK TV CARTOON NETWORK TRAVEL TV LAND USA NETWORK VIDEO HITS VERSUS WOMEN' S E NTERTAINMENT WGN ENCORE HOME BOX OFFICE HOME BOX OFFICE 2 CINEMAX SHOWTIME STARZ!

6:30

7:00

7:30

News Nightly Business European Journal News NBC News Wheel of Fortune Jeopardy! News Evening News Raymond 2 1/2 Men K Judge Judy ABC World News Ent. Tonight The Insider The Office Seinfeld FOX 32 News TMZ AMC (5:00) "Fallen"

('98) John Goodman, Denzel Washington. A&E AP BRAVO

CMT CNBC CNN COM COURT

CW DISC DISN DIY E! ESPN ESPN2 FAM FIT FOOD FNC FSD FX

Deal or No Deal Touched By An Angel "The Letter" Holmes on Homes House Hunters House Hunters Modern Marvels "The Autobahn" Modern Marvels Wife Swap "Alcorn/ Booker" Reba Reba The Ed Show Hardball With Chris Matthews Hills: Revealed The Hills The Hills Live: A Hollywood Ending Dead Sea Scrolls Nat Geo Amazing! Brainsurge SpongeBob Big Time Rush Big Time Rush "Just Friends"

('05,Com) Amy Smart, Anna Faris, Ryan Reynolds.

HALL M*A*S*H HIST LIFE MSNBC

MTV NG NICK OXY i

8:00

8:30

9:00

9:30

Wash. Week Need to Know Shanghai 2010 "The Jensen Project" (P) ('10) Brady Smith, Justin Kelly, Kellie Martin. 48 Hours Mystery Medium "Who's That Girl?" Wife Swap "McLeish/ O'Dell" Primetime: What Would You Do? House "Private Lives" The Good Guys "Small Rooms" "Ghost Ship" ('02) Julianna Margulies, Ron Eldard, Gabriel Byrne.

10:00

10:30

11:00

11:30

Charlie Rose Off the Record McLaughlin Dateline NBC News (:35)Tonight Show Flashpoint "Unconditional Love" News (:35)D. Letterman 20/20 News/(:05)Acc.Jim (:35)Nightline FOX 32 News Access H. King of the Hill South Park "Ghost Ship" ('02) Julianna Margulies, Ron Eldard, Gabriel Byrne.

Amer. Justice "The Brothers Kimble" The First 48 Criminal Minds "P911" Criminal Minds "The Perfect Storm" Criminal Minds "Aftermath" The Glades "Pilot" Last Cowboys "Branding the Legacy" Whale Wars "Stealth Attack" Whale Wars "The Thrill of the Chase" Whale Wars "Sliced in Two" River Monsters "Amazon Assassins" Whale Wars "Sliced in Two" The Real Housewives of New Jersey Housewives NJ "Bubbies Gone Bad" Housewives NJ "Porsche Spite" Housewives NJ "Country Clubbed" Housewives NJ "Country Clubbed" Bethenny "Let Me Eat Cake!" World's Strictest Parents Extreme Makeover: Home Edition The Singing Bee The Singing Bee The Singing Bee The Singing Bee Mad Money The Kudlow Report CNBC Special The Last Days of Lehman Brothers American Greed: Scams, Scoundrels and Scandals (5:00)The Situation Room John King, USA Campbell Brown Larry King Live Anderson Cooper 360 Scrubs Scrubs The Daily Show Colbert Report Tosh. O Comedy Presents Comedy Presents Comedy Presents Comedy Presents Comedy Presents Russell Simmons Russell Simmons World's Wildest Police Videos Cops Cops Most Shocking Most Shocking Forensic Files Forensic Files Forensic Files Forensic Files King of Queens King of Queens That '70s Show That '70s Show Smallville "Warrior" Supernatural Married, Children Married, Children Roseanne Roseanne Cash Cab Cash Cab Nature's Deadliest Pig Bomb Man, Woman, Wild "Amazon" Dual Survival "Swamped" Pig Bomb Wizards Wizards Wizards Wizards Life on Deck Wizards Phineas and Ferb Phineas and Ferb Wizards Wizards Life on Deck Wizards Cool Tools Reno Realities Yard Crashers Yard Crashers Man Caves Garage Mahal Turf War "Waterscapes" Desp.Land. Indoors Out Reno Realities Land/Const Pretty Wild Pretty Wild E! News The Daily 10 Extreme Dr. 90210 Jerseylicious The Soup The Soup Chelsea Lately E! News SportsCenter Golf The Open Championship PGA Site: St. Andrews Links -- Fife, Scotland To Be Announced SportsCenter Around the Horn Interruption Soccer Site: BMO Field -- Toronto, Ont. Live Boxing Judah vs. Cruz Site: Prudential Center -- Newark, N.J. Live Golf American Century Celebrity Champ. That '70s Show That '70s Show America's Funniest Home Videos America's Funniest Home Videos America's Funniest Home Videos The 700 Club Namaste Total Body Sculpt Pyramid Upper Body Discovery Health Body Challenge FITTV's Housecalls Rebuilt: Human Shop "Game of Life" Discovery Health Body Challenge French Food Chef at Home Ricardo Bitchin' Kitchen Chef Off! Thirsty Traveler The Wild Chef Throwdown Diners, Drive-Ins Diners, Drive-Ins Chef Off! Thirsty Traveler News FOX Report The O'Reilly Factor Hannity's America On the Record with Greta The O'Reilly Factor Tigers Weekly Pre-Game Live Baseball Detroit Tigers vs. Cleveland Indians MLB Site: Progressive Field -- Cleveland, Ohio Live Post-game Live The Final Score The Game 365 The Final Score Malcolm-Middle "Beowulf"

(2007,Action) Anthony Hopkins, Angelina Jolie, Robin Wright. Rescue Me "Comeback" "Aliens vs. Predator: Requiem"

('07) Steven Pasquale.

GAME Newlywed Game Baggage HGTV

Pisces (Feb. 19-March 20) — Today is a 9 — You want to be far away in some exotic locale. Get your work done today and plan that trip in between meetings. Keep the cost in mind.

JULY 16, 2010 6:00

WCML-WCMU / PBS WPBN-WTOM / NBC WWTV-WWUP / CBS WGTU-WGTQ / ABC WFUP / FOX AMERICAN M OVIE CLASSICS ARTS & ENTERTAINMENT ANIMAL PLANET BRAVO COUNTRY MUSIC TV

out who’s willing to participate. Allow others to work independently, until they get curious. Aquarius (Jan. 20-Feb. 18) — Today is an 8 — Ignore the rest of the world, get with a few friends, and lay back. You all deserve a break today. This is what we call a mental health day.

M*A*S*H

Family Feud Family Feud Newlywed Game Baggage 1 vs. 100 Deal or No Deal Touched By An Angel Golden Girls Golden Girls "The King and Queen of Moonlight Bay"

('03) Tim Matheson. Outdoor Room Curb: Block Sarah's House C. Splash: Miami House Hunters House Hunters HGTV Design Star "Flower Power" Modern Marvels "Super Steam" Gangland "Dead Man Inc." Gangland "Public Enemy #1" Gangland "A Killer's Revenge" Reba Reba Will & Grace "Spring Breakdown" ('08) Parker Posey, Rachel Dratch, Amy Poehler. Will & Grace Countdown With Keith Olbermann The Rachel Maddow Show Lockup Lockup "Inside Indiana State Prison" True Life True Life "Freedom Writers"

('07) Patrick Dempsey, Hilary Swank. The Dog Whisperer Sea Turtle Odyssey Bermuda Triangle The Dog Whisperer Big Time Rush The Troop Hates Chris George Lopez George Lopez Glenn Martin Hates Chris Hates Chris "Definitely, Maybe"

('08,Comedy/Drama) Elizabeth Banks, Isla Fisher, Ryan Reynolds. "Definitely, Maybe"

('08) Ryan Reynolds.

Ghost Whisperer "No Safe Place"

Without a Trace "Trip Box" Without a Trace "Moving On" Without a Trace "Coming Home" Without a Trace "Exposure" Without a Trace Haven "Welcome to Haven" Eureka "Founder's Day" Eureka "A New World" Haven "Consumed" Eureka "A New World" Days of Our Lives The Young and the Restless All My Children One Life to Live General Hospital Days of Our Lives Race in 60 "Chicago" Truck Racing Camping World Truck Series NASCAR Live NCWTS Live Truck Racing Camping World 200 NASCAR Live Mobil 1 The Grid Sports Crash Knockout Sports CSI: Crime Scene "Let It Bleed" CSI: Crime "Leave Out All the Rest" Knockout Sports Knockout Sports Knockout Sports Knockout Sports Knockout Sports Knockout Sports King of Queens King of Queens Seinfeld Seinfeld (:50)NeighborHell "Shrek the Third"

('07) Eddie Murphy, Cameron Diaz, Mike Myers. (:55) "Shrek the Third"

('07) Mike Myers. (:45) "Jeopardy"

('52) Barbara Stanwyck. Movie "Freaks"

('32) Roscoe Ates. (:15) "Circus of Horrors" ('60) Anton Diffring, Donald Pleasence. "Circus of Fear" ('67)

SCIFI Stargate: SG-1 SOAP SPEED SPIKE TBS TCM TLC TMC TNT

Cake Boss Cake Boss Battle of the Wedding Designers (:20) "Charlie Bartlett"

('07) Robert Downey Jr, Anton Yelchin.

Law & Order "Fixed" Bones Adventure Time Drama Island Batman: B&B Ben 10 Generator Rex Star Wars: Clone Star Wars: Clone King of the Hill MoralOrel Metalocalypse AquaTeen Extreme Conventions Man vs. Food Man vs. Food Man vs. Food Man vs. Food Ghost Adventures Ghost Stories Ghost Stories Most Haunted All in the Family All in the Family Sanford and Son Sanford and Son The Cosby Show The Cosby Show Raymond Raymond Raymond Raymond Roseanne (:35)Roseanne NCIS "Reveille" NCIS "Faking It" Law & Order: S.V.U. "Infiltrated" Law & Order: S.V.U. "Paternity" Law & Order: S.V.U. "Serendipity" "Welcome Home, Roscoe Jenk... Behind the Music "Eve" Behind the Music "Lil Wayne" Behind the Music "50 Cent" The T.O Show Ochocinco "The Ultimate Catch" Friday Night You're Cut Off (5:00)Cycling Tour de France Whacked Out Whacked Out Cycling Tour de France The Daily Line Charmed "Chick Flick" Charmed "The Fourth Sister" Charmed Charmed "The Witch is Back" Charmed "Wicca Envy" Charmed "Feats of Clay" from July 15 Becker Becker America's Funniest Home Videos Christmas Videos Scrubs Scrubs "Sideways"

('04,Com/Dra) Thomas Hayden Church, Virginia Madsen, Paul Giamatti. (:20) "Down Periscope"

('95) Lauren Holly, Kelsey Grammer. Movie "Lakeview Terrace"

('08) Patrick Wilson, Samuel L. Jackson. "Don't Be A Menace To South Central" ('96) (5:00) "Get Smart"

('08) Hung "Behind Enemy Lines"

('01) Gene Hackman, Owen Wilson. "Funny People"

(2009,Comedy/Drama) Seth Rogen, Leslie Mann, Adam Sandler.

(5:30) "Excess Baggage"

('97) (:15)Boxing Juan Manuel Marquez "Death Race" ('08,Act) Joan Allen, Tyrese Gibson, Jason Statham. Real Sports With Bryant Gumbel True Blood "9 Crimes" (:15) "A Perfect Getaway"

('09) Timothy Olyphant, Steve Zahn. Movie "Uncommon Valor"

('83) Gene Hackman. "Night at the Museum: Battle of the Smithsonian" (:45)Confidential (5:30) "Hard Ball"

('01) Keanu Reeves. (:25) "Extract"

('09) Mila Kunis, Jason Bateman. The Real L Word Penn & Teller.. The Green Room ShoBox: The New Generation (5:00) "G.I. Jane"

('97) (:10) "Bedtime Stories"

('08) Keri Russell, Guy Pearce, Adam Sandler. "Law Abiding Citizen"

('09) Jamie Foxx. (:50) "The House Bunny"

('08) Anna Faris.

TOON Johnny Test TRAV TVL USA VH1 VS WE WGN ENC HBO HBO2 MAX SHOW STARZ

Say Yes-Dress Say Yes-Dress Say Yes-Dress Say Yes-Dress DC Cupcakes DC Cupcakes Say Yes-Dress Say Yes-Dress Movie "Deal" (2008,Drama) Bret Harrison, Burt Reynolds. "The Score"

('01) Edward Norton, Marlon Brando, Robert De Niro. "Collateral"

(2004,Thriller) Jamie Foxx, Jada Pinkett Smith, Tom Cruise. "Collateral"

('04) Jamie Foxx, Tom Cruise.


B6

Friday, July 16, 2010 •

Tea Table Meetings

SUNDAY, JULY 18

Petoskey Duplicate Bridge Club meets at 1:30 p.m. on Sundays at 2144 Cemetery Road, Petoskey (behind Lowe’s). All players welcome. Visit www.petoskeybridgeclub.com or call (231) 3471258 for information.

MONDAY, JULY 19

Boyne City Rotary Club meets at 6 p.m. Monday at Robert’s Restaurant in Boyne City.

Lions Club will meet at noon Monday at Stafford’s Weathervane restaurant, Charlevoix.

Petoskey Lions Club will meet at 6:30 p.m. Monday at Southwoods in Petoskey.

Harbor Duplicate Bridge Club meets 10 a.m. Monday at 7196 Pleasantview Road, Harbor Springs. Everyone welcome. Singles call if you need a partner. Call first, (231) 526-5988.

Indian River Striders (IRS) are inviting all walkers and runners to join them for fitness, exercise, motivation 9 a.m. on Mondays, Wednesdays and Fridays at the Indian River Chamber of Commerce, walking a brisk 4 miles usually on the North Central State Bicycle Trail. Running is continuing at 6 p.m. on Mondays. For information call (231) 238-8930 or (231) 238-1029

The Compassionate Friends, Safe Harbor Chapter, provides support to parents who have experienced the death of a child or adult sibling. The chapter meets the third Monday of every month at Hiland Cottage in Petoskey. For information call Susan Conklin at (231) 582-7897 or JoAnn Locke at (231) 347-8487.

TUESDAY, JULY 20

Harbor Springs Chapter of BNI (Business Networking International) meets 7-8:30 a.m. every Tuesday at the Harbor Springs City Hall. Free breakfast. For more information, call Shaun Osborne at Ameriprise Financial Services, Inc., at (231) 439-0911.

The Petoskey Running Club will meet 6 p.m. every Tuesday at the clock tower in Petoskey’s Bayfront Park. There is no set distance or fitness level required. Everyone is welcome to join, and it’s free. For more information, contact Christina Rohn at (231) 439-9398, or e-mail her at crohn@petoskeynews.com

Petoskey Duplicate Bridge Club meets 10 a.m. Tuesdays at 2144 Cemetery Road, Petoskey. Players with 0-99 points welcome. Visit www.PetoskeyBridgeClub.com or call 3471258 for information.

Harbor Duplicate Bridge Club meets 6:30 p.m.Tuesday at 7196 Pleasantview Road, Harbor Springs. Everyone welcome. Singles call if you need a partner. Call first, (231) 526-5988.

Northern Michigan People for Peace meets 7 p.m. the third Tuesday of the month at Horizon Books in Petoskey. Call (231) 348-5499 or (231) 547-2626.

Straits Area Amateur Radio Club meets 7:30 p.m. the third Tuesday of each month in Petoskey High School, room 106. The meetings are open to the public and anyone who has an interest in amateur radio is encouraged to attend. For more information, contact club president, DeWayne Holmes, KC8LJX, (231) 348-9626, or John Felton, KC8VXI, (231) 347-1470.

Miscellaneous

Hospice of Little Traverse Bay offers grief and loss support groups throughout the year in both Emmet and Charlevoix counties. These two-hour groups run for six consecutive weeks with both daytime and evening groups available. Other services include individual and family counseling for adults and children, educational in services, pregnancy and infant loss support program, survivors of suicide and caregiver support groups. These services are provided free of charge through community contributions. Call See TEA TABLE on PAGE B7

SATURDAY AFTERNOON 12:00 WCML-WCMU / PBS WPBN-WTOM / NBC WWTV-WWUP / CBS WGTU-WGTQ / ABC WFUP / FOX AMERICAN MOVIE CL. ARTS & ENTERTAINMENT ANIMAL PLANET BRAVO CONSUMER NEWS CABLE NEWS NETWORK COURT TV CW DISCOVERY DISNEY ENT. SPORTS ENT. SPORTS 2 FAMILY CHANNEL FOX SPORTS DETROIT FOX NEWS CHANNEL FX HALLMARK HOME & GARDEN HISTORY CHANNEL LIFETIME MSNBC MUSIC TV NATIONAL GEOGRAPHIC NICKELODEON SCIENCE FICTION SOAPNET SPEED CHANNEL SPIKE TV SUPER STATION LEARNING CHANNEL TURNER NETWORK TV TRAVEL USA NETWORK VIDEO HITS VERSUS HOME BOX OFFICE HOME BOX OFFICE 2 CINEMAX SHOWTIME

K

AMC A&E AP BRAVO CNBC CNN CRT CW DISC DISN ESPN ESPN2 FAM FSD FNC FX HALL HGTV HIST LIFE MSNBC MTV NG NICK SCIFI SOAP SPEED SPIKE TBS TLC TNT TRAV USA VH1 VS HBO HBO2 MAX SHOW

JULY 17, 2010 12:30

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3:00

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AMC A&E AP BRAVO CNBC CNN CRT CW DISC DISN ESPN ESPN2 FAM FNC FSD FX HALL HGTV HIST LIFE MSNBC MTV NG NICK SCIFI SOAP SPEED TBS TLC TNT TRAV USA VH1 VS HBO HBO2 MAX SHOW

JULY 17, 2010 6:30

7:00

7:30

8:00

8:30

9:00

9:30

10:00

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12:00 K

AMC A&E AP BRAVO CNBC CNN CRT CW DISC DISN ESPN ESPN2 FAM FSD FNC FX HALL HGTV HIST LIFE MSNBC MTV NG NICK SCIFI SOAP SPEED SPIKE TBS TLC TNT TRAV USA VH1 VS HBO HBO2 MAX SHOW

1:00

1:30

2:00

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3:00

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AMC A&E AP BRAVO CNBC CNN CRT CW DISC DISN ESPN ESPN2 FAM FNC FSD FX HALL HGTV HIST LIFE MSNBC MTV NG NICK SCIFI SOAP SPEED TBS TLC TNT TRAV USA VH1 VS HBO HBO2 MAX SHOW

5:00

5:30

Off the Record McLaughlin Euro. Journal Religion News This Is America Need to Know Global Voices "The Beetle" The Way Bobby Sees It Eating in Place Paid Program Hunters Outdoor Mag. Paid Program Open House Homeowner Golf American Century Championship PGA Site: Edgewood Tahoe -- Lake Tahoe, Nev. Live To Be Announced To Be Announced Paid Program Auto Racing Indy Toronto IRL Site: Streets of Toronto -- Toronto, Ont. Live Golf The Open Championship PGA Site: St. Andrews Links -- Fife, Scotland Paid Program TBA To Be Announced To Be Announced "Frida"

(2002,Biography) Alfred Molina, Valeria Golino, Salma Hayek. (11:45) "Executive Decision"

('96,Action) Steven Seagal, Halle Berry, Kurt Russell. (:45) "Eraser"

('96,Act) Vanessa L. Williams, James Coburn, Arnold Schwarzenegger. (:15) "Thunderheart"

('92) The Glades "Pilot" Criminal Minds "What Fresh Hell?" Criminal Minds "The Tribe" Criminal Minds "Legacy" Criminal Minds Criminal Minds "Doubt" Wild Kingdom "Tigerhounds" Unexplained, Unexplored Whale Wars "Crossing Danger" Whale Wars "From Hell's Heart" Whale Wars "Stealth Attack" Whale Wars Top Chef "Room Service" Top Chef "Farm Policy" Kathy G: My Life Bethenny "Let Me Eat Cake!" Bethenny "So Hoppy Together" Bethenny Getting Married? Paid Program Paid Program Paid Program Paid Program Paid Program Paid Program Paid Program Paid Program Paid Program Paid Program Paid Program Paid Program State of the Union Fareed Zakaria GPS Christiane Amanpour Your $$$$$ CNN Newsroom Christiane Amanpour Most Daring Most Daring Most Daring Most Daring Most Daring Most Daring "Crashed & Smashed" Edgemont Edgemont Smash Cuts Smash Cuts "An Unfinished Life"

('05) Morgan Freeman, Robert Redford. "Antwone Fisher"

('02) Denzel Washington, Derek Luke. Dirty Jobs "Vomit Island Workers" Dirty Jobs "Sled Dog Breeder" Dirty Jobs "Dirty Chip Maker" Dirty Jobs "Leech Trapper" Dirty Jobs Dirty Jobs "Rocky Reach Dam" Wizards Wizards Good Luck Sonny Chance H. Montana H. Montana Wizards "16 Wishes" ('10) Jean-Luc Bilodeau, Debby Ryan. (:40)Good Luck (:05)Wizards (8:00)Golf The Open Championship PGA Live SportsCenter Soccer International Friendly Site: Qwest Field -- Seattle, Wash. Live Poker '09 World Series WPT (10:00)Sports Baseball T. Live NHRA Race Day Pirates of the F Grateful Nation Browning Exp. Grateful Nation Browning Exp. The ESPY Awards (10:30) "Miss Congeniality" ('00) "Hope Floats"

(1998,Romance) Harry Connick Jr., Gena Rowlands, Sandra Bullock. "Two Weeks Notice"

('02) Hugh Grant, Sandra Bullock. Movie Tigers Weekly Pre-Game Live Baseball Detroit Tigers vs. Cleveland Indians MLB Site: Progressive Field -- Cleveland, Ohio Live The Game 365 Golden Age Head to Head Head to Head News Fox News On the Record America's News HQ (11:00) "Taxi" ('04) "Big Momma's House"

('00) Nia Long, Martin Lawrence. "Big Momma's House 2" (2006,Comedy) Nia Long, Martin Lawrence. (:15) "Front of the Class" (2008,True Story) Treat Williams, Jimmy Wolk, Patricia Heaton. "Plainsong" ('04) Rachel Griffiths, Aidan Quinn. "The Valley of Light" ('06) Gretchen Mol, Chris Klein. House Hunters House Hunters My First Sale My First Place Real Estate Selling NY Bang For Buck Get It Sold House Hunters House Hunters HGTV Design Star "Flower Power" Prehistoric Monsters Revealed Death Masks The Real Face of Jesus? (11:00) "Brave New Girl" ('04) "Then She Found Me"

('07) Colin Firth, Bette Midler. "Twelve Mile Road"

('03) Wendy Crewson, Tom Selleck. "In the Land of Women" ('07) Murder on Lovers Lane Buried Secrets Meet the Press Nightmare Behind Closed Doors Escape From the Past? To Catch A Killer Teen Mom "How Many Chances?" Teen Mom "Fallout" Teen Mom "Moving On" Teen Mom "A Little Help" Teen Mom "Standing Up" Teen Mom "Baby Steps" Shipwreck! "Captain Kidd" Titanic: The Final Secret Herod's Lost Tomb The First Jesus? The Real George Washington Giant Crystal Cave iCarly iCarly iCarly iCarly Big Time Rush Big Time Rush Penguins Fanboy Chum SpongeBob SpongeBob iCarly iCarly (11:00) "The Hive"

('07) "Vipers" ('08,Horror) Jonathan Scarfe, Corbin Bernsen, Tara Reid. "Black Swarm"

('07) Sebastien Roberts, Robert Englund. "Swamp Devil"

('08) Bev.Hills 90210 "Bobbi Dearest" Gilmore Girls Gilmore Girls "The Great Stink" One Tree Hill One Tree Hill One Tree Hill "Life is Short" (11:00)Racing Dunlop Townsville 400 Auto Racing Rolex Sports Car Series Site: New Jersey Motorsports Park -- Millville, New Jersey Motocross Pro 250 AMA Motocross Pro 450 AMA Trucks! MuscleCar Jail UFC Unleashed UFC Unleashed "Matt Hughes" "Stuck On You"

(2003,Comedy) Greg Kinnear, Eva Mendes, Matt Damon. (10:45) "Secondhand Lions" ('03) Baseball Tampa Bay Rays vs. New York Yankees MLB Site: Yankee Stadium -- Bronx, N.Y. Live (:05) "RV"

('06) Cheryl Hines, Joanna Levesque, Robin Williams. Police Women of Memphis Female Lock Up "I Told the Truth!" Hoarding "Family Secrets" Hoarding "Beyond Embarrassment" Hoarding "Filling the Void" Hoarding "Paralyzed by Clutter" (11:00) "Four Brothers" ('05) "American Gangster"

(2007,Crime Story) Russell Crowe, Chiwetel Ejiofor, Denzel Washington. "Collateral"

('04) Jamie Foxx, Jada Pinkett Smith, Tom Cruise. Wild China "Heart of the Dragon" Wild China "Shangri La" Wild China Wild China "Land of the Panda" Natural Wonders 1/2 cont'd next Earth's Natural Wonders Pt. 2 of 2 (11:30)Royal P Burn Notice "Entry Point" "The Dukes of Hazzard" ('05) Seann William Scott, Johnny Knoxville. "Welcome Home Roscoe Jenkins" (2008,Comedy) (11:30)Ochocinco The T.O Show Bridal Bootcamp You're Cut Off "The Temptations"

(1998,Biography) DB Woodside, Christian Payton, Terron Brooks. Cycling Tour de France Racer TV Cycling Tour de France Whacked Out Cycling Tour de France (11:45)A Small Act (:15)Watch Movie "The Mummy: Tomb of the Dragon Emperor"

('08) "Spider-Man"

('02) Willem Dafoe, Tobey Maguire. (11:30)True Blood "Away We Go"

('09) John Krasinski. (:15)First Look Kevorkian Boxing After Dark "Ghost Town"

('08) Ricky Gervais. (11:35) "Jennifer's Body" ('09) (:20) "Barb Wire" ('95) Temuera Morrison, Pamela Anderson. "Held Up" ('00) Jamie Foxx, Nia Long. "Hellboy 2: The Golden Army"

('08) (:10)Bigger, Stronger, Faster "The Side Effects of Being American" (:25) "Extract"

('09) Jason Bateman. "Superhero Movie" ('08) Drake Bell. "Scary Movie 2" ('01)

JULY 18, 2010

6:00 K

11:30

JULY 18, 2010 12:30

SUNDAY EVENING WCML-WCMU / PBS WPBN-WTOM / NBC WWTV-WWUP / CBS WGTU-WGTQ / ABC WFUP / FOX AMERICAN MOVIE CL. ARTS & ENTERTAINMENT ANIMAL PLANET BRAVO CONSUMER NEWS CABLE NEWS NETWORK COURT TV CW DISCOVERY DISNEY ENT. SPORTS ENT. SPORTS 2 FAMILY CHANNEL FOX NEWS CHANNEL FOX SPORTS DETROIT FX HALLMARK HOME & GARDEN HISTORY CHANNEL LIFETIME MSNBC MUSIC TV NATIONAL GEOGRAPHIC NICKELODEON SCIENCE FICTION SOAPNET SPEED CHANNEL SUPER STATION LEARNING CHANNEL TURNER NETWORK TV TRAVEL USA NETWORK VIDEO HITS VERSUS HOME BOX OFFICE HOME BOX OFFICE 2 CINEMAX SHOWTIME

11:00

Antiques Roadshow The Lawrence Welk Show (:35)Bonaparte (:05)Austin City Limits "Aimee Mann/ Iron & Wine" "Royal Wedding"

('51) Jane Powell. News NBC News Wheel of Jeopardy! Persons Unknown "The Truth" Law & Order: C.I. "Broad Channel" Law & Order: C.I. "Love on Ice" News Sat. Night Live News Evening News Paid Program Paid Program The Bridge CSI: Crime Scene Investigation 48 Hours Mystery News 2 1/2 Men Paid Program World News CSI: Miami America's Funniest Home Videos Wipeout "Welcome Back America" Castle "Suicide Squeeze" Desperate Housewives (4:00)Baseball MLB Live House Cops Cops America Most Wanted Legend of the Seeker The Wanda Sykes Show (5:00) "The Cowboys"

('72) Bruce Dern, John Wayne. Movie "Troy"

(2004,Action) Orlando Bloom, Eric Bana, Brad Pitt. Family Jewel Family Jewel Family Jewel Family Jewel Family Jewel Family Jewel Family Jewel Family Jewel Family Jewel Family Jewel Family Jewel Family Jewel Pit Boss "Home Sweet Home" Pit Boss "Ashley's Big Adventure" Last Chance Highway Pit Boss Pit Boss "The Boss is Back" Pit Boss "The Boss is Back" House "Hunting" House "The Mistake" House "Deception" House "Failure to Communicate" House "Need to Know" House "Distractions" Paid Program Paid Program CNBC Special American Greed: Scam Suze Orman "Lighten Your Load" Debt do Us Part Debt do Us Part American Greed: Scam The Situation Room CNN Newsroom Campbell Brown Larry King Live CNN Newsroom CNN Newsroom Most Shocking Smoking Gun Presents Smoking Gun Presents Smoking Gun Presents It Only Hurts It Only Hurts Forensic Files Forensic Files American Idol Rewind "Top 10" That '70s Show That '70s Show Reba cont'd next Reba Pt. 2 of 2 King of Queens King of Queens Married, Child Married, Child "The List"

('00) Wild Pacific "Strange Evolution" Wild Pacific "Eat Or Be Eaten" Powering the Future Power Future "The Energy Planet" MythBusters "Dumpster Diving" Powering the Future Hannah Montana Life on Deck Life on Deck H. Montana Good Luck JONAS L.A. JONAS L.A. Hannah Montana JONAS L.A. JONAS L.A. SportsCenter Golf The Open Championship PGA Site: St. Andrews Links -- Fife, Scotland To Be Announced SportsCenter Drag Race Sportsman Series NHRA NASCAR Countdown Live Auto Racing Missouri-Illinois Dodge Dealers 250 NASCAR -- St. Louis, Mo. Live Drag Racing Nationals NHRA (4:30) "Hope Floats"

('98) "Practical Magic"

(1998,Fantasy) Sandra Bullock, Dianne Wiest, Nicole Kidman. "Two Weeks Notice"

('02) Hugh Grant, Sandra Bullock. "Blue Crush" America's News HQ FOX Report Saturday Huckabee On the Record Geraldo at Large Huckabee FOX News Tigers Weekly Pre-Game Live Baseball Detroit Tigers vs. Cleveland Indians MLB Site: Progressive Field -- Cleveland, Ohio Live Post-game Live The Final Score Tigers Weekly The Final Score "Big Momma's House 2" ('06,Com) Nia Long, Martin Lawrence. "Alvin and the Chipmunks"

('07) David Cross, Jason Lee. "Man of the House"

('05) Tommy Lee Jones. (5:00) "Safe Harbor"

('09) "Dad's Home" (2010,Drama) Sharon Case, David James Elliot. (:40) "Jack's Family Adventure" ('09) "Jack's Family Adventure" ('09) Designed to Sell Designed to Sell House Hunters House Hunters Divine Design Sarah's House Dear Genevieve Curb: Block C Spl: Miami House Hunters House Hunters House Hunters (5:00)Banned From the Bible II Afraid of the Dark Chasing Mummies "Stuck" Modern Marvels (5:00) "Live Once, Die Twice" Army Wives "Change of Station" "Deadly Honeymoon" ('10,Drama) Chris Carmack, Summer Glau. "P.S. I Love You"

('07) Gerard Butler, Hilary Swank. (5:00)Confessions of BTK A Murderous Obsession Lockup "Holman: The Shakedown" Lockup Lockup Lockup (5:30)Hills: End Hills: Revealed The Real World: New Orleans Fantasy Factory Fantasy Factory RJ Berger RJ Berger Pranked Pranked Pranked Pranked Hooked "Vampire Fish" Explorer "Fatal Insomnia" Great White "First Catch" Great White "Big Mama" Great White "Blood in the Water" Great White "First Catch" SpongeBob SpongeBob iCarly iCarly iCarly True Jackson Big Time Rush Victorious George Lopez George Lopez George Lopez George Lopez (5:00) "Jeepers Creepers" ('01) "The Ferryman"

('07) Kerry Fox, John Rhys-Davies. "Goblin" (2010,Sci-Fi) "The Pumpkin Karver" ('06) Gilmore Girls "The Great Stink" The Young and the Restless The Young and the Restless The Young and the Restless The Young and the Restless The Young and the Restless (5:00)Auto Racing World of Outlaws -- Sarver, Pa. Racing Auto Racing Legends Million Site: Charlotte Motor Speedway -- Charlotte, N.C. Superbike AMA -- Lexington, Ohio Seinfeld Seinfeld King of Queens King of Queens "Shrek 2"

('04) Voices of Eddie Murphy, Mike Myers. (:55)Family Guy (:25)Family Guy (:55) "Jersey Girl" ('04) Toddlers & Tiaras "Darling Divas" Real Life "Sins of the Father" Real Life "Deadly Sanctuary" Dr. G: Examiner "Cruel Intentions" Dr. G: Cases "Deadly Deception" Real Life "Deadly Sanctuary" (5:00) "A Few Good Men"

('92) Demi Moore, Tom Cruise. "American Gangster"

(2007,Crime Story) Russell Crowe, Chiwetel Ejiofor, Denzel Washington. "Four Brothers"

('05) Extreme Resorts Extreme Pools Extreme Waterparks Bert Conqueror Bert Conqueror Bert Conqueror Bert Conqueror Extreme Pools NCIS "Hide and Seek" NCIS "Lost and Found" NCIS "See No Evil" NCIS "Red Cell" NCIS "Pop Life" Covert Affairs "Pilot" (5:00)The T.O Show The T.O Show Ochocinco "The Temptations"

(1998,Biography) DB Woodside, Christian Payton, Terron Brooks. (5:00)Cycling Tour de France Lance Armstrong: The Look Back Cycling Tour de France World Challenge HBO First Look /(:15) "17 Again"

('09) Leslie Mann, Zac Efron. (:45)True Blood "The Invention Of Lying"

('09) Ricky Gervais. (:45)Boxing HBO After Dark Live (5:15) "Max Payne"

('08) Hung Entourage Big Love Enthusiasm (:40)Enthusiasm "X-Men Origins: Wolverine"

('09) Hugh Jackman. (:15) "Miss March" ('09) Trevor Moore. (:45) "Eagle Eye"

('08,Action) Billy Bob Thorton, Michelle Monaghan, Shia LaBeouf. "Jennifer's Body" ('09) Megan Fox. (:45)Confidential "Quantum of Solace"

('08) Olga Kurylenko, Daniel Craig. "Transsiberian"

('08) Emily Mortimer, Woody Harrelson. "Big Fan"

('09) Kevin Corrigan. "The Reader"

SUNDAY AFTERNOON WCML-WCMU / PBS WPBN-WTOM / NBC WWTV-WWUP / CBS WGTU-WGTQ / ABC WFUP / FOX AMERICAN MOVIE CL. ARTS & ENTERTAINMENT ANIMAL PLANET BRAVO CONSUMER NEWS CABLE NEWS NETWORK COURT TV CW DISCOVERY DISNEY ENT. SPORTS ENT. SPORTS 2 FAMILY CHANNEL FOX SPORTS DETROIT FOX NEWS CHANNEL FX HALLMARK HOME & GARDEN HISTORY CHANNEL LIFETIME MSNBC MUSIC TV NATIONAL GEOGRAPHIC NICKELODEON SCIENCE FICTION SOAPNET SPEED CHANNEL SPIKE TV SUPER STATION LEARNING CHANNEL TURNER NETWORK TV TRAVEL USA NETWORK VIDEO HITS VERSUS HOME BOX OFFICE HOME BOX OFFICE 2 CINEMAX SHOWTIME

5:30

Out of Doors America Heart. Motorweek Victory Garden Katie Brown Hometime This Old House Woodwright's America Sews Everyday Food Favorite Foods Greener World Willa's Wild Life Jane & Drag. Paid Program Paid Program Am. Athlete Health Heroes Golf American Century Championship PGA Site: Edgewood Tahoe -- Lake Tahoe, Nev. Live To Be Announced To Be Announced To Be Announced Power Rangers Power Rangers Paid Program Paid Program Wipeout Golf The Open Championship PGA Site: St. Andrews Links -- Fife, Scotland Paid Program Paid Program Cold Case Without a Trace TBA Week Baseball Baseball MLB Live Movie (:45) "Support Your Local Gunfighter"

('71) Jack Elam, James Garner. "Hondo"

('53,West) Geraldine Page, Ward Bond, John Wayne. "The Cowboys"

('72) Drill Team "John and Kirsten" Flip This House "Lethal Weapon 2"

(1989,Action) Danny Glover, Joe Pesci, Mel Gibson. The Glades "Pilot" The Glades "Pilot" Cats 101 Last Chance "Back Porch Puppies" Last Chance "Saving Hope" Pit Boss "Dogged Pursuit" Pit Boss "The Big Dog is Back" Pit Boss "All in the Family" America's Next Top Model America's Next Top Model America's Next Top Model America's Next Top Model America's Next Top Model America's Next Top Model Paid Program Paid Program Paid Program Paid Program Paid Program Paid Program Paid Program Paid Program Paid Program Paid Program Paid Program Paid Program CNN Newsroom Your $$$$$ CNN Newsroom CNN Newsroom CNN Newsroom CNN Newsroom Hot Pursuit Hot Pursuit Hot Pursuit Hot Pursuit Most Daring Most Daring Most Shocking Most Shocking Edgemont Edgemont Dead Like Me "In Escrow" Cold Squad "Deadbeat Walking" "The Cave"

('05,Hor) Eddie Cibrian, Piper Perabo, Cole Hauser. Smash Cuts Smash Cuts NaturesAmazing "Arctic Summer" Nature's Most Amazing Events NaturesAmazing "Kalahari Flood" Wild Pacific "Fragile Paradise" Wild Pacific "Survivors" Wild Pacific "A Fiery Birth" Wizards Wizards Good Luck Sonny Chance H. Montana H. Montana H. Montana H. Montana H. Montana H. Montana Wizards Wizards (9:00)Golf The Open Championship PGA Site: St. Andrews Links -- Fife, Scotland Live ESPNews Poker '09 World Series Soccer International Friendly -- Santa Clara, Calif. Live 30 for 30 "The Two Escobars" Baseball Home Run Derby Site: Angel Stadium -- Anaheim, Calif. Racing Missouri-Illinois Dodge Dealers 250 NASCAR Live (11:30) "Dirty Dancing"

('87) Jennifer Grey, Patrick Swayze. "Miss Congeniality"

('00,Comedy) Michael Caine, Benjamin Bratt, Sandra Bullock. "Hope Floats"

('98) Sandra Bullock. Tigers Weekly Tigers Weekly Baseball Detroit Tigers vs. Cleveland Indians MLB Site: Progressive Field -- Cleveland, Ohio Live Post-game Live Spartan Sports Air Racing World Championship America's News HQ America's News HQ Journal Edit. FOX News Glenn Beck America's News HQ "Money Talks"

('97) Chris Tucker, Charlie Sheen. "Taxi" ('04,Com) Jimmy Fallon, Henry Simmons, Queen Latifah. "Big Momma's House"

('00) Nia Long, Martin Lawrence. (11:00) "Dad's Home" ('10) "You've Got a Friend"

('07) Bitty Schram, John Schneider. "The King and Queen of Moonlight Bay"

('03) "Safe Harbor"

('09) Designed to Sell Designed to Sell The Unsellables Get It Sold Curb: Block Design on Dime Colour Conf. Bang For Buck Divine Design Sarah's House Dear Genevieve C Spl: Miami To Be Announced American Pickers "Super Scooter" Pawn Stars Pawn Stars Banned From the Bible II (11:00) "A Daughter's Convict... "Taken in Broad Daylight" ('09) James Van Der Beek, Sara Canning. "Unstable" ('09,Thril) Kathy Baker, Shiri Appleby, Charlotte Sullivan. "Live Once, Die Twice" ('05) The Mysterious Music Man A Shot in the Dark Dead Men Talking "Final Exit" Vanished Death in the Hollywood Hills Confessions of BTK The Hills Hills: Hollywood End The Real World: New Orleans When I Was 17 When I Was 17 When I Was 17 When I Was 17 When I Was 17 The Hills Hills: Ending Hooked "Monster Fish" Hooked "The Long Haul" Hooked "More Monster Fish" Hooked "Caught Bare-Handed" Hooked "Combat Fishing" Hooked "Fishzilla" The Troop Big Time Rush iCarly Big Time Rush Drake & Josh Drake & Josh Penguins Penguins Fanboy Chum Fanboy Chum SpongeBob SpongeBob (11:00) "Beowulf"

('07) "Boogeyman" ('05) Emily Deschanel, Barry Watson. "Rise of the Gargoyles" ('08) Nick Mancuso, Eric Balfour. "Jeepers Creepers"

('01) One Tree Hill Beverly Hills 90210 Bev.Hills 90210 "Survival Skills" Bev.Hills 90210 "Slipping Away" Bev.Hills 90210 "Bobbi Dearest" Gilmore Girls Race in 60 "New Hampshire" Race in 60 "Daytona" Race in 60 "Chicago" Test Drive Lucas Oil Edge Off-Road Racing Lucas Oil Auto Racing World of Outlaws Trucks! MuscleCar "Aliens"

(1986,Sci-Fi) Michael Biehn, Lance Henniksen, Sigourney Weaver. "Die Another Day"

('02) Halle Berry, Pierce Brosnan. (11:25) "Cheaper by the Dozen"

('03) (:25) "Jersey Girl" ('04) Raquel Castro, George Carlin, Ben Affleck. According to Jim Raymond Raymond Raymond Raymond Beekman Boys Beekman Boys Say Yes-Dress Say Yes-Dress DC Cupcakes DC Cupcakes Toddlers/Tiara "Winter Beauties" Toddlers & Tiaras Toddlers & Tiaras "The Guardian"

(2006,Drama) Kevin Costner, Sela Ward, Ashton Kutcher. "The Fugitive"

(1993,Thriller) Sela Ward, Tommy Lee Jones, Harrison Ford. "A Few Good Men" ('92) Extreme Terror Rides Extreme Terror Rides Extreme Mindblowing Hotels Extreme Conventions Extreme Truck Stops Extreme Towns (11:30)Covert Affairs "Pilot" NCIS "Escaped" NCIS "Witch Hunt" NCIS "Family" NCIS "Honor Code" NCIS "Bikini Wax" (11:00)Ochocinco The T.O Show The OCD Project You're Cut Off You're Cut Off You're Cut Off Bridal Bootcamp The T.O Show Cycling Tour de France Sports Jobs Cycling Tour de France Whacked Out Cycling Tour de France (11:00)No One (:15) "Nights in Rodanthe"

('08) Richard Gere, Diane Lane. "Inkheart"

('08) Sienna Guillory, Eliza Bennett, Brendan Fraser. "All About Steve"

('09) Sandra Bullock.

Movie Hung ('07) Vince Vaughn, Paul Giamatti. Entourage ('89) (:15) "Max Payne"

('08) "Fred Claus" "The Mighty Quinn" (:45) "Four Christmases"

('09) "The Substitute IV: Failure Is Not an Option" "Dragonball Evolution" ('09) Justin Chatwin. "Renegades"

('89) Kiefer Sutherland. (11:15) "The Answer Man" ('09) "Valkyrie"

(2008,War) Kenneth Branagh, Bill Nighy, Tom Cruise. Penn & Teller.. The Green Room "A Walk on the Moon"

('98) Diane Lane, Viggo Mortensen.

SATURDAY EVENING WCML-WCMU / PBS WPBN-WTOM / NBC WWTV-WWUP / CBS WGTU-WGTQ / ABC WFUP / FOX AMERICAN MOVIE CL. ARTS & ENTERTAINMENT ANIMAL PLANET BRAVO CONSUMER NEWS CABLE NEWS NETWORK COURT TV CW DISCOVERY DISNEY ENT. SPORTS ENT. SPORTS 2 FAMILY CHANNEL FOX NEWS CHANNEL FOX SPORTS DETROIT FX HALLMARK HOME & GARDEN HISTORY CHANNEL LIFETIME MSNBC MUSIC TV NATIONAL GEOGRAPHIC NICKELODEON SCIENCE FICTION SOAPNET SPEED CHANNEL SUPER STATION LEARNING CHANNEL TURNER NETWORK TV TRAVEL USA NETWORK VIDEO HITS VERSUS HOME BOX OFFICE HOME BOX OFFICE 2 CINEMAX SHOWTIME

5:00

(5:30)Eating

6:30 Healing Quest NBC News CBS Even. News World News

7:00

7:30

8:00

8:30

9:00

9:30

10:00

10:30

11:00

11:30

Lawrence Welk "Big Band Sounds" Nature "Andes: The Dragon's Back" Masterpiece Mystery! "Poirot: The Third Girl" PBS Previews Theater Talk Lines News Dateline NBC Law & Order: C.I. "Traffic" America's Got Talent News CSI: NY News 60 Minutes Big Brother CSI: Crime Scene "Mascara" Cold Case "The Runaway Bunny" News (:35)2 1/2 Men Exchange America's Funniest Home Videos Makeover: Home "Creasey Family" Scoundrels The Gates "The Monster Within" Desperate Housewives To Be Announced Sons of Tucson American Dad The Simpsons Cleveland Show Family Guy Family Guy Barclay Jack Van Impe Grey's Anatomy

(5:15) "Thunderheart" ('92) Graham Greene, Val Kilmer. (1999,Adventure) Rachel Weisz, John Hannah, Brendan Fraser. (:45) "The Mummy"

('99) Brendan Fraser. "The Mummy" Criminal Minds Criminal Minds "Scared to Death" Criminal Minds "The Angel Maker" Criminal Minds "Zoe's Reprise" The Glades "Bird in the Hand" The Glades "Bird in the Hand" Pit Boss "Ashley's Big Adventure" Pit Boss Pit Boss "The Boss is Back" Monsters Inside Me "Lurkers" Whale Wars "Sliced in Two" Pit Boss "The Boss is Back" Housewives/NewJersey Housewives NJ "Porsche Spite" Housewives NJ "Country Clubbed" Law & Order: C.I. "Gone" Law & Order: C.I. "Collective" Law & Order: C.I. "Inert Dwarf" Paid Program Paid Program Diabetes Life Wall St. Journal CNBC Special CNBC Special Crime Inc.: Counterfeit Goods CNBC Special CNN Newsroom State of the Union Larry King Live CNN Newsroom State of the Union World's Wildest Police Videos Cops Cops Cops Cops Cops Cops Las Vegas Jail Las Vegas Jail Forensic Files Forensic Files House of Payne House of Payne "Mr. Mom"

('83) Teri Garr, Michael Keaton. Cheaters Cheaters punk'd punk'd punk'd punk'd Dirty Jobs Dirty Jobs "Tofu Maker" Power Future "Striking a Balance" Powering the Future MythBuster "NASA Moon Landing" Power Future "Striking a Balance" H. Montana H. Montana Sonny Chance Sonny Chance H. Montana Sonny With a Chance (:15)Phineas H. Montana "Camp Rock"

('08) Kevin Jonas, Joe Jonas. SportsCenter Baseball Tonight Live Baseball Philadelphia Phillies vs. Chicago Cubs MLB Site: Wrigley Field -- Chicago, Ill. Live SportsCenter Drag Racing Fram-Autolite Nationals NHRA Site: Infineon Raceway -- Sonoma, Calif. Golf The Open Championship PGA Site: St. Andrews Links -- Scotland (5:30) "Practical Magic"

('98) Sandra Bullock, Nicole Kidman. "Revenge of the Bridesmaids" ('10) Beth Broderick. "Revenge of the Bridesmaids" ('10) Beth Broderick. News FOX Report Sunday Huckabee Hannity's America Geraldo at Large Huckabee Sport Science Air Racing World Championship Poker World Championship WPT Poker World Championship WPT 2/2 Tigers Weekly The Final Score Head to Head The Final Score (3:00) "Big Momma's House 2" "Alvin and the Chipmunks"

('07) David Cross, Jason Lee. Rescue Me "The Waterboy" ('98) Kathy Bates, Henry Winkler, Adam Sandler. Louie Movie (:45) "The Magic of Ordinary Days"

('05) Skeet Ulrich, Ken Russell. (:40) "Front of the Class" ('08) Patricia Heaton. "Jack's Family Adventure" ('09) Designed to Sell Designed to Sell House Hunters House Hunters Holmes on Homes House Hunters House Hunters HGTV Design Star Selling NY Selling NY Chasing Mummies "Stuck" Top Shot Truckers "Trapped on Thin Ice" Truckers "Danger at 55 Below" Top Shot "Wild, Wild West" Shootout! "Wild West" (5:00) "In the Land of Women" "P.S. I Love You"

('07) Gerard Butler, Hilary Swank. Drop Dead Diva "Begin Again" Army Wives "Army Strong" Drop Dead Diva "Begin Again" Vegas Homicide Caught on Camera Caught on Camera Caught on Camera "On Patrol" In Coldest Blood Predator Raw: The Unseen Tapes Teen Mom "Happy Birthday" Teen Mom "Check Up With Dr. Drew" Baby High The Real World: New Orleans The Hills Hills: Ending Great White "Life and Limb" Monster Fish of America Monster Fish of Mongolia Monster Fish of Thailand Monster Fish "Flying Carp" Monster Fish of Mongolia Big Time Rush The Troop iCarly True Jackson Victorious iCarly Hates Chris Hates Chris George Lopez George Lopez Malcolm-Middle Malcolm-Middle (5:00) "Swamp Devil"

('08) "Hydra" ('08) Polly Shannon, William Gregory Lee, George Stults. Mary Knows Best "Infestation"

('09) Bru Muller, Chris Marquette. One Tree Hill General Hospital General Hospital General Hospital General Hospital General Hospital Moto. Racing German Grand Prix The SPEED Report NASCAR "Dale Earnhardt" Wind Tunnel With Dave Despain My Classic Car Car Crazy Dangerous Drives (:05) "Shrek 2"

('04) Voices of Eddie Murphy, Mike Myers. (:55) "Shrek the Third"

('07) Mike Myers. Movie "Shrek the Third"

('07) Eddie Murphy, Mike Myers. Hoarding "Everything is at Stake" Hoarding "A Million Excuses" Hoarding: Buried Alive Strange Sex Strange Sex Strange Sex Strange Sex Hoarding: Buried Alive Movie Leverage "The Studio Job" "Shooter"

(2006,Action) Michael Peña, Danny Glover, Mark Wahlberg. "The Bourne Supremacy"

('04) Franka Potente, Matt Damon. Top Ten The Colorado: River of Wonders Earth Wonders Earth Wonders Earth Wonders The Colorado: River of Wonders Movie Royal Pains "Lovesick" "Good Luck Chuck"

('07) Dane Cook, Lonny Ross, Jessica Alba. "I Now Pronounce You Chuck and Larry"

('07) Kevin James, Adam Sandler. (5:30)Cut Off You're Cut Off Ochocinco "The Ultimate Catch" Ochocinco "The Ultimate Catch" The T.O Show Ochocinco "The Ultimate Catch" The T.O Show (5:00)Cycling Tour de France Lance Armstrong: The Look Back Cycling Tour de France Lance Armstrong: The Look Back (5:45) "Madagascar: Escape 2... (:15) "The Invention Of Lying"

('09) Ricky Gervais. True Blood "Trouble" Hung Entourage Hung True Blood (5:45)Boxing After Dark (:45)First Look Movie "All About Steve"

('09) Sandra Bullock. "Away We Go"

('09) John Krasinski. Movie (:15) "Jennifer's Body" ('09) Amanda Seyfried, Megan Fox. "Code of Silence"

('85) Henry Silva. "Sex and the City"

('08) Kim Cattrall, Sarah Jessica Parker. Movie The Real L Word Dexter "Blinded by the Light" The Real L Word "Free Pass" The Real L Word "Free Pass" "The Life Before Her Eyes"

('08)


TEA TABLE COMMUNITY NOTES

Friday, July 16, 2010 •

FROM B6 (231) 487-4825.

The Northern Michigan Panhellenic Group will be meeting at the Terrace Inn in Bay View at noon on Wednesday, July 21. Hostesses for the day will be Carlie Steele and Anthea Healy. The speaker will be Tressa Keys, a locally and nationally known quilter. Keys has chosen to concentrate on the colors, patterns, and fabrics of the 1930’s depressions era with a wide range of subjects and styles. She also donates 25 percent of her earnings to various charities. Reservations must be made by July 19 by calling (231) 348-9720 or signing up at the post office in Bay View. All Panhellenic women are invited.

Petoskey High School class of 1950 is planning an informal reunion 6 p.m. Saturday, July 24, at the Petoskey Big Boy. For information, call Linda Linehan, (231) 487-0671 or June Zoerhof, (231) 347-6497.

The Michigan Dyslexia Institute is hosting a used book sale 8 a.m.-4 p.m. Friday, July 16, at 681 E. Lake St., Harbor Springs. There is a wide assortment of books for all interests and ages. Phone (231) 526-9282.

Local author and News-Review columnist Mary Agria shares insights into the gardener’s spiritual journey at the Bay View Library, 4 p.m, Wednesday, July 28. “Life Lessons from the Garden” will draw on Agria’s best-selling novel, “Time in a Garden,” as well as a sneak preview from the upcoming sequel, “Garden of Eve.” The author chat is free and open to the public. The library is located on the central campus in Bay View.

Friends of the Petoskey Public Library will have its annual used book sale 9 a.m.-4 p.m. Friday, July 30, during Petoskey Sidewalk Sales. The sale will be under the tent on the street in front of the library. The Friends of the Petoskey Public Library is a volunteer organization whose mission is to promote and support the Petoskey Public Library as it provides access to resources that satisfy the lifelong infomational, educational and cultural needs of its community.

An old-fashioned picnic is set 5-7 p.m. Wednesday, July 21, at the Oden Community Hall on Luce Street, Oden. There will be braised beef, hot dogs, salads, sundaes and music provided by Dennis Hughes. Tickets are$10 for adults, $4 for children. The proceeds go for the upkeep of the hall and common areas in Oden.

The First Presbyterian Church of Boyne City on 401 S. Park St. wil sponsor an outside bazaar on the church lawn 11 a.m.-3 p.m. Friday, July 16. A variety of booths will include baked goods, knitted and sewn items, crafts, books, and much more. A chili supper will be served 5-7 p.m. in Faulman Hall. Suggested donation of $6 for adults and $3 for children. All proceeds will go to the deacon’s fund. Call the church, (231) 582-7983 or Carrie Edson, fellowship chair, at (231) 582-3821.

Petoskey Childrens Nursery is accepting applications for its co-op nursery school for 3-5-year old children. To sign up, call (231) 347-6581.

Veterans Affairs of Emmet County is open 9 a.m.- 3 p.m.Tuesday through Friday for assistance to all Emmet County veterans. Located in the county building in Petoskey, first floor, G92. Phone (231) 348-1780.

Community kitchen is held from 11:30 a.m.-12:30 p.m. every Monday at First Christian Church, 308 Monroe St., Petoskey, in the fellowship hall of the church. Anyone in need of a meal is welcome.

Food is available for anyone in need in the Petoskey area from 9 a.m.-noon every Tuesday at Brother Dan’s Food Pantry, 415 State St., Petoskey, behind St. Francis Xavier Church. Phone (231) 347-7423.

First Christian Church, 308

Monroe St., Petoskey, food pantry is open 9 a.m.-noon every Wednesday.

Lighthouse lunch is held 11 a.m.-1 p.m. every Monday and Thursday at Community Church of God, 202 W. Hurlbut St., Charlevoix, in the fellowship hall of the church. Anyone in need of a hot meal is welcome.

The Friends of the Petoskey Public Library will host a summer soirée from 6-8 p.m. Sunday, Aug. 1, at the library, 500 E. Mitchell St. Music will be provided by the Little Bay Baroque and classical guitarist Roger Humphrey. Five guest authors will be in attendance to meet guests and offer their books, DVDs and photography. Wine, hors d’oeuvres and sweets will be served, and a gourmet vinegar and oil tasting is planned. Cost is $25 per person, with all proceeds going toward the purchase of new books for the library. Dress is casual and reservations can be made by contacting Joyce Hutto, 804 Arlington St., No. 7, Petoskey, Mich. 49770.

The Friends of the Boyne Library are celebrating another family fun fair from 6-8 p.m. on Friday, July 23. There will be crafts and games, a bouncer, clowns, firetruck and snacks. The fair will take place on Park Street in front of the library. The quilt raffle winner and name of wookworm winner will be announced.

The Harbor Springs Community Food Pantry, located in the lower level of the Holy Childhood Community Center building (entrance on Third Street), is open from 9:30 a.m.-noon every nonholiday Monday. Food is available for anyone in need in the Harbor Springs area. Those wishing to donate items may bring them to the pantry on Monday morning or leave them in baskets inside the entrances of the church from 9 a.m.-5 p.m. daily. Phone (231) 526-2414.

Bay Shore Presbyterian Church food pantry is open from noon-3 p.m. the second and fourth Tuesday. Use the back door. For information, call (231) 348-2086.

met County residents who are low-income, without health insurance and are not included in a government health program. The clinic is staffed by volunteers. There is an appointment clinic on Monday afternoons for those who work on Wednesday evenings. For all other patients there is a walk-in clinic on Wednesday evenings with sign-in from 4:30-6:30 p.m. Patients are seen in order of sign-in which means there may be a wait. Bring photo ID, proof-of- residency and verification of income to your first visit. The address is 416 Connable Avenue in Petoskey. Call (231) 487-3600 for more information.

Food pantry is open 11 a.m.1 p.m. by appointment only Tuesday through Friday at the Charlevoix Assembly of God Church, 05291 M-66 North, Charlevoix. Call the church office for appointments at (231) 547-6430.

The Charlevoix Community Food Pantry is open to residents of the Charlevoix Public School district who need emergency food. It’s located in the Congregational Church on the corner of State Street and Park Avenue and

its hours of operation are: 10 a.m.-noon Monday and Thursday, and by appointment only on the last Saturday of the month. Clients can call Maxine Bergmann, (231) 547-6456, for an appointment.

Cross of Christ Lutheran and Emmanuel Episcopal churches provide a free lunch from noon-1 p.m. every Thursday for those in need at the First Presbyterian Church in Petoskey. All are welcome.

WIC appointments are now available at Health Department offices in Antrim, Charlevoix, Emmet and Otsego Counties. WIC provides free food for eligible pregnant and post-partum women; infants; and children. For appointments, call the Health Department of Northwest Michigan at (231) 547-0295 or (800) 432-4121.

Free and anonymous HIV counseling and testing Orasure/oral test, no needles. For information, call ( 800) 432-4121.

Twenty-four hour free and confidential crisis counseling is available to residents of Antrim, Charlevoix, Cheboy-

B7

gan, Emmet, Kalkaska and Otsego counties by dialing toll free (800) 442-7315. North Country Community Mental Health Services Board has contracted with Traverse City’s Third Level Crisis Intervention Center to provide crisis counseling services around the clock in the service area.

Seventh-day Adventist Community Service Center,1404 Howard St., Petoskey, is open 10 a.m.-4 p.m. on Tuesday. Appointments still available. It is in need of clean, used clothing which is given freely to local community needs. Emergency food is also available. For more information, call Brian Halbert at (231) 487-0720 or (231) 675-8855.

Find information, including phone numbers, contact names and Web links for local nonprofit agencies and services in Charlevoix and Emmet counties at www. char-em-hscb.org.

The Women’s Resource Center needs volunteers to work at its safe home and Gold Mine Resale Shop. If you are available and would like to give even a few hours per

month, contact Jamie Winters at (231) 347-1572.

Free vision and hearing screening appointments for children are available at health department offices in Antrim, Charlevoix, Emmet and Otsego counties. Vision screening is offered for children three years old to 18 years old; hearing screening is offered for children age six months to 18 years old. To schedule an appointment, call Health Department of Northwest Michigan at (800) 432-4121.

Challenge Mountain of Walloon Hills, a group that helps fund recreation for handicapped people, has resale shops in Petoskey and Boyne City. The Petoskey shop is located at 2429 N. U.S. 31, next to the Charles Park Funeral Home. Its hours are 10 a.m.-4 p.m. Tuesday through Friday, and 10 a.m.-3 p.m. on Saturday. Phone 348-3195. The Boyne City shop is located next to the Knights of Columbus hall. Hours are 10 a.m.-4 p.m. Tuesday through Saturday. Phone (231) 582-6966.

Breast and cervical cancer

See TEA TABLE on PAGE C8

THE NEXT N O I T A R E N E G OF DOES. X. INTRODUCING DROID

The Manna Food Pantry is open 9 a.m.-noon on Tuesday to serve those in need in the Oden/Conway/M-119 area. For more information, call (231) 347-8852.

Planned Parenthood of West and Northern Michigan provides complete GYN exams, breast exams and Pap tests for women of all ages; pregnancy tests; counseling and provision of birth control supplies, including emergency contraception, testing and treatment for vaginal, urinary and sexually transmitted infections, including HIV testing. Services are confidential, affordable, and provided by women clinicians. Medicaid/ Plan First! and Mastercard/ Visa accepted. Open Monday, Tuesday, Thursday and Friday; some evenings. Planned Parenthood, 1003 Spring St., Petoskey. Phone (231) 3479692.

Men’s Christian support group meets 6:30 p.m. every Monday and Wednesday at Stutsmanville Chapel at 2988 State Road, north of Harbor Springs. We are a confidential, faith based group of men seeking help with daily life struggles through the Word of God and fellowship with other men facing similar issues. The group is open to anyone. If you would like additional information call (231) 526-2335.

Boyne City Seventh-day Adventist Food Pantry at 326 N. Park St., is open 10 a.m.-noon each Monday. For emergencies call director at (231) 5492462; otherwise, can leave message at (231) 582-0151.

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Dental Clinics North, a partnership of local health departments, provides dental care for children and adults with Medicaid, Healthy Kids, HK Delta Dental and MIChild and private pay for non-covered services. Appointments are available in Petoskey, East Jordan and Cheboygan. Call (231) 547-0295 or toll-free (877) 321-7070 to schedule an appointment.

The Community Free Clinic offers free, temporary, health care services to Em-

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B8

Friday, July 16, 2010 •

Weather TODAY

Wear ‘em …You’ll love em!

Sign up for daily e-mail and text weather alerts at petoskeynews.com

Friday

City/Region Low | High temps

Forecast for Friday, July 16

TONIGHT

SATURDAY

SUNDAY

MONDAY

Built to last!!!!

CANADA

Marquette Sault Ste. Marie 77/56 79/63 Petoskey 81/61

Comfy styles for men, women and kids.

Alpena 85/63

WIS.

85

Saginaw 88/65 Grand Rapids 86/67

Detroit 88/74

65

77/58

sunset: 9:24 p.m.

sunrise: 6:08 a.m. sunset: 9:23 p.m.

ILL. IND.

79/61 79/59 sunrise: 6:99 a.m. sunset: 9:23 p.m.

Fireside… Travel… Day Job... Take your journey in comfort.

sunrise: 6:10 a.m. sunset: 9:22 p.m.

© 2010 Wunderground.com

PRECIPITATION Daily rainfall Rain since May 1 Rain 5/1-7/15/09

Petoskey .05” 7.81” 3.99”

Charlevoix .04” 8.59” 4.03”

231

348-1122

T Table COMMUNITY NOTES FROM B7 screening appointments are now available at health department offices in Antrim, Charlevoix, Emmet, and Otsego counties. For appointments, call the Health Department of Northwest Michigan at (231) 547-0295 or (800) 432-4121.

Birth

A daughter, Waasageebwan Angeline Wemigwase, was born to Aaron and Shanna Wemigwase of Harbor Springs at 6:55 p.m. July 14, 2010, at Northern Michigan Regional Hospital. Waasageebwan weighed 8 pounds, 11 ounces and was 20 inches long at birth. Her siblings are Anamekwan Wemigwase and Waaseyaban Wemigwase. Grandparents are Matt and Cheryl Kishigo-Lesky of Petoskey, and Robert and Beverly Wemigwase of Harbor Springs.

Senior citizens

Petoskey Friendship Center activities Tuesday, July 20: foot care 8:30 a.m., mas-

sage 9 a.m., bridge 9 a.m., golf 9:30 a.m., Wii 10 a.m., lunch at noon: homemade meatloaf, bridge 12:30 p.m., ice cream social 1 p.m.

Beaver Island Senior Center activities Tuesday, July 20: arthritis exercise 10 a.m., lunch: meatballs.

Boyne Area Senior Center activities Tuesday, July 20: Wii fun, lunch at noon: Polish sausage.

Contact Debbie McGuiness, 439-9353 • dmcguiness@petoskeynews.com

12:30 p.m.

The Wawatam Area Senior Center is serving dinners at 5 p.m. on Mondays, Tuesdays, Fridays and Saturdays and 1 p.m. on Sundays. The center is located at the Lion Dan Russell Building on Cedar Street, west of the cemetery, in Mackinaw City. All meals include salad bar and dessert.

Self-help

Charlevoix Senior Center

Alcoholics Anonymous

activities Tuesday, July 20: casino trip 9 a.m., acrylic paiting 9 a.m, lunch at noon: menu not available.

24-hour information call (231)348-5005.

East Jordan Senior Center activities Tuesday, July 20: bingo, paint class, lunch at noon: Polish sausage.

Harbor Springs Friendship Center activities Tuesday, July 20: lunch at noon: homemade meatloaf, ice cream social 1 p.m.

Pellston Friendship Center activities Tuesday, July 20: water fitness 8:45 a.m., coffee 10 a.m., games 10:30 a.m., lunch at noon: homemade meatloaf, ice cream

Compassionate Friends, a support group for bereaved parents, meets the third Monday at Hiland Cottage in Petoskey. Call Susan at (231) 582-7897 or JoAnn at (231) 347-8487.

Pregnancy and infant

(231) 330-0143.

Narcotics Anonymous information, call (231) 3481866.

Nicotine Anonymous information, call (231) 347-3428.

loss support group information, call (231) 4874825.

Self-help group information is found on www. petoskeynews.com.

Overeaters Anonymous

Survivors of suicide loss

information, call (231) 5472104.

support group information, call (231) 487-4825.

DivorceCare information, call (231) 547-9482 for details.

Al-Anon /Alateen information is available by calling (231) 675-7044.

Alzheimer’s Disease /Dementia support meets 2-3:30 p.m. the second Wednesday of each month at Petoskey Friendship Center library. Call (231) 347-3211 or (888) 3470369.

Caregiver Support meets 1:30-3 p.m. the fourth Thursday at Petoskey Friendship Center library. Call (231) 3473211 or (888) 347-0369.

Celebrate Recovery is a

YOUR CHAMBER NEWS

Christ-centered recovery program which meets at the Walloon Lake Community Church 7-9 p.m. every Thursday. For information, call John at (231) 347-3985 or Chuck at (231) 944-9324.

Emotional and mental

July 14, 2010

health self-help group. Call (231) 582-2699.

$50 $50 $50 $50 $50 $50 $50 $50 $50

Grief and loss support group information, call (231) 4874825.

Low Vision support meets noon-1:30 p.m. the first and third Wednesday at Petoskey Friendship Center multi-purpose room. Call (231) 3473211 or (888) 347-0369.

MS support group meets

0393 0348 0928 0208 2093 0249 1877 2542 1091

Ronita West Frank Babrick Roy M. Alexander Randy Burroughs G.C Hadden Robert W. Brummeler Roxie Beach Brad Summers Steve Sage

Cheboygan Petoskey Carp Lake Gaylord Harper Woods Petoskey Petoskey Grayling Petoskey

Open Every day 231.439.9500 321 E. Lake St., Petoskey www.bearcuboutfitters.com

6:30 p.m. the third Wednesday of every month at the Community Health Education Building in Petoskey. Call

JULY 2010

A Monthly Guide to the Latest News, Events and Developments From the Petoskey Regional Chamber of Commerce

It Pays To Be A

Celebrating 10 years of membership, Steve Hayes Remodeling & Tile, Inc., Petoskey, MI. Tel. 348-2051. www.SteveHayesRemodeling.com.

Celebrating 25 years of membership, Pirate’s Cove Adventure Golf, Chuck Lindsey, Manager, 1230 US 31 North, Petoskey. Tel. 347-1123. www.piratescove.net.

Chamber Member!

According to a nationwide study conducted by the Shapiro Group: • Consumers are 63% more likely to buy from a Chamber member than a nonmember • Consumers are 44% more likely to think positively of a small business that is a Chamber member • Consumers who are told that a business is a chamber member are 51% more likely to be highly aware of it and 57% more likely to think positively of its reputation • Overall, when asked about the local chambers themselves and their impact on the local economy, the study states that 82% of respondents believe that the local chamber helps create jobs and promotes local economic development. This reflects the important role the Chamber plays as an organization and as a leader in the business community. More importantly you can be proud that, as a member, your company association with the Chamber receives positive recognition from consumers and business owners.

Celebrating 10 years of membership, Shadetree Studios Inc., Penny Kristo, 421 Emmet Street, Petoskey, MI. Tel. 347-1011. www.shadetreestainedglass.com.

Airway Oxygen has moved to a new location, just down the street to 330 W. Mitchell. Tel. (231) 348-8343. www.airwayoxygeninc.com.

Ribbon-cuttings

Celebrating 20 years of membership, Gingerbread House Bed and Breakfast, Mary Gruler, Owner, 1130 Bluff, Bay View Association. Tel. 347-3538. www.gingerbreadbb.com.

Welcome New Members Macprofessionals – Michigan Segway, Lisa Glush, Owner, 801 Front Street, Bay Harbor, MI 49770. www.macprofessionals.com; www.segwayofmichigan.com. Tel. (231) 348-0835.

Member Anniversaries

Harbor-Petoskey Airport Authority, William P. Dohn, Chairman, 8350 M-119, Harbor Springs, MI 49740. Tel. (231) 347-2812. www. harborspringsairport.com. Cheek.a.de…Meek.a.de, Lisa Glush, Owner, 4233 Main Street, Bay Harbor, MI 49770. Tel. (231) 348-0849. www.cheekademeekade.com. Celebrating 10 years of membership, Pellston Market, Nancy Kelly, 230 US 31 North, Pellston, MI 49769. Tel. 539-7100. http://www.pellstonmarket.com.

Meijer, Inc., Kathy Keillor, Store Director, 1201 Lears Rd., Petoskey, MI 49770. Tel. (231) 348-6372. Fax. (231) 348-6399. www.meijer.com. First Presbyterian Church of Harbor Springs, Cynthia Donahey, Administrative Manager, 7940 Cemetery Road, Harbor Springs, MI 49740. Tel. (231) 526-7332. Fax (231) 526-7188. www.fpchs.org. Sunshine Charters, Gary Dawson, Owner, P.O. Box 774, Charlevoix, MI 49720. Tel (231) 547-0266. www.sunshinecharters.com.

Celebrating 10 years of membership, James A. Reid Furniture Company, Jim Reid, 307 E. Mitchell Street, Petoskey, MI. Tel. 347-2942. www.reidindeed.com.

International Payments Corporation, John Likins, Account Representative. Tel. (800)503-2505 ext. 7244. Fax (408) 752-2305. www.intlpay.com. Beltone Hearing Service, Ed Ledford, Co-Owner. Tel (877) 883-9887. Fax (231) 922-9911. www.beltone.com.

Your Chamber News is underwritten by:

Celebrating 10 years of membership, Prudential Preferred Properties Network, Bill Dickson, Managing Broker, 228 E. Mitchell St., Petoskey, MI. Tel. 347-7800. www.pprmi.com.

Chamber ambassadors welcomed new member, Doublestein Builders. Trevor Doublestein is the owner. They are located at 105 Division Street, Petoskey, MI 49770. (231) 838-0638. www.doublesteinbuilders.com.

Chamber ambassadors welcomed new member, Lavender Hill Farms. Linda Longworth is the owner. They are located three miles from US 31 on 07354 Horton Bay Rd. Tel. (231) 582-3784. www.lavenderhillmichigan.com. For more information, about Blue Cross Blue Shield Health Insurance Options, contact one of these chamber-member authorized Blues agents: Associated Benefits Group Timothy Duffy • 231-526-0908 Brummeler & Associates Bob and Steve Brummeler • 231-347-5571 Cadillac Insurance Center James C. Fisher • 231-347-8850 Collins & Associates Amanda Truman •231-347-7422 Harbor Brenn Agencies Dave Brossard/Lee Holbrook • 231-347-8113 Insurance By Burley Bryan Burley/Gary Morse • 231-548-2211 KorthaseFlinn Insurance and Financial Services Denise Flinn •231-348-8121 Madigan/Pingatore Insurance Services Alberta J. Dagnall • 906-635-5233 Mainland Insurance Ernie and Ken Mainland • 231-347-9061 Northwestern Mutual Financial Network Stephen Selden • 231-347-8542 Peterson McGregor & Associates Raquel Green/Jennifer Blain • 231-922-7220 Top O’Michigan Insurance Agency Brian and Mike Bartosh • 231-347-4610 Waldvogel Insurance Agency Jack Waldvogel/Bob Esford • 231-347-7830


ENTERTAINMENT

INSIDE: MUSIC • DINING OUT • CALENDAR

Friday, July 16, 2010 •

NEWS-REVIEW FILE PHOTOS FROM VENETIAN 2009

It’s Venetian time in Charlevoix

N

Rachel Brougham - 439-9348 - rbrougham@petoskeynews.com

ext week, the population of Charlevoix is expected to more than quadruple. Each year, the city’s Venetian Festival brings in tens of thousands of visitors for a week in July to enjoy a variety of events, including live music, food, games, parades, a carnival and fireworks.

“There really is something for all ages,” said Joan Miller, who works for the Venetian Festival planning office. “We have great events scheduled throughout the week.” The festival, which began 80 years ago as a simple candle-lit boat parade, has grown over the last several decades and features events for the whole family. Here’s a look at the events scheduled for this year’s festival:

SATURDAY, JULY 17 — Noon, horseshoes at Ferry Beach — Noon, volleyball at Ferry Beach — 3-7 p.m. Venetian Beach Bash at the Ferry Beach/Pier stage featuring Charlie’s Root Fusion, DeHurricane, and the AquaPalooza Boating Party.

SUNDAY, JULY 18 — 9 a.m., Basketball Beach Bash 3-on-3 tournament at Lake Michigan Beach — 3 p.m., Venetian Jam (bikes, blades and boards) at the Charlevoix Skate Park — 7-9 p.m. Music at the East Park Performance Pavilion featuring Voices Without Borders Youth Ensemble, Mariachi Los Rebeldes and Afrika Yetu Academy.

MONDAY, JULY 19 — 10 a.m., tennis tournament begins at Stroud Park Courts — 6 p.m., The Undeserving plays at Bridge Park — 8 p.m., Tommy Tropic Children’s Show, Venetian Vision, and family movie night at East Park Performance Pavilion.

TUESDAY, JULY 20 — 1:30 p.m., Croquet at East Park — 5 p.m., Battle of the Bands at Lake Michigan Beach — 5:30 p.m., 3-on-3 soccer at Shanahan Field — 5-11 p.m., My Friends and The Vermeers perform at the East Park Tiki Tent Stage — 7-10 p.m., Charlevoix Community Band and Terrance Simien perform at the East Park Performance Pavilion

WEDNESDAY, JULY 21 — Jr. Sailing Regatta at Depot Beach on Lake Charlevoix — Sailing Regatta at Depot Beach on Lake

Charlevoix — 4 p.m., Venetian Swim Meet at the community pool — 5:30 p.m., 3-on-3 soccer finals at Shanahan Field — 5-11 p.m., Jason Elsenheimer and David Cisco at the East Park Tiki Tent Stage — 6-10 p.m., Northwest Academy Jazz, Starr Farm, and War at the East Park Performance Pavilion

THURSDAY, JULY 22 — 10 a.m.- 3 p.m., Kid’s Day at Lake Michigan Beach featuring games and family entertainment — 2 p.m., downtown carnival opens — 5-11 p.m., Charlie Witthoeft at the East Park Tiki Tent Stage — 6-10 p.m., Pub Runners, Brian Lorente and the Usual Suspects, and Big Kenny at the East Park Performance Pavilion

FRIDAY, JULY 23 — 9 a.m., Piston’s Shock Basketball Clinic at the Charlevoix Middle School gym — 5-11 p.m., My Friends and Chris Martin perform at the East Park Tiki Tent

Stage — 6-10 p.m., Horton Creek, Venetian Queen Coronation Ceremony, 1964: The Tribute World’s #1 Beatle’s Show at the East Park Performance Pavilion — 8-10 p.m., Up North Big Band and fireworks at Ferry Beach

SATURDAY, JULY 24 — 9 a.m., Drenth Memorial Footrace 5k and 10k — 10:30 a.m., Shay Memorial Mile — 11 a.m., Venetian street parade on Bridge Street — 12:30 - 2:30 p.m., Sault Ste. Marie Pipe Band, Dub Dis perform in East Park — 12:30 p.m., Dutch History Live performs at Bridge Park — 5-11 p.m., Tom Zip at the East Park Tiki Tent Stage — 6-10 p.m., The Prouix Brothers “A Tribute to the Kingston Trio”, Saline Fiddlers, Motor City Women and the Detroit Express, Venetian boat parade, fireworks at the East Park Performance Pavilion

For more information about these events, call the Venetian Festival office at (231)547-3872 or visit www.venetianfestival.com.

The results are in! Be sure to pick up a copy of

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Friday, July 16, 2010 •

Performance schedule

World in Harmony

Sunday, July 18

7 p.m. — Free concert at East Park performance pavilion in Charlevoix, Mariachi los Rebeldes and Afrika Yetu Artistic Youth Ambassadors Monday, July 19

Children of the World in Harmony International Youth Choir & Dance Festival MiniFest will take place July 19-24 in Northern Michigan. The 2010 event features dance and singing groups from Canada, the United States and Vietnam. Approximately 150 singers and dancers will perform 15 events in Petoskey, Harbor Springs, Charlevoix, Boyne City, Mackinac Island and Beaver Island. The highlight of the festival will be the Festival Gala Concert at 7:30 p.m. on Wednesday, July 21, at the Harbor Springs Performing Arts Center. The gala concert will feature all of the singers, dancers and drummers.Tickets are $15 for adults and $5 for children under 18 years. Additional ticketed concerts are 7:30 p.m. Tuesday, July 20, at the Petoskey High School where the choirs will perform and at the Harbor Springs Performing Arts Center where the dance ensembles will perform. Both of these concerts are $10 for adults and $5 for children under 18 years of age. The 12 other festival events are free of charge. Tickets are available at Petoskey Regional Chamber of Commerce, Crooked Tree Arts Center, McLean & Eakin and Horizon book stores in Petoskey, Between the Covers book store in Harbor Springs, and at the door.

TBD — Winnipeg Children’s Choir concert on Mackinac Island 7 p.m. —20-minute free performance by Mariachi los Rebeldes and Afrika Yetu Artistic Youth Ambassadors at the United Methodist Church in Petoskey; public welcome Tuesday, July 20

7:30 p.m. — Dance concert at the Harbor Springs Performing Arts Center; tickets required 7:30 p.m. — Choir concert at Petoskey High School auditorium; tickets required Wednesday, July 21

Noon-2:30 p.m. — Concerts in the Park in Petoskey (free); part of the Charlotte Ross Lee Concerts in the Parks Series 7:30 p.m. — Festival Gala Concert with all festival groups at the Harbor Springs Performing Arts Center in Harbor Springs; tickets required Thursday, July 22

9:30–11 a.m. — African Drum Circle (free) with master drummer Elie Kihonia of Afrika Yetu Wacongo Dance Company at Bay View outside the John M. Hall Auditorium Noon-1:30 p.m. — Selected groups perform at Charlevoix Venetian Festival Kids’ Day (free) at Lake Michigan Beach TBD — SolArts Center Vietnam on Mackinac Island at Mission Point Resort 7 p.m. — Selected groups perform at Street Musique in Harbor Springs (free) Friday, July 23

7-9 p.m. — Mariachi los Rebeldes perform at Boyne City’s “Stroll the Streets” (free) 7:30 p.m. — Sol Arts Center of Hanoi, Vietnam concert at Petoskey High School (free) with donation accepted. Saturday, July 24

Evening — Mariachi los Rebeldes informal performances on Beaver Island Sunday, July 25

4 p.m. — Mariachi los Rebeldes concert at the Community Center on Beaver Island

Textile display

We love making pottery and it shows...

Claire Courage (left), 8, and her brother Whit Courage, 7, summer residents of Charlevoix, enjoy a sneak preview of the “One of a Kind” fiber arts exhibit opening today, Friday, July 16, at the Charlevoix Circle of Arts. An opening reception will take place from 5-7 p.m. at the gallery, located at 109 W. Clinton St. The exhibit features well known textile artist Kathie Briggs and the Fiber Artists Coalition. The exhibit is open 1-5 p.m. Tuesdays through Sundays, July 17-Sept. 18.

00254130

Sturgeon River Pottery Hand made by local artisans. Visit our studio and see us at work... Located between Petoskey and Bay Harbor on US-31 231.347.0590 . sturgeonriver.com M. CHRIS LEESE/NEWS-REVIEW

If you have art news, contact Babette Stenuis Stolz, people editor, 439-9351 • bstenuis@petoskeynews.com


ARTS

Friday, July 16, 2010 •

C3

COURTESY PHOTO

Sara Tisdel, instructor, points out something of interest to Central Lake students during Crooked Tree Arts Center’s 21st Century arts class on nature journaling.

The wonders of nature

Crooked Tree Arts Center hosted a nature journaling class this summer for 21st Century Summer Program students. Students in Central Lake, Boyne Falls, Boyne City and Pellston schools, spent a few hours exploring their school grounds in a new way. The classes, led by Marty Samson, Crooked Tree’s 21st Century Arts coordinator, and Sara Tisdel, an artisan and teacher, had students out-of-doors exploring nature and recording

their observations in a nature journal. “The goal for the summer program was to bring something to the students that would stay with them beyond just the summer,� said Samson. “Each student received a hand-lens, sketchbook, pen, pencil, colored pencils, eraser and a really cool bag to keep it all in. By giving the students the tools to start a nature journal we hope to encourage them to do more journaling outside of the class

and to continue after the class ends,� Samson said. Nature journaling combines art, science and literacy. Journalers create an original document based on their observations and interests in nature. Every journal looks different from any other and reflects what that person sees or feels or thinks about nature. “We help the nature journaling students explore the natural world through the eyes of a scientist and an artist and a

writer,� said Tisdel. “Close observation opens a new world for children as they record their observation though writing (descriptive words and poetry) and drawing and field sketches. We hope that introducing the students to nature journaling early will start a life-long habit.� The Charlevoix-Emmet Intermediate School District’s 21st Century Program provides services to children in 10 local qualifying schools. During the

school year, the afterschool program provides tutoring, homework help, academic classes and enrichment opportunities for the students. The program also provides a summer school session to work with students on their academic needs and provide them with additional enrichment opportunities. For more information on Crooked Tree Arts Center’s role in the 21st Century Program, contact Samson at (231) 347-5731 or marty@crookedtree.org.

Good Hart ‘Mini Fair’ features art, auctions and antiques

GOOD HART — The Readmond, Friendship, Cross Village Volunteer Fire and Rescue Squad’s annual fundraising event, “The Mini Fair,� will take place 10 a.m.4 p.m. Sunday, July 18, at the fire hall grounds on Robinson Road between State Road and M-119 in Good Hart. The event will feature The Young Americans performing a free, 30-minute benefit concert at noon, art and craft vendors, fine art and antiques, a silent auction 10 a.m.-2 p.m., a live auction at 1 p.m., wagon rides, food, games, gently used book and DVD sale, Native American art, music and a bake sale. Local performing artists will include Kirby and Dr. Goodhart’s Home Remedy, a magician, and Twister Joe, the balloon artist. The Crow’s Nest Restaurant chefs will be preparing perch, gazpacho and pizza, and Firehouse Chili, the winner of the recent firefighter cook off, will be served. Ice cream from Kilwin’s will be available. The auctions will feature a sailboat, jewelry by local artists, works by artist Jane Cardinal, a Pointer Boat tour, an etched glass table by artist Tom Hammill, a framed oil painting by Susan Glass, a cut rock table by Northern

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Medical first responder Lindsey Pfaff of the Readmond Friendship Cross Village Fire and Rescue Squad holds “Mr. Majestic,� a photo by Peg Muzzall that will be a part of the live auction at the Mini Fair in Good Hart on Sunday, July 18. Pfaff’s chili recipe also won the firefighter cookoff and it will be served along with fresh perch, pizza, hamburgers, ice cream and other culinary delights. Rock’s Al Dicken, photography by Roger Craton and Peg Muzzall, a quilt, furniture, antiques, gift certificates, golf packages, gift baskets, donations from local merchants and fine art. Proceeds will be dedicated to the purchase of new equipment and for training

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Boyne Arts Collective hosting Gail Stoltz exhibit through July 22

BOYNE CITY — Artist Gail Stoltz is hosting a oneman showing of his work at the Boyne Arts Collective Art Center, located at 210 S. Lake St., Boyne City. The show will be on display through July 22. Stoltz, as a graduate of Chicago’s Ray-Vouge School of Graphic Art, began his commercial art career at Reuben Donnely, the Yellow Pages Company. There he did illustrating and some

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Today he thinks of Boyne City as home and in his retirement continues to do that which is his first love — paint. The Gail Stoltz exhibit at the Boyne Arts Collective Art Center introduces the artist’s portraits, scenes and abstract canvasses. Stoltz’s work can be seen in the gallery regularly along with that of 40 or more other artists from the Boyne City area.

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CALENDAR

C4

ONGOING EVENTS

7:07 — Zion Lutheran Church in Petoskey hosts “7:07 rock ‘n’ roll worship” at 7:07 p.m. every Monday, featuring The Ablaze Band. Pizza dinner 6:30-7 p.m. Kids pajama party in the nursery. Contact Randy Hitts, (231) 6223565 or rjhitts@aol.com.

Art workshops — Kuhlhaus Gallery hosts both daily and weekly children’s workshops on different topics at the gallery in Harbor Springs. Daily classes for those 5-8 are 9-10 a.m. and cost $14 per student each class. Classes for those 9-12 is 10:30 a.m.-12:30 p.m. and cost $22 per student each class. Weekly classes for those 8-12 are 1:30 p.m.-3:30 p.m. Monday through Friday, and are $110 per student each week. Call Lizzie, (231) 2031343, or visit www.kuhlhausart. com.

Bluebird walks — Bluebird walks will be 11 a.m. on Sundays through Aug. 9 at Grass River Natural Area, Bellaire. Call (231) 533-8314.

Breakfast — Alanson

Church of the Nazarene serves breakfast 8-10:30 a.m. every second Saturday of the month through September at the church. There will be pancakes, sausage gravy, biscuits, scrambled eggs, hash browns, milk and orange juice. Cost for adults is $6, and $4 for children ages 4-12.

Breakfast — An all-you-

can-eat pancake, eggs and sausage breakfast is 7:30-11:30 a.m. every first and third Sunday of the month at the Charlevoix American Legion, 106 E. Garfield St., Charlevoix. Cost is $5 for adults or $3 for children. Takeout and delivery available. Handicap accessible. Call (231) 675-4444.

Concert — Coffee and

Connect in Petoskey hosts a Christian family music night 6:30-9 p.m. every Friday. The public is welcome to this nondenominational event. A food drive for Manna Food Project will take place.

Concerts — The Straits Area

Concert Band performs at 8 p.m. every Tuesday at Conkling Heritage Park, Mackinaw City.

Concert — Harbor Springs Community Band concert is 89 p.m. every Monday through August at the waterfront by the city dock in Harbor Springs. Call (231) 526-6626 or e-mail sanfordcharlotte@hotmail.com.

Concert — Jordan Valley Community Band will be playing 7:30 p.m. every Thursday in July in East Jordan’s downtown Memorial Park. E-mail tsothard@yahoo.com.

Concert — Pine Lake Winds Band will be playing 7-8:30 p.m. on Tuesday nights at the Charlevoix Middle School band room, Charlevoix. Public is welcome. Call Ev Wujcik, (231) 547-6376.

Concert — Evenings at the Longhouse are 7 p.m. every Tuesday through August at the longhouse just west of Ottawa Stadium, Harbor Springs. Bring a chair or blanket. Upcoming lineup includes: Little Traverse Bay Bands Language Program, July 20; Dan Chingwa, July 27. Call (231) 526-2705. Dinner theater — Ragamuffin Theatre presents a dinner theater called “The Maid Diaries: Room 310, Unlocking Secrets” 6:30-10 p.m. every Tuesday through Aug. 10 at the H.O. Rose dining room at Stafford’s Perry Hotel, Petoskey. Tickets are $39.95 plus tax. Reserve tickets at (231) 347-4000.

Film — Petoskey Film Theater shows independent, foreign and art house films 7:30 p.m. Wednesdays and Fridays at the Petoskey District Library Carnegie building. Donations are appreciated. Call the PFT Movie Hotline at (231) 758-3108 or send an e-mail to petoskey.film. theater2@gmail.com. Fundraiser — A fundraiser for the Charlevoix Circle of Arts is 6-9 p.m. the first Friday of every month at Stafford’s Weathervane restaurant, Charlevoix. Appetizers and a cash bar will be available. Cost is $10 per person.

Hayrides — Hayrides are noon-4 p.m. every Saturday and Sunday through October at Pond Hill Farm, Harbor Springs. Ride stops at trout pond to feed fish and ducks. Cost is $4 for adults. Kids 10 and under are free. Call (231) 526-3276.

Junior Birders — SEENorth Junior Birders of Northern Michigan is an interactive program of birding field trips that provides children 8-14 with a new adventure at every location. This club will meet once a month at different locations throughout the area. (231) 348-9700; www.seenorth.org.

Friday, July 16, 2010 •

FRIDAY, JULY 16

Rummage sale — A rum-

Ladies only swim — Charlevoix Area Pool ladies only swim 7:45-9 p.m. Tuesdays. The cost is $3.50. (231) 547-0982.

Music benefit — Live music 6-10 p.m. every Saturday at the American Legion Hall in Petoskey. Proceeds go to the Manna Food Project, the Salvation Army and Nazarene Church in Alanson. Suggested donations are nonperishable foods, paper goods, toiletries, store gift cards and cash. Local talent is invited to take part. This gathering is smoke- and alcoholfree, and kid friendly. Jim Gunter and Lori Voss host the event. Call (231) 348-9694.

Music session — A Celtic music session with Gail Gerrie and John Richey is the first and third Sunday of the month. For future locations, visit www.synergysong.com.

Open swim — Charlevoix Area Pool open swim 68 p.m. every Monday and Wednesday. The cost for residents of Charlevoix Township, Hayes Township or the city of Charlevoix is $1 per person, and $1.50 for all other residents. (231) 547-0982.

PAWS for a story

mage sale is 8 a.m.-noon Friday and Saturday, July 16-17, at the Irish Boat Shop storage building, Harbor Springs, and will feature water recreation items and boats for silent auction.

Used book sale — A used book sale is 8 a.m.-4 p.m. Friday, July 16, at the Michigan Dyslexia Institute, Harbor Springs. Call (231) 526-9282. Summer celebration — A summer celebration is 7 p.m. Friday, July 16, at Raven Hill Discovery Center, East Jordan. There will be indoor and outdoor activities including demonstrations, silent auction, live music, art and historic exhibits, and wine with hors d’oeuvres. Tickets are $25 and can be purchased at (231) 536-3369 or via e-mail at info@ravenhilldiscoverycenter.org.

Play — “The Music Man, Jr.” will be performed by the Northern Michigan Youth Theatre 7 p.m. Friday and Saturday, July 16-17, and 2 p.m. Sunday, July 18, at the Petoskey High School auditorium. Tickets are $5 for students and seniors, $8 for adults. Tickets are available at the chamber of commerce in Petoskey, Harbor Springs and Boyne City. Call (231) 8386320.

— Children can read to a dog at PAWS for a story 10:30-11:30 a.m. every Monday and Saturday in July at the Charlevoix Public Beaver Island Music Library, Charlevoix. Festival — The Beaver Island Music Festival is Friday and Saturday, July 16-17, on the Pray Petoskey — island. Friday’s line-up begins at Community nondenominational prayer gatherings are in Petoskey 5:30 p.m. and musicians include Red Tail Ring, Four Finger Five as follows: Pray Petoskey 7-8 and Black Jake and the Carnies. a.m. Mondays at the Petoskey For a complete schedule and Friendship Center, 1322 ticket information, visit www. Anderson Road; Pray Petoskey bimf.net. noon Tuesday at Petoskey City Hall; Pray Northern Michigan noon-1 p.m. Wednesdays at Indian River Northern Michigan Regional SummerFest — The Indian Hospital chapel, Petoskey. River SummerFest is Friday Contact Hi Stover, (231) 758through Sunday, July 16-18, 0302; Gil O’Gawa, (231) 347in Indian River. Friday events 9387. include: craft show; children’s activities; chili cook-off noon-6 See ONGOING on PAGE C6 p.m. in downtown with tasting

at 5 p.m.; carnival runs noon-11 p.m. in Marina Park; pony rides 2-6 p.m.; car cruise 6-7 p.m. with line-up at Indian River Car Quest.; music entertainment 6 p.m.-midnight by Mike Ridley and The Blitz. Visit www.irchamber.com.

Petoskey. Visit www.petoskeydowntown.com.

Street Legends car show — The annual Street

Art fair — The annual North American Art Fair is 9 a.m.-4 p.m. Saturday, July 17, at the Harbor Springs waterfront next to the tennis courts. The fair showcases culture, history, Native American tradition and more. Call (231) 526-2705.

Legends car show is Friday and Saturday, July 16-17, in Charlevoix. Friday events include a cruise-in 6:30-9:30 p.m. downtown along with music by The Fabulous Oldies but Goodies Band at Odmark Performance Pavilion in East Park. Visit www. streetlegends.net.

Chicken fry — Friends of Paradise Lake host a chicken fry noon-5 p.m. Saturday, July 17, at Paradise Lake Marina in Carp Lake. Cost is $7 for two pieces and sides, and $8 for three pieces and sides; beverages available. (231) 537-4714.

Author visit — Author Joseph Heywood will share his new book, “Death Roe,” 6-9 p.m. Friday, July 16, at Local Flavor, Boyne City. Author visit — Author of “Extreme Michigan Weather” Paul Gross will be signing his book at 1 p.m. Friday, July 16, at the Charlevoix Book World, Charlevoix. Pontoon cruise — Naturalist “Arloon” Westhoven will guide a pontoon cruise and talk about wildlife at 6 p.m. and 7:30 p.m. Friday, July 16, and 10 a.m. and 11:30 a.m. Saturday, July 17, at the Grass River Natural Area, Bellaire. Call (231) 533-8314.

Concert in the park — Charlevoix Men’s Chorus will perform 12:15 p.m. on Friday, July 16, at Pennsylvania Park, Petoskey. Visit www.petoskey. com.

Music in the Park — The Mickeys perform 7-9 p.m. Friday, July 16, at the bandshell in Memorial Park, East Jordan.

Rummage sale — A rummage sale is 8 a.m.-noon Saturday, July 17, at the Irish Boat Shop storage building, Harbor Springs, and will feature water recreation items and boats for silent auction.

Poochfest — The Charlevoix County Humane Society hosts its annual Poochfest 8 a.m.3 p.m. Saturday, July 17, at Veterans Park in Boyne City. A 1.5-mile parade of paws is 8-9 a.m. along the waterfront, starting and ending in Veterans Park. Registration is 7:45 a.m. Gifts given to the first 50 registrants who raise/donate $25 or more. There are a variety of contests, games and demonstrations throughout the day. For a complete schedule, call (231) 582-6774. Sand sculpting — Sand sculpting contest 9:30 a.m. Saturday, July 17, at Petoskey State Park. Registration is 8:30 a.m.; cost is $5. Gift certificates to Toski Sands will be awarded to the winners. Call (231) 3472311.

Baynanza — The Bay

SATURDAY, JULY 17

Art in the Park — There will be more than 130 exhibitors at Art in the Park 10 a.m.-6 p.m. Saturday, July 17, at Pennsylvania Park in

Harbor foundation is hosting a “Horse-n-Around Baynanza” featuring dancing, silent and live auctions, dinner and a cash bar at 6 p.m. Saturday, July 17, at the Bay Harbor Equestrian

See CALENDAR on PAGE C5

Family Fun! BIG Flea Market July 22, 23, 24, 25 Flywheelers Show Grounds By the Dam, on the Maple River

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C5

Friday, July 16, 2010 •

CALENDAR FROM C4

Club, Bay Harbor. Entertainment will be provided by Steve Azar. Tickets are $150 per person. Call (231) 439-7100.

Craft fair — A “Lovely

Made” craft fair is 10 a.m.-4 p.m. Saturday, July 17, at Holy Childhood Community Center, Harbor Springs. There will be crafts, a bake sale and raffle. Call (231) 526-2815.

Play — “The Music Man, Jr.” will be performed by the Northern Michigan Youth Theatre 7 p.m. Saturday, July 17, and 2 p.m. Sunday, July 18, at the Petoskey High School auditorium. Tickets are $5 for students and seniors, $8 for adults. Tickets are available at the chamber of commerce in Petoskey, Harbor Springs and Boyne City. Call (231) 8386320.

Venetian Festival

— Venetian Festival is Saturday through Saturday, July 17-24, in Charlevoix. It kicks off with music by Charlie’s Root Fusion and DeHurricane 3-7 p.m. Saturday, July 17, at Ferry Beach. For a complete schedule, visit www.venetianfestival.com or call (231) 547-3872.

Beaver Island Music Festival — The Beaver Island

Music Festival is Saturday, July 17, on the island. Saturday’s line-up begins at 3 p.m. and musicians include Dave Boutette, Blue Water Ramblers and Burton’s Garden. For a complete schedule and ticket information, visit www.bimf.net.

Street Legends car show — The annual Street

Legends car show is Saturday, July 17, in Charlevoix. The show is in East Park and on Bridge Street, with registration 9 a.m.noon. Activities such as music, contests, give-aways, 50/50 drawings and more are 10 a.m.noon; auction benefit for Camp Quality 2 p.m. Awards and drawings will follow at 3 p.m. Must be present to win. Visit www.streetlegends.net.

Bike tour — The Michigander Bike Tour is Saturday through Friday, July 1723, in Northern Michigan. There are two-day, six-day or seven-day courses. The trails will go through Indian River, Vanderbilt, Cheboygan, Gaylord, Bellaire,

Harbor Springs and Mackinaw City. All groups will head back to Indian River on Friday for refreshments and cake. Visit www.michigantrails.org for a complete schedule.

Indian River SummerFest — The Indian River SummerFest is Saturday and Sunday, July 17-18, in Indian River. Saturday events include: 5K/10K run 7 a.m. at Tuscarora Township Hall; co-ed volleyball tournament 9 a.m. at DeVoe Beach; airplane rides 9 a.m.noon at the Indian River Airport; bingo 10 a.m.-4 p.m. at Marina Park; craft show downtown; car smash and a classic/custom car and truck show downtown; carnival noon-11 p.m.; Mike Ridley and Jelly Roll Blues Band 6 p.m.midnight in Marina Park; raffle drawing 10 p.m. in Marina Park. Visit www.irchamber.com.

Theatre — Central Michigan University Summer Theatre presents “Almost, Maine” 7:30 p.m. Sunday, July 17, at the Boyne City Performing Arts Center, Boyne City High School, Boyne City. Tickets are $5 for adults and $3 for students and are available at the Boyne chamber office, Local Flavor and Country Now and Then, all in Boyne City.

Author visit — Author Peg Herring will be signing her book, “Her Highness’ First Murder,” 2-4 p.m. Saturday, July 17, at Horizon Books in Petoskey. Call (231) 347-2590.

Pontoon cruise — Naturalist “Arloon” Westhoven will guide a pontoon cruise and talk about wildlife at 11:30 a.m. Saturday, July 17, at the Grass River Natural Area, Bellaire. Call (231) 533-8314.

Concert — A concert featuring Bill and Kate Isles with April Verch is 7:30 p.m. Saturday, July 17, at the Aten Place, Boyne Falls. Tickets are $15 per person or $25 per pair. Tickets available at the door. E-mail baten@centurytel.net. Cherry Jubilee — The annual Cherry Jubilee is 11:30 a.m.-2:30 p.m. Saturday, July 17, at Friske Orchards, Atwood. There will be live music by Scatter the Mud, tractor-drawn wagon rides, clown tricks, cherry samplings and a visit by Miss Cherry. Call (231) 599-2604 or visit www.friske.com.

Chicken fry — Friends of Paradise Lake host a chicken fry noon-5 p.m. Saturday, July 17, at Paradise Lake Marina in Carp Lake. Cost is $7 for two pieces and sides, and $8 for three pieces and sides; beverages available. (231) 537-4714. Field trip — Join the Petoskey Regional Audubon Society on a field trip 10 a.m. Saturday, July 17, at Thorne Swift Nature Preserve, Harbor

SUNDAY, JULY 18

Family fun night —

Petoskey’s Genesis Church hosts a free family fun night 4-7 p.m. Sunday, July 18, at Sunset Park, Petoskey. There will be food, inflatables, cotton candy, popcorn and prizes. Entertainment is by DJ Experience and Tommy Tropic.

Triathlon — The Little Traverse Triathlon is 9 a.m. Sunday, July 18, in Harbor Springs. Relay teams are allowed. Racer check-in is 78:30 a.m. on Zoll Street. Awards are at noon. Visit www.littletraversetri.com. Breakfast — A pancake breakfast is 8 a.m.-12:30 p.m. Sunday, July 18, at the Holy Childhood Community Center, Harbor Springs. Call (231) 5262815.

Play — “The Music Man, Jr.” will be performed by the Northern Michigan Youth Theatre 2 p.m. Sunday, July 18,

at the Petoskey High School auditorium. Tickets are $5 for students and seniors, $8 for adults. Tickets are available at the chamber of commerce in Petoskey, Harbor Springs and Boyne City. Call (231) 8386320.

Mini fair — Readmond, Friendship and Cross Village volunteer fire and rescue squads are hosting their annual Mini Fair 10 a.m.-4 p.m. Sunday, July 18, at the fire hall grounds on Robinson Road, Good Hart. There will be art, auctions, arts and crafts vendors, games, entertainment and food. The Young Americans will also perform a free benefit concert at noon. Contact Trina Hayes at trina@bookhungry.com for a complete schedule.

Park. For a complete schedule, visit www.venetianfestival.com or call (231) 547-3872.

Indian River SummerFest — The Indian River SummerFest wraps up Sunday, July 18, in Indian River. Events include: breakfast 8 a.m.-noon at the VFW Post 7439; kayak-bike biathlon 9-11 a.m. beginning at DeVoe Beach; flea market 10 a.m.-3 p.m. at Marina Park; noon-2 p.m. open house and a Northern Rods ‘n Rides car display at Indian River Airport; children’s mountain bike race 11:30 a.m.-3 p.m. in Cooperation Park; carnival noon-6 p.m. Visit www.irchamber.com.

MONDAY, JULY 19

Venetian Festival

Author visit — Author

— Venetian Festival is Sunday through Saturday, July 18-24, in Charlevoix. Sunday events include: Venetian Jam 4 p.m. at the skate park; music by Voices Without Boundaries, Mariachi Los Rebeldes and Afrika Yetu’s Academy 7-9 p.m. in East

Robert Swanson will be signing his new book, “Petoskey 100,” 1-3 p.m. at McLean and Eakin Booksellers, Petoskey. Call (800) 968-1910.

See CALENDAR on PAGE C6

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C6

Friday, July 16, 2010 •

CALENDAR FROM C5

Venetian Festival

— Venetian Festival is Monday through Saturday, July 1924, in Charlevoix. Monday events include: music by The Undeserving 6 p.m. at Bridge Park; Tommy Tropic, a children’s show and Venetian Vision at 8 p.m. in East Park. For a complete schedule, visit www.venetianfestival.com or call (231) 547-3872.

TUESDAY, JULY 20

Nature work day

— Volunteers are needed to help remove exotic species on a nature preserve work day 9 a.m.-3 p.m. Tuesday, July 20, at Kalman Preserve just outside Harbor Springs. Call (231) 3441011 or e-mail cindy@landtrust. org.

Obesity prevention tour — The Move

It Movement Tour expansion of Cartoon Network’s Get Animated initiative is battling childhood obesity noon-4 p.m. Tuesday, July 20, at Boyne Highlands Resort, Harbor Springs. There are many different activities including skate park challenge, soccer shoot out challenge, Crayola outdoor challenge and more. All activities are free. Visit www.cartoonnetwork.com or www.boyne.com.

Venetian Festival

— Venetian Festival is Tuesday through Saturday, July 20-24, in Charlevoix. Tuesday events include: Battle of the Bands 5-9 p.m. at Michigan Beach; music by Charlevoix Community Band and Terrance Simien 5-9 p.m. in East Park; music by My Friends and The Vermeers 7-11 p.m. in East Park. Visit www.venetianfestival.com or call (231) 5473872.

Wednesday, July 21, downtown Pellston. Admission is free.

Festival of the Horse — The annual Mackinac Island Festival of the Horse runs Wednesday through Saturday, July 21-24. Wednesday events include a blessing of the festival by the Rev. Vincent Carroll at 6:45 p.m. at Mission Point, and a saddle horse parade at 7 p.m. on Main Street. Visit www. mackinacislandfestivalofthehorse.com for a complete schedule.

Venetian Festival — Venetian Festival is Wednesday through Saturday, July 21-24, in Charlevoix. Wednesday events include: Jason Elsenheimer 5-7 p.m. and David Cisco 7-11 p.m. at the Tiki Tent stage in East Park; music by Northwest Academy Jazz Band, Star Farm and WAR 6-10 p.m. in East Park. Visit www.venetianfestival.com or call (231) 547-3872.

Concert in the park — The Kowalskes perform 6:30 p.m.-8 p.m. Wednesday, July 21, at the gazebo in Old City Park, Boyne City. Visit www.boynechamber.com.

Concert in the park — Voices Without Borders will perform 12:15 p.m. on Wednesday, July 21, at Pennsylvania Park, Petoskey. Visit www.petoskey. com.

Craft — Teens in grades 712 are invited to create crafts from recycled products 1-2 p.m. Wednesday, July 21, at the Charlevoix Public Library, Charlevoix. Call (231) 237-7340.

Bay View festival concert — Bay View festival

— Kelly Shively will perform 12:15 p.m. on Tuesday, July 20, at Pennsylvania Park, Petoskey. Visit www.petoskey.com.

concert series continues 8 p.m. Wednesday, July 21, at the John M. Hall Auditorium, Bay View. Tickets are $10. Visit www. bayviewfestival.org or e-mail cludwa@gmail.com.

Choir concert — Children

Concert — Children of the

of the World in Harmony perform at 7 p.m. Tuesday, July 20, at the Petoskey High School auditorium, Petoskey. For ticket information visit www.vwbchoir. com.

World in Harmony perform 7 p.m. Wednesday, July 21, at the Harbor Springs Performing Arts Center, Harbor Springs. For ticket information visit www. vwbchoir.com.

Concert in the park

Dance concert — Children

of the World in Harmony perform a dance concert at 7:30 p.m. Tuesday, July 20, at the Harbor Springs Performing Arts Center, Harbor Springs. For ticket information visit www. vwbchoir.com.

WEDNESDAY, JULY 21

Concert — Ernie Mindel and

the Cedar Valley Band 7 p.m.

THURSDAY, JULY 22

Festival of the Horse

— The annual Mackinac Island Festival of the Horse runs Thursday through Saturday, July 22-24. Visit www.mackinacislandfestivalofthehorse.com for a complete schedule.

Venetian Festival

ONGOING EVENTS FROM C4 in Charlevoix. Thursday events include: kids day 10 a.m.-3 p.m. at Lake Michigan Beach; music by Charlie Witthoeft 5-11 p.m. at the Tiki Tent stage in East Park; music by Pub Runners, Brian Lorente and the Usual Suspects and Big Kenny 6-10 p.m. in East Park. Visit www. venetianfestival.com or call (231) 547-3872.

Tea party/hike — Robert Krueger will teach visitors how to identify and collect plants used for coffee or tea at 10 a.m. Thursday, July 22, at Grass River Natural Area, Bellaire. A hike will follow at 2 p.m. Call (231) 533-8314.

Concert — A concert with

Serene Jewel Sangha — Serene Jewel Sangha 7-9 p.m. Wednesdays in the Donovan Room of the Augustine Center in Conway. The third Wednesday of each month the group meets in noble silence from 7:30-9 p.m. Contact Michael Winnell, (231) 347-5557 or serene.jewel@gmail. com.

Skate park— The Charlevoix skate park is open noon-8 p.m. daily. Helmets required. Contact Laura Stebe (231) 675-4505 or lastebe@gmail.com.

Stroll the Streets — Boyne City’s Stroll the Streets are 6-9 p.m. on Fridays through Sept. 2 in downtown Boyne City. On these nights, businesses have extended hours, there is live entertainment on street corners, drawings and more. Call (231) 582-9009 or visit www. strollthestreets.com for the music line-up.

Seth Bernard and May Erlewine is 8 p.m. Thursday, July 22, at the Dhaseleer Events Barn in Charlevoix. Tickets are $15. Children 12 and under are free. Call Carl at (231) 376-7768 with questions or to reserve tickets. Visit www.blackcatconcerts.com. Street Musique — Street Musique 7:30-9:30 p.m. every Opera — “The Magic Flute” Thursday through Sept. 2 in downtown Harbor Springs. Call opera show is 8 p.m. Thursday (231) 526-7999. through Sunday, July 22-25, at the Ross Stoakes Theatre, Crooked Tree Arts Center, Summer fun — At 10:30 Petoskey. Tickets are $7 through a.m. every Wednesday in July $25. Visit www.bayviewfestival. there will be entertainment org or e-mail cludwa@gmail. for kids at the Jordan Valley com. District Library, East Jordan. The lineup includes: Historical and cultural topics with rent a Concert — Children of the rambling naturalist Wednesday, World in Harmony perform 9:30-11 a.m. Thursday, July 22, July 21; an interactive family play, “Fish Tank Follies,” at the John M. Hall Auditorium in Bay View. For ticket informa- Wednesday, July 28. Call (231) 536-7131. tion visit www.vwbchoir.com.

Flywheelers show

Swing dance — Blissfest

— The annual Northern Michigan Antique Flywheelers Tractor, Engine and Craft Show is Thursday through Sunday, July 22-25, at the Flywheelers’ show grounds three miles north of Boyne Falls on U.S. 131. Daily events include: opening ceremony 9 a.m.; fun tractor pull 9-10 a.m.; veneer mill 9 a.m.-noon; shingle mill 10-11 a.m.; sawmill demonstration 10 a.m.-noon; kids pedal tractor pull 12:30 p.m.; shingle mill and sawmill 1-2 p.m.; parade of power 23:15 p.m.; farm demonstrations 3:30-4:30 p.m.; and an evening tractor safari after 3:30 p.m. There will also be a flea and craft market, museum, petting zoo and a small engine and tractor display. Music on Thursday, July 22 includes open mic jam and dancing in the evening. For a complete schedule visit www. walloonlakeflywheelers.com.

swing dance series presents The Up North Big Band 7:30 p.m. every second and fourth Saturday, year-round, at the Rustic Ballroom, Walloon Lake. Adults, $10; $6 for those under 18. Children under 5 are free.

Hike — A hike on the Nippising Trail is 2 p.m. Thursday, July 22, at Grass River Natural Area, Bellaire. (231) 533-8314.

Vesper concerts — Bay View’s vespers concert series is 8 p.m. Sundays through Aug. 15 at the John M. Hall Auditorium, Bay View. The theme is: Poems and Parables Sunday, July 18. West Side Story Sunday, July 25. Tickets are $10. Visit www.bayviewfestival.org or e-mail cludwa@ gmail.com. Wildflower walks — Learn about wildflowers and plants on a walk at 10 a.m. Tuesdays through Aug. 25 at Grass River Natural Area, Bellaire. Call (231) 533-8314.

ART EXHIBITS

Exhibit — “Oncology On Canvas” exhibit is open through Friday, July 23, at the

— Venetian Festival is Thursday through Saturday, July 22-24,

Tell us what you think at petoskeynews.com

TERRACE INN Art Show Join Us For An

Friday Evening with artist Susan Craig

Serving Italian Food with a San Franciso influence since 1993

Featuring Pan Fried Walleye with a mozzarella crust.

Cocktails and Snacks Available Stay for Dinner

Sunday & Monday enjoy Serving Lunch & Dinner our homemade pizza! Tuesday-Saturday Bay View: US-31 to Fairview and follow the signs 1549 Glendale Ave. Petoskey • theterraceinn.com Reservations: 231-347-2410

Dinner from 5 pm Mon thru Sat Closed Sunday

Chef specials... Featuring local farm fresh vegetables from Dhaseleer and Kiteley Farms

2911 Boyne City Rd. • Boyne City

231.582.3341

Hidden River Golf & Casting Club

Live Entertainment Tuesday - Saturday

Tuesday Nights

“Music on the Maple” July 20th • 6-9:30pm Michelle Chenard reservations recommended

Lobster Bake

Tues., July 27th Music by Mike Ridley

Reserve your lobster by July 18th

www.hiddenriver.com

RESTAURANT

Rainbow Room Serving Lunch Daily 11-4pm. Dinner Served Nightly 5-9pm. Friday-Saturday 5-10pm.

Outdoor Dining Available Grey Gables Round Lake

Belvedere

New Friday Night Fish Fry Saturday Night Prime Rib

Open 7 Days at 4:30 p.m.

Best Golf Course

800.325.4653/reservations or hiddenriver.com

All You Can Eat Steamed Dungenes Crab $24.95

TUESDAY Angus Burger & Beer $6.00

Bridge Street Olesons Plaza

Exhibit — An exhibit of various mediums is open through mid-October at Kuhlhaus in Harbor Springs. Hours are 11 a.m.-5 p.m. Tuesday through Saturday. Call (231) 526-4204 or visit www. kuhlhausart.com. Exhibit — “IronWorks” exhibit is open 11 a.m.-7 p.m. daily (except Wednesdays) at Three Pines Studio, Cross Village. Visit www.threepinesstudio.com or call (231) 526-9447.

Exhibit — “North of the Bridge” exhibit is on display through Thursday, Sept. 2, at Crooked Tree Arts Center, Petoskey. Call (231) 347-4337.

Exhibit — An art exhibit by Emmet County artists is on display through October at the Petoskey City Hall. Call (231) 347-4337 or (231) 347-2500.

Exhibit — An exhibit of works by Kathie Briggs will open 5-7 p.m. Friday, July 16, at the Charlevoix Circle of Arts, Charlevoix. The exhibit will be open through Sept. 19. Visit www.charlevoixcircle.org.

FARM MARKETS Bay Harbor — The Bay

Harbor farmers market is 1-4 p.m. Saturdays in July in the village.

Boyne City — The Boyne

City farmers market is open 8 a.m.-noon every Wednesday and Saturday through October in Veterans Park. Call (231) 8389009, e-mail mainstreet@boynecity.com or visit www.boynecityfarmersmarket.com.

Charlevoix — The downtown Charlevoix farmers market is 9 a.m.-1 p.m. Thursdays through Sept. 30 on Bridge Street. East Jordan — The East Jordan farmers market is open 9 a.m.-1 p.m. Thursdays through October in Sportsman’s Park. Call (231) 536-2636. Ellsworth — The Ellsworth farmers market is 8 a.m.-noon every Saturday through Oct. 16 at Vollmer’s parking lot. Harbor Springs — The downtown Harbor Springs farmers market is open 8 a.m.-noon every Wednesday and Saturday through September. Call (231) 526-7999.

Good Hart — Good Hart

See ONGOING on PAGE C7

Next Week at

Saturday, July 17 Junior Tennis Tournament 8 a.m. Lakeside Courts “Treasures in the Trees” 9 a.m.-12 p.m. Campus Sunfish Sailing Races 12:30 p.m. Waterfront Crouse Visiting Artists Concert 7 p.m. Hall Auditorium Timothy Noble & Steve Zegree: The Great American Songbook Rock at the Rec 8 p.m. Rec Club

135th Assembly Season - Week Five Sunday, July 18 Infant/Toddler Care 8:30 a.m.-12:30 p.m. Loud Hall Holy Communion 9 a.m. Crouse Memorial Chapel Sunday School 9:30 a.m. Children (under 10) 9:30 a.m. Hitchcock Hall Younger Youth (10-11) 9:30 a.m. Hitchcock Hall Middle Youth (12-14) 9:30 a.m. Loud Hall Leader Youth (15-college) 9:30 a.m. Loud Hall Windows on Biblical World 9:30 a.m. Campus Club Christian Fellowship Class 9:30 a.m. Voorhies Hall Assembly Worship 10:45 a.m. Hall Auditorium The Rev. Dr. Phillip Gulley, Sermon: If the Church Were Christian. Scripture: Galatians 5:13-14, 22-23 (The Fruits of the Spirit) Museum Open after Worship Until 1 p.m. Museum Junior Tennis Tournament 1 p.m. Lakeside Courts Sundays at the Library Series 3 p.m. Library Youth Theatre, Willy Wonka 4 p.m. Voorhies Hall Festival Choir Rehearsal 6:30 p.m. Hall Auditorium John M. Hall Vespers Concert 8 p.m. Hall Auditorium Poems and Parables

Monday, July 19 Religion and Life Forum 10 a.m. Voorhies Hall The Rev. R. Robert and Bettirae Kimes Lectures delivered by the Rev. Dr. Phillip Gulley, Theme: Good Faith Junior Tennis Tournament 12:30 p.m. Lakeside Courts Youth Theatre, Willy Wonka 4 p.m. Voorhies Hall Hot Dog Roast 6 p.m. Boys’ and Girls’ Club Leader Youth Group (16-college) After Hot Dog Roast Swift Field International Film Festival 8 p.m. Voorhies Hall “On the Rocks” Pops Series 8 kp.m. Hall Auditorium Poems and Parables: The Music of Carrie Newcomer with the Stories of Phil Gulley

Tuesday, July 20 Religion & Life, Dr. Gulley 10 a.m. Voorhies Hall Woman’s Council Grand Bazaar 10 a.m. Woman’s Council Toddler Tales/Lap Sit Program 10-10:30 a.m. Library Junior Tennis Tournament 12:30 p.m. Lakeside Courts Woods Walk 1 p.m. Gateway Trailhead Burt Atkinson: Unmarked Trails of the Bay View Woods Student Artist Recital 4 p.m. Voorhies Hall Campus Club Program 7:30 p.m. Campus Club Justin Rashid, CEO, American Spoon Co.: The Story of American Spoon Co. Rec Club Movie Night 8 p.m. Rec Club

Wednesday, July 21 Religion & Life, Dr. Gulley Lecturer Book Signing Behind the Scenes Junior Tennis Tournament Museum Open Younger Youth Group (11-12) Middle Youth Group (13-15) Festival Chamber Music Series Power of the Piano

10 a.m. Voorhies Hall 11 a.m.-12 p.m. Library 11:30 a.m. Campus Landing Pad 12:30 p.m. Lakeside Courts 2:30-4:30 p.m. Museum 6 p.m. Outside Voorhies 6 p.m. Outside Voorhies 8 p.m. Hall Auditorium

Thursday, July 22 Men’s Bible Study Morning Council African Drum Circle Religion & Life, Dr. Gulley Toddler Tales/Lap Sit Program Chamber Music Class Morning Council Pasta Supper Museum Open Contemplative Prayer Hour Festival Choir Rehearsal Opera Opens The Magic Flute

8 a.m. Campus Club 9:30 a.m. Woman’s Council 9:30-11 a.m. Campus Landing Pad 10 a.m. Voorhies Hall 10-10:30 a.m. Library 2-3:30 p.m. Crist Hall 5-7 p.m. Woman’s Council 5-7 p.m. Museum 6:30-7:30 p.m. Crouse Chapel 6:30-9 p.m. Hall Auditorium 8 p.m. Crooked Tree Arts Center

Friday, July 23

WEDNESDAY & FRIDAY Maui Sushi Menu

Board of Trustees Meeting Women’s Bible Study Current Issues Forum Ernie Gray Olympics Opera, The Magic Flute

8:30 a.m. Wade Admin. Building 9:30 a.m. Campus Club 10 a.m. Loud Hall 1 p.m. Boys’ and Girls’ Club 8 p.m. Crooked Tree Arts Center

Saturday, July 24

BISTRO EARLY DINING MENU

7-11

Minutes from Harbor Springs & Petoskey on the beautiful Maple River in Brutus

MONDAY

Northern Regional Michigan Hospital in Petoskey. Visit www.northernhealth.org.

Served Nightly 4:30 to 6:00 p.m. Starting at $8.00

www.greygablesinn.com • 308 Belvedere, Charlevoix, 547-9261

Beeson/Sachse Mixed Doubles 8:30 a.m. Lakeside Courts Candidate/By-Law Info Forum 9 a.m. Voorhies Hall Sunfish Sailing Races 12:30 p.m. Waterfront Movie 8 p.m. Voorhies Hall Opera, The Magic Flute 8 p.m. Crooked Tree Arts Center “On the Rocks” Pops Concert 8 p.m. Hall Auditorium Beach Party: A Tribute to Jimmy Buffett

More Info: 231-347-6225 • www.bayviewassociation.org Buy tickets online at www.bayviewfestival.org


ENTERTAINMENT

Friday, July 16, 2010 •

Market Days are 2-5:30 p.m. Saturdays through Oct. 1 at the Good Hart General Store. Visit www.goodhartstore.com.

Indian River — The Indian

River farmers market is 3-7 p.m. Wednesdays and 9 a.m.-1 p.m. Saturdays through Oct. 30 at the Indian River Depot parking lot.

Petoskey — The Petoskey

Farmers market is 8:30 a.m.1 p.m. on Fridays through September on Howard Street between Mitchell and Michigan streets.

MUSEUMS

History museum — Inland Water Route History Museum is open 10 a.m.-2 p.m. Saturday and Sunday, and by appointment, off U.S. 31 on River Street in Alanson. Call (231) 838-5309 or visit www.iwrhs.com.

Maritime museum

— The Icebreaker Mackinaw Maritime Museum is open 9 a.m.-7 p.m. daily. The museum is located near Shepler’s Ferry Dock, Mackinaw City. Admission charged. Visit www. themackinaw.org.

Blackbird museum

— The Andrew J. Blackbird Museum “Quillwork to Beadwork” 2010-2011 exhibit is now open at 383 E. Main St., Harbor Springs. Summer hours are 10 a.m.-4 p.m. Monday through Friday and noon-4 p.m. on Saturday. Call Joyce Shagonaby at (231) 526-2705 or e-mail jshag@chartermi.net.

Art, science and history museum — Raven

Hill Discovery Center is open 10 a.m.-4 p.m. Monday through Friday, noon-4 p.m. Saturdays and 2-4 p.m. Sundays. Raven Hill is located between East Jordan and Boyne City just off C-48 at Pearsall Road. (231) 536-3369, (877) 833-4254 or visit www. ravenhilldiscoverycenter.org.

Family History Library

— The Petoskey Family History Library is open 10 a.m.-2 p.m. and 7-9 p.m. Wednesdays, and 10 a.m.-4 p.m. and 6-9 p.m. on Thursdays at the corner of Alcan and Country Club roads in Petoskey. (231) 758-2986.

History museum

— Charlevoix Historical Society’s Harsha House Museum is open 1-4 p.m. Mondays through Saturdays. The museum is located at 103 State St., Charlevoix.

Museum will be open through Saturday, Sept. 4, at 100 Depot Court, Petoskey. Hours are 10 a.m.-4 p.m. Mondays through Fridays and 1-4 p.m. Saturdays. Call (231) 347-2620 or visit www.petoskeymuseum.org.

Museum — L’Arbre Croche Museum is open 1-3 p.m. Saturdays or by appointment through the color season. The museum, which highlights the 300-year history of Cross Village, is located in the lower level of Father Al’s Parish Hall, adjacent to Holy Cross Church, located on M-119/Lakeshore Drive in Cross Village. Call Frank Francis, (231) 526-0906. History museum — The Harbor Springs History Museum, 349 E. Main St., is open to visitors 11 a.m.-4 p.m. Thursdays and Fridays, and 10 a.m.-2 p.m. Saturdays. The “Ships of the Great Lakes” exhibit is open through July 17. Call (231) 5269771 or visit www.harborspringshistory.org.

STORY TIMES

Story hour — Petoskey District Library lap sit for 3-yearolds is 10:30 a.m. Mondays and 10 a.m. and 10:45 a.m. Thursdays. Preschool story hour is 12:30 p.m. Tuesdays.

Story time — Story time for kids 1-2 p.m. the second and fourth Saturday of the month at Local Flavor in Boyne City.

Story time — Charlevoix Public Library story time 10:30 a.m. every Thursday for children birth-5 and their caregivers with stories, songs and crafts. The library is at 220 W. Clinton St. Story time — Crooked Tree District Library story time 10:3011:30 a.m. every Wednesday in Walloon Lake with stories, songs and crafts. (231) 535-2111.

Weekend music PETOSKEY Chandler’s, Petoskey — Don Julin 8-11 p.m. Friday, July 16. Joe Dart 8-11 p.m. Saturday and Sunday, July 17-18.

City Park Grill, Petoskey — Howard Baker

Knot, Just A Bar, Bay Harbor — Hipps n Ricco Friday, July 16. Sean Duo 9 p.m. Saturday, July 17.

CHEBOYGAN Mulligan’s, Cheboygan — Nate King Friday and Saturday, July 16-17.

CROSS VILLAGE

Coffee and Connect, Petoskey — Father and

B.B.Q. Restaurant, Boyne City — Michael Seiler 5-9 p.m. Friday and Saturday, July 16-17.

— Jelly Roll Blues Band 9:30 p.m.-1:30 a.m. every Sunday.

Boyne City Lanes, Boyne City — DJ 8 p.m.

EAST JORDAN

son blues duo 4-6 p.m. every Saturday.

Escape Lounge, Southwoods Restaurant, Petoskey — Skeleton Crew 9 p.m.-1 a.m. Saturday, July 17. .

Leo’s Sports Bar, Petoskey — The North’s Most Dangerous Band 9:30 p.m.1 a.m. Sunday, July 18.

Noggin Room, Stafford’s Perry Hotel, Petoskey — Chris Koury 8-11 p.m. Friday, July 16. Toby Jones 8-11 p.m. Saturday, July 17. Billy Brandt and Sarana VerLin 811 p.m. Sunday, July 18.

Ozone Nightclub, Odawa Casino Resort, Petoskey — Comedy 8-9:30 p.m. and DJ Shawn at midnight every Saturday; $5 admission.

Papa Lou’s, Petoskey — Hipps n Ricco 10 p.m.-2 a.m. Sundays. DJ Bill da Cat 10 p.m. Thursdays through Saturdays.

Sage, Odawa Casino Resort, Petoskey — Dan Farrow on piano 6-10 p.m. every Friday and Saturday.

ALANSON The Riverside, Alanson — Karaoke 9 p.m. every Saturday.

cava, Bay Harbor — Jason Kott 4-7 p.m. Friday and Saturday, July 16-17.

story time for children 0-5 years 9:30-11 a.m. every Wednesday at Jordan Valley District Library, East Jordan. (231) 536-7131.

Sagamore’s, Inn at Bay Harbor, Bay Harbor

Story time — Story time

South American Grill, The Inn at Bay Harbor, Bay Harbor — Nathan

for 3- to 5-year-olds 10:30 a.m. every Tuesday at the Boyne District Library, Boyne City.

5:30-8:30 p.m. every Saturday.

BOYNE CITY

BAY HARBOR

Story time — Playgroup and

Weathervane, Charlevoix — Marty Ward

10 p.m. Friday, July 16. Jamie and the Juveniles 10 p.m. Saturday, July 17.

Story time — Crooked Tree District Library story time 2-3 p.m. every Thursday in Boyne Falls with stories, songs and crafts. (231) 549-2277.

Pete Kehoe 7-11 p.m. Saturday, July 17.

— Bob Bryan 6-9:30 p.m. every Saturday in July.

every Friday.

Legs Inn, Cross Village

Jordan Inn, East Jordan — John Slough 7 p.m.

Larks Lake — Kirby 7 p.m. Saturday, July 17.

MACKINAC ISLAND

The Gate House, Grand Hotel, Mackinac Island — Karaoke 10 p.m.-1:45 a.m. Sundays. GHO 10 p.m.-1:45 a.m. Friday and Saturday, July 16-17.

Pink Pony, Mackinac Island — Myk Rise 9:30 p.m.1:30 a.m. Friday, July 16. Brian Thomas 3 p.m. and Myk Rise 9:30 p.m.-1:30 a.m. Saturday, July 17. Myk Rise 9:30 p.m.-1:30 a.m. Sunday, July 18.

every Friday.

Cafe Santé, Boyne City — Patrick Ryan 9 p.m.-midnight Friday, July 16. Sean Ryan 9 p.m.midnight Saturday, July 17.

Level’s Nightclub at 220 Lake Street, Boyne City — DJ Low Budget 11 p.m. every Friday. Open mic 8 p.m. every Sunday.

Sportsmans Bar, Boyne City — Karaoke with Ryan The Karaoke Kid 9:30 p.m. every Friday.

BOYNE FALLS The Beach House, Boyne Mountain, Boyne Falls — Nelson Olstrom 7-10 p.m. Friday, July 16. Pete Kehoe noon-3 p.m. and Michelle Chenard 7-10 p.m. Saturday, July 17.

Everett’s, Boyne Mountain, Boyne Falls — Michelle Chenard 7-10 p.m. Friday, July 16. Ron Getz 7-10 p.m. Saturday, July 17.

Murray’s Bar and Grill, East Jordan — Worker Bees 9 p.m.-midnight Friday, July 16. Beer Bottle Blues Band 9 p.m.midnight Saturday, July 17.

ELLSWORTH Gold Nugget Bar and Grill, Ellsworth — DJ Johnny Luv 9:30 p.m. Friday and Saturday, July 16-17.

ELMIRA The Railside Bar and Grill, Elmira — Karaoke 9:30 p.m. every Friday.

HARBOR SPRINGS Northern Lights Recreation, Harbor Springs — Seize the Karp 9:30 p.m. Friday and Saturday, July 16-17.

Seminole Pub, Boyne Highlands, Harbor Springs — JUSDUIT 5:30-

Terrace Room, Grand Hotel, Mackinac Island — Alex Graham and the Grand Hotel Orchestra 9:30-11:30 p.m. nightly.

MACKINAW CITY Dixie Saloon, Mackinaw City — DJ 11 p.m.-2 a.m. every Friday and Saturday.

JR’s Tailgate Pub, Mackinaw City — Karaoke 9 p.m.-2 a.m. every Friday.

PELLSTON Douglas Lake Bar, Pellston — Chris Koury 6:309:30 p.m. Sunday, July 18.

Smokey’s Grill, Pellston Regional Airport, Pellston — Hipps n Ricco 7 p.m. Saturday, July 17. Michelle

TOPINABEE

8:30 p.m. Friday, July 16.

Breaker’s Bar, Topinabee — Billy Jewell

records your karaoke 8:30 p.m.close every Friday and Saturday

Slopeside, Boyne Highlands, Harbor Springs — Ben Overbeek 9

9:30 p.m. Friday, July 16. The Darwin Project 9:30 p.m. Saturday, July 17. Splash 8 p.m. Sunday, July 18.

CHARLEVOIX

p.m.-midnight Friday, July 16. Jeff Fitzgerald and Friends 9 p.m.midnight Saturday, July 17.

WOLVERINE

INDIAN RIVER

p.m.-1:30 a.m. every Friday night.

Mountainside Grill, Boyne Falls — Kerry Carson

Flight Deck, Charlevoix — Free jukebox 8 p.m.-2 a.m. every Friday.

Giuseppe’s Italian Grille, Charlevoix — Connie’s Karaoke 9:30 p.m.-1:30 a.m. every Friday.

Grey Gables Restaurant, Charlevoix — Jeff Woolsey 6:30-10:30 p.m. every Wednesday, Friday and Saturday.

Brown Trout, Indian River —James Greenway 6:309:30 p.m. Friday and Saturday, July 16-17.

The Pinehurst, Indian River — Entertainment by Alvis 9:30 p.m.-1:30 a.m. every Wednesday, Friday and Saturday.

LARKS LAKE Moose Jaw Junction,

Bates 7-11 p.m. Friday, July 16.

Mauldoon’s Saloon, Wolverine — Karaoke 9:30

Meadows Bar and Grill, Wolverine — Muddy Bottom Boys 7-11 p.m. every Saturday.

DO

ONGOING EVENTS FROM C6

C7

History museum

— The Little Traverse Historical

The Venetian Festival

Decorated Bicycle Parade!

Sunday Indian River Cross in the Woods, every Sunday night at 6:00pm, Indian River $500 Coverall All Paper Games Mi. Progressive No Smoking

Sunday, Thursday, Friday Odawa Casino Resort 1760 Lears Rd, Petoskey Afternoon doors open at 11:00am Afternoon Progressive starts at $1000.00 Evening doors open at 5:00pm Evening Progressive starts at $2500.00 Must be 21 or older to participate.

Saturday • July 24, 2010 Ride your decorated, non-motorized vehicle in the parade! Wheel chairs, bikes, scooters, strollers all welcome

Prizes & a T-Shirt For Every Entrant! 80th Annual

ENJOY GROOVE

BINGO GAMES

DINE

2010

Tuesday VFW Post 2051 599 W. Conway Rd. (Airport corner, Harbor Springs)

Wednesday Hudson Township Auxiliary in the Hudson Township Hall, Camp 10 Rd., Elmira. 7 p.m. doors open at 5:30 p.m. All paper Higher Payouts! License #A21491. Proceeds to FD & other charities.

For additional information: 231-549-2789 or 231-549-3616. SMOKE FREE

Bike Decorating Clinic • Decorate your vehicle at home, or come to our decorating clinic on July 24 at 9:30 am at the Middle School Fenced Play Area • Decorations provided or use your own.

10:15 line up at the Middle School 11:00 Parade

To list your game night in this directory, call the Petoskey News-Review at 347-2544 and ask for Faith Sando. Or call direct, 439-9337.

Come early if you need more decorations!

Classifieds pay off!

This year’s bicycle parade sponsored by

The Rules • All ages welcome.

BE

6:00pm Registration 7:00pm Bingo All Paper Games Mi. Progressive starts at $500 for 52 numbers Bingo Balls - Pay out $150/game

• Children under the age of 7 must be accompanied by an adult on the parade route. • Helmets should be worn by all riders. • Non-motorized vehicles only.

E E R F &

Have fun & ride safely!

entertainment | art | music thegraphicweekly.com


C8

Local Flavor

Contact Rachel Brougham 439-9348 • rbrougham@petoskeynews.com

candy woman

Friday, July 16, 2010 •

The

Rachel Brougham

439-9348 - rbrougham@petoskeynews.com

W

PHOTOS: RACHEL BROUGHAM / NEWS-REVIEW

Mo’s Bacon Bar Did someone say CHOCOLATE AND BACON? While Pam Peterson takes pride in tracking down hard-to-find vintage candy to sell at Symons General Store in Petoskey, one of the big sellers at the candy counter right now is a chocolate bar laced with bacon and salt. “I’m buying six times more of these bars right now than some of these other products,� Peterson said. Mo’s Bacon Bar, a dark chocolate bar with applewood smoked bacon and salt, is made by Vosges HautChocolat. “Some people aren’t so sure about the combination at first, but I just explain that it’s the salty and sweet combo that is really appealing,� Peterson said. “So many people like bacon, and you can’t go wrong with chocolate.� While the flavor of bacon is definitely noticeable, it’s not overpowering. “I think once people get over that initial reaction of combining chocolate and bacon and try it, they’re pleasantly surprised,� Peterson added. — Rachel Brougham

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hen was the last time you had dark chocolate laced with bacon? Or black licorice with a hint of coconut? How about handmade fondant swirled with caramel and dipped in chocolate? “I’m always looking for the next big thing, but the vintage candy never goes out of style,� said Pam Peterson, general manager of Symons General Store in downtown Petoskey. “I have to search high and low for some of this stuff.� Peterson, who formerly owned a catering business in Atlanta, Ga., moved to Northern Michigan permanently four years ago. “I had a college friend who owned a summer home, and when I visited her one summer, I immediately fell in love with the area and knew I wanted to move here,� Peterson explained. “But I owned a business and it just wasn’t possible at the time.� Instead, Peterson returned north each summer and worked at the Sequanota Club in Charlevoix. But after more than a decade, she was ready to make Northern Michigan her year round home. “I just got so tired of having to

leave this area after the summer mmer each year,� Peterson said. “When I moved here year-round, it just really felt like home.� For the last four years, Peterson has been the face behind hind the candy and cheese counters ers at Symons General Store. “I like candy, but this candy counter is a Symons General Store tradition,� Peterson said. “We have people that stop in here in the spring to load up on candy they can’t find anywhere else, before they even arrive at the cottage to unload. How great is that?� For Peterson, hearing stories from people who came to the candy counter at Symons General Store as a child, and are now continuing that tradition with their children and even grandchildren, make her job worthwhile. “It’s always fascinating to hear stories from people who came here and picked out candy when they were young,� Peterson said. “A guy who manages the newsroom at CNN was talking recently about coming in here years and years ago, and it’s always great to hear people have such wonderful memories of this place.� Candy lovers often request hard-to-find items, and Peterson rises to the occasion. While she

One of Pam Peterson’s most recent finds: a set of giant lollipops she saw in San Francisco. admits it’s sometimes hard to track vintage candy down, she can find almost anything. One of her recent finds is a set of giant lollipops she proudly displays above the front counter. “I saw them at a little shop in San Francisco and knew I had to have them. I finally called them up and they gave me the number to the candy maker,� Peterson said. “I think it’s a pretty small operation since the invoice came hand written.� Among top sellers including a variety of black licorice, salted caramels and malted milk balls, Peterson stocks handmade items such as fondants, toffees, and a variety of gourmet chocolates. “I’m always looking for the next great thing,� she said. “There are so many great new candies on the market, but the vintage ones never go out of style.� Symons General Store is located at 401 East Lake St. in Petoskey. Phone (231) 347-2438.


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