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The Quotes of the year See page 10
January 7, 2013
FREE
RESS
Bluegrass Fest See page 13
Serving The Eastern Maumee Bay Communities Since 1972
M
After 20 years
Maumee Bay is starting to freeze up By Kelly J. Kaczala Press News Editor kkaczala@presspublications.com Oregon Councilwoman Sandy Bihn, who is also Western Lake Erie Waterkeeper, said winter activities on Maumee Bay once enjoyed by residents are now returning, thanks to cooler temperatures and less heated water being discharged from FirstEnergy’s power plant on Bay Shore Road. “Most of the Oregon shoreline along Maumee Bay is freezing - at least for now. What a treat,” said Bihn. “We may be able to once again skate, ice fish, etc.” When Bihn’s family moved to their current home on Bay Shore Road in 1987, the ice on the bay was thick. “We were able to go out on the ice and walk along the shoreline on ice. It was great,” she said. “But all of a sudden, we couldn’t do it anymore.” Bihn said in the 1990s, Maumee Bay stopped freezing over. “I called many people and asked why and was told any number of supposed reasons, but no one mentioned the Bay Shore power plant,” said Bihn. The plant, located on the south shore of Lake Erie, near the confluence of the Maumee River and Maumee Bay in Oregon, had added another unit and increased the amount of water it used by about 200 million gallons a day. Many power plants use water for cooling. The water that is discharged from the Bay Shore plant, often referred to as a “thermal plume,” is about 10 degrees warmer than the water taken in, according to Bihn. “For nearly 20 years, I watched the so called ‘thermal plume’ keep the waters from freezing, from the plant to Maumee Bay State Park - over two miles in distance. Going out on the ice was unsafe,” said Bihn. The Bay Shore plant, which at one time used up to 750 million gallons of water per day, has closed three of its four units, due to FirstEnergy’s announcement earlier last year that it would close several power plants because of air emission standards
Continued on page 2
Q
uote of The Week
We are surrounded by people who are telling us what’s wrong with everyone else. Bryan Golden See page 11
Oregon racer slipping and sliding at Hangover Races While the sun was shining in the metro Toledo area on New Year’s Day, lake-effect snow was causing problems at Sandusky Speedway’s 33rd Annual Hangover Race. The snow caused races, which are run in any kind of weather, to be challenging for stock car drivers and entertaining for just under 1,000 fans. Pictured, Oregon racer Mark Pollock, who placed second in his heat and fourth in the Champagne Stocks feature at the Hangover Races. See story on page 12. (Press photo by Russ Lytle)
Group challenges license extension
Davis-Besse opponents to press on By Larry Limpf News Editor news@presspublicaitons.com A coalition of environmental groups vowed to continue its challenge to an operating license extension for the Davis-Besse Nuclear Power Station after a federal board ruled against two of their motions. The coalition of Beyond Nuclear, Citizens Environmental Alliance of Southwestern Ontario, Don’t Waste Michigan, and the Green Party of Ohio has contended that a shield building where cracks have been found is vulnerable to additional stress, contrary to analysis of the FirstEnergy Nuclear Operating Co., which is applying to the Atomic Safety Licensing Board for a 20year license extension. The current license is scheduled to expire in 2017. The board late last month approved a FENOC motion to dismiss the coalition’s challenge to what is called the Severe Accident Mitigation Alternatives analyses the company conducted. In particular, the coalition questioned the company’s reliance on a computer code, Modular Accident Analysis Program, that nuclear plant operators use to simulate various scenarios.
“We conclude that FENOC’s use of the MAAP code to generate fission product source terms for use in the Davis-Besse SAMA analysis is reasonable…” the licensing board wrote in its decision. Terry Lodge, an attorney representing the coalition, said the company’s use of the code doesn’t adequately reflect the condition of the containment building. “In dismissing our SAMA contention, Nuclear Regulatory Commission staff and the Atomic Safety Licensing Board have embraced FENOC’s assumption, built into its computer modeling, that Davis-Besse’s containment will function as designed,” Lodge said. “But this is impossible, for the shield building is severely cracked, and could well fail due to any small added stress, such as a mild earthquake, tornado, or hear and pressure build-up from a reactor meltdown, This is not over. We will continue tracking NRC’s interactions with FENOC about the cracks.” FENOC issued a report last February that cited the absence of an exterior weather proof coating on the concrete building as a factor in the cracking, allowing moisture to migrate into the concrete and then freeze and expand. The extreme weather conditions of the 1978 blizzard contributed to the problem,
the report said. The cracking was discovered in October 2011 when the power station was shut down as scheduled for a new reactor vessel head, The company initially described the problem as a “sub-surface hairline crack” discovered while workers were cutting into the side of the building to remove the old reactor head. The building is made of 2 ½ feet-thick reinforced concrete and is designed to protect the steel containment vessel. There is a space of about 4 ½ feet between the shield building and the containment vessel. Michael Keegan, of Don’t Waste Michigan, described the company’s blizzard analysis as a “snow job.” “The weather sealant whitewash applied four decades now prevents independent inspection of the multiple surface cracks,” he said. The licensing board also rejected the coalition’s contention that a planned replacement in two years of a steam generator poses additional risk of more cracking, calling it “mere speculation.” FirstEnergy retained independent contractors it considered experts to conduct an analysis of the cracking problem. Inspectors from the NRC also were involved in the analysis.
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THE PRESS
JANUARY 7, 2013
Court Log Oregon Municipal Court
Black Forest Café This Week’s Specials from Chef Ron Duschl •Bavarian Pot Roast •Jagerschnitzel •Chicken Picata
Owens Community College Culinary Arts students Linzy Packard, Jerilyn St. Clair, Shelbie Pinkelman and Amber Simmet show off their delectable desserts at the recent “Evening of Chocolate” – a themed dessert buffet event designed to showcase the students’ baking and pastry talents. The students are in the Baking and Pastry II class, which is taught by Food, Nutrition and Hospitality Instructor Kelly Wolfe.
Maumee Bay starting to freeze up Continued from front page imposed by the Environmental Protection Agency. As a result, the Bay Shore plant has reduced its daily water usage by over 500 million gallons a day, said Bihn. And that, she believes, has allowed the bay to freeze over once again. “About 500 million gallons of water less per day are being used in 2013 than in 1987,” said Bihn. Less water use also means less fish kills, she added, “over hundreds of millions less.” Bihn is referring to the plant’s cooling water intake system, which, according to studies, has killed millions of fish, fish larvae and eggs. It has long been a controversial topic to environmentalists because the fish, according to Bihn, come from the warmest, shallowest, and most biologically productive waters of the Great Lakes.
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• Kristi A. Kamelesky, 548 S. Wheeling, Oregon, 30 days Correction Center of Northwest Ohio (CCNO), 30 days suspended, $189 court costs and fines, disregard for safety/public roads. • Canen Joshua Smith, 257 S. Berlin, Oregon, 180 days CCNO, 170 days suspended, license suspended six months, $489 court costs and fines, OVI – Alcohol/Drugs. • Artis A. Stallworth, 220 N. Hawley, Toledo, 180 days CCNO, 170 days suspended, $464 court costs and fines, OVI-Alcohol/ Drugs. • Artis A. Stallworth, 220 N. Hawley, Toledo, $125 court costs and fines, drivers license or commercial driver’s. • Che A. Ochoa, 358 Burger, Toledo, 90 days CCNO, 10 days suspended, $155 court costs and fines, petty theft. • Charles D. Costello, 710 S. Hawley, Toledo, 180 days CCNO, 180 days suspended, assault. • Christopher John Pence, 967 Butler, Toledo, 90 days CCNO, 90 days suspended, $180 court costs and fines, attempt to commit an offense. • Rick Allen Frederick, 537 Walsh, Toledo, 180 days CCNO, 180 days suspended, $180 court costs and fines, vessel or device operation. • Rick Allen Frederick, 537 Walsh, Toledo, 30 days CCNO, 30 days suspended, $180 court costs and fines, disorderly conduct. • Major Al Goodlow, 1936 Airport, Toledo, 90 days CCNO, 90 days suspended, $180 court costs and fines, petty theft. • Elaine M. Pence, 968 Butler, Toledo, 90 days CCNO, 90 days suspended, $180 court costs and fines, attempt to commit an offense. • Artis A. Stallworth, 220 N. Hawley, Toledo, 90 days CCNO, 80 days suspended, $155 court costs and fines, petty theft. • Canen Joshua Smith, 257 S. Berlin, Oregon, 180 days CCNO, 173 days suspended, $180 court costs and fines, possession of drugs.
Delectable desserts
We may be able to once again skate, ice fish...
The Ohio EPA for years reviewed options for the Bay Shore power plant to reduce the fish kills. The plant agreed in 2010 to install devices called “reverse louvers” to address the problem, though Bihn believed that the installation of the more expensive cooling towers would have been more effective. A new power plant, which will break ground in Oregon in May on 30 acres of land just south of the BP Husky Refinery,
between Wynn and Lallendorf roads, will help fill the gap being left by the phase out of the coal fired Bay Shore power plant. But the new gas fired plant, which will convert natural gas to electricity, is not expected to have the same impact that the Bay Shore plant had on fish, said Bihn, because it will use less water. Bihn plans to take a walk on the frozen bay soon, she said. “We should be able to enjoy a frozen Oregon Maumee Bay shore line this winter - if it is cold enough,” she said. She warned the public to check the ice and make sure it’s frozen solid before walking on it. “If you want to venture out on the ice, please be careful that the ice is thick enough and safe. Hopefully there will be ‘safe ice’ allowing ice fishing and ice skating once more at Oregon on the bay,” she said.
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SUBURBAN EDITION
THE PRESS
JANUARY 7, 2013
3
The Press serves 23 towns and surrounding townships in Lucas, Ottawa, Sandusky and Wood Counties
P.O. Box 169
419-836-2221 • OH www.presspublications.com • 836-1319 Vol. 41, No. 38 1550 Woodville Rd. Millbury, 43447 (419) 836-2221 Fax: (419) www.presspublications.com
Gas bill assistance
Rob Rodawalt spends some time sledding with his daughter Heaven, age 9, at Navarre Park. (Press photo by Ken Grosjean)
Columbia Gas of Ohio is making nearly $1 million available to incomeeligible customers for assistance with paying their natural gas bills this winter heating season. The fuel funds are in addition to established public energy assistance options such as the federal Home Energy Assistance Program (HEAP) and Ohio’s PIPP Plus program. Available funds include: • The Auction Fuel Fund, which contains $600,000 for the 2012-13 winter heating season, is a fund of last resort for families who have exhausted all other available emergency assistance programs. It provides up to $250 per heating season. Households at or below 200 percent Federal Poverty Level qualify for the fund. • The Crisis Fuel Fund, with $312,500 available, is a fund of last resort that provides up to $175 to customers who are disconnected or threatened with disconnection. Households at or below 175 percent Federal Poverty Level qualify for the fund. • HeatShare, available to homes with income ranges at or below 150 percent of the Federal Poverty Level, provides emergency assistance to payment-troubled households. Qualified Columbia customers may apply for the fuel funds through their local Community Action Agency. Local agency contact information is available at ColumbiaGasOhio.com or by calling Columbia’s Customer Contact Center at 1-800-344-4077.
Emergency plan
Women’s Connection
Sledding in the new year
Parents asked to change their thinking By Larry Limpf News Editor news@presspublications.com Cari Buehler is asking for about 45 minutes of time from residents of the Genoa School District – parents of students in particular. The assistant principal of Genoa High School is confident the emergency response training that district personnel have undergone can be utilized in situations other than schools, including retail outlets, movie theaters, and others. Buehler is the lead administrator in the district to be trained in the ALICE – Alert Lockdown Inform Counter Evacuate emergency response program. A former teacher and mother of four children, including three enrolled in Genoa schools, Buehler is convinced the more the community is aware of AWARE principles the better it would be prepared to respond to a tragic situation such as what occurred last month in Newtown, Connecticut. “I spent about a year and a half researching ALICE. Who was using it,” Buehler said. “We decided to take some time
and look into it and decided it was in everyone’s best interest to know about what we’re doing. We want community members to know what ALICE covers.” The district has scheduled its second informational session to explain the program to the community for Jan. 9 at 7 p.m. in the high school auditorium. A session held in the fall was attended by about 50 or so residents. District officials decided to hold another meeting after the shootings in Connecticut. In some emergency situations, it’s possible, says Buehler, some students may be told to flee their building while others may remain under lockdown. “We’ve gotten a lot of great feedback from our first session,” she said. “But some residents have had questions like, ‘Do you want students running down Genoa Clay Center Road?’ We’re asking people to change their way of thinking. The great thing about ALICE is you make it work for your district.” The more informed parents are of the district’s response plan for a crisis situation, the better, Buehler said. “Once police get on the scene no one would probably get
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within a two-mile radius of the school.” Clay Township Police Chief Terry Mitchell also praised the ALICE program for its flexibility. Buehler said her goal is to videotape the session and have it posted on the district’s website. The Genoa district was the first school system in Ottawa County to adopt the ALICE program, she said. Memorial trees offered An offer by a former Lake Township trustee to purchase a tree and have it planted as a memorial to the students killed in Connecticut was well received by the board of trustees Wednesday. The offer by John Welch was quickly approved by the trustees, Melanie Bowen, Richard Welling, and Ron Sims, who then offered to each purchase a tree. Bowen recommended a tree be planted on township property along East Broadway that may be developed into a park and at the township’s parks. Police Chief Mark Hummer said the township police association would also contribute for a tree.
Announcing the Grand Opening of...
All area women are invited to attend the “Originality in the New Year” luncheon and program being sponsored by Toledo East Women’s Connection Jan. 10 at Bayside Boardwalk, 2759 Seaman St., Oregon. Doors open at 11:30 a.m. Nancy Mills, of Oregon, will share her original designs, including scarves, gift baskets and more. Holiday Thomas, of Bowing Green, will provide musical entertainment. Barbara Falls, of Sylvania, will discuss, “How Crisis Provided Answers to Life’s Most Important Questions.” The cost is $10.50, all inclusive. For reservations, call Dorothy at 419691-9611 or Marilyn at 419-666-1633.
Instant Admission
Terra State Community College will hold the last of a series of Instant Admission Days for prospective students Jan. 8 and 9. Spring semester classes a begin Jan. 14. Participants should bring high school or college transcripts. Admissions counselors and financial aid staff will be available from 8 a.m. to 7 p.m. Jan. 8 and 9. Call 419-559-2349 or visit the college’s website at www.terra. edu.
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Sun., January 13th 7:30 a.m. - 1:00 p.m. Sponsored by: Woodville Twp. Fire Dept. Breakfast at the Fire Station includes scrambled eggs, chunky applesauce, homemade pork sausage, coffee or milk.
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THE PRESS
JANUARY 7, 2013
Sewer project on Wheeling may cause disruptions By Kelly J. Kaczala Press News Editor kkaczala@presspublications.com The Sanitary Sewer Rehabilitation Project Phase 2 in Oregon may cause some disruptions on Wheeling Street next week, according to Oregon Public Service Director Paul Roman. The project consists of rehabilitating local and trunk sanitary sewers to reduce inflo/infiltration into the city’s sanitary sewer system. Part of the project includes lining the inside of existing sanitary sewers and manholes on Wheeling Street, between Navarre Avenue and Bleeker Street, and Pickle Road, between Grasser Street and Wheeling Street. The lining work will involve cleaning, inspecting, and lining of the existing sanitary sewer and adjacent manholes within the existing right of way. “We really don’t have slowdowns in the winter anymore,” Roman said about infrastructure projects at the last council meeting in December. “The last five years have always been pretty busy.” Part of the project that involves lining the trunk sewer on Wheeling Street is scheduled to begin on January 7, said Roman. “We will put out a public notice to the residents of Wheeling informing them of the work and instructing them on anything that may affect them,” said Roman. “We’ll also try and put out information on solar boards and message boards on what’s to be expected.” The contractor will need to install temporary bypass pumps and above ground piping during the lining process, according to Roman. “The biggest issue with this work is that it will involve bypass pumping, in which there will be a large 12-inch discharge line that will have to be laid out along the west side of Wheeling Street, from Navarre to Starr,” said Roman. The work will last between three to four weeks, he added. “It will drastically affect residents on the west side of Wheeling. There will be road closures involved, certainly a lane restriction on Navarre at different times. There will be a ramp for Starr Avenue, a rectangular conduit. But we will have the proper warning beacons as well as signs prior to the work. It will be noticed. I guarantee it,” said Roman. The contractor for the project is Underground Utilities, Inc., Monroeville, Ohio. Inland Waters Pollution Control, Inc., Detroit, is a sub-contractor to Underground Utilities, Inc. The city has hired Quality Control Inspection, Inc., Bedford, Ohio, to provide a project representative/inspector who will be available on site to address any concerns during construction. The project is being funded through the Ohio Public Works Commission (OPWC) State Issue 2 program and the Ohio EPA Water Supply Revolving Loan Program.
East Toledo
Director of land bank to talk about demolitions Cindy Geronimo, executive director of the Lucas County Land Bank, will speak at the East Toledo Senior Center Thursday, Jan. 17 at 12:30 p.m. The event is sponsored by the East Toledo Club and is open to the public. The land bank acquires and sells foreclosed tax delinquent properties without going through the long court process leading to a sheriff’s sale. In July this year, the land bank was awarded a $3.6 million grant from the Ohio Attorney General. With matching funds from the City of Toledo, the land bank has $6.8 million available through December 2013. This funding will help increase the pace of demolitions of dilapidated housing. There are 93 East Toledo properties on the demolition list. To see a map, search the web for Lucas County Land Bank. Geronimo will talk about the location of these demolitions, how to get a house on the list and how to acquire the vacant land for use as a side lot or a community garden. Prior to taking the position with the land bank, Geronimo had worked for Lucas County for 16 years, as a Civil Bailiff for the Lucas County Court of Common Pleas, the Chief Deputy Recorder in the Lucas County Recorder’s Office and Director of Real Estate in the Lucas County Auditor’s Office. She also served as both a guardsman and civil service technician in the Ohio Air National Guard where she was a Logistics Special-
Workplace ist for the 180th Fighter Wing in Swanton, Ohio. The public is also invited to lunch which starts at noon and costs $6 for a sub, chips and a beverage. RSVP for lunch to 419-691-1429. The senior center is located at 1001 White St.
New stores open Dollar General recently opened two new stores in the area. One is at 1221 W. Main St in Woodville and the other is at 18300 Pemberville Rd. in Pemberville. According to a company spokesperson, Dollar General stores offer convenience and value to customers by providing a focused selection of national brands and private brands of food, housewares, seasonal items, cleaning supplies, basic apparel and health and beauty care products. Each store employs approximately six to 10 people. Dollar General is an ardent supporter of literacy and education. In 1993, the company founded the Dollar General Literacy Foundation, which has awarded more than
$74 million in grants to nonprofit organizations, helping more than 4.4 million individuals take their first steps toward literacy or continued education. For more information about the Dollar General Literacy Foundation and its grant programs, visit www.dollargeneral.com. Dollar General Corporation operates more than 10,000 stores in 40 states. In addition to private brands, Dollar General sells products from Procter & Gamble, Kimberly-Clark, Unilever, Kellogg’s, General Mills, Nabisco, Hanes, PepsiCo and CocaCola.
The right thing Genoa Retirement Village, provider of senior health and living services, donated more than $5,000 in cash and toys to the Ottawa County Holiday Bureau this year, according to a company press release. Through a combination of toy collection and several fundraising events, Genoa Retirement Village was able to raise money to give back to the local community. Each year, Genoa Retirement Village, along with their sister health campuses across a five-state area, participates in an annual fundraiser called Hope for the Holidays. In addition, the campus also participates in an annual companywide fundraising event each summer called Independence from Hunger. This year, Genoa Retirement Village donated over $4,000 of food and cash to the Genoa Area Food Pantry.
Ottawa County
New 9-1-1 system expected to be operating this month By Cynthia L. Jacoby Special to the Suburban Press A major upgrade of Ottawa County’s 9-1-1 emergency system is expected to go online sometime in January. “It’s being built as we speak,” said Sgt. James Lucas, head of the communications division of the Ottawa County Sheriff’s Office. “I will travel to Michigan in a couple of weeks to check it out.” The new system is being assembled by Cassidian Communications, a company that specializes in emergency management technology, at a Michigan site. Their work is being assisted by Frontier, Time Warner and Advanced Wireless Technologies. “They’ll set it up there and do the testing there on site,” Lucas explained. When the bugs are worked out, the new system will be transported back to the communications station on the third floor of the Ottawa County Courthouse. There should be little to no disruption in the local 9-1-1 service during the transition. “As I understand it, it will run parallel to the old system for a while,” until final approval is given for the solitary launch, Lucas said. Expectations were high that the system would be ready by mid to late December, but that did not happen. Lucas is confident, based on recent progress reports, that the system will be in place before January’s end. The upgrade will vastly improve service for residents across Ottawa County, Sheriff Steve Levorchick said in a previous
interview. The 9-1-1 committee pushed for the 15-year-old system’s replacement given the equipment is nearing its reliable shelf life, he explained. Wood County will also continue to play a major role in the local 9-1-1 service. More than five years ago, Ottawa County, under the direction of former Sheriff Robert Bratton, forged a partnership with Wood County that tied their 9-1-1 emergency systems together and introduced a back up option. The improved system, equipment included, will be shared with Wood County,
Park district projects to be discussed By Larry Limpf News Editor news@presspublications.com The Wood County Park District Board of Commissioners is scheduled to meet Jan. 8 at 4 p.m. at the district headquarters, 18729 Mercer Rd., Bowling Green, Director Neil Munger will report on the district’s 2013 capital improvement project schedule. Clinics funded The Ottawa County commissioners Thursday approved a proposal for funding the 60 Plus Nursing Assessment Clinics conducted by the county’s board of health. The commissioners approved $22,930 for the clinics in 2013. Funding will come from a Community
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Council meeting set The next regular meeting of Walbridge Village Council will be Jan. 16, 2013 at 6:30 p.m. A meeting set for Jan. 2 was cancelled.
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according to Sheriff Levorchick. The $680,000 bill will be covered by the two counties. Ottawa County’s portion is $160,000. Wood County carries the larger share of the cost because its network is larger and services municipalities such as Bowling Green and Perrysburg. Local residents won’t have to shell out any cash for the upgrade either. Ottawa County’s share comes from a fund accumulated from a 9-1-1 service charge collected on cell phone bills, according to Lucas.
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Bulletin Board policy As a service to our community, Bulletin Board items are published at no cost, as space permits. The Press makes no guarantee that items submitted will be published. To ensure publication of events/ news items, please speak to one of our advertising representatives at 419-836-2221. A complete listing of events is available at www.presspublications.com.
of the month; bingo the 4th Tues. of the month after lunch. Reservations: 419-862-3874. Elmore Card Players Meet Thurs. evenings at 7 p.m. at the Elmore Retirement Center.
assessments & more. Transportation and homedelivered meals available. 419-637-7947.
Jerusalem Twp.
Genoa
Ageless Wonders of Lake Township will be meeting for lunch Jan. 10, at 12:30 p.m. at American Table Restaurant, 846 W. Wheeling St., Oregon, at 12:30 p.m. Info: 419-836-3811. Mobile Food Pantry sponsored by the fire department auxiliary every 3rd Mon. of the month, 5-7 p.m., Fire Station 1, 4505 Walbridge Rd.
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Township Trustees Meet the 2 and 4 Tues. of the month at 6 p.m. at the township hall, 9501 Jerusalem Rd. Jerusalem Twp. Food Pantry, open 2nd Wed. of every month, 9-11 a.m. at the township hall, 9501 Jerusalem Rd.
Elmore Elmore Kiwanis Annual Pasta Supper Jan. 12, 4:30-7 p.m. at Woodmore High School (prior to the Woodmore vs. Gibsonburg basketball game). Menu will include meat or meatless pasta, salad, breadsticks, beverage and desserts. Tickets available at the door. A family ticket (immediate family members only) available for $15. The Kiwanis will also feed the team after the supper. Proceeds raised will be used to fund Kiwanis’ many community service projects. Storytimes for Preschool-Age Children offered Wed. at 11 a.m., Harris-Elmore Library, 328 Toledo St. Book discussion group meets the 4th Thurs. of each month at 10:30 a.m. New members welcome. Info: 419-862-2482. Elmore Senior Center-Elmore Golden Oldies, Grace Evangelical Lutheran Church, 19225 Witty Rd. Lunch served Tues. & Thurs. at noon. Reservations required by 10 a.m. the day before. Blood pressure & blood sugar checks the 4th Tues.
Bulletin Board
Preschool Storytime meets Tues. at 11 a.m. at the Genoa Branch Library, 602 West St. Book Discussion Groups meet the 3rd Thurs. of the month at 9:30 a.m. & the 3rd Tues. at 7 p.m., Genoa Branch Library, 602 West St. Call 419-8553380 to reserve a book. Genoa Senior Center 514 Main St., serves lunch Mon., Wed. & Fri., 11:30 a.m. (call 419-855-4491 for reservations). Card playing Mon. & Wed. at 12:30 p.m.; blood sugar checks offered the 3rd Wed. of the month; bingo Mon. at 9:30 a.m. Trinity Thrift Shop, 105 4th St., hours are Fri. 9:30 a.m.-4 p.m. & Sat. 9 a.m.-1 p.m. Clothes & small household items available at reasonable prices. Proceeds benefit mission projects. Genoa Community Food Pantry Open monthly on the 3rd Thurs.3:30-5:30 p.m. and the following Saturday of the same week, 10 a.m. - noon. Serving those who are in Genoa School District. Proper ID and billing address within the district required. Pantry is located at Trinity United Methodist Church, 4th & Main. Info: 419-855-3575 or 419855-8539.
Gibsonburg Active Seniors invited to Meet & Eat at Gibsonburg Senior Center, 100 Meadow Lane. Lunches every weekday, educational & social programs, health
Lake Twp.
Luckey Free Meal 4th Mon. of each month, American Legion Post 240, 335 Park Dr. Serving 5:30-6:30 p.m. Food Pantry open to the public the last Wed. of the month, 1-3 p.m. & the last Thurs. of the month 6-8 p.m., Main St. & Krotzer Ave. Contact local church offices for info.
Oak Harbor Blanket Collection is being conducted by Oak Harbor United Methodist Church, 360 East Ottawa St. Blankets will be donated to the Cherry Street Mission. Drop off donations Mon.-Fri. 9 a.m.-1 p.m. A dedication service for the blankets will be held Jan.13 at 10:30 a.m. A potluck will be held after church. Riverview Industries, Inc., 8380 W. SR 163, is selling grave pillows and blankets. Call for prices and info about personalizing. Food for Thought Food Pantry at Oak Harbor
THE PRESS JANUARY 7, 2013 5 Alliance Chapel, 11805 W. SR 105, the last Wed. of each month from 5 to 7 p.m. Info: 419-7073664.
Pemberville Quarter Frenzy Jan. 13, 6 p.m., Pemberville American Legion Hall, 405 E. Front St. Sign-in at 5 p.m. Proceeds benefit the Legion. Pemberville Area Senior Center at Bethlehem Lutheran Church provides programs & activities for adults 60 & over. Open 10 a.m.-2 p.m. M-F. Lunch served at noon. Community Food Pantry at Bethlehem Lutheran Church, 220 Cedar St. open M-Th, 11 a.m.-2 p.m. (excluding holidays). Open to Eastwood School District residents. ID & proof of residency required. Info available at Pemberville churches.
Walbridge Winter Revival Jan. 20-25, Grace Bible Baptist Church, 116 E Union St. Evangelist Ron Ostten will preach at services Sunday at 9:30 a.m. (Sunday School), 10:30 Sunday worship, followed by lunch and a 1 p.m. afternoon service, as well as Mon.Fri. at 7 p.m. Info: Pastor David Stogsdill, 419-6615058. Walbridge Centennial Committee meets the second Tues. of each month at 6:30 p.m. at the village hall. Family Storytimes for children of all ages Tues. 11 a.m., Walbridge Branch Library, 108 N. Main St. Free. 419-666-9900.
Woodville Woodville Senior Center offers lunch M-F, 11:30 a.m. (call 419-849-3636 for reservations). Home delivery also available.
Amber R. Billmaier Attorney at Law
Family Law Divorce Dissolution Child Custody Adoption
28350 Kensington, Suite 200 Perrysburg, OH 43551 419-931-0067
Free Consultations www.skiverlaw.com
Chateau Tebeau Winery ~Tours~Tasting Room~Menu~Entertainment~ 525 SR 635, Helena, OH ~ 419-638-5411
Located 7 miles West of Fremont on St. Rte. 6. Then 1 mile South on St. Rte. 635 Enjoy Our Award Winning Wines while you relax in front of the fireplace. We also serve soup, salads, pizzas & paninis.
Thurs. Jan. 10th Open Mic Night w/David Lester Fri. Jan. 11th Steve Brownell-Popular performer on Lake Erie Islands Sat. Jan. 12th Classic Trendz To place an ad in our Transitions Page, call The Press at 419-836-2221 and speak to the Classified Department. Deadline is Wednesday at 4:00 p.m.
Visit our website for details Live Entertainment every Thurs., Fri. & Sat. 7pm www.chateautebeauwinery.com Hours: Thurs. & Fri. 11am-10 pm ~ Sat. 2-10 pm
Happy 100th Birthday Aunt Marian!
TACO TUESDAY! Soft & Hard Chicken or Beef
1
$ 00
COME IN FOR A COLD MARGARITA and A HOT MEXICAN MEAL! Catering Available!
Banquet Room Available Perfect for your next meeting or Fiesta! BUY ANY LUNCH ENTREE GET SECOND OF EQUAL OR LESSER VALUE FOR
HALF OFF
El Camino Real 419-693-6695. Not valid with any other offer. Expires 1/19/13 Valid at Woodville Rd. location only.
Marian (Mauch) Schroeder will celebrate her 100th Birthday with an
Open House on Saturday, January 12, 2013 • 3:00pm to 5:00pm at Solomon Lutheran Church Main Street, Woodville OH (Use Cherry St. Entrance)
2072 Woodville Rd. 419.693.6695 Sun.-Thurs. 11-9, Fri. & Sat. 11-10
Oregon, OH
Marian would enjoy receiving a card, no gifts are necessary.
With Lots of Love ~ Your Nieces & Nephews
6
THE PRESS
JANUARY 7, 2013
Police Beats OREGON – Unknown suspect(s) entered an unlocked vehicle in the 2800 block of Pickle Rd. on Dec. 11 and took a case containing personal papers. • Unknown suspect(s) broke a window in a truck in the 1800 block of Woodville Rd. on Dec. 12 and took tools and a computer. • Unknown suspect(s) smashed the side passenger window on a vehicle in the 2700 block of Navarre Ave. on Dec. 12. Nothing was taken. • Unknown suspect(s) smashed a car window in the 3200 block of Pickle Rd. on Dec. 10 and stole a purse and bookbag with contents. • Unknown suspect(s) pried door open to an apartment in the 300 block of Van Buren Ave., and took a TV, cash and prescription medication on Dec. 11. • Unknown suspect(s) unsuccessfully attempted to break into a vehicle in the 6000 block of Grisell Rd. on Dec. 10. • Unknown suspect(s) entered an unlocked vehicle in the 3000 block of Dustin Rd. on Dec. 11 and went through it. Nothing was stolen. • A wallet was found in a ďŹ eld on Taylor Road containing I.D. cards, and credit/debit cards, on Dec. 10. • Unknown suspect(s) entered an unsecured running vehicle in the 3000 block of Navarre Ave. on Dec. 6 and drove off. • Unknown suspect(s) took three air conditioning units from an outside ofďŹ ce building at 2735 Navarre Ave., on Dec. 5. • Suspect entered school property at Cardinal Stritch High School, 3225 Pickle Rd., without proper authority, on Dec. 5. • Aluminum coils were stolen from an AC unit as well as 30 feet of copper tubing, in the 3400 block of Seaman St., on Dec. 4. • Tools, clothing and jewelry were stolen from an unlocked garage in the 2200 block of Brown Rd. on Dec. 8. • A moped was stolen from an unlocked garage in the 5100 block of Bay Shore Rd., on Dec. 4. • Unknown suspect(s) wrote derogatory words about victim’s wife on women’s bathroom wall in the 2600 block of Navarre Ave., on Dec. 8. • An unknown suspect entered a home by force in the 100 block of Springwood East on Dec. 9 and struggled with the victim. Nothing was taken. • A bank envelope with $150 in it was stolen from an unlocked vehicle in the 3300 block of Hazelton Dr., on Nov. 9. • A mitre saw and two sets of golf clubs were stolen from a garage in the 300 block of Crestway Dr., on Nov. 13. Crime log Lake Twp. – A 17-year-old male was charged with theft Dec. 30 after allegedly stealing a spare car key from his mother’s home on Laketon Terrace. • Noah Svette, 19, Newton Falls, Ohio, was charged with underage consumption of alcohol Dec. 31 at the Owens Lake Apartment complex. • Mark D. Hintz, 24, Walbridge, was charged Dec. 1 with possession of drug abuse instruments and three counts of possession of drugs. Police said his parents reported him.
Health Dept. clinics The Ottawa County Health Department has released the clinic schedule for Jan. 7 to 11. Unless otherwise stated, all clinics are held at the health department, 1856 E. Perry St., Port Clinton. Jan. 7: Immunization Clinic, 7:45 a.m.4:30 p.m.; Women, Infants and Children (WIC) Clinic, 7:45 a.m.-4:30 p.m. Jan. 8: 60-Plus Clinic, Lakeview Estates – Port Clinton, 9 a.m.-3 p.m. Jan. 9: Family Planning Clinic, 9:45 a.m.-1 p.m.; Tuberculosis Clinic (no appointment necessary), 3-4 p.m.; Immunization Satellite Clinic – Genoa St. John UCC, 8 a.m.-noon; 60-Plus Clinic – Riverview Healthcare Campus, 9 a.m.-3 p.m. Jan. 10: Well Child, Sexually Transmitted Disease (STD) and Family Planning Clinic, 8 a.m. to noon. Jan. 11: Tuberculosis Clinic (no appointment necessary), 3-4 p.m. For home health, call 419-734-6800.
Crash investigation The Ohio State Highway Patrol is investigating a single-vehicle crash that occurred Dec. 31 at 8:25 a.m. on Interstate 75 southbound, near milepost 177 in Wood County. According to Patrol reports, Christopher Harless, 22 of Findlay, was injured when the 1993 Ford F150 he was driving traveled off the right side of the roadway, striking two trees along the right of way fence. Harless was trapped inside the vehicle, and had to be extricated using the Jaws of Life by Central Joint Fire Department. He was taken to Mercy Saint Vincent Hospital in Toledo with serious but non-life threatening injuries. Interstate 75 was closed down for approximately 45 minutes in the aftermath of the crash.
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THE PRESS JANUARY 7, 2013
Honor Roll Of Business
Congratulations to these establishments for their years of service.
153 150 150 130 142 131 136 YEARS YEARS YEARS YEARS YEARS YEARS YEARS Woodville United Methodist Church Lutheran Home at Toledo 131 N. Wheeling Toledo 419-724-1414
201 W. 1st St. Woodville 419-849-2400
Solomon Lutheran School 305 W. Main Woodville 419-849-3600
St. John Lutheran Church
Funeral Home Cremation Center and Peacebird Garden
8180 W. St. Rt. 163 Oak Harbor 419-898-2851
3500 Navarre Ave. Oregon 419-691-6768
www.vehandson.com 132 W. Madison Gibsonburg, 637-7292
21140 W. Toledo St. Williston 419-836-5514
125 123 112 112 112 110 111 YEARS YEARS YEARS YEARS YEARS YEARS YEARS East Toledo Family Center
St. Peter Lutheran Church (Blackberry)
MYERS FARMS
17877 W. St. Rt. 579 Martin 419-836-8903
6810 Cedar Point Rd. Oregon 419-836-9387
1020 Varland Toledo 419-691-1429
Gibsonburg Pharmacy 241 W. Madison Gibsonburg 419-637-7441
105 102 104 106 YEARS YEARS YEARS YEARS
Pills ‘n’ Packages
Calvin United Church of Christ
Pharmacy, Gift Shop and Pantry
100 E. Main St. Woodville 419-849-2781 350 Rice St. Elmore 419-862-2982
801 Main St. Genoa 419-855-8381
1946 Bakewell Toledo 419-691-3033
97 YEARS
94 YEARS
91 YEARS
TANK’S MEATS
Kimball Well Drilling & Pump Service
S.R. 51 Elmore 419-862-3312
2320 N. Billman Rd Genoa 419-855-7302
3000 Dustin Rd. Oregon 419-693-3000
88 YEARS
85 YEARS
83 YEARS
79 YEARS
79 YEARS Oak Harbor • Curtice Oregon • Port Clinton
Kirwen’s Supermarket 21880 W. St. Rt. 163 Genoa 419-855-8336
4001 Cedar Point Rd. Oregon 419-698-6200
75 YEARS
104 W. Main Gibsonburg 419-637-2601
74 YEARS
Oregon’s Finest
BAYSHORE Supper Club 225 Front St. Pemberville 419-287-3271
5307 Bayshore Rd. Oregon 419-698-8106
3721 W. State St. Fremont 419-332-0041
4202 Navarre Ave. Oregon 419-698-2962
72 YEARS
70 YEARS
69 YEARS
67 YEARS
Siglar & Sieving
INDUSTRIAL EQUIPMENT
65 YEARS
5120 Navarre Ave. Oregon 419-693-0601
300 Mill St. Curtice 419-836-7735
63 YEARS
58 YEARS 22225 Woodville Rd. Genoa 419-855-8316
of Northern Ohio
Harrison Floors
516 Main St. Genoa 419-855-4417
Schneider Sons’ Electric 156 Oak St. Toledo 419-691-8284
20521 W. St. Rt. 579 Williston 419-836-2561
1842 Woodville Rd. Toledo 419-693-0862
159 N. Lallendorf Rd. Oregon 419-691-9766
1917 Pickle Rd. Oregon 419-698-6965
56 YEARS
54 YEARS
53 YEARS
53 YEARS
52 YEARS
52 YEARS
Prince of Peace Lutheran Church Millbury 419-836-7912
1071 E. Madison Gibsonburg 419-637-2111
5819 Woodville Rd. Northwood 419-836-7828
4320 Navarre Ave. Oregon 419-693-0039
4155 Pickle Rd. Oregon 419-691-9407
419-836-7774
CONTINUED ON THE NEXT PAGE
7
8
THE PRESS JANUARY 7, 2013
Honor Roll of Business
47 YEARS
46 YEARS
Don Gamby Exterior Decorators
WOJO'S
Elmore 419-862-2359
5523 Woodville Rd. Northwood 419-855-8554 419-693-3220
42 YEARS
41 YEARS
17145 W. Portage River Rd
44 YEARS
33 YEARS
316 W. Andrus Rd. Northwood 419-666-9583
1213 Schreier Rd. Rossford 419-666-3288
3250 Yorktown Dr. #A Oregon 419-693-6811
40 YEARS
39 YEARS
39 YEARS
1550 Woodville Rd. Millbury 419-836-2221
160 W. Water St. Oak Harbor 419-898-1916
37 YEARS
36 YEARS
36 YEARS
OREGON CLINIC
Dr. Stephen Branam Children’s Dentistry
644 Main St. Genoa 419-855-7221
3841 Navarre Ave. Oregon 419-691-8132
3140 Dustin Rd. Oregon 419-698-4339
2737 Navarre Ste. #202 Oregon 419-693-3376
33 YEARS
33 YEARS
33 YEARS
32 YEARS
Gary’s Eastside Automotive
32
AC
R CREEK POTT ER KE Y
P
YEARS JA A NP UGH, MAJOLIC
32 YEARS Judy’s
21270 SR 579 Williston 419-836-7461
32 YEARS
Tadsen Jewelers
Dan R’s
633 State Street Elmore 419-862-2408
4201 Woodville Rd. Northwood 419-698-1570
3545 Navarre Ave. Oregon 419-698-4393
4041 Navarre Ave. Oregon 419-693-6141
31
31 YEARS
31 YEARS
30 YEARS
YEARS
30 YEARS
29 YEARS
29 YEARS
Fioritto’s 860 Ansonia, Ste. 7 Oregon 419-693-1941
Kontak Kars
Eastern Community
Pete MacDonald
30 YEARS
Accounting And Tax Service
35 YEARS
32 YEARS
407 N. Main St. Walbridge 419-666-4974
28 YEARS
36 YEARS
32 YEARS
Owner Nourm Freyer 4997 Country Rd. 16 Woodville 419-849-3584
717 W. College Woodville 419-849-2886
3624 Navarre Ave. Oregon 419-346-7411
2960 Pickle Rd. Oregon 419-691-3523
111 E. Main St. Woodville 419-849-3994
7511 St. Rt. 2 Oregon 419-836-7788
119 E. Main St. Woodville 419-849-2000
550 S. Toledo Elmore 419-862-2292
103 E. 8th St. Genoa 419-855-3858
Sew...What Can I Do For You?
State Farm
Automotive
THE BIG APPLE DELI
1313 Cousino Rd. 419-836-7706
2118 Woodville Rd. Oregon 419-698-2344
29 YEARS
28 YEARS
Northwood Jewelers
BJ’s Auto Parts
Country Catering
TLC Groomers
4725 Woodville Rd. Northwood 419-691-6352
1533 Industrial Toledo 419-691-1111
1611 Pemberville Rd. Northwood 419-691-3056
4430 Woodville Rd. Northwood 419-691-6477
27 YEARS
26 YEARS
Huss Nursery & Landscaping LLC 582 N. Opfer Lentz Rd. Genoa 419-855-3058
38 YEARS
Insurance Agency
Douglas Perras Law Office
Pet Grooming
LOU’S ALTERATIONS
Apartments
WITTKAMP
36 YEARS
Elmore Retirement Village 3953 Navarre Ave. Oregon 419-698-4521
45 YEARS
Dawn Betz Peiffer
3150 Dustin Rd. Ste. 1 Oregon 419-693-0781
Heartland of Oregon 5526 Woodville Rd. Northwood 419-693-0741
Vasko Family Dental Care
1512 Woodville Rd. Millbury 419-836-8160
Metro Suburban Maumee Bay
GENOA CUSTOM INTERIORS
1016 S. Rt. 19 Oak Harbor 419-898-3366
J & J Heating & Air
WAYWARD INN
PRESS
BATTERY
38 YEARS
45 YEARS
The Curiosity Shoppe
The
2604 A Glenwood Perrysburg 419-873-1706
45 YEARS
26 YEARS
25 YEARS
OUEN
CHRYSLER/DODGE/JEEP 3209 Navarre Ave. Oregon 419-697-1888
1091 Fremont Pike Woodville 419-837-6228
St. John’s Elderlife
1209-1211 Washington St.
Genoa 419-855-7095
Musser
Restoration & Remodeling Oregon 419-691-0131
28 YEARS Classic Style Barber Shop 4608 Woodville Rd. Northwood 419-693-9914
25 YEARS Northwood Tax Service 2665 Navarre Ave. Oregon 419-697-7777
THE PRESS JANUARY 7, 2013
25 YEARS
Honor Roll of Business
25 YEARS
25 YEARS
Auction Service
Country Charm Cleaning
3239 Navarre Ave. Oregon 419-693-4311
3303 S. SR. 19 Oak Harbor 419-266-7171
6763 Wildacre Curtice 419-836-8942
22 YEARS
22 YEARS
21 YEARS
ALAN MILLER JEWELERS
Chad W. Brough
24 YEARS
Licensed Master Plumber Roy Bomyea Jr.
419-693-8736
21
YEARS
1600 Woodville Rd. Northwood 419-836-2773
20 YEARS Genoa Jewelers
4155 Pickle Rd. Oregon 419-691-9407
2300 Navarre Oregon 419-691-7653
Martin, 419-855-3608
12560 Middleton Pike Bowling Green 419-354-9090
18 YEARS
18 YEARS
18 YEARS
18 YEARS
Beck’s Pizza
Maumee Bay Self Storage
Main St. Woodville 419-849-9800
7640 Jerusalem Rd. Oregon 419-836-4000
111 W. Main St. Woodville 419-849-2244
15 YEARS
14 YEARS
13 YEARS
1460 Woodville Rd. Millbury 419-836-8766
15 YEARS
3324 Navarre Oregon 419-698-9283
15 YEARS
Dan Wilhelm Insurance
® All your protection under one roof®
James E. Murphy, Agent
23 YEARS
23 YEARS
1629 Woodville Rd. Millbury 419-349-4992
362 Rice St. Elmore 419-862-2407
19 YEARS
19 YEARS
Adams’ Screen Printing
Northwestern Water & Sewer District
Prince Of Peace Pre-School
23 YEARS
611 Main St. Genoa 419-855-8411
17 YEARS
BURKIN SELF STORAGE 7410 Jerusalem Rd. Oregon 419-836-4049
3581 St. Rt. 51
17 YEARS
16 YEARS
Gibsonburg 419-862-2127
Joseph P. Sexton, DDS Virginia D. Carner, DDS
Rosebuds
419-697-8889
13 YEARS
3448 Navarre Oregon 419-693-6872
13 YEARS
Payroll Little Wonders Physicians, Child Care
LLC
3246 Navarre Ave. Ste. B Oregon 419-698-1184
1460 Woodville Rd. Millbury 419-836-3606
1515 Main St. Genoa 419-855-9089
133 E. Front St. Pemberville 419-287-2201
2246 Navarre Ave. Oregon 419-698-9300
2534 Woodville Rd. Northwood 419-691-3783
217 E. Front St. Pemberville 419-287-1018
13 YEARS
12 YEARS
12 YEARS
11 YEARS
11 YEARS
11 YEARS
9 YEARS
Hot or Cold SUBS & SALADS 7410 Jerusalem Rd. Oregon 419-836-5027
9 YEARS
MANN Technologies 21051 W. Toledo St. Williston, 866-269-0388 419-972-4167
9 YEARS
108 E. Main St. Woodville 419-849-2900
368 Rice St. Elmore 419-862-2220
5 YEARS
4 YEARS
Musser’s Home & Property Maintenance
Kathleen Pollauf, LMT Massage Therapy
Oregon 419-304-8666
2665 Navarre Ave. Suite A, Oregon 419-320-9993
Owner Art Richardson
Freck Funeral Home
6067 Bayshore Rd. Oregon 419-697-1000
Wynn at Pickle Oregon 419-693-9304
2251 Woodville Rd. Oregon 419-698-5259
9 YEARS
8 YEARS
6 YEARS
Dave’s Affordable Lawn Care
DC Motors, Inc.
“The Handy Man Can!”
Citywide Auto Credit 12551 Jefferson St. Perrysburg 419-873-0433
1-800-TOMBSTONE
6
YEARS
Graytown 419-266-3186
5 YEARS
Joe’s
CHEN
PIZZA & KIT
Landscaping Snow Removable 419-862-3064
“Call Today-Drive Today” 3304 Woodville Rd. Northwood 419-697-4495
2072 Woodville Rd. Oregon 419-693-6695
7410 Jerusalem Rd. Oregon 419-836-7151
506 S. Lallendorf Oregon 419-690-1555
4 YEARS
4 YEARS
3 YEARS
3 YEARS
2 YEARS
22645 W. Front St. Curtice 419-972-4077
3310 Navarre Ave. Oregon 419-725-4747
4037 Navarre Ave. Oregon 419-724-3666
3241 Navarre Ave. Oregon 419-690-8267
3555 Navarre Ave. Oregon 419-697-7627
9
10
THE PRESS
JANUARY 7, 2013
Your Voice on the Street: by Laura Norden What was your New Years’ Resolution for 2013?
The Press Poll Do you support banning assault weapons in the wake of the Sandy Hook shootings? Yes No To cast your ballot, go to www.presspublications.com
Chelsey Hawkins Hairdresser Walbridge “To stay positive.”
Crystal Bacon Dietary Worker Toledo “To not get down on myself. I get down on myself a lot.”
Nicole Maker Pizza Girl Curtice “To make sure everybody in my family is happy.”
Brian Michalak Boilermaker Reno Beach “To save more money and be a better father.”
Kevin Schrimsher Sun Oil Oregon “To exercise more.”
Last Week's Results Do you think President Obama and Congress will compromise to avoid the fiscal cliff? 99% Yes. 1,290 votes 1% No 20 votes
Let’s give the last word of 2012 to those who made the pages of The Press Let’s give the last word of 2012 to those who made the pages of The Press. “Property crimes, I know to you, are important. I’ve got homicides I can’t solve because people won’t tell me what’s going on in the neighborhoods. We have drug dealings everywhere…If you see it happening, you’ve got to report it. “I’ve got a manpower problem and I’ve got to utilize the manpower the best I can. Don’t wait until the next community meeting to talk to the police officers about what is going in your neighborhood. Tell them about it now.” Derrick Diggs, Toledo Police chief, speaking to a group of Birmingham Neighborhood residents. *** “When we had these 18 colleges all kind of floating around, they were like PT Boats, they were shooting each other. It was kind of like the Polish army or something.” E. Gordon Gee, president, The Ohio State University, attempting to explain the difficulty in coordinating OSU’s 18 colleges. *** “I just decided for me personally there was no doubt in my mind that I would rather be on the front end trying to help somebody than being the guy that comes and sees this child (a 13-year-old boy who hung himself). If this child had one positive influence, perhaps they would have gone to that person instead of taking such a desperate step. For me personally, that was my conviction, and once I realized that, there was no stopping me.” Nathan Wolf, pastor of Echo Meadows Church of Christ in Oregon, on why he quit the Anchorage, Alaska police force to become a minister. *** “When you come from an abusive family, you don’t know anything about unconditional love. That’s the one thing animals are really good at. They will love you no matter what. As long as you treat them well, they will be your devoted friends for life.” Kelly Meister, Walbridge’s Critter Lady, on her love of animals. *** “In three years, when we’re cutting all these teachers’ jobs and bus drivers’ jobs, and we’re cutting everyone to pieces again, we’re all going to forget about today. This is definitely something that should have been discussed by this board ahead of time to give our residents, who we work for, the right to ask questions. This is exactly what’s wrong with this board. I’m adamantly against locking our district into millions of dollars in contracts, knowing we’re going to be in negative money.” P.J. Kapfhammer, Oregon City Schools’ board member, on the board voting 3-2 to renew administrator contracts one and half years early. *** “How we got it in our contracts where we’re paying an administrator to go watch his kid’s basketball game? Take one for the team, guys. Don’t submit miles for it. If we’re really going broke…if it’s this dire, before we talk levies, before we stick it to the community, I would love to sit down and see how we could save money as a board, so the community doesn’t have to give as much.”
Page Two
by John Szozda P.J. Kapfhammer, Oregon school board member, criticizing the board for paying mileage to an administrator who attended his child’s basketball game. *** “You might as well have a Christmas club account as opposed to buying a maternity coverage plan. The new plans are going to be mandated to have that (maternity benefits)… It’s going to make it unaffordable. They are going to stay on Mom and Dad’s insurance until they’re 26 or 28. Then, they’re going to go to COBRA…It’s going to be more advantageous for them to not get married… That’s the way they’re going to get that maternity and childbirth covered...So they’re going to find the guy of their dreams, move in with the guy of their dreams while staying on Mommy and Daddy’s policy. They’re going to have their children. They’re going to on COBRA because now they can take the man of their dreams, put them on COBRA and stay on Mom and Dad’s policy for three more years because they are aging out, so now we have a 31-year-old on Mommy and Daddy’s policy in the State of Ohio.” Barbara Sears, Republican assistant majority floor leader for the Ohio House of Representatives on one potential effect of the Affordable Care Act. *** “I was involved in a lot of different (organizations) at Woodmore. It made me betterrounded. I think growing up at Woodmore High was wonderful for my life journey, especially in a small school (where) the student body is involved in a lot of different things.” Jon Waters, director of the Ohio State Marching Band, The Best Damn Band in the Land. *** “All right I’m going to eat my burger. And, everybody just pretend like I’m not here.” President Barack Obama, talking to diners at Kozy Corners Restaurant in Oak Harbor where he stopped by for a surprise visit on his way from Maumee to Sandusky. *** “The Asian Carp would gobble up the food that walleye, yellow perch and bass eat. Without food, these key sport fish would rapidly dwindle. The silver carp like the sound of boat motors and leap when they hear them. In the Mississippi (River), boaters wear helmets to avoid getting hit by the flying fish. While it would probably take decades for the Asian Carp to have this devastating impact, once and if the Asian Carp establish in Lake Erie, the flying fish would pose a threat to Lake Erie boaters.” Sandy Bihn, executive director for Lake Erie Waterkeeper and Oregon councilperson, on hearing Asian Carp DNA was found in Lake Erie. ***
United States — if we go to a big war do you think China and some of these Asian companies are going to ship us parts and help us fight? During World War II, most of the wives and women ran the tool shops, die shops, and machine shops to make military parts for the war. Well, if we don’t have any shops here, what would we do?” Paul Faykosh, owner of Centaur Tool & Die in Bowling Green, commenting on losing tool and die and manufacturing shops in America. *** “They are almost like performers, and I don’t think it contributes to the dialogue like we are having right here. It is dissatisfying to the American people and they are spending all this money. Ohioans should have questions answered about Ohio, rather than listening to all these canned speeches both sides give. Marcy Kaptur, U.S. Congressman, on the 2012 presidential election. *** “It was not a great location, but it was not in the condition it is in today. We never had a huge return at that location, although it helped our financial performance. Frankly, somebody has to pay for all of this stuff. There is not the demographic density to make sense of keeping a location open there.” Dan Anderson, president of The Andersons Retail Group, on pulling out of the Eastern Maumee Bay market after 24 years. *** “The Andersons were there because the mall owners gave them the spot cheaply-$10,000 per month in rent--to help draw people to the mall itself. I don’t think anybody could have done anything. There is no one to blame. When it opened, it was stateof-the-art and a hopping place. Then the mall became obsolete.” Mike Seferian, Oregon mayor, *** “The demographics are not there yet. We can’t go from a city of 20,000 to 40,000 overnight. We don’t want them to come to Oregon and not be successful. We don’t want a store to come in and fail. We want stores like Kohl’s and Target to come when they can be successful here. We could not afford to have them close up. We have to be in shape to handle what comes our way. The stores would also strain city services. With-
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“Some people might not like to hear this, but my contention is if we farm everything out and we lose manufacturing in the
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out additional business and industry to help with those costs, we would be sunk.” Mike Seferian, Oregon mayor, on attracting a major retailer. *** “Heartbroken. Sad thing is this side of the river didn’t give up on Andersons, but they sure gave up on us. Poor management of the Woodville Mall, Northwood, and Woodville Road, and most importantly, poor management of The Andersons retail division…The Andersons could have moved to Oregon and kept its “East Side” store profitable and avoided this closing. Navarre Avenue has so much more to offer and would have been ideal. It’s not like the city of Oregon hasn’t tried. So sad.” Jeannine Burgess Czop, a Press reader who said Andersons should have stuck it out longer *** “Teamwork, time management, ethical leadership and the ability to think quickly, process and make decisions...I apply something I learned through athletics every day of my life. I will always function in teams-with family, co-workers, and friends--and call on the guiding principles that I first learned as a female athlete...because someone/something gave me the opportunity to play sports. Thank you to my mentors and thank you Title IX” Kris Livingston, former Lake basketball and Division I college player and current administrator for the University of Colorado commenting on the 40th anniversary of Title IX, the federal law that brought gender equality to sports. *** “Anybody that is involved in a team sport gets something out of it. You learn to work as a team. You learn to share. There are some things that you don’t really like to do … but you do it for the team. It’s not always about fun. You learn to push through it. Face it, everything in life doesn’t always go the way you want it to.” Amy Sander, former Genoa Comet basketball player on the effect of playing sports.
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THE PRESS JANUARY 7, 2013
Opinion
11
The Press
Letters
Compassion is key to relating to others
Letters should be about 250 words. Deadline Wed. Noon. Send to news@presspublications.com
Clay’s loss To the editor: In reference to the letter to the editor published in The Press about the resignation of Mike Donnelly from the position as Clay High School’s football coach, Mike was forced to resign from his coaching position. I’ve known the Donnellys ever since Mike’s marriage to Tracy, and they certainly are not having problems at home where Mike would need to devote more time to his family. His children will go a long way in this world because of his and Tracy’s guidance. They will learn to respect others by the example Mike and Tracy have set. Mike loves his family and had so much love and respect for his team and players. Where was the backbone of the school board members who didn’t step up to support Mike? Knowing Mike, I’m sure he will excel in the future and become someone else’s coach. It’s Clay’s loss. Phyllis Haeft Williston
Senior support To the editor: Each year for the past several years, Home Instead Senior Care has sponsored the “Be a Santa to a Senior” program, which helps provide Christmas gifts to seniors who would otherwise have nothing. Since its inception, Home Instead has worked with Ottawa County Senior Resources’ Home Delivered Meal program to identify those seniors in need of some special Christmas cheer. This year was no exception. Thanks to Home Instead Senior Care’s caring and loving staff and the communities of Ottawa County for their generous support of this program, more than 60 seniors were able to have a gift to open for this special holiday. Dianne Martin Mortensen Ottawa County Senior Resources
How we relate to other people is to a large extent dependent on how we view them. An insidious pitfall is judging others based on what we believe in, think, and do. We have a subconscious expectation that other people share similar beliefs and behavior. We learn to be judgmental from a very young age. We are surrounded by people who are telling us what’s wrong with everyone else. We hear it from our parents, relatives, friends, strangers, newspapers, TV, and movies. It’s not surprising we then develop the same bad habit. When another person deviates from what we expect, there is a tendency for us to be judgmental. This can include ridicule, condemnation, criticism, or alienation. It’s a mistake to use yourself as a basis to judge others. This does not apply to malicious behavior but rather to the unique makeup of each individual. Each of us has our own perceptions. Even identical twins can have markedly different personalities. We all have different experiences, different expectations, different preferences, different likes and dislikes, different dreams, different goals, and different desires. The chances of any two people being exactly alike are essentially zero. So how can you expect another person to be like you and then be in any way critical of them when they are not? There will be people you disagree with. There will be those you don’t like. There will be individuals you don’t want to spend time
Dare to Live
by Bryan Golden with. However, you have no more basis to condemn them than they have to condemn you. We also have a tendency to judge others based on outer appearances. We make judgments based on where someone lives, how they live, the amount of money they spend or don’t spend, the kind of car they drive, who their friends are, how they dress, what they eat, their physical appearance, or even what they enjoy doing. The list of judgment criteria we use is limitless. You never know what problems another person is dealing with. They can have the most envy evoking outer trappings yet be living a life of misery. Conversely, a person who appears to be living a Spartan existence may be happier than you could ever imagine. You never know what’s important to someone or what makes them happy. When you are judgmental of others, you generate negative energy within yourself and close off your ability to be compassionate and understanding. This causes a frustration within you that inhibits your positive energy and accumulates negative energy. When this happens, your own happi-
ness is diminished. You can’t experience true joy when you are finding fault with others. Your ability for compassion is reduced. You then have little understanding of what others might be experiencing. Every aspect of your life will be enhanced when you open your heart to accept people for who they are. Don’t waste any time or energy being judgmental or critical. You have no control over how others live their lives. You won’t change them. It’s a major task just focusing on living your own life. When you stop being judgmental, you will feel more compassion and have more understanding. You will then be able to release built up negative emotions such as anger, frustration, resentment, jealousy, envy, and bitterness. There is deep wisdom in the concept of live and let live. Changing your outlook requires readjusting your attitude. You can start immediately to develop a nonjudgmental attitude. Maintain a constant awareness of your thoughts. As soon as you catch yourself being judgmental, let it go. Making these changes will be a source of enlightenment for you. NOW AVAILABLE: “Dare to Live Without Limits,” the book. Visit www.BryanGolden. com or your bookstore. Bryan is a management consultant, motivational speaker, author, and adjunct professor. E-mail Bryan at bryan@columnist.com or write him c/o this paper. © 2012 Bryan Golden
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JANUARY 7, 2013
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Holiday Inn hosts weekend Bluegrass Fest In the Moonshine Stocks division, a stock car slides into Mark Reser (No. 69) at the New Years’ Day Hangover Races. (Press photo by Russ Lytle)
Hangover Race
Lake-effect snow leads to sliding on track By J. Patrick Eaken Press Sports Editor sports@presspublications.com While the sun was shining in the metro Toledo area on New Year’s Day, lake-effect snow was causing problems at Sandusky Speedway’s 33rd Annual Hangover Race. The snow caused races, which are run in any kind of weather, to be challenging for stock car drivers and entertaining for just under 1,000 fans. “They had plowed it, but it kept coming down,” said Oregon driver Mark Pollock. “What happened once they plowed it, it was still wet, and then it froze. I was sideways more than straight. It’s an asphalt track and it was like racing dirt. There were a lot of spin-outs.” The hardcore racing fans that braved the cold weather were treated to three divisions, the Champagne Stocks, the Moonshine Stocks, and the Whiskey Stocks. As is the customary tradition, there was an endless barrage of snowballs flying from the grandstands all afternoon as the cars raced by. Pollock said there was up to a half inch of snow on the track, but “that was enough” to cause problems. Track promoter Kevin Jaycox said that was on top of 8 to 10 inches that fell the previous week and said up to another inch fell on New Year’s Day that had to be cleared. “It was slippery,” Jaycox said. “It was definitely different. It was probably the worst track conditions I have ever seen. Honestly, we didn’t have a lot of badly wrecked cars. We had a lot of spin-outs
with the snow and stuff, but it wasn’t that bad.” Pollock added, “Race tires and moisture are not a good combination. Plus, the trouble was it kept coming down. They cleared it between each race and it kept coming down, plus I don’t think they want to put salt down on a race track.” Track promoter Kevin Jaycox said the Hangover Race, which has garnered national attention, drew fans from as far away as Canada. “They had a pretty good crowd, considering of course we had two warm years the last two years, and this is just a typical January,” Pollock said. The speedway does everything it can to make the racing fans comfortable. Under the grandstands, a bar is open so fans can stay warm while watching football on a big screen television. Drivers set up heated trailers in the infield, too. Lambertville, Michigan resident Ron Miller would begin his 50th year of racing by winning the 20-lap Champagne Stocks feature. Miller has won eight of the last nine Hangover races, and possibly even more from previous years once he checks his trophy case. Miller, who also finished first in the second Champagne heat, said that this was the most fun racing of the year. Miller took the lead on lap two and was never challenged. Pollock finished second behind Tim Murphy in the Champagne Stocks first heat, and then fourth behind Miller, Murphy, and Mark Kachenmeister in the Champagne feature. Gary Hensel finished fifth in
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the feature. “The track wasn’t very good,” Pollock said. “I should have done better in both races but it was so hard to pass because there was one groove and everybody ran that one groove, and if you dropped out of that groove to pass somebody you were immediately sideways and the tires were spinning. It was a very frustrating experience. “I did pretty well, but the main thing is I brought the car back in one piece, which is a victory in itself,” Pollock continued. “But it was frustrating because I had such a fast car, and I know I could have done better, but I just couldn’t pass anybody. It would take five to six laps just to get around one car. “We kept having cautions — the feature is 20 laps of green flag racing but we probably ran 30 laps of cautions because people kept wrecking. They’d throw the green flag, and they’d wreck, and they’d throw the green flag, and they’d wreck. I’m sure a race that should have taken a half hour took an hour-and-a-half. But you know, all in all, I had fun.” Ryan Tamburro won the 15-lap Whiskey Stocks feature. Howard Kelly was the early race leader before Kevin McCall took the point. Tamburro would take the lead from Joey Wyckoff and hold on to take the checkered flag. The Moonshine Stocks 20-lap feature was won by Pauly Hess, who started fifth in the lineup. Hess would have his pace slowed by numerous cautions as the racing surface became increasingly icy as the sun came out late in the afternoon and melted some of the snow on the track.
One of Ohio’s largest Indoor Bluegrass Festivals featuring national and regional bluegrass bands will be held Jan. 11 and 12 at the Holiday Inn French Quarter in Perrysburg. In addition to the sounds of traditional bluegrass at its best, the indoor festival will include jamming and workshops. All bands are available for autographs, and will be selling CDs. Friday’s concert schedule, which runs from 12:30 to 11:30 p.m., will include Jr. Sisk & Rambler’s Choice, Deepwater Bluegrass, Lorraine Jordan & Carolina Road, Larry Gillis & Swamp Grass and Idle Tyme. Saturday’s lineup includes the legendary Rhonda Vincent and the Rage (The Queen of Bluegrass Music), Bluegrass Mountaineers, Matheson Family Pride, Remington Ryde and Bo Isaac & The Rounders. The music will begin at noon and run until 11:30 p.m. General seating is $25 per day. Children 12 and under are free. For more information, visit www.BluegrassWinterfest.com or www.Bluegrassmountaineers.net.
Winterfest 2013 Winterfest 2013 in downtown Pemberville Saturday, Jan. 19 from 10 a.m. to 4 p.m. The celebration will feature winter festivities galore, including a snow creation contest (weather permitting), ice cube competitions, free movies at the historic Opera House, an old sled display (bring your own antique sled), food, a hot cocoa bar and a roasted nut station. In addition, Russell Herner, author of “Antique Ice Skates for the Collector,” will be at Beeker’s General Store to discuss his book, which includes more than 250 photographs identifying various types, styles and designs of skates.
Rock On Area residents will have the opportunity to become immersed into the lives of some of the most notable contemporary musicians as seen through the camera lens of photographer Baron Wolman, as Owens Community College’s Walter E. Terhune Art Gallery opens the 2013 season with an exhibit titled “Rock On: Photographs by Baron Wolman.” The exhibit will run Jan. 7 – March 28.
Continued on page 13
THE PRESS
JANUARY 7, 2013
Entertainment
The Press
Continued from page 12
Bird Count 4 Kids
In 1967, Wolman was approached by Jann Wenner, the founder of “Rolling Stone,” to become the publication’s first chief photographer. The meeting led to Wolman witnessing and capturing the moments of arguably one the most important periods of change in popular music and culture through his camera, with the images serving as a focal point for the magazine. For three years at the publication, Wolman’s photographs were known for capturing the events and personalities as well as visualizing the music. Over the years, Wolman’s artistic talents have been showcased in art galleries around the world. His most recent book, “Every Picture Tells A Story – Baron Wolman, The Rolling Stone Years,” highlights stories and photographs of some of the most significant artists and events of the period. Wolman’s professional background also includes sports photography, aerial photography, figure photography and portraits. More than 30 photographs will be on display in the Owens exhibit. Featured musicians within the photographs will include James Brown, B.B. King, Johnny Cash, Willie Nelson, Duke Ellington, Jim Morrison, Neil Young, Tina Turner, Chuck Berry, George Harrison and Joan Baez, among others. “Rock On: Photographs by Baron Wolman” is being presented in part by a grant from the Ohio Humanities Council. In addition to the exhibit, Owens’ Center for Fine and Performing Arts will host a lecture presentation by Wolman Thursday, March 21 at 7 p.m. The lecture will high-
Award-winning bluegrass singer Rhonda Vincent will be among the 10 national and regional performers at the Bluegrass Winterfest. light his experiences with some of the most well-known contemporary musicians of the 20th century. The Walter E. Terhune Art Gallery is located in Owens’ Center for Fine and Performing Arts on the Toledo-area Campus in Perrysburg Township. Admission to the Walter E. Terhune Art Gallery is free and open to the public from 10 a.m. to 4 p.m. Mondays, Tuesdays, Fridays and Saturdays, and from 10 a.m. to 7 p.m. Wednesdays and Thursdays. For additional information about the exhibit, call 1-800-GO-OWENS, ext. 2721.
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Kids ages 8 to 12 are invited to visit Magee Marsh on Saturday, Jan. 12 for the annual Christmas Bird Count 4 Kids. Each family will be a part of a small birding team, which will set out to count all the birds that they see or hear. Prior to going out, kids will be given a short talk on how to use binoculars and what birds they might expect to see. Binoculars will be available for borrowing. Kids will be outside for about 90 minutes, so they should dress for the weather, including warm boots and layers. When they come back in, each team will report its findings to the group. A pizza lunch will be served compliments of the Friends of Magee Marsh. In addition, Back to the Wild will be on hand with some live birds to show. The event starts at 9 a.m. at the Bird Center at Magee Marsh and runs until approximately 2 p.m. To sign up, call Mary at 419-898-0960, ext. 31 and leave contact information. Magee Marsh is located at 13229 W. SR 2, Oak Harbor.
Volunteer Trail Patrol You may have seen them on the Metroparks trails in their yellow shirts. Metroparks Volunteer Trail Patrol volunteers help Metroparks provide park visitors with a safe and enjoyable experience. Their duties include acting as a communications link, promoting safe use of the trail system, alerting staff to potential hazards and providing information and assistance. An informational meeting for prospective volunteers will be held Sunday, Jan.
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Prizm Creative Community, a local non-profit 501 (c) (3) will sponsor the Salon des Refusés Exhibition for all local artists’ works that were rejected entry into the annual Toledo Area Artists show held at The Toledo Museum of Art. A printable prospectus for the show is available at www.myprizm.com or by emailing prizm@bex.net. Hard copies of the prospectus and postcards for the use of artists can be picked up at The Arts Commissions offices, 1838 Parkwood Ave. in Toledo. The show will be held Feb 1 through March 15 at The Art’s Commission’s Parkwood Gallery. To receive pre-show publicity, artists should postmark their application by Jan. 7 to chairman Judith Gusweiler at 31 Stonegate Circle, Bowling Green, Ohio, 43402, and email jpg images of their work to divjud@fastmail.fm with a copy to prizm@bex.net.
Silent movie night A Silent Movie Night featuring “The Black Pirate” starring Douglas Fairbanks Sr. will be presented Saturday, Jan. 5 at 7:30 p.m. in the Pemberville Opera House. The presentation is part of the Live in The House series. Tickets are $10 and are available at the door. For more information, visit www. pembervilleoperahouse.org.
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JANUARY 7, 2013
Entertainment
The Press
Concerts, comedies, competitions & more keep cabin fever at bay By Tammy Walro Press Entertainment Editor twalro@presspublications.com
Calendar
Sure, the holidays and their related hubbub are behind us, but there’s no need to become a couch potato – there’s plenty to do, see and enjoy, both inside and outdoors in the crisp January air. • Through Jan. 10: “Museum People: Faces of TMA” Gallery 1, Toledo Museum of Art. Last spring, hundreds of Toledo Museum of Art community members of all ages stopped by to have photo headshots taken by photographer Jim Rohman and his assistant Giles Cooper to be included in this exhibition, featuring a sea of nearly 700 faces. The collective community portraits are shown floor-to-ceiling, “salon style.” www. toledomuseum.org. • Through Jan. 13: “Prints and Authors from the Time of Manet,” Works on Paper Gallery, Toledo Museum of Art. www.toledomuseum.org. • Through Jan. 13, 2013: “Leslie Adams: Drawn from Life,” Gallery 18, Toledo Museum of Art. As a young girl Leslie Adams attended art classes at the Toledo Museum of Art. Today she is nationally known for her portraits of distinguished members of society and civic leaders. www.toledomuseum.org. • Through Jan. 20, 2013: “Made in Hollywood: Photographs from the John Kobal Foundation,” Galleries 4, 5 and 9, Toledo Museum of Art. Exhibition focuses on the stars, sets and scenes created by the American film industry and captured by Hollywood photographers between 1920 and 1960. www.toledomuseum.org. • Saturdays through Feb. 24: Cabin Fever Feeds, part of Winter Weekends, Toledo Zoo, 2 Hippo Way, Toledo. www.toledozoo.org. Jan. 18-20 and 24-27: “The Fox on the Fairway,” Toledo Repertoire Theatre, 16 10th St., Toledo. Mile-a-minute laughs are par for the course with this hysterical farce from the author of the Rep’s wildly successful “Leading Ladies.” 419-243-9277 or www.toledorep.org. • Jan. 11-12, 17-20 and 24-26: “The Dinner Party,” The Village Players Theatre, 2740 Upton Ave., Toledo, 8 p.m. Five people are invited to dine at a first-rate restaurant in Paris. They do not know who the other guests will be or why they have been invited. Tossed together in a private dining room, they have a sneaking suspicion that this unorthodox dinner party will forever change their lives. 419-472-8817 or www. thevillageplayers.org. • Saturdays Jan. 5-26: Ice Carving Demonstrations, Toledo Zoo, 2 Hippo Way, Toledo. Each Saturday, ice carvers will transform 2,000-blocks of ice into shimmering sculptures. 419-385-4040 or www.toledozoo.org. January Jan. 5-6: Greater Midwest Cheer Competition, SeaGate Convention Centre, 401 Jefferson Ave., Toledo. www.toledo-seagate. com. Jan. 6: Toledo Walleye vs. Kalamazoo Wings, Huntington Center, 500 Jefferson Ave., Toledo, 5:05 p.m. 419-725-WALL or www.toledowalleye.com. Jan. 10: Comedian Lewis Black, Stranahan Theater, 4645 Heatherdowns Blvd., Toledo, 8 p.m. 419-381-8851 or www.stranahantheater.com.
A fight breaks out in downtown Toledo’s state of the art Huntington Center as the Chicago Express are in town to play the Walleye. (Press file photo by Scott Grau.) Jan. 10: “Swan Lake,” The National Russian Ballet Theatre, Valentine Theatre, 400 N. Superior St., Toledo, 7:30 p.m. A fairytale story of a beautiful princess, a passionate prince and the evil spell that threatens their happiness together, 419-242-ARTS or www.valentinetheatre.com. Jan. 11: Silver Screen Classics: “Citizen Kane,” Valentine Theatre, 400 N. Superior St., Toledo, 7:30 p.m. Tall drafts, a full bar and popcorn are available. 419-242-2787 or www.valentinetheatre.com. Jan. 11: Art of the Vine Wine Tasting, Toledo Museum of Art Glass Pavilion, 2444 Monroe St., Toledo, 7 p.m. Enjoy four wines and light snacks during It’s Friday! At TMA. 419-255-8000 or www.toledomuseum.org. Jan. 12 & 26: “BIG,” Appold Planetarium, Lourdes University, 6832 Convent Blvd., Sylvania, 7:30-10 p.m. A full-dome show that takes an imaginative look at the size and scale of our universe, featuring a lighthearted storytelling style, 3D graphics, clayanimated characters and a surround musical score. www.lourdes.edu/planetarium. Jan 12: Vineyard Adventure Wine Tasting: Bubbles, Toledo Zoo, Arctic Encounter, 2 Hippo Way, Toledo, 7 p.m. Each Vineyard Adventure is based on a unique theme and is spent at a different location at the Zoo. Enjoy a mix of wine tasting, hors d’oeuvres, live music, and socializing. Gourmet foods, wines, and other great gifts for additional purchase. 419-385-5721, ext. 6001 or www. toledozoo.org. Jan. 12: “A Streetcar Named Desire,” Toledo Museum of Art Little Theater, 2445 Monroe St., Toledo, 1 p.m. Free screening
of the film featuring Marlon Brando and Vivien Leigh. www.toledomuseum.org. Jan. 12: “A Day at the Races,” Toledo Museum of Art Little Theater, 2445 Monroe St., Toledo, 3:30 p.m. Free screening of the film featuring the Marx Brothers. www.toledomuseum.org. Jan 12: Christmas Bird Count for Kids, Magee Marsh, 13229 W. SR 2, Oak Harbor, 9 a.m.-2 p.m. Free. Get the kids (grades 3-6) outside and looking for birds. Youths will be grouped into small birding teams led by an experienced birder. Lunch will be provided by the Friends of Magee Marsh, and Back to the Wild will be on hand with some live birds from the Wildlife Rehabilitation and Education Center. Preregistration encouraged, but not required. 419-898-0960 or friendsofmageemarsh.org. Jan. 13: “Ziegfeld Girl,” Toledo Museum of Art Little Theater, 2445 Monroe St., Toledo, 1 p.m. Free screening of the 1941 film featuring James Stewart and Judy Garland. www.toledomuseum.org. Jan. 13: “How to Marry a Millionaire,” Toledo Museum of Art Little Theater, 2445 Monroe St., Toledo, 3:30 p.m. Free screening of the film featuring Marilyn Monroe, Lauren Bacall and Betty Grable. www.toledomuseum.org. Jan. 17: Kronos Quartet, Valentine Theatre, 400 N. Superior St., Toledo, 7:30 p.m. www.valentinetheatre.com. Jan. 18: Silver Screen Classics: “The Bridge on the River Kwai,” Valentine Theatre, 400 N. Superior St., Toledo, 7:30 p.m. Cold drafts, full bar and popcorn available. 419242-2787 or www.valentinetheatre.com. Jan. 18: Art of the Vine Wine Tasting, To-
ledo Museum of Art Glass Pavilion, 2444 Monroe St., Toledo, 7 p.m. Enjoy four wines and light snacks during It’s Friday! At TMA. 419-255-8000 or www.toledomuseum.org. Jan. 18-19: Toledo Symphony Classics: An Evening of Symphonic Dance, Toledo Museum of Art Peristyle Theatre, 2445 Monroe St., Toledo, 8 p.m. 419-246-8000 or www. toledosymphony.com. Jan. 19: Beginner Genealogy Class, Hayes Presidential Center, Spiegel Grove, Fremont, 9:30-11:30 a.m. Learn the basics of beginning a family history at this class led by experienced genealogists from the Hayes Presidential Center staff. Pre-registration required. 419-332-2081 or www.rbhayes. org. Jan. 19: Visit Elmo at the Zoo, Toledo Zoo, 2 Hippo Way, Toledo. As part of the Winter Weekends celebration during Martin Luther King Jr. weekend, families can visit Elmo at the Indoor Theatre at 12, 1, 2 and 3 p.m. 419-385-5040 or www.toledozoo.org. Jan. 19: Glass City Roller Derby, SeaGate Convention Centre, 401 Jefferson Ave., Toledo, 7 p.m. www.ticketmaster.com. Jan. 19-21: Free Admission for Lucas Co. Residents at the Toledo Zoo, 2 Hippo Way, Toledo, 10 a.m.-4 p.m. Proof of residency required. www.toledozoo.org. Jan. 20: Annual Gun Show & Sportsman’s Swap Meet, Oak Harbor Conservation Club Clubhouse, 975 S. Gordon Rd., Oak Harbor, 9 a.m.-3 p.m. Featuring hunting and fishing equipment, decoys, lures, sporting goods, collectibles, raffles, tools and guns (all state and federal gun laws are applicable). Lunch available. 5/person. Dealers welcome. 419-797-2569. Jan. 21: Martin Luther King, Jr. Unity Day Celebration, Savage Arena, 2801 W. Bancroft St., Toledo, 9-11 a.m. www.utoledo. edu/diversity/oed/unity.html. Jan. 21: Historic Sandusky County Jail and Dungeons Tour, Sandusky County Jail, 622 Croghan St., Fremont, 5, 6, and 7 p.m. $2/ person. One-hour guided tours are open to the public and do not require reservations. All funds are earmarked for the restoration of the dungeons and the gallows exhibition hall. 419-332-4470 or lakeeriesfavoriteneighbor.com. Jan. 25: Great Lakes RV Dealers Show, SeaGate Convention Centre, 401 Jefferson Ave., Toledo. NW Ohio’s oldest and largest RV show. Hours Fri. and Sat. 10 a.m.-9 p.m. and Sun. 10 a.m.-5 p.m. www.nwohiorvdealers.com. Jan. 25: Toledo Walleye vs. Kalamazoo Wings, Huntington Center, 500 Jefferson Ave., Toledo, 7:05 p.m. 419-725-WALL or www.toledowalleye.com. Jan. 25: Silver Screen Classics: “From Here to Eternity” Valentine Theatre, 400 N. Superior St., Toledo, 7:30 p.m. Tall drafts, full bar and popcorn available. 419-242-2787 or www.valentinetheatre.com. Jan. 25: Art of the Vine Wine Tasting, Glass Pavilion, 2444 Monroe St., Toledo, 7 p.m. Enjoy four wines and light snacks during It’s Friday! At TMA. 419-255-8000 or www. toledomuseum.org.
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THE PRESS
JANUARY 7, 2013
15
Eight Comets perfect in inaugural Holiday Duals By Harold Hamilton Special to The Press sports@presspublications.com Genoa’s modernized high school gym is not the only thing that’s changed this fall. Bob Bergman, now in his second year as wrestling coach, is starting to see his program’s efforts come to fruition. Last year in his staff’s first year of mentoring the team, Genoa went 28-5 in dual meets, were Northern Buckeye Conference duals champions, Napoleon dual champions, and Division III sectional champions. This year, the team is much stronger and getting challenged early in various meets where they are matched with some of the best in their division as well as some larger schools. An example of this increased competition was last week’s inaugural Northcoast Holiday Duals Tournament at Genoa High School. The tournament drew teams from across the state, some as far away as Cincinnati (Oak Hills). Competition was considered tough and included Margaretta (Sandusky Bay Conference), which was also a D-III sectional champion last year, and Division I Whitmer. Genoa dominated the field and finished with a perfect 9-0 team record while going 108-19 individually. Genoa finished the tournament by beating D-III rival Margaretta in the finals by a score of 52-12. Eight Comet matmen went 9-0 on the weekend earning first tournament team honors. Statistically, the Comets also established some impressive feats. Genoa recorded 53 pins while surrendering 13. The men in maroon also outscored the opposition by a combined dual score of 574-97 while eclipsing the 50-point barrier in each of its nine duals. Winning all nine of their matches were Damian Demillio (106 pounds), Max Reeder (132), Nathan Moore (138), Drew Keenan (145), Ryan Szymanski (152), Jake Fejes (152), Mike Snider (170), and Jay Nino (220). Of 14 wrestlers finishing undefeated, Genoa had over half. Others going undefeated were Margaretta wrestler Tyler Rogers (113), Galion wrestler Zac Tupps (120),
At 160 pounds, Genoa wrestler Jacob Fejes pinned Whitmer wrestler Conner Jacobs in 45 seconds. (Press photo by Harold Hamilton/ HEHphotos.lifepics.com) Whitmer wrestler James Wingate (126), Gibsonburg wrestler Jacob Auld (182), Cleveland Heights wreslter Bobby Upshaw (195), and Whitmer wrestler Marquise Moore (285). Tupps was named Most Valuable Wrestler and Upshaw had the most pins with eight.
Genoa was the only team to go 9-0, followed by Margaretta (8-1), Whitmer (7-2), Galion (6-3), Cincinnati Oak Hills (5-4), Gibsonburg (4-5), Mogadore (3-6), Cleveland Heights (2-7), Lakota (1-8), and Seneca East (0-9), The Comet’s next test will be an NBC
quadrangular on Jan. 8 at Genoa against league teams Elmwood, Woodmore and Lake. Genoa’s record stands at 20-3 on the year and they are currently 4-0 in the league. The Northcoast Holiday Duals was the second of four dual tournaments the Comets will be competing in this winter as they prepare for the first annual OHSAA sanctioned state duals scheduled to begin on January 23. Coach Bergman said Genoa chose to host the event because by wrestling nonleague teams it exposes his wrestlers to different styles, some of which would otherwise not be discovered until the district or state level. He said the dual format, rather than that used in the traditional bracketed tournaments, also increases competition and endurance and helps build a team. In a “dual” tournament, teams are pitted against each other building both a fan following as well as generating more team excitement. “We feel that by wrestling in duals we can build a better team and program as a whole,” Bergman said. “In duals, team scores are updated immediately so wrestlers care about each other’s performance and hold each other accountable; creating a positive peer pressure that is seldom realized in individual tournaments. “The more matches the more experience and with experience comes confidence,” Bergman continued. This type of schedule resulted in some wrestlers having nine matches where, in a conventional tournament, with eliminations, some may wrestle only two or three matches, unless they reach the semifinals. “In a 32-man bracketed tournament if you win all your matches you will only wrestle five times,” Bergman said. “Duals are usually just as tough, if not tougher, than a bracketed tournament as any competitive team will place their toughest kid against yours, and sometimes they will even bump their stud up to wrestle ours. “By wrestling in duals, wrestlers can learn from each other and coaches can make spot corrections mat side rather than running from mat to mat. We can also figure out team tendencies of our own and more readily correct them,” the coach added.
Gavin Nelson brings new element to Clay’s Gold Team By Mark Griffin Press Contributing Writer sports@presspublications.com Rich Nelson probably had a lot of reasons why he got his son, Gavin, involved in wrestling back in elementary school. “He wanted me to be real good when I got older,” said Gavin, a junior at Clay. “I never really took it that serious. I think I just did it because my dad wanted me to. It’s starting to pay off. It hasn’t paid off yet, but it will.” Nelson, a 5-foot-6 bundle of confidence and energy, waited his turn while wrestling for the Eagles’ Green team the past two seasons. He has quietly turned himself into one of coach Ralph Cubberly’s top wrestlers. Nelson, who competes on the Gold team at 132 pounds, took a 16-3 record into the new year. “He just dominates kids,” Cubberly said. “He has a non-stop motor. He just goes. He’s just strong and he’s a tough wrestler. He’s a pleasant surprise for me. I knew he was going to be good, but I didn’t know he was going to be this good.” Nelson kicked off the season by going 4-0 at a duals tournament at Cincinnati Moeller High School in November. He beat a state qualifier in overtime and also defeated an Illinois state champion during that event. A year ago, Nelson went 26-8 at 126 pounds on the Green team while he wait-
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Clay junior Gavin Nelson closes in on a pin. (Submitted photo) ed his turn behind senior Mike Screptock, who placed seventh at the state tournament. Ironically, Screptock’s younger brother, Richie, is Nelson’s workout partner. “It stunk,” said Nelson, whose brother Caleb is a sophomore on the Green team. “I wanted to be on the Gold team. There was nothing I could do about it. It was kind of like redshirting in a way, where I just get a
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lot practice in. Now it’s my turn, and that practice (regimen) built up and I’m ready to use all that skill I learned in the last two years.” Cubberly said Nelson has a combination of skill, the will to work hard and determination. “He has major dedication to the sport of wrestling,” the coach said. “He didn’t
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complain and cry or moan about not starting his first two years. He got better and better. He improved his technique and physical strength because he knew he was behind a couple good guys. “He had to put in his time at that level and wait for his chance. That chance is now, his junior year. Most people have an ‘I want it now’ mentality. Gavin’s not like that. He said, ‘I’ll wait until it’s my turn and I’ll be prepared,’ and boy is he prepared. I think he has an opportunity to make the state tournament if he keeps working hard. He’s going to be one of those guys people don’t know about.” Nelson, who placed seventh at the Brecksville Tournament on Dec. 21-22, has not been pinned this season but he said he knows he has to refine his technique from the bottom position. He said he feels comfortable wrestling on top and on his feet. His goal for the rest of this season is to take things one match at a time, listen to what his coaches tell him and, hopefully, make the podium at the state tournament in early March. “I think I have a chance at top eight if I keep doing what I’m doing,” Nelson said. “My coaches have told me I have what it takes and I could be something some day and I could be good. I started to put some more (effort) into it, then more. I worked harder and kept getting better results. Now, I just love it and I want to keep going farther and farther.”
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THE PRESS
JANUARY 7, 2013
Jared Rettig (20)
Tyler Landis (23)
Connor Bowen (32)
Backcourt trio 3 times the trouble for opponents
“
Ryan Bowen says he has a team with great chemistry and players who don’t care about their individual statistics. The Lake boys’ basketball coach also has a trio of talented guards who plan to make life very difficult for the rest of the Northern Buckeye Conference this season. The Flyers took an 8-0 record into their key game at preseason NBC favorite Otsego on Jan. 4. They put that unbeaten record together by both scoring nearly at will, as they did in a 118-56 rout of Genoa, and by playing stifling defense. Lake has held six of its first eight opponents to 53 points or less, allowing just 19 points on the road against Elmwood, which went scoreless in the fourth quarter, and 32 against Oak Harbor. The Flyers are getting 40 points a game from their guard trio of sophomores Connor Bowen, the coach’s son, and Jared Rettig and senior Tyler Landis. Connor Bowen, a 5-11 point guard, is averaging 15 points, eight assists and four steals a game. A returning starter, he averaged just six points a game last season. He had a school-record 12 assists in the Flyers’ 62-point win over Genoa, and he nearly had a triple-double in a win over Woodward. “He’s just an old-school point guard,” coach Bowen said. “He can handle the (opponents’) presses and he does all the work on the basketball court and can make things easier for everybody else. He’s a joy
BOYS BASKETBALL Team (League) Overall Lake (3-0, NBC) Oak Harbor (3-1, SBC) Cardinal Stritch (1-2, TAAC) Woodmore (1-2, NBC) Northwood (1-2, TAAC) Gibsonburg (1-2, TAAC) Genoa (0-3, NBC) Eastwood (1-2, NBC) Clay (0-4, TRAC) Waite (0-4, TCL)
8 0 4 3 3 4 3 5 3 6 2 6 1 4 1 8 0 6 0 10
Genoa (2-1, NBC) Oak Harbor (4-3, SBC) Woodmore (3-1, NBC) Waite (3-2, TCL) Gibsonburg (2-2, TAAC) Cardinal Stritch (2-3, TAAC) Clay (1-3, TRAC) Lake (1-3, NBC) Eastwood (1-3, NBC) Northwood (0-4, TAAC)
5 6 6 5 4 4 3 3 1 0
GIRLS BASKETBALL
3 4 5 5 6 6 7 8 7 8
(Records updated to January 2)
When Connor is doing the work for us and Jared is on the wing, he can shoot it and can finish well.
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By Mark Griffin Press Contributing Writer sports@presspublications.com
to coach. As a point guard he has to be a second coach on the court. He’s my son, so he may get chewed out more than others, but he is positive every day and he brings a lot of energy. He loves to win, and he shows it every day.” The 6-2 Rettig started last year and averaged seven points a game. He has bumped that average up to 13 points a game this season. “He’s a great scorer and he plays great defense,” coach Bowen said. “When Connor is doing the work for us and Jared is on the wing, he can shoot it and can finish well. Elmwood’s two best two players were averaging 42 points a game coming in, and Jared and Connor guarded those two and held them to zero field goals and two total points. You just tell them, ‘those are your two guys. Don’t let them get the ball.’ It’s
nice when you have two kids take pride in the defensive end. Jared just plays smooth and smart.” A big surprise has been Landis, who transferred in from Start last season but had difficulty meshing with the rest of the squad, according to coach Bowen. Landis (5-11), who is averaging 12 points a game, had never played organized basketball prior to last season. “It showed,” coach Bowen said. “He got frustrated. He had a hard time dealing with structure and he thought, ‘I want to score, but not really work on the defensive end of it.’ We had a talk in the offseason and he’s bought into what we want him to do. He’s come a long ways.” Landis scored 40 points, on 17-of-20 shooting, in the victory over Genoa. “He’s a great open-court player, but he still struggles in the half-court aspect,” coach Bowen said. “He’s great when we’re in transition. This year he’s come a long way and bought in. He sees that everybody gets along and he wants to be a part of that.” Not to be overlooked has been the play of Lake’s two 6-5 post players, Jayce Vancena and Marcus Pierce. The 225-pound Vancena is averaging 11 points and 10 rebounds per game, while the 260-pound Pierce averages eight points and eight rebounds. “Our posts have done very well,” coach Bowen said. “We have a good starting five.” (Press photos of Jared Rettig, Tyler Landis, and Connor Bowen by Harold Hamilton/HEHphotos.lifepics.com)
Genoa softball team readies for South Carolina trip By Cynthia L. Jacoby Press Contributing Writer sports@presspublications.com Genoa girls’ softball team members have put the holidays behind them and are shifting focus to Spring Break training. “I’m looking for the girls to do some team bonding while having the chance to play against some other quality players from around the country,” Comets coach Jeff Eisenbrandt said in a New Year’s Eve interview. In late fall, Genoa Board of Education approved the team’s travel to the Cal Ripken Training Center in South Carolina. Eisenbrandt requested permission for the trip at the beginning of the 2012-13 school year. School board members put off a decision until they could check with the insurance company representatives regarding liability issues, Schools Superintendent Dennis Mock explained in December. “The insurance company said it was OK,” Mock said. Through fundraisers such as a bus trip to Greektown Casino, the girls and coach
raised the $5,200 needed to cover the facility training and hotel arrangements, Eisenbrandt said. The next hurdle is gathering funds to cover the travel expenses, he said. Some of those travel funds will come about through fees collected by Eisenbrandt for pitching and hitting lessons held weekends for elementary students this winter. Most likely, he’ll rent vans to transport the 13 to 16 athletes (mostly varsity players and some floaters between the varsity and junior varsity teams) to the eastern seaboard destination. “We looked into getting buses - but they are just too expensive,” Eisenbrandt explained. Team members will join other athletes from across the United States at the Cal Ripken Training Facility in Myrtle Beach. The complex boasts seven fields and features a training island that will have three Ripken-designed infield training circles, bullpen mounds, batting cages and bunting stations. This year will be Eisenbrandt’s third year at the helm of the Comets fast-pitch
softball team. The team last took a trip to Florida sometime before his hiring. He hopes the trip makes the six returning seniors as well as the underclassmen a more cohesive unit ready for the challenges of the new season. “Last year was a building year,” Eisenbrandt said. “I Jeff Eisenbrandt am hoping to build on that growth and carry it in over into the new year. The freshmen will be a big help in the outfield.” Eisenbrandt took over leadership of the Comets team in 2011. Prior to that, he had coached junior varsity at Anthony Wayne in 2008 and Perrysburg in 2009 and 2010. His resume also includes coaching a traveling team for the Wizards organization in Toledo. Expectations remain high following the storied career of his predecessor, Tom
Kontak. Kontak’s softball teams posted a 16752 overall record in eight seasons dating back to 2003. His teams won Suburban Lakes League titles in 2006 and 2007 and earned SLL runner-up honors from 2003 to 2009. In that time, the teams also collected seven sectional championships, one district title in 2006, four district runner-up finishes, one regional championship and one D-III state final four appearance. Eisenbrandt is not sure how many students in all will turn out for softball tryouts this season. “It’s getting kind of tight now,” he said of the inflow of new blood. “Genoa is a smaller community and the girls play a lot of multiple sports.” Still, he is encouraged and excited by what he sees overall in the community. And that is what especially drives him to make the hitting and pitching camps available to the younger girls. Exposure at earlier ages can only benefit the athlete pool, Eisenbrandt added. (Press file photo by Jeff Eisenbrandt by Harold Hamilton/HEHphotos.lifepics.com)
THE PRESS
JANUARY 7, 2013
17
Cramer seeks to improve on fourth place state finish By Yaneek Smith Press Contributing Writer sports@presspublications.com After finishing fourth at 138 pounds at the Division II state meet last season, Oak Harbor senior wrestler Luke Cramer is hoping for something bigger this year. A state championship. So far, Cramer is on track during a 2012-13 season highlighted by his recent second place finish at The Medina Invitational Tournament, a first-place finish at The Oak Harbor Invite and an eighth-place finish at The IronMan Competition, one of the nation’s premier wrestling tournaments. Cramer and his coaches say there is still work to be done. The Rockets still have the Perrysburg Invite, the Sandusky Bay Conference Duals and the SBC Tournament before competing in sectionals and districts later in February. The thing that sets Cramer apart is his leadership traits. “Luke has been our main leader and everybody looks up to him because he placed at Columbus,” Oak Harbor coach George Bergman said. “He’s stepped up this year and has done an outstanding job leading our guys. And 18 of our 24 guys are freshman or sophomores. He leads by example and he’s not afraid to verbalize it. But he does it in a good manner. He’s not abrasive. A lot of times, your best wrestler might be abrasive because (wrestling) is a very intense sport. Those guys can rub you the wrong way sometimes, but Luke’s a great kid.” Cramer tried to have a positive influence on the younger wrestlers. “I’ll always talk to the younger kids after practice,” he said. “I’ll try to get them to come to one or two night workouts per week. In practice, I’ll tell them what they’re doing wrong, not to make them mad but to make them work harder. I’m always talking to them, always being a good team leader, showing them what they can (accomplish) if they work for it. We have a giant sophomore class and they go to the JV tournaments and almost every other kid is taking top-3 (in his weight class) and we’re en-
Oak Harbor wrestler Luke Cramer in control at last year’s state meet. (Press file photo by Harold Hamilton/HEHphotos.lifepics.com) couraging them and it helps them. We try to get them to come to a few night workouts each week.” Cramer suffered a serious setback in May when he broke the growth plate in his shoulder and had to sit out for three months. The injury forced him to undergo therapy, and, thus far, he hasn’t experienced any problems. “I’m keeping my fingers crossed,” Cramer said. Cramer benefits from wrestling being his only sport, allowing him to maintain his focus on the sport 12 months a year. He stays in shape by lifting weights, working out, and competing in tournaments. “He’s very serious and he trains for it year-round,” Bergman said. “He entered the Super 32 National Tournament in North
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Carolina and placed at The IronMan Competition, the toughest tournament in the country. That’s a credit to him, a feather in his cap and it helps his confidence. All of his losses have been to real good competitors. He’s lost to some real quality opponents. He’s worked extremely hard, he’s committed, he does all of the lifting, and goes to all of the workouts. He doesn’t leave a stone unturned.” From 2007-11, Bergman oversaw an unprecedented run of success within his program. The Rockets won five straight Sandusky Bay Conference titles, finished in the top-five in D-II each year, including runner-up finishes in 2008 and 2010, and had five state champions. Last season, Oak Harbor finished 19th in D-II, fourth in the SBC, and had two wrestlers, Cramer and
Alex Bergman (152), finish fourth at state. Cramer and four fellow seniors, Jared Chambers, Josh Chambers, Hunter Gresh and Alec Bowlick, are looking to reclaim the SBC crown and make their mark in Columbus. Over the past four years, Cramer has moved up sin the weight classes going from 112 to 130 to 138 and he’s now at 170. At the SBC tournament, he finished in the top three each time, placing third at 112 and 138 as a freshman and junior, respectively, and coming in second as a sophomore at 130. This season, Cramer is hoping to win at 170. Cramer started wrestling when he was 5-years-old and credits his brother, Jake, and his father, Jim, with helping him to become acclimated with the sport. One of his best friends is Alex Bergman, a former Rocket great who currently wrestles as a freshman at the U.S. Naval Prep School in Newport, R.I. Cramer credits Alex with helping him improve as a wrestler over the years. “One big thing is my dad always keeps (the pressure) on me,” Cramer said, “and drove me to do the workouts with my brother.” The brother he’s referring to is Jake Cramer, who is currently wrestling at Tiffin University. “Jake, he was part of the class that was runners up at Division II and he had Ian and Tyler Hackworth right beside him. He would go to the night workouts and after the junior high workouts, I’d go over and workout with the high school guys. That always drove me. And not making it as far as I wanted to in my freshman and sophomore year motivated me, too.” Cramer speaks highly of the Rocket’s coaching staff, which, in addition to Bergman, includes Aaron Bomer, Bill Scherf and Paul Bergman, all of whom wrestled in college. He said they helped instill confidence in he and his teammates. “They’re always positive,” Cramer said. “They tell us what we can do (better) and how to be a leader. He (Bergman) tells me I’m doing a good job through the week, talking to the kids, Coach Bomer, Scherf, they always work with me and help me with wrestling to keep me going.”
Brian Gentry 419-855-8366
BAUMANN
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will receive the best possible care here.
Oregon Pediatric Dentistry Dr. Stephen R. Branam Dr. Stephen R. Branam, DDS Children’s Dentistry
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It’s Time to Kick-Up Your Feet! Get Your Tickets for the Next Dance at Ole Zim’s!
Live music: Round & Square, Line and Free-Style Dancing
2013 Dance Schedule. 8pm-Midnight Dates Fri. January 18th Fri. February 1st Fri. February 15th Fri. March 1st Fri. March 15th
Band Saw Buck Saw Buck Legacy II Saw Buck Saw Buck
Advance Tickets only $13 Includes pop, cups, ice, chips, pretzels, popcorn.
Call 419-665-2577 to reserve tickets or stop by to purchase!
Open Every Sunday to the public for homestyle dinners or sandwiches 11am - 3pm. Hall available for wedding receptions, private parties, meetings and events.
OLE Zim’s Wagon Shed, LLC
1375 St. Rt. 590 Gibsonburg, OH (just south of US 20) www.olezims.com
18
THE PRESS
JANUARY 7, 2013
Walleye’s Youds, Glendening to be play in all-star game By Matt Melzak and Andi Roman Tye Special to The Press Toledo Walleye defenseman Ben Youds and forward Luke Glendening will represent the Toledo Walleye at this year’s ECHL All-Star game. Youds is having a tremendous season. He is currently tied for the ECHL lead in points for defensemen with 26 (4g, 22a). The 22 assists he has collected are the most for any defenseman, and he currently sits fourth on the Walleye in scoring. He is also a plus 8 on the season. Youds started the year in Rockford, appearing in three games with 2 assists. Glendening was recalled to Grand Rapids on December 18. When he left Toledo, he was third among Toledo players in scoring with 21 points (14g, 7a). He was also fifth among ECHL first year players in scoring at that time. Two of his 14 goals were shorthanded goals and Glendening was playing as a plus 13 in Toledo. With the Griffins, he has one goal and one assist in six games. The ECHL All-Star Classic is being played January 23 in Colorado as the host team is the Colorado Eagles. Walleye forward Andrej Nestrasil is the AMI Graphics ECHL Plus Performer of the Month for December with a plus 13. Nestrasil was resassigned by the Detroit Red Wings to the Grand Rapids Griffins of the American Hockey League soon after. Nestrasil finished December with a plus 5 in the game to close out the month, a 9-4 win in Fort Wayne on December 31. He also had two games where he was a plus 2, December 1 against Cincinnati and the 16th against Florida. Nestrasil was a plus or better in each of his ten December games, and for the season he holds a Walleye best plus-minus at plus 14.
Former Toledo Walleye forward Andrej Nestrasil (right) heads down the ice at the Huntington Center in downtown Toledo. (Photo courtesy of the Toledo Walleye) The former third round draft choice of Detroit in 2009 has appeared in a total of 30 games this season with Toledo and has collected 31 points (10g, 21a), which ties him for the team lead. He has at least one point in each of his last 11 games with a total of 4 goals and 14 assists during the streak. The 31 points is two more than Nestrasil collected in 51 contests with Toledo a season ago. AMI Graphics in recognition of this award will present Nestrasil with a personalized Plus Performer of the Month Banner during an on-ice ceremony at an upcoming Walleye home game. Tickets are on sale for
Walleye games online at www.toledowalleye.com, or at 419-725-9255. The Walleye set a new franchise record for goals in a game in a 9-4 win at Fort Wayne. Toledo has a record of 18-12-0-1 and is 9-7-0-1 on the road this season. Toledo would get the game’s first goal just 3:11 into the opening period. Kyle Rogers beat Ken Reiter with a wrist shot from the left circle for his 6th goal of the season. Joey Martin and Randy collected the assists on the goal from Rogers. The Komets would tie the game at 6:21 when J.M. Rizk beat Pearce on a breakaway from the Toledo
blue line. Toledo would regain the lead just 34 seconds later at 6:55 when Andrej Nestrasil wristed a shot past Reiter. The lone assist went to Cody Lampl on the 9th goal of the season from Nestrasil. The Komets would even the game at two at 10:39 when Pearce was beaten Scott Kishel. “The message was to keep things simple tonight,” said Coach Nick Vitucci. “We did a great job matching their energy at the start of the game. The best part was that we finished this team off after we got the lead.” Terry Broadhurst would put Toledo back in front 3-2 at 7:13 of the second when he beat Reiter with a one-timer. Nestrasil had a perfect pass to Broadhurst for his 11th goal of the season. Wes O’Neill would put the Walleye in front by two goals at 9:43 with a power play goal, his 10th of the season. Toledo would make it 5-2 when Andrej Nestrasil scored his second goal of the night on a wrist shot from the right circle (O’Neill and Willie Coetzee assisting). The Komets would get a late goal to close to gap to 5-3 after two periods. The offensive explosion would continue in the third period. Travis Novak would make it 6-3 at 8:52 of the period. After a Komet goal made it 6-4, Toledo’s Travis Novak would score his second goal of the game and 5th of the season to make 7-4 at 11:56. Adam Hobson would score his second of the year and Joey Martin would score a shorthanded goal for his 6th to round out the scoring. Goaltender Jordan Pearce made 28 saves and is 9-5-0-0 on the season. The goal in the first period extended Andrej Nestrasil’s point streak to a season high 11 games (4g, 13a). Prior to the game against longtime rival Fort Wayne, new to the ECHL this season, Toledo added forward John May to the roster for the game. May has appeared in 26 games over four years with the Walleye scoring twice with two assists.
The Press
Church Worship Guide
Chris Crozier Chris invites you to see him at Thayer in BG. He will get you the best deal!
18039 N. Dixie Highway Bowling Green, OH 1-888-440-5271
Deadline: Thursday 11:00 am
nspirational essage of the eek: Worry Subsists by Lack of Faith Woodmore
Genoa
• Shirts • Hats • Sweats • Nylon Jackets • Bags • Scarfs • Mittens • Pants • Shorts • Socks
Varsity Jackets 329 RICE STREET (across from Post Office)
ELMORE 419-862-5303 Tues., Thurs., Fri. 10-5, Closed Wed., Sat. 9-Noon
Portage Valley Senior Lifestyle Choices
or hold it in your hand, Catch the Spirit!
Thriving throughout
St. John's UCC
Euchre Card Party
1213 Washington Street, Genoa 419-855-3906 Sunday Worship at 8:15 & 10:30 am Dr. Don Giesmann, Pastor
Tuesday, Jan. 15
Trinity United Methodist
11:30 a.m.—3:00 p.m.
Sunday School 9:15 am Worship 10:30 am
Join us for lunch and a
The Spirit of O erbein, and you’ll find it
Zion United Methodist Church Every Sunday: 9am Breakfast. Communion 9am - 9:15am 9:30 am Classes for all ages. 10:30 am Worship. Handicap Acces. Nursery Available
Genoa
but it’s very real We call it
Elliston
Wed. 5:25-7:30 WOW 18045 N. William St. 419-862-3166 www.ellistonzion.com
You can’t see it,
nevertheless.
Living in today's fast-paced world, and trying to keep up with our hectic daily lives is not always easy. Unfortunately, anxieties have become a greater part of our everyday living, and for many of us, it seems that each day brings new problems. We should resign ourselves to the fact that we will always have concerns to handle; however, the important thing is how we let these concerns affect us. Expressions such as, "I should have" or "I could have"are phrases that indicate that we are living in the past, and should serve as a reminder as to how we should act in the future. Although we cannot change our past
our community each and every day.
Main at 4th, Genoa Ramp & Elevator
Bring a friend! Call Robin to r.s.v.p. 419-833-8917
20311 Pemberville Road, Pemberville, Ohio 419.833.8917, www.otterbein.org In keeping with our United Methodist tradition, we seek to enhance the quality of life & holistic growth of older persons.
Pastor Cherl Matla
www.genoatrinity.com
mistakes, we can build on them to help make us a more faith-filled person. Being accountable for our actions and knowing that God is aware of our weaknesses, as well are our strengths, should encourage us to try to do what is in His will. Being overly concerned with " what could have been" is not only demoralizing, it reflects a lack of faith. Trusting in God and believing in ourselves, along with daily prayer, will help develop our faith and help us to live better lives. To have faith is to be sure of the things we hope for, to be certain of the things we cannot see. Good News Bible Hebrews 11:1
Williston
Northwood Calvary Lutheran Ch.
EVANGELICAL LUTHERAN CHURCH Williston, Ohio
Route 579-center of Williston Shawn O’Brien, Pastor 419-836-5514 www.StJohnWilliston.org
Sunday School 8:30am Sunday Worship 9:00 am Contemporary Service Saturday 5:00 pm Handicapped accessible-Nursery Available
See you in church! Walbridge
1930 Bradner Rd./Corner of Woodville & Bradner Rds. 419-836-8986 Sunday School 9:15 am. Sunday worship: 8 am & 10:30 am Wed. 7:30 p.m. Pastor Robert Noble Every 2nd Sun. 10:30 am Praise Service
Elmore Trinity Lutheran Church Lutheran Church-Missouri Synod 412 Fremont St. 419-862-3461 Stephen Lutz, Pastor
Worship 8 am - 10:45 am Sunday School - 9:30 am
Your ad could be here!
Don’t Hide Your Light under a Basket! Invite your friends and future friends to worship & experience the joy of fellowship with you. With rates as low as $6.25 per week (Suburban) or $7.50 per week (Metro), you can be listed in the Press Church Directory. Call us at 836-2221
THE PRESS
Real Estate Transfers
Week ending Dec. 21 Genoa Corp. 12-20-12 Richard G. and Lenore A. Harmeyer to Harmeyer Farms, LTD., 130.6 acres Wilson Road, $400,000. 12-21-12 David L. Shessler to Roger E. and Chris A. Hummel, 815 Cherry Street, $27,000. Catawba Township 12-17-12 Lawrence R. Cline Jr. and Debra L. Cline to Federal National Mortgage Association, 2267 North Wedgewood Circle, $166,667. 12-18-12 Fred A. Agnello to Thomas A.Crawford and LeeAnne E. Monday, 3401 Karwood Drive, $158,000. Danbury Township 12-18-12 William R. French to John L. And Maureen P. French, 2308 South Linda Drive, $150,000. 12-19-12 John and Donna Anderson to Mark A. and Brenda L. Bishop, 242 North Steele Road, $70,000. 12-19-12 Terry L. Schmitt to Kenneth C. and Carolyn J. McDowell, 396 South Deerwood, $110,000. 12-19-12 Reverend Leonard P. Blair to Ronald J. Ossovicki, vacant land State Route 163, $20,000. 12-21-12 Gregory L. and kim M.Spatz to The Cove On The Bay, 2911 South Amherst, $45,000. Marblehead Corp 12-21-12 Dwight and Virginia Taylor to Michael and Lois Tretter, 10654 East Bayshore Road #86, $195,000.
12-21-12 Claudette T. Blaha et al to Scott D. and Angela G. Hendricks, 2060 South Sugar Bush Drive, $115,000. Erie Township 12-21-12 James R. Weisend and Robert E. Weisend to Freddie C. Reales, 17 South Wolfe Road, $59,000. Elmore Corp. 12-21-12 Grant and Maryellen Cummings to Linda A. Millhime, 344 Lincoln Street, $71,000. Harris Township 12-17-12 Sharon J. Elder to Kenneth E. and Carolyn J. Neeb, vacant land Dischinger Road, $79,298. 12-21-12 Todd W. and Shelia K. Rothert to Jared R. and Christy I. Diekman, 17479 West Portage River South Road, $157,500. 12-21-12 Sandra A. Rodawalt to Kenneth E. and Carolyn J. Neeb, South Dischinger Road Âź int, $75,000. 12-21-12 Sandra J. Blausey to Kevin M. Fox, vacant land 80 acres, $240,000. 12-21-12 Richard T. Gargas Jr. and Lisa L. Gargas to Kevin M. Fox, vacant land 80 acres, $240,000. Portage Township 12-17-12 Mildred J. Butts to Samantha Idrogo,
3878 East State Road, $56,000. Port Clinton City 12-19-12 Roger Hofacker to First Island Company, 118 Harrison Street, $25,000. Week ending Dec. 28 Allen Township 12-28-12 Jeffrey S. and Lisa M. Cass to Robert Eugene Russell, 5945 North Billman, $217,000. 12-28-12 Rita J. Vincent to Michael W. Vincent Jr., 31140 North Fostoria Road, $99,000. Bay Township 12-28-12 Michael T. Conner to Dwayne L. and Jane P. Fleming, 6789 West Boysen , $44,000. Carroll Township 12-26-12 Ernest E. Cottrell to Dean A. and Adrianna C. Huston, 2320 North Carroll Erie Road, $new split $80,000. Genoa Corp. 12-26-12 Federal Home Loan Mortgage Corporation to Ronald G. and Julie A. Rightnowar, 813 North Railroad Street, $32,000. 12-27-12 Gary W. and Marcy J. Duquette to Federal Home Loan Mortgage Corporation, 608 West 4th Street, $60,000.
JANUARY
7, 2013
19
Catawba Township 12-26-12 Mildred J. Kline to Daniel L. and Nancy L. Kline, 584 NE Catawba Road, $135,000. 12-27-12 Stephen G. and Carol V. Loach to Jody L. and John M. Graham, 2881 Shad Row, $625,000. MarbleheadCorp 12-27-12 Mathew and Nicole James to Bank of America, 309 East Main Street, $60,000. 12-28-12 Michael N. and Joseph M. Horvath to Michael T. and Margaret M. Fife, Memorial Shoreway, $570,000. Harris Township 12-28-12 Kathleen S. Derickson to Thomas E. and Gretchen R. Rymers, new split Ernsthausen, $108,000. Portage Township 12-27-12 Almina J. Thompson to Sallie Traxler and John A. Laverty, 1240 East Hickory Grove, $254,915. Put In Bay Village School 12-28-12 David J. and Irene J. Fox to John R. Donahue, 184 Sandcastle, $170,000. Salem Township 12-28-12 Barbara S. Lodermeier to Donald D. Epke, 38 acres Hetrick Road, $198,000. 12-28-12 Barbara S. Lodermeier to Franklin Eugene and Bernadine A. Hammer, 10653 West Hetrick Road, new split $35,000. Oak Harbor Corp 12-28-12 David B. and Virginia B. Msrtin to Rith A. wagner, 331 Country Meadows Drive, $132,000.
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20
THE PRESS, JANUARY 7, 2013
Homes for Sale Investment Property For Rent Auctions Lots and Acreage
Real Estate 419-836-2221 or 1-800-300-6158 www.presspublications.com
WOODVILLE- 2 bed, 1 bath home, with 2 car detached garage, near elementary school. $86,900 419849-2360
The Press Classifieds
CLASSIFIED DEPT. CLOSED FRIDAYS Deadline: Thursdays at 1:00 p.m.
2 bedroom apartment, Walbridge, Ohio,103 Clinton, A/C, D/W hook up, $500/mo. + deposit & utilities. Call Willy 419-690-8009 or 313-980-2222 2 bedroom completely remodeled twinplex 1341 Penny Lane, Millbury, No pets smoking $650.00 419-3090398 .
Dawn BetzPeiffer
OPEN 24 HOURS EVERYDAY!
Commercial For Rent Commercial Property Office Space For Rent Share House/Apartment
2 bedroom mobile home, 527 W. Harborview, $300/mo., 419-4664871
3 easy steps to place your ad... 1) go to our website at www.presspublications.com
2) click on classifieds 3) click on classifieds form
*** PUBLISHER'S NOTICE ***
619 W. Madison Beautiful home near elementary. Four bedroom (1 walk-thru), office, beauty salon, and workshop make this a great find for the right owners. ($139,900) Adjacent, buildable lot to south of home (on Yeasting) also for sale ($14,000). 420 W. Stevenson Very nice 3 bedroom home with lovely kitchen and bath. Very well maintained. Two car garage, shed, deck, and patio all for only $92,500. 521 W. Smith Agent owned. Three bedroom, 1 1/2 bath, open living/dining room area. Three season room and office plus 2 car garage on lot and a half ($124,500). Call Becky Lauer, Secure Realty, today for your personal tour. 419-637-2738 Oregon home- 466 Georgetown Dr., 5 bedroom, 3.5 bath, full basement, 2 car garage, Reduced$229,000. 419-698-8902
Real Estate For Sale 1620 Shenandoah Toledo, Oh. 43607 3-bed, gar, & full basement 231 Longdale Toledo, Oh. 43605 3-bed, 1.5 baths 19102 W. Orchard Elmore, Oh. 43416 4-bed, 2.5 bath, attach. Gar. 118 Allen St., Swanton 3-bed, 1-bath, attach. Gar. 4339 Elliston Trowbridge Graytown, Oh. 43432 House, barn, store front & 2-bay garage Commercial 8260 Jerusalem Rd. Curtice, Ohio 43412 Building & 1.44 acres Commercial Building 2126 Consaul St. Toledo, Ohio 43605
Lots 457 Clubhouse Reno Beach 5-Lots $5,500 2.88 acres 10050 Corduroy Curtice, Oh $32,000. 418 Beachview Reno Beach 10 - lots $6,000.
Ohio Real Estate Auctions Ken Belkofer 419-277-3635
Thousands of Homes . . . One Address 419-691-2800 www.danberry.com 1514F - 2 story, 3 Bedroom. Large living room. Updated electric. Great Retail. $14,500! IL#53754 Tom Smith 419-343-8553. 827M - 3 Bedroom, 2 bath, newly remodeled kitchen and bath. Great First Time home!! IL#55334 Amparo Pecina 419-322-0720. 1001L - Cape Cod. 4 bed, 2 car garage, full basement. Lake schools on large lot. $89,900. IL#55284 Becky Naugle 419-266-2770. INFOLINE 419-539-1020 24 HOURS A DAY! If there is a property you are interested in, call and enter the 5 digit infoline number (IL) above.
bubbaswife@msn.com
CURTICE 2 bedroom home-$675/month. 1 bedroom apartment-$450/month. Can be seen on Craig's list. 419-276-2148
If you are selling or would like info on buying, Call me or Email me at:
or (419) 346-7411
East - 1931 Nevada, 2 bedroom house, appliances, no pets, 1 car/basement, C/A, $550/mo., + deposit + utilities. 419-691-1624
Nice Selection of New and Pre-Owned Homes! 2 & 3 Bedroom Low Monthly Lot Rent! Financing Available! Contact Walnut Hills/Deluxe 419-666-3993
East Side, 1 room apartment furnished, attached kitchen & bath $350/month. 419-309-9479
Walnut HIlls, Lot 272, newly updated, 3/bed, 2/bath, porch/shed, awning, Much more for $38,900. 419-902-0167
East Toledo 1 bedroom apartment, January Special $100 off deposit, all utilities except electric, includes stove/fridge. $395/mo. + $395 deposit. 419-932-0503 EAST TOLEDO 1 bedroom, upper unit, $375/mo.+deposit, 1022 Greenwood, fenced backyard, Section 8 Approved. 419-693-9506
*** PUBLISHER'S NOTICE *** All real estate advertising in this newspaper is subject to the Fair Housing Act. As amended, prohibits discrimination in the sale, rental, and financing of dwellings, and in other housing related transactions, based on race, color, national origin, religion, sex, familial status (including children under the age of 18 living with parents or legal custodians, pregnant women, and people securing custody of children under the age of 18), and handicap (disability). To complain of discrimination call HUD toll-free telephone number 1800-669-9777, for the hearing impaired is 1-800-347-3739. *Equal Housing Opportunity*
East Toledo 1-bedroom upper duplex, appliances included, $375/month plus utilities. 2-bedroom upper duplex, gas heat included, $450/month. 2-bedroom upper $410/month plus utilities.
duplex,
419-698-9058 East Toledo, 3 bedroom upper duplex, $425/mo., 3 bedroom lower, $425/mo + deposit and utilities, appliances, No Pets. 419-691-3074
1403 West State Street Fremont, OH 43420 419-333-TEAM (8326) 877-787-8326 toll free GIBSONBURG‌ A SPECTACULAR SETTING: The handsome home set far back from the road, w/gray custom garage/barn, white rail fenced pasture, & lots of grass & trees in the view. 3BR, 2BA home built in 2004, w/20 acres of land & a second home on the lot. SP3786 FREMONT‌ GOT HORSES?‌36x50 barn w/full bath, 2 horse stalls, fenced pasture area & fenced riding area plus a custom built 3BR, 2BA ranch all on over 5 acres! Very Open Floorplan. Partial bsmnt. Att, heated garage. SP3772 WOODVILLE‌ Move in ready condo built in 2002. 2BR, 1.5 baths. Neutral dÊcor throughout. Open floor plan. 1 car attached garage. SP3685 BRADNER‌ AMAZING KITCHEN- yards & yards of ceramic counter & oak cupboards, w/lrg space for table & chairs. FR/LR combo w/wdbrn & gas frpl. 4+ car storage capacity, hot water heat & c/a. SP3458 BRADNER‌ ON THE EDGE OF TOWN- Bradner's east end of town sets the scene for this 2 story home w/small mstr suite & roomy upstairs bedroom/ landing/ bonus room. Bring one, bring all. SP3437
www.WendtKeyTeamRealty.com Multi Parcel Land Auction SAT. JAN. 12, 2013 Property Located at 25547 SCHEIDER RD. PERRYSBURG, OH 43551 Auction to be held off site at Levis Commons Hilton Gardens 6165 Levis Commons, Perrysburg, Oh 43551 Doors Open @ 9 A.M. Auction @ 10 A.M. The 15 acres is situated off Roachton on Scheider, N.W. corner with frontage on Schieder and Roachton. The 3 parcels are approx. 326 ft. x 668 ft. each. Bids will be taken on each parcel or as a whole. Currently zoned agriculture. Prime location. TERMS: 10% Buyer Premium. $5,000 down day of sale per parcel/ $15,000 for entire 15 acres. Balance within 45 days.
Midwest Real Estate & Auctions, LLC. Daniel P. Kapudjija Broker/Auctioneer 419-794-7290 www.midwestreauctions.com
The Press delivers more of these prime buyers to you than any other media. We deliver The Suburban Press and the Metro Press to more than 32,000 homes in 23 communities in Lucas, Ottawa, Sandusky and Wood Counties including: Curtice, East Toledo, Elmore, Genoa, Gibsonburg, Lake Township, Luckey, Millbury, Northwood, Oak Harbor, Oregon, Walbridge and Woodville. If you live in one of these communities, make sure you get maximum exposure with those most likely to buy.
LD
HOMES IN GIBSONBURG
29920 Hille, Millbury, 3 bed, 2 bath, 2 car garage, fenced, first time rented. $900/mo.,1st/last and security 727-639 3006
A study by The National Association of Realtors shows that most households move within 10 miles of their current location.
SO
All real estate advertising in this newspaper is subject to the Fair Housing Act. As amended, prohibits discrimination in the sale, rental, and financing of dwellings, and in other housing related transactions, based on race, color, national origin, religion, sex, familial status (including children under the age of 18 living with parents or legal custodians, pregnant women, and people securing custody of children under the age of 18), and handicap (disability). To complain of discrimination call HUD toll-free telephone number 1800-669-9777, for the hearing impaired is 1-800-347-3739. *Equal Housing Opportunity*
38 years of Full-Time Experience
Looking to sell your home? We’ll bring the buyer to you
Call 419-836-2221
PRESS The
Since 1972
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P.O. Box 169 • 1550 Woodville, Millbury, OH 43447
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BATDORFF REAL ESTATE, INC. Trust the oldest and most experienced real estate company in town with your sale or purchase - over 170 combined years of real estate sales in our area!
149 Church St., Oak Harbor, OH (419) 898-9503 www.batdorff.com NEW LISTING ! 421 E Yeasting GIBSONBURG - $64,900 Excellent starter or retired home, priced to sell. 3 bedrooms, 1.5 bath, eat in kitchen, formal dining, detached 26x15 garage, large lot. Call Bernie Hammer 419-307-4060 or Batdorff Real Estate 419-8986804 for information or to schedule a showing.
NEW LISTING ! 6567 Humphrey Rd OAK HARBOR - $110,000 3 bedroom, 2 bath, could be made back to single home or investment property - 2 units. Call Bernie Hammer 419-307-4060 or Batdorff Real Estate 419-898-6804 for information.
NEW LISTING ! 10123 W Toussaint East OAK HARBOR - $129,000 Country - almost 3 acres, 3 BR, 2 baths, large family room fireplace, wood floors, 2 car attached garage, extra storage, older barn. Excellent for horses or 4-H animals. Call Bernie Hammer 419-307-4060 or Batdorff Real Estate 419-898-6804 for showing.
COZY ! 152 Brooklyn Street OAK HARBOR - $79,900 Cozy in town 2 bedroom, 1 bath, sun room, one car attached garage, 10 x 12 shed, move in ready. Call Bernie Hammer 419-307-4060 or Batdorff Real Estate 419-898-6804 for information or to schedule a showing.
www.batdorff.com
THE PRESS, JANUARY 7, 2013
East Toledo, upper 2-bedroom, $375/month, no pets, 419-320-1007. ELMORE, 4 bedroom, 1 ½ bath, 2 ½ car garage, C/A, 90% efficient furnace, new kitchen carpet, appliances included. 419-849-2449 Elmore- 3 bedroom home, 1.5 bath, all appliances included, full basement w/workshop, central air, fireplace, enclosed porch, attached 2 car garage, across from golf course, No smoking. $995/mo. 419-8622417 Genoa 1 bedroom apartment, all utilities included, $425/mo. 419-855-7250
COPPER COVE APTS.
So Are We! Easy In - Easy Out! $99 Move In
Call for new tenant rate 1105 S. Wheeling
419-693-6682
Piccadilly East Apartments
Genoa 2 bedroom upper, clean, no pets. $450/mo. +Security deposit/utilities. 419-862-2000 Graytown – 3 bedroom, 2 bath home , attached 2 car garage, Oak Harbor Schools, No Smoking/Pets. 419-345-8768 Northwood-4101 Wise, 2 bedroom house, $550/mo +security/utilities, no pets. 419-691-8404
* 1 Bed $400 * 2 Bed $500
• Oregon Schools • No Deposit • No Gas Bill • Small Pets OK! • Storage Units On Site
OREGON APARTMENTS
419-693-9391
1 bedroom, spacious, patio, appliances, low deposit, car port available, C/A, $395/mo. + utilities;
Mon.-Fri. 10am-6pm, Sat. 11am-4pm 2750 Pickle Rd., Oregon Visa & MasterCard Accepted
2 bedroom, all electric, $495/mo.; 1 unit $495/mo., heat included.
Visit us on our website at: www.oregonarms.net Call 419-972-7291 419-277-2545 Oregon, 130 N. Yarrow. 2-bedroom, 2-car garage, all appliances, no pets, $725/month + deposit + utilities. 419343-3421 Oregon-2040 Autokee, 2 bedroom home, large garage, fenced back yard. $650/mo +deposit, utilities not included. 419-466-4871 Quiet duplex on 1 acre lot, near Maumee Bay State Park, 2 large bedrooms, 1.5 bath, large kitchen/appliances, family room w/fireplace, full basement, garage, no shoveling/mowing/smoking or pets. $800/mo 419-260-6705
• • • • • •
A Place To Call Home
Swimming Pool Basketball/Tennis Courts Playground 24 hour emergency maintenance Laundry facilities Ask about our new tenant specials Featuring
1 bedroom $405 2 bedroom $495 2 & 3 bedroom Townhomes starting at $599
Walbridge 2-bedroom apartment, $475/month + deposit, no pets. 419666-3809 WALBRIDGE–one bedroom, 101 Blair, brick apartment, ground floor. $435. Lease, No Pets. 419-467-9432 Woodville, Ohio, 2-Bedroom upper, stove/refrigerator, W/D hookup, No Pets, $450/mo. + deposit + utilities. 419-862-2867 Woodville, Ohio- 2 bedroom apt., just painted, appliances, quiet neighborhood, laundry facility, starting at $399/mo. +Deposit 419-669-0274
Yorktown Village
1 & 2 Bedroom Townhouses & Apartments Join Oregon’s Finest Community ★Laundry ★Swimming Pool ★Spacious Floor Plans★Private Patios ★ 24 hr. Emergency Maintenance
419-693-9443
www.YorktownVillageOregon.com
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
~~~~~~~~~~ Amberwood
419-698-1717 3101 Navarre Ave., Oregon
Your New Home For 2012 Ask about our specials •Oregon Schools • Pool • Intercom entry • Washer/Dryer hookups • Cat Friendly
Apartments
Featuring
Visa & MasterCard Accepted Ranch style, 1 bed, spacious, A/C, quiet, parklike setting
1 bedroom apt. $425 2 bedroom apt. $495 2 bed. Townhouse $625
Pet Friendly
LOW DEPOSIT! 3525 Navarre 419-693-6202
amberwood@aspenmgt.net
~~~~~~~~~~
The Press Circulation
“Make your first Big Move!�
EASTWYCK APTS. 3148 Corduroy Rd. Oregon, Ohio 419-691-2944
Hab Specialist Luther Home of Mercy, a facility located in Williston, Ohio has Hab Centers in Lucas and Wood Counties. LHM is accepting applications to hire a qualified individual who is able to assist adults with Developmental Disabilities in daily activities in LHM Hab Center. Must meet the following qualifications: HS Diploma or GED, one (1) year experience in field, valid driver’s license. Must obtain CPR/FA and Med Administration within 90 days of hire. If interested, send resume to: Luther Home of Mercy Director of Employee Relations 5810 N. Main St. P.O. Box 187 Williston, OH 43468 or apply online at www.luthhome.org. EOE
Classifieds
Deadline: Deadline:Thursdays Thursdaysat at1:00 1:00p.m. p.m.419-836-2221 419-836-2221or or1-800-300-6158 1-800-300-6158 Deadline: Thursdays at 1:00 p.m. 419-836-2221 or 1-800-300-6158 classified@presspublications.com - (Closed Fridays) classified@presspublications.com Delivered to - 36,047 Homes, businesses and newstands Delivered to - in 38,358 Homes in Lucas, Ottawa, Sandusky & Wood Count Lucas, Ottawa, Sandusky & Wood Counties
Wheeling Street Is Open
Oak Harbor apartment, 2 bedrooms, $425/mo. 419-855-7250
Northwood/Williston Rd. 1 Bdrm, part. furnished. $550 p/mo + deposit. Includes gas & electric. Non smoking/no pets. Credit application required. 419-392-8968
21
Mike's Hauling We buy junk cars, trucks and vans Scrap metal hauled free. 419-666-1443
Avon Reps Needed. Earning Potential Unlimited. $10.00 Starter Kit. Call for Appointment 419-666-5680 Drivers: Regional GREAT $$$, avg. annual 2011 regional Pay $68K Consistent miles, ALL miles pd. Good benefits Home time weekly/ weekends Class A, 2yrs exp., 25 yoa 800-321-3460 x227 Drivers: Start up to $.40/mi. Home Weekly. CDL-A 6 mos. OTR exp. Req. 50 Brand New Coronado's you'll be proud to drive! 888-406-9046 Insurance Rep- West Toledo Temp to Perm. We are recruiting for several candidates that are interested in working in the Insurance Business. Will be focusing on Property, Casualty, Life and Health Insurance. Prefer candidates to have Licenses, however, willing to train candidates with excellent customer service, sales and computer skills. Will develop leads, schedule appointments, establish client relationships, identify customer needs and market appropriate products and services. Respond to inquiries regarding insurance availability, eligibility coverages, policy changes, transfers, claim submissions and billing clarification. $13.00 temp to perm positions. Email resume to toledo.oh@manpower.com with Insurance in the subject line. Owner Operator looking for experienced steel hauler, regional, home weekends. Call Tom at 419-4672167. No calls after 7pm please. SALES OPPORTUNITY NABF College World Series media publications/sponsorship. Commission only. Call 419-936-3887, leave name and phone number. Shop Mechanic Manpower of Maumee is currently recruiting for a full time, shop mechanic. The technician is responsible for mounting the cranes, running all of the electrical, fabrication/alterations of frames and sub-frames, and finishing installation of mechanical parts. Must be able to work in fast pace environment and have strong attention to detail. This position is a long term, possible temp to hire. 1st shift - starting at 6:30 a.m. to 4:30 p.m. (overtime may be required during the week and on weekends) Must provide own basic hand tools. (Standard and metric) If you are interested, please e-mail your resume to toledo.oh@manpower.com or fax it to 419-893-6245 and put "Shop Mechanic" in subject line. Tier 1 Automotive Supplier seeks a journeyman electrician for a Maintenance Technician. Direct hire in North Toledo, 50-55K annually, 2nd shift salaried position with eligibility for overtime, EOE. Contact Chelsea 419-254-2812 Welding Positions North Toledo We are searching for experienced welders. Must have previous experience from past employment or school. These are temp to perm positions paying $14.00 per hour. Drug and Bkg checks will be conducted. Will need HS Diploma or GED. Call Manpower at 419-893-4413 or email resume to toledo.oh@manpower.com enter welding in the subject line
TRAINCO
Day - Eve - Weekend Class Job Placement
Have Scissors/Will Travel Experienced hair care that comes to homebound disabled persons. All hair services provided. Available 5 days a week. Servicing Oregon, Genoa, Walbridge, Perrysburg Twp, and South Toledo Call Patty K. at 419-283-9628
Perrysburg 419-837-5730 Norwalk 419-499-2222
Toledo Restaurant Training Center –– Register Now! –– C.H.E.F. Program Culinary and Hospitality Educational Fundamentals
Spring Term Begins Feb. 11, 2013 Financial Aid Available
419-241-5100 www.trtc.edu School Registration No. 08-08-1860T
Turnpike Service Plazas are hiring for: TRAVELER’S EXPRESS
Hiring for All Shifts and Shift Managers Part time Positions Available
• • • •
Competitive Wages Meal Discounts Insurance Flexible Hours
Applicants will be considered for all concepts
Apply @ Hardees.com/jobs
Blue Heron Plaza
Wyandot Plaza
419-855-3478 419-855-7239
* Antiques * Buying all types and estates, including old toys, advertising items, Watches. 419-351-7014 or 419-6915808 Antiques, furniture, lamps, paintings, pottery. Stony Ridge Antiques. 419-837-3068 and 419-837-5490 A Mechanic looks at vehicles, pays accordingly, anything w/wheels 419-870-0163 We buy most anything from your garage! 419-870-0163 We buy name brand brass & woodwind instruments and old drums and drum parts any condition,guitars and tube amplifiers. Dr. Dave's Band Aide 2048 Starr Ave., Toledo. 419-693-3900
$ WANTED $
Buying all items Gold - Silver - Platinum • Coin Collections • Pocketwatches • Old Wristwatches Michael Tadsen Jewelers 4201 Woodville Rd., Northwood
419-698-1570
Teacher Assistant – Bowling Green Candidate must have a high school diploma or GED; prefer CDA or Associates in Early Childhood Education or related field, and experience with pre-school aged children and working knowledge of early childhood development. Responsibilities include assisting the teacher with daily classroom activities, responding to the needs of children, maintaining the cleanliness of items used in the classroom and preparing and maintaining accurate reports and documents. Initial and periodic physical exam, drug testing and background checks are required. Seasonal, PartTime, Avg. 25 hrs/wk, high school diploma - $8.65 / hr; associates $9.30 / hr. Applications must be received by January 20, 2013. Apply online at wsos.org/employment. EOE
81
Are you in need of a housekeeper, I do general/deep housecleaning also run errands (doctor's appointments, groceries, etc), or just some companionship for your loved one or just someone to provide loving pet care in your home while you're gone? Flexible hours and competitive wage. 419-464-5826. Child care provided in my Oregon home or your home, volunteer parttime at Lucas County Children Services, references and very reasonable. Robin 419-392-4863
REQUEST FOR QUALIFICATIONS/PROPOSALS The City of Oregon requests qualification statements and proposals from qualified professional planning, community development, economic development, and/or other qualified consulting firms to perform necessary functions for its FY2013 Community Development Block Grant (CDBG) Community Development Program. All proposals must be responsive to the Scope of Services section of this RFP and must meet the content of RFQ/RFP criteria. Offerors are invited to submit one original and one copy of their response to Ms. DarLynn Huntermark, Deputy Finance Director, City of Oregon, 5330 Seaman Road, Oregon, Ohio 43616 no later than 4:00 p.m., Monday, January 28, 2013. The complete RFQ/RFP may be requested from Ms. Huntermark at 419-698-7012 or dhuntermark@oregonohio.org.
Electrical Service Changes from fuses to breakers, 100/200 etc., House Wiring Specialist, 567-277-5333 (local)
Truck Driving Schools
• • •
To the Residents of Jerusalem Township, The Reno Beach/Howard Farms Conservancy District will hold their regular business meetings on the second Monday of every other month. Starting January 14, 2013, the meeting will be held at 7pm, in the township hall at: 9501 Jerusalem Road, Curtice, Ohio. 43412.
Thanks St. Jude, Blessed Virgin Mary, St. Anne and all for prayers answered. jah
Do you need to speak with confidence or better clarity? Be our guest at the next Toastmasters Club Meeting. No Classes - No Pressure Just an inviting, supportive environment. We all have similar goals. Come to Bay Park Community Hospital the first and third Tuesday of each month at 6:30 P.M. Visitors always welcome. Call Ken for more info 419-378-1777 or check our local website: tinyurl.com/7475cv6 or the district: www.d28toastmasters.org
Hardwood Flooring, Refinishing, Installation, and Repair Work. 18-yrs experience. Call Kyle 419-343-3719
RAY'S HANDYMAN SERVICES Carpentry, Drywall Repairs, Painting, Roof Repairs, Siding, Electrical Problems, Help for the Do-It-Yourselfer. Small Jobs Welcome, 35+ Years Experience 419-836-4574/419-304-0583
We buy any scrap medal. Old cars, Refrigerators, Stoves, Lawn mowers, Yard equipment, etc. Call Mike 419-350-8662
General house cleaning and offices. Reasonable, 30 yrs. experience and referenses. 419-6661753
*Outdoor Power Equipment Repair & Service For the Home, Lawn, Farm & Garden Generators, Riding Mowers, Log Splitters, Trimmers, Edgers, Chainsaws, Lawnmowers, Leaf Blowers, etc. Track Record of Professional Service and Happy Customers Reasonable Rates 419-260-8990
BAY AREA CONCRETE New or Replace Concrete Driveways, Sidewalks, Pole Barns, Porches, Stamped & Color Concrete Brick & Block work etc. Veterans & Senior Citizens' Discounts Free Estimates, Licensed & Insured "No job to big, no job to small"
Mike Halka 419-350-8662 Oregon, OH. "Serving all of N.W. Ohio"
Madison Twp. Board of Trustees regular meeting will be held at 5:30pm, Jan. 7, 2013. 611 W. Madison St. Gibsonburg. S. Stevenson Fiscal Officer
“A GREAT DEAL IS A DUNN DEAL� See Randy Readel
3000 Dustin Rd., Oregon, OH
419-693-3000
22
THE PRESS, JANUARY 7, 2013
KNIERIEM PAINTING & WALLPAPERING EXTERIOR-INTERIOR Painting & wall papering; Interior wood refinishing; man lifts; airless spray; power wash & blasting; silicone seal; refinishing aluminum siding; residential; church, farm. EXPERIENCED FREE ESTIMATES *SENIOR & WINTER RATES* 419-862-2000 GRAYTOWN OR 419-697-1230 NORTHWOOD
Jake's Drywall We service Northwest Ohio. No job is too big or too small. 20 years experience. Fully insured. Free estimates. 419-360-3522
Seasoned, split firewood. Cheap! Call 419-307-6523
Ivan's Tree Service Serving Toledo & Surrounding Counties for 32 years! Rated A+ from BBB Free Estimates & Reasonable Rates *Expert Removal *Trimming *Shaping *Complete Clean-Up Fully Insured. 419-693-9964
3 Year Old Blue Eyed Paint Gelding For Experienced Rider or Trainer. $1,100.00 OBO. 419-898-2404
Fork Lift Friday
Affordable roofing, garages, flat roofs , new roofs or repairs, big or small, license, insured, 419-2424222 FREE ESTIMATES. Roofer & Company LLC (Previously Hatfield Roofing) Commercial and Residential All Types ,Re-roof and Repair Senior Discount/Free Estimates Reasonable, BBB 419-836-9863
5 PC. furniture outfit- 2 end tables, 1 recliner, chair w/ottoman and couch, $300/OBO, 419-2839628.
Leather Couch, white, 8' long $200 Call 419-898-2032
Cabbage Patch Dolls $5 each and other Collectibles. 419-855-7038. GENERAC XL5500 GENERATOR 120/240 volt, 5500 watt, $575.00. 419-367-8256
STU
Call Penta Career Center for more information at
419-661-6503.
2 La-Z-Boy swivel rocking chairs, New, burgundy. $300 ea. or both for $500. 419-691-7921
Cadillac Head Gasket Repair Is your Northstar engine losing coolant? Have it tested free at TMZ Automotive. 419-837-9700.
In Home Service
APPLIANCE WORKS INC. Washers, Dryer, Ranges, Microwaves, Refrig., Air Conditioners, Dishwashers, Disposers, Freezers
Hi there! I'm Stu. I'm a very handsome young man with an outgoing personality. I love playing with my brother and sister and after playtime I like to cuddle and take a nap. I've been told that I'm a special boy because I have extra toes! It makes me look like I have mittens on. I love meeting new people and I would sure love it if you would come and meet me! woodcountyhumanesociety.com
Operated By Mark Wells
419-836-FIXX (3499)
Concrete
Hauling
BAY AREA CONCRETE
B & G HAULING
New or Replace Concrete Driveways, Sidewalks, Pole Barns, Porches, Stamped & Color Concrete Brick & Block work etc.
Veterans & Senior Citizens’ Discounts
Automotive
Free Estimates, Licensed & Insured
MAIN STREET MOTORS Guaranteed Lowest Rates Weekly Specials
All minor & major mechanical repairs •Pre-owned Auto Sales •ATVs •New Motorcycle •Scooter Sales
636 Main St., Genoa 419-855-7700
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We will inspect...
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7
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•Anti-freeze •Belts •Hoses •Spark Plugs •Spark Plug Wires •Distributor Cap & Rotor •Wiper Blades •Load Test Battery •Tires •Brakes •Exhaust •Suspension •Shocks
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WINTER SPECIAL
ABSOLUTELY FREE Valid only with this ad
Mike Halka
419-350-8662 Oregon, OH
Insured & Bonded — FREE ESTIMATES — BOBCAT SERVICES AVAILABLE
419-697-9398
Electrical Contractor
SCHNEIDER SONS’ ELECTRIC CORP. Whole House Generators
21270 SR 579 Williston
836-7461
Carpet Cleaning
COUNTRY CHARM
Cleaning & Restoration LLC Professional Cleaning Services Since 1988 Carpeting & Upholstery Cleaning Pet Odor Removal Emergency Water Removal General House Cleaning — Certified By I.I.C.R.C. — 6763 Wildacre Rd., Curtice
CALL 419-836-8942
Cleaning R.D. Haar’s The Cleaning Professionals
• •
Residential Housekeeping daily, weekly or bi-weekly Commercial Housekeeping Carpet Cleaning Upholstery Cleaning
•
Call
•
419-277-0564
You’ll laugh at the name ... not the service!!
Don’t Call An Amateur, Call An Expert!
WEEKEND DELIVERIES •Stone & Dirt Hauling •Bobcat Service •Demolition & Hauling •Concrete Removal
419-340-0857 419-862-8031
Licensed & Insured New & Old Homewiring Specialists 1556 Oak St/At Oakdale Toledo, OH 43605
Hauling If it’s heavy ... and you want it hauled in or out ...
• Septic Systems • Sewer Taps • Snow Removal & Salting Backhoe/Bobcat/Dozer Work Stone and Dirt Hauling
419-836-8663 419-392-1488
Trucks
•Painting FREE ESTIMATES •Drywall •Fences, Reasonable Rates •Tile •Plumbing Fast Friendly Service •Decks •Electrical Insured and Bonded
MARK 419-855-4161
CARGO VANS 2012 Nissan [ NV ] 2500HD Rare find - Only $19,995.00 2007 Chevy Express 2500 White Only $7,995.00 2007 Chevy Express 1500 White Only $6,495.00 2003 Chevy Express 2500 Left & Right side Doors Priced To Sell $3,995.00
‘09 Chevy Impala LS - Low Miles All Power.................................$9,500 ‘04 Mustang - Very Clean, Spoiler Custom Wheel........................$5,900 ‘06 Dodge Charger SXT - Loaded ................................................$9,500 ‘03 Saturn 200L - Loaded, Sunroof, CD...........................................$5,900 ‘98 Ford Mustang Convertible Low Miles................................$3,900
Dan R’s Automotive
Joe Lehmann ~ Ron (RJ) Rowland ~ Dennis Cieply
www.danrsauto.com
4041 Navarre Ave., Oregon Oh 43616 1-888-697-5399 419-693-6141
Thank You For Reading The Press!
21270 SR 579 Williston
836-7461
Lawn Services
JERRY’S
LAWN CARE AND SNOW REMOVAL Commercial • Residential
– 2012 LAWNCARE SPECIAL – All Residential Properties Starting at $25 Bagged, edged & Trimmed •Spring/Fall Clean-up •Senior/Military Discounts •Multiple Property Discounts •Weekly Cuts •Referral Programs •Fully Insured
PHONE (419) 340-1418
MUSSER’S HOME AND PROPERTY MAINTENANCE • Home Repair Specialists • Commercial & Residential
Lawn Care & Snowplowing MANY DISCOUNTS & OTHER SERVICES • FULLY INSURED • FREE ESTIMATES
419-304-8666
1998 Ford Sport V6 Automatic, Runs Excellent/Looks Good. All New Tires, $2,200 OBO. 419-349-2126 2008 Honda Accord V6 Ex-L-Navigation, 55,000mi., Interior Gray, Exterior Blue, Sunroof, Excellent Condition. $18,250.00
Serving You for 20 Years! Contact me for a new or used vehicle.
Jim Schenk
(419)693-3000 (419)392-5252
Cycleman We repair Chinese Pocket Bikes and Scooters, and Mopeds, many parts available, also repair motorcycles, Call Wed. - Sat (10-6pm) 419-244-2525.
1997 Ford E350 shuttle bus, 22seat V-10, gas, auto, $5,000 OBO. 419-283-8580.
Burkin Self Storage • Camper Storage Inside & Outside
• Inside Auto Storage • Personal Storage
St. Rt. 51, South of Elmore 419-862-2127
If You’re an Expert and want to get involved... CALL 836-2221. Deadline: 11 a.m. Thursday
Outdoor Power Equipment
Plumbing
Gray Plumbing Since 1944 WILLISTON, OH
419-836-2561
25 Years Experience **** 24 HR. SERVICE **** D.O.T. Certified. Insured/Bonded All Major Credit Cards Accepted — Senior Discount — LICENSED MASTER PLUMBER
Jim Gray
419-691-7958
OREGON PLUMBING No Jobs Too Small Insured - Bonded
•SALES•RENTALS •PARTS•SERVICE
Only 7 mi. east of Woodville Mall on St. Rte. 579
419-693-8736 Licensed Master Plumber Roy Bomyea
Mon-Fri 8-5, Sat 8-12
S andwisch Painting
Handyman
J.N.T. HOME REPAIRS
2006 GMC Sierra 2500 4 x 4 EXT CAB 4 x4 Clean $10,995.00 2001 Ford F-150 Lariat Extended cab - V-8 Low miles $6,495.00
‘01 Dodge Dakota Ext Cab 4X4, Very Low Miles................................$5,800 ‘00 Chevy Silverado žTon 4X4 Full Power, 4X4, Low Miles......$5,900 ‘01 Ford F150 Supercrew 4X4 XLT Loaded....................................$7,900 ‘05 Dodge Dakota Quad Cab 4X4 Cargo Cover............................$8,500 ‘09 Chevy HHR Panel Loaded....................................$5,500
SNOW REMOVAL We can work directly with your Insurance Company
PICKUP TRUCKS
Warranties ~ Priced to Sell Fast
Painting
Family Owned & Operated Since 1942
BELKOFER EXCAVATING
2007 Chevy Cobalt $3,995.00 Wow! 2007 Ford Taurus Se Only $4,495.00 2006 Chrysler P.T. Cruiser Reduced - $2,995.00
RJ Auto Sales
•Dirt •Stone •Debris •Cars •Equipment •Trucks
(419) 691-8284 Excavating
2013 SALE CARS
Remodeling
Call Us!
BOBCAT SERVICES
1996 Ford Crown Victoria, very good condition, 70,000mi., $2,500 OBO. 419-693-8575 call between 8am to 2pm.
Got Junk & Garbage? We do: Clean Ups/Clean Outs
KELLER CONCRETE INC. Tear Out & Replace Concrete, Driveways, Patios, Porches, Pads, Sidewalks & Stamped/Colored Concrete ** Quality & Affordable Work **
1629 Woodville Rd. Millbury 419-349-4992
THE PRESS EXPERTS Appliance Repair
Cars
Forklift training each Friday.
Buying Quality Antiques, From single to whole estates, Also old toys, advertising items, watches, pottery419-351-7014
BAY AREA We haul anything away. Barn, Garage, Yard clean up services etc. Dump Truck and Bobcat Services Available. Call Mike 419-350-8662
•Interior •Exterior •Residential - Commercial
Terry 419-708-6027 Josh 419-704-7443
DON GAMBY EXTERIOR DECORATORS Vinyl & Aluminum Siding Gutters, Awnings, Windows, Roofing, Shutters, Pre-cast Stone, Custom Design Decks Licensed, Bonded & Insured
•Sump Pumps •Broken Pipes •Hot Water Tanks •Drain Clean All other plumbing needs and drainage tile. WINTER DISCOUNT 15%
MARK 419-392-3669 – SNOWPLOWING –
Residential/Commercial Senior & Veteran Discount
Call An Expert!
ACE ROOFING - FREE ESTIMATES Senior Discounts Roofs/Gutters Siding/Windows Your Owens Corning Preferred Contractor
INSURED - O/C Lifetime Shingles PREFERRED CONTRACTOR • Better than the typical A+ BBB rated contractor. We have a clean record. Call BBB at 419-531-3116. Check on all contractors. RECENTLY CHOSEN TO INSTALL ROOFS FOR OWENS CORNING PRESIDENT & COMMUNICATIONS DIVISION PRESIDENT BECAUSE OF OUR EXCELLENT REPUTATION
419-836-1946 419-470-7699 ACEROOF.net
Storage
419-862-2359 42 Years Experience
Plumbing
ALL COMPLETE PLUMBING
Roofing
Musser
Restoration & Remodeling, Inc
Additions - Decks - Bathrooms Exteriors - Windows - Kitchens Licensed - Insured - Bonded In Business for over 30 years — Free Estimates — BBB Senior Discounts PRO
MAUMEE BAY SELF STORAGE 7640 Jerusalem Road (Rt 2) (419)836-4000 Multi-sized Units - Outside storage Security fence - 7 day access “We make every effort to accommodate YOU.�
419-691-0131 O PRProfessional Remodelers Organization
www.musserremodeling.com E-mail: remoc1@bex.net No job too small or too big
Roofing
BLUE LINE ROOFING • Licensed & Insured Since 1964 • Senior & Veteran Discounts • Free Estimates with no pressure
AFFORDABLE PRICES HIGH QUALITY WORK OUTSTANDING REPUTATION
419-691-2524 www.BlueLineRoof.com
Your Ad Could Be Here! Call 419-836-2221 or 1-800-300-6158
THE PRESS
JANUARY 7, 2013
888-303-5636
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THE PRESS
JANUARY 7, 2013
Meet Jacob is a native of Oak Harbor, Ohio and will talk about his once-in-a-lifetime experience at the Olympic Games. Come hear about his experience and see the silver medal up close and personal! Jacob will also be available for pictures and autographs.
January 24th, 2013 from 7pm to 8pm at
2841 Munding Drive, (Navarre to Isaac Street) Oregon, Ohio 43616 ~ (419) 697-4100
Drs. Matt and Jody Freytag 3601 Ayers Rd. Millbury, Oh 43447 419-836-1033 www.walbridgedental.com
* New Patients Welcome * * Emergencies Welcome * Call for an appointment today!
Space is limited so please RSVP to Kathy or Anne at 419-697-4100
We look forward to seeing your smiling faces at our new location!
Tip Your Carrier & Receive
Trust Your Repairs to the Experts
$164.00 worth of coupons of Press Classified Advertising. We're proud we've been able to deliver the Metro & Suburban editions of The Press, free to your home since 1972.
When you TIP YOUR CARRIER, you will receive SIX (6) FREE CLASSIFIED COUPONS & FIVE (5) DISPLAY COUPONS (For use on birthday, anniversary or congratulations ads, etc.)
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PRESS The
Since 1972
Metro Suburban Maumee Bay
P.O. Box 169 • 1550 Woodville, Millbury, OH 43447 (419) 836-2221 Fax 836-1319 E-Mail news@presspublications.com
Fill out this form and mail to: The Press, Box 169, Millbury, OH 43447 Enclosed is $15. Please tip my carrier and send me $164 worth of coupons. Enclosed is $22. Please tip my carrier, send me $164 worth of coupons and the book Common People, Uncommon Challenges by John Szozda, 50 stories of inspiration about local people who rose to meet the uncommon challenges they faced.
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“Why trust anyone else?” All jewelry repairs are done in house, by these expert craftsmen. We repair everything from costume to fine jewelery made of silver, gold or platium.
Most items repaired in 1-2 days, though many repairs can be done while-you-wait. We are a licensed precious metal dealer. Turn your jewelry into cash!
Watch Batteries includes installation while-you-wait. *For most watches. With this coupon
$
Northwood Jewelers
“Service After The Sale”
Expires 2-28-13
2.
99
Northwood Jewelers “Service After The Sale”
4725 Woodville Rd., Northwood (in front of the mall) 419-691-6352 M-F 9-6; Sat. 9-3 www.northwoodjeweler.com