June 8, 2014
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Opinion
Bladenfreude and wounded warriors Tom Pounds on the pending job losses at The Blade and Michael S. Miller on sacrifices on and off the field. page 3
Community
Witness at Gitmo UT student Evan Matheney to attend hearings at Gitmo. page 10
Community Star
Remembering Eddie
Eddie Boggs tribute concert planned for June 22. page 15
Sustainable Nicholas Bloom helps create sustainable food, jobs. By Amanda Tindall, page 6
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Toledo Free Press
A Toledo tradition since 2005 ToledoFreePress.com
June 8, 2014
June 8, 2014
ToledoFreePress.com
Publisher’s statement
Opinion
A Toledo tradition since 2005
3
DON LEE
Bladenfreude “The Toledo Blade has developed plans to close its facility located at 541 North Superior Street, Toledo, OH 43660. The entire facility will be closed, and it presently is anticipated that this shutdown will be permanent. Consistent with these plans, employment separations are expected to begin on or about August 1, 2014 or during the 14-day period thereafter. Approximately 131 employees currently are expected to be separated from employment. Bumping rights are not available for affected employees. Some of the affected employees are represented by a labor organization.” — Letter from Block Communications Inc. to Toledo Mayor D. Michael Collins
T
he May 30 news that The Blade plans to close its Downtown production facility and lay off at least 131 employees led to a slew of people asking Toledo Free Press employees if the daily newspaper’s misfortune was good news for Toledo Free Press or brought us any satisfaction. The answer to both questions is a resounding no. Just when Downtown, through investments by ProMedica and the efforts of areas such as the Warehouse District, is starting to grow and thrive, the loss of 131 Blade jobs is a setback for Downtown, the city and our region. That is a lot of people no longer driving, parking, working, eating, spending money and paying taxes Downtown. There is no joy, no schadenfreude in that. Toledo Free Press’ well-documented Thomas F. Pounds problems with Block Communications and its ongoing lawsuit against us do not jaundice us to its workers and employees. We recognize the difference between institutional managerial bullying and the working people on Superior Street. Some of the public reaction to The Blade’s bad news is of interest to those who believe that one reaps what one sows, but again, there is no gain for Toledo Free Press when a Downtown employer, struggling to survive financially, has to cut so deep into its workforce and eliminate so many jobs. The continuing failure of daily paid print newspapers to evolve with new information standards has led to some markets having no newspaper watchdog to protect its interests. While we continue to fight against Block Communications in court, we wish to make it clear we do not take any joy or satisfaction in seeing its workforce continue to dwindle; the cost to our city is too high to seek any silver lining. O Thomas F. Pounds is president and publisher of Toledo Free Press. Contact him at tpounds@toledofreepress.com.
LIGHTING THE FUSE
Wounded warriors
O
n June 1, I awoke with a sore left knee and a right unique, direct programs and services to meet the needs hamstring that protested even the slightest move- of injured service members.” These are men like Zachary ment. I do not believe I will ever be so grateful to be “Beef ” Briseno, a Marine who lost both legs below the knee in Iraq and yet still plays softball, hunts, lifts strained and in low-grade pain. weights and coaches his son’s baseball team. The day before, I shared a field with Men like Kyle Earl, a Marine whose right the Wounded Warrior Amputee Softball hand was amputated during service in Iraq Team, armed forces veterans who sacribut who still plays hockey, football and softficed arms, legs, hands, feet and untold ball. Men like Matias Ferreira, a Marine who other elements of their lives in the service lost both legs below the knee in Iraq and yet of our country. Aching muscles were an skydives, dances, snowboards and bikes. embarrassing complaint compared to the These are men who redefine concepts prosthetics those men must use every day. like toughness, perseverance and grace. The Wounded Warriors played three games I never played organized baseball or softball May 31 at Ned Skeldon Stadium, raising Michael S. miller growing up. I did play on the NASA softball more than $18,000 during their time here. team during a summer in Washington, D.C., The group’s core effort consists of three missions: “To raise awareness and enlist the public’s aid but was smart enough to not swing for the fences when playing for the needs of injured service members, to help injured against the IRS and Department of the Treasury teams. service members aid and assist each other, and to provide n MILLER CONTINUES ON 4 Thomas F. Pounds, President/Publisher tpounds@toledofreepress.com
A publication of Toledo Free Press, LLC, Vol. 10, No. 23. Established 2005. EDITORIAL James A. Molnar, Design Editor jmolnar@toledofreepress.com Sarah Ottney, Managing Editor sottney@toledofreepress.com Jeff McGinnis, Pop Culture Editor PopGoesJeff@gmail.com
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Michael S. Miller, Editor in Chief mmiller@toledofreepress.com
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Toledo Free Press is published every Sunday by Toledo Free Press, LLC, 605 Monroe St., Toledo, OH 43604. Subscription rate: $100 /year. Reproduction or use of editorial or graphic content in any manner without permission is strictly prohibited. Copyright 2014, all rights reserved. Publication of advertisements does not imply endorsement of advertisers’ goods or services.
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Opinion
Just Blowing Smoke
Blade cuts both ways
A
fter years of castigating cor- ever, The Blade simply fell victim porate America for failing to to its own stale business plan; like recognize Toledo’s convenient many of its ilk, it could not decide location, to see competitive advantage whether it wanted to be an awardin its Downtown, or to appreciate its winning business that occasionally hardworking union workers, it ap- made a profit or a profitable business that occasionally pears that The Blade is won an award. about to tuck tail and As it now scales follow in the footsteps back in use, I’m sure of those they’ve previsome will see the Suously chastised. What perior Street site as else can we take from one that should be formal notifications to on a federal list of the city and The Blade’s historic buildings. unions that it intends to Others might agree to outsource its producits entry on a list, but tion? Such an intenTim HIGGINS suggest instead that tion makes it difficult to reconcile the disparity between the entry should be on a list of federal claim of being one of the city’s biggest Superfund cleanup sites. One cannot supporters and an apparent unwill- help but wonder at the impact of petroleum-based inks, industrial ingness to invest in its future. Nonproduction functions will chemicals and lubricants used over apparently remain in its Downtown time. One might be even more cufacility, but The Blade appears ready rious about the disposal of decades to cease all production at both its of solvent-based cleaners used in Superior Street and Water Street fa- their cleanup. The damage of The Blade’s past cilities, with more than 130 people losing their jobs. While The Blade political attacks may soon become has not formally announced where history, but not so quickly whatever that production will resurface, it’s may have leeched into the soil and likely that its plan will require aban- water supply from a facility only doning not only the Glass City but blocks from the Maumee River and a stone’s throw from Lake Erie. The the Buckeye State as well. In its announcement, The Blade toxic treatment of those held in discites the age of the equipment and the favor over the years by The Blade challenges of an older building in its may someday fade away, but not so decision not to reinvest. Having re- easily the residue of chemicals used cently announced that it will finance to produce them. As its production an almost identical investment for its equipment is mothballed or removed Pittsburgh newspaper (The Post-Ga- for eventual sale, let’s hope The Blade zette) however, the refusal to bank- makes more of a commitment to the roll improvement in Toledo might proper remediation of such materials than they have to their Downtown seem almost duplicitous. From a purely business stand- location itself, and that such residue point this becomes even more cu- may not prove to be the only longrious, considering that The Post-Ga- term legacy it leaves. The Blade easily deserves one zette competes for its market share with another Pittsburgh daily (The of the stinging rebukes it has been Tribune-Review), while no such daily so fond of handing out throughout competition exists in Toledo. Does the years; and the failure in its anthis speak to the market for news in nouncement to promise anything both cities, or simply the red-headed in the way of change shows that its stepchild status of The Blade under owners have learned nothing. Some the absentee landlord nature of one may say it seems a bit unfair to pile on The Blade, but few would argue of its owners? As “One of America’s Great that it’s undeserved. Sorry guys, but it’s your turn Newspapers” (self-described), The Blade tells us it lost $8.5 million last to be on the firing line for picking year by way of explanation (excuse) up your chips and leaving the for its plan. Some might see this as game early. After all, the blade “how the mighty have fallen,” or cuts both ways. O perhaps “reaping what you sow”; still others might see it as proof Read the collected works of columnist of the adage that “you shouldn’t Tim Higgins at www.toledofreepress. crap where you eat.” Perhaps how- com/tag/tim-higgins.
A Toledo tradition since 2005 ToledoFreePress.com n MILLER CONTINUED FROM 3 But when Newsradio 1370 WSPD’s Fred LeFebvre asked for volunteers to form a media team to play the Wounded Warriors, there was no way I was going to say no. We all knew going in we were signing up for a probable asskicking, and not one of us hesitated. The Wounded Warriors beat the Metro Police/Firefighters team in extra innings but then lost to the Allshred Services/ Pacesetter Property Management tournament team, which left them tired but determined to whoop on some local “celebrities.” Close to 30 of us assembled, with no practice, to form our team, managed by Al Seeger. There were a number of former Detroit Tigers serving as our ringers (Stan Clarke, Tom Matchick, Mickey Stanley, Dave Rozema, Jon Worden, Milt Wilcox and Willie Horton as well as former Cleveland Indian and 1980 American League Rookie of the Year Joe Charboneau), but I was most excited to meet football legend Chuck Ealey, the University of Toledo and Canadian Football League quarterback who never lost a football game during his career. Ealey was friendly and accommodating, a true pleasure to meet. I was less impressed with some of the former pros, a couple of whom spoke about the women on our team like we were in a 1972 locker room. Among the many media people on the team were WSPD morning show producers Don Zellers and Adam Ragle, and Joe Thompson and Tori Carmen of NBC 24. Ragle and I had been talking for weeks about our relative lack of softball skills and how we just wanted to get through the game without major injury to body or pride. The pregame ceremonies included a home run hitting demonstration, an appearance by veteran Matthew Drake, an honor guard and a medley of military anthems danced to by the Off Broadway Dance Company, decked out in redwhite-and-blue-spangled vests. The national anthem was beautifully performed by Yvonne Ramos, who contributed to our 2012 Make-A-Wish holiday CD; her rendition was so powerful and moving, each of the Wounded Warriors lined up to hug her with thanks, even as the last echoes of her vocals faded from the stadium. The game started with the first few innings played by our Tigers ringers, who jumped out to a several-run lead. But any illusions we had of competing were dashed when the media members and celebrities took over. I had carefully watched the first few innings, during which not one hit came anywhere near third base, so that was the position I covered. The umpire there greeted me with, “Taking the hot corner, are you?” to which I responded, “No, I am third base. If I had known they called it the hot corner, I’d have stayed in the dugout.” The Wounded Warriors did things on prosthetics I would not have dreamed of doing in my athletic prime. As an offensive lineman for the Libbey High School Cowboys in the mid-1980s, I was about force, not finesse. These men ran, rolled and hustled with a purpose that inspired awe and respect in vast measures. Nothing came my way that inning, though I did manage to catch one ball Zellers threw my way. It was actually kind
June 8, 2014
of rolling to a stop in front of me as I set my borrowed glove down before it. I was still excited enough to show the umpire, as if I had made a deciding catch in a World Series Game 7, prompting someone in the stands to heckle my glee, but I did not care; of all the possible embarrassing fielding outcomes, none transpired. “Hammer” Ragle led off the next inning and slapped a single into right field, so there was a man on first as I approached the plate. I took a few quick swings and tried to remember coaching advice I had seen in baseball movies. The only thing I could think of was Kevin Costner’s line in “Bull Durham” about “long, slow, deep, soft, wet kisses that last three days,” which wasn’t relevant and didn’t help. The first pitch arced in low and hit the dirt right in front of me, an obvious ball. I stepped out of the batter’s box and then took my “stance” waiting for the next pitch. I swung, connected, and the ball sailed over the pitcher’s head, a line drive single to center field. I did my best imitation of running to first base, absolutely soaring to get a hit. It was one of the three greatest athletic moments of my life, the others being a 1985 senior high school football game against St. John’s (no Jesuit in the name then) and the session that led to the conception of my first son. The joy lasted until I realized just how far away second base looked. Radio personality Sid Siddall was up next, and he hit a single that scored Ragle and allowed me to lumber to second base. It was then that I first thought I might actually have a chance to score a run. With my little boys and wife in the stands cheering me on, it was a tantalizing and previously unconsidered chance at glory. But Zellers took the plate and his contact with the ball sent it straight toward third base. I tried, though, barreling as fast as I could, pushing my protesting legs. Predictably, I was outplayed by a catcher with one arm and a baseman with two prosthetic legs. I went back to the dugout happy and fist-bumped Ragle on our achievement, which I know, in the presence of the Wounded Warriors, was pathetic, but we were still happy. In fact, when Zellers asked me if I was going back on the field, I declined, ostensibly so someone else could take a turn, but primarily because why mess up a .1000 career batting average? Zellers, by the way, took the hot corner and played like an all-star, making catches and throws so good that the Warriors-supporting crowd booed him. The Wounded Warriors beat us 19-11, and as we lined up for the postgame attaboys, I thanked every one of them for their service. The games raised $18,000 and some much-needed attention for a tremendously compelling cause. Plus, I got a hit! So, yes, I was sore the next morning, but I have legs to be sore, and after seeing what the Wounded Warriors have sacrificed for you and me, that soreness was a blessing of perspective to be treasured. O Michael S. Miller is editor in chief of Toledo Free Press and news director of Newsradio 1370 WSPD. Email him at mmiller@toledofreepress.com.
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Community
A Toledo tradition since 2005 ToledoFreePress.com
June 8, 2014
toledo free press photo AND cover photo by christie materni
DEVELOPMENT
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From left, Sustainable LOCAL Foods CEO Nicholas Bloom and lead growers Danny Taylor and Bryan Ellis.
Local business aims to create sustainable food, jobs By Amanda Tindall
TOLEDO FREE PRESS STAFF WRITER atindall@toledofreepress.com
Ninety-eight percent of produce consumed by Toledoans comes from more than 1,800 miles away. Meanwhile, the city has an unemployment rate of 5.7 percent. When Toledo resident Jim Bloom worked in vocational rehabilitation, assisting in job searches for those who needed it, he realized Toledo-grown produce was an area with huge potential for job growth. Traditional farming — growing plants in soil and using sunlight for photosynthesis — had one big limitation in creating sustainable, profitproducing crops in Ohio: winter. Of the states in the continental United States, Ohio receives among the least amount of sunlight in winter months, Bloom said, and even green-
houses are energy-inefficient. “I discovered that the one huge growth area was food production, if it could be done right,” Bloom said. “For four years, I’ve been researching the best ways to do this and how to do this. What I wanted to be done in other cities was being done in the Netherlands, and I wanted to know what they’re doing in the Netherlands that we’re not doing here.” After researching the technology used in Europe and the Middle East, Bloom found a way to modify the energy technology for use in the U.S. He started Sustainable Local Foods in 2012 and set up shop on Hill Avenue. Mayor D. Michael Collins, who was recently introduced to the mission and technology of Sustainable Local Foods, said the company can offer hope and opportunity to the community. “I’m a firm believer that this is a new venture for this area in the
agricultural industry,” Collins said. “I see it as a potential business niche to complement all the other things that are going on here. The science and the technology provides the growth of produce 365 days a year. When you figure our position in the COLLINS marketplace, I could very easily see us gravitating [toward becoming] a major supplier to this corridor of the United States. From a business niche standpoint, this is just the beginning. It’s another footprint in Northwest Ohio; it’s a huge opportunity for business growth.” By adapting the technology used in other countries, Sustainable Local
Foods aims to produce 150 jobs in the Toledo area in the next five years. Each half-acre of growing space requires 167 hours of work each week, which means Toledoans can buy locally and organically while supporting Toledo workers.
Sunless, soilless growth
With LED lights specifically designed to induce photosynthesis and narrow, white trays that hold the plants in a constant stream of water and nutrients, the indoor gardens of Sustainable Local Foods look incredibly futuristic. The method of growing plants in a stream of nutrients, but without soil, is known as hydroponics. The water with nutrients flows through the trays, the plants soak up the nutrients and water, and the excess water flows to a barrel below. Not only are the gardens of Sustainable Local Foods energy-efficient,
they are also efficient with other resources, said lead grower Bryan Ellis. By using hydroponics, Ellis said, they can use less water and keep a consistent amount of nutrients flowing to the plants. Hydroponics uses an eighth of the water that would be used in a typical, soil-based garden. “Each one of these trays has this cute little thing dripping nutrients, a very light flow of nutrients, through the system,” Ellis said. “It flows slightly downhill to a drain in the back, all the way down the 200 feet down this garden.” The nutrients are split up into two barrels with a control system that allows the growers to decide how much nutrient-rich water the plants receive. Each row of lettuce is planted a week apart. Heads of lettuce are spread out from the smallest to largest, growing larger and larger down the row. n GROWTH CONTINUES ON 7
June 8, 2014
ToledoFreePress.com
n GROWTH CONTINUED FROM 6 The garden can produce 3,000 heads of lettuce a week, many of which go to local stores. One of the major problems Bloom said he faced was adapting the energy systems used in the Netherlands. However, by using the energy-efficient LED lights, the plants can photosynthesize, even inside. Lead grower Danny Taylor said the lights produce red, blue and white rays of light, all of which are in the spectrum of light the plants need to grow best. “Those lights are LED; they’re very energy-efficient,” Ellis said. “They allow us to do this yearround, so we can grow lettuce in the middle of winter. “We could grow these crops without any natural light at all,” Taylor said. “We’ll actually be doing that in the not-too-distant future because it’s such a heat-sensitive crop. If we could get ourselves into an insulated situation, provide all the plants’ needs with the LED lighting, then we could basically produce a perfect crop every time. Eliminate all the environmental factors that are different every day, the amount of sun and the amount of light.” The crops at Sustainable Local Foods are all cold crops, which means they do best at cooler tem-
Community
A Toledo tradition since 2005
peratures than other plants. Each garden has a temperature control system, used to ensure the gardens will not get too warm. Because the Toledo garden at 3901 Hill Ave. is in a greenhouse, not entirely shielded from light, the plants receive more nutrients during the hours when the sun is hottest. Even inside, plants can develop biological problems and diseases, but Sustainable Local Foods grows organically and does not use any chemical pesticides on its plants. “We use organic pesticides such as ladybugs,” Ellis said. “That is what we refer to as our IMP, which is integrated pest management. We rely on critters that eat other critters. So for every problem, there’s a solution that’s natural that doesn’t require us spraying.” Their main type of lettuce is a natural hybrid product called buttercrunch lettuce, developed purposely for indoor growth. But it is not genetically modified, Taylor said, because genetically modified lettuce does not exist. In addition to the buttercrunch lettuce, they grow basil and romaine lettuce and will add tomatoes next month. Sustainable Local Foods CEO Nicholas Bloom said the business plans on opening three more organic, indoor gardens as soon as the buildings are secured.
Sustainable jobs, incomes
The garden is set up in a greenhouse, but Jim Bloom said because greenhouses are not energy-efficient, they hope to have completely indoor gardens in the future. Each half-acre garden requires three full-time and three part-time workers. Sustainable Local Foods is quickly expanding, and Ellis said the company aims to increase its growing space by a half acre every month. “We’re a for-profit corporation,” Bloom said. “We want to be an efficient, affordable food producer, to grow in market share, to create more jobs in the city in areas that need revitalization. We want people to live in areas that they choose to live in. We’ll only place gardens in areas that have a bus line, so people who don’t have an opportunity for transportation can get to work, people who have been incarcerated, veterans with PTSD, and those in need of jobs.” While applicants with a college education would not be excluded, a degree is not required, Taylor said. “The fact is, even though this is reasonably high-tech, with time and effort and good training, people without a college education could actually run a system like this,” Taylor said. Jim Bloom, Nicholas Bloom, Taylor, and Ellis all said the real mission of Sustainable Local Foods is not,
in fact, food, but bringing jobs and hope to the community. “We’re a for-profit company that acts like a nonprofit,” Ellis said. “So that’s what’s very unique about this. We hire individuals who might have barriers to employment and we start them out above living wage. So our starting pay is $11 an hour.” The mission and motto of Sustainable Local Foods is to provide “food, opportunities and hope.” “We also want to provide opportunities for people to own their own growing space,” Taylor said. “If people have the aptitude and the desire, we can actually help finance a place like this, and their family could run that place. We could sell the produce, and teach them how to run the place effectively. We’ll tell them, ‘If you can grow this, this and this for us, we’ll take it all and sell it.’” If a family owned a garden like this, Taylor said, they could earn about $40,000 each year. By selling all the produce, the cost of technology is quickly recouped. The produce grown in Toledo is mainly sold at the Toledo Farmers’ Market in Downtown and other area farmers markets. It is also used by many local restaurants, including Swig in Perrysburg, Ellis said. “We try to keep our produce in Toledo,” Taylor said. “We’re selling some of what we grow in Detroit, but really,
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we don’t want to do that. We want to sell everything we grow in Toledo in Toledo, and basically we’ve got a Detroit market.” “But we want our Detroit team to grow for Detroit,” Ellis said. “We want sustainable local food to be exactly that in every city that it’s in. We want it to supply its own community, help its own community, and hire from its own community. I like to think of it less as distribution of produce and more like distribution of opportunity.”
Training youth
Taylor, like Jim Bloom, was previously involved in a field with goals similar of Sustainable Local Foods. He worked in urban missions in Brisbane, Australia, and came to the United States to study hydroponics. He said he and his wife felt God was calling them back to the United States to serve. “What I thought would take me five years to get set up took me no time at all,” Taylor said. “Jim [Bloom] had already been working on it for about that much time.” In April, Alan Halterman joined the Sustainable Local Foods team as a grower. Halterman studied in the urban agriculture program at Owens Community College. n GROWTH CONTINUES ON 8
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n GROWTH CONTINUED FROM 7 “They just ended the [urban agriculture] program,” Halterman said. “It’s very sad news. Everyone’s pretty disappointed with that. With all the new jobs coming up in the industry, we need more graduates, but the closest place you can go is Ohio State, Michigan or Hocking. That’s too far away for people who have a job.” To train youth in agriculture, Sustainable Local Foods works heavily with the Lucas County Youth Treatment Center (YTC) and the Toledo juvenile courts. Ellis said many of the youth that work with them have either come through the YTC program, which works with adjudicated youth to help them re-enter society and the workforce, or are court appointed. “Our response would be to create an educational program here connected with the work that we’re doing with the juvenile courts, etc.,” Taylor said. “You don’t need a degree to do this, but education is necessary. We have graduates like Alan, like Bryan. I have a certificate in aquaponics, but between the three of us, we should be able to pull something together.” Halterman said Jose Soto and Derek Hawkins, who was one of the first employees, are two of the youth who have come through Sustainable Local Foods’ training and are now an indispensable part of the team. “They’re actually brought up through the YTC program from Toledo GROWs,” Halterman said. “So they’re youth born and raised around here. They were kind of reintroduced to society through gardening. Jose and Derek are shining stars of that program. They’ve come out and now they’re leaders in the community and are leading other groups that they were once a part of.” Hawkins shared his story of being a juvenile in the CITE program (Community Integration for Training
June 8, 2014
A Toledo tradition since 2005 ToledoFreePress.com and Employment), as he placed new plants in white nutrient trays. He began working with Toledo GROWs, an outreach program at the Toledo Botanical Garden, where he came into contact with Ellis and Soto. When Toledo GROWs started reducing their number of workers, Hawkins ended up at Sustainable Local Foods. “Toledo GROWs opened my eyes to a lot of things and taught me a lot about agriculture,” Hawkins said. “I love this type of field, greenhouse, farming. I love the people that come around. I just love the feel, it has a homey feel to it.” Madeenah Robinson, another young worker, was home-schooled and just graduated from high school. She began training through the Youth Empowerment Program at United North and began her work at Sustainable Local Foods less than a week later. “It’s been a good experience,” Robinson said, as she planted seeds. “We plant and seed and harvest and you have to make sure that the water’s good. You have to clean up, but really that’s not my specialty. There’s a lot of things I like about it.” While Robinson doesn’t plan on staying in agriculture permanently, she said she would enjoy doing something like it again. Ellis said the thing young workers talk about most is how the plants always look different, and that they really take pride in the work that they do. “There’s a lot of people I used to work with that now work here,” Hawkins said. “It’s really not a workplace; it’s a family.” Taylor and Ellis called each other brothers as they shared their passion for Sustainable Local Foods. “There’s a need for charity, but it’s not the answer,” Taylor said. “In the short term, we need people to have food, have jobs, but in the long term, we need to create opportunities for them to be empowered.” O
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June 8, 2014
By Jordan Finney
Toledo Free Press Staff Writer jfinney@toledofreepress.com
Nineteen nongovernmental organizations have been granted “observer status” on an Office of Military Commissions list that defines the coterie of Americans who can travel to Guantanamo Bay, Cuba, and watch the upcoming military commissions hearings. The University of Toledo is on that list. And a 23-year-old UT law student is about to become one of the few Americans who will ever sit in the same room as a Guantanamo detainee. Evan Matheney will be a military commissions hearings observer at the U.S. Naval Base in Guantanamo Bay, Cuba, from June 14-21. Matheney said he believes he will attend the trial of Khalid Sheikh Mohammed (KSM), who was identified as “the principal architect of the 9/11 attacks” by The 9/11 Commission Report. “I was super excited when I first found out that I could go because it’s a big honor,” Matheney said. “I view it like going to the Nuremberg Trials after World War II. For the rest of my life I can say that I got to attend the historic 9/11 hearings.”
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Matheney said he feels “personally intrigued” by the story of Daniel Pearl, an Israeli-American journalist who was captured by al-Qaida in Pakistan. During a 2007 military hearing, Mohammed stated that he had personally beheaded Pearl five years before. “KSM is proud, not remorseful. Of all the people in Guantanamo, he deserves to be in there,” Matheney said. “It’s hard to grasp someone being responsible for the deaths of thousands of people.” Matheney was nominated to be an “observer” at the hearings by his former UT professor, Ben Davis. Davis attended the American Bar Association’s annual meeting in August 2012 where he met U.S. Army Brig. Gen. Mark Martins, chief prosecutor for the Office of Military Commissions. “I tried to be a straight shooter with him,” Davis said. “I’m just an ordinary citizen who has been looking at this situation and I felt like he should hear someone challenge him on a few things in a heartfelt way.” Davis said he had “enormous respect” for Martins as a lawyer, but was concerned about the number of legal precedents being determined by allowing the Supreme Court to decide that only certain provisions of the U.S.
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Constitution apply in Guantanamo. “I told Gen. Martins that this is a bulls*** process and I don’t want him to get played,” Davis said. “We don’t know where the U.S. Constitution applies, yet these lawyers are citing all these federal and state criminal cases to build their respective cases. Those were all decided within the context of the U.S. Constitution. So are these really precedents or just an informal, interesting thing?” Following their discussion, Martins told Davis that he was “welcome to come to Gitmo and see the hearings for himself.” Two weeks later, Davis decided to accept Martins’ invitation. Following Martins’ endorsement, the Office of Military Commissions promptly added UT to the exclusive list of organizations with “observer status” at the hearings. Davis, who could simply always nominate himself as UT’s representative to Guantanamo, has instead sent about 10 of his UT students for a week each. “This is a learning experience for them,” Davis said. “The defense council and sometimes the prosecution will meet with observers and encourage them to ask any question they want. “That’s an incredible opportunity.” n GITMO CONTINUES ON 11
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UT student Evan Matheney to attend 9/11 hearings at Gitmo
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UT Law Student EvAn Matheney will attend the 9/11 trials in Cuba.
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n GITMO CONTINUED FROM 10 Linda Amrou, a third-year law student, was the third person from UT to visit Guantanamo Bay via the nomination of Davis. She went for a week in October 2013. “I’m a Muslim American woman who wears a headscarf, so going down there was particularly important not only for me but for all Muslim Americans,” Amrou said. “We are part of the fabric of this nation so what happened on 9/11 affected us just like it affected your neighbor.”
Amrou said she feels “really excited” for Matheney to discuss what he observes in Guantanamo with the prosecution, defense council and representatives from other nongovernmental organizations. “Talking to them is single-handedly the best part of the trip,” Amrou said. “These people aren’t a second source of information — they deal with the detainees day in and day out. They told us very bluntly and openly about their experiences and that was extremely important and eye-opening for me.”
Like Davis, Amrou expressed concerns about the legal precedents that are being set every day in Guantanamo and their implications for the future of American law. “No matter what your politics are, no one can truly understand what’s going on down there unless they’re able to witness it firsthand. We’re callous and removed,” Amrou said. “We know what’s happening on a pretty superficial basis, but because it’s not in our face day to day we don’t understand the impact
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on our justice system. When we’re there, we can’t deny it.” Matheney said he and his fellow law students frequently discuss the implications for U.S. law should the 9/11 hearings “translate” into the American court system. “The scariest thing about Guantanamo Bay is how they’re making up rules of a military tribunal as they go along,” Matheney said. “Lawyers are scared about what the precedents being set mean for all of us here at home.” Davis said he remembers sitting in the observer box at a trial during his January 2013 trip to Guantanamo. The box’s monitor feed suddenly went blank. Forty seconds later it flashed back on. Sometimes the judge will press a button to delay the box’s monitor so that observers do not hear classified information. However, the judge had not pressed the monitor control button. “That’s when I realized things are worse than I thought they were,” Davis said. “One of the intelligence agencies has a link to the monitor and they control the censorship on classified information, too. So the military judge really isn’t in charge of his own courtroom. That’s something to think about. Who are the actors off screen and what are their roles in these court proceedings?” Davis said he remembers sympathizing with the reaction of the judge, who seemed “shocked and angry” that this intervention would happen in a U.S. courtroom. Like all observers, Matheney will adhere to the daily instructions of a military handler regarding where he is allowed to go, who he is allowed to talk to and what he is allowed to pho-
tograph or discuss. “I’m happy for him because this is such a positive and unique historical experience,” said Kendra Matheney, Evan’s mother. “It seems to encompass everything that he’s interested in — the legal system, human rights and politics. There is that nervous aspect when your kids travel anywhere but it sounds pretty safe to me because he’ll be on a U.S. naval base.” Matheney said his classmates have told him that Guantanamo is “super Americanized,” complete with an ice cream parlor, shopping center, fast food and a gift shop where you can buy an ‘It doesn’t Gitmo better than this’ T-shirt. “It’s been described to me as one of the most stark lines between heaven and hell,” Matheney said. “You can look one direction and see a tropical paradise with beautiful beaches and forests. But it’s a harsh dichotomy because 20 feet away is Camp X-Ray, where some of the worst human rights violators have walked.” Matheney will pay for his transportation to and from Andrews Air Force Base in Maryland where observers fly out together. However, the U.S. Department of Defense will pay for the rest of his trip, including flights. After returning to the United States, Matheney has the option to write a one-credit research paper about some aspect of his experience. “I want to give it a fair shake,” Matheney said. “I want to give my country the benefit of the doubt. I want to believe we are good people at heart, that we have the world’s best interests at heart and that we are hopefully setting good precedents. “We’ll see.” O
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A Toledo tradition since 2005 ToledoFreePress.com
June 8, 2014
By Amanda Tindall
Toledo Free Press Staff Writer atindall@toledofreepress.com
With 3,126 miles of Great Lakes shoreline and 115 lighthouses, Michigan is a lighthouse-lover’s heaven. Hillsdale County resident Mary Segur lives in Osseo, Michigan, and spends her retirement capturing Michigan lighthouses on canvas and selling the paintings at events throughout the state. When Segur was a first-grader living in Toledo, her mother took her to the Toledo Museum of Art for art lessons. “They had good teachers, and they taught you every aspect you can imagine,” Segur said. “They had clay modeling, pen and ink, tempera paints; then you would graduate, and you could try watercolor and oil.” Every day from first to sixth grade, Segur received art lessons. Eventually, having graduated into watercolor and oil, she began taking private lessons in high school. As a high-school English teacher for 25 years, Segur saw many schools go through budget cuts. She objected to the elimination of, or reduced funding for, music and art programs. “I always argue that practicality isn’t
the whole purpose of schooling, any more than it is of life,” she said. “The things that artists create, whether it be music or literature or the visual arts, are not only expressions of their talent and their message, but they’re also a way of bonding people together.” Segur said she’s painted both landscapes and portraits, but portraits were a lot of work. “I must have been in my mid-20s and visited Ludington State Park and saw the Big Sable Point Lighthouse,” Segur said. “You have to walk about two miles down the beach before you see it. I just was mesmerized. I fell in love with it.” She said it brought her closer to expressing a human bond that is often missing in everyday life. “What drew me to the lighthouses was really what they stood for,” she said. “They’re kind of from a time when people were more willing to risk their life to save a total stranger. I don’t see people doing that today. The keeper that stayed there had to get in a boat and row out in a horrible storm to try to save people who were drowning from a shipwreck. “Something about that beacon of light and the way it turns, it’s symbolic of a lot more than just showing sailors the
way,” she said. “A lot of churches have adopted the symbol of a lighthouse because there’s a parallel there. It has a metaphorical application to your life.” Segur’s friend and fellow artist Rich Katuzin, who draws similar subjects with pen and ink, takes photographs of the lighthouses for Segur to use as reference. “I used to paint en plein air (outdoors) and I had an easel, and I was painting with oils,” Segur said. “I had gotten a palette knife, and I was really putting it on thick because I was doing waves, and all of a sudden that wind picked up and blew the canvas off. It went face down in the sand. And it was like, ‘Oh! Texture!’ I decided right then and there that I couldn’t do it.” Living in a little house on Lake Pleasant in Osseo, with model ships sitting on the windowsill above the front door, Segur has filled her home with her paintings of lighthouses. At times, Segur calls her friend Kevin Kirwan to look at her paintings and to get his opinion. Kirwan said sometimes she would make changes following their discussions. Kirwan has lived near Segur since 2006, and said he enjoys the feel of living by the lake, a feeling expressed in Segur’s paintings.
Photo by Ben Block
Former Toledoan paints lighthouses as retirement hobby
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Mary Segur will be at the Toledo lighthouse waterfront festival in july.
“They call her the Lighthouse Lady and, when it comes to the lighthouses, she really wants to represent the actual look and feel, the structure of the lighthouse,” Kirwan said. “From there, she does her own interpretation of the seasons of the year. She’s very intent that her rendition of the lighthouse is true to form.” Along with her paintings, which she calls her retirement hobby, Segur sells copies of her work and cards that include the history of each lighthouse on the back. As she travels to various art shows,
Segur is able to talk with those who have similar interests, as well as with people who have never quite understood the symbolism of lighthouses. Segur said the hobby will never make her rich, but after she sells a painting it does pay for gas, paints and canvas so she can start all over again. Segur and her paintings will appear at the Toledo Lighthouse Waterfront Festival at Maumee Bay State Park on July 12 and 13. More information about the festival can be found at the website www. toledolighthouse.org. O
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By Amanda Tindall
Toledo Free Press Staff Writer atindall@toledofreepress.com
When John McNamara bought advertisements from Toledo Free Press for Raceway Park and Hollywood Casino Toledo, he both identified and agreed with the goals and mission of the paper. Now, as new Toledo Free Press sales manager, McNamara is an integral part of expanding the brand he said he considers respected, reputable and ethical. While attending Bowling Green State University, McNamara worked for the athletic and marketing departments, working in game day operations. He later worked event security, a position that required him to
manage and relate to people. “Every job I have ever had has always been relating to people, whether it was customer-related or guest services-related,” McNamara said. “I’ve always loved working with a lot of people around. I’ve never been one to sit behind the desk.” After McNamara studied marketing in college, he and his wife, Jaimee, decided to stay in the Toledo area, and he began working at Raceway Park. “At Raceway Park, when I was signing corporate partnerships, I wanted to make sure that we added as much value to the client as possible, to give them exposure for their company, and help their business be successful,” McNamara said. Toledo Free Press publisher Tom Pounds said he’s known McNa-
mara for a number of years because Raceway Park partnered with Toledo Free Press. The two stayed in contact when McNamara began his work at Hollywood Casino as a manager in the marketing department. “He’s young, connected and very professional,” Pounds said. “He’s got great leadership skills and is very forward-thinking.” McNamara said having experience on the other side of sales offers him a different perspective on selling ads and understanding clients’ concerns. “You have revenue goals at the casino, so it’s a similar setting. You’re not selling ads. You’re selling gambling,” he said. “I think I come from a unique perspective on it because I don’t come from a traditional ad sales background. I come from the other side of the table, where I was buying media and working with sales reps and sales managers from multiple different advertising mediums. “So I’m going to bring that approach to our clients, as a peer, because I was in their seat and I know what they’re looking for. I understand tight budgets and how they’re trying to maximize their marketing dollars. That’s what I want to do here.” Renee Bergmooser, Toledo Free Press senior sales representative, said she and Pounds were impressed with McNamara’s charisma and personableness when she met him at Holly-
toledo free press file photo
McNamara named Toledo Free Press sales manager
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John McNamara is a graduate of bowling green state university.
wood Casino, but never thought she would have the chance to work with him at Toledo Free Press. Concern for the buyer is what McNamara said drives the way he conducts business. “In anything, if your client is successful, you’ll be successful,” McNamara said. “If they’re not, you’re not. So my main goal in any business I’m in, espe-
cially now at Toledo Free Press, is I’m not here to sell an ad to someone just to make money. I want to make sure that whatever I’m doing is helping the client. Because at the end of the day, if it’s not helping the client, it’s hurting them. And if it’s hurting them, it’s going to end up hurting us as a company. So my main focus is making my clients successful, whatever that may take.” O
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Sushi restaurant to open Downtown By Danielle Stanton
TOLEDO FREE PRESS STAFF WRITER news@toledofreepress.com
New York-born chef Kengo Kato, who has been preparing sushi in Toledo for seven years, had the opportunity to pull up his Toledo roots and take his sushi-making skills to Denver, but food blogger Josh Wagy of Smash Toledo was not about to let that happen. “[Kato] was thinking about moving out of Toledo; he had a good job offer in Denver. Me and Smash Toledo want really great chefs to stay in Toledo. We came up with a little funding and a budget and we got backers to help and we made him an offer he couldn’t refuse,” Wagy said. Wagy and Kato are now co-owners of Kengo, a sushi and yakitori (skewered meat) restaurant set to open by Sept. 1 at 38 S. St. Clair St. in the Downtown Warehouse District. The restaurant will be the first sushi bar to come to Downtown. “It was a pretty unanimous decision on where we wanted to put our restaurant,” Wagy said. “Rent was a great price and everything has been lining up really nicely for us. We got the money in the bank and we’ve signed the lease and it’s a go.” Currently, the two are working to transform their rented space from an empty room with just a three-bin sink to a 25-seat dining area with a five-seat sushi bar. They already have an architect laying down plans and recently met with an electrician. A fabrication shop in Delta is building Kengo’s sushi bar and local woodworker Craig Mossing is creating the platter boards for the sushi rolls. The final effect they’re hoping for is urban and organic with lots of art. They will not have any white plates, only ceramic bowls, Wagy said. “We’re going to have local artists doing murals. It’s going to be a fun, casual, eclectic atmosphere.” The menu will be unique as well, they said. They’re calling it “small and more traditional” than what other
sushi restaurants are offering. The courses will be cut down in size and available à la carte or in a combination platter to keep it simple, they said. Kato will buy fish fresh at area markets as well as in Livonia, Michigan, and from places as far away as Honolulu and Japan, he said. “I really want to work with local farmers and stay local,” Kato said. “I will work with Honolulu and Japan and all over the U.S. I have guys that will deliver (the meat) daily and in Livonia there’s a warehouse where I will personally go pick it up. I just want to do everything fresh. I don’t have a walkin cooler or freezer. Everything is going to have to be fresh. “I’m going to have a sushi bar and I’m going to purchase a yakitori grill where I’ll be skewering all kinds of meat and fish and grilling them. Yakitori is a Japanese street food and comfort food. I don’t want to be a pretentious restaurant. I just want people to enjoy themselves. I want to go back to the roots of a Japanese chef and do simple things.” Kato was born and raised in New York City. His parents owned two Japanese restaurants in the city, where he worked from a young age. As an adult, he worked in a traditional Japanese restaurant for seven years and helped other people open up restaurants, but this endeavor will be the first time he has opened up his own restaurant. The opportunity to own his own restaurant and the support from people in Toledo convinced Kengo to stay, he said. “This is an opportunity. I’m originally from New York and my friends and family want me to come back there to do my thing. A friend gave me an offer in Denver. [But] people here just have been really great to me and supportive of me. I’ve gotten so many text messages congratulating me, and [saying] how happy they are I’ll be staying in Toledo. I just love the support and Josh is so supportive.” The plan is for Kengo to be the first restaurant in the city with sake on tap. Wagy said they’ve also been in talks with Maumee Bay Brewing Co. and Black Cloister Brewing Company, both of which said they would come up with a beer designed especially for Kengo. O
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Concert to pay tribute to musician Boggs By Sarah Ottney TOLEDO FREE PRESS MANAGING EDITOR sottney@toledofreepress.com
T
he life of Sylvania musician and retired educator Eddie Boggs will be celebrated with a tribute concert combining two of his greatest passions: music and serving others. Eddie Boggs: A Tribute of Song is set for 2 p.m. June 22 at the Franciscan Center at Lourdes University, 6832 Convent Blvd., Sylvania. The event will feature performances by Bob Wurst & Sundown, David Browning, Jean Holden, First Creation, Tim Ellis & Flatland Grass and Sam DeArmond. The event will also have remarks from Sylvania Schools Superintendent Brad Rieger and Rep. Marcy Kaptur. In lieu of tickets, donations will be accepted to benefit The Victory Center, a Toledo nonprofit that offers counseling and wellness programs for cancer patients and their families. After the concert, a musical jam is planned to last until 6 p.m. The tribute concert was organized by a group of musicians who approached Boggs’ family wanting to do something to honor and remember him. Boggs, 68, died Jan. 9 after an eight-month battle with cancer. “‘Thank you’ are two little words that cannot express how it feels that so many people miss him and have a story to share with our family about him,” Boggs’ wife, Chris Boggs, wrote in an email to Toledo Free Press. “It is overwhelming. He was a simple man. He loved life and he lived to lighten people’s loads. And his avenue was music and kindness. … We miss the music, so to hear it from his friends means everything! ... Each participant has their connection with Eddie and we hope the songs reflect the stories. What a memory for our family! What a gift they are giving us!” DeArmond, who is related to Boggs by marriage and was mentored musically by him, said he plans to perform “You’ve Got A Friend” and “Fire and Rain” by James Taylor. “I chose these because Eddie was al-
ways there to lend a helping hand to not only me, but countless others. And ‘Fire and Rain’ is a song that we all can connect to about losing someone that meant a lot to us,” DeArmond said. “He deserves to be remembered at the highest level.” Wurst said he wants to leave his song choices a surprise, but said each will have meaning and be attributable to Boggs. “One I’m going to be doing is the only song — the only serious song — Eddie and I ever sang together in a show,” Wurst said. Wurst said he, like many others, respected Boggs as a musician, but even more as a person. “He was very kind and courteous to anyone he talked to,” Wurst said. “I think it would be impossible for anyone to meet him and not like him.” Holden, who plans to sing “In This Life” by Bette Midler, performed with Boggs at numerous charity events over the years. “Eddie was always ready to lend a hand to raise money for worthy causes and I was always willing to work with him if he called me,” Holden said. “He was a wonderful musician and just a wonderful guy.” Holden said she felt a special connection with Boggs because of their shared Southern background. Boggs grew up in rural Kentucky while Holden was born in Arkansas and grew up in Louisiana. Both moved to Ohio as teenagers. “That old Southern charm — he was just bubbling with it,” Holden said. “That common politeness and courtesy. … I loved that about him. “We all loved him,” Holden said. “[The concert is] just to share our love for Eddie and to embrace Chris and the family and let them know that we loved him so much. It just does not seem like he ought to be gone. … He just had such a love in his heart for everybody. “It will be good for all of us to be together,” Holden added. “There will probably be a lot of tears. But he will be there.” Musician Kerry Patrick Clark, a close friend of Boggs’, was also slated to perform at the tribute event, but his tour schedule
will keep him out of town. Although disappointed to miss the event, Clark said he’s happy so many fellow musicians will be coming together to celebrate Boggs. “I think it speaks to the heart of the man, the teacher, the musician, the entertainer,” Clark said in an email to Toledo Free Press. “He not only fostered and supported so many local and regional artists, but invited them to participate in some big or small way in one of his many shows.” Boggs, who retired in 2007 after 37 years as a teacher and school counselor, also left a lasting legacy as an educator, Rieger said. “Probably the greatest character trait of Eddie is he had tremendous empathy,” Rieger said. “He always seemed to have his radar up for students on the margin and find a way to bring them back in and make them feel valued. Eddie used every opportunity he had with the students to elevate their worth and dignity.” Recalling the student trips Boggs led to Washington, D.C., where he would stop to sing and play guitar outside the Capitol, Kaptur said Boggs often reminded her of a “strolling minstrel.” “He brightened the Capitol whenever he was here,” Kaptur told Toledo Free Press in January. “He was uniquely gifted and he was uniquely generous.” Boggs’ family said they are humbled by the gesture. “It is a testimony to who Eddie was and how he treated others,” Chris said. “For those who attend, myself and our family extend our sincere gratitude for remembering Eddie, in whatever way he touched your life, and we thank God for blessing us with such a loving man.” This summer’s Toledo Free Press benefit CD for the Red Cross, “Red, White & You, Too!” is dedicated to Boggs and contains one of his signature songs, “Uptown Boogie Down Saturday Night.” Another tribute event, being organized by the Sylvania Area Chamber of Commerce and the City of Sylvania, is planned for Aug. 17 in Downtown Sylvania. O
Eddie Boggs died Jan. 9 after an eight-month battle with cancer.
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A Toledo tradition since 2005 ToledoFreePress.com
A matter of ‘Trust’ By Jeff McGinnis Toledo Free Press Pop Culture Editor PopGoesJeff@gmail.com
Sometimes you have to finish something before you really understand why you wanted to do it in the first place. Clark Gregg was sitting in a theater at the Seattle International Film Festival in early May, watching the premiere of one of his movies. This was not, in and of itself, an unusual occurrence for the 52-year-old actor. Gregg has attended more than his fair share of big premieres over the past few years — ever since the Marvel Cinematic Universe had been born and a certain S.H.I.E.L.D. agent named Phil Coulson became, rather surprisingly, one of its most beloved figures. This premiere was different. This wasn’t a bombastic superhero epic where the fate of the world was at stake. This was a small independent film, made on a shoestring. Gregg was still playing an agent, ironically enough — a downon-his-luck showbiz representative of child actors, looking for that one special client who could relaunch his career. And he wasn’t just acting in this one. Director: Clark Gregg. Writer: Clark Gregg. This film — “Trust Me”— was his baby. But even with all the work he had put into it, Gregg didn’t completely realize why he’d been so compelled to bring this story to the screen — not until he watched it that night. He hadn’t understood how personal it was for him, and how much it said about his own life. “I went, ‘Oh, God. That’s what made me write this.’ It’s about how having a daughter, or a child that you love, can completely change who you are. And I have a 12-year-old daughter, and it never occurred to me that that’s what was driving me to write this. But here, two and a half years after I wrote it, that’s clearly what was motivating this.”
The To-Do List
“Trust Me” tells the tale of how Gregg’s character, Howard Holloway, stumbles across a childstar-in-the-making named Lydia (played by newcomer Saxon Sharbino) and attempts to launch her career despite pitfalls and surprises that come from both inside and outside the movie business. “I was writing a bigger piece about a bunch of different kinds of stories, about grown-ups and children and Los Angeles. And it was just going to be an epic that would never get made. And this one felt different,” Gregg said in an interview with Toledo Free Press. “From the beginning, it felt like an unusual mashup of kind of a comedy of desperation, about this former child actor, and a film noir about the brutality of a certain part of show business. It never was meant to be an exposé — I don’t think it’s representative. It felt like a story that was representative of an idea about success and stardom.” Though Gregg has plied his trade as an actor for decades now — from performing in small offBroadway productions to consistent roles on TV
Gregg steps from Agent Coulson’s shoes to director’s chair.
and film — he is no neophyte behind the camera. In addition to writing the screenplay for the 2000 Michelle Pfeiffer/Harrison Ford thriller “What Lies Beneath,” Gregg made his directorial debut with a 2008 adaptation of the Chuck Palahniuk novel “Choke.” (Gregg also wrote the screenplay.) But while in “Choke” he had a relatively minor role on camera, in “Trust Me” he is the lead, which, combined with his other responsibilities, was even more pressure than he expected. “The most I’ve ever experienced. And at the same point, it was so laughably too much to handle that it became kind of funny. It was just you’re so thrown out of an airplane without a parachute, and a couple of napkins that you might be able to use to slow your fall, that you can only laugh and see if there’s a way you can pull it out. And I woke up nightly leading up to this, thinking of directors or actors I could give one of the two jobs to. “And yet, I had this vision for the piece stylistically and for the role — and I felt the guy needed to be as old as I am for you to really buy that this is his last shot. And my partner, Mary Vernieu, really pressured me to not give up the part. And she’s kind of dependably brilliant about these kind of things. “I got there, trying to get through a 20-day shoot of this ambitious, odd movie, and I realized that I was going to feel just as vulnerable and over my head as Howard Holloway did,” Gregg said. “For all the things I might sacrifice, it was going to work to support the performance.”
I love trouble
June 8, 2014
The similarities between Howard and Clark first became clear to Gregg as he was working on the original story, a piece of work that resists easy classification. “Trust Me” merges elements of comedy and drama into a tale that sees both the humor and the tragedy of Tinseltown. “It came out of me that way,” Gregg said of the script. “Like life. Like some stuff I’ve been through and survived in a very different sphere, which is, everything’s fine, and you’re trying to work on something and collaborate on something, and then suddenly there’s a lot of money involved, and things get dark. And you find out what you stand for, and what your dreams are, and what you’re willing to do for them, and what you’re not.” Gregg answered a lot of those questions himself as he was working to make “Trust Me” a reality. “I had a lot of people say, ‘We won’t. This doesn’t fit into a category. It’s kind of two different things at once. And we won’t give you the money to make it unless you change it.’ And I couldn’t. I was lucky to have a partner who liked it, and really kind of believed in what we were trying to do,” Gregg said, referring to fellow producer Vernieu. “Because I felt like a lot of the movies that I loved that walked that line, a lot of them were in the ’70s. And I wanted to try and make a movie like that. I wanted to try something new, and not try to fit something into a box. I think that the purpose of independent film is to try, you know,
to not succumb to those kind of commercial pressures and to try something risky. And that’s what we went for.”
Brightest star
They say that 90 percent of being a great director is finding a great cast. If that’s true, Gregg is an impressive director indeed. In addition to the “name” actors that fill key roles in “Trust Me” — Amanda Peet, Sam Rockwell, Felicity Huffman, Allison Janney, William H. Macy — Gregg’s film also features great performances from its unknowns. Most crucial of all is the role of Lydia, Howard’s hopeful superstar, played by Sharbino. “Mary and I, and our other partner Keith Kjarval, agreed if we didn’t find someone that special — one of those people who people would go, ‘Who the hell is that?’ — if we didn’t find someone like that, we wouldn’t make the film,” Gregg said. “For a minute, that’s where we were. And when I hear people, so many people, have been touched and blown away by Saxon, and I still can’t believe that we found her. Because I didn’t believe that we would. “One of the smartest things of the many that Mary talked me into, was how important it was to have Lydia and her father Ray played by actors that weren’t household names. That we didn’t know enough about. Because there’s kind of this unknown quantity to Howard, and the movie is very much seen through Howard’s eyes. “So to find this brilliant character actor, Paul Sparks — who I had seen on ‘Boardwalk Empire,’ and remarked on — to kind of realize that that was the same person that I was looking at on this tape that Mary presented, who in real life couldn’t be more different than his ‘Boardwalk’ character, and is this kind of very masculine, soft-spoken Oklahoman. When we found both Saxon and Paul, that’s when I felt that we had a shot at making the movie work.”
The air that I breathe
Gregg is promoting “Trust Me” during his hiatus from “Marvel’s Agents of S.H.I.E.L.D.,” the ABC series that resurrected Agent Coulson following his untimely demise in 2012’s “The Avengers.” There’s no doubt that the expansive fan base he has earned during his time wearing Coulson’s suit and shades has helped shine a light on Gregg’s other work. And it’s clear he’s thrilled by the response he’s gotten from Marvel devotees. “The cool thing about the friends that Agent Coulson has made, and that I have made since Agent Coulson became a part of my life, is there’s a real deep connection. Because Agent Coulson, in the Marvel world of superheroes, is the guy with no powers. Who’s a bit of a nerd. Who’s probably been to a ComicCon like I have. And there’s a real ownership — they brought him back to life when he died, with their human cry. So there’s a connection between those people and I, and it’s one that I’m very honored by.” And whether it be through “Trust Me,”
CLARK GREGG “Agents of S.H.I.E.L.D.” or directly via his presence on Twitter, it’s clear that continuing to connect with people is a big part of what drives Gregg as a person. “I spent most of my 20s doing plays in New York and it was really amazing, the greatest education. An intimate relationship with an audience that’s missing in film sometimes, most of the time. And then suddenly, there’s this way to connect with the people,” Gregg said. “I had taken up Twitter when my wife (actress Jennifer Grey) was on ‘Dancing with the Stars,’ and found out that people kind of liked Agent Coulson. “And suddenly you see the stuff you worked so hard on, in a vacuum, in a soundstage, to make it good, and make it real and make it work, and see that blowing people away, or in some cases not. It’s really — it’s a connection with people you’re trying to work for. And one of the reasons I came out to Hollywood is because it’s communication, it’s a form of communication. And at its deepest, it’s even a form of nonverbal, emotional communication with, you know, an unimaginable number of people. “And that’s why films are exciting. You can reach so many people. You can touch and inspire them, if you’re lucky, the way that I have been touched and inspired by other people’s films and television.” “Trust Me” is available On Demand and will be shown theatrically in select cities beginning June 6. O
June 8, 2014
ToledoFreePress.com
Star 17
A Toledo tradition since 2005
Spotlight Artist Showcase
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Local bands to raise money for International Boxing Club. By Jordan Finney Toledo Free Press Staff Writer jfinney@toledofreepress.com
Three local bands will perform during a benefit concert called the Spotlight Artist Showcase to raise money for the International Boxing Club (IBC) in Oregon, at 6 p.m. June 14. The showcase, co-hosted by 92.5 KISS FM and IBC, will feature Harbours, The Eight Fifteens and The Last Born Sons. “This will be our first live show together as a band and we’re very excited to launch with this project,” said Matt Beier, guitarist for Harbours. “I know the other bands who are participating, too, and they are fantastic. It’s just a nice opportunity for us to get out and showcase what we’ve done creatively.” KISS FM’s morning show, The Morning Rush, has hosted dozens of local music artists, bands and DJs on Fridays for more than a year. However, the Spotlight Artist Showcase will be its first concert. “It’s usually one quick song and an interview on Friday. This is a full-blown show with three live sets and all the proceeds — except for sound equipment expenses — go straight to the boxing club,” said Jodi Szczublewski, promotions director at Clear Channel Media and Entertainment.
IBC is a Toledo-based organization that engages disadvantaged 8- to 20-year-olds in their studies by using amateur boxing and boxercise “as a hook to get kids into the building and off the streets,” according to its website. Since its founding in 1998, IBC has helped more than 4,000 at-risk youth. “We’re trying to develop champions in life,” said Harry Cummins III, IBC’s founder and executive director. “These kids have a future in our community and we can’t turn our backs on them. They don’t have anywhere to go. As adults, we need to support them and send the message that they can get out of their neighborhoods and current lifestyle. It’s key just to show that we do care as a community.” Cummins said that IBC’s program costs about $165,000 annually and helps an average of 160 local youth every year. The program does not cost anything for participants, but requires them to meet IBC’s academic standards. “Got to keep the grades up to put the boxing gloves on,” Cummins said. “Watching them grow up and graduate makes you so proud. I’m blessed to have these kids.” In addition to academic services, such as a free tutoring program with University of Toledo’s Honors College, IBC provides vocational training and
community service opportunities for its participants. “Our drummer actually trains at the International Boxing Club so this is very exciting for us as a band,” said Josh Whitney, guitarist for The Eight Fifteens. “We love to do charity events. It’s our pleasure to help other people by giving back and if we can provide entertainment, too, then it’s a double whammy.” DJ 3PM, aka local artist Casey Clark, will open Saturday’s show at 6 p.m. The bands kick off at 7 p.m. and each will play for about 45 minutes, with DJ 3PM spinning tunes between each set. Szczublewski said she hopes to see a crowd of about 300 people and would consider making this an annual event to raise money for IBC. Alcohol, food and band merchandise will be available for purchase at the concert, which is open to all those 21 and older. Tickets cost $15 at the door and $10 in advance at 925kissfm. com/showcase. “We’re all stoked about it,” said Kyle Smithers, bassist for The Last Born Sons. “It’s cool just because we’re playing with guys we’ve known in town. It’s just fun to do showcases like this where we can all work together for the Toledo music scene and make a contribution for charity, too.” O
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“We are your neighbors, friends and family. Our kids play together.We listen when you are sad, mad and happy — and when you are hungry, we feed you and your family the food that we made with our own two hands.When you are thirsty, we are the first to sit and share a pint and laugh along with you or just offer company. And at the end of the day, we watch the same sunset from the same view.We are local.” – Tony Bilancini, Owner of Swig Restaurant
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18 Star
June 8, 2014
A Toledo tradition since 2005 ToledoFreePress.com
By Sanya Ali Toledo Free Press Staff Writer sali@toledofreepress.com
Derek Lalonde wants to usher in an era of development, unity and triumph for the Toledo Walleye. “We want to have a culture in this locker room that, whenever you come into this locker room, you’re expected to give everything you can for Toledo on that given night,” Lalonde said. The Walleye announced June 2 that Lalonde would take over the head coaching spot vacated by Nick Vitucci in February. Vitucci, now director of hockey operations for the Walleye, said he feels confident in his successor. “We’re thrilled we were able to land [Lalonde],” Vitucci said. “The criteria we set up as far as what we wanted in our coach, he fit every part of it.” Those criteria, Vitucci said, included a track record of success, championship victories, a position as top coach at a talented junior league and knowledge of Toledo’s league. Lalonde said winning is his goal, but first and foremost he wants to foster a sense of community and teamwork. “It’s all about that balance of development, but winning is also development,” Lalonde said. “Any competitive hockey player at this level, they still
want to be coached, they still want to be communicated to and they want to win. If you can achieve the communication, the teaching, the structure for development, usually the winning follows.” Lalonde grew up close to the Canadian border in upstate New York, where he said each hockey game was a unifying event. “Having a good experience growing up, where hockey was second nature to everyone, you grew a passion for it,” Lalonde said. Lalonde took his passion and went on to play for SUNY Cortland, where he was goaltender from 199195. He was also a physical education major at the school. “It’s probably exactly where I belonged, talent-wise,” Lalonde said. “I went there for all the right reasons: the opportunity for a good hockey experience and the education I wanted.” Lalonde got his first assistant coaching job two months after graduation. He coached at the Massachusetts College of Liberal Arts (1995-98) where he was also a graduate assistant and master’s student. “When you first start coaching, the last thing on your mind is ever making a living because the money is not there as a young coach,” Lalonde said. “You do it for the right reasons: You have a passion and the excitement for it.”
Lalonde has since been assistant coach at the University of Denver (200611), Ferris State University (2002-06), Hamilton College (2000-02) and Lebanon Valley College (1998-00). He said many of the head coaches he worked under influenced his coaching style. “Bob Daniels at Ferris State University, George Gwozdecky at the University of Denver — these guys were perfect mentors for my growth,” Lalonde said. “I took a little bit of who they both were and kind of blended that into who I am.” Lalonde most recently coached and acted as general manager for the Green Bay Gamblers. He led the team to a record of 111-54-14, including regular season and playoff championships in 2011-12. “Being the head coach and general manager at that level, you wear so many hats,” Lalonde said. “It’s very overwhelming at times. It prepares you for anything.” Lalonde also coached the U.S. Under-19 National Team, which earned gold at the World Junior A Challenge in November. “First, for the U.S. hockey federation to choose me was a great honor,” Lalonde said. “Then, having that twoweek short, intense tournament of putting a team together [and] getting that team to buy into a common goal.” n WALLEYE CONTINUES ON 19
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DEREK LALONDE
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n WALLEYE CONTINUED FROM 18 Lalonde chose Toledo because of the success of the Mud Hens brand as well as the Walleye’s association with the Detroit Red Wings, who Lalonde said showed they “cared a lot” about the team. Lalonde said he is excited to bring his family to Toledo. Wife Melissa is a Cleveland native and Lalonde said her
parents still live there. Melissa and their children, Alex, Luke and Abby, attended the news conference as well as a Mud Hens game last weekend, which Lalonde said “really helped in the transition.” Lalonde said he hopes he can follow in the footsteps of Vitucci, because the former coach exemplifies what Lalonde deems most important
in the coaching profession. “[Vitucci is] a very genuine person and he is a person who does things right,” Lalonde said. “That’s who you want to be in Toledo when advisers call, when kids call, when they look at Toledo. They do things the right way. I want that to be my legacy and to have that continued legacy of Toledo.” O
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Wrath O’ Ath illustration by steven Athanas
June 8, 2014
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June 8, 2014
A Toledo tradition since 2005 ToledoFreePress.com
((((((((((((( THE PULSE
June 6-14, 2014
What’s what, where and when in NW Ohio
Compiled by Matt Liasse Events are subject to change.
MUSIC
Bar 145º
Featuring burgers, bands and bourbon. $5 cover. 5304 Monroe St. (419) 593-0073, bar145toledo.com. ✯ Jeff Stewart, The Bridges: June 6. ✯ Flabongo Nation: June 7. ✯ Captain Sweet Shoes: June 8. ✯ Ryan Dunlap: June 10. ✯ Breaking Ground: June 11.
Barr’s Public House
Featuring craft beer, hand-crafted specialty drinks and martinis, a well-rounded wine selection and an eclectic food menu. 3355 Briarfield Blvd., Maumee. (419) 866-8466. ✯ Chris Shutters: 9 p.m. to midnight June 6. ✯ Mudfoot: 9 p.m. to midnight June 7. ✯ Jeff Stewart: 8-11 p.m. June 12.
Bronze Boar
Be sure to check out this Warehouse District tavern’s namesake, overhead near the entrance. 20 S. Huron St. (419) 244-2627 or www.bronzeboar.com. ✯ Open mic: Thursdays and Mondays. ✯ Beg To Differ: June 6. ✯ Decent Folk: June 7. ✯ Steve Finelli and Oliver Roses: June 9. ✯ Steve Kennedy: June 12.
Brown Bag Summer Concert Series
This free concert series is sponsored by the Toledo-Lucas County Public Library. North Lawn of Main Library, 325 Michigan Street. ✯ Jeff Williams Group: 12:15 – 1:15 p.m. June 11.
Dégagé Jazz Café
Signature drinks, such as pumpkin martinis, plus live local jazz performers. 301 River Road, Maumee. $5 weekends for cafe seating. (419) 794-8205 or www.degagejazzcafe.com. ✯ Murphy’s: June 6. ✯ New Fashioned: June 7.
The Distillery
The mic is open on Sundays, but paid entertainers rock out Fridays-Saturdays. 4311 Heatherdowns Blvd. (419) 382-1444 or www. thedistilleryonline.com. ✯ Live Trivia with DJ Brandon: Tuesdays. ✯ Velvet Jones: June 6. ✯ Velvet Jones: June 7. ✯ Name That Tune: June 11. ✯ Kyle White: June 12.
Doc Watson’s
1515 S. Byrne Road. (419) 389-6003 or docwatsonstoledo.com. ✯ Jason & Pete: 10 p.m. June 6. ✯ Ben Barefoot: 10 p.m. June 7. ✯ Sporcle Live Trivia: 8:30 and 9:30 p.m. June 13.
Dorr St. Café
5243 Dorr St., at Reynolds Road. (419) 531-4446 or www.dorrstreetcafe.com. ✯ Don Coats: June 6.
Durty Bird
601 Monroe St. Right Across from Fifth Third Field
A club “for the mature crowd,” Evolution offers $5 martinis on Thursdays and the occasional live musical performance. 519 S. Reynolds Road. (419) 725-6277 or clubevolutiontol.com. ✯ Feel Good Fridays: Fridays. ✯ Sensational Saturdays: Saturdays.
which features locally grown frutis and vegetables, annuals, perennials, cut flowers, herbs, baked goods, eggs, meats, prepared foods, handmade soups, jewelry and unique gifts. Commodore School Yard, Perrysburg. 7-8:30 p.m. Thursdays. ✯ Captain Sweet Shoes: June 12.
Frankie’s Inner-City
Name That Tune
Toledo’s venue for rock. Tickets vary between $5 and $14, unless otherwise noted. 308 Main St. (419) 693-5300 or www.FrankiesInnerCity.com. ✯ Fast Piece of Furniture, The Funkin Wagnalls and The Figs Posey: June 6. ✯ Kiernan McMullan & Max Dvorak: 7 p.m. June 10. ✯ Twisted Insane: 9 p.m. June 12.
French Quarter J. Patrick’s Pub
Live entertainment after 9:30 p.m. FridaysSaturdays. Holiday Inn French Quarter, 10630 Fremont Pike, Perrysburg. (419) 874-3111 or www.hifq.com. ✯ The Bradberries: June 6-7.
A full bar featuring frozen drinks and multiple happy hours (4-7 p.m.) on weekdays, plus salads, soups and sandwiches, accompany live entertainment four nights a week. 2 S. St. Clair St. (419) 243-2473 or www.yeoldedurtybird.com. ✯ Ben Barefoot: 9 p.m. to 1 a.m. June 6. ✯ Sugar Daddies: 9 p.m. to 1 a.m. June 7. ✯ Funk ORG: 12-2 p.m. June 8. ✯ Jason Hudson: 8-11 p.m. June 9. ✯ Brad McNett: 8-11 p.m. June 10. ✯ Ryan Dunlap: 8-11 p.m. June 11. ✯ Kaiden: 5-7 p.m. June 12. ✯ Sweet Tea Lite: 9 p.m. to 1 a.m. June 12.
Glass City Café
Elixer
The Art Tatum Jazz Society will provide smooth, cool “Twilight Jazz” along the river, appetizers included. 5:30-7:30 p.m. Wednesdays, Grand Plaza Hotel’s Aqua Lounge, 444 N. Summit St. $5-$15. (419) 241-1411, www.arttatum society.com. ✯ Kyle Turner & Friends: June 11.
This two-man band (Dave Rybaczewski and Walter Guy) performs Beatles songs acoustically. www.beatlesebooks.com/elixir. ✯ Mancy’s Italian Grill, 5453 Monroe St.. 7:3010:30 p.m. June 6. ✯ Stella’s Restaurant & Bar, 104 Louisiana Ave., 8 p.m. to midnight Perrysburg. June 7. ✯ Tres Belle Wine and Martini, 3145 Hollister Lane, Perrysburg. 6-9 p.m.
Come to The Blarney ... Go From There!
facebook.com/blarneytoledo
Evolution
HAPPY HOUR Mon-Fri 4-7 pm Live Entertainment Thurs-Fri-Sat
This small venue offers musical accompaniment for its Saturday brunches. 10 a.m., 1107 Jackson St. (419) 241-4519 or www.glasscitycafe.com. ✯ First Saturdays with Old State Line: 10 a.m. June 7.
H Lounge
The Hollywood Casino offers musical distractions from all the lights, noise and jackpots. 777 Hollywood Blvd. (419) 661-5200 or www. hollywoodcasinotoledo.com. ✯ DJ Rob Sample: 11 p.m. June 6-7.
Jazz on the Maumee
Music at the Market
This 12-concert outdoor series runs in conjunction with the Perrysburg Farmers Market,
Sponsored by:
✯ The Oarhouse, 5044 Suder Ave.: 8-10 p.m. Mondays, 6-8:30 p.m. Fridays. ✯ Ralphie’s Sports Eatery, 6609 Airport Hwy.: 8-10 p.m. Tuesdays. ✯ Jed’s Barbeque and Brew, 855 S. HollandSylvania Road: 6-8 p.m. Wednesdays. ✯ Pat & Dandy’s Sports Bar & Grill, 3344 W. Laskey Road: 9-11 p.m. Wednesdays. ✯ Ralphie’s Sports Eatery, 5702 Monroe St.: 7-9 p.m. Thursdays.
(419) 381-2079: 8 p.m. Tuesdays. ✯ Maumee Elks, 139 W. Wayne: 7:30 p.m. ✯ Centennial Terrace, 5773 Centennial Road: 7:30-10:30 p.m. June 7.
Old West End Festival
Ottawa Tavern
Casual meals and bingo and trivia nights with weekend entertainment. 1815 Adams St. (419) 725-5483 or www.otavern.com. ✯ fuxa 20th Anniversary Tour with Streamlined and Jura: 10 p.m. June 12.
Tunes combined with pizza and booze, some would say it’s a perfect combination. 309 Conant St., Maumee. (419) 893-7281 or www. villageidiotmaumee.com. ✯ The House Band: 6 p.m. Fridays. ✯ Bob Rex Band: 6 p.m. Sundays. ✯ Dooley Wilson: Sundays. ✯ Frankie May and friends: 10 p.m. Mondays. ✯ John Barile & Bobby May: 8 p.m. Tuesdays. ✯ Ben Daniels Band: June 6. ✯ The Nu-Tones: June 7. ✯ Zimmerman Twins: June 12.
Potbelly Sandwich Shop
Ye Olde Cock n’ Bull
This event includes home tours, an art show, an antique car show and a parade. 10 a.m. to 5 p.m. Historic Old West End. www.toledooldwestend.com. June 6-7.
What began as an antique store in Chicago turned into a string of more than 200 eateries nationwide, including Toledo. 4038 Talmadge Road. (419) 725-5037 or www.potbelly.com. ✯ Jaime Mills: Noon-2 p.m. Fridays.
SWINGMANIA
With its focus on swing music, Jeff McDonald’s group of musicians provides a peek into another era, with music from bandleaders such as Benny Goodman, Glenn Miller, the Dorseys and more. With combos from trio to full orchestra, the group provides music for all occasions. (419) 708-0265, (419) 874-0290 or www.swingmania.org. ✯ Trotters Tavern, 5131 Heatherdowns Blvd.,
Thursday, June 12th
Cliff Millimen
Trotters Tavern
5131 Heatherdowns Blvd. (419) 381-2079. ✯ Jeff McDonald’s Big Band All Stars: 8-10:30 p.m. Tuesdays.
The Village Idiot
Featuring 30 draught beer selections, daily drink specials and live entertainment seven days a week. 9 N. Huron St. (419) 244-2855 or facebook.com/cocknbulltoledo. ✯ Bobby May and John Barile followed by Hoozier Daddy: June 6. ✯ Juke James and Thieves: June 7. ✯ Dick Lange Blues Jam: June 8. ✯ Joe Woods: June 10. ✯ Danny Mettler hosts Open Mic Night: June 11. ✯ Captain Sweet Shoes: June 12. If you would like your event in The Pulse, contact Matt at mattliasse@gmail.com.
Premier Downtown event anD recePtion center
Friday, June 13th
The Bridges
Saturday, June 14th
The Bridges
WE’LL CUSTOMIZE FOR YOU
Fundraisers • Holiday Parties • Celebrations Reunions • Sports Banquets • Corporate Retreats Summer Picnics • Employee Appreciation Events Client Appreciation
www.theblarneyeventcenter.com 419-481-5206
June 8, 2014
ToledoFreePress.com
A Toledo tradition since 2005
Star 21
now open!
1631 toll gate dr. Maumee, OH
Serving breakfaSt, lunch and dinner and get our great food at our drive-thru!
/CharliesRestaurants
www.charliesoftoledo.com
@charliestoledo
22 Father’s Day The producer
A Toledo tradition since 2005 ToledoFreePress.com
June 8, 2014
After the rush
Fatherhood is learn-as-you-go Fatherhood: A job description I
T
he world is currently ac- every night for 30 minutes, in cepting applications for the hopes that one day they will start reading to you. position of father. To qualify: O You must be able to tone down O You must own attire that can be unceremoniously decorated with your awesome sauce in the event your child has company. baby-created bodily fluids. O You must be O You cannot be good at being found afraid to dress and and bad at finding. brush the hair of an O You must eventuAmerican Girl doll. ally accept the remote O You must be possibility that a boy willing to play catch may text. every day for the rest O You must know of your life. Knowing what to say when a girl how to throw a curvesays “no.” ball is a plus. O You must know O You must be able to cook hot dogs, Jeremy BAUMHOWER how to properly hug, macaroni and cheese and chicken so that the other participant never nuggets, every day for years. Ability wants you to let go. O You must not be afraid to cry to watch others dip anything in or to say “I love you.” ketchup is a plus. O You must be able to accept O You must have the patience to build various luxurious items that any version of your child, including Barbie may own. Possessing the pa- their sexual orientation. O You must be a good example tience to apply tiny stickers is a plus. O You must be eager to attend of someone you wish your child to countless talent shows, featuring become or to one day marry. O You must teach love over hate, participants with more enthusiasm acceptance over intolerance and than talent. O You must be good at designing compassion and understanding, no Pinewood Derby cars so that people matter the views you were raised with and surrounded by. You must believe your son built them. O You must have a fine palate do better than your parents, even if for such tastes as imaginary tea that seems impossible. O You must never quit nor walk and cookies or anything created in away. You must never give up on plastic kitchens. O You must be willing to look your child. O You must be fully ready to under beds and inside closets for monsters. Be able to kill bugs and accept the most important job a man can ever have. There are no spiders upon demand. O You must on occasion believe days off, no pay raises and very that floors are temporarily filled few vacations. You will be paid in with flowing hot lava and couch kisses within months of starting. cushions are the only thing keeping If you can accept this payment arrangement, in lieu of pension you you alive and safe. O You must be competent using will receive a lifetime of happiness, the following software: Angry Birds, adoration and unwavering, unMinecraft, Instagram, Facebook, apologetic love. If you were not deterred by any Twitter. O You must be able to medically of the above mentioned items and treat boo-boos, bumps and bruises, meet these minimal requirements, even if they cannot be seen by the then you are qualified and ready to be a dad. human eye. Good luck to all future appliO You must speak and comprehend the following languages: Baby, cants. For those who are already on Toddler, Tween, Attitude, More the job, Happy Father’s Day O Attitude, Heartbreak and Moron. Being able to read body language Jeremy Baumhower can be reached at jeremytheproducer@icloud.com or and use emoticons is a plus. O You must read to your child on Twitter @jeremytheproduc.
What I’ve learned is that being a good father is more than had just returned from dropping off my daughter at her last day of kindergarten when my wife said, “Don’t you just providing for your children or spending good quality time with them. It’s both of those, and much, much more. have a column to write?” Oh, yeah, that. Hang on. I think most men reflect back on their own father for I pull out my laptop, sit down and take inventory ... my 10-month-old son is crawling around my floor yelling guidance. They may look back and see their childhood as being too controlling so the first thing they out words I’ve never heard before while my do is loosen the reins a little. The problem 3-year-old is running around her room as she with that theory is that their kid may need pretends her dolls are her babies and they all more guidance than usual, so loosening the must be naked. (Can someone tell me why rules only adds problems. The end result? A girls take clothes off their dolls?) The noise failed relationship. is too much, so I have to move to my office, Being a good father is a custom, kid-by-kid something I should have done anyway. job. Don’t misunderstand me. I don’t mean difThis is a great example of what I, as a faferent rules for each kid. I mean a different set ther, have to endure on a constant basis. of guidelines on how to treat each child. To be honest, I love it. My oldest brother is the kind of kid that This month, we’re going to celebrate Fawill do things the first time you tell him. Me, ther’s Day! With the celebration of yet an- Sid Kelly I need a little push. If you were to approach other holiday, let’s peel back a layer and ask: both of us with the same attitude, you’d have no way of What does it take to be a good father? Based on the definition of “father,” my dad provided ev- avoiding failing one of us. Does this sound confusing? It should. This is why being erything I needed so he should have been a candidate for father of the year. However, I look back on my childhood a parent is, without a doubt, the hardest job you’ll ever take on in your life. There will never be something as important and that’s the last thing I think he should have won. Being a father starts with being there whenever you’re or with such high stakes as your role as a father. Men need to look into how this is really done before needed for whatever you’re needed for. It sounds so simple, jumping into having kids, too. Sure, it’s a learn-as-you-go but we (guys) screw it up so often. I have a very good friend that is a great man. He pro- environment, but you better put some serious thinking vides everything his family could ever want. He provides into who you are as a person before accepting that type his wife with the type of lifestyle others would be jealous of, of commitment. This thought process needs to include yet he has no idea how to relate to his young children. He more than the “I’m going to be (nothing like) or (just like) loves them as much as you can love someone, but when it my dad.” That doesn’t work. You need to be there for each of your kids. comes to spending time with them he falls short. So, for all you dads out there reading this, happy Father’s I also know of (but am not a friend of) a man who is a very shady person. This is a guy you wouldn’t trust to have Day. We are a very interesting breed, we fathers. We spend your kids around, but you put him around his kids and you all that time trying to ensure they’re OK, only to have them look into the camera and thank their mom when the news would think he’s the best father you’ll ever see. interviews them. Perfect! Happy Father’s Day! O Who’s the better dad?
Now’s your time to Fly!
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BRINGING THE FLAVORS OF
Loma Linda A Toledo Tradition 10400 Airport Hwy. Toledo’s Best urant Mexican Resta for over 58 years!
(1.2 miles east of Toledo Express Airport)
419-865-5455
Bienvenidos Amigos!
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mexico
to northwest ohio
Voted Toledo’s Best Margarita 2013
THE ORIGINAL MEXICAN RESTAURANTE & CANTINA IN TOLEDO
Locally Owned & Family Operated 7742 W. Bancroft (1 Mi. West of McCord) 419-841-7523 10” x 10.25” ad
HOURS: Monday-Thursday 11 a.m. – 11 p.m. Friday-Saturday 11 a.m. – Midnight Sunday Closed
24 TV Listings Wednesday Evening ABC 13 CBS 11 FOX 36 NBC 24 PBS 30 A&E BRAVO COM DISN ESN FAM FOOD HGTV LIF MTV TBS TCM TNT USA WTO5
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Thunder in the Hills Shark Tank (CC) (DVS) What Would You Do? 20/20 (CC) News J. Kimmel Wheel Jeopardy! Undercover Boss (CC) Hawaii Five-0 (CC) Blue Bloods (CC) News Letterman The Office Simpsons 24: Live Another Day Gang Related Fox Toledo News Arsenio Hall Jdg Judy Jdg Judy 2014 Stanley Cup Final New York Rangers at Los Angeles Kings. (N) News J. Fallon NewsHour Business Wash Deadline Great Performances (CC) Charlie Rose (N) (CC) Criminal Minds (CC) Criminal Minds (CC) Criminal Minds (CC) Criminal Minds (CC) Criminal Minds (CC) ›› Analyze That (2002) Robert De Niro. ››› Analyze This (1999) Robert De Niro. ›› Analyze That Colbert Daily South Pk ››› Coming to America (1988) Eddie Murphy. (CC) South Pk South Pk ›› 16 Wishes (2010) Jessie (N) Dog I Didn’t Liv-Mad. Austin Good Jessie Austin SportsCenter (N) (CC) 2014 U.S. Open Golf Championship Best of the Second Round. (CC) SportsCenter (N) (CC) ›› Jumanji (1995) Robin Williams. ››› The Goonies (1985) Sean Astin, Josh Brolin. The 700 Club (CC) Diners Diners Diners Diners Diners Diners Diners, Drive Diners Diners Hunt Intl Hunters Love It or List It (CC) Love It or List It (CC) Hunters Hunt Intl Hunt Intl Hunt Intl Celebrity Wife Swap Celebrity Wife Swap Wife Swap (CC) Little Women: LA (CC) True Tori Tori reflects. Ridic. Ridic. Ridic. Ridic. Ridic. Ridic. MTV Special MTV Special Seinfeld Seinfeld ›› Old School (2003) Luke Wilson. (DVS) ››› Blades of Glory (2007) Will Ferrell. (DVS) 13 Frightened ››› The Crimson Pirate (1952) Burt Lancaster. ››› The Pirate (1948) Judy Garland. (CC) Supernatural (CC) ›› Sherlock Holmes: A Game of Shadows (2011, Action) Sherlock Holmes-Game Law & Order: SVU Mod Fam Mod Fam Mod Fam Mod Fam Mod Fam Mod Fam Mod Fam Playing Big Bang Mod Fam Whose? Whose? Hart of Dixie (CC) OK! TV (N) Two Men Fam. Guy Cleveland
Saturday Afternoon / Evening ABC 13 CBS 11 FOX 36 NBC 24 PBS 30 A&E BRAVO COM DISN ESN FAM FOOD HGTV LIF MTV TBS TCM TNT USA WTO5
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Ent Insider Middle Goldbergs Mod Fam Goldbergs Motive “Deception” News J. Kimmel Wheel Jeopardy! Undercover Boss (CC) Criminal Minds CSI: Crime Scene News Letterman The Office Simpsons So You Think You Can Dance (N) (CC) Fox Toledo News Arsenio Hall Jdg Judy Jdg Judy Fisher Fisher People vs. O.J. Simpson: Jury Never Heard News J. Fallon NewsHour Business Nature (CC) (DVS) NOVA Satellite data of the earth. (CC) Charlie Rose (N) (CC) Duck D. Duck D. Duck D. Duck D. Duck Dynasty (CC) Duck D. Big Smo Big Smo Duck D. Million Dollar Listing Million Dollar Listing Million Dollar Listing Untying Million Dollar Listing OC Colbert Daily Key Key South Pk South Pk South Pk South Pk Daily Colbert I Didn’t Dog Tinker Bell and the Lost Treasure Austin Good ANT Farm Jessie Shake It MLB Baseball Boston Red Sox at Baltimore Orioles. (Live) (CC) Baseball Tonight (N) SportsCenter (N) (CC) Melissa Melissa Melissa Daddy Chasing Life “Pilot” Melissa Daddy The 700 Club (CC) Restaurant: Im. Restaurant Stakeout Restaurant Stakeout Restaurant: Im. Restaurant: Im. Buying and Selling Property Brothers (CC) Property Brothers (CC) Hunters Hunt Intl Brother vs. Brother Wife Swap (CC) Little Women: LA (CC) Little Women: LA (CC) Little Women: LA (CC) Celebrity Wife Swap Catfish: The TV Show Catfish: The TV Show Catfish: The TV Show Catfish: The TV Show True Life Seinfeld Fam. Guy Big Bang Big Bang Big Bang Big Bang Big Bang Big Bang Conan (N) (CC) Brother Rat ››› Ride the High Country (1962) (CC) › The Deadly Companions (1962), Brian Keith Castle “Knockdown” Castle “Lucky Stiff” Castle (CC) (DVS) Castle (CC) (DVS) Hawaii Five-0 Law & Order: SVU Law & Order: SVU Suits (N) (CC) (DVS) Graceland “The Line” Mod Fam Mod Fam Big Bang Mod Fam Arrow “Broken Dolls” The 100 (N) (CC) OK! TV (N) Two Men Fam. Guy Cleveland
Friday Evening
June 8, 2014
A Toledo tradition since 2005 ToledoFreePress.com
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Good Morning News Hanna Ocean Explore 2014 FIFA World Cup: Group C Your Morning Saturday (N) (CC) Recipe J. Oliverr All In Changers Paid Prog. Paid Prog. Wild Am. Aqua Kids Eco Co. Hollywood Paid Prog. Paid Prog. Paid Prog. Paid Prog. Kids News McCarver Paid Prog. Paid Prog. LazyTown Zou (EI) Chica Noodle Justin Tree Fu U.S. Open Golf Super WordWrld Peg Dinosaur MotorWk Our Ohio Wild Ohio Out Mag. Nature (CC) (DVS) Criminal Minds (CC) Criminal Minds (CC) Criminal Minds (CC) Flipping Vegas (CC) 60 Seconds to Sell (N) Million Dollar Listing Million Dollar Listing Housewives/OC Housewives/OC Housewives/OC ››› Bill & Ted’s Excellent Adventure (1989), Alex Winter ›› First Sunday (2008) Ice Cube. (CC) Love Guru Pirates Sofia Jessie Austin Jessie I Didn’t Dog Liv-Mad. Good Good SportsCenter (CC) SportsCenter (CC) SportsCenter (N) (CC) SportsCenter (N) (CC) SportsCenter (N) (CC) Chronicles of Narnia: Lion, Witch and the Wardrobe ››› Dumbo (1941), Billy Bletcher ››› The Muppets Be.- Made Best Thing Trisha’s Pioneer Pioneer Farm The Kitchen (N) Food Network Star Hse Crash Hse Crash Hse Crash Hse Crash Elbow Elbow Rehab Rehab Rehab Rehab Paid Prog. Paid Prog. Paid Prog. Paid Prog. Paid Prog. Paid Prog. Devious Maids (CC) Status: Unknown (CC) Awkward. Awkward. Awkward. Awkward. Awkward. Awkward. 9 Days and Nights Faking It Payne Browns There King King King ››› Blades of Glory (2007) Will Ferrell. (DVS) The Affairs of Annabel Annabel Takes a Tour Carson ›› Doctor in Distress (1964) (CC) › The Homesteaders Major Crimes (CC) Murder in the First Cold Justice (CC) Cold Justice (CC) ››› Red Eye (2005) Paid Prog. Paid Prog. Playing Playing Royal Pains Suits (CC) (DVS) NCIS (CC) Sonic X Bolts Spider Justice Dragon Digimon Yu-Gi-Oh! Yu-Gi-Oh! Pets.TV Career
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Ent Insider J. Kimmel NBA 2014 NBA Finals San Antonio Spurs at Miami Heat. (N) News Wheel Jeopardy! Big Bang Mom (CC) Two Men Millers Elementary (CC) News Letterman The Office Simpsons Hell’s Kitchen (N) Gang Related Fox Toledo News Arsenio Hall Jdg Judy Jdg Judy Game Night Undate Undate Last Comic Standing News J. Fallon NewsHour Business Toledo Stories (N) Masterpiece Mystery! (CC) (DVS) The Grateful Dead -- Dead Ahead The First 48 (CC) The First 48 (CC) The First 48 (CC) The First 48 (CC) The First 48 (CC) Million Dollar Listing To Be Announced Housewives/Atl. TBA Married to Medicine Atlanta Colbert Daily Tosh.0 Tosh.0 Tosh.0 The Comedy Central Roast (CC) Daily Colbert I Didn’t Dog ›› 16 Wishes (2010) Debby Ryan. Austin Good ANT Farm Jessie Shake It SportsCenter (N) (CC) 2014 U.S. Open Golf Championship Best of the First Round. (CC) SportsCenter (N) (CC) › Zookeeper (2011, Comedy) Kevin James. ›› Accepted (2006) Justin Long, Jonah Hill. The 700 Club (CC) Food Network Star Chopped Chopped Canada (N) Food Court Wars Diners Diners Hunt Intl Hunters Rehab Rehab Fixer Upper (CC) Hunters Hunt Intl Fixer Upper (N) (CC) Sorority Surrogate A Daughter’s Nightmare (2014) Emily Osment. Zoe Gone (2014) Jean Louisa Kelly. (CC) Ridic. Ridic. Ridic. Ridic. Catfish: The TV Show The Challenge: Free Challenge Scary 3 Seinfeld Seinfeld Fam. Guy Fam. Guy Big Bang Big Bang Big Bang Big Bang Conan (N) (CC) ››› The Hitch-Hiker ››› Magnificent Obsession (1954) (CC) ››› All That Heaven Allows (CC) Giant (CC) Castle (CC) (DVS) Castle (CC) (DVS) Castle (CC) (DVS) Castle (CC) (DVS) Murder in the First Law & Order: SVU Law & Order: SVU Law & Order: SVU Law & Order: SVU Mod Fam Mod Fam Big Bang Mod Fam The Vampire Diaries The Originals (CC) OK! TV (N) Two Men Fam. Guy Cleveland
Saturday Morning ABC 13 CBS 11 FOX 36 NBC 24 PBS 30 A&E BRAVO COM DISN ESN FAM FOOD HGTV LIF MTV TBS TCM TNT USA WTO5
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FIFA World C. SportCtr 2014 FIFA World Cup: Group D March to Brazil News ABC Wrinkles? Lottery Bet on Your Baby (N) Sing Your Face Off (N) (CC) (DVS) News Castle Paid Paid AntiPaid Paid Paid Paid Paid CSI: Miami (CC) News News Wheel Jeopardy! Hawaii Five-0 (CC) CSI: Crime Scene 48 Hours (N) (CC) News CSI Paid Paid Paid Paid Paid Paid Bones (CC) Leverage (CC) Burn Notice (CC) MLB Baseball Regional Coverage. (N) (S Live) (CC) News Carpet Office Office 2014 U.S. Open Golf Championship Third Round. From Pinehurst Resort and Country Club in Pinehurst, N.C. (N) (S Live) (CC) Academic Dateline NBC (CC) The Blacklist (CC) News SNL This Old House Hr Cooking Quilting Grateful Dead-Dead Ahead Sun Stud Globe Trekker Steves Rudy Lawrence Welk To Play the King Antiques Roadshow As Time... Wine Masterpiece Flipping Vegas (CC) Flipping Vegas (CC) ›››› GoodFellas (1990) Robert De Niro, Ray Liotta. (CC) Criminal Minds (CC) Criminal Minds (CC) Criminal Minds Criminal Minds Criminal Minds Criminal Minds Housewives/OC Ladies of London Ladies of London Housewives/Atl. Housewives/Atl. › Coyote Ugly (2000) Piper Perabo. ›› Burlesque (2010, Drama) Cher, Christina Aguilera. › Coyote Ugly (2000) › The Love Guru (2008) (CC) South Pk South Pk › Billy Madison (1995) Adam Sandler. (CC) ››› Coming to America (1988) Eddie Murphy. (CC) Kevin Hart: Laugh Sinbad: Make Me Wanna Holla Kevin Hart: Laugh Billy Mad Good Dog Dog Dog Jessie Jessie Jessie Jessie Good Good Austin Austin Dog Dog Dog Adventures of Sharkboy Lab Rats Kickin’ It Good Liv-Mad. SportCtr NASCAR NASCAR Racing Nationwide Series: Michigan. (N) (Live) SportsCenter (N) 2014 FIFA World Cup Group D -- England vs. Italy. (N) SportCtr 2014 FIFA World Cup: Group C SportsCenter (N) ››› The Muppets ›› Jumanji (1995, Fantasy) Robin Williams. ››› The Goonies (1985) Sean Astin, Josh Brolin. ››› Remember the Titans (2000) Denzel Washington. ››› The Blind Side (2009, Drama) Sandra Bullock, Tim McGraw. Rewrap. Rewrap. Iron Chef America Diners Suppers Guy’s Games Cutthroat Kitchen Chopped Chopped Chopped Chopped Chopped Restaurant: Im. Love It or List It (CC) Alaska Alaska Alaska Alaska Alaska Alaska Alaska Alaska Hunters Hunt Intl Hunters Hunt Intl Property Brothers Property Brothers House Hunters Reno Hunters Hunt Intl Status: Unknown The Good Sister (2014) Sonya Walger. (CC) The Girl He Met Online (2014) (CC) To Be Announced The Mentor (2014) Jes Macallan. Premiere. The Secret Sex Life of a Single Mom (CC) Faking It Catfish: The TV Catfish: The TV Catfish Catfish: The TV Catfish: The TV Catfish: The TV Catfish: The TV 9 Days and Nights Ridic. ›› White Chicks (2004) Shawn Wayans. ›› Old School (2003) Luke Wilson. (DVS) Friends Friends Friends Friends King King Raymond Raymond Raymond Raymond Big Bang Big Bang Big Bang Big Bang Big Bang Big Bang ›› Due Date (2010) Homestdr ››› Sunrise at Campobello (1960) Ralph Bellamy. (CC) ››› The Misfits (1961) Clark Gable. (CC) Funny Thing Happened on Way to Forum ››› The Champ (1931) (CC) ›› Life Begins for Andy Hardy (1941) I Never Red Eye ››› The Italian Job (2003) Mark Wahlberg. (CC) (DVS) ›› Sherlock Holmes (2009, Action) Robert Downey Jr.. ›› Sherlock Holmes: A Game of Shadows (2011) AFI Life Achievement Award AFI Life Achievement Award NCIS “Heartland” NCIS “Silent Night” NCIS Tense reunion. NCIS (CC) NCIS (CC) NCIS (CC) NCIS (CC) (DVS) Mod Fam Mod Fam Mod Fam Mod Fam Mod Fam Mod Fam Mod Fam Just Not Icons Live Life EP Daily EP Daily Rules Two Men Rules Two Men Big Bang Commun Big Bang Mod Fam Minor League Baseball Buffalo Bisons at Toledo Mud Hens. (N) OK! TV Made Two Men Two Men
2014 CHRYS TOWN & COUNTRY
Loaded, 5k Miles, Blue with Baby Sitters
Priced to Sell!!
MIKe’S SUPer SPeCIAL THIS weeK!
Mike’s going on Vacation, get your Deal before he leaVes
Check Out Our Fresh, New Inventory
2007 & Newer!
Choose from Northwest Ohio’s best used cars.
WE SPECIALIZE IN SUPER CLEAN, ALMOST NEW 2007 AND NEWER PRE-OWNED VEHICLES
5272 Monroe St. • Toledo, Ohio • 419-882-7171 • franklinparklincoln.com
10” x 10.25” ad
June 8, 2014
ToledoFreePress.com
DIZZY
BY DEAN HARRIS
TFP Crossword
“Be Upfront” ACROSS
1. Recently acquired blessing? 10. Harry Potter pal 11. On Lake Erie, maybe 12. Diamondbacks' home 13. Happens while waiting to get in? 15. Unflappable 20. Pigpen 22. Spoiled kid 25. Look at that portal? 28. “East of Eden” girl 29. Motorist’s aid 30. She lives near the college, but doesn’t go there 33. Cause problems as a cast member? 37. On edge 39. “Friends” veteran 41. Part of USNA, for short 42. Don’t forget to use hand sanitizer?
Comics & Games 25
A Toledo tradition since 2005
Solution, tips and computer program at www.sudoku.com
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6. “This American Life” host Glass 7. The AFT, for one 8. Virus in the news 9. Regional speech 13. Ruth ---- Ginsburg n CROSSWORD ANSWERS FOUND ON 26
n SUDOKU ANSWERS FOUND ON 26
Third Rock
Almanac
n ANSWERS FOUND ON A48
By Elizabeth Hazel
Your Tarotgram and Horoscope
June 8 – 14, 2014
Events: Neptune retrograde in Pisces (9th); Full Moon in Sagittarius (Friday the 13th) Aries (March 21-April 19)
Libra (September 23-October 22)
Think deeply about desires and goals. Ideas from the past inspire creative efforts in the present. After Thursday, there may be conflicts over finances or the need to replace expensive items. Shop around, delay purchases. Saturday is turbulent until the sweet, tender evening hours.
Creative juices surge as the week starts. Curiosity drives you to explore possibilities. Trust midweek premonitions, as someone poses a threat to your possessions or peace of mind. Confusion is at full tilt on Friday. Saturday begins with quarrels but ends with peace.
Taurus (April 20-May 20)
Scorpio (October 23-November 21)
You’re determined to pursue top-priority goals. Obstacles or delays can rouse your fury. Inheritances and legacies cause conflicts midweek. Some matters from the past must be resolved or healed before you’re free to proceed. Look for kindred souls and love on Saturday evening.
People and knowledge from the past inspire fresh perspectives early in the week. You’re drawn toward romance/fulfillment on Tuesday evening. Decisions are challenged after Thursday. Changing rules upset the balance. Seek wisdom from loved ones on Saturday evening.
Gemini (May 21-June 21)
Sagittarius (November 22-December 21)
Matters of skill and money blossom as the week begins, and it seems like simple solutions will fly by midweek. Not so fast! Thursday brings barriers and delays. People jockey for power and control. Consider motives if people try to draw you into their conflicts.
Financial resources are funneled toward delayed repairs; help is available. Other peoples’ conflicts erupt midweek. Hard choices are inevitable. If you must mediate disputes or heal animosities, try to stall irrevocable decisions. Find magic and humor on Saturday evening.
Cancer (June 22-July 22)
Capricorn (December 22-January 19)
Benefits flow from partners and good news arrives as the week begins. You’re in a romantic mood on Tuesday evening. Loved ones hit snags midweek and may flounder on quests for justice. Disruptive noises shatter a peaceful Saturday morning, but the evening promotes love.
News gushes from partners and family members as the week starts. Future travels are discussed. Turbulent situations around friends and children roil after midweek. Previous decisions have consequences. Seek emotional support and closeness on Saturday evening.
Leo (July 23-August 22)
Aquarius (January 20-February 18)
You make progress in career matters and identify potential domestic improvements as the week starts. Major decisions are apt to be delayed by confusion around family situations. Something you fixed comes undone. Rest or do something joyful on Saturday evening.
Good results from previous work inspire new assignments as the week starts. Revisit co-workers from the past. A major overhaul in or around your house stirs up chaos midweek; external demands disrupt progress. Watch out for hidden pitfalls on Saturday morning.
Virgo (August 23-September 22)
Pisces (February 19-March 20)
Great news and needed information comes from people at a distance and friends as the week starts. A new network expands rapidly. Construction/destruction halts midweek travels; orange barrels colonize roadways. Malfunctions occur Saturday morning, but evening is fine.
You’re stirred by longings for love, adventure and travel as the week begins. A friend makes an excellent suggestion. A sibling or close relative is confounded by legal or financial obstacles on Thursday. The company of like-minded people soothes you on Saturday night.
Elizabeth Hazel is a professional tarotist-astrologer and author. She gives readings every Wednesday at Attic on Adams above Manos Greek Restaurant. She may be contacted at ehazel@buckeye-express.com (c) 2014
26 Classified
A Toledo tradition since 2005 ToledoFreePress.com
community
Employment
legal notices
Driver / Delivery / Courier
REVISED NOTICE TO BIDDERS 14-009P FOOD SERVICE — LUCAS COUNTY
Sealed bids will be received by the Board of County Commissioners of Lucas County, Ohio, in the Purchasing Department until 2:00 P.M. (local time), July 1, 2014 and opened immediately thereafter for #14-009P Food Service – Lucas County for Lucas County Juvenile Court, according to specifications on file in the Purchasing Department, Board of County Commissioners and available for examination during regular working hours or download the bid by going to the site; http://www.co.lucas.oh.us/bids.asp. A MANDATORY PRE-BID CONFERENCE WILL BE HELD AT 1:00 PM (local time), JUNE 24, 2014. PARTIES ARE TO MEET AT LUCAS COUNTY JUVENILE COURT, 1801 SPIELBUSCH AVENUE, TOLEDO, OH 43604. Prior to 2:00 P.M. (local time), July 1, 2014, each bid upon submission must be stamped for the time and date and placed in our bid box. The bid box is located in the Receptionist Area, Lucas County Purchasing Department, One Government Center, Suite 480, Toledo, Ohio 436042247. Each bid shall contain the full name of each person submitting the bid and the name of every person or company interested in same and must be accompanied by a Bid Bond, Certified Check, Cashiers Check or Money Order drawn on a Solvent Bank or Savings and Loan Association, in the sum of One Thousand Dollars and No Cents ($1,000.00). This notice is posted at http://www.co.lucas. oh.us/bids.asp. The right is reserved to reject any and all bids. By order of the Board of County Commissioners, Lucas County, Ohio. Carol Contrada – President Tina Skeldon Wozniak – Commissioner Pete Gerken – Commissioner Bid #14-009P Food Service – Lucas County A+ Self Storage at 1324 W. Alexis Toledo, OH 43612 will offer for public sale at 3:30PM on June 26, 2014 the following units: Unit 104, Irene Preuss P.O. Box 8593 Toledo, OH. 43623: Storage Tubs, Boxes, Clothes; Unit 305, Kristy Hook 2016 N. Suzanne Circle North Palm Beach, FL 33408: Entertainment Center, Box Springs, Car Seat; Unit 401, Danielle Conley 1617 Milburn Toledo, Ohio 43606: End Table, TV, Loveseat; Unit 407, Anthony Verde 155 E. Marion ST Doylestown, OH 44230: File Cabinet, Recliner, Toys; Unit 636, Todd Hunt 5873 Jackman Rd Toledo, OH 43613: Floor Lamp, Sofa, Loveseat; Unit 843, Brett D Bookover 2251 West Alexis RD apt 2 Toledo, OH 43613: Fishing Equipment, Boxes, TV; Unit 1018, Gregory Willardo 4226 ½ Vermaas Toledo, OHio 43612: TV, Boxes, Computer Equipment; Unit 1311, Adelita A Zepeda 3152 Stickney Tol, Oh 43608: Fishing Equipment, Folding Table, Pool; Unit 1905, Janell Chatman 749 Belmont Toledo, OH 43607: TV, Fireplace, Playhouse;; Cash and Removal. Call ahead to confirm: 419-476-1400 NEED 18-24 energetic people to travel with young successful business group. Paid travel. No experience necessary $500-$750 weekly. 702-468-7890 ADOPTING NEWBORN is our dream Security, family, endless love awaits. Allison & Joe 1-800748-9554 Exp. Pd UNPLANNED PREGNANCY? THINKING OF ADOPTION? Open or closed adoption. YOU choose the family. LIVING EXPENSES PAID. Abbys One True Gift Adoptions. Call 24/7. 866-413-6294
Wanted WANTS TO purchase minerals and other oil & gas interests. Send details P.O. Box 13557, Denver, Co 80201
Transport Service Company — Chemical Division, a highway subsidiary of the Kenan Advantage Group, is now seeking Class A CDL Drivers out of Gibraltar, MI.
Employment General Employment Securitas Security Services USA is currently hiring full- and part-time security officers for Toledo and the surrounding area. Previous security and/or military experience and flexibility to work any day and any shift is preferred. We offer competitive wages and dental, vision, and life insurance. Uniforms are provided. HS diploma or GED required and valid driver’s license with good driving record. Must clear a background check and drug screen. EOE M/F/Vet/Disabilities Apply at www.securitasjobs.com and select the Maumee location.
Company Drivers:
$2,000 Sign-On Bonus! (Paid out over 1 year) • • • • • • • •
Competitive pay – NEW RATES FOR OTR POSITIONS! Excellent benefits and 401K Paid training, vacations & holidays Well-maintained equipment Satellite Dispatch Mileage Club Safety Bonus Driver referral incentive pay And so much more! To qualify for the premium pay for OTR positions, applicants must be willing to stay out 14 days at a time and have no limit on areas traveled.
Owner-Operators:
$5,000 Sign-On Bonus! (Paid out over 1 year) • • • • • • • • •
Competitive pay – Mileage Contract or Percentage Contract Health Insurance Plans Available 100% of Fuel Surcharge paid to Owner-Operator 100% of Billable Pump or Compressor Charge paid to Owner-Operator Paid Orientation and Training Paid Weekly Mileage Club Safety Bonus Driver referral incentive pay And so much more!
We require Class A CDL, 1 year recent, verifiable tractor-trailer experience, Tank & Hazmat endorsements (or ability to obtain) and a safe driving record. EOE. Now offering premium pay to drivers with tank experience. Call for Details!
800-871-4581 TheKAG.com
Education THE OCEAN Corp. 10840 Rockley Road, Houston, Texas 77099. Train for a New Career. *Underwater Welder. Commercial Diver. *NDT/Weld Inspector. Job Placement Assistance. Financial Aid available for those who qualify. 1-800-321-0298.
WOULD YOU LIKE TO PURSUE A CAREER AS TOOLMAKER? KERN-LIEBERS is a worldwide supplier of systems to the automotive, textile and consumer goods industries. Our group of companies develops and manufactures precision products made of steel strip and wire at over 50 locations around the world.
Do you need a GREAT part-time job? be a toledo free press home delivery carrier!
Walking Routes available
Please call 419-241-1700 ext. 221
Kern-Liebers USA, Inc. located in Holland, OH is currently recruiting individuals looking for a career as a Tool & Die Maker. Kern-Liebers USA, Inc. is partnering with Owens Community College to support the candidates in their training and education. The trainees will receive Tool & Die Maker course work through the Skilled Trades program at OCC while receiving hands- on training at the Kern-Liebers training center of about 3-4 years. In addition to the possibility of a full-time position after successfully passing the trainings period.
Sweet, sensitive, beautiful Princess is 2 years old and came to us because her owner did not have time for her. She is vivacious, funny, gentle and a loveable girl. She loves to be around Princess people and older respectful kids who will help continue to build her confidence. Princess is spayed, was examined by a TAHS staff veterinarian, is current on her vaccinations and microchipped. Toledo Area Humane Society is located at 1920 Indian Wood Circle, Arrowhead Park, Maumee. Adoption hours are noon to 7 p.m. Tuesday through Friday and noon to 5 p.m. Saturday and Sunday. Call (419) 891-0705 or visit www. toledoareahumanesociety.org. O
Toledo, Bigelow St 2BR/1BA Single Family Fixer Upper Lease or Cash $500 DN, $263/mo 877-519-0180
n SUDOKU ANSWERS FROM 25
Daisy’s Cleaning Service
hr.manager@kl-usa.com or Human Resource Manager Kern- Liebers USA Inc. 1510 Albon Rd. Holland, Ohio, 43528
Residential & Office Cleaning
Sales / Marketing
All real estate advertised in this paper is subject to the federal Fair Housing Act, which makes it illegal to advertise any preference, limitation, or discrimination based on race, sex, handicap, familial status or national origin, in the sale, rental, or financing of housing. This Publisher will not knowingly accept any advertising that violates any applicable law. All persons are hereby informed that all dwellings advertised in this paper are available on an equal opportunity basis. If you believe you have been discriminated against in connection with the sale, rental, or financing of housing, call the Toledo Fair Housing Center, (419) 243-6163.
A home for Princess
homes
The training program begins in early September 2014. If you are interested in this once in a life time opportunity, you must submit a cover letter and résumé to:
Toledo Free Press has a great opportunity for an unpaid internship working in the sales area. If you are working toward a career in advertising sales, this is your opportunity for on-the-job training. We are seeking a summer intern to help our team with daily tasks of prospecting, order entry, etc. We can offer you a fun atmosphere working in Downtown Toledo and an opportunity to learn volumes about working in the advertising field. If you are interested in sales and marketing as a career path, we want to hear from you. Send your résumé to jmcnamara@toledo freepress.com. No phone calls please.
CARLSON’S CRITTERS
REAL ESTATE
This program is designed to offer a journeyman’s certificate and/or an Associate’s Degree with financial support (Tuition, Hourly Wage etc.).
Exciting opportunity!
June 8, 2014
Paula Wolfe n Crossword ANSWERS FROM 25 A N S S A I G N S E B A B L B E A N E I A
E W B E A T I T U D E D L R O N R N C I I L I N G A R I Z O N A E E O L L B E F A L L S I N L I N E A A E C D A T E S T Y B R A T E H O L D T H E D O O R R A M A P T O W N I E S I E S S E T T H E S T A G E S T O L L E R V O U S A N I S T O N E L P N A V C W A S H A N D B E W A R E
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June 8, 2014
Did you know a
Did you know a
Toledo Free Press 27
Did you know about Did you know about Toledo’s Best Kept Secret? Toledo’s Best Kept Secret? Facebook us! Facebook us!
Call us! us! Call
Swan Creek Retirement Village is a continuing care retirement community located on 34 acres Swan Creek Retirement Village is apartments. a continuing offering spacious villa homes and
care retirement community located onour 34 acres We promote an upbeat lifestyle, allowing offering homes and apartments. residents spacious to do the villa things they enjoy. Call or visit us today.
VILLA HOMES | VILLA HOMES | DEMENTIA CARE | DEMENTIA CARE
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5916 Cresthaven Lane Toledo, OH 43614Signature____________
419.865.4445
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www.swancreekohio.org We promote an upbeat lifestyle, allowing our 5916 Cresthaven Lane Toledo, OH 43614 | INDEPENDENT APARTMENTS | ASSISTED LIVING residents to VILLA do theHOMES things they enjoy. DEMENTIA CARE | SKILLED NURSING | REHABILITATION | HOSPICE 419.865.4445 Call or visit us today. www.swancreekohio.org
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28 Toledo Free Press
A Toledo tradition since 2005 ToledoFreePress.com
June 8, 2014
You need a biopsy. The last words you want to hear are, “We’ll schedule you in a couple weeks.”
Breast cancer is never an easy thing to deal with, but it can be easier when you’re connected to the right resources. Learn about ProMedica’s cancer services and local resources at promedica.org/wellconnected.
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© 2014 ProMedica
Same-day biopsy appointments. It’s just one way – an important one – that ProMedica’s dedication to connectivity benefits you. Because at ProMedica, breast cancer diagnosis, treatment, recovery, and even prevention services are all linked.
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