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STORMING BACK: The cover for this special edition features the Blanks, who look back a year after the deadly storms that took their home (see page 6). Brandi Barhite writes about covering the Blank family for a year (see page 3). Moline adjusting to a “new normal” (see page 12). Triumph Over Tragedy “celebration” leads storm memorials (see page 14). Fulton County in last stages of cleanup (see page 16). Tornado brought Dundee community together (see page 18). Storm chaser awed by nature’s power (see page 20). Read last year’s Special Report on the deadly storms: http://issuu.com/toledofreepress/docs/tfp_061310
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JUNE 5, 2011 FREEwww.toledofreepress.com
How NW Ohio and SE Michigan rebuilt after the June 5, 2010 deadly storms.
Storming backThe Blank Family looks back on a year of triumph over tragedy.
Story by Brandi Barhite, Page A6
spEcial rEport: storMiNG BacK BEST WEEklynEWSpapEr
in ohio2009, 2010
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SPECIAL R EPORT: STORMING BACKJUNe 5, 2011 Visit www.toledofreepress.com n .A3
Publisher’s statement
on May 31, Toledo City Council finally got out of its own way and voted to approve the deal to sell the Marina district to dashing Pacific.
As Councilman Tom Waniewski remarked to his fellow council-persons, this could have been accomplished a month ago, but “better late than never” has rarely been so applicable.
At this point, there are no losers in this transaction. Mayor Mike Bell’s quest to breathe life in Toledo receives a major boost. dean Monske and the regional Growth Partnership have a major deal to tout to other po-tential investors, at home and abroad. The venerable Northwest ohio firm
rudolph|libbe gains a major role in shaping the future of downtown Toledo. All area residents stand to benefit from the jobs, investment and economic boost that could be the first step to-ward a new era.
“There has been a lot of concern over this particular project, when we went back to China last week, I think we covered a lot of ground in being able to be able to get this project moving back in a forward direction,” Bell said. “Not only are dashing Pacific prepared to buy the land, they are prepared to put a $200 to $300 million dollar project on that land.” He said if we looked around to see what $200 to $300 million would buy, you could almost buy the City of Toledo. This project would change our riverfront into something it should have been some time ago.
The optimism is warranted, but of course now the work begins. There will undoubtedly be mistakes and complications, as there are on any major development project, but it is our hope — and it should be a voter mandate — that former naysayers support the project and facilitate solu-tions as dashing Pacific makes its mark.
Storming back with the Blank familyIf the dashing Pacific investors need any examples of our resiliency and
ability to pull together, they need look no further than the local families who survived last year’s deadly storms. The seven lives lost can never be replaced, but as the reporting in this special issue shows, most of the local communities have rebuilt their homes and businesses and are working their way back to a pre-storm “normal” life.
For the past year, Toledo Free Press Associate editor Brandi Barhite has filed a weekly report on the progress of the Blank family — ed, Julie and son Casey — as they “stormed back” after losing their home to the tornado. This award-winning series has been a showcase of the monumental moments and mundane details of re-establishing triumph in the face of tragedy.
We profusely thank the Blank family for allowing us to follow their prog-ress and to take inspiration from their yearlong journey. O
Thomas F. Pounds is president and publisher of Toledo Free Press and Toledo Free Press star. Contact him at [email protected]. Michael S. Miller is editor in chief of Toledo Free Press and Toledo Free Press star. Contact him at [email protected].
dashing success
Thomas F. Pounds
Michael S. miller
A publication of Toledo Free Press, LLC, Vol. 7, No. 23. Established 2005.
Thomas F. Pounds, President/[email protected]
Toledo Free Press is published every sunday by Toledo Free Press, llC, 605 Monroe st., Toledo, oH 43604 Phone: (419) 241-1700 Fax: (419) 241-8828 www.toledofreepress.com. subscription rate: $100 /year. reproduction or use of editorial or graphic content in any manner without permission is strictly prohibited. Copyright 2011 with all rights reserved. Publication of advertisements does not imply endorsement of advertisers’ goods or services.
Michael S. Miller, editor in [email protected]
PRODUCTIONLisa Stang, John Pollock, Photographers
EDITORIALMary Ann Stearns, design editor [email protected] James A. Molnar, lead [email protected] Barhite, Associate [email protected] Ottney, special sections [email protected]
STAFF WRITERS [email protected] Mike Bauman • Jim Beard • Zach Davis • John Dorsey • Vicki L. KrollJason Mack • Jeff McGinnis • Kathryn Millstein • Patrick Timmis • Duane Ramsey Chris Schmidbauer, sports editor • Lisa Renee Ward, Web editor Chris Kozak, staff Writer emeritusCOPY EDITORS/PROOFREADERS
Lisa Renee Ward, Brandi Barhite, Darcy Irons
ADVERTISING SALESRenee Bergmooser, sales Manager [email protected] Casey [email protected] Matt [email protected] Reid [email protected]
DISTRIBUTIONCharles Campos (419) 241-1700, ext. [email protected]
ADMINISTRATIONPam Burson, Business [email protected]
This issue features the 50th and final story in the year-long series about the Blank family re-building after the June 5 tornado.
every week, for the past year, when I filed my story, I put the number with it — and usu-ally a message to my editor.
“I almost blew the streak. You would think prom was top secret.” (No. 43)
“I changed my story this week because I found out that lake is going to help Findlay flood victims.” (No. 37)
“My Blank story is done with a hole or two in it. The fam just got back from vacation and I am trying to reach them for an additional quote.” (No. 7)
so when I say “Whew,” I mostly speak for ed and Julie Blank and their son, Casey. I called them all the time. sometimes we met in person. We emailed and texted when I needed to double-check a detail. When I
couldn’t reach them, I got on Facebook. Casey quickly responded to that.
I phoned the Blanks when they were out of the country — and they answered. I called Julie when she was giving Casey a driving lesson. In between a terrified scream or two, she asked if we could talk in a few minutes. I even interviewed Casey about going to the lake High school prom. I then called his date (Casey loved that).
Tough questionsTo be sure, the Blanks won’t miss me. I in-
vaded their lives when they didn’t need distractions. I asked questions they didn’t want to answer. I asked questions they didn’t have time to answer. I asked questions they never thought they would have to answer.
STORMING BACK
No spin factor
Brandi BArHiTe
n BArHiTe CONTINUES ON A4
DON LEE
SPECIAL R EPORT: STORMING BACKA4 n Toledo Free Press JUNe 5, 2011
“I am truly the culmination of all that I have experienced.”
Profile of Excellence: Christine DrathOwens Community College Alumna
Christine Drath, a Diagnostic Medical Sonography program student, was selected as the Owens Community College 2011 class representative and addressed the graduates during the May 6 Commencement Ceremony.
Drath was born the third of four children to a father with a tenth grade education and a mother with a high school diploma. Her family received public assistance in the form of welfare for the majority of her childhood.
At the age of 14, she began working. It was a life changing experience for her. She knew she could be independent and
take care of herself with a job. Later, as the mother of two boys, now 13 and 15, she set a good example by working hard as an accounting clerk, but she always knew she wanted more.
As the boys grew up, she found herself with a little more time and she was able to begin her college education.
“I was terrified to attend Owens. I didn’t know if I was smart enough, I didn’t know if I was good enough,” said Drath.
She soon discovered that she did have what it takes to excel in college. She graduated summa cum laude with a 4.0 GPA, is a member of Phi Theta Kappa and Chi Alpha Epsilon honor societies, and was nominated for this year’s
Allied Health Honor Award, in addition to receiving the prestigious honor of representing her graduating class as the student speaker.
Her speech addressed the challenges and the journey of a college experience.
“I did not anticipate the evolutionary process of higher education, but I am a testament to all that it encompasses,” said Drath.
She credits her success to an incredible amount of hard work, the support of her sons, William and Nicholas, and the support of the faculty at Owens Community College, especially Susan Perry.
After graduation, she plans on working at the University of Michigan as an Ultrasound Technician. She hopes that one day she can continue her education and help other new graduates by becoming an Ultrasound Practitioner, a position reserved for highly educated ultrasound technicians.
“I am truly the culmination of all that I have experienced,” said Drath.
For a complete calendar of events, please call Laura Moore at (567) 661-7410, e-mail [email protected] or go to www.owens.edu and click the Alumni and Donors link.
Come Join The FunJoin the Alumni Association today and experience cultural events, community service, legacy scholarship opportunities and more.
Reconnect with Owens online at www.owens.edu/alumni.
Christine Drath2011 Commencement Class Representative Diagnostic Medical Sonography
Summer Fun
Whitewater Rafting Trip July 15 - 17
Mud Hens Alumni NightJuly 29
Call (567) 661-7876 for more information.
Can you tell me about your neighbors who died?How did it impact you knowing you survived
and they didn’t?What is left of your belongings?People always asked me how I came up with
stories week after week.sadly, it was easy. When you lose your
home, your neighbors and the high school your son attends, the storytelling could go on forever.
That’s what a lot of journalists forget. The story never ends; we just stop paying attention because the next big story arrives. Murders, defi-cits, elections, car accidents and other tragedies — it all trumps the tornado after awhile.
so when Toledo Free Press editor in Chief Michael s. Miller gave me the chance to write a story every week for one year with guaranteed space, I knew this was a rare chance to teach people that stories are never as simple as we try to make them.
The Blanks showed everyone that rebuilding from a tragedy is an ongoing process — both physically and emotionally.
The smallest things in life become a big deal when the rest is so uncertain.
That is why I cared so much when Julie finally had a new closet for her clothes. That is why I cared when Casey’s classmates voted him a homecoming representative. That is why I cared when ed bought a motorcycle, some-thing he stopped waiting to do. That is why I cared when they found their missing cat rippy after the tornado separated them. That is why I
cared when they moved home into their newly rebuilt house in time for Christmas.
I also wrote about the people close to the Blanks and therefore also affected by the tor-nado. People don’t walk their lives in a straight line without touching other people.
That’s why I wrote about how Julie’s aunt and uncle, pseudo parents, supported them after the tornado. That’s why I wrote about the Bihn family, who let the Blanks live with them. That is why I wrote about ed’s grandson, Noah, needing therapy after being at the house on the night of the tornado. That is why I wrote about Casey’s baseball team and how the sport was an escape.
The empty lot next doorIf I could change one thing about the se-
ries it would be a few people’s reactions to the Blanks. some readers thought they were rich or their house was too big or they should not have gone on vacation. To those people, I say:
The Blanks lost a house in a nice middle-class neighborhood, so they rebuilt a home that was almost exactly the same. did you want them to rebuild smaller to play into your idea of how vic-tims behave?
despite the Blanks losing nice things in the tornado, some people also complained that the family bought nice things. To those people, I say: The Blanks would return everything if it meant one less person died in the tornado. I know this because I know the Blanks. They in-vited me into their lives for one year and held nothing back, especially their sorrow.
seven people died from injuries sustained in the tornado, three of them lived right next door to the Blanks.
For the Blanks, the loss is always visual. The empty lot next door.
one of the comments that stood out from this series was when ed said, “Why did we live?”
It was with that comment I knew I had se-lected the right family for this yearlong series
because my selection had, in fact, been random. My husband teaches at lake High school,
and Casey plays on his baseball team. The day after the tornado, my husband went to survey the damage and saw ed standing among the rubble. They exchanged a few words, including a comment about ed wearing a Tigers shirt — the right shirt, according to them both.
I noted that conversation in a column and, a few days later, I was offered a chance to follow a family for a whole year.
Now, I just needed a family.When I called ed Blank, he was enthusiastic
and willing. He said something along the lines of “this needs to be done.”
He was right. It needed to be done. For once, the story needed to go on. It needed to be longer than a few days of coverage.
even now, the story isn’t done. The series might be finished, but the Blanks’ rebuilding goes on. If I could write story No. 51, I would continue with the tradition of picking the smallest routines of life and putting them into perspective for a family that is just one year into a lifelong process of rebuilding.
It would make us feel better if the Blanks had moved on. We want them to be oK — for us and them. We want life to go back to normal. But after finishing this series, I have realized the Blanks haven’t moved on; they have just kept moving — and that is a feat in itself and a story worth telling. O
Brandi Barhite is associate editor of Toledo Free Press. Contact her at [email protected].
n BARHITE CONTINUED FROM A3 “despite the Blanks losing nice things in the tornado, some people also complained that the family bought nice things. To those people, I say: The Blanks would return everything if it
meant one less person died in the tornado. I know this because I know the Blanks. They invited me into their lives for one year
and held nothing back, especially their sorrow.”— Brandi Barhite
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Editor’s note: Toledo Free Press has followed the Blank family of Millbury for the past year as they rebuilt their lives after a June 5 tornado destroyed their Main Street home. This is the final story in the yearlong series.
By Brandi BarhiteTOlEDO FREE PREss AssOCIATE EDITOR
Julie Blank’s cousin built a steel sculpture to memorialize the tornado victims. Although he did not intend to capture both the heartache and the hope that the June 5 tornado left in its path, that’s exactly what he did.
“It was one of those things I started to build with nothing in mind and it turned into this,” said Tom Zitzelberger.
This dichotomy of emotions reflect what the Blank family has experienced this past year — and will continue to en-dure — as they rebuild their lives after the tornado destroyed their home.
ed, Julie and their son Casey are changed, and in many ways for the better. They appreciate every day. Hol-idays and birthdays are more mean-ingful. They were grateful their home was rebuilt in time for Christmas. When Julie turned 49 in February, she celebrated all month. she always liked to make a big deal out of her birthday, but this year’s occasion also marked her survival.
The family wants to help others because so many people came to their rescue. Casey still can’t believe all the people, many of them strangers, who showed up in the days after the tor-nado to help salvage the few items they could find. In return, Casey was part of a group of students from lake High school who helped the flood vic-tims in Findlay.
The Blanks now realize material goods are meaningless compared to surfacing from a pile of rubble with
everyone intact. While they jokingly lament ed’s lost sweater vest collec-tion, the family only really still misses a few items, among them photos of their deceased parents and a cedar chest from Julie’s mom.
“It was the last thing Julie had that belonged to her mother. It was never recovered,” ed said. “We could go out and buy it and say, ‘I have a cedar chest,’ but it isn’t that cedar chest.”
That missing cedar chest — likely shattered into pieces by the F4 tornado — is one reminder of what the storm took from the Blanks: a sense of safety.
When it storms, they are terri-fied. Julie’s heart gets heavy. ed wants to take action immediately, a change from the man who told Julie on the night of the tornado, “don’t worry about it honey. They never hit us.”
The Blanks are acutely aware of the pain of those who lost everything in the recent tornado in Joplin, Mo. It is also a reminder how much worse it could have been here.
The June 5 tornado could have hit a more populated area during a time of day when more people were coming home from work. Fortunately, it tore through open fields, not subdivi-sions. It hit Casey’s school, lake High school, but the building was empty.
“I do understand the magnitude of what has happened in Joplin and the south. It is tenfold what has happened here,” ed said. “My heart goes out to those people. I used to say a prayer, but now that isn’t enough. I have sent checks to disaster funds to try to help out. You feel so helpless and you have to do something.”
Ed ed was always the rock of the
family. He didn’t get ruffled. He as-sumed things would work out for the best. Then June 5 arrived.
Blanks say they are forever changed as they observe the one-year anniversary of tornado
Ed Blank will be the guest on 1370 AM WSPD’s “Eye on Toledo,” hosted by Toledo Free Press Editor in Chief Michael S. Miller at 6 p.m. June 6.
n BLANKS CONTINUEs ON A8 n Ed and juliE Blank and thEir son casEy on thE front stEps of thEir rEBuilt homE.
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SPECIAL R EPORT: STORMING BACKJUNe 5, 2011 Visit www.toledofreepress.com n A7
419.241.5049 www.toledocf.org
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The Toledo Community Foundation helps individuals, families and businesses meet
their charitable goals.We are committed to enriching
the quality of life for those in our community.
n an aErial photograph takEn of lakE high school on junE 6, 2010. thE school was a total loss; studEnts spEnt thE school yEar at owEns community collEgE.
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SPECIAL R EPORT: STORMING BACKA8 n Toledo Free Press JUNe 5, 2011
The man who would watch the storm from the porch changed forever.
He longs for the days when a fore-cast for rain didn’t mean a possible tornado. He refers to his Main street neighborhood as “tornado alley.” It seems like every time there is a storm, the neighborhood gets exten-sive wind or rain.
A trip to the movies during Me-morial day weekend proved just how much ed had changed.
“I am the more paranoid one now, although Julie still freaks out” he said. “We were at the movie theater and Julie has apps on her phone so she gets tornado warnings, and we are getting texts about tornadoes, and I just felt like getting up and leaving in the middle of the movie because I was concerned. I was concerned about being in the movie theater and not having anywhere to go.”
His need to protect his family has been heightened. He wants to make sure his neighbors are safe. In the weeks after the tornado, he spoke fre-quently about the guilt of not going next door to wake up the Walters. Three of the four members of that family died when the tornado tore through their second floor.
ed remembers Mary and ryan
coming home that night and saying they were going to bed with their chil-dren, Maddie and Hayden. It never occurred to him to run next door and warn them, because why would a tor-nado hit this time?
“We have a table set up with a pic-ture of Mary and Hayden hugging and a picture of ryan on his own,” ed said. “When I go outside to talk to scott swartz and I walk through the middle of their property, I am like ‘What am I doing? There used to be a house here.’”
ed grapples with the question of “Why did I live?” Anyone who was in the basement like his family that night was fortunate to survive. The tor-nado could have picked up a car and dropped it on top of them.
“Anyone who doesn’t feel they were really lucky on that day to survive and doesn’t wake up every day thankful to be alive, they are completely foolish.”
ed realized his circle of friends is larger than he ever thought.
“everyone has busy lives and sched-ules and after it happened, people we might see once per year, people we graduated with that we haven’t seen in 15 years came forward and helped.”
He is particularly thankful for his church family and Pastor sarah Teich-mann, as well as Al swartz, the interim pastor, at the time of the tornado.
n Tom ZiTZelberger, a cousin of julie blank, and The memorial sculpTure.
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n BLANKS CONTINUED FROM A6
n BLANKS CONTINUES ON A10
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SPECIAL R EPORT: STORMING BACKJUNe 5, 2011 Visit www.toledofreepress.com n A9
n a lake Township home was decimaTed by The june 5, 2010, Tornado.
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SPECIAL R EPORT: STORMING BACKA10 n Toledo Free Press JUNe 5, 2011
“They have been there and talked to us and sat down and shared things with us, helped us understand why us. Pastor sarah, whenever there is bad weather, calls and asks, ‘Are you oK? Are you in the basement?’”
ed used to scoff at the idea of rushing to the basement every time there was bad weather. Not now.
“When the bad weather comes, your heart starts racing. It isn’t like it isn’t going to hit. Now you know it can hit you,” he said.
JulieJulie vaguely remembers what she
did in the hours before the tornado. she shopped a bit while ed golfed at a lake outing. she set up for Casey’s 15th birthday party.
Julie said she feels older these days. Worn out. Tired all the time. since the tornado, if she has to make a decision, she sits back and pro-cesses it a bit more.
everything seems more special. she recently said to her friend Becci, “Gosh, can you believe it has almost been a year since we lived with you?”
The Blanks moved in with friend Becci and steve Bihn and their three children before they got their tempo-rary condo.
n BLANKS CONTINUED FROM A8
n TwisTed girders and beams aT lake high school afTer The june 5, 2010, Tornado.
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n BLANKS CONTINUES ON A11
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“Part of me feels like we should be moving in again,” Julie said. “It was a whole different type of summer. We were consumed by calls, by insurance, banks, buying new cars, closing credit cards, dealing with the builder — every day it was something.”
Julie recently looked at her driv-er’s license. she doesn’t remember going five days after the tornado for a new one.
everything was a blur. The morning after the tornado she surveyed the damage and started to feel like she was having a heart attack. she spent a few days in the hospital where doctors de-termined she had suffered from broken heart syndrome. The syndrome in-volves a condition where intense emo-tional or physical stress can cause rapid and severe heart muscle weakness.
“It seems to flare up every now and then. When the weather goes crazy like it did the other day, my heart starts feeling heavy,” Julie said. “I don’t remember this as a kid — all the tor-nado tragedies. We very rarely had a tornado siren go off. I don’t under-stand why it is so severe. It is never a light breezy day, it is severe winds. It is never light showers, it is a downpour.”
A neighbor, dave dunaway, gave her thousands of photos of the neigh-borhood’s rebuilding process. He took photos from day one from every
angle, on the ground, on the roof, in the middle of the chaos.
It was interesting for Julie to see them because she missed some of the initial cleanup efforts. It was also nice to receive photos from dunaway, a neighbor she had never talked to be-fore the tornado. The neighborhood is closer now, she said. This closeness will be celebrated with a block party at 4 p.m. June 4. But the occasion will also be solemn.
“The tornado is the worst thing I have ever experienced in my life,” Julie said. “We lost lives and those lives can never be replaced. I walk out of my house every day and I am faced with the lives that were lost. Maddie will grow up without her mom, dad and brother.”
CaseyThe night of the tornado was
Casey’s 15th birthday party. The sat-urday pool party was hosted in ad-vance of his June 8 birthday. ed de-cided one week before the party that the 35 teenagers attending could only stay until 10 p.m. instead of 11. This decision probably saved lives because the tornado hit shortly after 11 p.m.
Casey remembers taking his gifts into the basement and opening them as the family waited out the storm. His half brother, eddie, with his son Noah and wife Michelle, came for shelter as well.
At the time, Casey thought they would go upstairs in a few minutes
and everything would be fine — ex-cept it wasn’t.
“I was in awe. I didn’t know what had happened,” Casey said a few weeks after the tornado.
Almost immediately, Casey de-cided to move forward.
He just finished his sophomore year at lake High school, which in-cluded serving as a homecoming representative. He found normalcy in playing three sports, golf, basketball and his favorite, baseball.
He is turning 16 and getting his license in a couple days. He is inher-iting his mom’s PT Cruiser, which he doesn’t think is the coolest car, but it comes with perks.
“I am excited to hopefully get my license and be able to have a little more freedom and drive places and be with my friends more.”
He is also excited for his junior year, which will once again be at the temporary building in Northwood. Casey is mostly looking forward to his senior year, which is set to be in the new school.
“I am excited to get into the new school. It is pretty state-of-the-art and that should be pretty cool,” he said.
Julie said there won’t be a party for Casey this year because the family is tagging along with ed on a business trip to California in a few days.
“I think we will be jinxed if we have a big party. That last party didn’t go so
well,” Julie said, with a wry smile. she jokes, but only because others
can’t. she knows her family is lucky. They have to live and enjoy life for those who died June 5 and for those who continue to die at the hands of Mother Nature.
“We don’t feel like victims, espe-cially with what has happened in Jo-
plin,” Julie said. “We are nothing com-pared to those people. Those people are living a hell right now. They have nothing. They can’t even go to their neighbor because he doesn’t have any-thing, and their neighbor’s neighbor doesn’t have anything. We could have gone to our neighbors. I just feel help-less for them.” O
n BLANKS CONTINUED FROM A10
n a Thank-you sign from The walTers family nexT To The blanks’ home.
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SPECIAL R EPORT: STORMING BACKA12 n Toledo Free Press JUNe 5, 2011
By Kathryn MilsteinToledo Free Press sTaFF WriTer
The only evidence of the havoc caused by the tornado that ripped through Moline is the two empty lots and the lone house still under construction.
“If you drive through and you look, you will notice there are a lot of big trees in Moline,” said lake Town-ship Chief of Police e. Mark Hummer. “And there’s an area kinda cutting right through the middle of it where there’s no big trees, but you’d have to be looking for it. I think they’re back to a new normal in Moline.”
Hummer, who flew over Mo-line in a helicopter the night of the tornado to survey the damage, said he was relieved no one died in Moline. While he found about 20 homes uninhabitable, he said most people rebuilt in time to be home for Thanksgiving.
“They did a great job,” he said. “They took care of each other.”
When Hummer drove through Moline after the tornado, he said his job was to help people get in touch
with debris cleanup crews, the red Cross and insurance adjusters.
The things that people were most concerned about were universal across the township, “was they weren’t so concerned about their big-screen TVs or even their jewelry or watches or electronics, they were worried about their pictures and mementos, things that truly cannot be replaced,” Hummer said.
Ben sample said most of his be-longings were scattered in the field near the remains of his mother’s house. The house, which has been rebuilt, only had a foundation and a toilet left after the tornado swept through.
“It wasn’t real,” sample said. “It was like a nightmare. It looked like a battlefield.”
While he was not in town during the tornado, he drove back that evening.
“When I got here, everybody else was in the street, trying to have moral support,” he said. “every-body came out and had support. every day we came out here to clean up, there was a new person. It was amazing how the community re-sponded to it.”
Moline adjusting to a ‘new normal’ after 2010 tornado
n MOLINE CoNTiNUes oN A13 n The june 5, 2010, Tornado lefT only a ToileT and soMe of The foundaTion of Ben saMple’s Moline hoMe.
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The community response gave homeowner John Pratt new faith in mankind. The roof and ceilings of Pratt’s home were damaged in the tornado, and every window in the back of the house was shattered.
A neighbor who had his house up for sale allowed Pratt and his family to live in the home while they rebuilt their house.
Pratt said he has wondered about the tornado’s timing.
“We were just talking about how lucky our neighborhood had been,” he said. “If it had been a weeknight, we might have all been sleeping.”
He said when the tornado hit, his thoughts were on saving his family, including their three dogs. When the roof lifted off his house, he made his way to the basement.
“By the time I actually closed my door,” he said, “it was over.”
Pratt said his family was one of the lucky ones. They didn’t lose many mementos, only a few pictures of his sons, Bryce and Austin. Two of the dogs, who rode out the storm in Pratt’s bed-room, had a few scratches but no serious injury.
“everything I couldn’t replace in my house was just fine — and that was my family,” he said.
But for Moline resident Jill Becker, who cooks for nearby The outpost Pizza & Carryout, life couldn’t have returned to normal faster.
“We slept through it,” she said. “We were watching movies and weren’t even paying any at-tention to the weather channel. We fell asleep on the couch. We’d have slept till morning if people hadn’t called.”
Becker said she woke up be-cause a friend called her asking if she was oK. When she was told there had been a tornado, she had to see for herself.
“We went and looked out the window,” she said. “We could see all of our neighbors running to help other people.”
After she hung up on her friend, her family went out-side and did what they could to help, including about eight hours of raking the yard. The tornado had missed her family by four houses.
But now, one would have to be looking to find any evidence of the terrible night in Moline.
Hummer said the events since the tornado and Moline’s return to normal give him faith.
“It was a positive experience coming out of a horrific night,” he said. O
n MOLINE CoNTiNUed FroM A12
SPECIAL R EPORT: STORMING BACKA14 n Toledo Free Press JUNe 5, 2011
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Mainstreet Church in Walbridge to host services for anniversary of tornado
Triumph Over Tragedy ‘celebration’ leads storm memorials
The June 4 event “Triumph over Tragedy” will be part celebration of life, part memorial for the victims of the June 5 tornado. The 4 p.m. block party with food, alcohol and music will take place on Main street in Millbury, just south of Ayers road to Cherry street, the neighborhood that bore the brunt of the tornado. At midnight — the anniversary of the tornado — several pastors will lead a moment of silence for the seven people who died from injuries sus-
tained in the storm.“We aren’t celebrating the tor-
nado,” said Millbury Mayor Michael Timmons. “I think it is a good idea to celebrate all the people coming to-gether. People know their neighbors three or four doors down when they might not have before.”
To become a sponsor, perform, donate or set up a booth, contact ed Blank at (419) 508-9693 or via email at [email protected]. O
— Staff Reports
Mainstreet Church is hosting ser-vices June 5 to mark the one year since the tornado hit the region.
“As individuals came forward we experienced something community-wide that is stressed all the time around Mainstreet, we’re better to-
gether,” Pastor Marty Pennington said. “Most of us know this deep down, but the reality is that taking time out to help others can get crowded out in the pace of life most of us live.”
Mainstreet, located in Wal-bridge, will host services at 8:30
a.m., 10 a.m. and 11:30 a.m. They will focus on “the good that rose out of this tragedy and the incredible impact that can be realized when individuals take the simple step of being available for others. O
— Zach Davis
n cars and Buildings desTroyed in laKe Township on june 5, 2010.
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SPECIAL R EPORT: STORMING BACKJUNe 5, 2011 Visit www.toledofreepress.com n A15
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By Sarah OttneyTOLEDO FREE PRESS SPECIAL SECTIONS EDITOR
A year later, there is still tornado cleanup to be done in Fulton County.
While most major damage has been dealt with, there are still fami-lies with damaged trees to cut and clear, said Chuck Whitmire, senior pastor at Shiloh Christian Union Church in Delta.
The church — which served as an initial volunteer center for county relief efforts after the June 5 tornado — recently organized its annual week of community service. Among the dozens of projects tackled by volun-teers was helping local families clear storm damage.
“There are still some families struggling,” Whitmire said. “They still have some pretty significant things with actual property damage that are not resolved yet. For the most part, the rebuilding of homes and buildings is pretty much com-plete. What’s going on right now is still a lot of cutting up of trees, re-landscaping, reseeding lawns.”
Several lots also now stand empty as families elected to move or leave the area rather than rebuild, added Anita Whitmire, the pastor’s wife and church secretary.
Cleanup also continues in Oak Openings Metropark, where one trail is still closed, said Scott Carpenter, public relations director of Me-troparks of Toledo Area.
The tornado cut a 150-acre swath through the park’s 4,000 acres, downing and damaging thousands of trees, Carpenter said. Last fall, a log-ging company removed all the dead and dying trees, but many stumps and smaller limbs still need to be cleared.
“Amazingly, the lodge and no buildings were harmed and no people were harmed, but, man, it really tore things up,” Carpenter said.
Fulton County had 68 structures affected by the tornado, all private resi-dential: 11 destroyed, 20 with major damage, 11 with minor damage and 26 affected, meaning minimal damage such as a piece of damaged siding or a shingle blown off, said Justin Thompson, director of the Fulton County Emer-gency Management Agency.
Insurance covered the vast ma-jority of damage.
“I’m sure people are still trying to get back to normal, but most of our affected victims were insured,” Thompson said. “From the county point of view, we went through and we took care of most of the major wooded debris and then we let insurance take its course.”
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Fulton County in last stages of tornado cleanup
n A deltA church vOlunteer helpS cleAr tree BrAncheS knOcked dOwn By the June 5, 2010 StOrmS.
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Costs to the county and townships were mainly paying for extra shifts put in by first responders and those who removed debris from roads. Some of the public time and materials were re-imbursed by the state, Thompson said.
“I’m sure it’s hurt the [county’s] budget, but it really didn’t matter to them what the budget was at that point; they just wanted to get done what needed to get done,” Thompson
said. “Everyone from the county com-missioners to Congressman Latta and the rest of the state government were instrumental and no holds barred to getting things done.”
Although federal aid was denied, the state provided some emergency aid to families, Thompson said.
Local churches and organizations also collected donations, including the United Way of Fulton County, which distributed more than $53,000, said Executive Director Gina Saaf.
Although some Fulton County families reported last year they missed warnings because they did not hear tornado sirens, the county will not be adding more, Thompson said. The sirens, which are meant for outdoor notification, have a 1-mile audible ra-dius, although wind and other ambient sounds can decrease that range.
“We’ve talked about it, but there’s always going to be people out of reach of sirens,” Thompson said. “Having a siren every square mile
radius of the county is not cost-effective at all. People really need to find other means of notifica-tion. One thing I always push is the NOAA weather radios.”
To mark the anniversary of the tor-nado, Shiloh Christian Union Church is planning a community commemo-ration June 5.
The event, which starts at 11 a.m. at the church, 2100 County road 5, will include an outdoor worship ser-vice, potluck, photo display, music and speakers. Everyone is welcome. Attendees should bring lawn chairs and a dish to share.
“I think it’s a great opportunity to celebrate what’s happened since that time — the resilience, the rebuilding, the sense of community and neigh-bors helping one another. People responded so marvelously and we just want to celebrate that together,” Chuck Whitmire said.
“We want to thank God. Not one person lost their life here. There was millions of dollars in damage, but the
one person injured recovered within a few months. Her house was completely blown away and when it was gone, she was still standing there. It was the mar-velous hand of protection upon her to not have more serious injuries than she experienced. Most of the things lost were things that could be replaced.” O
n DELTA CONTINUED FROM A16 “We want to thank God. Not one person
lost their life here. There was millions
of dollars in damage, but the one person injured recovered
within a few months.”— Chuck Whitmire
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By patrick timmisTOLEDO FREE PRESS STAFF WRITER
Few traces remain of the tornado that ripped through Dundee one year ago. But rebuilding continues for sev-eral of the hardest hit.
“We lost everything,” Brenda York said.
The storm destroyed her and her husband Mark’s house, vehicles and the building that housed their nursery business. Picking up the pieces has been slow and arduous.
“It probably took 10 years off my life,” she said. “It’s frustrating; it’s trying to piece things back together.”
But even for the Yorks, normality has begun to set in again. They’ve moved into their nearly completed new home and their business is back in operation.
They received lots of support along the way, she said, a statement echoed by local Tim Domber, who found a hole in his roof and a piece of wood sticking out of his siding after the storm.
“It was just incredible to me ... the way we all pitched in and helped each other,” he said.
‘A giant weed-whacker’June 6, 2010, was to have been the
first day of operation for Dundee’s newly established police force. That Sunday morning was not the quietest of beginnings.
“There are not too many things that have really scared me like that,” Domber said.
The tornado hit Dundee shortly after 2 a.m., cutting power, knocking down phone lines, shredding homes
and heavily damaging several busi-nesses along M-50.
The town “looked like a giant weed-whacker went through it,” said Geoff Gale, an employee at the Ca-belas retail store.
“On the street there were just piles, and you knew that’s where a house had been,” Domber said.
Tornado brought Dundee community together
n A mArAthOn gAS StAtiOn On m-50 in dundee wAS One Of the BuSineSSeS thAt SuStAined dAmAge On June 5, 2010.
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“[Dundee] “looked like a giant
weed-whacker went through it.”
— Geoff Gale, Cabelas employee
SPECIAL R EPORT: STORMING BACKJUNE 5, 2011 Visit www.toledofreepress.com n A19
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The Holiday Inn Express & Splash Universe was one of the town’s most damaged businesses. The tornado blew out a wall in the water park, tore off pieces of the roof, snapped mechanicals and broke a waterline, which flooded three floors of one of the hotel’s two wings.
“You could not step anywhere in this water park without stepping on debris,” said Keith Alexander, the ho-
tel’s general manager. Alexander said there was never
any doubt that the hotel would re-open. But the process was painful.
“One of the worst things I had to do was lay off over 140 employees,” Alexander said. The hotel opened after three months. The water park finally reopened in March. Alexander hired back 150 employees, including many of those he had laid off. Spring Break hit and April was “one of our best months ever,” Alexander said.
‘9/11 effect’The recovery, Domber said, cre-
ated a much tighter-knit commu-nity. He met neighbors for the first time in the days following as the township pulled together to clean up as quickly as possible.
He spent 12 straight hours with one neighbor as, chainsaws in hand, they cleared away large maple trees knocked over on his property, stop-ping only for sandwiches provided
by the red Cross or Salvation Army. David Uhl, the town’s sheriff,
said people from the surrounding communities swarmed in to help. Many of them were police officers intent on preserving order, prohib-iting gawkers and looters and pre-venting scams.
Joe ross, a manager at Cabelas, said the outfitter sent water bottles, loaves of bread, jerky and all the food prepared for the day in the restaurant to help the efforts down-town. It was fantastic, he said, to watch the community react — even at a less local level.
“I don’t know how many calls I got from all over the state [offering to help],” he said.
When Domber checked his phone Sunday evening, he had 67 messages making sure he was safe.
The experience, Domber said, was terrible, something he never wants to go through again.
But the fruit of it, the heightened sense of closeness to each other, re-
mains for the town.“The community was just out of
this world,” he said. Dundee Baptist Church, which
served as a staging site for relief ef-forts last year, will host a remem-brance service from 3 to 6 p.m. June 5 to commemorate victims and those who helped them.
“We want to bring closure for people,” the rev. Wayne Vann said. “We want to bring people together.” O
n DUNDEE CONTINUED FROM A18 ““We want to bring closure
for people. We want to bring people
together.”— Rev. Wayne Vann,
Dundee Baptist Church
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By Jason MackToledo Free Press sTaFF WriTer
When riding along on a storm chase, the last phrase you want to hear is, “speed up or we’re going to die.” Brandon Copic, a 17-year-old storm chaser, said those words as we raced away from a May 29 tornado in dundee.
Storm chaser awed by nature’s power
n A funnel cloud twists towArd the ground in dundee on MAy 29.
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“That was my most dangerous chase,” said Copic, a rising senior at Whitmer High school. “That tornado developed within a half to a quarter mile from us, and it was coming for us fast. If it did drop, it wasn’t on the ground for too long.”
After watching a wide funnel cloud start to drop, Copic called 911 to have
a tornado warning issued. “It was getting close, and we had
to speed off to avoid getting killed,” he said. “At this time, we were driving along a lot of dirt roads. lightning was striking close, but I was getting scared by the potholes we were hitting.”
Copic’s interest in tornadoes started at the age of 12. He founded Thundering skies Media with co-
owner James Gustina in 2009.“I’ve always been interested
in weather, but I really started in tornadoes and severe weather in particular after seeing the movie ‘Twister’,” he said. “I just love how small and weak I seem compared to the power of nature.”
Copic and his driver went on their first chase May 7, 2010.
“Me and my best friend Austin stalhood went out chasing super-cells near the Indiana border, and we got a wall cloud, funnel cloud, roll cloud and shelf cloud,” Copic said. “It was pretty good considering we had nothing more than our eyes and an atlas. We even beat reed Timmer of ‘storm Chasers’ to the area in which the tornado would have formed.”
These days, Copic uses advanced meteorology programs on his laptop to assist in the chase.
“luckily I got my knowledge from Norm Van Ness at NBC 24,” Copic said. “He taught me all I know in
weather as of right now, and for that I give NBC 24 free live streaming video.”
To help pay for chasing expenses such as gas and mobile Internet, Copic streams live video from a webcam on his dashboard. The video is sent to ChaserTV.com and is sold to news stations by Kdr Media.
After he graduates next year, Copic plans to follow his passion for weather and major in meteorology at okla-homa University. The weather pat-terns in Norman, okla. played a major role in his choice of college.
n CHASER CoNTiNUed FroM A20
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“I mainly want to go to oU be-cause that’s where all the storm chasers go,” Copic said. “All my friends are going there, and I love being around people like me. I really don’t plan on getting anything big for a degree, just to expand my meteoro-logical knowledge for storm chasing. I will definitely be chasing once I get out to the plains.”
Copic hopes to translate a degree in meteorology into a career as an oklahoma state trooper.
“I plan on becoming an oklahoma state trooper because it’s in Tornado Alley, and state troopers cover a large area of land to patrol,” Copic said. If there’s a severe weather outbreak, I might still see it while I’m working. I’ve wanted to become a cop for the longest time.”
He is getting a head start on be-
coming a state trooper by taking courses in Whitmer’s criminal science program. He was also in the Toledo Police explorer program but quit to focus on storm chasing.
“Whitmer’s criminal science pro-gram is amazing,” Copic said. “We learn and then do mock scenarios of what we’ve learned, like traffic stops. Honestly, it’s the teacher who makes the class. Mr. Palmer is the best teacher ever.”
Copic is combining his passions for criminal justice and meteorology on June 4. He is attending the ohio safety Festival in Canton to teach local law enforcement members how to use a weather radar program.
While it may seem like a simple concept, Copic warned of the dangers of storm chasing and the importance of a proper education.
“do not go chasing if you’re un-educated,” Copic said. “You need a de-
gree in meteorology and knowledge of storm structure, storm dynamics and how to forecast them. No skywarn meeting can teach you that.”
Copic also warned of the personal dangers of being a storm chaser.
“If you want a girlfriend, don’t be-come a storm chaser,” Copic said. “It’s very nerdy, and nobody likes a nerd. It’s hard being a storm chaser and keeping a relationship because one
day you will randomly pack up and leave for a couple days at a time. I’m still working on one girl. Flowers help. All jokes aside, only chase if you know what you’re doing.”
For those uninterested in chasing, Copic also shared advice on tornado safety.
“Take all tornado warnings seri-ously,” Copic said. “If there is a tor-nado warning, then you need to get
to the lowest level of your home. If you don’t have a basement, then get into a bathtub on the lowest floor, or the most interior room in your home. If you’re in a mobile home, get out. It’ll get thrown. stay away from windows.”
For more information on Thun-dering skies Media and links to live streaming, visit the website www. ToledoTornadoTrackers.webs.com. O
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2426 N. Re ynolds Road Toledo, OH 43615We value traditions and incorporate new ideasto serve families at their most diffi cult times. (419) 531-4424
T H O M A S I
F U N E R A L H O M E I N C .WISNIEWSKI
By Brandi BarhiteToledo Free Press assoCiaTe ediTor
1. June 27 — Haunted by memo-ries of storms, Blank family rebuilds
2. July 4 — Game goes on for teen who lost home to twister
3. July 11 — Mom works on mending family, self after tornado hits
4. July 18 — Blank family enjoys summer, despite tornado recovery
5. July 25 — Perrysburg family opens home to Blanks
6. Aug. 1 — Blank family helps other storm victim families find help
7. Aug. 8 — Blanks find humor in lost items
8. Aug. 15 — Fiske Brothers com-pany comforts the Blank family
9. Aug. 22 — Blank teen, other lake students to receive shopping spree
10. Aug. 29 — Blanks settle into friend’s condo as their home is rebuilt
11. Sept. 5 — Blank continues lake booster duties
12. Sept. 12 — Blank sons help their dad find strength to rebuild home
13. Sept. 19 — Golf scramble to benefit lake athletes
14. Sept. 26 — 5K raises $10,000 for lake
15. Oct. 3 — Casey Blank to rep-resent his class at lake homecoming
16. Oct. 10 — Blanks excited about house rebuilding progress
17. Oct.17 — Blanks get prayers, support through church
18. Oct. 24 — Maumee, Perrysburg students raise money for lake
19. Oct. 31 —Blanks to return home to distribute Halloween candy
20. Nov. 7 — Bad weather frightens family with echoes of summer storm
21. Nov. 14 — lake boosters mark golf fundraiser, prepare for basketball
22. Nov. 21 — Blank family sharing Thanksgiving with relatives
23. Nov. 24 — Blanks get closer to moving into new house
24. Dec. 5 — Casey keeps playing as Blank family gets ready to move
25. Dec. 12 — Blank family pre-pares to move into new home dec. 17.
26. Dec. 19 — Blank family pre-pares for Christmas at son’s house
27. Dec. 26 — Blanks settle into rebuilt home six months after disaster
28. Jan. 2 — storming back: Blank Family, 2010 Newsmakers
29. Jan. 9 — Blanks’ basement brings back memories
30. Jan. 16 — son’s attention turns from tragedy to move normal pursuits
31. Jan. 23 — As Blanks settle into consistent routine, so does family cat
32. Jan. 30 — Blanks speak at red Cross ‘ready U’ volunteer event
33. Feb. 6 — Blanks receive help from Genoa Custom Interiors
34. Feb. 13 — Julie Blank thankful for replaced wedding rings
35. Feb. 20 — Block party to mark first anniversary of tornado
36. Feb. 27 — Julie turns 49, her sister thankful for another birthday
37. March 6 — Casey Blank among students aiding flood victims
38. March 13 — organization brings harmony to Blank household
39. March 20 — ed and Julie Blank lean on aunt and uncle
40. March 27 — Blanks to attend groundbreaking for new high school
41. April 3 — Grandson relives tornado every time it storms
42. April 10 — Blank brothers bond through baseball
43. April 17 — Casey ready to enjoy lake prom
44. April 24 — easter provides family celebration time for Blanks
45. May 1 — Weather radios provide alerts, comfort during storm season
46. May 8 — ed Blank knocks one off his bucket list
47. May 15 — Blanks to partici-pate in 5K race for Walters family
48. May 22 — Tornado committee seeks donations for tribute
49. May 29 — Maddie’s aunt keeps her in touch with the Blanks, neigh-borhood
50. June 5 —Blanks say they are forever changed as they observe the one-year anniversary of tornado O
Index: A year of ‘storming back’ with the Blank family
On the webvisit www.toledofreepress.com and click on ‘Storming Back’ button for more.
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June 5-11, 2011
Your TaroTgram and Horoscope
BY ELIZABETH HAZEL
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 [email protected] (c) 2011
Aries (March 21-April 19)
Gumball machine. Hard work leads to rewards, extra resources, travel and extended network connections this week. Delightful surprises surface Wednesday. Keep the phone at hand — messages fly Friday. Plan ahead for Saturday activities to stay on track. Taurus (April 20-May 20)
Fairy godmother. Take your eyes off the grindstone: good things are coming in from multiple directions. A special honor or offer arrives midweek. Financial squeezes are easing. Connect with groups sharing focal interests after Friday; Saturday night is magical. Gemini (May 21-June 21)
Manifesting. Excellent reports and exciting messages wing your way. A big-picture concern improves for overall benefit and trickles down to you. You’re at the center of activity as the weekend arrives and can supply the perfect thing or activity that appeals to everyone.Cancer (June 22-July 22)
Comfort zone. Improvements around others relieve you of pressures and free you to pursue matters of personal interest. A phenomenally lucky break or dazzling vision of the future propels you into new realms. People need to understand their place and role in the group.
Leo (July 23-August 22)
Line in the sand. Good news and uplifting trends help you on a practical level all week, while mystical forces or dreams offer blessings on a spiritual level. Practical and spiritual events are invisibly entwined. Trust the universe to supply what is needed in every area.Virgo (August 23-September 22)
Wishing tree. Mysteries are eliminated as needed details become available. Your information sources help you take small, swift steps toward your larger goals. Make as much progress as you can. Flashes of genius Friday and Saturday surprise everyone. Libra (September 23-October 22)
Imposing order. Get control of unstable and uncertain issues and forcefully address whatever’s keeping you off balance. Helpful transitions improve your income, and distasteful ideas become worth consideration. Trust instincts to lead to the right choices. Scorpio (October 23-November 21)
Survey your domain. Keep your seat while others are making swaps and exchanges in various parts of life. Perfect moments arrive midweek and generate hope and acceptance of others. Family transitions lead to benefits, especially for single women.
Sagittarius (November 22-December 21)
Wizard work. You have an almost magical ability to fix what you touch, turn things into gold and find exactly what/who you need this week. Groups and organizations generate lucrative contacts. Make nice with the Grand Poobah and other potential allies. Capricorn (December 22-January 19)
Mermaid song. Whatever rocks your world, it comes in abundance this week. A weeklong series of dialogues helps a project evolve and flower. Initiatives flow up and down the chain of command like lightning. If you’re a big winner, share your fortune with others. Aquarius (January 20-February 18)
Got milk? If you’ve been trying to get an edge, gain entrée, or overcome obstacles, this is your week for triumph. Shake the trees as hard as you can Monday and don’t stop! Miracles are at hand and good things are in reach. Others share your joy after Friday. Pisces (February 19-March 20)
Keeping up. Things set into motion in April-May are blooming this week. It’s all good but you’ll struggle to keep up with the accelerated momentum in social and business concerns. Plan ahead, watch the clock and stay focused if you want to have it all.
mariTz researCH inC. is nOW Hiring Call CenTer inTervieWers and we will be hosting a Job Fair for these posi-tions on Wednesday, June 8, from 9 a.m. to 8 p.m. Applicants are encour-aged to come in and fill out an application to begin the interview process at our Arrowhead Park facility, located at 1740 Indian Wood Circle, Maumee, OH 43537. These part time positions offer quality employment, flexible scheduling, and an opportunity to learn about market research. Starting salary is $8.00/hour with other performance based earning oppor-tunities also possible. All interviewers work 2nd shift, conduct-ing market research/customer satisfaction surveys. Absolutely no sales or solicitation is involved. Basic job requirements include: • Friendly personality • Proficient in general computer usage • Ability to read verbatim from a script and follow instructions Become a dynamic part of the maritz team! If you are unable to attend the Job Fair please send your resume to: Maritz Research; Human Resources, Fax: 419-725-4299, Email: [email protected]. You can also pick up an application at our Arrowhead Park Facility.
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JUNE 5, 2011 TV LisTings Visit www.toledofreepress.com n A25
Sunday Morning June 5, 20118 am 8:30 9 am 9:30 10 am 10:30 11 am 11:30 12 pm 12:30
ABC 13 Good Morning News This Week-Amanpour To Be AnnouncedCBS 11 Your Morning Sunday CBS News Sunday Morning (N) Nation Leading Mass Paid Prog. SkinFOX 36 Paid Prog. Paid Prog. Fox News Sunday Paid Prog. Paid Prog. Paid Prog. Best Bra! Paid Prog. NASCARNBC 24 Today (N) (CC) 2011 French Open Tennis Men’s Final. From Roland Garros Stadium in Paris. (N) (S Live) (CC)PBS 30 Sid Cat in the Super Dinosaur Opry Memories (CC) Great Performances (CC)
A&E ›››› The Untouchables (1987) Kevin Costner. ›››› GoodFellas (1990) Robert De Niro, Ray Liotta, Joe Pesci. (CC)BRAVO Decorators Platinum Hit Housewives/NYC Housewives/NYC Housewives/OC
COM › The Ladies Man (2000) Tim Meadows. (CC) ›› How to Lose Friends & Alienate People (2008) (CC) Scrubs DISN Mickey Pirates Phineas Phineas Phineas Fish Deck Deck Wizards WizardsESN SportsCenter (N) (CC) Outside Reporters SportsCenter (N) (Live) (CC) BaseballFAM ›› Confessions of a Teenage Drama Queen Another Cinderella Story (2008), Drew Seeley ››› Freaky Friday
FOOD Dinners Paula Rachael Ray’s Hungry Guy’s Barbecue Money Chopped “Gotta Grill!”HGTV Block Holmes Holmes Inspection Disaster Disaster Yard Outdoor House Hunters
LIF Hour of Power (CC) J. Osteen Paid Prog. The Party Never Stops (2007) Sara Paxton. ›› Gracie’s ChoiceMTV Made I Was 17 America’s Best Dance ›› Bring It On: Fight to the Finish (2009) Bring It OnTBS › Not Another Teen Movie (2001), Chris Evans ›› Eurotrip (2004, Comedy) Scott Mechlowicz. The Whole Nine YardsTCM Flower ›› Witness to Murder (1954) ››› Goodbye, My Fancy (1951), Robert Young Take Me OutTNT Law & Order “Fed” Franklin & Bash (CC) ›› Ghosts of Mississippi (1996) Alec Baldwin. (CC) ClearUSA Makeover J. Osteen Law Order: CI In Plain Sight (CC) Law & Order: SVU Law & Order: SVU
WTO5 Paid Prog. Paid Prog. Old House For Home Paid Prog. Paid Prog. Paid Prog. Raceline ›› Get Over It (2001)
Daytime Afternoon2 pm 2:30 3 pm 3:30 4 pm 4:30 5 pm 5:30 6 pm 6:30
ABC 13 One Life to Live General Hospital Ellen DeGeneres News News News ABC NewsCBS 11 The Talk Let’s Make a Deal Oprah Winfrey News at Five News NewsFOX 36 The People’s Court Justice Justice Smarter Lyrics! How I Met Raymond TMZ NewsNBC 24 The Doctors Judge B. Judge B. Judge J. Judge J. The Dr. Oz Show News NBC NewsPBS 30 Varied Programs News NewsHour
A&E The Sopranos CSI: Miami Criminal Minds Dog Dog The First 48BRAVO Varied Programs
COM Movie Varied Programs RENO 911! Futurama South Pk Tosh.0 Scrubs ScrubsDISN Deck Deck Phineas Deck Good Shake It Wizards Deck Phineas VariedESN SportsCenter Report Football NFL Live Jim Rome Around Pardon SportsCenterFAM My Wife My Wife ’70s Show ’70s Show ’70s Show ’70s Show Gilmore Girls Still Stnd Still Stnd
FOOD 30-Minute 30-Minute Guy’s Secrets Cooking Giada Contessa Ingred. Fix Paula 30-MinuteHGTV Varied Programs
LIF Grey’s Anatomy Cold Case Files Cold Case Files Unsolved Mysteries Unsolved MysteriesMTV Varied Programs The Seven ’70s Show ’70s Show ’70s ShowTBS Raymond Jim Jim The Office Friends Friends Raymond Raymond King KingTCM Movie Varied Programs Movie Varied ProgramsTNT The Closer Cold Case Law & Order Law & Order Law & OrderUSA Varied Programs NCIS NCIS
WTO5 Wendy Williams Show The Tyra Show Friends Friends Chris Chris Fam. Guy Fam. Guy
Sunday Afternoon / Evening June 5, 20111 pm 1:30 2 pm 2:30 3 pm 3:30 4 pm 4:30 5 pm 5:30 6 pm 6:30 7 pm 7:30 8 pm 8:30 9 pm 9:30 10 pm 10:30 11 pm 11:30
ABC 13 Heal Power-Juicing To Be Announced Shark Tank (CC) News ABC J. Kimmel NBA 2011 NBA Finals Miami Heat at Dallas Mavericks. (N) (Live) (CC) News CarpetCBS 11 Best Bra! Criminal Minds (CC) PGA Tour Golf Memorial Tournament, Final Round. (N) (Live) (CC) News News 60 Minutes (N) (CC) To Be Announced Undercover Boss CSI: Miami (CC) News CriminalFOX 36 NASCAR Racing Sprint Cup Series: STP 400. (N) (S Live) (CC) Base The Closer (CC) Mother Mother American Burgers Simpsons Cleveland Fam. Guy American News Recap Office OfficeNBC 24 French Open Hungr Spl Legends Adv. Sports Rugby USA 7’s Collegiate Championship. News News Dateline NBC (CC) Minute to Win It (CC) America’s Got Talent (CC) News PaidPBS 30 America’s Home Cooking: Easy Recipes for Thrifty Cooking Suze Orman’s Money Class (CC) Tackling Diabetes-Barnard Nature (CC) (DVS) Masterpiece Mystery! (CC) (DVS) Opry Memories (CC)
A&E Criminal Minds (CC) Criminal Minds (CC) Criminal Minds (CC) Criminal Minds (CC) Criminal Minds (CC) Criminal Minds (CC) Criminal Minds (CC) Criminal Minds (CC) Criminal Minds (CC) The Glades (N) (CC) The Glades (CC)BRAVO Housewives/OC Housewives/OC Housewives/OC Housewives/OC Housewives/OC Housewives/OC Housewives/OC Housewives/OC Housewives/OC Housewives/OC Happens OC
COM Scrubs Scrubs Scrubs ›› The Heartbreak Kid (2007) Ben Stiller. (CC) ›› Beerfest (2006) Jay Chandrasekhar. ›› Scary Movie 4 (2006) Anna Faris. (CC) ›› Jackass: Number Two (2006) Tosh.0 South Pk Work.DISN Good Shake it Good Good Sonny Sonny Sonny Good Wizards Wizards Good Shake It Good Shake It Good Random Wizards Good Shake It Shake It Good RandomESN College Softball Update College Softball SportsCenter (N) (Live) (CC) Baseball Tonight (N) MLB Baseball Atlanta Braves at New York Mets. (Live) SportsCenter (N)FAM ››› Freaky Friday ›› Hotel for Dogs (2009) Emma Roberts. ›› Beverly Hills Chihuahua (2008, Comedy) ›› Dr. Dolittle (1998) Eddie Murphy. ››› Mrs. Doubtfire (1993, Comedy) Robin Williams, Sally Field. Funny Home Videos
FOOD Dinner: Impossible Best Best Diners Diners Meat Candy Cupcake Wars Cake Food Best in Smoke Challenge (N) The Next Food Network Star (N) Cupcake WarsHGTV First Pla. First Pla. Property Property Get, Sold Get Sold House Hunters For Rent Unsella Designed To Sell Hunters House Holmes Holmes Holmes Inspection House Hunters Income Income
LIF ›› Gracie’s Choice Homeless to Harvard: The Liz Murray Story ››› Erin Brockovich (2000) Julia Roberts, Albert Finney. (CC) Bringing Ashley Home (2011) A.J. Cook. Army Wives (N) (CC) Coming Home (N) Army Wives (CC)MTV ›› Bring It On: All or Nothing Bring It On: In It to Win It (2007) America’s Best America’s Best America’s Best America’s Best Dance Crew 2011 MTV Movie Awards (N) (S Live) Teen Wolf (N)TBS Whole 9 Yards MLB Baseball Chicago Cubs at St. Louis Cardinals. (N) (Live) (CC) King King ››› Fun With Dick and Jane (1977) ››› I Love You, Man (2009) Paul Rudd. ››› I Love You, Man (2009) Paul Rudd.TCM Take Me ››› Arsenic and Old Lace (1944, Comedy) Cary Grant. ››› The Goodbye Girl (1977) (CC) ›› The Ambassador’s Daughter (1956) ›››› The Adventures of Robin Hood ››› Le Mans (1971) Steve McQueen.TNT ››› Clear and Present Danger (1994) Harrison Ford. ››› Patriot Games (1992) Harrison Ford. (CC) ››› Collateral (2004) Tom Cruise. (CC) ›› Four Brothers (2005) Mark Wahlberg. ›› Four Brothers (2005) Mark Wahlberg.USA Law & Order: SVU Law & Order: SVU Law & Order: SVU Law & Order: SVU Law & Order: SVU Law & Order: SVU Law & Order: SVU Law & Order: SVU Law Order: CI In Plain Sight (N) White Collar (CC)
WTO5 ›› Get Over It (2001) Made Scrubs Cold Case (CC) Friends Friends Chris Chris Two Men Two Men Heartland (CC) Heartland (CC) ›› Red Dawn (1984) Patrick Swayze. Cold Case “Iced”
Monday Evening June 6, 20117 pm 7:30 8 pm 8:30 9 pm 9:30 10 pm 10:30 11 pm 11:30
ABC 13 Ent Insider The Bachelorette (N) (CC) Extreme Makeover News NightlineCBS 11 Wheel Jeopardy! How I Met How I Met Two Men Mike Hawaii Five-0 (CC) News LettermanFOX 36 The Office The Office MasterChef (N) (CC) House (PA) (CC) Fox Toledo News Seinfeld King-HillNBC 24 Jdg Judy Judge J. Minute to Win It (N) Law Order: CI Law & Order: LA (N) News Jay LenoPBS 30 NewsHour Business Antiques Roadshow American Experience “Seabiscuit” Suze Orman’s Money Class (CC)
A&E The First 48 (CC) Criminal Minds (CC) Criminal Minds (CC) Criminal Minds (CC) Criminal Minds (CC)BRAVO Housewives/NJ Housewives/NJ Housewives/NJ Platinum Hit (N) Housewives/NJ
COM ››› American Pie (1999) Jason Biggs. (CC) Sunny Sunny Sunny Sunny Daily ColbertDISN Wizards Wizards ›› Halloweentown (1998) (CC) Deck Good Good Wizards WizardsESN MLB Baseball Los Angeles Dodgers at Philadelphia Phillies. (Live) (CC) Baseball Tonight (N) SportsCenter (N) (CC)FAM Secret-Teen Secret-Teen Switched at Birth (N) Switched at Birth The 700 Club (CC)
FOOD Iron Chef America Unwrap Candy Diners Diners Meat Best Thing ChallengeHGTV Hunters House My Yard House H. HGTV’d House Hunters Hunters House House H.
LIF ›› Held Hostage (CC) Last Man Standing (2011) Catherine Bell. (CC) Vanished, Beth How I Met How I MetMTV 2011 MTV Movie Awards Host Jason Sudeikis. Teen Wolf Teen Wolf (N) Teen Wolf TBS Seinfeld Seinfeld Fam. Guy Fam. Guy Fam. Guy Fam. Guy Fam. Guy Fam. Guy Conan (N)TCM North by Northwest ››› North to Alaska (1960) John Wayne. ›› Operation Mad Ball (1957) Jack Lemmon.TNT Law & Order Law & Order “Fallout” Law & Order The Closer (CC) Rizzoli & Isles (CC)USA NCIS “Sub Rosa” (CC) WWE Tough Enough WWE Monday Night RAW (N) (S Live) (CC) WWE Tough Enough
WTO5 Two Men Two Men 90210 (CC) Gossip Girl (CC) Entourage Curb Scrubs Scrubs
Tuesday Evening June 7, 20117 pm 7:30 8 pm 8:30 9 pm 9:30 10 pm 10:30 11 pm 11:30
ABC 13 Ent Insider J. Kimmel NBA 2011 NBA Finals Miami Heat at Dallas Mavericks. (N) (CC) NewsCBS 11 Wheel Jeopardy! NCIS (CC) (DVS) NCIS: Los Angeles The Good Wife (CC) News LettermanFOX 36 The Office The Office MasterChef (N) (CC) Raising Traffic Fox Toledo News Seinfeld King-HillNBC 24 Jdg Judy Judge J. America’s Got Talent The Voice Vocalists perform. (N) (S Live) (CC) News Jay LenoPBS 30 NewsHour Business Moments to Remember: My Music Number 204 (CC) Opry Memories (CC)
A&E The First 48 (CC) The First 48 (CC) The First 48 (CC) First 48: Missing The First 48 (CC)BRAVO Housewives/NJ Inside Actor’s Studio Housewives/OC Decorators Decorators
COM Daily Colbert South Pk Tosh.0 Tosh.0 Tosh.0 Tosh.0 (N) Macdon Daily ColbertDISN Wizards Wizards ››› Halloweentown High (2004) Deck Good Good Wizards WizardsESN SportsCenter (N) (Live) (CC) NFL Live SportsCenter (N) (CC) Baseball Tonight (N) SportsCenter (N) (CC)FAM Funniest Home Videos Funniest Home Videos America’s Funniest Home Videos (CC) The 700 Club (CC)
FOOD Iron Chef America Cupcake Wars Chopped Chopped (N) 24 Hour Rest. BattleHGTV Hunters House First Place First Place Property Property House Hunters First Place First Place
LIF Pawn Pawn American Pickers (CC) American Pickers (CC) Love Handles How I Met How I MetMTV Teen Wolf Teen Wolf 16 and Pregnant (CC) 16 and Pregnant (N) Movie AwardsTBS Seinfeld Seinfeld The Office The Office The Office The Office The Office The Office Conan (N)TCM Robin-7 Hoods ›››› Great Expectations (1946) John Mills. ››› Black Narcissus (1947) Deborah Kerr.TNT Law & Order “Flaw” Law & Order ››› Gran Torino (2008, Drama) Clint Eastwood. (CC) CSI: NYUSA Law & Order: SVU Law & Order: SVU White Collar (N) (CC) Covert Affairs (N) (CC) Law Order: CI
WTO5 Two Men Two Men One Tree Hill (CC) Hellcats (CC) Entourage Curb Scrubs Scrubs
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A26 n TolEdo FrEE PrEss JUNE 5, 2011TV LisTingsWednesday Evening June 8, 2011
7 pm 7:30 8 pm 8:30 9 pm 9:30 10 pm 10:30 11 pm 11:30ABC 13 Ent Insider Middle Middle Family Family 20/20 (N) (CC) News NightlineCBS 11 Wheel Jeopardy! Undercover Boss (CC) Criminal Minds Blue Bloods (CC) News LettermanFOX 36 The Office The Office So You Think You Can Dance (N) (CC) Fox Toledo News Seinfeld King-HillNBC 24 Jdg Judy Judge J. Minute to Win It (N) America’s Got Talent America’s Got Talent News Jay LenoPBS 30 NewsHour Business Les Misérables 25th Anniversary Concert at the O2 Silver anniversary of the musical. (CC)
A&E The First 48 (CC) Beyond Scared Storage Storage Storage Storage Dog Bounty HunterBRAVO Housewives/OC Housewives/NJ Top Chef Masters Top Chef Masters (N) Top Chef Masters
COM Daily Colbert Chappelle Chappelle South Pk South Pk South Pk Work. Daily ColbertDISN Wizards Wizards ›› Thunderbirds (2004) (CC) Deck Good Good Wizards WizardsESN MLB Baseball Boston Red Sox at New York Yankees. (Live) (CC) Baseball Tonight (N) SportsCenter (N) (CC)FAM ››› Fried Green Tomatoes (1991, Drama) Kathy Bates. Premiere. Switched at Birth The 700 Club (CC)
FOOD Iron Chef America B. Flay Flay The Next Food Network Star Diners DinersHGTV Hunters House Property Property Income Property House Hunters Hunters Income
LIF Pawn Pawn The First 48 (CC) The First 48 (CC) Vanished, Beth How I Met How I MetMTV 16 and Pregnant (CC) 16 and Pregnant (CC) The Real World (CC) The Real World (N) Barbar. Real...TBS Seinfeld Seinfeld Browns Browns Payne Payne Payne Payne Conan (N)TCM Young Philadlp Dave Brubeck: In His Own Thelonious Monk Eastwood After HoursTNT The Mentalist (CC) The Mentalist (CC) Franklin & Bash (N) Men of a Certain Age Franklin & Bash (CC)USA NCIS “Under Covers” NCIS “Sharif Returns” NCIS (CC) NCIS “In the Dark” NCIS “The Curse”
WTO5 Two Men Two Men America’s Next Model America’s Next Model Entourage Curb Scrubs Scrubs
Thursday Evening June 9, 20117 pm 7:30 8 pm 8:30 9 pm 9:30 10 pm 10:30 11 pm 11:30
ABC 13 Ent Insider J. Kimmel NBA 2011 NBA Finals Miami Heat at Dallas Mavericks. (N) (CC) NewsCBS 11 Wheel Jeopardy! Big Bang Rules CSI: Crime Scene The Mentalist (CC) News LettermanFOX 36 The Office The Office So You Think You Can Dance (N) (CC) Fox Toledo News Seinfeld King-HillNBC 24 Jdg Judy Judge J. Commun 30 Rock The Office Parks Love Bites (N) (CC) News Jay LenoPBS 30 NewsHour Business Toledo Stories (CC) Masterpiece Mystery! (CC) (DVS) Solution
A&E The First 48 (CC) The First 48 (CC) The First 48 (N) (CC) First 48: Missing First 48: MissingBRAVO Housewives/NYC Housewives/NYC Housewives/NYC Housewives/NYC Happens NYC
COM Daily Colbert South Pk South Pk South Pk Futurama Futurama Tosh.0 Daily ColbertDISN Wizards Wizards Adventures of Sharkboy Deck Good Good Wizards WizardsESN SportsCenter (N) (Live) (CC) NFL Live Nation Baseball Tonight (N) (Live) (CC) SportsCenter (N) (CC)FAM ›› Good Burger (1997, Comedy) Kel Mitchell. › Billy Madison (1995) Adam Sandler. The 700 Club (CC)
FOOD Iron Chef America Iron Chef America Chefography 24 Hour Rest. Battle ChoppedHGTV Hunters House First Place First Place Selling NY Selling NY House Hunters House Hunters
LIF Pawn Pawn Reba (CC) Reba (CC) Reba (CC) Reba (CC) Reba (CC) Reba (CC) How I Met How I MetMTV Teen Wolf The Real World (CC) MTV Special Jackass 3.5 (2011, Comedy) Johnny Knoxville.TBS Seinfeld Seinfeld ›› The House Bunny (2008) Anna Faris. Fam. Guy Fam. Guy Conan (N)TCM ››› Battleground ››› Them! (1954) (CC) ›› Cosmic Monsters (1958) ›› Tarantula (1955)TNT Bones (CC) Bones (CC) Bones (CC) Bones (CC) CSI: NY “Tri-Borough”USA NCIS Murdered model. NCIS (CC) NCIS (CC) NCIS “Love & War” Covert Affairs (CC)
WTO5 Two Men Two Men The Vampire Diaries Nikita “Kill Jill” (CC) Entourage Curb Scrubs Scrubs
Saturday Afternoon / Evening June 11, 20111 pm 1:30 2 pm 2:30 3 pm 3:30 4 pm 4:30 5 pm 5:30 6 pm 6:30 7 pm 7:30 8 pm 8:30 9 pm 9:30 10 pm 10:30 11 pm 11:30
ABC 13 To Be Announced Wipeout (CC) ESPN Sports Saturday (N) News ABC Entertainment ’Night The Bachelorette (CC) Extreme Makeover News AnatomyCBS 11 College Track and Field PGA Tour Golf FedEx St. Jude Classic, Third Round. (N) (CC) News News Paid Lottery CHAOS (N) (CC) CSI: NY (CC) 48 Hours Mystery News AmericaFOX 36 ››› Gone Baby Gone (2007) Casey Affleck. McCarver Base MLB Baseball Regional Coverage. (N) (S Live) (CC) Simpsons Simpsons Cops (N) Cops Amer. Most Wanted News Seinfeld Fringe (PA) (CC)NBC 24 Paid Paid Paid Paid Track and Field Adidas Grand Prix. (N) (CC) 143rd Belmont Stakes (N) (S Live) (CC) Academic Academic Field of Vision (2011) Tony Oller. (CC) Law & Order: LA News SNLPBS 30 Moments to Remember: My Music Number Great Performances (CC) Rick Steves’ Viva Espana! (CC) Lawrence Welk’s Big Band Splash (CC) Opry Memories (CC) Suze Orman’s Money Class
A&E Jewels Jewels Jewels Jewels Jewels Jewels Jewels Jewels Parking Parking Parking Parking Parking Wars (CC) Parking Parking Storage Storage Parking Parking Parking ParkingBRAVO Decorators Platinum Hit Platinum Hit Housewives/NYC Housewives/NYC Housewives/NYC Housewives/NYC Housewives/NYC Housewives/NYC House (CC) House “Wilson” (CC)
COM Scrubs Scrubs Scrubs ››› Hot Fuzz (2007) Simon Pegg. (CC) ››› Napoleon Dynamite (2004) Jon Heder. ›› Walk Hard: The Dewey Cox Story (2007) (CC) Kevin James Larry/Cable ››› Bad Santa (CC)DISN Good Shake It Suite Life on Deck Shake It Shake it Shake It Shake It Random Lemonade Mouth (2011) Bridgit Mendler. Sharpay’s Fabulous Adventure Good Random Phineas Shake it Shake It Shake ItESN College Baseball College Baseball NCAA Super Regional: Teams TBA. (N) (CC) SportsCenter (N) College Baseball NCAA Super Regional: Teams TBA. (N) (CC) Baseball Tonight (N) SportsCenter (N)FAM ›› Mr. Magorium’s Wonder Emporium ››› Holes (2003) Sigourney Weaver, Jon Voight. ›› The Goonies (1985) Sean Astin, Josh Brolin. ››› Finding Nemo (2003) Voices of Albert Brooks. ›› The Karate Kid (1984)
FOOD Contessa Giada The Next Food Network Star Chopped Iron Chef America Challenge Flay B. Flay Cupcake Wars Cupcake Wars Cupcake Wars Iron Chef AmericaHGTV HGTV’d Unsella Cash, Design Buck Secrets Candice Summer Dear Color Spl. Favorite To Sell Hunters House Summer Block Color Spl. Hunters The Next Food Network Star (CC)
LIF Living With the Enemy (2005) (CC) Murder on Pleasant Drive (2006) (CC) Last Man Standing (2011) Catherine Bell. Next Stop Murder (2010) Brigid Brannagh. Date With Darkness-Andrew Luster Next Stop MurderMTV Movie Awards Teen Wolf Teen Wolf The Real World (CC) 16 and Pregnant Teen Wolf Teen Wolf Bring It On: In It to Win It (2007) 2011 MTV Movie Awards TBS ››› Wedding Crashers (2005, Comedy) Owen Wilson. Jim Raymond Raymond Raymond Raymond Seinfeld Seinfeld King King ››› I Love You, Man (2009) Paul Rudd. ›› The Replacements (2000, Comedy) (CC)TCM Tarzan ››› The Adventures of Huckleberry Finn ›› Destination Moon (1950) ›› Ice Station Zebra (1968) Rock Hudson, Ernest Borgnine. (CC) ››› The Caine Mutiny (1954, Drama) (CC) ››› King and Country (1964) Dirk Bogarde.TNT ››› Fracture (2007) ››› Assault on Precinct 13 (2005) (CC) ››› The Rock (1996, Action) Sean Connery, Nicolas Cage. (CC) ›››› Saving Private Ryan (1998, War) Tom Hanks, Edward Burns. (CC) ››› Gran Torino (2008) (CC)USA ››› Chaos (2005) Jason Statham. (CC) ›› Crank (2006) Jason Statham. (CC) NCIS “Caged” (CC) NCIS “Chained” (CC) NCIS “Bloodbath” NCIS “Hiatus” (CC) NCIS “Hiatus” (CC) NCIS “Broken Bird” In Plain Sight (CC)
WTO5 Icons Career Payne Browns Without a Trace (CC) American American Fam. Guy Fam. Guy Two Men Two Men Minor League Baseball Entou Curb American American
Friday Evening June 10, 20117 pm 7:30 8 pm 8:30 9 pm 9:30 10 pm 10:30 11 pm 11:30
ABC 13 Ent Insider Shark Tank (CC) Jamie Oliver’s Food 20/20 (CC) News NightlineCBS 11 Wheel Jeopardy! Flashpoint (N) (CC) CSI: NY (CC) Blue Bloods (CC) News LettermanFOX 36 The Office The Office Bones (PA) (CC) Lie to Me (CC) Fox Toledo News Seinfeld King-HillNBC 24 Jdg Judy Judge J. 2011 Stanley Cup Final Boston Bruins at Vancouver Canucks. (N) (CC) News Jay LenoPBS 30 NewsHour Business Wash. Suze Orman’s Money Class (CC) Great Performances (CC)
A&E Criminal Minds (CC) Criminal Minds (CC) Criminal Minds (CC) Criminal Minds (CC) The Glades (CC)BRAVO Housewives/NJ ››› Ocean’s Thirteen (2007) George Clooney, Brad Pitt. ››› Ocean’s Thirteen (2007)
COM Daily Colbert Tosh.0 Tosh.0 Dane Cook Comedy Comedy Comedy ComedyDISN My Babysitter’s a Vampire (2010) My Babysitter’s a Vampire (2010) Shake It Good Wizards WizardsESN College Baseball NCAA Super Regional: Teams TBA. (N) (Live) (CC) Baseball Tonight (N) SportsCenter (N) (CC)FAM Funniest Home Videos Funniest Home Videos Funniest Home Videos Funniest Home Videos The 700 Club (CC)
FOOD Iron Chef America Diners Diners Diners Diners Food Best Thing Unwrap CakeHGTV Hunters House Hunters Hunters Hunters Hunters Hunters Hunters Hunters Hunters
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JUNE 5, 2011 Visit www.toledofreepress.com n A27
Local Emergency Planning Committee2144 Monroe Street Toledo, Ohio 43604 Phone: (419)213-6527 Fax: (419)213-6520 - www.lucascountyoh.gov
LEPC Meetings are held in the EMS Building at 2144 Monroe St. in the third floor conference room. Free parking is available adjacent to the building. Next Meeting: July 21 2011 - 12:15pm to 2:15pm
Current LEPC OfficersChairman - Ryan Grant
Vice-Chairman - Tony Sloma Secretary - Patekka Bannister
Information Coordinator - Joe WalterEmergency Coordinator - Michelle Hughes-Tucker
Ad design for the Lucas County LEPC by Robyn Sigler, Co-Chair of the Public Information Committee
Chemical Release Reporting Requirements
Tornado Preparedness: Preparing Your Family for the Unexpected!
Tornado SeasonVery large thunderstorms that generally form to the Southwest can produce high winds, severe lightening, large hail and possibly Tornados. Tornados can occur in any month of the year and at any time of the day. The Tornado Season in our region begins in March and runs through July. Most Tornados develop between the hours of 2:00 pm and 10:00 pm. Most severe injuries from Tornados result from fly debris at speeds of up to 300 mph. Knowing these facts can help you to plan and prepare for Tornados.
Weather AlertsLucas County maintains 120 outdoor warning sirens. When the sirens sound it means that people should go indoors or find someplace that provides shelter from severe weather. If possible tune into a local radio or TV station to hear about severe storms in the area.
Your Safe RoomEveryone should identify a Safe Room in their home or workplace, usually the lowest floor possible, in the center of the building, away from windows and doors and with some overhead protection. In a highrise building the safest area is in the center core space of each floor. Some homeowners may choose to build or retrofit a Safe Room that is designed to resist the impact of high winds and Tornados. More information on Safe Rooms is available in FEMA Publication 320.
Do you have a Weather Alert Radio?While sirens can provide warning to people who are outdoors they sometimes cannot be heard indoors or when buildings, trees or traffic block their signals. The National Weather Service (NWS) issues weather alerts in the form of watches and warnings over special Weather Alert Radios.Everyone should have a Weather Alert Radio to receive the earliest alerts for all types of severe weather events. While most alert weather radios are AC/DC powered some models have a wind-up feature that requires no batteries. Weather radios are available from most Department, Outdoor and Electronics retail stores.
Free preparedness resources, such as a Family Emergency Plan template and an Emergency Supply Kit Checklist are a click away at http://www.ready.gov.
For more information please visit:http://www.co.lucas.oh.us/index.aspx?nid=1498
If there is a release of an extremely hazardous substance (EHS), a hazardous substance, or oil in a quantity equal to or greater than the applicable reportable quantity at a facility where a hazardous material is produced, used or stored the release must be reported as specified below:
30 Minute Spill Reporting RequirementsWithin 30 minutes of discovery of a spill
or release, you must notify:Jurisdictional Fire Department (9-1-1 if emergency)Ohio EPA-ER (800) 282-9378Lucas County LEPC
(419) 936-3550 (24 Hour) [Option 8](419) 213-6527 (Day)
30 Day Written Spill Reporting RequirementsWithin 30 days of discovery of a spill or release,
you must submit a written follow-up report to both addresses below which includes all of the
information required by SERC:Ohio EPA, DERR-ER, Lazarus Government Center 50 West Town St., Suite 700, P.O. Box 1049, Columbus, OH 43216-1049 Attn: ER Records Mgmt. SERC ReportLucas County LEPC, 2144 Monroe St., Toledo, Ohio 43604 Attn: Emergency Coordinator
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Heat - It’s a Killer!Monday, June 27, 2011; 7:00-8:00 PM
Secor Metro Park 10001 W. Central Ave. Berkey, Ohio 43504
Extreme heat can become a killer. When outdoor temperatures soar many become trapped in our homes. Without an understanding of the dangers of heat many homes can become dangerous for seniors, children, disabled persons and pets. HEAT – It’s a Killer will provide information on how to stay hydrated, recognize the signs of Heat Injuries, learn basic first aid for heat related emergencies. Learn how you can stay COOL when the heat outside is a killer.
Saving your Bacon (Financial Readiness)Monday, July 25, 2011; 7:00-8:00 PMWildwood Metro Park - Manor House
5100 W. Central Ave. Toledo, Ohio 43615
In the aftermath of every emergency questions arise on how affected households will be able to survive financially. Will you be able to rebuild if necessary? What happens if you cannot work? Will my insurance cover my losses? Will normal banking services be disrupted? Can I qualify for or even afford a disaster loan? Financial experts will advise you on the steps that you should begin to take today to prepare for the crisis’ that may lie in your future. Will your Piggy Bank save your bacon?
All Ready U Presentations are FREE of Charge!READY U partners include the Lucas County Emergency Management
Agency, the American Red Cross, 13ABC-WTVG, The Andersons, Cumulus Broadcasting, and the Toledo Free Press.
http://ready-u.com
Make a Plan - Get a Kit - Be Informed
Recommended Items to Include in aBasic Emergency Supply Kit:
Water, one gallon per person per day for at least three days, for drinking and sanitation Food, at least a three-day supply of non-perishable food Battery-powered or hand crank radio and a NOAA Weather Radio with tone alert Flashlight and Extra batteriesFirst aid kit Pet food and extra water for your pet(s)Whistle to signal for help Dust masks and plastic sheeting and duct tape to shelter-in-place Moist towelettes, garbage bags and plastic ties for personal sanitation Wrench or pliers to turn off utilities Local mapsCell phone with charger
Additional Items to Consider Adding to an Emergency Supply Kit:
Prescription medications and glasses Infant formula and diapers Important family documents such as copies of insurance policies, identification and bank account records in a waterproof, portable container Cash or traveler’s checks and change Emergency reference material such as a first aid book Sleeping bag or warm blanket for each person. Consider additional bedding if you live in a cold-weather climate. Complete change of clothing including a long sleeved shirt, long pants and sturdy shoes. Consider additional clothing if you live in a cold-weather climate. Household chlorine bleach and medicine dropper – When diluted nine parts water to one part bleach, bleach can be used as a disinfectant. Or in an emergency, you can use it to treat water by using 16 drops of regular household liquid bleach per gallon of water. Do not use scented, color safe or bleaches with added cleaners. Fire Extinguisher Matches in a waterproof container Feminine supplies and personal hygiene items Mess kits, paper cups, plates and plastic utensils, paper towels Paper and pencil
Books, games, puzzles or other activities for
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What is a Local Emergency Planning Committee?The Local Emergency Planning Committee (LEPC) is a county board charged with designing and maintaining a hazardous materials plan for Lucas County. The creation of LEPCs is a component of the Federal Emergency Planning and Community Right-to-Know Act (EPCRA), which was enacted in 1986. Chapter 3750 of the Ohio Administrative Code is Ohio’s implementation of EPCRA. The LEPC has many responsibilities under EPCRA. These include maintaining records of chemical releases, collecting chemical inventory data from industry, and developing and annually exercising the Hazardous Materials plan for Lucas County. The responsibilities are met through partnerships with members of the response community, government agencies, and Industry representatives.
A28. n Toledo Free Press JUNe 5, 2011
“I was tired and having difficulty breathing,
so my doctor had me get a stress test
at St. Charles. Long story short, I had four
blockages. My cardiologist referred me to
the surgeons at St. V’s. I was concerned
going in because I thought they had to
stop my heart. Then I learned they’re
doing the most procedures on beating
hearts. They’re very good.
“Mercy is the only place to go. They saved
my life.” – Gordy
Mercy is a leader in “beating heart” open-heart surgery.
100%
80%
60%
40%
20%
Mercy
National Average
Isolated coronary artery bypass surgeries performed without heart-lung machine
SOURCE: The Society of Thoracic Surgeons
Doing more surgeries without
stopping the heart.
Find us at mercyweb.org/heart or call 888.987.6372.
Gordy was tested at Mercy St. Charles, had a quadruple bypass at the Mercy Heart & Vascular Center on the campus of St. Vincent, and is back at St. Charles for cardiac rehabilitation. His surgeon was Dr. Jim Burdine with Mercy Cardiothoracic Surgical Associates.
© 2
011
Mer
cy
St. Anne St. Charles St. Vincent Children’s Defiance Tiffin Willard
MHP861 Cardiac 10x10.25_A.indd 3 6/1/11 3:37 PM