2 min

Tt post may 23 2016 a

quote=202893

reggie, you also added nothing to the thread topic. It seems that no new information exists. Everything is a rehash of what was reported or rumored in 2015.

Do you have answers to RolandHansen's post that was for some reason another thread instead of a comment here?

"Whatever happened to Patrick Hickey, the former superintendent of Washington Local School District? Back in December 2015, Patrick Hickey allegedly stated that he planned to file complaints with the Ohio Ethics Commission against Washington Local Board of Education members Patricia Carmean and James Langenderfer, but to the best of my knowledge, there have been no reports about any such ethics complaints ever actually having been filed. And, what of the proclamation by Patrick Hickey that he was planning to seek election in 2017 to become a Member of the Washington Local Board of Education? Has anyone heard of the formation of an actual campaign committee or even of an exploratory committee by Patrick Hickey?"


I have questions too.

  • Why has the content at makingapredator.com been scrubbed?
  • Why has terrikern.wordpress.com deleted the Hickey-related posts made last year?
  • Why does hickeyleaks.org no longer exist?
  • Do you think that ALL of the Toledo media outlets are intentionally ignoring the story?


Molsonator posted at 07:03:00 AM on May 21, 2016:

They hang out at Erie Street Market too....which by the way Flying Rhino's sells Tiedtke's Coffee at her stand.

The new coffee shop Kathy's Confections, located at Sylvania and Bowen, also sells Tiedtke’s Coffee.

May 23, 2016 - Toledo Blade - Toledo made a mean cup of coffee - "City once turned out 50 million pounds each year"

Coffee producers included Tiedtke’s, the Great Atlantic & Pacific Tea Co. (A & P), Berdan Co., Woolson Spice Co., and Interstate Coffee Co.

Coffee brand names included Tiedtke’s, Eight O’Clock, Bokar, Red Circle, Empire, Chef, and Green Label.

Toledo News Bee photographer George Blount took this photo published May 30, 1936, at the A & P coffee packaging operation at 719 Brown Ave. near Detroit Avenue. At that time, A & P sold 15 percent of the coffee Americans drank every day, and a good part of it was processed and distributed in Toledo. The Toledo plant’s roasters could process 500 pounds of coffee every 18 minutes. Because unground coffee retained its flavor longer than ground coffee, A & P delivered its three brands of coffee to its stores unground.

The last A & P stores in Toledo closed in 1983. Then, after seven decades, the Toledo A & P coffee production facility closed in July, 1998.

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