FRIDAY, SEPTEMBER 1, 2023 POSTCRESCENT.COM PART OF THE USA TODAY NETWORK Volume 104 No. 191 Subscribe 877-424-4924 $3.50 XEAJAB-51575s Get the latest news, sports and more See top headlines, local breaking news, area scores, things to do and subscriber exclusives at postcrescent.com. Subscriber-only eNewspaper Use your computer or app to access your paper online. Subscribers also get access to USA eNewspaper and updated news and sports Extra sections. Four roster takeaways: Youth and speed dominate Packers SPORTS, 1B SUPER SMART BACK TO SCHOOL SALE CALL US TODAY! TEAMRENEWALWINDOWS.COMBOGO FOR EVERY APPOINTMENT SCHEDULED, WE WILL DONATE SCHOOL SUPPLIES TO LOCAL NO PAYMENTS NO INTEREST FOR 12 MONTHS! NOW OFFERING ENTRY DOORS! 920-310-0251 OF OFFER Offer expires Not valid with other offers or prior purchases.
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It includes 20 years on glass and Fibrex material, 2 years on installation, and 10 years on hardware. non-prorated and fully transferable, should you sell your home. Ask your Renewal by Andersen sales consultant for complete written details. FOX CROSSING Neighborhood dis- putes are not uncommon in urban areas, particularly when homes abut in- dustry, but hard to imagine a more complicated and bitter than the one between Tree Service and nearby residents. On one side stands 936 Ap- pleton Road, which operates heavy ma- chinery, including a wood grinder, on land that once operated as a quarry.
The property long has been zoned for heavy industrial use. Menasha and Fox Crossing residents clash with over noise, dust Amy Stephany stands in her yard in Menasha, across the street from Tree Service in Fox Crossing. Stephany says noise from wakes her from a dead sleep and disturbs the peace of the neighborhood. Tree Service is zoned industrial and abuts residences in Fox Crossing and Menasha. PHOTOS BY WM.
TODAY NETWORK-WISCONSIN Duke Behnke Appleton Post-Crescent USA TODAY NETWORK WISCONSIN See CLASH, Page 2A After an autumn-like day on Wednesday, summer vacation is fore- cast to go out in a blaze of heat. High temperatures over Labor Day weekend are forecast to reach the mid-90s again in Appleton and Green Bay but this time around, the air will be drier, said meteorologist Tasos Kal- las with the National Weather Service in Green Bay. However, unlike earlier in summer, many public outdoor pools and water parks have closed for the season. The days will start heating up Sat- urday, but the region will see its high- est temperatures Sunday, Monday and potentially Tuesday, according to the weather service. How hot will it get? The temperatures will either meet or exceed the record high for Sept.
2-4 in Appleton and Green Bay, Kallas said. The forecast for Green Bay (as of Thursday morning) calls for: 87 on Saturday 94 on Sunday 94 on Labor Day 91 on Tuesday, which will be the day for most area schools The forecast for Appleton calls for: 87 on Saturday 96 on Sunday 95 on Monday 91 on Tuesday Like the heat earlier this month, the culprit is the heat dome been plaguing the central and south- ern United States all Kallas said. However, the hottest ever Septem- ber day on record in Green Bay goes back to Sept. 10, 1931, which recorded a high temperature of 97. Hot weather is coming to Appleton and Green Bay.
how to protect yourself Heat-related illnesses can suddenly 90-degree days ahead for Labor Day weekend Rebecca Loroff Appleton Post-Crescent USA TODAY NETWORK WISCONSIN See WEATHER, Page 3A APPLETON A supper club on Ap- north side has closed after 30 years with the same owners. The Legacy Supper Club, 5334 N. Richmond closed Aug. 12 after its longtime owners, Bob and Mary Blair, decided to retire and sell the building. The retirement and the sale of the building were announced on the Facebook page in recent weeks.
and Mary would like to thank you very much for the last 30 an Aug. 14 post read. has been wonder- ful meeting all of you. wait to start retirement and The sale of the building was shared in an Aug. 17 Facebook post and Kevin Loosen, a real estate agent with Cold- well Banker Real Estate Group, con- that the building is currently be- ing sold.
He said the sale of the property will close Friday and that the new owner has plans to keep the building a supper club. Bob and Mary Blair purchased The Legacy in the mid-1990s after stepping away from jobs as a mill worker and convenience store manager, re- spectively. See CLUB, Page 2A THE BUZZ What the future holds as The Legacy Supper Club closes Alexandria Bursiek Kloehn Appleton Post-Crescent USA TODAY NETWORK WISCONSIN Tree Service operates heavy machinery on its property at 936 Appleton Road in Fox Crossing..