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Grove prepares for Arlington, p6

Youth hunt this weekend, p3

DELPHOS
The

HERALD

Telling The Tri-Countys Story Since 1869

www.delphosherald.com

75 daily

Friday, November 21, 2014

Vol. 145 No. 114

Delphos, Ohio

Local trio acquires Lima Bargain Center


BY NANCY SPENCER
DHI Media Editor
nspencer@delphosherald.com
DELPHOS Hardware has been in the Fritz
blood for decades. Eric Fritz and son, Jeff, own
Delphos ACE Hardware and family patriarch,
Ed, has been in the business for more than 60
years.
On Thursday, Eric, Jeff and Jeffs long-time
friend, Andrew Mancinnoti, looked to continue
the legacy with the purchase of Lima Bargain
Center on South Dixie Highway in Lima.
The Fritzes brought in Mancinnoti as partner
and general manager for the new Lima store,
which will be called Shawnee ACE Hardware.
Andrew worked for me for four or five
years when he was in college and when he left,
I made the comment that our paths would cross
in business, Eric said. I saw value in him from
day one. He has a great work ethic and good
morals.
The purchase made sense to the trio.
The business has been on our radar for a

long time, Jeff Fritz said. They have a great


history and its still successful.
His father agreed.
I looked into buying it in 2007, he said.
Mancinnoti said is looking forward to the
challenge.
The Fritzes made me an offer I couldnt
refuse, he said. It a great opportunity for me
and for them.
While the employees and management will
stay the same at the Shawnee location, the trio
said patrons will notice an increase in merchandise with the introduction of work boots, heaters
and grills and an expanded candy line and lawn
and garden division to start.
We dont have to build this from scratch,
Eric Fritz said. The employees are really good.
Theyre knowledgeable and dedicated. Well
just bring some of our own successful practices
to the business and make it even better. We do
what we do and we do it well. If customers care Eric Fritz, right, his son Jeff, back, and friend Andrew Mancinotti, second from
about service they come to us.
right, ink the deal for the purchase of the Lima Bargain Center from Harold
Waronker, second from left, with his wife, Sue, and Carolyn Ruben. (Submitted
See BARGAIN, page 12
photo)

Winter
brings
driving
hazards

Upfront
Benefit Saturday
for local woman
A benefit for Lisa
Wiseman Merschman, who
was recently diagnosed with
cancer, will be held Saturday
at the Delphos Eagles Lodge.
The day includes a 50-50
raffle; bake sale from 9
a.m. to noon; and a Texas
Holdem Tournament,
with sign-up at noon and
start at 1 p.m. Registration
is $25 with $25 rebuy.
Dinner will include
Turkey Manhattans, green
beans and cookie for $7
from 4-7 p.m. Presale tickets
are available with a limited
number sold at the door.
Deuces Wild will perform after the poker tournament and Supervillin will
play from 8:30-11:30 p.m.

Herald names
turkey winners

The Delphos Herald


has announced winners in
the Turkey Sweepstakes.
They are (with the store
where registered):
Donna Eickhold,
Kitchens Inc.; Bob
Warnecke, Delphos Trading
Post; Miriam Elkins, The
Ottoville Bank Co.; Kevin
Ardner, Hickory Pit BBQ;
Sharon Earley, Reliable
Plumbing and Heating;
Jeanne Martin, Easy Auto
Credit; Joan Moening, PEAK
24 Hour/Total Solution;
Susie Sanderson, Save-A-Lot
Grocery; Mike Edelbrock,
Tom Ahl; Lois Blankemeyer,
Greman Mutual; Dawn
Ledyard, Delphos Discount
Drugs; Bonnie Mullenhour,
Chief; Ron Lumm, First
Federal Bank; Mike
Neidert, Pistenbarger
Supply; and Judy Schroeder,
Ottoville Hardware.

BY STEPHANIE GROVES
DHI Media Staff Writer
sgroves@delphosherald.com

Vancrest residents and families share holiday dinner

Vancrest Healthcare Center of Delphos brought family members and residents together Thursday evening through
their annual Thanksgiving dinner. Staff prepared enough turkey, green bean casserole, mashed potatoes, stuffing,
roils and desserts for 350 people. Many St. Johns students volunteered their time to help with the festive event
by setting up, serving and cleaning up. It was geared residents to spend time with their loved ones and enjoy the
younger generation assisting with the meal. Above: Beth and Joe Wallenhorst spend time with resident Sally
Wallenhorst, middle, chatting before dinner is served. Below: Resident Linda Petersmeyer bonds with 6-month
old Brian Cabrera, son of Jessica Radler, right, and godson of granddaughter Jordyn Radler, left, who dined with
Petersmeyer at Vancrests Thanksgiving dinner. (DHI Media/Stephanie Groves)

Forecast
Mostly sunny
today. Partly
cloudy tonight
with a chance
of freezing
rain after midnight. Highs in the mid 20s.
Lows around 20. See page 2.

Index

Obituaries
State/Local
Religion
Community
Sports
Televion
Classifieds
Comics and Puzzles
World news

2
3
4
5
6-8
9
10
11
12

DELPHOS - Old Man


Winter has made a grand yet
brutal entrance back into our
daily lives and the time is
now to be reminded of those
helpful driving skills we need
to navigate through the blustery driving conditions and
be prepared for a roadside
emergency.
AAA Ohio Auto Clubs
Senior Public Relations
Manager Kimberly Schwind
said the first snow of the season led to a triple call volume in the number of roadside assistance calls the club
normally sees during a typical
morning.
Close to 50 percent of
the calls were tows for people who spun out on wintry
roads, Schwind said.
She said motorists should
use these winter driving tips to
stay safe and on the road:
Stop gradually on ice or
snow and never slam on the
brakes;
When skidding, motorists should take their feet off
the pedals and keep their eyes
focused on where they want to
go, instead of on the obstacle
theyre trying to avoid;
Keep sufficient distance
between vehicles; and
Leave early and expect
trips to take longer in bad
weather.
Even the most careful
drivers may become stranded
on winter roads, Schwind
explained. Motorists can be
prepared with an emergency
roadside kit which can help
them while they wait for help
to arrive.
AAA recommends motorists keep these items in an
Emergency Roadside Kit
secured in their vehicle:
See HAZARDS, page 12

Most US unemployed dont get benefits: Heres why


WASHINGTON (AP) Even
though the U.S. job market is gaining
strength, there are still a lot of unemployed Americans. Yet only a fraction
of them are receiving financial aid
from the government.
Fewer than 25 percent of those
out of work are signed up for weekly unemployment benefits, a nearrecord low since the government
began tracking this data in 1987.
Thats a sharp turnaround from just
after the recession, when as many as
three-quarters of those out of work
received help, a record high.

The drop counters a common


assumption that most of those out of
work receive unemployment benefits.
It is partly a sign of an improving
job market: Layoffs have plummeted
and Americans seem more confident
in their prospects for finding a job.
But the drop also reflects the fact
that state and federal benefit programs have been downsized from
where they were just a few years ago.
Unemployment benefits had been
extended nationwide for as long as
99 weeks in 2009.
We cut back on the safety net

really sharply when the labor market is still damaged, said Josh
Bivens, director of research at the
Economic Policy Institute, a liberal
think tank.
In October, an average of 2.1 million people received benefits each
week, according to calculations by
the EPI. That is equal to just 23.3
percent of the nearly 9 million who
were out of work, and is just above
Septembers 23.2 percent, the alltime low.
On Thursday, the government said
291,000 people applied for benefits

last week, the 10th straight week that


applications were below 300,000.
That suggests the number of recipients will remain low.
The unemployment insurance program is administered and mostly paid
for by states. Workers who lose their
jobs through no fault of their own are
eligible for up to 26 weeks of aid in
most states. The weekly checks average about $300.
Here are five things to know about
the drop-off in benefits:
See BENEFITS, page 12

2 The Herald

www.delphosherald.com

Friday, November 21, 2014

For The Record

Mike Nichols, crafter of


films, plays, dies at 83
NEW YORK (AP) A legend of film, theater and comedy
in nearly equal measure, Mike
Nichols was an unquestioned fixture of smart, urbane American
culture across a relentlessly versatile, six-decade career that on
stage or screen, reliably coursed
with crackling intelligence.
Nichols won nine Tonys,
an Oscar, several Emmys and a
Grammy. He made up the lanky
half of his groundbreaking comic
duo with Elaine May. As a director,
he made countless performers
from Dustin Hoffman to Melanie
Griffith into stars. To acclaim, he

LOCAL GRAINS
Wheat
Corn
Soybeans

$5.21
$3.35
$10.04

adapted Edward Albee, Neil Simon,


Tony Kushner and Arthur Miller.
Nichols, who died Wednesday
night in New York at 83, was
a supreme orchestrator of material, talent and taste. In films like
The Graduate, Whos Afraid
of Virginia Woolf? and Carnal
Knowledge, he left not only a
firm stamp of authorship, but with
a dry wit and a classical eye,
he choreographed caustic social
commentaries of couples drunk
with bitterness, bored with regret
and apprehensive in flight.
I keep coming back to it, over
and over: adultery and cheat-

The Delphos
VAN WERT COURT NEWS
Herald
INFORMATION SUBMITTED

Two individuals appeared Thursday before


Judge Charles Steele for probation violations:
Luke Reinhart, 35, Van Wert, admitted
to violating his probation by failing to report
to probation since July 2013 and by failing a
drug test in July 2013.
He was sentenced to serve the balance of
his prison sentence of fours years for each of
two counts of aggravated vehicular homicide,
consecutive, for a total of eight years. He was
given credit for 2,047 days already served.
Kari Hatfield, 24, Van Wert, admitted
to violating her probation for burglary and
possession of drugs by failing to report to
probation and by violating her electronic
house arrest by being out of range without
permission.
Her case was continued for sentencing on
Dec. 2.

ing, Nichols, who was divorced


three times before marrying ABC
News Diane Sawyer in 1988, said
last year. Its the most interesting
problem in the theater. How else
do you get Oedipus? Thats the
first cheating in the theater.
Meryl Streep, who stared
in Nichols Silkwood and
Heartburn, recalled him as
a director who cried when he
laughed, a friend without whom,
well, we cant imagine our world.
Steven
Spielberg
called
Nichols passing a seismic loss.
See NICHOLS, page 12

FROM THE ARCHIVES

BIRTHS

One Year Ago


ST. RITAS
Members of the Do-Right Motorcycle
A boy was born Nov. 19 to
Megan and Thomas Theobald Club recently made their annual donation to the Delphos Community Christmas
of Venedocia.
Project. Participating in the presentation
of $11,200 were Do-Right Dee Helms,
Community Christmas Project representative Tina Link and Do- Rights Jared Tiny
Fisher, Don Ardner, Sr., and Carol Boop.

Delphos St. Johns


Week of Nov. 24-28
Monday: Popcorn chicken/whole grain roll, green
beans, Romaine salad, pears, fresh fruit, milk.
Tuesday: BBQ pork sandwich, whole grain bun,
carrots, Romaine salad, turnover, fresh fruit, milk.
Wednesday: No school. Thanksgiving break.
Thursday: No school. Thanksgiving break.
Friday: No school. Thanksgiving break.
Delphos City Schools
Week of Nov. 24-28
Monday: Salisbury steak, dinner roll, mashed
potatoes with gravy, fruit, milk.
Tuesday: Soft taco, lettuce and cheese, refried
beans, carrots, fruit, milk.
Wednesday: No school. Thanksgiving break.
Thursday: No school. Thanksgiving break.
Friday: No school. Thanksgiving break.
Jennings Local Schools
Week of Nov. 24-28
High school: Additional fruit and vegetable daily.
High school: A la carte pretzel and cheese every
Friday and salad bar every Wednesday. White,
chocolate or strawberry milk offered daily.
Monday: Chicken noodles over mashed potatoes,
peas, dinner roll, fruit.
Tuesday: Cheesy rotini, breadstick, mixed vegetables, fruit.
Wednesday: Hot ham sandwich, ham and bean
soup, cocoa bar, fruit.
Thursday: No school. Thanksgiving break.
Friday: No school. Thanksgiving break.
Ottoville Local Schools
Week of Nov. 24-28
Monday: Pizza, corn, pineapple, milk.
Tuesday: No school. Thanksgiving break.
Wednesday: No school. Thanksgiving break.
Thursday: No school. Thanksgiving break.
Friday: No school. Thanksgiving break.
Spencerville
Week of Nov. 24-28
Daily choices: M-W-F: Peanut butter and jelly
sandwich; T-Th: sub sandwich. These choices will
include daily veggie and fruit. 4th grade: Choice
of daily salad.
Monday: Turkey and noodles, mashed potatoes/
gravy, carrots and dip, yum yum cake, fall applesauce, milk.
Tuesday: Buckeye burger sandwich, beat
Michigan baked beans, Brutus broccoli and dip,
marching band mixed fruit, dot the i ice cream
cup, milk.
Wednesday: No school. Thanksgiving break.
Thursday: No school. Thanksgiving break.
Friday: No school. Thanksgiving break.

When submitting a

DIGITAL
PHOTO

25 Years Ago 1989


Jackie OConnor and Cindy Grothouse,
two Elida Middle School teachers, presented their award-winning project recently
at the 11th Career Education Association
Conference in Columbus. Last spring these
teachers received a special career education award from Apollo Career Center for
their project with learning disabled students and Johnny Appleseed Park.
A formal pledge service was conducted for new member Bonnie Myer
at a recent meeting of Tau Chapter of
Alpha Delta Omega Sorority. President
Janice Sherrick and vice president Char
Hotz were in charge. It was decided
that Christmas dinner will be Dec. 12
at Stagecoach Restaurant, Van Wert. A
gift exchange will follow in the home of
Marge Morris.
Essay winners of Voice of Democracy
Essay contest will be attending the
Ottoville Veterans of Foreign Wars
Auxiliary Christmas dinner on Dec. 12
to read their essays and receive awards.
Seventeen members attended the recent
meeting with President Ruth Grote presiding. Barb Wannemacher reported that 17
fruit plates were taken to Ottoville parishioners in nursing homes on Veterans Day.
50 Years Ago 1964
Delphos residents contributed almost
25 pints over the 125-pint quota set for the
Bloodmobile visit here Thursday. There
were 148 pints collected as a tribute to the
late Mrs. George Horine, who headed the
Red Cross chapter here for so many years.
The Thursday visit by the bloodmobile unit
had been dedicated to Mrs. Horine.
A Jay-C-Del meeting was held Thursday

FISCHBACH,
Victor
Vic J., 78, of Ottoville,
Mass of Christian Burial
will begin 10:30 a.m. today
at Immaculate Conception
Catholic Church, Ottoville,
the Rev. John Stowe officiating. Burial will follow
in St. Marys Cemetery,
Ottoville. Memorials may be
given to the activities department at Vancrest Nursing
Home. Condolences may be
expressed to: www.lovefuneralhome.com.
RICKER, Harold Rick,
82, of Tallahassee, Florida,
visitation with the family and friends will be held
from 5-7 p.m. today at LoveHeitmeyer Funeral Home,
Route 634 in Fort Jennings.
The funeral Mass will be held
at Immaculate Conception
Catholic Church in Ottoville
at 11 a.m. Saturday. Interment
will be at St. Marys
Cemetery in Ottoville. In
lieu of flowers, donations
can be made to Immaculate

There is a $22.50* charge for any


engagement announcement
with a photo.
*must be paid when submitting. Visa or Mastercard accepted*

For movie information, call

419.238.2100
or visit

vanwertcinemas.com
Van-Del drive-in
closed for the season

Four Seasons Dance Shoppe


803 Fairview Dr., Wapakoneta, Ohio 419-738-6611
www.facebook.com/FourSeasonsDanceShoppe

SHOP NOW FOR YOUR


SPECIAL DANCERS CHRISTMAS WISH LIST!

25%
off

thru Dec. 18.

405 North Main St.


TELEPHONE 695-0015
Office Hours
8 a.m.-5 p.m. Mon.-Fri.
POSTMASTER:
Send address changes
to THE DELPHOS HERALD,
405 N. Main St.
Delphos, Ohio 45833

CORRECTIONS

LOTTERY

WEATHER

Conception Catholic Church,


P.O. Box 296, Ottoville
OH 45876; or Big Bend
Hospice,
1723
Mahan
Center Blvd., Tallahassee
FL 32308. Condolences may
be expressed at lovefuneralhome.com.
GEDDINGS, Helen A.
(Weber), 92, of Delphos,
Mass of Christian burial will
begin at 11 a.m. Monday
at St. John the Evangelist
Catholic Church, the Rev.
Daniel Johnson officiating.
Burial will be in St. Marys
Cemetery in Ottoville, with
Military Grave Rites by the
Delphos Veterans Council.
Visitation will be from 2-5
p.m. Sunday at Harter and
Schier Funeral Home in
Delphos, where a Parish
Wake will begin at 5 p.m.
Memorial contributions may
be made to the Wounded
Warriors Project or Delphos
St. Johns Scholarship Fund.
To leave condolences, visit
harterandschier.com.

entire stock and


special orders

The
Delphos
Herald
(USPS 1525 8000) is published
daily except Sundays, Tuesdays
and Holidays.
The Delphos Herald is delivered by carrier in Delphos for
$1.82 per week. Same day
delivery outside of Delphos is
done through the post office
for Allen, Van Wert or Putnam
Counties. Delivery outside of
these counties is $117 per year.
Entered in the post office
in Delphos, Ohio 45833 as
Periodicals, postage paid at
Delphos, Ohio.

The Delphos Herald wants


to correct published errors in
its news, sports and feature
articles. To inform the newsroom of a mistake in published
information, call the editorial
department at 419-695-0015.
Corrections will be published
75 Years Ago 1939
Three travel talks were given Monday on this page.
evening at the Delphos Public Library
in keeping with Book Week. The first
travel was on a trip to Virginia by Mrs.
H. M. Viel. Mary Hardy, librarian at the
Brumback Library in Van Wert, gave the
second travel talk on a trip to the British
CLEVELAND (AP)
Isles. Grace Klein gave the third talk about
These Ohio lotteries were
a trip to Mexico.
The 1939-40 cage season for the drawn Thursday:
Mega Millions
Ottoville basketeers will open Wednesday
Estimated jackpot: $43
night when the Varsity and Reserve teams
see action at Ottawa against the St. Peter million
Pick 3 Evening
and Pauls forces. Ottoville will have little
8-0-5
difficulty in turning in wins over the
Pick 3 Midday
Ottawa teams as the Putnam County seat
4-6-0
aggregations are not regarded as particPick 4 Evening
ularly strong. On the other hand, the
9-8-8-3
Ottoville Varsity has a nice group of letterPick 4 Midday
man available and Coach L. W. Heckman
1-8-3-8
has every hope of turning out an excepPick 5 Evening
tional aggregation.
4-4-4-8-5
The members of the Delphos Jefferson
Pick 5 Midday
football squad were entertained Monday
8-8-0-5-4
night by the Mens Brotherhood of the
Powerball
Methodist Church. Harry D. Bellis served
Estimated jackpot: $70
as master of ceremonies. The program
opened with a trumpet duet by Don million
Rolling Cash 5
Weideman and Ed Link, and a piano solo
05-06-14-15-32
by Dane Heitzman. The male quartet of
Estimated
jackpot:
Dale Van Meter, John Deffenbaugh, Mel
Wilkins and Ed. Link performed before an $254,000
address by the coach.

FUNERALS

Please email the original jpg file


as an attachment to:
nspencer@delphosherald.com
Include the information
forBrand
the Name Styles
Quality
Shoes
picture along with a phone Dance
number
Dance Accessories
to contact with any questionsINinSTOCK!
the
email text.
The Delphos Herald charges $32.50*
for any wedding with a photo

evening in Jaycee Hall with the main topic


of business being a discussion about the
groups Christmas project. Party bridge
was played after the meeting with prizes going to Mrs. Jim Mesker and Mrs.
Robert Pothast. Hostesses were Mrs. James
Schimmoeller and Mrs. Stan Backus.
Lois Blankemeyer and Ann Grothouse
of Delphos, both seniors at St. Francis
College, Fort Wayne, have been honored
by being included in the 1964-65 edition of
Whos Who Among Students in American
Universities and Colleges. The college
submitted a list of 17 for outstanding
academic achievement and other campus
activities.

Nancy Spencer, editor


Ray Geary,
general manager
Delphos Herald, Inc.
Lori Goodwin Silette,
circulation manager

We now carry

STEVEN
STOMPERS

CLOGGING SHOES

DANCEWEAR & MORE

WEATHER FORECAST
Tri-County
Associated Press
TODAY: Mostly sunny. Highs in the mid 20s. Southwest
winds 5 to 10 mph. Wind chills zero to 10 above zero in the
morning.
TONIGHT: Partly cloudy through midnight. Then cloudy
with a 40 percent chance of freezing rain after midnight. Lows
around 20. South winds 5 to 15 mph.
SATURDAY: Cloudy. Chance of light rain or slight chance
of light freezing rain in the morning. Then chance of rain in the
afternoon. Not as cold. Highs in the lower 40s. South winds 15
to 20 mph. Chance of measurable rain 40 percent.
SATURDAY NIGHT: Cloudy with a 50 percent chance of
rain. Not as cool. Lows in the upper 30s. South winds 10 to
15 mph.
SUNDAY: Rain. Highs around 50. Chance of rain 80 percent.
SUNDAY NIGHT: Rain likely. Lows in the upper 40s.
Chance of rain 70 percent.
MONDAY: Rain likely in the morning. Then rain and snow
likely in the afternoon. Highs in the lower 50s. Chance of rain
and snow 60 percent.

OVI checkpoint planned


in Allen County tonight
INFORMATION
SUBMITTED

LIMA - The Ohio State


Highway Patrol announced
today that an OVI checkpoint
will be held in Allen County
on Friday evening.
The OVI checkpoint, funded by federal grant funds, is
planned to deter and intercept
impaired drivers.
Based on provisional
data, there were 918 fatal
crashes in which 990 people were killed last year in
Ohio, of which 30 percent
of those were alcohol-related, Sergeant Tim Grigsby,
Assistant Commander of
the Lima Post, said. State
Troopers make on average

25,000 OVI arrests each


year in an attempt to combat
these dangerous drivers. OVI
checkpoints are designed to
not only deter impaired driving, but to proactively remove
these dangerous drivers from
our roadways.
This
checkpoint
is
being dedicated to Antonia
Doster, who, at age 21, was
killed by an impaired driver
on July 13, 2011. Motorists
coming through the checkpoint will be provided
information on Antonia to
remind them the reason for
the effort to end impaired
driving.
The location of the checkpoint will be announced this
morning.

Friday, November 21, 2014

www.delphosherald.com

The Herald 3

STATE/LOCAL

Girl Scouts offer


Fall Break Day
Camp in Van Wert
INFORMATION
SUBMITTED
VAN WERT Local
girls are invited to participate in Girl Scouts Fall Break
Day Camp and spend their
time having a blast, making new friend, and learning
new skills. The camp takes
place MondayWednesday
at Trinity United Methodist
Church in Van Wert. Courses
are from 9 a.m.3 p.m.
Girls can sign up for each
day or all three to explore topics like yoga and fashion. The
cost is just $15 for non-registered Girl Scouts and free for
current Girl Scouts. Financial
assistance is available.
Those interested can contact Lynn Bryan at 419-2254085 or lynnbryan@gswo.org
for details.

Van Wert County


Financial Aid Night
set for Dec. 10
INFORMATION
SUBMITTED
VAN WERT An informational meeting for parents/
guardians of senior students
regarding financial aid has
been set for Dec. 10.
The Office of Student
Services has arranged for
Lawrence Matthews of Bluffton
University to present on the
financial aid process. Matthews
will explain the step-by-step
procedures in completing the
FAFSA (Free Application for
Federal Student Aid).
In addition, Seth Baker,
executive secretary of the Van
Wert County Foundation, will
explain the requirements and
application procedures for
securing grants.
Plan to attend this important meeting to be held from
6:30-8:15 p.m. Dec. 10 in the
Niswonger Performing Art
Center-Lecture Hall. Anyone
unable to attend should contact their high school guidance
counselor for more information.

Report: System
to check bus
drivers flawed
COLUMBUS (AP) A
flawed notification system
allows some school bus drivers charged with crimes to
stay on the job without the
districts or parents knowing,
according to a central Ohio
TV news report.
WBNS-TV in Columbus
reported Thursday that the
Ohio Department of Education
has a notification system that
automatically alerts school
districts of bus driver charges
and convictions. But because
the system is triggered when
the drivers are fingerprinted,
weeks or months can go by
before the system is triggered.
Some people charged with
misdemeanors arent fingerprinted by police at all.
Even when fingerprints are
taken, the station found several instances when the system failed and notification was
delayed. The station found bus
drivers arrested after they were
hired for crimes including theft,
assault and domestic violence.
The Ohio attorney generals office said an improved
system will be launched by
the end of November.
One man who drives for
Columbus city schools was
accused in April of pointing
a gun at his wifes head. He
pleaded guilty to aggravated
menacing but was still driving
kids to school. The state notification system failed to notify
Columbus City Schools of his
record. He resigned Wednesday.

Humane Society fundraisers announced


INFORMATION SUBMITTED

VAN WERT Good old Santa Paws is


coming to town and stopping to pose with
pets at 540 Martial Arts at 134 E. Main St.,
Van Wert, from 10 a.m. to 2 p.m. Dec. 13.
Come get your fur kids (or your
childrens) picture taken with Santa and
the Grinch, said Shad Robison of 540
Martial Arts. Photos are free. However,
donations to the Van Wert County Humane
Society are encouraged and appreciated.
540 Martial Arts is a Van Wert-based
school offering classes for youth and
adults specializing in Karate and Tae
Kwon Do. Photo sessions are being
donated by Gibbys Photo (137 E. Main
St., Van Wert). Bring your pets on a leash.
Also on Dec. 13, dine at Bob Evans
(761 W. Ervin Road, Van Wert) and
support the Van Wert County Humane
Society. The restaurant will donate 15
percent of its sales to the animal shelter
that day. Diners must present a community
fundraiser flyer at the time of purchase.
The flyer is available on the Shelter Pets of
Van Wert and Van Wert County Humane
Shelter Facebook pages. Dining donation
hours are between 6:30 a.m. and 9:30 p.m.
We are making great strides in
improving conditions at the Van Wert
County Humane Society animal shel-

ter, said newly-appointed Board Vice


President Pete Weir. Van Wert City and
County officials have offered support, as
have communities throughout northwest
Ohio and northeast Indiana. We are building on the best practices and policies of
our neighboring shelter communities.
A newly-formed humane society board
holds extensive meetings every other week
to update policy, create new adoption and
volunteer applications and establish new
adoption procedures; all with the intention
of protecting the 40-50 dogs and cats taken
in by the shelter each month. Improvement
projects under way include the installation
of fencing to increase the animals exercise
area, the furnishing of large metal cabinets
for shelter storage and the addition of surveillance/security equipment.
The Humane Society board communicates weekly with Van Wert County
Sheriff Tom Riggenbach. Riggenbach
provides weekly reports from Deputy
Sergeant Randy Averesch who serves as
newly-appointed dog warden.
Community organizations are also
pitching in. The Van Wert County Chamber
of Commerces fall 2014 leadership class
will make improvements to the Humane
Society office and shelter. Local Scout
Troop 35, in partnership with the First
Presbyterian Church, will make yard exer-

cise equipment for the animals. Vantage


Career Center students are currently creating a humane society website to promote
the profiles of animals available for adoption and access to necessary shelter forms.
Recent individual contributors
include Avery Amweg, a local child,
who donated pet supplies collected in
lieu of gifts at her recent birthday party,
and Grace Doctor, who raised $151.12
from a Van Wert Middle School project
and donated it to the shelter.
There is much work to be done. The Van
Wert County Humane Society is in need of
volunteers and donations. Applications are
available on the shelters Facebook page
and by contacting the shelter directly.
Donations needed include the following:
240 feet of 6-foot-tall chain link fencing and horizontal support poles, 35 posts,
and three 6-foot gates.
Large metal cabinets for storage
Surveillance/security equipment
Metal or plastic cat cages
Office desk and two chairs
Counters for around the sink in kennel
Anyone who has any of these items to
donate is urged to contact the shelter.
For more information, contact the Van
Wert County Humane Society at 419-2385088 or Weir at 419-203-5212 / weirbuckeyes@roadrunner.com.

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Youth deer-gun season set for this weekend


INFORMATION SUBMITTED

COLUMBUS Ohios 12th annual youth white-tailed


deer hunting season gives young hunters the opportunity to
pursue the states most popular big-game animal on Saturday
and Sunday, according to the Ohio Department of Natural
Resources (ODNR).
The youth deer-gun season is open to hunters with a valid
youth hunting license and a deer permit. Youth hunters must
be 17 years old or younger at the time they purchase
their youth hunting license.
Deer can be hunted with a shotgun using slugs,
a muzzleloader .38 caliber or larger, a handgun .357
caliber or larger, specific straight-walled cartridge
rifles and bows during these two days. Go to wildohio.gov for a complete list of legal straight-walled
cartridge rifles.
All participants must wear hunter orange, possess
a valid Ohio youth hunting license as well as a deer
permit and they must be accompanied in the field by a nonhunting adult. One adult may accompany no more than two
youth hunters. Deer can be hunted from 30 minutes before
sunrise to 30 minutes after sunset for all seasons. Youth hunters checked 6,645 deer during the 2013 season.
Youth hunters can commemorate their achievement with
a First Harvest certificate, available at wildohio.gov. Parents
can upload a photo and type in the hunters information to
personalize the certificate. Hunters can also share photos by

clicking on the Photo Gallery tab online.


Deer bag limits are determined by county (see attached
bag limit map). The statewide bag limit is nine deer, but a
hunter cannot exceed a county bag limit. Hunters may harvest only one buck in Ohio, regardless of method of take or
location.
Antlerless permit use was changed for the deer hunting
seasons, and these permits are no longer valid in some counties (see attached bag limit map). Antlerless permits are valid
in the remaining counties until Nov. 30, the Sunday
before the deer-gun season. Only one antlerless
permit may be used per county, regardless of the
bag limit.
Hunters are required to make their own game tag
to attach to a deer. Game tags can be made of any
material (cardboard, plastic, paper, etc.) as long as it
contains the hunters name, date, time and county of
the kill. Go to the Deer Hunting Resources page at
wildohio.gov for more information about the game
check process.
All other regularly scheduled hunting seasons will continue during the two-day youth deer season. All hunters (except
waterfowl hunters) are required to wear hunter orange during this time. More information can be found in the 2014-15
Ohio Hunting and Trapping Regulations and at wildohio.gov.
ODNR ensures a balance between wise use and protection
of our natural resources for the benefit of all. Visit the ODNR
website at ohiodnr.gov.

Heartbeat bill re-emerges for panel vote


COLUMBUS (AP)
Stringent abortion restrictions
resurfaced for a committee
vote in the Ohio House on
Thursday, leading to raised
voices and pounding gavels
at a hastily-called hearing.
The so-called heartbeat
bill was a late addition to the
House Health Committees
calendar and was scheduled
for a vote before lunch. The
bill would restrict most abortions at the first detectable
fetal heartbeat, which can be
as early as six weeks into
pregnancy.
The divisive measure had

languished without a hearing since it was introduced


more than a year ago. A
nearly identical bill cleared
the House in 2011 but was
stopped in the state Senate.
Abortion rights advocates
attacked the measure during
Thursdays hearing as unnecessary, dangerous and misogynist, and the American Civil
Liberties Union warned
it would draw an immediate, costly legal challenge if
passed.
Some lawmakers called
abortion murder and defended their right as public ser-

vants to protect human life.


Chairman
Lynn
Wachtmann, a Republican
from Napoleon, allowed
questioning to stray into witnesses beliefs on when life
begins and whether one witness had children of his own.
He then repeatedly gaveled
discussion out of order.
At one point, Rep. Nickie
Antonio,
a
Lakewood

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VAN WERT, OH 45891

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Women delivered heartwrenching testimony on both
sides of the debate.
One woman brought gifts
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high school student.

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Friday, November 21, 2014

4 The Herald

Is this Pope Catholic? The debate heats up

With Catholic leaders still sweating after


the Extraordinary Synod on the Family firestorm, Pope Francis has once again tried to
cool things down -- by publicly affirming core
church doctrines.
The question, however, was whether
Catholics could balance edgy front-page headlines about sex, divorce, cohabitation, homosexuality and modern families with the pontiffs orthodox sermons, which have received
very little ink in the mainstream press.
We know that today marriage and the
family are in crisis, said Pope Francis, opening this weeks Vatican conference on The
Complementarity of Man and Woman in
Marriage. It drew 300 leaders from many
world religions, including Islam, Judaism,
Hinduism and several branches of Christianity.
Rather than yielding to the culture of the
temporary, the pope said, its time to stress
that children have a right to grow up in a
family with a father and a mother. ... Do not
fall into the trap of being swayed by political
notion. Family is an anthropological fact -- a
socially and culturally related fact. We cannot qualify it based on ideological notions or
concepts important only at one time in history.
We cant think of conservative or progressive
notions.
These words came days after an address to
the Association of Italian Catholic Doctors in
which Pope Francis attacked any false com-

TERRY MATTINGLY

On
Religion
passion that rationalizes abortion, euthanasia
and the use of human beings as guinea pigs.
So many times in my life as a priest, I
have heard objections. ... Why is the church
opposed to abortion? for example. Its a religious problem? No, no. It is not a religious
problem. ... Its a scientific problem, because
there is a human life and it is not lawful to
take out a human life to solve a problem, he
said. The same truth applies to euthanasia. ...
This is to say to God, No, the end of life, I do
as I want to.
This latest media drama resembles what
happened after the famous interview in
America and other Jesuit publications in
which Francis said, We cannot insist only on
issues related to abortion, gay marriage and
the use of contraceptive methods. Rather, he
added, the church cannot be obsessed with
the transmission of a disjointed multitude of
doctrines to be imposed insistently.

Those words have been frequently quoted


as evidence that Pope Francis is seeking a
ceasefire in public efforts to defend church
doctrines. Yet shortly after that interview, he
bluntly told physicians that Catholics must
keep proclaiming: Each child who is unborn,
but is unjustly condemned to be aborted, bears
the face of Jesus Christ, bears the face of the
Lord, who, even before he was born, and then
as soon as he was born, experienced the rejection of the world.
Angered by this confusion, many Catholics
have blamed the media, arguing that the
popes words ring true when read in context.
Others are more critical, saying that this charismatic pope means well, but is naive about
how off-the-cuff remarks will be heard in the
public square. On the edges of cyberspace, a
few critics hint that he is a liberal Machiavelli
who is steering the church toward publicrelations icebergs to force massive doctrinal
changes.
A key moment in recent debates came
when New York Times columnist Ross
Douthat, a doctrinally conservative Catholic,
noted that Pope Francis has repeatedly signaled a desire to rethink issues where Catholic
teaching is in clear tension with Western
social life -- sex and marriage, divorce and
homosexuality.
Any open rejection of established doctrine,
he warned in the worlds most powerful news-

paper, would put the church on the brink of


a precipice. ... It would sow confusion among
the churchs orthodox adherents -- encouraging doubt and defections, apocalypticism and
paranoia (remember there is another pope still
living!) and eventually even a real schism.
One thing is certain, said Russell Shaw,
former communications director for the U.S.
bishops. The Pope Francis honeymoon may
not be over, but its evolving.
Respect for the papacy guarantees that
questioning and criticism in the Catholic
mainstream will be more muted, and the
media coverage, if at all responsible,
will mirror that, he noted in an essay on
TheCatholicThing.org. But the pluses for the
media in a less adoring approach to Francis
are obvious. Factual reporting and fact-based
analysis are what they exist for.
Fairness is all. Cheerleading isnt part of
a journalists job description. Not even cheerleading for a pope.
(Terry Mattingly is the director of the
Washington Journalism Center at the Council
for Christian Colleges and Universities and
leads the GetReligion.org project to study
religion and the news.)
COPYRIGHT
UCLICK

2014

UNIVERSAL

Our local churches invite you to join them for their activities and services.

dElphos

ST. PAULS UNITED


METHODIST
335 S. Main St. Delphos
Pastor - Rev. Rich Rakay
Sunday
9:00
a.m.
Worship Service

DELPHOS BAPTIST
CHURCH
Pastor Jerry Martin
302 N Main, Delphos
419-692-0061 or 419-302-6423
TRINITY UNITED
Sunday - 10:00 a.m. Sunday
METHODIST CHURCH
School (All Ages) , 11:00 a.m.
211 E. Third St., Delphos
Sunday Service, 6:00 p.m Sunday
Rev. Rich Rakay, Pastor
Evening Service
Week beginning Nov. 23, 2014
Wednesday - 7:00 p.m. Bible
Sunday - 8:15 a.m. Worship
Study, Youth Study
Service; 9:15 a.m. Sunday School
Nursery available for all
Classes for All Ages; 10:30
services.
Worship Service; 11:30 Radio
Worship on WDOH; 12:00 noon
FIRST UNITED
Laborers R Us Celebration Lunch;
PRESBYTERIAN
5:30 p.m. Jr. High Youth; 7:00
310 W. Second St.
p.m. Sr. High Youth; 7:30 p.m.
419-692-5737
Ladies Bible Fellowship
Pastor Harry Tolhurst
Wednesday -1:30 p.m. UMW
Sunday: 11:00 Worship Service
General Meeting; 7:00 p.m.
- Everyone Welcome
Chancel Choir.
Communion first Sunday of
Thursday - 4:30 p.m.-6:30 p.m.
every month.
Communion at Van Crest Health Suppers on Us.
Friday - 3:00 p.m. Mustard Seeds
Care Center - First Sunday of each
Office Hours: Monday thru
month at 2:30 p.m., Nursing Home
Friday - 8:00 a.m.-12 p.m. and 1:00
and assisted living.
p.m.-5:00 p.m..
MARION BAPTIST CHURCH
2998 Defiance Trail, Delphos
419-339-6319
Services: Sunday - 11:00 a.m.
and 6:00 p.m.; Wednesday - 7:00
p.m.
FIRST ASSEMBLY OF GOD
Where Jesus is Healing
Hurting Hearts!
808 Metbliss Ave., Delphos
One block so. of Stadium Park.
419-692-6741
Lead Pastor - Dan Eaton
Sunday - 10:30 a.m. - Worship
Service with Nursery & Kids
Church; 6:00 pm. Youth Ministry
at The ROC & Jr. Bible Quiz at
Church
Monday - 7:00 p.m. Teen Bible
Quiz at Church
Wednesday - 7:00 p.m.
Discipleship Class
in Upper
Room
For more info see our website:
www.delphosfirstassemblyofgod.
com.
DELPHOS WESLEYAN CHURCH
11720 Delphos Southworth Rd.
Delphos - Phone 419-695-1723
Pastor Rodney Shade
937-397-4459
Asst. Pastor Pamela King
419-204-5469
Sunday - 10:30 a.m. Worship;
9:15 a.m. Sunday School for all
ages.
Wednesday - 7 p.m. Service
and prayer meeting.

ST. JOHNS CATHOLIC


CHURCH
331 E. Second St., Delphos
419-695-4050
Fr. Ron Schock &
Fr. Daniel Johnson.
Deacons: Fred Lisk, Dave Ricker
and John Sheeran
Mary
Beth
Will,
Liturgical Coordinator;
Tom
Odenweller,
Parish
Council
President; Lynn Bockey, Music
Director
Celebration of the Sacraments
Eucharist Lords Day
Observance; Saturday 4:30 p.m.,
Sunday 7:30, 9:15, 11:30 a.m.;
Weekdays as announced on
Sunday bulletin.
Baptism Celebrated first
Sunday of month at 1:00 p.m. Call
rectory to schedule Pre-Baptismal
instructions.
Reconciliation Tuesday and
Friday 7:30-7:50 a.m.; Saturday
3:30-4:00 p.m.
Anytime by
request.
Matrimony Arrangements
must be made through the rectory
six months in advance.
Anointing of the Sick
Communal celebration in May
and October. Administered upon
request.

landECk
ST. JOHN THE BAPTIST
CHURCH

Landeck - Phone: 419-692-0636


Administrative aide:
DELPHOS CHRISTIAN
Rita Suever
UNION
Masses: 8:30 a.m. Sunday.
Pastor: Rev. Gary Fish
Sacrament of Reconciliation:
470 S. Franklin St.,
Saturday.
(419) 692-9940
Newcomers register at parish.
9:30 Sunday School
Marriages: Please call the par10:30 Sunday morning serish house six months in advance.
vice.
Youth
ministry
every Baptism: Please call the parish
Wednesday from 6-8 p.m.
Childrens ministry every
pEnCErVillE
third Saturday from 11 to 1:30.

ST. PETER LUTHERAN


CHURCH
422 North Pierce St., Delphos
Phone 419-695-2616
Rev. Steve Nelson
Sunday - 9 AM Sunday School;
10:00 AM Worship Service; 11:00
AM Choir Practice.
Wednesday - 7:00 PM Worship
Service.
Thursday - Office closed Thanksgiving day.
Friday
- Office closed Thanksgiving day.
Saturday - 8 AM Prayer
Breakfast

RAABE FORD
LINCOLN

11260 Elida Road


DELPHOS, OH 45833
Ph. 692-0055
Toll Free 1-800-589-7876

ST. PATRICKS CHURCH


500 S. Canal, Spencerville
419-647-6202

Saturday
4:30
p.m.
Reconciliation; 5 p.m. Mass, May
1 - Oct. 30. Sunday - 10:30 a.m. Mass

SPENCERVILLE
FULL GOSPEL
107 Broadway St., Spencerville
Pastor Charles Muter
Home Ph. 419-657-6019
Sunday: Morning Services 10:00 a.m. Evening Services - 7:00
p.m.
Wednesday: 7:00 p.m. Worship
service.

Alexander &
Bebout Inc.

419-238-9567

10098 Lincoln Hwy.


Van Wert, OH
www.AlexanderBebout.com

UNITED CHURCH OF CHRIST


102 Wisher Drive, Spencerville
Rev. Michael Cassady, Pastor
Sunday 9:30 a.m. Cafe; 10:00
a.m. Worship Service.

SPENCERVILLE CHURCH
OF THE NAZARENE
317 West North St.
419-296-2561
Pastor Tom Shobe
9:30 a.m. Sunday School;
10:30 a.m. Morning Worship; 7:00
p.m. Wednesday Service
TRINITY UNITED METHODIST
Corner of 4th & Main,
Spencerville
Phone 419-647-5321
Rev. Jan Johnson, Pastor
Christmas Eve services: 6:3 p.m.
Message - Christmas
Uncensred
Sunday - 9:30 a.m. Sunday
School; 10:30 a.m. Worship service.
AGAPE FELLOWSHIP
MINISTRIES
9250 Armstrong Road,
Spencerville
Pastors Phil & Deb Lee
Sunday - 10:00 a.m. Worship
service.
Wed. - 7:00 p.m. Bible Study
HARTFORD
CHRISTIAN CHURCH
(Independent Fundamental)
Rt. 81 and Defiance Trial
Rt. 2, Box 11550, Spencerville
Rev. Robert King, Pastor
Sunday - 9:30 a.m. Sunday
school; 10:30 a.m. Worship
Service; 7:00 p.m. Evening worship and Teens Alive (grades
7-12).
Wednesday - 7:00 p.m. Bible
service.
Tuesday & Thursday 7- 9
p.m. Have you ever wanted to
preach the Word of God? This
is your time to do it. Come share
your love of Christ with us.

Elida/GomEr
IMMANUEL UNITED
METHODIST CHURCH
699 Sunnydale, Elida, Ohio
Pastor Bruce Tumblin
Sunday - 8:30 a.m. traditional;
10:45 a.m. contemporary
CORNERSTONE BAPTIST
CHURCH
2701 Dutch Hollow Rd. Elida
Phone: 339-3339
Rev. Frank Hartman
Sunday - 10 a.m. Sunday
School (all ages); 11 a.m. Morning
Service; 6 p.m. Evening Service.
Wednesday - 7 p.m. Prayer
Meeting.
Office Hours: Monday-Friday,
8-noon, 1-4- p.m.
GOMER CONGREGATIONAL
CHURCH
7350 Gomer Road, Gomer
419-642-2681
gomererucc@bright.net
Sunday 10:00 a.m. Worship
NEW HOPE
CHRISTIAN CENTER
2240 Baty Road, Elida
Ph. 339-5673
Rev. James F. Menke, Pastor
Sunday 10 a.m. Worship.
Wednesday 7 p.m. Evening service.
LIGHTHOUSE
CHURCH OF GOD
Elida - Ph. 222-8054
Rev. Larry Ayers, Pastor
Service schedule: Sunday
10 a.m. School; 11 a.m. Morning
Worship; 6 p.m. Sunday evening.

HARTER
& SCHIER
FUNERAL
HOME
209 W. 3rd St.
Delphos, Ohio 45833
419-692-8055

ZION UNITED
METHODIST CHURCH
Corner of Zion Church &
Conant Rd., Elida
Pastor: David Howell
Nov. 23 Kossuth Zion UMC Give Thanks Psalm 100
Church Conference
Cridersville, Wed. Nov. 26 Thanksgiving Eve Service.
Nov. 23 Elida Zion UMC
Give Thanks Psalm 100 New members and Baptism,
Church Conference Cridersville,
Wed., Nov. 26 - Thanksgiving
Eve Service.
PIKE MENNONITE CHURCH
3995 McBride Rd., Elida
Phone 419-339-3961

FAITH BAPTIST
CHURCH
4750 East Road, Elida
Pastor - Brian McManus
Sunday 9:30 a.m. Sunday
School; 10:30 a.m. Worship,
nursery available.
Wednesday 6:30 p.m.
Youth Prayer, Bible Study; 7:00
p.m. Adult Prayer and Bible
Study; 8:00 p.m. - Choir

Van WErt County


BREAKTHROUGH
101 N. Adams St., Middle Point
Pastor Scott & Karen Fleming
Sunday Church Service - 10
a.m, 6 p.m.
Wednesday - 7:00 p.m.
CALVARY EVANGELICAL
CHURCH
10686 Van Wert-Decatur Rd.
Van Wert - 419-238-9426
Rev. Clark Williman. Pastor
Sunday- 8:45 a.m. Friends and
Family; 9:00 a.m. Sunday School
LIVE; 10:00 a.m.
SALEM UNITED
PRESBYTERIAN CHURCH
15240 Main St. Venedocia
Rev. Thomas Emery, Pastor
Church Phone: 419-667-4142
Sunday - 8:30 a.m. - Adult
Bell Choir; 8:45 a.m. Jr. Choir;
9:30 a.m. - Worship; 10:45 a.m. Sunday school.
Monday - 6 p.m. Senior Choir.
ST. MARYS CATHOLIC
CHURCH
601 Jennings Rd., Van Wert
Pastor: Rev. Stan Szybka
Sunday 8:30 a.m., 10:30 a.m.;
Monday 8:30 a.m.; Tuesday 7
p.m.; Wednesday 8:30 a.m.;
Thursday 8:30 a.m. - Communion
Service; Friday 8:30 a.m.;
Saturday 4 p.m.
VAN WERT VICTORY
CHURCH OF GOD
10698 US 127S., Van Wert
(Next to Tracys Auction Service)
Pastor: E. Long
Sunday worship & childrens
ministry - 10:00 a.m.
Wednesday Service: 7:00 p.m.
www.vwvcoh.com
facebook: vwvcoh
GRACE FAMILY CHURCH
634 N. Washington St., Van Wert
Pastor: Rev. Ron Prewitt
Sunday - 9:15 a.m. Morning
worship with Pulpit Supply.
KINGSLEY UNITED METHODIST
Ohio 709 and Mendon
Rd.Phone: 419-965-2771
Pastor Anthony Perry
Sunday School - 9:30 a.m.;
Worship - 10:25 a.m.
Wednesday - Youth Prayer and
Bible Study - 6:30 p.m.
Adult Prayer meeting - 7:00 p.m.
Choir practice - 8:00 p.m.

PITSENBARGER
SUPPLY
Professional Parts People

234 N. Canal St.


Delphos, O.
Ph. 692-1010

MIDDLE POINT UNITED


METHODIST
Corner of Jackson
and Mill Streets
Pastor - Tim Owens

MANDALE CHURCH OF CHRIST


IN CHRISTIAN UNION
Rev. Justin Sterrett, Pastor
Sunday 9:30 a.m. Sunday
School all ages. 10:30 a.m.
Worship Services; 7:00 p.m
Worship.
Wednesday - 7 p.m. Prayer
meeting.
TRINITY FRIENDS
CHURCH
605 N. Franklin St., Van Wert
Ph: (419) 238-2788
Sr. Pastor Stephen Savage
Outreach Pastor Neil Hammons
Sunday - Worship services at
9:00 a.m., 10:30 a.m. & 6:30 p.m.
Wednesday-Ministries at 7:00
p.m.
TRINITY LUTHERAN
303 S. Adams, Middle Point
Rev. Tom Cover
Sunday 9:30 a.m. Sunday
School; 10:30 a.m. Worship service.
FIRST BAPTIST CHURCH
13887 Jennings Rd., Van Wert
Ph. 419-238-0333
Childrens Storyline:
419-238-3476
Email: fbaptvw@bright.net
Pastor Steven A. Robinson
Sunday 9:30 a.m. Sunday
School for all ages; 10:30 a.m.
Family Worship Hour; 6:30 p.m.
Evening Bible Hour.
Wednesday - 6:30 p.m. Word
of Life Student Ministries; 6:45
p.m. AWANA; 7:00 p.m. Prayer
and Bible Study.
PENTECOSTAL WAY
CHURCH
Pastors: Bill Watson
Rev. Ronald Defore
1213 Leeson Ave.,
Van Wert 45891
Phone (419) 238-5813
Head Usher: Ted Kelly
10:00 a.m. - Sunday School
11:10 a.m. - Worship 10:00 a.m.
until 11:30 a.m. - Wednesday
Morning Bible Class 6:00 p.m.
until 7:00 p.m. - Wednesday
Evening Prayer Meeting
7:00 p.m. - Wed. Night Bible
Study.
Thursday - Choir Rehearsal
Anchored in Jesus Prayer
Line - (419) 238-4427 or (419)
232-4379.
Emergency - (419) 993-5855

ST. JOSEPH
CATHOLIC CHURCH
135 N. Water St., Ft. Jennings
Rev. Charles Obinwa
Phone: 419-286-2132
Mass schedule: Saturday 5
p.m.; Sunday 7:30 a.m. and 9:30
a.m.
ST. ANTHONY OF PADUA
CATHOLIC CHURCH
512 W. Sycamore,
Col. Grove
Office 419-659-2263
Fax: 419-659-5202
Father Tom Extejt
Masses: Tuesday-Friday - 8:00
a.m.; First Friday of the month
- 7 p.m.; Saturday - 4:30 p.m.;
Sunday - 8:30 a.m. and 11:00
a.m.
Confessions - Saturday 3:30
p.m., anytime by appointment.
HOLY FAMILY
CATHOLIC CHURCH
Rev. Robert DeSloover, Pastor
7359 St. Rt. 109 New Cleveland
Saturday Mass - 7:00 p.m.
Sunday Mass - 8:30 a.m.
IMMACULATE CONCEPTION
CATHOLIC CHURCH
Ottoville
Rev. Jerry Schetter
Mass schedule: Saturday - 4
p.m.; Sunday - 10:30 a.m.
ST. MICHAEL CHURCH
Kalida - Fr. Mark Hoying
Saturday 4:30 p.m. Mass.
Sunday 8:00 a.m. & 10:00 a.m.
Masses.
Weekdays: Masses on Mon.,
Tues., Wed. and Friday at 8:00
am; Thurs. 7:30 p.m.

pauldinG County
GROVER HILL
ZION UNITED METHODIST
CHURCH
204 S. Harrision St.
Grover Hill, Ohio 45849
Pastor Mike Waldron
419-587-3149
Cell: 419-233-2241
mwaldron@embarqmail.com

putnam County
CHURCH OF GOD
18906 Rd. 18R, Rimer
419-642-5264
Rev. Mark Walls
Sunday - 9:30 a.m. Sunday
School; 10:30 a.m. Worship
Service.
ST. BARBARA
CHURCH
160 Main St.,
Cloverdale 45827
419-488-2391
Rev. Jerry Schetter
Mass schedule: Saturday 5:30
p.m., Sunday 8:00 a.m.
FAITH MISSIONARY
BAPTIST CHURCH
Road U, Rushmore
Pastor Robert Morrison
Sunday
10 am Church
School; 11:00 Church Service;
6:00 p.m. Evening Service
Wednesday - 7:00 p.m. Evening
Service

BALYEATS
Coffee
Shop
133 E. Main St.
Van Wert
Ph. 419-238-1580
Hours: Closed Mondays
Tuesday-Saturday
6:00 a.m.-10:00 p.m.

We thank
the sponsors
of this
page and
ask you to
please
support them.

Vanamatic
Company
AUTOMATIC
AND HAND
SCREW MACHINE
PRODUCTS
701 Ambrose Drive
Delphos, O.

www.delphosherald.com

Friday, November 21, 2014

COMMUNITY

Paws to Consider

LANDMARK

Senior citizens, pets share


golden lives together
BY DR. BONNIE JONES, DVM

St. Josephs Church


Fort Jennings

CALENDAR OF
EVENTS

TODAY
7:30 a.m. Delphos
Optimist Club, A&W DriveIn, 924 E. Fifth St.
10 a.m. to 3 p.m. The
Delphos Museum of Postal
History, 339 N. Main St., is
open.
11 a.m.-4 p.m. Interfaith
Thrift Store is open for shopping.
11:30 a.m. Mealsite
at Delphos Senior Citizen
Center, 301 Suthoff St.
SATURDAY
9 a.m.-noon Interfaith
Thrift Store is open for shopping.
St. Vincent dePaul Society,
located at the east edge of the
St. Johns High School parking lot, is open.
10 a.m. to 2 p.m.
Delphos Postal Museum is
open.
12:15 p.m. Testing of
warning sirens by Delphos
Fire and Rescue.
1-3 p.m. The Delphos
Canal Commission Museum,
241 N. Main St., is open.
7 p.m. Bingo at St.
Johns Little Theatre.

was during visits with senior citizens who


commented that their current pets would
Many know I have a special affection for be their last. When each verbalized these
senior pets. I love golden oldies because sentiments, my heart sank, not only for the
by nature they have greater health care potential loss of my relationship with the
needs. As such, senior pet care is where pets owner, but for the absence of a pet in
veterinarians have an opportunity to excel the aging owners life.
I am an obvious observand employ their best eduer of the role pets play
cation and communication
in human lives, especially
abilities.
older pet owners. I have the
Perhaps the most essenongoing honor and privitial trait for a veterinarlege to witness the power
ian to possess is indeed
of pets as they improve
exceptional communicathe health and well-being
tion skills. A large part of
of their pet parents. Pets
our day, after all, is spent
make us exercise our mind,
talking to and teaching
body and hearts. They
proper pet care to pet owngive us purpose, a reason
ers. I enjoy this part of
to wake up, and a roumy job, especially when it
tine to carry out. Yet their
comes to senior citizens,
most powerful role is in the
for whom I also have a
completion of the humanspecial affection. For me,
animal bond, an indescribit doesnt get any better
Dr. Bonnie Jones, DVM
able phenomenon that I see
than a visit with a senior citiand enjoy on a daily basis.
zen who owns a senior pet.
So when my senior clients lament that a
I love that senior citizens appreciate
and experience the benefits of pet owner- pet will be their last, my soap box quickly
ship. However, I have been troubled by appears and I sharpen my communication
two events that transpired more than once skills. Growing older does not need to be
the end of pet ownership. On the contrary,
recently.
Because I am growing older with my it needs to be the beginning. Senior citizens
senior clients, I am also experiencing their can and should reap the benefits of adoptpassing. I am saddened by their departure, ing older pets, most of which reside in
for their loved ones, for myself, and for their shelters nearly four times longer than their
pets that are missing them. Many times there younger counterparts.
Older pets come with some important
is a surviving significant other who readily
steps in to continue the pets care and love. advantages. They are already housetrained,
However, it is sometimes obvious that the past the puppy chewing stage, and are usually calmer with lower energy. Older pet
survivor was not as active in the pets care.
While this may seem at first like a sad parents become fully engaged in their pets
scenario, it tends to turn out well as the care, too, which results in mood elevasignificant other quickly learns the pets tion, lower blood pressure and weight loss
quirks, routines and needs. A strong bond through increased exercise.
Part two of my soapbox speech then
is readily born out of the common loss of
a loved one. And, grief seems to be more addresses the senior citizens next concern
readily diminished by the distraction of for who will care for my pet when somecaring for anothers beloved and needy thing happens to me. I respond to this query
pet. Veterinarians can be instrumental in by explaining that, like many veterinarians,
fostering this relationship by assisting the I have seen this situation before, and things
survivor with knowledge about the pets always have a way of working out.
veterinary needs, habits and temperament.
See GOLDEN, page 12
The second event I have had recently

SUNDAY
1-3 p.m. The Delphos
Canal Commission Museum,
241 N. Main St., is open.
1-4 p.m. Putnam County
Museum is open, 202 E. Main
St. Kalida.
1:30 p.m. Amvets Post
698 Auxiliary meets at the
Amvets post in Middle Point.
4 p.m. Amvets Post 698
regular meeting at the Amvets
post in Middle Point.
7:30 p.m. Sons of
Amvets Post 698 meet at
on Point.
Amvets Post inmMiddle
The
mati

The Herald 5

At the movies ..

Van Wert Cinemas


10709 Lincoln Hwy., Van Wert
The Hunger Games: Mockingjay Part 1 (PG-13) Fri.:
4:30/7:00/9:15; Sat.: 1:00/3:30/6:00/8:30; Sun.: 2:00/4:30/7:00;
Mon.-Thurs.: 5:00/7:30
Dumb and Dumber To (PG-13) Fri.: 4:30/6:45/9:00; Sat.:
1:00/3:15/5:30/8:00; Sun.: 2:00/4:00/6:15/8:15; Mon.-Thurs.:
5:00/7:15
Interstellar (PG-13) Fri.: 4:30/8:00; Sat.: 1:00/4:15/7:30;
Sun.: 2:00/5:00/8:00; Mon.-Thurs.: 5:00/8:00
Big Hero 6 (PG) Fri.: 4:30/9:00; Sat.: 1:00/5:30; Sun.:
4:00/8:15; Mon. and Wed.: 5:00; Tues. and Thurs.: 7:15
Big Hero 6 3D (PG) Fri.: 6:45; Sat.: 3:15/8:00; Sun.:
2:00/6:15; Mon. and Wed.: 7:15; Tues. and Thurs.: 5:00
Ouija
(PG-13)
Fri.:
4:00/6:30/8:30;
Sat.:
1:00/3:00/5:00/7:00/9:00; Sun.: 2:00/4:00/6:00/8:00; Mon.Thurs.: 5:00/7:00
American Mall Stadium 12
2830 W. Elm St., Lima
Saturday and Sunday
The Hunger Games: Mockingjay Part 1 (PG-13) 10:00/10:
30/11:30/11:55/1:00/1:30/2:30/3:00/3:30/3:55/4:30/5:30/6:00/
6:30/7:00/7:30/8:00/8:30/10:00/10:30/11:00
Beyond the Lights (PG-13) 11:35/3:25/7:25/10:15
Dumb and Dumber To (PG-13) 11:00/11:25/1:40/2:10/4:20
/4:50/7:10/7:40/9:50/10:20
Big Hero 6 3D (PG) 11:40/2:20/5:00
Big Hero 6 (PG) 11:10/1:50/4:25/7:20/10:10
Interstellar (PG-13) 11:50/3:40/7:50/9:35
Ouija (PG-13) 9:55p
Fury (R) 11:45a
St. Vincent (PG-13) 11:05/1:45/4:15/6:55/10:25
Shannon Theater, Bluffton
Through Nov. 27
The Hunger Games: Mockingjay Part 1 (PG-13) premieres
at 12:01 a.m. Friday. Shows are every evening at 7 p.m. and
9:30 p.m. with 1:30 p.m. and 4 p.m. Saturday and Sunday
matinees.
Nov. 22
Kelsey Buettner
Charles Fletcher
Nov. 23
Dan Hermiller
Nick Mills
Delaney Deuel
Amanda Bohrer
NOV. 24
Greg Grothous
Ryan Weeden
Mandy Ulm
Josh Rose
Becky Hirn

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at Delphos Senior Citizen
Center, 301 Suthoff St.
6:30 p.m. Shelter from
the Storm support group
meets in the Delphos Public
Library basement.
7 p.m. Ottoville village
council meets at the municipal building.
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40544389E

O N LY
O N LY

40544389E

Description

AVA I L A B L E
AVA I L A B L E

HERE
HERE

FUEL SAVINGS VALID:

STOCKS

FRIDAY, SATuRDAY
& SuNDAY

Quotes of local interest supplied by


EDWARD JONES INVESTMENTS
Close of business November 20, 2014
LastPrice

AmericanElectricPowerCo.,Inc.
57.23
AutoZone,Inc.
567.50
BungeLimited
90.66
BPp.l.c.
41.77
CitigroupInc.
53.52
CenturyLink,Inc.
40.50
CVSHealthCorporation
89.25
DominionResources,Inc.
72.67
EatonCorporationplc
67.36
FordMotorCo.
15.46
FirstDefianceFinancialCorp.
29.96
FirstFinancialBancorp.
18.08
GeneralDynamicsCorporation
143.75
GeneralMotorsCompany
32.13
TheGoodyearTire&RubberCompany 26.20
HuntingtonBancsharesIncorporated
10.15
HealthCareREIT,Inc.
71.68
TheHomeDepot,Inc.
97.57
HondaMotorCo.,Ltd.
31.16
Johnson&Johnson
108.18
JPMorganChase&Co.
60.12
KohlsCorp.
58.34
LowesCompaniesInc.
62.43
McDonaldsCorp.
96.64
MicrosoftCorporation
48.70
Pepsico,Inc.
98.06
TheProcter&GambleCompany
88.47
RiteAidCorporation
5.52
SprintCorporation
4.83
TimeWarnerInc.
80.59
UnitedBancsharesInc.
14.60
U.S.Bancorp
43.91
VerizonCommunicationsInc.
50.19
Wal-MartStoresInc.
84.58
DowJonesIndustrialAverage
17,719.00
S&P500
2,052.75
NASDAQComposite
4,701.87

Change

-0.01
-1.01
+0.47
+0.23
-0.14
-0.08
-0.34
+0.21
+0.52
+0.02
+0.26
+0.15
+0.38
-0.02
+0.23
+0.03
+0.12
+0.87
+0.03
-0.58
-0.48
+0.94
+0.17
+0.08
+0.48
-0.35
-0.26
0.00
+0.12
-0.34
-0.15
+0.02
-0.30
-0.41
+33.27
+4.03
+26.16

25

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6 The Herald

Friday, November 21, 2014

OHSAA Football Regional Final/


State Semifinal Information
INFORMATION SUBMITTED
2014 OHSAA Football Playoffs
Third Round Pairings and State
Semifinal Pairings (sites announced
Sunday)
Pairings are shown with seeds
and records
Home Team Listed First
DIVISION I Regional Semifinals
Games at 7 p.m. Saturday
Region 1
1 Hudson (12-0) vs. 4 Mentor (11-1)
at University of Akron InfoCision Stadium
Summa Field
2 Lakewood St. Edward (10-2) vs.
3 Westerville Central (11-1) at Mansfield
Arlin Field
Region 2
16 West Chester Lakota
West (7-5) vs. 5 Huber
Heights Wayne (11-1) at
Dayton Welcome Stadium
2 Cincinnati St. Xavier
(10-2) vs. 6 Cincinnati
Archbishop Moeller (9-3) at
Mason Dwire Field at Atrium
Stadium
The regional finals in
Division I also serve as the state semifinals. The Region 2 champion will be the
home team in the 2014 state championship game (rotates each year between
Region 1 and Region 2 champion).
DIVISION II Regional Finals
Games at 7:30 p.m. today
Region 3: 1 Bedford (12-0) vs. 2
Mayfield (11-1) at Solon Stewart Field
Region 4: 1 Grafton Midview (120) vs. 2 Macedonia Nordonia (12-0) at
Brunswick Judy Kirsch Field at AutoMart
Stadium
Region 5: 1 Lewis Center Olentangy
(12-0) vs. 7 Dublin Scioto (8-4) at
Westerville Central Warhawk Field
Region 6: 1 Cincinnati LaSalle (11-1)
vs. 2 Cincinnati Mt. Healthy (12-0) at
Mason Dwire Field at Atrium Stadium
State Semifinals
Games at 7:30 p.m. Friday, Nov. 28
Region 3 vs. Region 4
Region 5 vs. Region 6
DIVISION III Regional Finals
Games at 7:30 p.m. today
Region 7: 1 Hubbard (12-0) vs. 2
Akron St. Vincent-St. Mary (10-2) at
Ravenna Gilcrest Field at Portage
Community Bank Stadium
Region 8: 1 Toledo Central Catholic
(10-2) vs. 2 Clyde (10-2) at Millbury Lake
Community Stadium
Region 9: 4 The Plains Athens (12-0)
vs. 7 Columbus St. Francis DeSales (102) at Logan Chieftain Stadium
Region 10: 1 Wapakoneta (12-0)
vs. 3 Trotwood-Madison (11-1) at Sidney
Memorial Stadium
State Semifinals
Games at 7:30 p.m. Friday, Nov. 28
Region 7 vs. Region 9
Region 8 vs. Region 10
DIVISION IV Regional Finals
Games at 7:30 p.m. today
Region 11: 1 Cleveland Benedictine
(11-1) vs. 7 Bay Village Bay (8-4) at
Parma Byers Field

Region 12: 4 Kenton (10-2) vs.


3 Wauseon (12-0) at Findlay Donnell
Stadium
Region 13: 1 Columbus Beechcroft
(11-1) vs. 3 Steubenville (9-3) at
Zanesville Sulsberger Stadium
Region 14: 1 Kettering Archbishop
Alter (12-0) vs. 2 Clarksville ClintonMassie (12-0) at Monroe Fighting Hornet
Stadium
State Semifinals
Games at 7:30 p.m. Friday, Nov. 28
Region 11 vs. Region 13
Region 12 vs. Region 14
DIVISION V Regional Finals
Games at 7 p.m. Saturday
Region 15: 1 Canton
Central Catholic (12-0) vs.
3 Youngstown Ursuline (8-4)
at Uniontown Lake Alumni
Field
Region 16: 4 Coldwater
(11-1) vs. 2 Findlay LibertyBenton (12-0) at Lima
Spartan Stadium
Region 17: 1 Columbus
Bishop Hartley (10-2) vs.
2 Wheelersburg (11-1) at
Chillicothe Herrnstein Field
Region 18: 1 Cincinnati Hills
Christian Academy (12-0) vs. 6 West
Jefferson (8-4) at West Carrollton Dayton
Outpatient Center Stadium
State Semifinals
Games at 7 p.m. Saturday
Region 15 vs. Region 17
Region 16 vs. Region 18
DIVISION VI Regional Finals
Games at 7:30 p.m. today
Region 19: 1 Loudonville (12-0) vs.
3 Kirtland (12-0) at Medina Ken Dukes
Stadium
Region 20: 1 Defiance Tinora (12-0)
vs. 3 Bucyrus Wynford (11-1) at DialRoberson Stadium at Ohio Northern
University, Ada
Region 21: 4 Centerburg (10-2) vs.
2 Lucasville Valley (10-2) at Gahanna
Lincoln Stadium
Region 22: 4 West Liberty-Salem
(11-1) vs. 3 Minster (9-3) at Piqua
Alexander Stadium, Purk Field
State Semifinals
Games at 7:30 p.m. Friday, Nov. 28
Region 19 vs. Region 21
Region 20 vs. Region 22
DIVISION VII Regional Finals
Games at 7 p.m. Saturday
Region 23: 1 Norwalk St. Paul (11-1)
vs. 2 Berlin Center Western Reserve (111) at InfoCision Field at Copley Stadium
Region 24: 1 Arlington (11-1) vs.
3 Columbus Grove (8-4) at Findlay
Donnell Stadium
Region 25: 1 Shadyside (11-0) vs.
2 Glouster Trimble (12-0) at Byesville
Meadowbrook Eugene Capers Field
Region 26: 1 Maria Stein Marion
Local (12-0) vs. 2 Sidney Lehman
Catholic (10-2) at Wapakoneta Harmon
Field
State Semifinals
Games at 7 p.m. Saturday, Nov. 29
Region 23 vs. Region 25
Region 24 vs. Region 26

SPORTS

www.delphosherald.com

Bulldogs eye stopping Rettig,


Red Devils in regional finals
By JIM METCALFE
DHI Media Sports Editor
jmetcalfe@delphosherald.com
Columbus Grove head coach Andy
Schafer and his coaching staff has had a
game plan the past two playoff wins of
shutting down a focal point player of its
opponents and forcing someone else to
beat them.
Last week it was Tiffin Calverts
Tyler Long, whom the Bulldogs stymied in a 17-7 victory in a Region 24
semifinal.
Saturday night, the job may be even
more difficult as Arlingtons bullish
Austin Rettig is the main cog in the Red
Devils offense.
However, he also has a pretty big
offensive line in front of him and a
blocking back to clear the way.
That is what faces third-seeded
Columbus Grove as they tangle with
top-seeded Arlington at 7 p.m. Saturday
on the turf of Findlays Donnell Stadium
in regional final action.
He is the main man in their offense.
They have a lead back in front of him,
even though they are still in the shotgun 90 percent of the time, Schafer
assessed. They use a 2-quarterback
system but one got hurt last week, so
his availability is in question. Rettig
does a nice job of setting up his blockers and being patient, just like our Joey
(Warnecke); I think that is more important than pure speed because he doesnt
take the big shot a lot. What is more
important is their size up front; they are
definitely bigger than we are. I thought
we were small compared to Tiffin last
week and Arlington is bigger.
At the same time, as you move on
in the tournament, teams have more than
one weapon, so you just cant sell out
completely in stopping one guy.
The Arlington (11-1, 5-1 in a
revamped
2-division
Blanchard
Valley Conference) offense comes
at the Bulldogs (8-4, 5-2 Northwest
Conference) with a 37-points-a-game
attack. Groves D gives us 19.8 but
has only ceded 32 the last five weeks.
Challenged to stop said offense are
the likes of junior linebacker Andrew
Nichols (47 solo stops, 97 assists, 15 for
loss), senior linebacker Warnecke (56

Columbus Grove sophomore defensive tackle Rece Roney pressures


Tiffin Calverts Drew Ritzler during Saturdays Region 24 semifinal at
Findlay. The Bulldogs will return to Donnell Stadium in Findlay this Saturday to take on top-seeded Arlington. (DHI Media/Charlie Warnimont)
and 73, 21), senior middle man Christian
Stechschulte (33 and 70, 16), junior
safety Logan Diller (24 and 58; 4 picks),
junior end Brandt Follas (35 and 46, 21;
9 sacks), freshman tackle Enoch Jones
(22 and 42), senior end Elisha Jones (19
and 42), senior safety Tanner From (7
picks) and junior corner Eli Schroeder
(3 picks).
Defensively, they are in a 4-3 cover2 look. They dont blitz a lot, Schafer
continued. They will do some line
stunts but the biggest challenge we face
is the size of their tackles. They are
going to be very tough for us to handle,
especially as we like to run the ball.
For us, one key is to keep Rettig in
check. I figure he will get a couple of
big plays but we cant give him big play

after big play. We really have to play


good team defense reading our keys,
maintaining gap control, staying in our
lanes and making Rettig run horizontal.
Two, our offensive line has to play well
from the start. We have challenged them
to take control from the start instead of
waiting til the second half to do so.
Third, turnovers, special teams and field
position will be key. We forced four
turnovers and had two; one was simply
trying to make a play downfield. Joey
has given us a threat for a field goal
once we get into the red zone and that is
a big factor. Last week, with his punting
and turnovers, they had long fields and
we had shorter ones. We need that again
this week.
See BULLDOGS, page 8

NASCAR: Johnson says


Harvick was correct winner College footballs calm-before-the-storm Saturday
By JENNA FRYER
Associated Press
CHARLOTTE, N.C. Jimmie Johnson believes
NASCARs new championship format produced the correct
champion and a Ryan Newman victory would have been
tough to swallow for the sport.
Johnson began the season as the 6-time and defending
champion but he was eliminated from title contention in the
revamped Chase for the Sprint Cup format. A 16-driver field
was whittled down to four for Sundays finale, where Kevin
Harvick beat Newman, Denny Hamlin and Joey Logano to
claim his first title.
I feel like Kevin winning was the
right thing when you look at the winners and the dominant cars throughout the year, Johnson said Thursday.
Harvick had to win the race to
wrap up the title and found himself
in a late shootout with Newman for
the victory. Newman, in his first
season for Richard Childress Racing,
advanced to the finale through consistency after a winless season.
The Chase format this year was
touted by NASCAR chairman Brian
Johnson
France as one that would put an
emphasis on winning and Harvick
won three Chase races, including the final two. But he nearly
lost the title to Newman, who finished second in the finale.
The highest-finishing driver Sunday at Homestead-Miami
Speedway was guaranteed the title.
Ryan had every right in the world to be the champion, the
rules were laid out that way, said Johnson, who was eliminated after the second round, or the sixth of 10 races. But if
(Newman) wins the championship, I think that would have
been tough to swallow for the sport. Its not taking anything
away from Childress or Ryan, they had an awesome year and
collected a ton of points. Theres some danger for the sport
with this format.
Johnson said he discussed the new format with France at
the start of the season. He believed, based on performance
during the regular season, the finale should have been between
Harvick, Team Penske drivers Logano and Brad Keselowski
and Jeff Gordon, his Hendrick Motorsports teammate. Those
four drivers combined for 12 wins in the first 26 races and
eight wins in the 10 Chase races.
But Gordon and Keselowski were both eliminated after the
third round,and Gordon last week called on NASCAR to set a
separate points system for the Chase drivers. Gordon felt it was
unfair for the Chase drivers to be scored against the entire 43-car
field and they should only be scored against the Chase drivers.
Still, drivers have praised the new elimination system, with
Newman saying the intensity of the sport has gone through
the roof, because of the Chase. The high stakes produced
drama on and off the track, including a pair of brawls in in the
final seven races.
The system is fine. Its exciting. Every race is exciting,
Hamlin said. Theres not been one boring race. This is the
best thing thats happened to this sport in a really long time.
But Johnson said attendance and television ratings are the
true measure. Although attendance was improved at many
tracks this season, TV ratings were flat. The 10-race Chase
drew an average of 4.41 million viewers for ESPN/ABC and a
2.7 rating. Last season drew an average of 4.5 million viewers
and a 2.8 rating.
See JOHNSON, page 8

Associated Press

We interrupt this exciting


college football season, the
race for the first playoff and
the Heisman Trophy chase, to
bring you this Saturday.
By chance and by plan,
this weekends college football schedule does not have
much to get excited about.
Most of the Southeastern
Conference is taking its
November break, playing
a pushover to prepare for a
rivalry game (No. 2 Alabama
vs. Western Carolina and
No. 15 Auburn vs. Samford)
or taking the week off altogether.
In other cases the schedule just didnt pan out. No.
4 Mississippi State against
Vanderbilt. Yuck. No. 3
Oregon against Colorado.
Pass. No. 6 Baylor against
Oklahoma State. Yawn. No.
7 Ohio State against Indiana.
Ugh.
Out of the top seven teams
in the latest College Football
Playoff rankings only one
is favored by fewer than 20
points: No. 1 Florida State is

minus-19 1/2 at home against


Boston College.
Theres some action in the
Pac-12 South worth keeping
an eye on: No. 24 Southern
California is at No. 11 UCLA
and No. 15 Arizona visits No.
20 Utah. All of those teams
plus Arizona State are still
alive to win one of the best
divisions in the country.
Over in the
Big Ten West,
Minnesota vs.
No. 21 Nebraska
and No. 14
Wisconsin at
Iowa will help
determine
a
close division
race but other
than watching what Badgers
record-breaking star Melvin
Gordon does for an encore,
thats not exactly must-see
TV.
If you wanted to have a
fall wedding and not tick
off your college football fan
friends and relatives, this
would be the week to do it.
In the fall I may have
a few appointments on the
weekend, typically no wed-

ding, said wedding planner Christina Sloan, who


runs Christina Sloan Events
in Birmingham, Alabama.
This weekend I have one on
Thursday, one on Saturday
and one on Sunday. Ive had
inquiries for more, I just cant
take all of them on.
It is the kind of weekend where ESPNs College
GameDay
goes
to
Harvard-Yale.
The Crimson
and
the
Bulldogs are
playing with
the Ivy League
title at stake
for both teams
for the first time since 2007.
Pretty cool but if GameDay is
in Cambridge, Massachusetts,
on the second-to-last weekend of November its probably a slow Saturday around
the country.
One of the other candidates for GameDay this week
was a trip to Yankee Stadium
in the Bronx, where Lehigh
and Lafayette play college
footballs oldest rivalry for

the 150th time.


Call it the Calm-Beforethe-Storm
Saturday.
Thanksgiving weekend is
packed with rivalry games
and huge matchups, starting
Thanksgiving night with No.
5 TCU facing Texas.
The next weekend is
Championship Weekend, featuring all the FBS conference
title games and culminating
with the selection of the teams
to play in the first College
Football Playoff. Like those
SEC teams, fans can use this
weekend to recharge for the
stretch drive.
Of course, just because
the schedule is lacking highly-ranked teams playing big
games doesnt mean something dramatic cant happen.
Maybe one of those doubledigit underdogs can pull an
upset and shake things up.
If that happens, Sloan has
her clients covered with a
tailgate station and televisions to watch the games.
Even though its a slow
weekend, she added, they
still make sure they get their
football in.

Lewis in range of big prize at Tour Championship


Associated Press
NAPLES, Fla. Stacy Lewis was
three shots out of the lead Thursday and
one step closer to the largest payoff in
womens golf at the CME Group Tour
Championship.
Lewis overcame the kind of tension
she typically feels on the weekend at
majors. She held it together with her
short game, made a 25-foot eagle putt
late in her opening round and wound
up with a 3-under 69 to trail Julieta
Granada by three shots.
Its going to be a long week if were
feeling that on Thursday, Lewis said.
There are two tournaments in one at
the Ritz-Carlton Golf Resort.
Granada played bogey-free in a tough
wind on the Tiburon Course for a 66 that
gave her a 2-shot lead over Sandra Gal
in the LPGA Tours final tournament.
The other event is the Race to CME
Globe, which pays a $1 million bonus
to the winner. Only the top nine players
in the standings can win it and Granada
isnt one of them. She still hopes to close
out the season with her first victory in

eight years.
about everything at stake at the Tour
The top three players Lewis, Inbee Championship. Along with the $1 milPark and 17-year-old Lydia Ko need lion bonus, Lewis or Park could take
only to win the tournament for the $1 home all the significant awards on the
million bonus. Lewis is atop
LPGA Tour player of the
the standings, so finishing
year, Vare Trophy for lowahead of the other two is a
est scoring average and the
good spot to be. Park and
money title.
Ko each shot 71.
Granada knows what its
I think everybody is
like to be an instant millionthinking about the $1 milaire. She was a 20-year-old
lion, Park said.
rookie in 2006 when she capIt certainly showed at the
tured the ADT Championship,
start, especially when Lewis
which at the time was turned
sent her opening tee shot
into a winner-take-all extravwell to the right. She recovaganza. That remains her only
ered well and nearly holed a
LPGA victory.
bunker shot for birdie.
Granada is No. 24 in the
Lewis
Conditions were tough
standings, though there is
enough that only five playplenty on the line at a tournaers broke 70; 19 of the 69 in the field ment that still pays $500,000.
broke par.
I think all the girls that have a
Lewis surged ahead with a hybrid chance, they know what theyre doing
from 217 yards that finished pin-high at out there, Granada said. Theyre
the back of the green on the par-5 17th tough and theyre good players, so they
and she lightly pumped her fist when it will just keep playing their game. This
fell for eagle.
course is a good finish, especially with
All week long, the chatter has been 17 being a reachable par 5.

www.delphosherald.com

Bengals McCarron returns


from shoulder problem
By JOE KAY
Associated Press

McCarron. Theyll have to


decide whether to add him to
the active roster for the rest
of the regular season and
bump someone off the roster
or leave him on an injury
list the rest of the way.
The Bengals (6-3-1) lead
the AFC North heading into
their game on Sunday at
Houston (5-5).
I just want to go out and
have fun and then be ready to
go whenever they need me,
whether they call on me this
year or next year, McCarron
said. The old saying you
dont realize what you have
until its taken away? It really
is true. Being out that long,
it felt like it was taken away.
Being back, I felt
like a kid again. I
was having fun.

CINCINNATI One of
AJ McCarrons early throws
in practice was so far off
the mark that it deflected off
the wall of the University of
Cincinnatis bubble-covered
field.
Didnt dent his mood at
all.
The fifth-round draft pick
hadnt done anything with the
Cincinnati Bengals until this
week, when he returned from
a sore passing shoulder that
sidelined him since the start
of training camp. McCarron
spent the last few months
strengthening his right shoulder and waiting to
be declared ready.
He
finally
Notes: Linebacker
got to practice
Vontaze Burfict was
with the team on
held out of practice
Wednesday.
again on Thursday, an
I had a smile
indication hell miss
on my face the
his fourth consecutive
whole
day,
game following knee
McCarron said
surgery. Defensive
on
Thursday.
end Margus Hunt
I could have
was still walking
with a boot on his
messed up the
sprained right ankle
whole practice. I
Thursday. Offensive
was just having
McCarron
lineman
Mike Pollak
fun. I felt like a kid
again out playing the game sat out practice with a sore knee.
Running back Giovani Bernard
in the backyard. I was just fully participated in practice for the
excited to play football.
first time. Hes likely to be active
McCarron led Alabama to on Sunday after missing three
national titles in 2011 and games with a sore shoulder and
2012. He went 36-4 as the hip, although rookie running back
Crimson Tides starter and set Jeremy Hill is expected to get the
school records for touchdown bulk of the plays.
Bengals-Texans Capsule
passes, yards passing and
HOUSTON (AP) CINCINNATI
completion percentage. The
at HOUSTON (5-5)
Bengals took him with the (6-3-1)
Sunday, 1 p.m. ET, CBS
164th overall pick, looking
OPENING LINE Texans by 1
to develop him into a reliable
RECORD VS. SPREAD
backup to Andy Dalton.
Cincinnati 5-5, Houston 6-4
The sore shoulder sideSERIES RECORD Series tied
lined him at the start of train- 3-3
LAST MEETING Texans beat
ing camp. The Bengals put
him on a strengthening pro- Bengals 20-19, Dec. 11, 2011
LAST WEEK Bengals beat
gram that involved throwing from short distances at Saints 27-10; Texans beat Browns
23-7
the outset and building up to
AP PRO32 RANKING
longer throws as the shoul- Bengals No. 13, Texans No. 18.
der allowed. He was finally
BENGALS OFFENSE
cleared to join practice this OVERALL (17), RUSH (9), PASS
week.
(21).
BENGALS DEFENSE
The Bengals moved their
practices on Wednesday and OVERALL (28), RUSH (28), PASS
Thursday to Cincinnatis cov- (20).
TEXANS
OFFENSE

ered field the Bengals are


(15), RUSH (3), PASS
the most northern NFL team OVERALL
(28).
without one of their own. It
TEXANS
DEFENSE

took McCarron a little while OVERALL (30), RUSH (16), PASS


to settle in and start complet- (31).
ing his throws.
STREAKS, STATS AND NOTES
I havent thrown to Dalton, who grew up in suburreceivers, he said. Getting ban Houston, is 0-3 all-time against
the timing with the guys at Texans, including playoffs. Dalton
first was different at first. threw for 220 yards with three touchThat was the first time I had downs for career-high 143.9 quarterback rating last week. Rookie
thrown in shoulder pads since second-round pick Jeremy Hill had
(the Sugar Bowl). Thats 152 yards rushing last week for his
almost a year.
second game with at least 150 yards
I completed the first one, this season. He leads rookies with
sailed the next two. I could 556 yards rushing. A.J. Green
have messed up 100 times, I had 127 yards receiving vs. Saints
was just so happy to be play- for his 18th career 100-yard game.
DT Geno Atkins has 20 sacks
ing football.
The question is how the since 2012. Houston QB Ryan
threw for 211 yards and two
Bengals will handle him for Mallett
touchdowns in his first NFL start in
the rest of the season.
win over Cleveland. RB Arian
Dalton has been one of Foster is one 100-yard game shy of
the NFLs most durable quar- passing Priest Holmes (31) for most
terbacks, missing only half such games by undrafted player.
of a game due to injury dur- Foster did not play against Browns.
ing his four seasons. Veteran Rookie sixth-round pick RB Alfred
Jason Campbell is the back- Blue had franchise-record 36 carries
up. The Bengals envisioned and rookie team-record 156 yards
McCarron growing into the rushing last week. WR Andre
Johnson needs one catch to pass
backup role but the injury has Randy Moss for 10th on all-time list
prevented him from making with 983. WR DeAndre Hopkins
much progress.
has had four straight games with at
If Dalton continues to least 80 yards receiving. DE J.J.
struggle in big games hes Watt became first player since 1982
0-3 in the playoffs and 2-6 with a sack, forced fumble, fumble
in prime time games the recovery and touchdown reception
Bengals could make a switch in single game against Browns. Hes
at quarterback in a couple of second player in NFL history with
touchdown receptions, fumble
years, which would provide two
recovery for a touchdown and interan opening for McCarron.
ception return for a touchdown in
The Bengals have a same season, joining Jay Arnold,
3-week roster exemption for who did it in 1938.

NFLPA: No way to press painkiller claims


Associated Press
SAN FRANCISCO The NFL
Players Association told the federal judge
hearing a lawsuit against the league that
the collective bargaining agreement did
not provide a way for the union to press
claims by former players that NFL teams
routinely mishandled painkillers.
The filing Wednesday by the NFLPA
came in response to questions raised by
U.S. District Judge William Alsup, who
said he wanted to determine the unions
position in the case before considering
the NFLs motion to dismiss. The lawsuit
was filed in May in the northern district
of California and now includes more than
1,300 former players. Nine players have
been named as plaintiffs, including Hall
of Fame defensive end Richard Dent.
In a hearing last month, the NFL
argued it is not responsible for the medical decisions of its 32 teams and, further,
that the issue should be addressed by the
players union, which negotiated a collective bargaining agreement that covers
players health.
But the unions filing read it does not
believe that any provisions of the current
CBA or any provision of any former
CBA would cover the specific claims
asserted by the putative Dent class and
therefore the NFLPA does not believe
that the specific claims asserted by the
Dent class were or could have been
grieveable.
The lawsuit alleges the NFL and its
teams, physicians and trainers acted
without regard for players health, withholding information about injuries. At
the same time they were handing out
prescription painkillers and anti-inflammatories to mask pain and minimize
lost playing time. Among other claims,
the players contend prescriptions were
filled out in their names without their

knowledge.
Federal
Drug
Enforcement
Administration agents conducted spot
checks last Sunday of at least five NFL
visiting teams medical staffs as part of
an ongoing investigation. The probe was
sparked by claims in the lawsuit from
former players, including dozens who
said the teams lax controls over dispensing painkillers continued
until 2012. Any violations of
the Controlled Substances Act
after 2009 could be used in a
criminal investigation.
There were no arrests made
but DEA spokesman Rusty
Payne said Sunday that agents
are currently interviewing NFL
team doctors in several locations as part of an ongoing
investigation into potential violations of
the CSA.
The next hearing in the lawsuit has not
yet been scheduled.
Union appeals Adrian Petersons
suspension: The NFL players union on
Thursday appealed the leagues suspension of Adrian Peterson and demanded
an independent, neutral arbitrator hears
the case.
In a letter to its player representatives and executive committee obtained
by The Associated Press, the NFLPA
called Commissioner Roger Goodells
punishment unprecedented, arbitrary
and unlawful.
The union also accused Troy Vincent,
the NFLs executive vice president of
football operations, of telling Peterson
that the games he missed on a special
exempt list would count as time served
toward a suspension.
League officials declined comment
to the AP.
Goodell on Tuesday suspended
Peterson without pay for the rest of the

BASEBALL
MAJOR LEAGUE BASEBALL Announced
commissioner-elect Rob Manfred will serve a
5-year term, beginning Jan. 25.
American League
BALTIMORE ORIOLES Claimed OF Alex
Hassan off waivers from Oakland. Selected the
contracts of RHPs Tyler Wilson and Mike Wright
from Norfolk (IL).
BOSTON RED SOX Selected the contracts
of LHP Eduardo Rodriguez, INF Travis Shaw and
C Blake Swihart from Pawtucket (IL) and INF
Sean Coyle from Portland (EL).
CHICAGO WHITE SOX Assigned OF Jared
Mitchell outright to Charlotte (IL). Designated
RHP Ronald Belisario for assignment. Selected
the contracts of INF Tyler Saladino from Charlotte
(IL) and RHP Frankie Montas, INF Rangel Ravelo
and C Kevan Smith from Birmingham (SL).
Claimed LHP Onelki Garcia off waivers from the
L.A. Dodgers.
CLEVELAND INDIANS Selected the
contracts of RHP Shawn Armstrong and INF
Giovanny Urshela from Columbus (IL), RHP
Cody Anderson and C/INF Tony Wolters from
Akron (EL) and LHP Ryan Merritt from Lynchburg
(Carolina).

season and told him he will not be considered for reinstatement before April 15
for his violation of the NFL personal conduct policy. Peterson pleaded no contest
Nov. 4 to misdemeanor reckless assault
in Texas for injuries to his 4-year-old son
with a wooden switch.
Peterson has said he intended no harm
to his son, only discipline. The 2012 NFL
MVP played just one game
for the Minnesota Vikings this
season and was paid part of
his $11.75 million during the
leave. He will keep the money
accrued while on the exempt
list. But the NFLs punishment
now amounts to a 14-game
ban, with six unpaid weeks.
Thats the equivalent of a fine
of more than $4.1 million.
Goodell announced Aug. 28 tougher
punishment for players involved with
domestic violence. That action stemmed
from a torrent of criticism for the initial leniency toward former Baltimore
Ravens running back Ray Rice, who was
caught on camera hitting his then-fiancee
and knocking her unconscious on an elevator in an Atlantic City casino. Rice was
later suspended indefinitely and recently
had his appeal heard by an arbitrator.
According to the enhanced policy, first
offenses of assault, battery or domestic
violence bring a 6-game suspension.
But the union is arguing that the new
policy was enacted after the incident had
already occurred and shouldnt be retroactively applied to Petersons conduct in
May 2014.
The union also claims the NFL is
making up the process and punishment
as it goes a blatant violation of the
CBA.
See NFL, page 8

Gordons return gives Browns different look


Associated Press

him on the field, Hoyer said. You put No. 12 on the field and
the defense is going to have to see where hes at. How they
BEREA Browns coach Mike Pettine noticed pass after want to play him, thats up to them.
Hoyer hasnt had the luxury of throwing to anyone of
pass from quarterback Brian Hoyer going in the same direcGordons size this season, so he may take some risks and put
tion during practice at one tall target.
the ball up where only Gordon can reach it.
Short throws, long ones, all toward the new guy, No. 12.
Shanahan laughed when he was asked if Gordon fits in
Pro Bowl wide receiver Josh Gordon returned from his
10-game suspension on Wednesday and Hoyer couldnt stop with his offensive scheme.
He fits in great, he replied. We love real good receivers.
throwing the ball to him during practice.
There arent many better than Gordon, never mind a motiLike a kid with a new toy at Christmas, Pettine said.
vated Gordon.
Sunday could be another holiday for Hoyer
Haden can appreciate Gordons mindset headwhen the Browns (6-4) visit the Atlanta Falcons
ing into Sundays game. Haden was suspended
(4-6), who have the NFLs worst pass defense and
four games in 2010 and said the time away
will have their hands full with Gordon, one of the
changed his attitude.
games most dangerous players looking to make
Just being away from the game shows you
up for lost time.
how much you miss it and how much it means to
The Browns are expected to incorporate
you. I think J.G., hes just excited. Hes happy,
Gordon into their game plan; although he hasnt
added Haden, who is close with Gordon. I see
played this season, cornerback Joe Haden said he
him smiling and it makes me happy just to know
wouldnt be shocked if the 6-3, 225-pounder has a
that hes back and just ready to ball.
dazzling debut.
NOTES: Pettine has not ruled out starting LBs
It wouldnt surprise me if he went out there
Karlos Dansby (knee) and Jabaal Sheard (foot) for
and had 250 (yards), Haden said.
Sundays game. Pettine said Dansby is doing everyIt wouldnt surprise anyone and fantaGordon
thing possible to play. For a guy like that, its like not
sy football owners are fantasizing about the
an option for him, he added. Well have to tell him,
Browns sending Gordon deep on the first play from
Literally, you cant go. Hes that type of player and thats what you
scrimmage.
Hoyer wouldnt mind that. He called Gordon a freak ath- want. To me, it speaks to his character. TE Jordan Cameron
lete, saying Arizona cornerback Patrick Peterson is the only (concussion) also missed practice.
Browns-Falcons Capsule
player in Gordons class.
CLEVELAND (6-4) at ATLANTA (4-6)
The things he can do at his size are remarkable, so Im
Sunday, 1 p.m. ET, CBS
glad hes on our team, he said.
OPENING LINE Falcons by 3
Pettine said Gordon reported being a a little sore followRECORD VS. SPREAD Cleveland 6-4, Atlanta 5-5
ing his first practice, which was held indoors as the Browns
SERIES RECORD Browns lead 10-3
prepare to play in the Georgia Dome. Theres a big difference
LAST MEETING Falcons beat Browns 20-10, Oct. 10, 2010
between being in shape and being in football shape, which is
LAST WEEK Browns lost to Texans 23-7; Falcons beat
why the Browns are trying to bring Gordon along slowly this Panthers 19-17
week.
AP PRO32 RANKING Browns No. 17, Falcons No. 22
The Browns increased Gordons workload on Thursday and
BROWNS OFFENSE OVERALL (14), RUSH (15), PASS (14).
offensive coordinator Kyle Shanahan came away impressed
BROWNS DEFENSE OVERALL (22), RUSH (30), PASS (11).
FALCONS OFFENSE OVERALL (10), RUSH (24), PASS (6).
by how the 23-year-old looks despite the lengthy layoff.
FALCONS DEFENSE OVERALL (32), RUSH (24), PASS (32).
Gordons route running was crisp and hes managed to stay
STREAKS, STATS AND NOTES Despite record, Browns are
up to speed with the details of Clevelands offense despite not
tied for last in AFC North. Despite record, Falcons are tied for first
being on the field for a single play in 2014.
You can tell hes been working while hes been away, in NFC South. Of Gordons 14 career TDs, 13 have been longer
Shanahan said. Hes running good and stuff. Weve had two than 20 yards. Browns have forced 13 turnovers in past five
games, most in league during span. Hoyer set franchise record
practices on turf and well see how his body responds.
Gordons impact could be immediate. Last season, he with 30 incompletions against Houston. Hoyer is 9-4 as starter
returned from a 2-game suspension and caught 10 passes for but future remains uncertain and big road win could help chances
146 yards and a touchdown in a win over Minnesota. It was to re-sign with Browns. Cleveland hasnt won consecutive road
since 2008. Atlanta K Matt Bryant has made 16 of 18 fieldHoyers first start for the Browns and he targeted Gordon 19 games
goal attempts this season, his only misses coming from 57 and 59
times.
yards. Falcons WR Roddy White is 42nd receiver in NFL history
Gordons presence will make defenses honest. Teams to reach 10,000 yards receiving. He is 59 yards away from passing
wont be able to position multiple defenders near the line of TE Shannon Sharpe (10,060) for 41st on career list. Falcons,
scrimmage because theyll likely need two players to cover averaging just 96.1 yards per game on ground, will look to bolster
Gordon, who led the league with 1,646 yards last season in those numbers against Cleveland defense that has struggled to stop
just 14 games.
run. Falcons are playing first home game in six weeks. Atlanta
Hes going to help in every way possible because you put is 38-14 at Georgia Dome in Mike Smiths seven years as coach.

Thursdays Sports Transactions


Associated Press

The Herald 7

Friday, November 21, 2014

DETROIT TIGERS Designated OF


Ezequiel Carrera for assignment. Selected the
contracts of SS Dixon Machado and RHP Angel
Nesbitt from Erie (EL). Claimed RHP Josh Zeid off
waivers from Houston.
HOUSTON ASTROS Assigned RHP
Anthony Bass outright to Fresno (PCL) Selected
the contracts of INF Ronnie Torreyes from
Oklahoma City (PCL) and RHP Vincent Velasquez
from Lancaster (Cal).
LOS ANGELES ANGELS Designated LHP
Michael Roth and C Jackson Williams for assignment. Selected the contracts of C Jett Bandy and
Danny Reynolds from Arkansas (TL).
MINNESOTA TWINS Selected the contracts of RHP Alex Meyer from Rochester (IL)
and 2B Eddie Rosario, INF Miguel Sano and LHP
Jason Wheeler from Chattanoga (SL).
NEW YORK YANKEES Selected the contracts of RHPs Danny Burawa and Branden
Pinder from Scranton/Wilkes-Barre (IL) and OF
Tyler Austin and OF Mason Williams from Trenton
(EL). Sold the contract of INF Zelous Wheeler to
Tohoku Rakuten (Pacific League-Japan).
OAKLAND ATHLETICS Selected the contract of INF Renato Nunez from Stockton (Cal).
SEATTLE MARINERS Claimed LHP Edgar
Olmos off waivers from Miami.

TEXAS RANGERS Agreed to terms with


C Chris Gimenez, RHP David Martinez and LHP
Efrain Nieves on minor league contracts.
National League
ATLANTA BRAVES Designated 2B Ramiro
Pena and LHP Jonny Venters for assignment.
Selected the contracts of SS Jose Peraza,
3B Kyle Kubitza and RHPs Tyrell Jenkins and
Brandon Cunniff from Mississippi (SL), RHP
Mauricio Cabrera from Carolina (Carolina), LHP
Yean Carlos Gil from Rome (SAL) and RHP
Williams Perez from the GCL Braves.
COLORADO ROCKIES Selected the contract of LHP Tyler Anderson from Tulsa (TL).
Designated RHP Juan Nicasio for assignment.
LOS ANGELES DODGERS Selected the
contract of RHP Zach Lee from Albuquerque
(PCL) and LHP Chris Reed and OF Scott
Schebler from Chattanooga (SL).
MILWAUKEE BREWERS Selected the contracts of INF Yadiel Rivera, RHP Taylor Jungmann
and LHP Michael Strong from Nashville (PCL).
NEW YORK METS Assigned RHP Jeff
Walters to Las Vegas (PCL). Selected the contracts of RHPs Hansel Robles Gabriel Ynoa from
Binghamton (EL), Akeel Morris from Savannah
(SAL) and Noah Syndergaard and Cory Mazzoni
and LHP Jack Leathersich from Las Vegas.

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8 The Herald

www.delphosherald.com

Friday, November 21, 2014

Manfred given 5-year term


as baseball commissioner
Associated Press

KANSAS CITY, Mo. Praising


the transition as quick and orderly, Bud
Selig announced Thursday that baseball
owners unanimously approved a 5-year
term for Rob Manfred, who will succeed the longtime commissioner early
next year.
Selig spoke at the conclusion of two
days of meetings in Kansas City, where
owners discussed a variety of issues that
included pace of play, instant replay and
domestic violence initiatives.
Selig will chair his final owners
meeting in January in Arizona.
Ive been so busy and every day is
so frenetic that the last month or two,
Im sure Ill spend a lot of time thinking
about it, Selig said, but you know, we
are where we want to be. Were having a
wonderful transition, orderly transition,
good transition. Thats very important.
Manfred, who has worked for MLB
since 1998, was chosen to replace the
80-year-old Selig in August over Red
Sox Chairman Tom Werner. He will
assume office Jan. 25.
It hits me every day when I go to
work, Manfred said. I agree with
Commissioner Selig; weve had a really
productive and smooth transition.
One of Manfreds mandates will be to
attract young fans back to baseball and
many believe that will involve speeding up the game. The average time of a
9-inning game increased from 2 hours,
33 minutes, in 1981 to a record 3:02 this
year, with postseason games stretching
nearly 4 hours.
Selig appointed a committee chaired
by Braves President John Schuerholz
to discuss ways to improve the pace of
play. Among the ideas experimented during the Arizona Fall League were pitch
clocks and requiring hitters to remain in
the batters box between pitches.
MLB cant alter the rules for 2015
without agreement from the players
association, though it can implement
changes unilaterally with 1-year advance
notice. Selig said union head Tony Clark
and other representatives from the players association provided their input.
I want the committee to continue to
do its work, Selig said. This was very
productive in terms of ideas. The experience in the Arizona Fall League made

Domestic violence has become an issue


quite an impact on a lot of people.
When changes may be implemented of increased importance across profesat the major-league level remains to be sional sports.
To underscore that point, Selig
seen. Selig said he wants to push them
and will have more to say on the subject announced the Seattle Mariners had
received the Commissioners Award
in the next couple months.
Owners also spent time discussing for Philanthropic Excellence for their
Refuse to Abuse program.
the first season of expanded
The state-wide educational
instant replay, largely considinitiative is designed to
ered a success after several
promote healthy relationcalls were overturned during
ships in Washington state.
the postseason.
It was really great comThe system also slowed
petition. We had three or
games. Given the opportunity
four clubs, tough decisions
to challenge everything from
to make, Selig added. Its
force and tag plays to fan
a program that goes around
interference and home runs,
the state of Washington on
managers often stalled in the
domestic abuse and theyve
middle of the diamond while
been doing it a long time.
awaiting word from their dugThis isnt something that
out whether to contest a call.
Selig
just happened.
I think the core of replay
Japan beats MLB All-Stars 6-4 in
will be similar, Manfred said. I think
the changes were contemplating exhibition game
NAHA, Japan Yuki Yanagita
without getting into them are largely
technology improvements. I think greeted Randy Choate with a 2-run sinthere are also some issues related to gle in the eighth inning and Japan beat
exactly how long it takes to get replay the Major League Baseball All-Stars 6-4
Thursday in an exhibition game followgoing.
MLB Executive Vice President Joe ing their 5-game postseason tour.
Japan won the series 3-2 and the
Torre said during a recent meeting of
general managers in Phoenix that put- teams split a pair exhibition games that
ting a stop to all the lingering would be preceded and followed.
With Japan ahead 3-2 Thursday,
a priority.
Thats one area well do some- Nobuhiro Matsuda doubled off Jose
thing differently, Torre said. Im not Veras leading off the eighth and Ginji
sure what that is but certainly we will Akaminai walked. After a pair of bunts,
eliminate some of that standing around Choate relieved, Yanagita singled and
Ryosuke Kikuchi tripled for a 6-2 lead.
because 10 seconds is a long time.
Justin Morneau had an RBI single in
Selig also applauded the record-breaking $325 million. 13-year deal reached the bottom half and Alcides Escobar hit
by the Miami Marlins and Giancarlo a sacrifice fly in the ninth.
Shota Takada won by allowing one
Stanton, calling it the objective of everything we did in changes to the games run unearned four hits and four
economic model, which included revenue walks in three innings, and Yuji Nishino
pitched the ninth for the save. Loser
sharing and luxury taxes.
What I like is individual franchises Hector Santiago gave up two runs
making decisions to make themselves one earned and four hits in four
better, Selig said. Ive been reading innings.
Morneaus sacrifice fly put the MLB
all the clips and I do think theyre happy
in South Florida, and they should be. Its All-Stars ahead in the first but Kenta
a good sign, a very good sign for them, Imamiya hit a tying single in the second,
Tetsuto Yamada had a go-ahead sacrifice
and thats how you have to look at it.
MLB Executive Vice President fly in the fourth and Yoshihiro Maru
Dan Halem provided owners with an tripled in a run off Tsuyoshi Wada in the
update on a comprehensive domestic fifth for a 3-1 lead.
Evan Longoria homered in the botviolence program that is being developed for players and non-players alike. tom half off Takahiro Matsuba.

Johnson
(Continued from page 6)
We need to do something to drive the viewership up,
added Johnson, who supports heat races capped by a final A
main-style race slotted into a television window. Maybe we
qualify on Saturday and thats televised, then run some heat
races and a feature on Sunday, in a 4-hour time window. It
sticks to our roots, sticks with what weve always had and
done, gives some natural pauses for the show for the social
element at the track. I think that would be a pretty entertaining format.
Hendrick gives Kahne 3-year contract extension
CONCORD, N.C. Hendrick Motorsports announced a
3-year contract extension Thursday that keeps Kasey Kahne
in the No. 5 Chevrolet through the 2018 Sprint Cup season.
The deal removes Kahne from the free-agent market and
raises questions about where Rick Hendrick plans to put
Nationwide Series champion Chase Elliott in his stacked
lineup. Kahnes current contract expired after next season and
many believed hed have to improve his results to remain with
the organization.
Hendrick is making changes to help Kahne, who needed
a late win at Atlanta in August to make the 16-driver Chase.
He was eliminated from the Chase after the second round and
finished 15th in the final standings.
HMS this week said Keith Rodden, a longtime engineer
on Kahnes team, was returning to the organization as crew
chief of the No. 5 car. Kenny Francis, who had been crew
chief for Kahne since the final race of the 2005 season the
second-longest active driver/crew chief pairing in the Cup
Series was moved into a design and development role for
the entire organization.

Kahne signed with HMS in 2010 for a deal that began with
the 2012 season.
It puts Hendrick in a bind with Elliott, the 18-year-old
phenom who won NASCARs second-tier series championship in his first season competing at the national level. Elliott
won the title driving for JR Motorsports, which is co-owned
by Hendrick driver Dale Earnhardt Jr., his sister, Kelley, and
Rick Hendrick.
Earnhardt has said the team has no plans to move up to the
Sprint Cup Series and Hendrick has only said the immediate
future for Elliott is a second season with JRM.
Hendrick fields the NASCAR-maximum four cars in Cup
for Earnhardt, Kahne, Johnson and 4-time champion Gordon.
Although Gordon has hinted that retirement is coming, he
wrote in a Twitter chat Wednesday its currently not on my
radar.
Johnson, at a Thursday event for the Jimmie Johnson
Foundation, said hes working on an extension for his contract, which expires in 2015, and that Elliott was not a candidate for his No. 48 seat.
Hendrick Motorsports general manager Doug Duchardt
said Thursday on Sirius XM that Elliott will run a handful of Cup races next season thats allowed under
NASCAR rules but ducked a question on where hell
eventually land. He likened Elliott to a Triple A prospect
in baseball and the pressure to bring him up to the big
leagues.
Kahne, meanwhile, has ranked among the top 10 drivers
the last three seasons in Sprint Cup wins (five), pole positions (four), top-5 finishes (26) and laps led (1,177). He has
17 career Cup wins and has three consecutive berths in the
Chase.

NFL
(Continued from page 7)
NFL to relocate Bills
home game against Jets
BUFFALO, N.Y. The
Buffalo Bills have been
snowed out by Mother Nature.
The NFL has chosen to
relocate the Bills home game
against the New York Jets on
Sunday because of a severe
lake-effect snowstorm that

Bulldogs

has paralyzed much of the


region over the past week,
league spokesman Michael
Signora wrote in an email on
Thursday.
The only questions remaining are where the game will be
played and on what day.
Due to public safety concerns in light of the ongoing weather emergency in
Western New York, Sundays

(Continued from page 6)

Warnecke fourth all-time in rushing


yards (2,853) at Columbus Grove has
amassed 1,532 yards on 199 totes (17 touchdowns; 31-of-37 point-after-touchdowns,
7-of-9 field goals; ) for an offense averaging
22.7 points, 190.7 yards rushing and 120.3
passing per game. Reid Stechschulte (79of-205 passing, 1,443 yards, 14 scores, 13
interceptions; 146 rushes, 629 yards, 6 scores)
is a dual threat under center and has a quartet
of solid targets outside: senior David Bogart
(27 grabs, 330 yards, 5), junior Baily Clement
(16 for 346, 3), junior Aiden Fortman (14 for
414 - 29.6 yards per catch - 4) and From (13
for 193, 2).
Warnecke has 68 punts (22.2 yards per).

Jets-Bills game will not be


played in Buffalo, Signora
wrote. He added more information would be provided as
soon as possible.
We have been in contact
with the public authorities
and we realize the importance
of all available public safety
resources being available for
the community at this difficult
time, Signora wrote.

Schafer has given the defensive line in


particular for his teams solid play as of late.
Weve had some guys move into the lineup from elsewhere, plus we have a freshman
tackle (Enoch Jones). Hes done very well for
a freshman, Schafer added. Those guys are
very aggressive but we have asked them to be
more read and eract, not penetrate as much as
stay in the gaps, and curb some of that aggression. I think that is one reason we have played
better defense as of late.
Offensively, our offensive line just seems
to take time to really get into it but they finally
do. It might be our off-season, pre-season and
during the season conditioning program that
finally pays off. However, we are in week 13
and for us Saturday, we need them to dominate from the first play.

Tuesday Merchant
Nov. 11, 2014
Pitsenbarger Supply
48-2
To Legit 2 Split
37-12
Lears Martial Arts
36-10
Ace Hardware
34-12
R C Connections
33-14
Men over 200
Desteni Lear 210, Shane Lear
212, Mark Biedenharn 225, Mike
Hughes 217, John Jones 212248, John Allen 209-206, Doug
Milligan Jr. 206, Joe Geise 227-205,
Brock Parsons 212-202, George
Cunningham 208.
Men over 550
Shane Lear 562, Mike Hughes
590, John Jones 654, John Allen 589,
Doug Milligan Jr. 594, Joe Geise 621,
Brock Parsons 560.
Wednesday Industrial
Nov. 12, 2014
K-M Tire
34-6
Unverferth Mfg.
30-10
Rustic Cafe
24-16
Topp Chalet
24-16
Buckeye painting
21-19
Heather Marie Photo
19-21
Fusion Graphic
16-24
Cabo
14-26
John Deere
10-30
D & D Grain
8-32
Men over 200
Justin Rahrig 201, Russ Wilhelm
207, Shane Schimmoller 203-235,
Josh DeVelvis 244-202, Don Rice
225-226, Brian Gossard 217-220202, Shawn Allemeier 205-257-216,
Bruce VanMetre 202-206-206, Phil
Austin 232-239, Harold Beckner
208, Duane Kohorst 225, Kyle Early

MLB Free Agency


Associated Press
Free Agent Signings
NEW YORK The eight
free agents who have signed,
with name, position, former
club if different and contract.
The contract information was
obtained by The Associated
Press from player and management sources. For players
with minor league contracts,
letter agreements for major
league contracts are in parentheses:
AMERICAN LEAGUE
BOSTON
(1)

Re-signed Koji Uehara, rhp,


to an $18 million, 2-year
contract.

CHICAGO (1) Signed


Zach Duke, lhp, Milwaukee,
to a $15 million, 3-year contract.
DETROIT
(1)

Re-signed Victor Martinez,


dh, to a $64 million, 4-year
contract.
NEW YORK (1)
Re-signed Chris Young, of,
to a $2.5 million, 1-year contract.
OAKLAND (1) Signed
Billy Butler, 1b, Kansas City,
to a $30 million, 3-year contract.
TORONTO (1) Signed
Russell Martin, c, Pittsburgh,
to an $82 million, 5-year
contract.
___
NATIONAL LEAGUE
NEW YORK (1)
Signed Michael Cuddyer, of,
Colorado, to a $21 million,
2-year contract.
PITTSBURGH (1)
Signed A.J. Burnett, rhp,
Philadelphia, to a 1-year
contract.

Remaining Free Agents


NEW YORK The 129
remaining free agents (q-did
not accept $15.3 million
qualifying offer from former
team):
AMERICAN LEAGUE
BALTIMORE (9)
Alexi Casilla, inf; q-Nelson
Cruz, of; Nick Hundley, c;
Kelly Johnson, 2b; Nick
Markakis, of; Andrew Miller,
lhp; Johan Santana, lhp;
Joe Saunders, lhp; Delmon
Young, of.
BOSTON (4) Burke
Badenhop,
rhp;
Craig
Breslow, lhp; Ryan Dempster,
rhp; David Ross, c.
CHICAGO (3) Paul
Konerko, 1b; Matt Lindstom,
rhp; Felipe Paulino, rhp.
CLEVELAND (1)
Jason Giambi, 1b.
DETROIT (6) Joba
Chamberlain, rhp; Phil Coke,
lhp; Joel Hanrahan, rhp; Torii
Hunter, of; Jim Johnson, rhp;
q-Max Scherzer, rhp.
HOUSTON (3) Matt
Albers, rhp; Jesse Crain, rhp;
Jose Veras, rhp.
KANSAS CITY (7)
Nori Aoki, of; Scott Downs,
lhp; Jason Frasor, rhp; Luck
Hochevar, rhp; Raul Ibanez,
of; q-James Shields, rhp;
Josh Willingham, of.
LOS ANGELES (4)
Sean Burnett, lhp; Jason
Grilli, rhp; John McDonald,
ss; Joe Thatcher, lhp.
MINNESOTA (1)
Jared Burton, rhp.

BOWLING

263-226-262, Shane Stabler 209232, Brian Schaadt 224-216, Jason


Mahlie 225-201-256, Rob Shaeffer
201-244, Butch Prine Jr. 223-211,
Terence Keaser 202-241-219, Frank
Miller 221, Joe Geise 247, John Jones
210, Rick Kennedy 209-204, Erin
Deal 244-204, Chandler Stevens 229258-213, Brian Sharp 245-231, Kyle
Profit 212-236, Terry Trentman 211219-212, Matt Hamilton 207-232,
Taylor Booth 209, Justin Starn 231208-215.
Men over 550
Russ Wilhelm 600, Shane
Schimmoller 586, Josh DeVelvis
609, Don Rice 639, Brian Gossard
639, Shawn Allemeier 678, Bruce
VanMetre 614, Phil Austin 636,
Duane Kohorst 590, Kyle Early 751,
Dave Moenter 568, Shane Stabler
626, Brian Schaadt 640, Jason Mahlie
682, Rob Shaeffer 624, Butch Prine
Jr. 619, Terence Keaser 662, Frank
Miller 556, Joe Geise 619, John Allen
566, Jim Thorbin 552, Rick Kennedy
586, Erin Deal 638, Chandler Stevens
700, Brian Sharp 639, Kyle Profit
632, Terry Trentman 642, Matt
Hamilton 610, Taylor Booth 554,
Justin Starn 654, Ryan Robey 571.
Thursday National
Nov. 13, 2014
S & Ks Landeck Tavern
36-12
VFW
30-18
Old Mill Campground
8-26-22
K-M Tire
26-22
First Federal
26-22
Westrich
22-26
Mushroom Graphics
20-28
D R C Big Dogs
20-28
Evans Construction
18-30

NEW YORK (9) Chris


Capuano, lhp; Stephen Drew,
ss; Chase Headley, 3b; Rich
Hill, lhp; Derek Jeter, ss;
Hiroki Kuroda, rhp; Brandon
McCarthy, rhp; q-David
Robertson, rhp; Ichiro
Suzuki, of.
OAKLAND
(8)

Alberto Callaspo, 3b; Jonny


Gomes, of; Luke Gregerson,
rhp; Jason Hammel, rhp;
Jon Lester, lhp; Jed Lowrie,
ss; Hiroyuki Nakajima, ss;
Geovany Soto, c.
SEATTLE (7) Joe
Beimel, lhp; Endy Chavez,
of; Chris Denorfia, of;
Franklin
Gutierrez,
of; Kendrys
Morales, dh;
Humberto
Quintero, c;
Chris Young,
rhp.
TEXAS (4) Scott
Baker, rhp; Neal Cotts, lhp;
Colby Lewis, rhp; Alex Rios,
of.
TORONTO
(6)

q-Melky Cabrera, of; Casey


Janssen, rhp; Munenori
Kawasaki,
inf;
Dustin
McGowan, rhp; Brandon
Morrow, rhp; Colby Rasmus,
of.
___
NATIONAL LEAGUE
ATLANTA (6) Emilio
Bonifacio, 2b; Ryan Doumit,
c; Gavin Floyd, rhp; Aaron
Harang, rhp; Gerald Laird, c;
q-Ervin Santana, rhp.
CHICAGO (2) Kyuji
Fujikawa,
rhp;
Carlos
Villanueva, rhp.
CINCINNATI (3)
Jack Hannahan, 3b; Ryan
Ludwick,
of;
Ramon
Santiago, ss.
COLORADO (4) Brett
Anderson, lhp; Matt Belisle,
rhp; Nick Masset, rhp;
Franklin Morales, lhp.
LOS ANGELES (8)
Josh Beckett, rhp; Chad
Billingsley, rhp; Kevin
Correia,
rhp;
Roberto
Hernandez,
rhp;
Paul
Maholm, lhp; Chris Perez,
rhp; q-Hanley Ramirez, ss;
Jamey Wright, rhp.
MIAMI (4) Rafael
Furcal, ss; Kevin Gregg,
rhp; Reed Johnson, of; Brad
Penny, rhp.
MILWAUKEE (5)
Tom Gorzelanny, lhp; Lyle
Overbay, 1b; Mark Reynolds,
1b; Francisco Rodriguez,
rhp; Rickie Weeks, 2b.
NEW YORK (2)
Bobby Abreu, of; Daisuke
Matsuzaka, rhp.
PHILADELPHIA
(3)
Mike Adams, rhp; Kyle
Kendrick, rhp; Wil Nieves, c.
PITTSBURGH (3)
Clint Barmes, ss; q-Francisco Liriano, lhp; Edinson
Volquez, rhp.
ST. LOUIS (5) Mark
Ellis, 2b; Justin Masterson,
rhp; Jason Motte, rhp; Pat
Neshek, rhp; A.J. Pierzynski,
c.
SAN DIEGO (2) Josh
Johnson, rhp; Tim Stauffer,
rhp.
SAN FRANCISCO (5)
Michael Morse, of; Jake
Peavy, rhp; Sergio Romo,
rhp; q-Pablo Sandoval, 3b;
Ryan Vogelsong, rhp.
WASHINGTON (5)
Asdrubal Cabrera, ss; Scott
Hairston, of; Adam LaRoche,
1b; Nate Schierholtz, of;
Rafael Soriano, rhp.

Wannemachers
16-32
Men over 200
Lenny Klaus 222, Randy
Fischbach 226-218, Mike Hughes
247, Jason Mahlie 223-231, Don Rice
216-220-278, Scott Scalf 279, Lenny
Hubert 212, Sean Hulihan 236-211,
Rob Ruda 237-225-269, Tim Koester
204, Shawn Allemeier 246-236, Brad
Thornburgh 202, Frank Miller 213224-214, Tom Pratter 221, Mike
Rice 221, Brian Schaadt 230-204,
Seth Schaadt 221-205, Neil Korte
247-214-218, Bruce VanMetre 267289-205, Jeff Lawrence 277, Jim
Looser 213, Nate Lawrence 211,
Randy Mason 242-216, Matt Mason
224, Ray Geary 212-216-246, Rick
Schuck 203-266, John Jones 235,
John Allen 245-203-201, Dan Grice
213-213-255, Doug Milligan Jr. 223,
Chuck Verhoff 256-223, Chris Martin
201-204, Justin Miller 203-203, Dave
Miller 211.
Men over 550
Lenny Klaus 600, Neil Mahlie
551, Randy Fischbach 644, Mike
Hughes 575, Jason Mahlie 649, Don
Rice 714, Scott Scalf 697, Lenny
Hubert 581, Sean Hulihan 633, Rob
Ruda 731, Tim Koester 564, Shawn
Allemeier 664, Brad Thornburgh 592,
Frank Miller 651, Tom Pratter 557,
Mike Rice 586, Brian Schaadt 633,
Seth Schaadt 616, Neil Korte 679,
Bruce vanMetre 761, Jeff Lawrence
615, Jim Looser 571, Randy Mason
642, Ray Geary 674, Rick Schuck
661, John Jones 624, John Allen
649, Dan Grice 681, Doug Milligan
Jr. 610, Chuck Verhoff 679, Chris
Martin 575, Justin Miller 598, Dave
Miller 580.

Friday, November 21, 2014

www.delphosherald.com

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NOVEMBER 24, 2014


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Castle : Kill Switch (N)


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(:35) Late Show HD
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Criminal Minds HD
Blue Bloods HD
Blue Bloods : Critical
Blue Bloods HD
Criminal Minds HD
The First 48 HD
Godfather of (N) HD
(:02) Godfather of HD
(:01) The First 48 HD
The First 48 HD
Shrek the Third (07, PG) aac Mike Myers. HD
School HD
The Sorcerers Apprentice (10, PG) aac Nicolas Cage. HD
To Be Announced
To Be Announced
To Be Announced
To Be Announced
To Be Announced
(7:00) Dysfunctional Friends (12) ac Soul Men (08, R) aaa Samuel L. Jackson, Bernie Mac.
Wendy Williams (N) HD
Real Housewives
Vanderpump Rules
Vanderpump Rules (N) Euros of Hollywood (N) Vanderpump Rules
Tyson
Family Guy Family Guy Robot
Squid HD
King Hill
King Hill
Cleveland Cleveland Dad HD
Young Guns II (90, PG-13) Emilio Estevez. HD
Young Guns (88, R) aaa Emilio Estevez, Kiefer Sutherland. HD
Anderson Cooper 360 Anthony
Anderson Cooper 360 Anthony
CNN Tonight (N)
Colbert HD midnight
South Park
Futurama Futurama South Park South Park South Park South Park Daily HD
Misfit Garage (N) HD
Fast N Loud (N) HD
(:01) Misfit Garage HD
(:02) Fast N Loud HD
Fast N Loud (N) HD
Mickey
Austin HD Dog Blog
Girl Meets Liv HD
Good Luck Good Luck
Up (09, PG) aaac Ed Asner. HD
Kourtney
E! News (N) HD
Sex & City Sex & City
Live (N) HD The Soup Kourtney
(:20) SportsCenter Sports news. HD
(:15) Monday Night Football: Baltimore vs New Orleans (Live) HD
College Bball : Maui Invitation HD
(7:00) College Bball HD Basketball College Basketball: Alabama vs Iowa State HD
Another Cinderella (08)
Nemo (03) Dark Shadows (12, PG-13) aac Johnny Depp.
The 700 Club (TV G)
Mystery
Mystery
Mystery
Mystery
Restaurant: Impossible Restaurant: Impossible Mystery
Mystery
Horrible Bosses (11, R) aaa Jason Bateman.
Anger HD Anger HD Horrible Bosses (11, R) aaa Jason Bateman.
Love It or List It (N) HD Hunters
Hunters
Love It or List It HD
Love It or List It HD
Love It or List It HD
Lost History HD
Lost History HD
(:03) Thanksgiving HD
(:01) Lost History HD
Lost History HD
Finding Mrs. Claus (12)
Finding Mrs. Claus (12, NR) aac Mira Sorvino. HD Christmas on the Bayou (13, NR) Hilarie Burton.
Are You the One? HD
The One? Are You the One? HD
The One?
To Be Announced
Are You the One? HD
Full Hse
Full Hse
Full Hse
Full Hse
Prince
Prince
Friends
Friends
How I Met How I Met
Oceans Thirteen (07, PG-13) George Clooney.
Couples Retreat (09, PG-13) aa Vince Vaughn, Jason Bateman. HD
Paranormal Witness
Paranormal Witness
Paranormal Witness
Spartacus: Damned
(:05) 2010 (84) aac
Dad HD
Big Bang
Big Bang
Conan HD
Hospital
Conan HD
Family Guy Family Guy Dad HD
Dogs Life (:45) The Birth of the Tramp (14)
Seven Chances (25)
Keaton
(:45) The Freshman (25, NR) aaac
19 Kids and Counting
19 Kids and Counting
19 Kids and Counting
Quints by Surprise HD 19 Kids and Counting
Major Crimes (N) HD
Major Crimes HD
Law & Order HD
Law & Order HD
Major Crimes HD
Booze Traveler (N)
Bizarre Foods America Bizarre Foods
Bizarre Foods
Bizarre Foods (N)
Raymond Raymond Queens
Queens
Queens
Queens
Friends
Friends
(:20) Family Feud HD
Chrisley
Chrisley
Law & Order: SVU HD
WWE Monday Night Raw HD
Michelle
Weave Trip Love & Hip Hop
Michelle
Weave Trip Love & Hip Hop
Love & Hip Hop (N)
Rules HD
Parks HD Parks HD
How I Met How I Met How I Met How I Met How I Met How I Met Rules HD
Fight Game Foo Fighters: Sonic HD Getting On Comeback
Batman Begins (05, PG-13) aaac Christian Bale. HD
Veronica Mars (14, PG-13) aaac HD (:50) Kiss of the Dragon (01, R) aac Jet Li. HD Sin City Diaries Feature (07) HD
The Affair
Homeland HD
The Affair
Therapy
Brothers
Homeland HD

Antiques Roadshow

8:00

8:30

NOVEMBER 25, 2014


9:00

9:30

10:00

10:30

11:00

11:30

12:00

12:30

Local
Jimmy Kimmel Live (N) Nightline
Dancing with the Stars Dancing with the Stars (N) HD
NCIS: New Orleans (N) Person of Interest (N)
Local
(:35) Late Show (N) HD Late Late
NCIS : Grounded (N)
Marry Me Boy (N) HD Chicago Fire (N) HD
Local
Tonight Show (N) HD
Late Night
The Voice (N) HD
Mindy (N) Local Programs
Local Programs
MasterChef Junior (N) New Girl
Criminal Minds HD
Criminal Minds HD
The Listener (N)
The Listener
Criminal Minds HD
Storage
Storage
Storage
Storage
Shipping
Shipping
Country
Country
Storage
Storage
Ghost (90, PG-13) Patrick Swayze.
The Curious Case of Benjamin Button (08, PG-13) aaac Cate Blanchett, Brad Pitt. HD
To Be Announced
Yellowstone: Battle HD
To Be Announced
Yellowstone: Battle for Life HD
Husbands Wendy Williams (N) HD
Husbands Husbands Husbands Husbands Husbands Nellyville (N)
The Peoples Couch
Real Housewives
Vanderpump Rules
Real Housewives
Real Housewives (N)
Dad HD
Family Guy Family Guy Robot
Squid HD
King Hill
King Hill
Cleveland Cleveland Dad HD
Cops HD
Cops HD
Cops HD
Burlesque (10, PG-13) aac Cher, Christina Aguilera. HD
Anderson Cooper 360 Anthony : Thailand
Anderson Cooper 360 Anthony : Thailand
CNN Tonight (N)
Colbert HD midnight
Tosh.0 HD
Tosh.0 HD Tosh.0 HD Tosh.0 HD Tosh.0 HD Tosh.0 (N) Sneak Peek Daily HD
Moonshiners (N) HD
Billy Bobs Gag (N) HD
Moonshiners HD
Billy Bobs Gag HD
Moonshiners (N) HD
Girl Meets Liv HD
Good Luck Good Luck
WALL-E (08, G) aaaa Ben Burtt. Mickey
Austin HD Dog Blog
E! News (N) HD
Sex & City Sex & City
House of DVF
House of DVF
E! True Story HD
Basketball College Basketball : Maui Invitat. (Live) HD
SportsCenter HD
(7:30) College Basketball (Live) HD
College Basketball : Legends Classic (Live) HD
NFL Live HD
(7:00) College Football : Teams TBA (Live) HD
The 700 Club (TV G)
Mirror Mirror (12) HD
Dark (12) Willy Wonka and the Chocolate Factory (71, G) aaac HD
Chopped (N) HD
Chopped
Chopped
Chopped HD
Chopped : Wasted!
Chopped HD
Madagascar 3: Europes Most Wanted (12) aaa Madagascar 3: Europes Most Wanted (12) aaa Madagascar 2 (08) HD
Flip Flop
Flip Flop
Flip Flop
Flip Flop
Hunters
Hunters
Fixer Upper
Flip Flop
Flip Flop
Oak Island (N) HD
(:03) Search For (N) HD America Unearthed HD (:01) Oak Island HD
Oak Island HD
The Sisterhood (N) HD
Prison Wives Club (N)
True Tori : He Said,
True Tori : He Said,
True Tori (N) HD
Awkward. Awkward. Awkward. Awkward. Awkward. Faking It
Girl Code Awkward. Faking It
L. Blonde
Full Hse
Full Hse
Full Hse
Full Hse
Prince
Prince
Friends
Friends
How I Met How I Met
Ink Master HD
Ink Master (N) HD
Nightmares Nightmares Ink Master HD
Ink Master HD
Spartacus: Damned
(:05) Lockout (12)
Shutter Island (10, R) aaac Leonardo DiCaprio, Mark Ruffalo. HD
Hospital
Conan HD
Big Bang
Big Bang
Big Bang
Big Bang
Big Bang
Big Bang
Conan HD
(:15) The Secret Life of Walter Mitty (47) aaa (:15) TCMs Night at the Movies
Bagdad
Night at Movies (N)
19 Kids and Counting
(:04) Risking It All HD
19 Kids and Counting
19 Kids and Counting
Risking It All (N) HD
(:01) Bones HD
(:02) CSI: NY HD
(:03) CSI: NY HD
CSI: NY : Hush HD
Bones HD
Bizarre Foods
Bizarre Foods
Hotel Impossible
Hotel Impossible
Hotel Impossible (N)
Raymond Raymond Queens
Queens
The Exes
Cleveland Friends
Friends
(:20) Family Feud HD
Modern
Modern
Modern
Modern
Chrisley
Benched
Chrisley
Benched
Law & Order: SVU HD
Love & Hip Hop
TI & Tiny TI & Tiny Soul Plane (04, R) ac Tom Arnold, Kevin Hart.
TI & Tiny TI & Tiny
Batman (89, PG-13) aaa Jack Nicholson, Michael Keaton.
Rules HD
Rules HD
Parks HD
Home Videos HD
State of Play (N) HD
Foo Fighters: Sonic HD Comeback Newsroom
The Wolverine (13) HD Real Sports HD
X-Men: The Last Stand (06) aaa (:45) Escape from L.A. (96, R) aa Kurt Russell. HD Weekend Sexcapades (14) c HD
Homeland HD
Inside the NFL HD
The To Do List (13) HD
The Affair
Inside the NFL (N) HD

Finding Your Roots |

Jay Leno

| Charlie Rose
Hometown Content, Listings by FYI

WEDNESDAY EVENING

12:30

Hometown Content, Listings by FYI

8:00

WBGU

Hometown Content, Listings by FYI

9:00

ABC
CBS
NBC
FOX
ION
A&E
AMC
ANIMAL
BET
BRAVO
CARTOON
CMT
CNN
COMEDY
DISCOVERY
DISNEY
E!
ESPN
ESPN2
FAMILY
FOOD
FX
HGTV
HISTORY
LIFETIME
MTV
NICK
SPIKE
SYFY
TBS
TCM
TLC
TNT
TRAVEL
TV LAND
USA
VH1
WGN
HBO
MAX
SHOW

PBS

NOVEMBER 23, 2014

Local Programs
Local Programs
2014 American Music Awards HD
The Good Wife (N) HD
CSI: Crime Scene (N)
Local Programs
60 Min. (N) Madam Secretary (N)
Local
Dateline NBC HD
(:20) Sunday Night Football: Dallas Cowboys at New York Giants Week 12. (Live) HD
Local Programs
Local Programs
Simpsons Brooklyn Family Guy Bobs (N)
Criminal Minds HD
Criminal Minds HD
Rookie Blue : I Never
Rookie Blue (TV14) HD
Criminal Minds HD
Duck HD
Duck Dynasty HD
Dogs of War (N) HD
Duck HD
Duck HD
Duck HD
Duck HD
Duck HD
The Walking Dead (N)
Talking Dead (N) HD
The Walking Dead HD
Comic Book Dead HD
The Walking Dead HD
Finding Bigfoot : Bobo, Bobcat (N)
Finding (N) Finding Bigfoot (N) HD
Finding Bigfoot HD
North Woods Law (N)
(7:00) Honey (03) aa Set It Off (96, R) aa Jada Pinkett Smith, Queen Latifah.
BET Inspiration
Real Housewives
Fashion
Watch What Housewives
The Real Housewives of Atlanta (N) Real Housewives
Bobs HD
Sit Down Family Guy Family Guy Squid (N)
Aqua TV
Superjail!
King Hill
King Hill
Bobs HD
Young Guns (88, R) aaa Emilio Estevez. HD
Winters Bone (10, R) aaa Jennifer Lawrence, John Hawkes. HD
Anthony : Jamaica
Ivory Tower (98, NR) aa Patrick Van Horn.
This is Life
This is Life
Futurama Futurama South Park South Park South Park South Park South Park Tropic Thunder (08, R) Ben Stiller.
Alaska: Last (N) HD
Edge of Alaska (N)
Alaska: Last HD
Edge of Alaska
Alaska: Last (N) HD
Austin HD I Didnt
Good Luck Good Luck
Austin (N) Liv (N) HD Jessie HD Girl Meets Jessie HD Dog Blog
House of DVF (N)
Kourtney
Kourtney
Kourtney
Kourtney (N)
2014 World Series of Poker : Final Table HD
SportsCenter Sports news. HD
Sports HD
Sports HD Champ.
ESPN Films HD
ESPN FC HD
(6:30) College Bball HD College Basketball : Charleston Classic (Live)
Nightmare Before (93) aaa HD
Osteen
Turn Point
Finding Nemo (03, G) Albert Brooks, Alexander Gould. HD
Cutthroat Kitchen (N)
Cutthroat Holiday Baking
Guys Grocery Games Holiday Baking (N)
Looper (12, R) aaac Bruce Willis, Joseph Gordon-Levitt.
Looper (12, R) aaac Bruce Willis, Joseph Gordon-Levitt.
Life (N)
Hunt
Hunt
House for Free
Hunters
Hunters
Hunt
Hunt
Life (N)
Cars HD
Cars HD
Cars HD
Cars HD
Cars HD
Down East Dickering
Cars HD
Cars HD
Cars HD
Seasons of Love (14) HD
An En Vogue Christmas (14) Rhona Bennett. HD
An En Vogue (14) HD
(7:00) A Walk to Remember (02) aac Slednecks Slednecks Slednecks Girl Code Girl Code Legally Blonde (01) aac
Full Hse
Prince
Prince
Friends
Friends
How I Met How I Met
The Last Airbender HD Full Hse
Bar Rescue (N) HD
Catch a Contractor (N) Bar Rescue HD
Bar Rescue HD
Bar Rescue HD
Spartacus: Damned
(:05) Halloween II (09)
Cabin in Woods (12)
Thir13en Ghosts (01, R) aa Tony Shalhoub. HD
The Wizard of Oz (39, NR) Judy Garland, Frank Morgan. HD
Complicate
The Wizard of Oz (39, NR) Judy Garland. HD
Plymouth Adventure (52, NR) aa Spencer Tracy. Northwest Passage (40, NR) aaa Spencer Tracy. Master of House (25)
90 Day Fiance (N) HD
My Five Wives (N) HD
90 Day Fiance HD
My Five Wives HD
90 Day Fiance (N) HD
Citizen HD
Law Abiding Citizen (09, R) aaa Jamie Foxx. HD (:01) The Lincoln Lawyer (11, R) Matthew McConaughey. HD
Extreme RVs HD
Alaska Starts Here
Bizarre Foods America Alaska Starts Here (N) Extreme RVs (N) HD
Cosby
Cosby
Raymond Raymond Queens
Queens
Queens
Queens
Friends
Friends
Law & Order: SVU HD
Law & Order: SVU HD
Modern
Modern
Modern
Modern
Law & Order: SVU HD
Weave Trip Michelle
Love & Hip Hop
Love & Hip Hop
Friday After Next (02, R) aa Ice Cube. HD
Pirates of Caribbean: Dead Mans Chest (06)
Pirates of the Caribbean: At Worlds End (07, PG-13) Johnny Depp. HD
Comeback Getting On The Newsroom HD
Comeback Getting On
Awkward Moment (14) The Newsroom (N) HD
Wedding Crashers (05, R) aaa Owen Wilson. HD In Bed HD Top HD
Enders Game (13, PG-13) Asa Butterfield. HD
The Affair (N)
Homeland HD
The Affair
The Affair
Homeland (N) HD

ABC
CBS
NBC
FOX
ION
A&E
AMC
ANIMAL
BET
BRAVO
CARTOON
CMT
CNN
COMEDY
DISCOVERY
DISNEY
E!
ESPN
ESPN2
FAMILY
FOOD
FX
HGTV
HISTORY
LIFETIME
MTV
NICK
SPIKE
SYFY
TBS
TCM
TLC
TNT
TRAVEL
TV LAND
USA
VH1
WGN
HBO
MAX
SHOW

TUESDAY EVENING

Hometown Content, Listings by FYI

Local
Local Programs
(:07) College Football : Teams TBA (Live) HD
48 Hours
Local Programs
NCIS : Crescent City
NCIS: Los Angeles HD
State of Affairs : Pilot Saturday Night Live HD Local
(:29) Saturday Night Live (N) HD
Dateline Sat. (N) HD
Golan HD
Golan HD
Local Programs
(7:30) College Football: Oklahoma State Cowboys at Baylor Bears (Live)
Law & Order CI HD
Law & Order CI HD
Law & Order CI HD
Law & Order CI HD
Law & Order CI HD
Criminal Minds HD
Criminal Minds HD
(:01) Criminal Minds HD (:01) Criminal Minds HD
Criminal Minds HD
Hell on Wheels HD
The Outlaw Josey Wales (76, PG) aaac HD
Heartbreak Ridge (86) Hell on Wheels (N) HD
Pit Bulls and Parolees To Be Announced
Pit Bulls and Parolees
My Cat from Hell (N) HD To Be Announced
(7:00) Meet the Browns (08, PG-13) Tyler Perrys Madeas Big Happy Family (11, PG-13) ac Tyler Perry.
Husbands
Get Him to the Greek (10, R) aac Jonah Hill, Joe Benson.
Get Him to the Greek (10, R) aac Jonah Hill, Joe Benson.
Dad HD
Boondcks Dynamite Family Guy Attack HD DBZ Kai
Naruto HD
King Hill
King Hill
Dad HD
Swamp
Cops HD
Cops HD
Cops HD
Cops HD
Cops HD
Good Will Hunting (97) Swamp Pawn (N) HD
(7:00) The Sixties
The Sixties
The Sixties
The Sixties
The Sixties : 1968"
The House Bunny (08, PG-13) Anna Faris. HD
Thunder
Hit & Run The House Bunny (08, PG-13) Anna Faris. HD
Airplane Repo (N)
Airplane Repo (N)
Airplane Repo HD
Airplane Repo HD
Airplane Repo HD
Mighty Med Dog Blog
I Didnt
Austin HD Girl Meets
The Little Mermaid (89) Girl Meets Jessie HD Lab Rats
Next Door
Evan Almighty (07, PG) aa Steve Carell.
The Dilemma (11, PG-13) aa Vince Vaughn, Kevin James. HD
SportsCenter Sports news. HD
SportsCenter HD
(7:30) College Football : Teams TBA (Live) HD
(:15) College Football: Boise State Broncos at Wyoming Cowboys (Live)
(7:00) College Football : Teams TBA (Live) HD
The Hunger Games (12, PG-13) Jennifer Lawrence, Stanley Tucci. HD
The Mummy Returns (01, PG-13) aac
Chopped HD
Chopped HD
Chopped HD
Chopped HD
Chopped HD
Anger HD
Mike Molly Mike Molly Mike Molly Mike Molly Mike Molly Mike Molly Sons of Anarchy : Suits of Woe HD
Hunters
Hunters
Property Brothers HD
Property Brothers HD Property Brothers HD House Hunters (N)
American Pickers HD
American Pickers HD
American Pickers HD
Country
American American Pickers HD
An En Vogue Christmas (14) Rhona Bennett. HD
An En Vogue (14) HD
An En Vogue Christmas (14) Rhona Bennett. HD
To Be Announced
To Be Announced
Scary Movie 3 (03, PG-13) aa Anna Faris. HD
Thunderman Haunted
Prince
Prince
Friends
Friends
How I Met How I Met
Henry (N) Nicky (N)
Cops HD
Auction
Thrift (N)
Transporter 3 (08, PG-13) aac Jason Statham. HD
Bourne ID
Cops (N)
Final Destination 3 (06) The Cabin in the Woods (12, R) aaa
The Crazies (10, R) aaa Timothy Olyphant.
Big Bang
Big Bang
Big Bang
Big Bang
Big Bang
Big Bang
Deal With Life as We Know It (10, PG-13) HD
The Champ (31, NR) aaa
The Kid from Brooklyn (46, NR) aa Danny Kaye. The Prizefighter and the Lady (33)
Untold ER HD
Sex Sent Me to the ER Sex Sent Me to (N) HD
Untold ER HD
Extra Dose HD
Transporter (N) HD
Transporter (N) HD
Transporter HD
Transporter HD
National (07, PG) HD
Ghost Adventures HD
The Dead Files (N) HD
The Dead Files HD
Ghost Adventures HD
Ghost Adventures HD
Fam. Feud Fam. Feud Raymond Raymond Queens
Queens
Queens
Queens
Friends
Friends
(6:30) No Strings (11)
The Ugly Truth (09, R) aac Katherine Heigl.
Modern
Modern
Covert Affairs
(7:30) Never Been Kissed (99, PG-13) aa
The Wedding Date (05, PG-13) Debra Messing.
Bacardi
Dating HD
Blue Bloods HD
Blue Bloods HD
How I Met How I Met
Blue Bloods : Critical
Blue Bloods HD
Hello Ladies: The Movie (14) HD
The Newsroom : Run Foo Fight
That Awkward Moment (14, R) Zac Efron. HD
Topless
Shame HD
Kick-Ass 2 (13, R) aaa Aaron Taylor-Johnson. HD X-Men: The Last Stand (06) aaa HD Topless
Breaking Dawn, P2 HD The To Do List (13, R) aac HD
Lost Song Homeland HD
The Affair

Antiques Road Show|

Friday, November 21 to Thursday, November 27, 2014

PREM

8:30

TVListings

BROADCAST

8:00

Delphos Herald

NOVEMBER 22, 2014

SUNDAY EVENING

PREM

12:30

CABLE

WBGU

12:00

ABC
CBS
NBC
FOX
ION
A&E
AMC
ANIMAL
BET
BRAVO
CARTOON
CMT
CNN
COMEDY
DISCOVERY
DISNEY
E!
ESPN
ESPN2
FAMILY
FOOD
FX
HGTV
HISTORY
LIFETIME
MTV
NICK
SPIKE
SYFY
TBS
TCM
TLC
TNT
TRAVEL
TV LAND
USA
VH1
WGN
HBO
MAX
SHOW

PBS

8:00

8:30

9:00

NOVEMBER 26, 2014


9:30

10:00

10:30

11:00

11:30

12:00

12:30

Modern
black-ish Nashville HD
Local
Jimmy Kimmel Live (N) Nightline
Charlie Brown HD
Criminal Minds (N) HD
Stalker (N) HD
Local
(:35) Late Show (N) HD Late Late
Survivor (N) HD
Local
(:35) Tonight Show HD Late Night
Making of Peter (N) HD Saturday Night Live : SNL Thanksgiving (N) HD
Red Band Society (N)
Local Programs
Local Programs
Hells Kitchen (N) HD
Cold Case HD
Cold Case HD
Cold Case : A Dollar
Cold Case : 8:03 AM
Cold Case HD
Duck Dynasty HD
Duck (N)
Country
Country
Country
Country
Duck HD
Duck HD
Duck HD
Gone with the Wind (40, NR) aaac Clark Gable, Vivien Leigh. HD
The Whale: Revenge From the Deep (14) HD
The Whale: Revenge From the Deep (14) HD
(7:00) Megalodon HD
(7:00) Little Man (06, PG-13) ac
Nellyville
Husbands
Husbands Wendy Williams (N) HD
Real Housewives
Real Housewives
Real Housewives
What Happens
Real Housewives
Dad HD
Family Guy Family Guy Robot
Squid HD
King Hill
King Hill
Cleveland Cleveland Dad HD
Party Down South : Drunksgiving
Starsky
Starsky & Hutch (04, PG-13) aac Ben Stiller, Owen Wilson. HD
Anderson Cooper 360 Mike Rowe
Mike Rowe
Mike Rowe
Mike Rowe
Colbert HD midnight South Park
Happy Gilmore (96) HD South Park South Park South Park South Park Daily HD
Dude, Youre Screwed Naked and Afraid HD
Naked and Afraid HD
Naked and Afraid HD
Dude Youre (N) HD
So Raven So Raven
Meet the Robinsons (07, G) aaa Star Wars Star Wars (:35) Blog Girl Meets Liv HD
Sex & City Sex & City
Kourtney
Kourtney
The Soup The Soup E! News (N) HD
College Basketball : Maui Invitat. (Live) HD
SportsCenter HD
(7:30) NBA Basketball: New York vs Dallas (Live)
College Basketball: Georgia vs Gonzaga (Live)
College Basketball (Live) HD
(7:30) College Basketball (Live) HD
The 700 Club (TV G)
A Cinderella Story (04)
Wonka HD Cars 2 (11, G) aac Jan Nilsson, Owen Wilson. HD
Cutthroat Kitchen
Cutthroat Kitchen
Cutthroat Kitchen
Cutthroat Kitchen
Kitchen Inferno (N)
The Amazing Spider-Man (12, PG-13) aaa Andrew Garfield, Emma Stone.
The Amazing Spider-Man (12, PG-13) aaa
Hunters
Hunters
Property Brothers HD Property Home
Property Brothers HD Property Home (N)
American Pickers (N)
Down East Dickering
(:03) Thanksgiving HD
American Pickers HD
American Pickers HD
Seasons of Love (14) Taraji P. Henson. HD
Good Deeds (12) aa
Good Deeds (12, PG-13) aa Tyler Perry. HD
Snooki and JWoww HD Snooki and JWoww HD Snooki and JWoww (N) Snooki (N) Ridiculous Ridiculous Ridiculous
Witch Way Full Hse
Full Hse
Full Hse
Prince
Prince
Friends
Friends
How I Met How I Met
I Am Legend (07) HD
End of Watch (12, R) Jake Gyllenhaal, Michael Pea. HD
Walking Tall (04, PG-13) aa HD
Space Cowboys (00, PG-13) aac Clint Eastwood, Tommy Lee Jones.
The Almighty HD
The Right Stuff (83)
Hospital
Conan HD
Family Guy Family Guy Big Bang Big Bang Big Bang Big Bang Conan HD
Arsne Lupin (32, NR) aaa
Gambit (66, NR) aaa Shirley MacLaine.
The Fake (53, NR) Dennis OKeefe.
Christmas Light HD
Christmas Lights 2 HD Crazy Lights HD
Christmas Light HD
Crazy Lights HD
Training Day (01, R) Denzel Washington, Ethan Hawke. HD
(:31) The Town (10, R) aaa Ben Affleck, Rebecca Hall. HD
Food Paradise
Food Paradise
Booze Traveler
Man v. Food Nation HD Booze Traveler
Friends
Friends
Cleveland The Exes Cleveland The Exes Queens
Queens
(:20) Family Feud HD
Modern
White Collar HD
Law & Order: SVU HD Law & Order: SVU HD Law & Order: SVU HD Modern
Malibus Most (03) HD
TI & Tiny TI & Tiny Love & Hip Hop
Love & Hip Hop
Macklemore (N)
Batman
How I Met How I Met How I Met How I Met How I Met Rules HD
Rules HD
Parks HD Parks HD
Comeback The Newsroom HD
Real Time Maher HD
Getting On State Play
That Awkward Moment (14, R) HD
Smaug HD
Gravity (13, PG-13) Sandra Bullock.
Endless Love (14, PG-13) aac HD (:15) A Wifes Secret (14, NRAO) HD
Homeland HD
The Affair
Therapy
Inside the NFL HD
Therapy
Inside the NFL HD

WBGU Nature My Life As a Turkey |Nature

|Nature

| Charlie Rose

Hometown Content, Listings by FYI

THURSDAY EVENING
8:00

8:30

NOVEMBER 27, 2014

9:00

9:30

10:00

10:30

11:00

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How to Get Away HD


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When Turkeys Attack
The Hunt for Hogzilla
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(7:30) The Preachers Wife (96, PG) aa Denzel Washington.
Little Richard (00, NR) aac Leon, Jenifer Lewis.
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Matchmaker Millionaire Matchmaker Millionaire Matchmaker The Real Housewives of Atlanta
What Happens
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Austin HD Dog Blog Girl Meets Liv HD
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Terror HD Ratatouille (07, G) aaac Patton Oswalt, Ian Holm. HD
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Beat Bobby Beat Bobby Diners HD Diners HD Chopped HD
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Madagascar: Escape 2 Africa (08, PG) aaa HD Madagascar 3: Europes Most Wanted (12) aaa Train Dragon (10)
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Friday
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HD
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of Eddies Father
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II:
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(:01) Transporter HD
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to Lose
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The
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Central
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Improv:
Saturday Night Live HD A Very Bonnaroo Thanksgiving (N)
Never Been Kissed (99, PG-13) aa 50 Years
VH1
DISC
Guns:
Locked
Sons Home
of Guns
WildHome
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The
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(14,
PG)
aaac
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HD
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of
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(14,
R)
aac
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R)
aaa
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MAX
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HD
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R)
aaac
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11:30

| Charlie Rose | Washington Week with Gwen Ifill

SATURDAY EVENING
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11:00

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9:30

Last Man Cristela


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MasterChef Junior HD Gotham : The Mask
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(:01) Criminal Minds HD (:01) Godfather of HD
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Seed of Chucky (04, R) aa Jennifer Tilly. HD
The Walking Dead HD
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Joyful Noise (12, PG-13) aa Queen Latifah. HD
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Dad HD
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Whole Nine Yards (00)
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Spotlight Unguarded Anthony : Jamaica
Anthony
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Gold Rush: Pay Dirt (N) Gold Rush (N) HD
Edge of Alaska (N) HD
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Liv HD
Jessie HD I Didnt
Dog Blog
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NBA Basketball: Chicago vs Portland (Live) HD
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College Football: San Jose State Spartans at Utah State Aggies (Live) HD
Sports HD
Miss (00) Monte Carlo (11, PG) aac Selena Gomez, Katie Cassidy.
The 700 Club (TV G)
Abduction (11) aa HD
Outrageous
Diners HD Diners HD Diners (N) Diners HD Diners HD Diners HD Diners HD Diners HD
Grown Ups (10, PG-13) aac Adam Sandler, Kevin James. HD
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Love It or List It HD
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Oak Island : Once In,
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(:03) Search For HD
Oak Island : Once In,
Christmas in (13) HD
Christmas in the City (13, NR) Ashley Williams.
Under the Mistletoe (06, NR) aac HD
Final Destination 2 (03)
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TMNT HD
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GT Academy Cops HD
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Big Bang
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Deal With Hitch (05, PG-13) Will Smith, Eva Mendes. HD
Duel (71, PG) aaac Dennis Weaver.
Slither (73, PG) aac James Caan, Peter Boyle.
Scarecrow (73) aaa
19 Kids and Counting
Say Yes
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Borrowed Borrowed Say Yes
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Borrowed Borrowed
Along Came a Spider (01, R) Morgan Freeman.
(:02) On the Menu HD
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Mysteries
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Raymond Raymond Queens
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(:20) Family Feud HD
Modern
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Chrisley
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Oceans Eleven (01, PG-13) aaa George Clooney.
Boogie Nights (97, R) aaac Mark Wahlberg, Julianne Moore.
Rules HD
How I Met How I Met How I Met How I Met How I Met How I Met How I Met How I Met Rules HD
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The Legend of Hercules (14) ac HD Pacquiao Real Time Maher (N)
Lolita From Interstellar Space (14)
16 Blocks (06, PG-13) Bruce Willis.
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The Affair

Masterpiece Classic |

WBGU

9:00

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PBS

NOVEMBER 21, 2014

8:30

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ABC
CBS
NBC
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E!
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FOOD
FX
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8:00

PREM

PREM

CABLE

BROADCAST

FRIDAY EVENING

The Herald - 9

PBS
FAM

WBGU
FOOD
FX
HGTV

Matilda

Cloudy-Mtballs
Diners

Diners, Drive

Beach

Hunters

Bowling
Holiday Parade
2014
Diners GreenDiners
Diners
Thor
Beach

Beach

Beach

Hunt Intl

The 700 Club


Diners
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Thor
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Hunt Intl

Prince
Diners

Prince
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Beach

Beach

Hometown Content, Listings by FYI

|Independent Lens Muscle Shoals/Waiting For a Train: The Toshio Hirano Story
HIST
LIFE
Hometown Content, Listings by FYI

MTV
NICK
SCI

American Pickers
Celebrity Wife Swap
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Relative Insanity
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American Pickers
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The Waterboy
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Classifieds
10 The Herald

Friday, November 21, 2014

www.delphosherald.com

235 Help Wanted


DANCER LOGISTICS in
Delphos, Ohio has the
following openings:
Part-time and Full-time
Drivers, Maintenance
Technicians. Drivers
needed for regional and
home every-day runs.
Full-time benefits include
Major Medical, Dental,
Vision, Bonus Program,
401K and Paid Vacations. You need two
years experience and a
Class A CDL. Maintenance
Technicians
needed for our semi and
trailer repair shop. Experience preferred and
must have own tools.
Salary depends on experience. To Apply, go to:
www.dancerlogistics.com,

Careers, select desired


position and fill out the
short application and
submit. Once we receive
your online application
we will contact you.

DRIVERS NEEDED Bee


Line Trucking is in the
need of two full-time
drivers. Dedicated daytime and afternoon
routes out of Ottoville.
Drop & Hook Automotive
freight. Good Pay, Good
equipment, Paid Vacations, Paid Holidays,
Group Medical , 401K,
Class-A CDL 18 months
driving experience a
must. Call: Ed
Kraetschmer
419-453-2273

NURSE PRACTITIONER or physician assistant needed full time for


busy dermatology practice. Friendly, collegial
team environment with
opportunity to learn.
Very competitive compensation package.
Send resume to: West
Ohio Dermatology Inc.,
1005 Bellefontaine Ave.,
Ste. 225, Lima, OH
45804, Attn: Office Manager

HOME WEEKENDS
& NIGHTS

SEMI DRIVERS
NEEDED

Class A CDL required with


experience preferred.
New Trucks
Pay based on percentage
Benefits included
Vacations and 401K
Send resume or inquire at:
ulms@bizwoh.rr.com
AWC Trucking Inc.
835 Skinner St.
Delphos, Ohio 45833
419-692-3951

S
610 Automotive

Geise

Transmission, Inc.
Denny

580

& 7 paid holidays

!Job Objectives: Serves


as confidential secretary
to the superintendent.
Provides administrative
support that supports the
effective management of
career center operations.
Preferred Minimum
Qualifications:
Proficient in office
protocol, and!
technology business
equipment & protocols
Ability to interact
comfortably and
confidently with
the public
Record keeping skills
and ability to organize &
maintain contractual
data accurately
Multitasking ability and
strong interpersonal
skills
Strong organizational,
planning and project
management skills
Proficient in data entry,
spelling, proofreading
and the correct use of
grammar
Proficient in the use of
computer software
programs to include
Publisher and Adobe
Meets all mandated
health requirements
(e.g., a negative
tuberculosis test, etc.)
Complies with drug-free
workplace rules and
board policies

1BR APT., Nice, clean.


Appliances, electric heat,
laundry room, No pets.
WATER INCLUDED.
$425/month, plus deposit. 320 N. Jefferson.
419-852-0833.
NICE CLEAN one bedroom apartment. Stove &
refrigerator, electric heat,
large backyard and
off-street parking. $400
a month plus utilities. Ph.
419 296-5123
RICKER ADDITION: All
brick, 2BR ranch. All
appliances, garage
w/opener. No pets.
$595mo. Lease deposit.
419-453-3290.

320 House For Rent


SEVERAL MOBILE
Homes/House for rent.
View homes online at
www.ulmshomes.com or
inquire at 419-692-3951
THREE-BEDROOM
HOUSE
in Delphos,
1-Bath. Call 419695-2586, leave message.

Garage Sales/
555
Yard Sales
AVON, CHRISTMAS
Open House, Nov 21-23,
8am-?, 11411 Ridge Rd.
(by Country Meadows).
ESTATE SALE. 804
Lima
Ave.
11/21,
12-5pm, 11/22, 10-2pm.
New things, kitchen,
lamps & more.

Provides documented
evidence of a clear
criminal record

Instrumental

BABY GRAND piano.


Excellent condition.
$4,900.
Ph.
419
303-2767.

585 Produce
POTATOES FOR sale.
Schutzs Produce. 1 mile
east of Pandora on St.
Rt. 12.
Ph. 419-384-3398.

592 Wanted to Buy

Raines
Jewelry
Cash for Gold

Scrap Gold, Gold Jewelry,


Silver coins, Silverware,
Pocket Watches, Diamonds.

2330 Shawnee Rd.


Lima
(419) 229-2899

Place a House
For Sale Ad
In the Classifieds
Call

The
Delphos
Herald

419 695-0015

STNA

State Tested Nursing Assistants


Get your application submitted today!
10357 Van Wert Decatur roaD
Van Wert, ohio

!Vantage Career Center


is an Equal Opportunity
Employer.!The Vantage
Career Center
Administration reserves
the right to not

www.vancrest.com
jpond@vancrest.com

fill this position.

Van Wert

For details call

419.238.4646

AT YOUR

ervice
660 Home Services

Metzgers

Appliance Service

665

Lawn, Garden,
Landscaping

TEMANS
Jon

OUR TREE
SERVICE

419.286.8387
800.686.3537
automatic transmission
standard transmission Washers Dryers Refrigerators Freezers Trimming Topping Thinning
Ranges Dishwashers Icemakers Microwaves
Deadwooding
differentials
Stump, Shrub & Tree Removal
We service Kenmore appliances
transfer case
Since 1973
and most major appliance brands
brakes & tune up
Denny
Denny
Jon
Denny
Jon
2 miles north of Ottoville
419.286.8387
| 419.692.8387
419.286.8387
419.286.8387 800.686.3537
800.686.3537
Bill Teman 419-302-2981
800.686.3537
Washers Dryers
Ernie Teman
419-230-4890
Washers Dryers Refrigerators
Freezers
Washers
Dryers Refrigerators
Freezers
Refrigerators
Freezers Icemakers Microwaves
Ranges Dishwashers Icemakers
Microwaves
Ranges
Dishwashers
Ranges Dishwashers
We service Kenmore appliances
We service Kenmore appliances
625 Construction
Icemakers Microwaves
and most major appliance brands
and most major appliance brands

Metzgers Metzgers
419-692-7261

Appliance Service Appliance Service

419-453-3620

670 Miscellaneous

SAFE &
SOUND

DELPHOS

SELF-STORAGE
Security Fence
Pass Code Lighted Lot
Affordable 2 Locations
Why settle for less?

419-692-6336
680 Snow Removal

WE SERVICE MOST
670 Miscellaneous
419.286.8387 | 419.692.8387
419.286.8387
| 419.692.8387
MAJOR APPLIANCE
BRANDS
INCLUDING
800.686.3537
800.686.3537
KENMORE
APPLIANCES

POHLMAN
BUILDERS
ROOM ADDITIONS

GARAGES SIDING ROOFING


BACKHOE & DUMP TRUCK
SERVICE
FREE ESTIMATES
FULLY INSURED

POHLMAN
POURED
CONCRETE WALLS

Residential
& Commercial
Agricultural Needs
All Concrete Work

Mark Pohlman

419-339-9084
cell 419-233-9460

419-286-8387
419-692-8387

665

Lawn, Garden,
Landscaping

COMMUNITY
SELF-STORAGE
GREAT RATES
NEWER FACILITY

419-692-0032
Across from Arbys

L.L.C.

Trimming & Removal


Stump Grinding
24 Hour Service Fully Insured

KEVIN M. MOORE

(419) 235-8051

To place an ad phone 419-695-0015 ext. 122

FREE ADS: 5 days free if item is free THANKS TO ST. JUDE: Runs 1 day at the
price of $3.00.
GARAGE SALES: Each day is $.20 per
ad per month.
BOX REPLIES: $8.00 if you come word. $8.00 minimum charge.
and pick them up. $14.00 if we have to I WILL NOT BE RESPONSIBLE FOR
DEBTS: Ad must be placed in person by
send them to you.
CARD OF THANKS: $2.00 base the person whose name will appear in the ad.
Must show ID & pay when placing ad. Regucharge + $.10 for each word.
lar rates apply

Sons sex life is exposed


by unlucky coincidence
DEAR ABBY: How much
interest in an adult childs sex
life is normal? My mother
seems obsessed.
I hooked up with a girl a
couple of months ago on a
Friday. She spent most of the
weekend with me. We both
knew it wouldnt go further
than that.
It turns out she works with
my mom, who by chance
found out about the weekend.
Mom has been interrogating
her for every detail every
chance she gets, and she likes
to drop details into my daily
life to embarrass me.
How much interest is a
parent supposed to show?
Mine knows my favorite
position
and
intimate
interests. -- EXPOSED IN
PENNSYLVANIA
DEAR EXPOSED: It
seems your mother is not only
nosy, but also has a sadistic
sense of humor. Shes getting
a kick out of embarrassing
you.
Tell her to lay off
because what shes doing is
inappropriate, and its making
you uncomfortable. If she
cant respect your wishes,
then realize its time you put
some distance between you
and Mama. And to prevent
this from happening in the
future, find out more about
the chicks you hook up with
because this last one sings
like a bird.

DEAR
ABBY:
The
holidays will soon be here,
and so will something that
may seem petty, but really
irks me. My friends have a
large home with plenty of
room, so they usually host
the holiday dinners. We -the guests -- supply a few
side dishes to accompany the
meal. I usually bring several
sides because I like to cook
and I enjoy variety.
My
problem
is
presentation. I bring my sides
in nice casserole dishes and
do my best to make them
look appealing. Because
Im not particularly artistic,
it takes some effort. When
I arrive with the food, my
hosts unceremoniously dump
it into disposable aluminum
containers, wash my dishes
and put them aside.
I hope I dont sound picky,
but even when I have asked
that the items be served in the
dishes I brought, the hosts say,
Oh, this is easier. I have said
I dont mind bringing home
dirty dishes, but my wishes
are ignored. Am I being petty?
-- FRUSTRATED GUEST IN
NEW YORK
DEAR FRUSTRATED: I
dont think your feelings are
petty. Having put as much
effort as you have into making
the food youre preparing
look as appetizing as
possible, its understandable.
However, because this is

Ask Mr. Know-it-All

a
recurring
annoyance,
consider preparing this years
contributions in disposable
aluminum pans. That way,
your creations wont be
dumped.
DEAR ABBY: My wife is
a neatnik who always finds
extra or unexpected things to
do before meeting me at the
car, in the TV room, etc. It
means I always must wait for
her before going anyplace.
I have asked her a thousand
times to avoid doing one last
thing before coming to meet
me. How can I appeal to her
better nature to avoid tending
to every tiny detail before
joining me? Or am I being too
impatient? -- WAITING FOR
YOUR ANSWER
DEAR WAITING: Im
sorry, but I cant give you an
unbiased answer because I am
guilty of the same thing, and
it makes my husband crazy,
too. (I suspect your wife and
I are not the only women who
do this.)
Dear Abby is written by
Abigail Van Buren, also
known as Jeanne Phillips,
and was founded by her
mother, Pauline Phillips.
Contact Dear Abby at www.
DearAbby.com or P.O. Box
69440, Los Angeles, CA
90069.
COPYRIGHT
2014
UNIVERSAL UCLICK

Fairy tale was inspiration for mermaid statue

Preference may be
given to candidates with
office management
experience
!Salary:! Commensurate
with experience
!Deadline to submit
application:!
Friday,
December 5, 2014!
Interested applicants
should submit a letter of
interest, a Vantage
Career Center
Employment
application, resume and
three letters of reference
to:!
Staci Kaufman, Supt,!
818 N. Franklin St.,!
Van Wert, OH 45891
!or!kaufman.s@vantagecareercenter.com

HERALD

Telling The Tri-Countys Story Since 1869

Dear orAbby
less than $50. Only 1 item per ad, 1

Minimum Charge: 15 words,


Deadlines:
Apartment/
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1 BEDROOM
upstairs paper
LAMP is
REPAIR,
or Friday
6-9 days
attended our event $.25
at SUPERINTENDENTS
apartment. Appliances, floor. Come to our store.
Mondays paper is 1:00 p.m.
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Your No. 1 source for
local news.

by Gary Clothier
Q: Its been many years since Ive had
the opportunity to see the statue the Little
Mermaid in the Copenhagen Harbor. How old
is the statue? Who was the model? I understand
that it has been the subject of many incidents
of vandalism. Is this true? -- G.L.B., Norwalk,
Conn.
A: In 1909, Carl Jacobsen, son of the
founder of Carlsberg brewery, attended the
ballet The Little Mermaid, based on Hans
Christian Andersens fairy tale. He was so
moved by the performance, he commissioned
a statue by Edvard Eriksen. Ellen Price, who
performed the title role in the ballet, posed
for the statue. However, she refused to model
nude, so the body was modeled after Eline
Eriksen, the sculptors wife.
The Little Mermaid was unveiled on Aug.
23, 1913, and was donated to the city of
Copenhagen by Jacobsen.
The statue has been
vandalized -- including
being decapitated -- many
times over the years.
DID YOU KNOW?
Danny
DeVito
was
considered for the role of
George Costanza in the TV
series Seinfeld. The role
went to Jason Alexander.
Danny DeVito
Q: Being a lifelong
Green Bay Packers football
fan, my favorite quarterback has always been
Bart Starr. Is Bart his real first name? I assume
he was inducted into the Hall of Fame, but
when? -- S.K., Lexington, Mass.
A: Bryan Bartlett Bart Starr was born
in Montgomery, Ala., in 1934. He graduated
from the University of Alabama and entered
the NFL Draft in 1956, where the Packers
chose him in the 17th round.
After his playing career ended in 1971,
Starr stayed with the team as an assistant
coach, eventually becoming the Packers head

coach from 1975 to 1983. In 1965, Bart and


his wife, Cherry, helped co-found Rawhide
Boys Ranch in New London, Wis., to help atrisk and troubled boys throughout the state.
He was inducted into the Pro Football Hall of
Fame in 1977.
Q: Im watching reruns of the TV series In
the Heat of the Night. My question is about
Anne-Marie Johnson, who played Althea
Tibbs. She seemed so thin -- was she having
any health issues? -- V.G., Madelia, Minn.
A: Johnson was born July 18, 1960, in
Los Angeles. The 5 foot, 11 inch actress is
naturally slender. Since leaving In the Heat
of the Night in 1993, shes appeared in 50
different TV series, including House of
Payne, Thats So Raven and JAG.
Q: Thank you for the information about
Cyd Charisse. She and Tony Martin were
married until her death in 2008. Is Martin still
alive? -- M.L.S., Kokomo, Ind.
A: Cyd Charisse and Tony Martin were
married in 1948 and remained together until
her death in 2008. Tony Martin was born Dec.
25, 1913, and died July 27, 2012, at age 98.
He and Charisse had one son, Tony Martin Jr.,
who died in 2011 at age 60.
Q: During my travels with my family many
years ago, I vaguely recall seeing a sign for
the Worlds Only Cactus Plantation. Did
I imagine this? My folks dont recall such a
sign. -- T.G., Raleigh, N.C.
A: Your family travel plans took you
through Edwards, Miss., where, more than 20
years ago, John Thomas bought the property.
He filled the greenhouses with cacti and
bromeliads. Thomas is a World War II veteran
in his mid-80s, so I would call to make sure
its open before visiting -- 601-209-9153.
(Send your questions to Mr. Know-It-All
at AskMrKIA@gmail.com or c/o Universal
Uclick, 1130 Walnut St., Kansas City, MO
64106.)
Distributed by Universal UClick for UFS

Credit card investigation is likely to be brief


DEAR BRUCE: I recently
was notified by my bank
that my credit card was
compromised by someone in
another state. They charged
$600 to my card. I called the
bank and they canceled my
credit card and issued me a
new one. In the meantime,
they are going to investigate
and return my money into my
account in five business days.
My question is, will
they just return the money
or will they really do an
investigation? Or do I need
to notify my local police? -Ben
DEAR BEN: You did the
proper thing. You canceled
your card and will be sent a
new one, and your money
will be refunded. Most likely,
with the small amount of
money involved, the bank
wont spend a lot of time
investigating. You certainly
should consider filling out
a local police report, just to
protect yourself.

In any case, the fact that you


notified the credit card issuer
quickly discharges $550 of
the cost automatically. The
maximum you can be held
responsible for is $50, and
issuers very seldom do that.
DEAR BRUCE: I have
an IRA with approximately
$25,000. I am 41 years old
and in need of cash due to
bad credit card mistakes. I
am wondering how much I
can take out. What would be
the penalties and the taxes?
-- S.D.
DEAR S.D.: You can take
it all out, however, there will
be penalties. Because of your
relatively young age, there
will be a 10 percent penalty
for taking the money out, and
you will have to figure out the
taxes.
The amount that you
withdraw will simply be
added to your ordinary
income for the tax year. It
should be a simple matter to
compute your taxes, but if

Bruce Williams

Smart
Money
you are unable to handle that,
a tax preparing company
can do it for a very modest
amount.
(Send
questions
to
bruce@brucewilliams.
com. Questions of general
interest will be answered in
future columns. Owing to
the volume of mail, personal
replies cannot be provided.)
COPYRIGHT
2014
UNITED
FEATURE
SYNDICATE
DISTRIBUTED
BY
UNIVERSAL UCLICK FOR
UFS

www.delphosherald.com

Comics & Puzzles


Zits

Blondie

For Better or Worse

Beetle Bailey

Pickles

Garfield

Born Loser

Hagar the Horrible

Barney Google & Snuffy Smith

Todays
Horoscope
By Eugenia Last

FRIDAY, NOV. 21, 2014


Its time to take care of
your own needs. Youve done
so much for others that you
have neglected your own wellbeing. Stay focused and take
firm action when it comes
to health, financial and legal
matters. Leave the past behind
and face the future with selfconfidence.
SCORPIO
(Oct.
24Nov. 22) -- Create an area at
home where you can let your
imagination wander. Free of
distractions or interruptions,
you will be able to formulate
the steps necessary to get
ahead.
SAGITTARIUS (Nov. 23Dec. 21) -- You have a strong
mindset, but stubbornness will
not get you what you want.
Let others have their say. The
more agreeable you are, the
better you will do.
CAPRICORN (Dec. 22Jan. 19) -- Its time to make
a move. Get the preliminary
work out of the way, so
nothing is left to prevent you
from getting ahead. Strive for
perfection.
AQUARIUS (Jan. 20Feb. 19) -- Be considerate
of other peoples feelings. A
hurtful remark could cause
a wide rift between you
and someone special. Make
helpful suggestions instead of
criticisms.
PISCES (Feb. 20-March
20) -- Collaborations and
emerging partnerships look
favorable. Your innovative
ideas will draw attention,
bringing you the support and
help of influential people. You
will dazzle everyone with your
creative ideas.
ARIES (March 21-April
19) -- Money spent improving
your home will bring you
pleasure and improve your
standard of living. Offering
a place where everyone can
congregate is a great way
to introduce some low-cost
entertainment and celebration.
TAURUS (April 20-May
20) -- You will need to do a
little digging to learn what is
really going on around you.
Its possible that someone is
trying to undermine you or
sully your reputation. Dont
believe everything you hear.
GEMINI (May 21-June
20) -- Dont leave projects
unfinished. Go down your todo list until you have completed
everything thats expected
of you. Once everythings
crossed off, youll feel free to
do as you please.
CANCER (June 21-July
22) -- Your charisma will
not go unnoticed. Spread the
cheer with family and friends.
Consider throwing a party,
or go somewhere inviting. A
romantic connection is heating
up.
LEO (July 23-Aug. 22)
-- Love is on the rise. Get
out and enjoy some local
entertainment. Stick to your
budget and avoid adding stress
to your life. You cant buy
love.
VIRGO (Aug. 23-Sept. 22)
-- Youll feel blue if you dwell
on disappointments. Visiting
someone who brings you joy
will help you move past any
regrets you are harboring.
Move forward, because you
cannot change the past.
LIBRA (Sept. 23-Oct.
23) -- Business deals and job
changes feature prominently
today. If there is a particular
position you desire, pick up
the required skills and give
it your best shot. A golden
opportunity is apparent.
COPYRIGHT 2014 United
Feature Syndicate, Inc.
DISTRIBUTED
BY
UNIVERSAL UCLICK FOR
UFS

Answer to Sudoku
Hi and Lois

The Herald 11

Friday, November 21, 2014

Crossword Puzzle

ACROSS
1 Citified
6 Lemony
11 Bread, so to
speak
13 Mysterious
14 Longhaired
cat
15 Uproar
16 Blunder
17 Hairy insect
18 Chem. or
biol.
21 Dislike
intensely
23 Really
relax, slangily
26 Charged bit
27 Barnstorm
28 Not here
29 Rosemary
or bay
31 Ripe
32 Earnest
requests
33 Mile-high
team
35 Countingrhyme start
36 Je ne sais
-37 Sooner
than anon
38 Banned
bug spray
39 Cigar type
40 The, to
Wolfgang
41 Pool hall
item
42 Actress
Ryan
44 Taxi devices
47 Royal
decrees
51 Brunch
favorite
52 Rough
canoe
53 Gridiron
kicks
54 Kind of
bank

3 Quagmire
4 Lotion additive
5 Tells a story
6 More reliable
7 Crowning
point
8 Rug texture
9 Veld grazer
10 Affirmative
12 Wharf locale
13 Vine support
18 Used a straw
19 Lost ardor
20 Purpose
22 Confused
noise
23 Expressed
24 Performers
extra
25 It blows off
steam
28 Rev the
engine
30 Cow chow
31 Enlisted (2
wds.)
34 Was a wanderer
36 Medieval
adventure

Saturdays answers

39 Smokes
ham
41 Ancient
Briton
43 Chevalier musical
44 Janitors
tool
45 Low-fat

DOWN
1 Emma in
The Avengers
2 Actor-Perlman

Marmaduke

The Family Circus By Bil Keane

meat
46 Half a
score
48 Machine
tooth
49 Pull hard
50 Messy
place

12 The Herald

Soaring generic
drug prices draw
Senate scrutiny
WASHINGTON (AP)
Some low-cost generic drugs
that have helped restrain
health care costs for decades
are seeing unexpected price
spikes of up to 8,000 percent,
prompting a backlash from
patients, pharmacists and now
Washington lawmakers.
A Senate panel met Thursday
to scrutinize the recent, unexpected trend among generic
medicines, which usually cost
30 to 80 percent less than their
branded counterparts.
Experts said there are multiple, often unrelated, forces
behind the price hikes, including drug ingredient shortages,
industry consolidation and
production slowdowns due
to manufacturing problems.
But the lawmakers convening
Thursdays hearing said the federal government needs to play a
bigger role in restraining prices.
If generic drug prices continue to rise then we are going
to have people all over this
country who are sick and need
medicine and who simply will
not be able to buy the medicine they need, Vermont Sen.
Bernie Sanders, who chairs
the Senate Subcommittee on
Primary Health and Aging.
Sanders is a political independent who usually votes
with the liberal wing of the
Democratic party.
Sanders introduced a bill
that would require generic
drugmakers to pay rebates
to the federal Medicare and
Medicaid programs when
prices of their medications
outpace inflation. Those payments are already mandatory
for branded drugs, but have
never applied to generics.
Last month, Sanders and
House Rep. Rep. Elijah
Cummings,
D-Maryland,
sent letters to the makers of
10 generic drugs that have
seen price increases of over
300 percent or more in recent
months. The price for one of
those, the antibiotic doxycycline hyclate, rose more than
8,280 percent during a sixmonth period from an average
of $20 per bottle to $1,849 per
bottle. The increases cited by
the Senate subcommittee were
calculated by the Healthcare
Supply Chain Association
using the average prices of the
drugs and other price data.

Bargain

www.delphosherald.com

Friday, November 21, 2014

Fed to review its


oversight of big banks
WASHINGTON (AP) The Federal
Reserve said Thursday that it will review
how it oversees the biggest U.S. banks
amid criticism that it has grown too close
to the financial institutions it is charged
with regulating.
The Feds announcement came a day
before a Senate subcommittee is scheduled to hold a hearing on whether Fed
examiners particularly in the Feds
New York operation have become too
cozy with the big banks they oversee.
The central bank said the review will
examine whether its decision-makers get
the information they need to make good
decisions in their inspection and oversight
of banks. It also will look at the Feds
internal culture, and whether dissenting
views related to oversight are stifled.
The bailout of Wall Street banks during the 2008 financial crisis brought the
issue forward.
William Dudley, the president of the
New York Fed, says in testimony prepared for todays Senate hearing that
the Fed already has made important
changes to its bank supervision process.
Among them is the reorganization of the
New York Feds supervision group in
ways that promote unbiased analysis and
professional objectivity, Dudley says.
At the same time, the New York Fed
has devoted attention and resources to
the reform of banks culture and conduct,
notes Dudley, who recently gave a speech
calling Wall Streets ethical culture unacceptable.
We understand the risks of doing our
job poorly and of becoming too close to
the firms we supervise, he says in his

testimony. We work hard to avoid these


risks and to be as fair, conscientious and
effective as possible. Of course, we are
not perfect. We cannot catch or correct
every error by a financial institution, and
we sometimes make mistakes.
The issue gained a high profile recently when conversations between New York
Fed supervisors, secretly taped by a former employee there, were played on the
radio program This American Life. The
tapes were made by Carmen Segarra,
a former Fed bank examiner who sued
the New York Fed last year, alleging
she was wrongfully terminated because
she refused the change the results of her
investigation into Goldman Sachs.
Segarras lawsuit said the New York
Fed interfered with her examination of
Goldmans legal and compliance divisions, and directed her to change her findings. She says she refused and was fired
three days later, in May 2012.
The New York Fed hasnt commented
specifically on the lawsuit but has said
its personnel decisions are based exclusively on individual job performance and
are subject to thorough review.
Sen. Sherrod Brown, D-Ohio, who
heads the Senate Banking subcommittee
on financial institutions that is holding
the hearing, said in a statement Thursday,
Its past time that the Federal Reserve
shows with actions, not words that
it will protect consumers rather than Wall
Street.
Brown said the regulators closeness
with banks in the years preceding the
financial crisis helped fuel the meltdown
that touched off the Great Recession.

Florida State shooter was well-liked but troubled


GARY FINEOUT
Associated Press
TALLAHASSEE, Fla.
Authorities dont know why
Myron May targeted his alma
mater Thursday when he opened
fire on students at Florida State
Universitys library, but they do
know he thought the government was watching him and out
to get him.
Or, as Tallahassee Police
Chief Michael DeLeo said,
his sense of being was not
normal.
Mr. May had a written
journal and videos where he

(Continued from page 1)

Fritz said what everyone will notice


will be the top-to-bottom renovation
planned for the new acquisition.
The Shawnee store will be totally
remodeled inside and out, he said.We
have ACE behind us 100 percent on this
new business and theyll be a big help.
Mancinnotti will be in charge of the

expressed fears of being targeted and that he wanted to


bring attention to this issue of
targeting, DeLeo said. Mr.
May was in a state of crisis.
Police killed May, a 2005
graduate who later earned a
law degree from Texas Tech
University, early Thursday.
Officers had responded to a
12:30 a.m. call about shots
being fired at the library,
where about 450 students
were studying. When police
arrived, May had wounded
two students and an employee and reloaded a .380 semiautomatic pistol. He refused

day-to-day operations at the Shawnee


location and Jeff Fritz will help as well.
Eric Fritz said hell handle the financials.
I know how to do that, he said
Then I get to work with two young
guys and watch this grow. They will
be the backbone. I just get to help with
direction.
Long-time owner of Lima Bargain
Center Harold Waronker will keep his

Nichols

(Continued from page 2)

For me, The Graduate was life altering


both as an experience at the movies as
well as a master class about how to stage a
scene, said Spielberg. Mike had a brilliant
cinematic eye and uncanny hearing for keeping scenes ironic and real.
Born Michael Igor Peschkowsky in Berlin,
Nichols Jewish family emigrated to the U.S.
in 1939. He began as a stand-up and comedy
would remain the bedrock to this sensibility
and sense of timing. He and May developed
their great improvisational rapport into a
saucy, sophisticated stage show that took on
sex, marriage, family and other subjects in a
frank manner that titillated and startled audiences of the late 1950s and early 60s.
People always thought we were making
fun of other people when we were in fact
making fun of ourselves, Nichols told The
Associated Press in 1997. We did teenagers
in the back seat of the car and people committing adultery. Of course, youre making fun of
yourself. Youre making jokes about yourself.
Who can you better observe?
His 1966 film directing debut, Whos
Afraid of Virginia Woolf?, unforgettably
captured the vicious yet sparkling and sly
dialogue of Edward Albees play, as a couple
(Richard Burton and Elizabeth Taylor) torment each other over deep-seated guilt and
resentment.
Angels in America, the 2003 TV miniseries adapted from the stage sensation, blended
rich pathos and whimsy in its portrait of
people coping with AIDS and looking to the
heavens for compassion they found lacking in
Ronald Reagans 1980s America. Similarly,
Nichols 2001 TV adaptation of the play
Wit packed biting levity within the stark
story of a college professor dying of ovarian
cancer.
I have never understood people dividing things into dramas and comedies, said
Nichols, who won directing Emmys for both
Angels and Wit. There are more laughs
in Hamlet than many Broadway comedies.
He was a wealthy, educated man who
often mocked those just like him, never more

to put the gun down and they


opened fire. More than 30
rounds were fired by May
and the officers.
Police said May didnt get
past the lobby, but the sound
of gunfire set off screams
among students, who scrambled for cover among the
bookshelves and barricaded
themselves in rooms.
One person was in critical
condition at a local hospital. Another, library staffer
Nathan Scott, in good condition at Tallahassee Memorial
Hospital. A third person was
treated and released.

other business, Lima Floor Covering, at


the same location next door. Letting go
of the bargain center wasnt easy.
We were looking for a good owner
and found one, Waronker said. I know
the people who have adopted our business and they are wonderful people and
they are going to make it a lot better
and it should be here for many more
decades.

memorably than in The Graduate, which


shot Hoffman to fame in the 1967 story
of an earnest young man rebelling against
his elders expectations. Mixing farce and
Oedipal drama, Nichols managed to capture
a generations discontent without ever mentioning Vietnam, civil rights or any other
issues of the time. But young people laughed
hard when a family friend advised Benjamin
that the road to success was paved with
plastics.
Nichols won the best-director Oscar for
The Graduate, which co-starred Anne
Bancroft as an aging temptress pursuing
Hoffman. The film was radical for both its
casting (Hoffman, then a little-known character actor, was far from the traditional leading
man) and its hugely influential Simon and
Garfunkel soundtrack.
Not just actors, but great actors, clamored
to work with Nichols, who studied acting with
Lee Strasberg and had an empathy that helped
bring out the best from the talent he put in
front of the camera.
Nichols often collaborated with Jack
Nicholson, Emma Thompson and Streep.
Other stars who worked with Nichols
included Al Pacino (Angels in America),
Gene Hackman and Robin Williams (The
Birdcage), Harrison Ford, Griffith and
Sigourney Weaver (Working Girl) and Julia
Roberts (Closer). In 2007, Nichols brought
out Charlie Wilsons War, starring Hanks
and Roberts.
On Broadway, he won Tonys for directing
the plays Barefoot in the Park (1964), Luv
and The Odd Couple (1965), Plaza Suite
(1968), The Prisoner of Second Avenue
(1972), The Real Thing (1984), and Arthur
Millers Death of a Salesman (2012). He
has also won in other categories, for directing the musical Monty Pythons Spamalot
(2005), and for producing Annie (1977) and
The Real Thing (1984).
I think a director can make a play happen before your eyes so that you are part of
it and it is part of you, he said. If you can
get it right, theres no mystery. Its not about
mystery. Its not even mysterious. Its about
our lives.

Hazards

(Continued from page 1)


Jumper cables;
Blankets and extra clothes
to stay warm;
Flashlight and extra batteries;
Ice scraper;
Safety flares or reflectors;
Shovel;
First aid kit;
Water and non-perishable
food; and
Cellular phone and charger to call for assistance.

Golden

(Continued from page 5)

What tends to happen is


friends and family members
realize how important the pet
is or was to their loved one
and will step up to care for the
pet themselves or place them
with someone they know and
trust. In the absence of prior
arrangements (which I highly
encourage), numerous agencies and breed rescue groups
will assist in expediently placing pets in good homes. And,
yes, sometimes veterinarians
and their staff adopt their
older clients pets, too!
Aging pet owners are
among the very best pet caregivers. They deserve the love
and happiness that pets bring
to them. For me, adopting
a pet when you are in your
senior period is a no brainer. If
you love pets, dont let growing older be the death of the
human-animal bond. Instead,
rejoice in it. I promise you
will never regret it.

Obama spurns GOP with


expansive immigration orders
WASHINGTON (AP)
Spurning furious Republicans,
President Barack Obama
unveiled expansive executive actions on immigration
Thursday night to spare nearly 5 million people in the U.S.
illegally from deportation and
refocus enforcement efforts
on felons, not families.
The moves, affecting mostly parents and young people,
marked the most sweeping changes to the nations
fractured immigration laws
in nearly three decades and
set off a fierce fight with
Republicans over the limits of
presidential powers.
In a televised address to
the nation, Obama defended
the legality of his actions and
challenged GOP lawmakers
to focus their energy not on
blocking his measures but on
approving long-stalled legislation to take their place.
To those members of
Congress who question my
authority to make our immigration system work better,
or question the wisdom of me
acting where Congress has
failed, I have one answer: Pass
a bill, Obama said, flexing
his presidential powers just
two weeks after his political
standing was challenged in the
midterm elections.
As Obama spoke from
the White House, immigration supporters with
American flags draped over
their shoulders marched on
Pennsylvania Avenue outside carrying signs that read,
Gracias, Presidente Obama.
The address marked the first
step in the White House effort to
promote the executive actions
to the public. Today, Obama

Benefits

will speak at a campaign-style


rally in Las Vegas.
Despite Obamas challenge
to Republicans to pass a broader immigration bill, his actions
and the angry GOP response
could largely stamp out those
prospects for the remainder of
his presidency, ensuring that the
contentious debate will carry on
into the 2016 elections.
Republicans, emboldened
by their sweeping victories in
the midterms, are weighing
responses to the presidents
actions that include lawsuits,
a government shutdown,
and in rare instances, even
impeachment.
The president will come
to regret the chapter history
writes if he does move forward, Sen. Mitch McConnell,
the Kentucky Republican who
is soon to become the Senate
majority leader, said before
Obamas address.
House Speaker John Boehner,
R-Ohio, who has refused to have
his members vote on broad
immigration legislation passed
by the Senate last year, said
Obamas decision to go it alone
cemented his legacy of lawlessness and squandered what little
credibility he had left.
While Obamas measures
are sweeping in scope, they
still leave more than half of
the 11 million people living
in the U.S. illegally in limbo.
The president announced new
deportation priorities that
would compel law enforcement
to focus its efforts on tracking down serious criminals
and people who have recently
crossed the border, while specifically placing a low priority
on those who have been in the
U.S. for more than 10 years.

(Continued from page 1)

HARDLY ANYONE IS GETTING LAID OFF. If you


survived the tsunami of job losses in the Great Recession, you
now have pretty good job security. Average monthly layoffs
this year and last are running at the lowest levels since the government began tracking the data in 2001. Thats helped bring
down the unemployment rate to 5.8 percent, a six-year low.
To be sure, job cuts are still a painful reality for many workers. JPMorgan Chase & Co. said earlier this month that it will
eliminate another 3,000 jobs on top of 8,000 layoffs that it
announced in February. But overall, fewer recent layoffs has
meant fewer people receiving benefits.
THOSE WHO LOSE JOBS ARE MORE CONFIDENT.
People are less likely to apply for benefits after a layoff when
the job market improves. They may find jobs more quickly, or
feel more confident that they will.
Layoffs have remained pretty constant, at very low levels,
since early 2013. Yet unemployment benefit applications have
continued to fall. Michael Feroli, an economist at JPMorgan
Chase, attributes the ongoing decline to the better job market.
Employers have added an average of 229,000 jobs a month this
year, the healthiest pace in 15 years.
SMALLER SAFETY NET. A big reason fewer people
are receiving benefits is a less happy one: Its because fewer
benefits are available. Both the federal government and many
state governments have sharply cut back on their assistance
to the unemployed. The federal extended benefits program
expired at the beginning of this year. That immediately cut off
benefits for about 1.2 million people. That also means that the
three million people currently out of work for six months or
more are ineligible for aid.
And some states have also cut back, citing tight budgets.
Eight states provide fewer than 26 weeks of benefits, up from
zero states before 2011, according to the EPI.
MOST DONT QUALIFY. Unemployment benefits are
only available to those who lost a job through no fault of their
own. Because laid-off workers make up fewer of the unemployed, the proportion receiving benefits is smaller.
Many of the unemployed are recent college or high school
graduates who are now looking for work. Others may have quit
their jobs, or they left work years ago to take care of children
and are now job-hunting again. People in those categories
make up 52 percent of the unemployed, up from 46 percent a
year ago.
MORE HIRING IS NEEDED. Even if layoffs are low,
the job market still isnt back to full health. If you are out of
work, your chances of getting a job are better but could use
more of a boost. Just over 24 percent of those who were unemployed in September found jobs in October, according to Labor
Department data. That was the highest monthly figure since the
downturn, though still below the average of 28 percent in the
decade preceding the downturn.

Trivia

Answers to Thursdays questions:


The first union strike occurred in 1776 in New York.
Members of the Journeymen Printers Union struck
against their local shops.
A turkey can run up to 25 mph.
Todays questions:
What Dolly Parton hit song that later became Whitney
Houstons signature ballad was used by Iraqi dictator
Saddam Hussein in his 2002 election campaign?
In what color order are Chuckles sugar-coated jelly
candies arranged in their standard five-piece packages?
Answers in Fridays Herald.
The Outstanding National Debt as of Thursday evening was $17,970,429,050,383.
The estimated population of the United States is
319,449,081, so each citizens share of this debt is
$56,254.
The National Debt has continued to increase an
average of $2.44 billion per day since Sept. 30, 2012.

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