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DELPHOS

The
50 daily www.delphosherald.com

Nearly deported student faces uncertainty, p3

Sectional action, p6-8

Telling The Tri-Countys Story Since 1869

Monday, May 7, 2012

HERALD
Police probe death at Churchill Downs
By COLIN FLY The Associated Press LOUISVILLE, Ky. Authorities planned to conduct an autopsy today for a man who was found dead in a barn at Churchill Downs hours after the Kentucky Derby. The victim, who worked at the track, was identified Sunday as 48-year-old Adan Fabian Perez, a Guatemala native, according to Jo-Ann Farmer, chief deputy coroner for Jefferson County. His body was found early Sunday in a barn just four away about 150 yards from where this years Derby winner Ill Have Another is kept. Theres a suspicion of foul play, Farmer said Sunday evening. Louisville Metro Police said the death is being investigated as a homicide, but that there appears to be no connection to the race. At this point we dont have anything pointing to the fact that this had any association with Churchill Downs or the Derby itself, said Alicia Smiley, spokeswoman for Louisville Metro Police. We are still investigating at the stables and at the barn. Smiley said that the victim did sustain injuries that lead us to believe he was involved in some type of altercation. Our investigation is ongoing as to why he would have specifically been at this location, Smiley said. Farmer said the victim lived at the tracks quarters Delphos, Ohio for workers. Churchill Downs security called police at 4:50 a.m. EDT, Smiley said. The body was found in a barn used by Louisville trainer Angel Montano Sr. Montano did not have a horse running Saturday either in the undercard or the Derby, which saw a record attendance of more than 165,000. A telephone call, text and Twitter message left for Montano were not immediately returned. About 200 people live at Churchill Downs at any given time either in dormitories on the edge of the property or in small apartments above some of the barns themselves. Although Montanos barn is near where this years Derby winner is kept, there was little talk of the incident in the stable area. Instead, Ill Have Anothers trainer and owners were participating in the usual post-Derby media interviews and speculating about the next race in the Triple Crown, the Preakness Stakes, in three weeks. The body was removed by stretcher from the barn at 9:50 a.m., and police were seen packing about a dozen large paper bags into the back of a crime scene unit van. About a week after last years Kentucky Derby, jockey Michael Bazes body was found in a vehicle near the stables at the famed Louisville track. His death was ruled an accidental drug overdose.

Canal Days Queen Pageant applications available

Upfront

Applications are now available for the 2012 Canal Days Queen Pageant. They are available at both high schools and the Jefferson Middle School or by emailing delphosqueenspageant@hotmail.com. The pageant is open to students at both Delphos school who will be freshman through seniors for the 2012-13 school year. Applications must be returned by May 23. The pageant will be held on Sept. 9 in the Jefferson Middle School auditorium.

CHP offers hypnotic comedy


Community Health Professionals of Delphos is bringing The JimmyG hypnotic comedy show to Delphos at 7 p.m. on May 18 at Delphos Eagles Lodge, 1600 E. Fifth St. His show is all about hypnosis and the comedy that arises from the spontaneous reaction of audience participants who volunteer to be hypnotized. Tickets are available in advance for $20 and $25 at the door. Doors open at 7 p.m., showtime will be at 8 p.m. Tickets are available at the CHP office, 602 E. Fifth St., Delphos.

Dena Martz photos

Jefferson hosts Midnight Mirage 2012

TODAY Baseball (5 p.m.): St. Johns at Coldwater (MAC - moved from Tuesday); Jefferson at Kenton; Miller City at Fort Jennings (PCL); St. Henry at Spencerville; Van Wert at Paulding. Softball (5 p.m.): Jefferson at OttawaGlandorf; Kalida at Elida. Track and Field: Fort Jennings and LCC at Ottoville, 4:30 p.m. TUESDAY BASEBALL (5 p.m.) DIVISION IV: At Perry (Upper Bracket) - USV vs. No. 1 seed St. Johns (winner to Elida District May 16) DIVISION II: At Elida (Upper Bracket) - Elida vs. No. 1 Wapak (winner to BU District May 17) Baseball Kalida at Spencerville; Crestview at Antwerp. SOFTBALL (5 p.m.) DIVISION IV: At Lincolnview (Upper Bracket) - Lincolnview vs. No. 2 Parkway (winner to Elida District May 15); At Miller City (Upper Bracket) - Kalida vs. No. 1 Miller City (winner to Elida District May 15) Softball: Kalida at Jefferson; Elida at Coldwater. Track and Field: MAC meet at New Bremen, 4:30 p.m. Mostly sunny Tuesday afternoon with high in low 70s. See page 2A.

Sports

Jefferson High School hosted prom on Saturday. This years theme is Midnight Mirage 2012. Above: Students dance the night away. Right: Zach Ricker and Sydney Drerup make their entrance into the prom.

Wife Skyping with soldier husband saw bullet hole in door


By TERRY WALLACE The Associated Press DALLAS (AP) An Army nurse showed no alarm or discomfort before suddenly collapsing during a Skype video chat with his wife, who saw a bullet hole in a closet behind him, his family said Sunday. Capt. Bruce Kevin Clarks family released a statement describing what his wife saw in the video feed recording her husbands death in Tarin Kowt, Afghanistan. Its not clear how the bullet hole got in the closet. Clark was suddenly knocked forward, the statement from the soldiers family said. The closet behind him had a bullet hole in it. The other individuals, including a member of the military, who rushed to the home of CPT Clarks wife also saw the hole and agreed it was a bullet hole. The statement says the Skype link remained open for two hours on April 30 as family and friends in the U.S. and Afghanistan tried to get Clark help. After two hours and many frantic phone calls by Mrs. Clark, two military personnel arrived in the room and appeared to check his pulse, but provided no details about his condition

Forecast

Index

Obituaries State/Local Politics Community Sports Announcements World News Classifieds TV

2A 3A 4A 5A 6-8A 9A 10-11A 2B 3B

to his wife, the statement said. In the statement, Susan Orellana-Clark said she was providing details of what she saw to honor my husband and dispel the inaccurate information and supposition promulgated by other parties. U.S. officials in Afghanistan referred questions to the Pentagon, which previously referred questions to the William Beaumont Army Medical Center in El Paso, where Clark was assigned. The Pentagon said previously that Clarks death remains under investigation. Clarence Davis, spokesman for William Beaumont Army Medical Center, declined to comment on Clarks familys statement. Clark, 43, grew up in Michigan and previously lived in Spencerport, N.Y., a suburb of Rochester, his wifes hometown. He joined the Army in 2006 and was stationed in Hawaii before he was assigned to the medical center in El Paso. He deployed to Afghanistan in March. Clarks body was returned Thursday to Dover Air Force Base. He is survived by his wife and two daughters, aged 3 and 9.

St. Johns held its annual benefit auction Saturday with nearly 300 in attendance. The evenings theme was Cinco de Mayo. Above: Quint Haunhorst, left, Duane Schulte and Tony Wehri sport sombreros for the Mexican-theme evening. The benefit helps keep student tuition as low as possible. Below: Winners in the big ticket drawing are, from left, Rick and Deb Reindel ($300), Bob and Grace Schulte ($1,200) and Arnie and Helen Fischer ($500). Absent are Matt Conley ($200), Ted and Clara Hanf, Joe and Doris Bockey and Scott and Chrissy Elwer ($100).

St. Johns Benefit Auction draws crowd

Jim Metcalfe photos

2A The Herald

Monday, May 7, 2012

www.delphosherald.com

TVs Goober Pyle dies


By TRAVIS LOLLER The Associated Press NASHVILLE, Tenn. George Lindsey, who spent nearly 30 years as the grinning Goober on The Andy Griffith Show and Hee Haw, has died. He was 83. The Marshall-DonnellyCombs Funeral Home in Nashville said Lindsay died early Sunday morning after a brief illness. Funeral arrangements were still being made. Lindsey was the beaniewearing Goober on The Andy Griffith Show from 1964 to 1968 and its successor, Mayberry RFD, from 1968 to 1971. He played the same jovial character a service station attendant on Hee Haw from 1971 until it went out of production in 1993. America has grown up with me, Lindsey said in an Associated Press interview in 1985. Goober is every man; everyone finds something to like about ol Goober. He joined The Andy Griffith Show in 1964 when Jim Nabors, portraying Gomer Pyle, left the program. Goober P y l e , who had b e e n m e n tioned on the show as Gomers cousin, replaced him. A t Lindsey t h a t time, we were the best acting ensemble on TV, Lindsey once told an interviewer. The scripts were terrific. Andy is the best script constructionist Ive ever been involved with. And you have to lift your acting

For The Record

OBITUARIES

level up to his; hes awfully good. In a statement released through the funeral home, Griffith said, George Lindsey was my friend. I had great respect for his talent and his human spirit. In recent years, we spoke often by telephone. Our last conversation was a few days ago ... I am happy to say that as we found ourselves in our eighties, we were not afraid to say, I love you. That was the last thing George and I had to say to each other. I love you. Although he was best known as Goober, Lindsey had other roles during a long TV career. Earlier, he often was a heavy and once shot Matt Dillon on Gunsmoke. His other TV credits included roles on MASH, The Wonderful World of Disney, CHIPs, The Continued on Page 3A

The Delphos Herald


Nancy Spencer, editor Ray Geary, general manager, Delphos Herald Inc. Don Hemple, advertising manager Tiffany Brantley, circulation manager
Vol. 142 No. 245

Delphos teen Delphos man arrested at business On at 5:07 p.m. with a represenfaces OVI charge DelphosFriday were called to they met the business and Police tative of
On Sunday at 1:28 a.m., Delphos Police were called to the intersection of West Fifth and North State streets in reference to a possible intoxicated subject in a vehicle at that intersection. Upon officers arrival, they located Aaron Honigford, 18, of Delphos operating a motor vehicle while impaired. Honigford was cited into Van Wert Municipal Court on the charge. a business in the 100 block of East Fourth Street in reference to a disturbance at the business. Upon officers arrival,

POLICE REPORT

Gomez

Menke Street residents report thefts from vehicles

Delphos man faces disorderly charge


On Wednesday at 11:12 a.m. Delphos Police were called to the 300 block of North Main Street in reference to a domestic in that area. Upon officers arrival, they met with the complainant, who advised the Frasl subjects involved had left the area and had gone to their residence on Old

observed Dean Gomez, 23, of Delphos being disorderly in his actions. Officers spoke with Gomez, at which time, they advised him to calm down. He continued to be disorderly. Gomez was arrested on charges of persistence disorderly conduct and was transported to the Allen County Jail. He will appear in Lima Municipal Court on the charge. Lincoln Highway. At that time, officers went to that location for further investigation. Upon arriving at the location, officers came into contact with the subjects involved. While speaking to the subjects, the male half of the disturbance, identified as Kevin Frasl, 48 of Delphos, became disorderly and was taken into custody on the charge of disorderly conduct. Frasl was transported to the Delphos Police Department and was issued a citation into Van Wert Municipal Court on the charge and was later released.

On Friday at 7:56 a.m., Delphos Police were called to the 500 block of Menke Street in reference to a theft complaint at a residence in that area. Upon officers arrival, they met with the complainant who advised them that sometime in the overnight hours, someone had gained entry into a vehicle parked at a residence in the area and had taken items from inside. On Saturday at 6:14 a.m., police were called to the 500 OTTERY block of Menke Street in refCLEVELAND (AP) Powerball erence to another theft comThese Ohio lotteries were Estimated jackpot: $70 M plaint at a residence in that drawn Sunday: Rolling Cash 5 area. 02-29-30-33-39 The complainant advised Mega Millions Estimated jackpot: that sometime in the overnight Estimated jackpot: $12 M $110,000 hours someone had gained Pick 3 Evening Ten OH Evening entry into a vehicle parked at a 7-9-1 04-17-22-23-24-26-33-38residence in that area and had Pick 4 Evening 40-41-46-47-48-52-60-64-66taken items from inside. 1-8-2-2 68-69-71

Sept. 26, 1934-May 6, 2012 Mary M. Young, 77, of Delphos, died at noon Sunday at St. Ritas Medical Center. She was born Sept. 26, 1934, in Delphos to Perry and Wandis (Spitnale) Stocklin, who preceded her in death. She was married to Jim D. Young, who survives in Delphos. Survivors include daughters Virginia Marie (Dave) Zwiebel of Wapakoneta, Mary Ann (Kim) Mitchener of Findlay, Kelly Jo (Brian) Pancake of Van Wert and Jackie B. (Donald) Fisher of Delphos; sisters Fern Winget of Kalida and Betty Copeland of Delphos; and five grandchildren and two great-grandchildren. She was also preceded in death by a brother, Carl Stocklin. Mrs. Young had worked at Hayes Albion in Spencerville for many years. She was a member of the American Legion Auxiliary and Veterans of Foreign Wars Post 213 Auxiliary in Spencerville. Her hobbies included crocheting, camping and spending time with her grandchildren. Services will begin at 11 a.m. Wednesday at Harter and Schier Funeral Home, the Rev. David Howell officiating. Burial will follow in Maplewood Cemetery. Friends may call from 2-4 and 6-8 p.m. Tuesday and from 10-11 a.m. Wednesday at the funeral home. Memorial contributions may be made to the Alzheimers Association. A Delphos woman was cited for failure to yield when turning left following a two-vehicle crash at East Fifth Street and Fort Jennings Road reported at 6:02 p.m. Saturday. Police reports indicate a

Mary M. Young

April 29, 1933-May 3, 2012 Kenneth W. Fetzer, 79, of Spencerville, died at 10:48 p.m. Thursday in Auglaize Acres Nursing Home. He was born April 29, 1933, in Van Wert to Alfred John Pat and Gwendolyn Jane Dodie (Dunlap) Fetzer, who preceded him in death. On April 12, 1958, he married Doris Hayden, who died Jan. 21, 2000. Survivors include four sons, Jeffrey (Kathy) Fetzer of Eustis, Fla., Randy (Jo) Fetzer of Las Vegas, Byron (Lesa) Fetzer of Delphos and Jerry (Julie) Fetzer of Spencerville; two daughters, Jackie Fezter of Dayton and Keri (Lee) Hickman of Anna; 10 grandchildren and 1 greatgranddaughter; and 10 siblings. He was also preceded in death by a son, Wesley Fetzer; and a daughter Sherry Fetzer. Mr. Fetzer retired from Delphos Manufacturing and has been a U.S. Army veteran of the Korean War. A celebration of life will be held at 5 p.m. May 18 at the Delphos Veterans of Foreign Wars Post 3035. Preferred memorials are to The Alzheimers Association or the Auglaize County Humane Society. Condolences may be shared at BayliffAndSon.com

Kenneth W. Fetzer

The Daily Herald (USPS 1525 8000) is published daily except Sundays, Tuesdays and Holidays. By carrier in Delphos and area towns, or by rural motor route where available $1.48 per week. By mail in Allen, Van Wert, or Putnam County, $97 per year. Outside these counties $110 per year. Entered in the post office in Delphos, Ohio 45833 as Periodicals, postage paid at Delphos, Ohio. No mail subscriptions will be accepted in towns or villages where The Daily Herald paper carriers or motor routes provide daily home delivery for $1.48 per week. 405 North Main St. TELEPHONE 695-0015 Office Hours 8 a.m.-5 p.m. Mon.-Fri. POSTMASTER: Send address changes to THE DAILY HERALD, 405 N. Main St. Delphos, Ohio 45833

Scholars of the Day


Today and Tuesday

St. Johns Scholars of the Day are Alaina Backus and Nick Pohlman. Congratulations Alaina and Nick. Jeffersons Scholars of the Day are Quinn LeValley and Fallon VanDyke. Congratulations Quinn and Fallon!

Driver fails to yield when turning

ST. RITAS A boy was born May 4 to Bryan and Anna Mack of Elida. A boy was born May 4 to Samuel and Courtney Ayree Students can pick up their of Spencerville. awards in their school offices. vehicle drive by Kevin Leis, 29, of Fort Jennings, was traveling westbound in East Fifth Street and traveled through a green traffic signal at the intersection when his vehicle was struck by a vehicle driven by Linda Redmon, 49, of Delphos, who failed to yield to the Leis vehicle as she was turning left. No one was injured. Both vehicles sustained disabling damage and were towed from the scene.

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High temperature Sunday in Delphos was 78 degrees, low was 60. Rainfall was recorded at .05 inch. High a year ago today was 64, low was 50. Record high for today was 87, set in 1926. Record low is 29, set in 1966. WEATHER FORECAST Tri-county Associated Press

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Monday, May 7, 2012

The Herald 3A

Ohio student almost Man seeks home deported faces uncertainty for traveling
BRIEFS
Latin museum
LORAIN (AP) A man who has spent 35 years collecting Central and South American cultural artifacts says hes hoping to find his traveling museum a permanent home in the Ohio town thats known by locals as the International City. Retired school teacher Guillermo Arriaga, the curator and president for the recently created mobile Museum of Hispanic and Latino Cultures, has more than 3,000 items in his collection and is looking for space to display them in Lorain, The Morning Journal newspaper reported. The museum, which was incorporated in 2010 and became a nonprofit in 2011, has traveled to more than 15 locations. The items from 18 cultures, largely from Mexico, include woodwork, paintings, a statue of an Aztec god, a traditional dress for Mexican girls and a mortar and pestle made of lava rock. Arriaga said some of the collected or donated items are showing wear from traveling. TIFFIN (AP) A German man who was brought to the United States as a child and then threatened with deportation just before his high school graduation is about to finish college. Yet, Manuel Bartsch does not have a Social Security number or a drivers license and still faces an uncertain future. Bartschs life was turned upside down when he was arrested in December 2005 and jailed for more than two weeks after immigration officials discovered that the step-grandfather who brought Bartsch to the United States eight years earlier never completed paperwork to make his stay legal. The case sparked a groundswell of support from friends and neighbors in the small northwest Ohio community of Pandora, where Bartsch attended high school, and eventually garnered attention far beyond Ohio. Deportation hearings were halted when a judge intervened. Bartsch, 24, will graduate May 13 from Heidelberg University with a bachelors degree in political science. He told The (Toledo) Blade (http://bit.ly/IqJQph ) that he isnt sure whats next. I would love to contribute to this country, give back to it, he said. I just dont understand why they would educate people in my situation and deport them back and let other countries reap the benefits of the education system here. Thats just the biggest thing that startles me about it all. David Leopold, a Cleveland immigration attorney who has helped Bartsch since he was first jailed, said the government has dropped its case against him. But he remains in a legal limbo unless and until Congress changes the law to enable people like Bartsch to apply for citizenship. The good news is theyre not pursuing him in terms of removing him, Leopold told the newspaper. The bad news is theres no status. Hes not in a position to put himself on a pathway to compliance, which he really wants to do. Bartsch traveled from Germany to Ohio in 1997 on a 90-day visa with a U.S. citi-

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zen, Toby Deal, who took custody of Bartsch in Germany when Bartschs grandmother died. Deal never adopted him nor processed his immigration papers in the U.S. Heidelberg professor David Hogan said Bartsch is one of the best students hes taught in terms of brilliance, work ethic, personal qualities. Hes very charismatic. He has everything going for him, Hogan said. He is the kind of person we want in this country. Hes the kind of person any country would want. Bartsch was able to attend Heidelberg College on a scholarship offered by school officials who heard about his predicament. Donors paid for his books and housing. He doesnt know who gave him that chance. Whoever did, I thank them with all my heart, he said. I love this country through and through, the opportunities it has given me. Just to have the opportunity one day just to give back and be a citizen. That would be the most meaningful thing in the world to me.

The Delphos Herald


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(Continued from page 2A) Glen Campbell Goodtime Hour, The Real McCoys, Rifleman, The Alfred Hitchcock Hour, Twilight Zone and Love American Style. Reflecting on his career, he said in 1985: Theres a residual effect of knowing Ive made America laugh. Im not the only one, but Ive contributed something. He had movie roles, too, appearing in Cannonball Run II and Take This Job and Shove It. His voice was used in animated Walt Disney features including The Aristocats, The Rescuers and Robin Hood. Lindsey was born in Jasper, Ala., the son of a butcher. He received a bachelor of science degree from Florence State Teachers College (now the University of North Alabama) in 1952 after majoring in physical education and biology and playing quarterback on the football team. After spending three years in the Air Force, he worked one year as a high school baseball and basketball coach and history

teacher near Huntsville, Ala. In 1956, he attended the American Theatre Wing in New York City and began his professional career on Broadway, appearing in the musicals All American and Wonderful Town. He moved to Hollywood in the early 1960s and then to Nashville in the early 1990s. Theres no place in the United States I can go that they dont know me. They may not know me, but they know the character, he told The Tennessean in 1980. At that time, he said the Griffith show was the first soft rural comedy with a moral. We physically and mentally became those people when we got to the set. He did some standup comedy ending the show by tap and break dancing. One of his jokes: A football coach, holding a football, asks his quarterback, Son, can you pass this? The player says, Coach, I dont even think I can swallow it. Lindsey devoted much of his spare time to raising funds for the Alabama Special

Olympics. For 17 years, he sponsored a celebrity golf tournament in Montgomery, Ala., that raised money for the mentally disabled. The University of North

Alabama awarded him an honorary doctorate in 1992, and he was affectionately called Doctor Goober by acquaintances after that.

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4A The Herald

POLITICS

Monday, May 7, 2012

www.delphosherald.com

There are those who believe something, and therefore will tolerate nothing; and on the other hand, those who tolerate everything, because they believe nothing. Robert Browning (1812-1889)

House Republicans want to cut social programs


By ANDREW TAYLOR Associated Press WASHINGTON The Republicans who control the House are using cuts to food aid, health care and social services like Meals on Wheels to protect the Pentagon from a wave of budget cuts come January. The reductions, while controversial, are but a fraction of what Republicans called for in the broader, nonbinding budget plan they passed in March. Totaling a little more than $300 billion over a decade, the new cuts are aimed less at tackling $1 trillion-plus government deficits and more at preventing cuts to troop levels and military modernization. The House Budget Committee meets today to officially act on the measure, the product of six separate House panels. It faces a likely floor vote Thursday. The measure kicks off Congress return to action after a weeklong recess. The House will also vote on a spending bill funding NASA and the Justice Department and on legislation to reauthorize the Violence Against Women Act. The Senate, meanwhile, has a test vote slated for Tuesday on a plan backed by President Barack Obama to prevent a doubling of college loan interest rates. Fully one-fourth of the House GOP spending cuts By JULIE PACE Associated Press come from programs directly benefiting the poor, such as Medicaid, food stamps, the Social Services Block Grant, and a child tax credit claimed by working immigrants. Federal workers would have to contribute an additional 5 percent of their salaries toward their pensions, while people whose incomes rise after receiving coverage subsidies under the new health care law would lose some or all of their benefits. The budget-cutting drive is designed to head off a looming 10 percent, $55-billion budget cut set to strike the Pentagon on Jan. 1 because of the failure of last years deficit supercommittee to strike a deal. The Obama administration and lawmakers in both parties warn the reductions would harm readiness and weapons procurement, and reduce troop levels. The automatic spending cuts, known as a sequester, would strike domestic programs as well, including a 2 percentage point cut from Medicare payments to health care providers. The sequester required by the supercommittees failure would abruptly wring about $110 billion in new spending from next years budget, but the upcoming GOP measure is more gentle in the near term, cutting deficits this year and next by less than $20 billion though the cuts add up to more than $300 billion over

IT WAS NEWS THEN


One Year Ago The St. Johns Athletic Boosters recently presented the Rev. Mel Verhoff with a check towards the Teacher Endowment Fund in memory of Bob Arnzen. Representing the boosters were Secretary Linda Schulte and Vice President Don Haggard. 25 Years Ago 1987 Visitors to the Tuesday night lecture at the Delphos Public Library departed with a vast array of implements with which to dig into their familys genealogical past. Genealogical researchers Jeanne Porroca of Allen County, Patricia Carter of Van Wert County and Imogene Elwer of Putnam County discussed the many records, offices and other sources of information available to researchers in the tri-county area. Plaques bearing the names of the men and women from Allen County who died in wars since the founding of the county in 1820 were dedicated recently at the Veterans of Foreign Wars Post 1275, Lima. Names were compiled by Beda Shafer, president of Ohio and Kentucky Gold Star Mothers Inc. St. Johns eliminated Jefferson from the Class A sectional baseball tournament 6-2 Tuesday at Elida. Dave Etgen went the distance to pick up the win allowing six hits, three walks and striking out nine. Scott Sakemiller also went the route and took the loss. He allowed six hits, three walks and struck out two. 50 Years Ago 1962 Carole Rekart, student at Fort Jennings High School, and Jack Rozelle, student at Delphos Jefferson High School, were the winners in the Teen-Age Safe Driving Road-E-O sponsored by the Delphos Junior Chamber of Commerce Sunday on the parking lot of Pangles Market. The Delphos Eagles band received the second place marching band award in the Loyalty Day parade in Lima last Saturday. They were presented with a trophy about 18 inches tall which is now on exhibit at Doyles Sohio service station at the corner of Main and Fifth streets. Students from Delphos Jefferson High School received high ratings in the Junior High School Vocal and Piano auditions for District 3 Saturday at Blue Creek Local School. Jane Powell received a superior rating on her soprano solo and an excellent rating for her piano solo in eighth grade competition. Alida Raabe and Kathy Giller received ratings of excellent on piano solos in the ninth grade competition, and Pam Shaw received a rating of excellent on her soprano solo in the same division. 75 Years Ago 1937 Word was received Thursday from the chairman of the Ohio State solo and ensemble contest which is to be held at Oberlin Saturday, that Mary Alice Fethers will be eligible to go directly to the National contest to compete in the clarinet solo competition. Miss Fethers entry was the only one in the state solo competition. Sorosis entertained with an exceptionally fine program Wednesday evening. In addition to a few guests, the members of the Ella Huber Delphian chapter and of the Tourist Club were present for a fine program which was given at the home of Mrs. W. L. Carter, East Fourth Street. Mrs. Thomas B. Snow and Mrs. George Horine were in the receiving line. Mrs. Carl Nash, Scotts Crossing, received the members of the Ladies Aid Society of the Lutheran Church and a group of guests into her home Wednesday afternoon. She was assisted by Margaret Osmun, Olive Palmer and Mrs. J. G. E. Mittermaier.

Senate squabble begins over student loans

WASHINGTON (AP) The Senate is the newest arena in the election-year face-off over federal student loans, and both sides are starting out by pounding away at each other. With Congress returning from a weeklong spring recess, the Senate plans to vote Tuesday on whether to start debating a Democratic plan to keep college loan interest rates for 7.4 million students from doubling on July 1. The $6 billion measure would be paid for by collecting more Social Security and Medicare payroll taxes from high-earning owners of privately held corporations. Republicans want a vote on their own bill, which like the Democrats would freeze todays 3.4 percent interest rates on subsidized Stafford loans for one year. It would be financed by eliminating a preventive health program established by President Barack Obamas health care overhaul. Each side scoffs that the others proposal is unacceptable, and neither is expected to garner votes needed to prevail. Even so, everyone expects a bipartisan deal before July 1 because no one wants students interest rates to balloon before Novembers presidential and congressional elections. Were still pushing on that, said Rhode Island Sen. Jack Reed, chief sponsor of the Democratic bill. But I also think I recognize if there is another proposal outside of going after the health care fund, well certainly listen. Stafford loans are made to low- and middle-income students. With student loans of all types a growing household burden that now exceeds the nations credit-card debt, the fight in Congress has come to symbolize how each party would help families cope with the rugged economy and how to pay for it. Lawmakers face a pile of other issues this week as well.

Biden speaks out in favor of marriage equality


WASHINGTON Vice President Joe Biden says hes absolutely comfortable with gay couples who marry getting the same civil rights and liberties as heterosexual couples, a stand that gay rights advocates interpreted as an endorsement of samesex marriage. But the White House and President Barack Obamas re-election campaign, eager to avoid a debate on a hotbutton social issue in an election year, insisted that Biden was not breaking ranks with Obama, who does not publicly support gay marriage. Biden told NBCs Meet the Press that marriage should be about being loyal to someone you love, whether that marriage is between a man and a woman, two men or two women. I am absolutely comfortable with the fact that men marrying men, women marrying women and heterosexual men and women marrying one another are entitled to the same exact rights, all the civil rights, all the civil liberties, Biden said in the interview broadcast Sunday. Gay rights advocates said Bidens comments signaled unmistakable support for gay marriage, which they said made him the highest-ranking member in the Obama administration to take that position. Im grateful that the vice president of the United States is now publically supporting marriage equality and I hope very soon the president and the rest of our leaders, Republicans and Democrats in Congress, will fall in line with the vice president, said Chad Griffin, a gay rights supporter and a member of the Obama campaigns national finance committee. Joe Solmonese, the president of the Human Rights Campaign, said his group was encouraged by Bidens comments and called on Obama to speak out for full marriage equality for same-sex couples. Biden, a devout Catholic,

the coming decade. Some of the cuts may or not be realistic, though, despite the seal of approval of the respected Congressional Budget Office. Particularly dubious is $22.5 billion in savings claimed by repealing new orderly liquidation authority awarded to the Federal Deposit Insurance Corp. to prevent the failure of large financial firms from endangering the economy. Costs would be offset by assessments on other institutions over subsequent years. And $56 billion in savings over 10 years from Medicare and Medicaid as a result of curbing medical malpractice lawsuits is speculative, too, relying on a CBO estimate that assumes changes like capping punitive damages will produce a half-percentage-point cut in health care spending. The cuts will be dead on arrival in the Democraticcontrolled Senate this year. But theyre likely just a sample of whats in store next year from Republicans if Mitt Romney wins the White House and the GOP takes back the Senate. Romney promises much tougher cuts to domestic programs and an even bigger boost in the Pentagons budget, while the House GOP budget promises sharp cuts to Medicaid and a dramatic overhaul of Medicare for future beneficiaries.

Moderately confused

WASHINGTON News that Chinese dissident Chen Guangcheng and his family might be allowed to leave China for a university fellowship in the U.S. brought relief not only to Chen, but also to dissidents around the world. It also may have put a smidgeon of crow in the mouths of critics who perhaps protested too much too soon. Then again, maybe not. The outcry over how the State Department initially handled Chens dramatic escape from house arrest to the U.S. Embassy in Beijing ultimately may have helped persuade Chinese officials to concede to amped-up pressures from the U.S. Whatever the case, the Obama administration and, in particular, Secretary of State Hillary Clinton seem to have prevailed under difficult circumstances. If all goes according to plan, they not only may have saved Chens life but also will have invigorated the spirits and convictions of others around the world who still look to the U.S. as a beacon of freedom and protector of human rights. This result, assuming no further glitches, was not always apparent, least of all to Chen and his family. Until his harrowing escape several days ago, Chens plight was relatively unknown to most Americans, though a handful of people have been working for years to free

Seeing-eye nation

has said previously that his personal views, as well as the countrys, on gay marriage are evolving. The vice presidents office said Sunday after the interview aired that Bidens comments were not an endorsement of gay marriage, but simply a reaffirmation of his belief that same-sex couples deserve the same rights and protections as all Americans. David Axelrod, a senior adviser to the Obama campaign, chimed in on Twitter, saying Biden and Obama share the view that all married couples should have the same legal rights. For the Obama campaign, gay marriage has become a vexing electionyear issue. Each time the campaign promotes the presidents extensive work in advancing gay rights, including ending the militarys ban on openly gay service members, it is reminded of the one area where the president has fallen short in the eyes of gay rights advocates.

KATHLEEN PARKER

Point of View
this man known simply as a Chinese dissident. The words Chinese dissident dont resonate much in the U.S., where dissidence is a national pastime and China, despite its role as our banker, is over there. Furthermore, protesters are just so much landscape in this country an azalea here, a protester there. We consider political activism to be not just a birthright but a necessary prod to elected officialdom. Chens dissidence was both dangerous and of the highest moral order. Despite years in prison and regular beatings, he persisted in documenting forced abortion under Chinas one-child policy. Although blind, Chen was unable to avert his gaze from the abomination of women being forced to submit to abortions even in the latest term of their pregnancies. Sometimes only the blind can see. And sometimes nations prefer not to look. While in China last year, Vice President Joe Biden rather famously said he understood Chinas one-child policy and wouldnt second-guess it. Our reasoning, to the

extent any share Bidens view, deserves closer scrutiny. Perhaps we feel it is none of our business. And, of course, China has a population problem, doesnt it? As Biden said, Youre in a position where one wage earner will be taking care of four retired people. Not sustainable. A dozen inhumane solutions suggest themselves unbidden. I once asked a prolife activist what Chinas remedy should be and she said: I dont know, but I know we can do better than tearing babies from their mothers wombs. Chinas central government insists that the one-child policy is no longer enforced, but in the provincial regions, things happen. We know this because of Chens relentless bravery. But, really, why should we care? On Morning Joe Friday, regular guest Donny Deutsch said that Chens plight has little relevance to everyday Americans. Others on the panel lambasted Mitt Romney for criticizing the Obama administrations handling of the situation. Harsh political critiques are probably best reserved for less sensitive moments. On the other hand, what we do know about the State Departments handling of Chens detention, escape and subsequent hospitalization -- where he reportedly was abandoned by all but Chinese guards -- is

troubling. It appeared either that we were naive or that our leaders lacked moral clarity. U.S. officials contended that Chen left the embassy of his own volition to seek medical treatment, but Chen said his decision was based on incomplete information. He told CNN that, after he escaped, his wife was tied to a chair in their home for two days. Guards carrying sticks moved into their house and threatened to beat her to death. As the BBCs Michael Bristow wrote from Beijing, Mr. Chen came out of the U.S. Embassy thinking his safety had been assured -- but it is hard to escape the conclusion that he is already in detention. Matters were complicated, obviously, by the thenpending U.S.-China summit. Apparently, discussions to which reporters and others were not privy have led to a satisfactory diplomatic solution. As to whether Chens plight should be the concern of everyday Americans, the answer is clear. Americans are noisy for all the right reasons, and the cacophony of protest from our shores to theirs cant have hurt. Americans should care what happens to Chen because, if not us, then who? Kathleen Parkers email address is kathleenparker@ washpost.com.

www.delphosherald.com

Monday, May 7, 2012

The Herald 5A

LANDMARK

COMMUNITY Rhodes names deans lists


The 2012 Winter Quarter Deans List for full-time students, part-time students and One Night A Week Business Admin. students at Rhodes State College has been announced. Part-time students include: Delphos Amanda Burnett Brittany Dunahay Diana Harman Betsy Kunkleman Adam Marquiss Heather Marquiss Kaitlin Miller Gregory Odenweller Sarah Schier Kyle Suever Elida Joseph Bailey Cynthia Lee Burklo Bryan Flick James Hurt Michelle Jones Fort Jennings Jennifer Price Benjamin Schroeder Middle Point Jon Klingler Brooke Teman Cassondra Thatcher Kalida Lynne Moore Ottoville Brittany Wehrly Spencerville The Ohio State University at Lima announces its Deans List for Winter Quarter 2012. Students on the list are: Delphos Michelle Burnett Dylan Dancer Kayla Giller Meghan Ryba Jessica Spencer Jennifer Swick Elida Katelynn Bimer Andrew Bok Amber Daniel Jordane Duffy Nicholas Fraley Desiray Goedde Ashley Crisp Summer Mark Samantha Sensabaugh Full-time students on the list include: Delphos Brandon J Carder Kristin N Conkle Jamie M Delaney Stephanie L Havill Delannie O Hicks Luke T Inkrott Jerry Lee Pack Ryan Ricker Jeanette Zimmerman Elida Andrea Beery Timothy Brunk Mindy Calvelage Lauren Diglia Brooke Kirk John Metzger Lindsay Peters Jenna Rahrig Fort Jennings Jacob Berelsman Bethany Potter Anna Tenwalde Jennifer Warnecke Spencerville Alicia Ball Christopher Johnson Shane Stewart Heather Tucker-Hamilton Spencerville April Sandy Adam Goes Jessica Good Constance Kimmey Renita Ramdeo Katherine Siefker Ashley Singer Katherine Singer Chase Steiner Fort Jennings Ryan Kraner Spencerville Alexandria Degen Timothy Horner Shelby Moeller Cloverdale Andrew Warnecke Venedocia Alexandria Rostorfer

CAMPUS NOTE

Clymer Hall

CALENDAR OF
EVENTS
TODAY 7 p.m. Delphos City Council meets at the Delphos Municipal Building, 608 N. Canal St. Delphos Parks and Recreation board meets at the recreation building at Stadium Park. Washington Township trustees meet at the township house. 7:30 p.m. Spencerville village council meets at the mayors office. Delphos Eagles Auxiliary meets at the Eagles Lodge, 1600 Fifth St. 8 p.m. The Veterans of Foreign Wars meet at the hall. TUESDAY 11:30 a.m. Mealsite at Delphos Senior Citizen Center, 301 Suthoff Street. 6:30 p.m. Delphos Lions Club, Eagles Lodge, 1600 E. Fifth St. 7:30 p.m. Ottoville Emergency Medical Service members meet at the municipal building. Ottoville VFW Auxiliary members meet at the hall. Fort Jennings Local School District board members meet at the high school library. Alcoholics Anonymous, First Presbyterian Church, 310 W. Second St. 8:30 p.m. Elida village council meets at the town hall. WEDNESDAY 9 a.m. - noon Putnam County Museum is open, 202 E. Main St. Kalida. 11:30 a.m. Mealsite at Delphos Senior Citizen Center, 301 Suthoff Street. Noon Rotary Club meets at The Grind. 4 p.m. Delphos Public Library board members meet at the library conference room. 6 p.m. Shepherds of Christ Associates meet in the St. Johns Chapel. 7 p.m. Bingo at St. Johns Little Theatre. THURSDAY 9-11 a.m. The Delphos Canal Commission Museum, 241 N. Main St., is open. 11:30 a.m. Mealsite at Delphos Senior Citizen Center, 301 Suthoff Street. 5-7 p.m. The Interfaith Thrift Shop is open for shopping. 8 p.m. American Legion Post 268, 415 N. State St. FRIDAY 7:30 a.m. Delphos Optimist Club, A&W DriveIn, 924 E. Fifth St. 11:30 a.m. Mealsite at Delphos Senior Citizen Center, 301 Suthoff Street. 1-4 p.m. Interfaith Thrift Store is open for shopping.

Jennings raises $2,249 in St. Judes Math-a-thon

Photos submitted

Fort Jennings Elementary successfully completed its St. Judes Math-a-thon. This year, 55 students participated, raising $2,248.72. Certificates were given to all, T-shirts were given to those who raised $35-74.99 and T-shirts and sports bags were given to those who raised over $75. Top fund raiser was Emilee Calvelage, who raised $163.64. The program is sponsored nationally by Six Flags Theme Parks, who also provided free passes to its parks for every student raising $35 or more. Above: T-shirt, bookbag and top prize winners are, front from left, Lydia Will, Rachael Luersman, Jacob Mueller and Emilee Calvelage; and back, Paige Kloeppel, Riley Horstman, Logan Schimmoeller, Reagan Ricker and Gavin Schimmoeller.

OSU-Lima announces deans list

T-shirt winners are, front from left, Blake Schram, Brad Eickholt, Reese Von Sossan and Justin Liebrecht; center, Lauren Boggs, Evan Joseph, Troy Calvelage, Kaylee Gilchriest, Evelyn Meyer, Brooke Hellman, Jared Liebrecht and Evan Horstman; and back, Elizabeth Meyer, Brayden Calvelage, Carley Von Sossan, Chloe Fields, Zoe Young, Carmella Fondriest, Alexis Schram, Kaitlyn Arrizola and Andrea Phillips. Not pictured: Aiden Grothouse.

Thatcher-Kulwicki Insurance LLC


David Kulwicki 106 W. Tully St., PO Box 539, Convoy, OH 45832

1 (877) 594-5467

Happy Birthday
May 8 Roger Brinkman Cheryl Bishop Mary Ann Good Dan Haehn Austin Brock Emma Lindeman May 9 Chelsea Ditto Mikayla Ultrup Bobbie Kohorst Dawn Overholt Jessica Sherrick Keegan Sherrick

6A The Herald

Monday, May 7, 2012

TRACK AND FIELD


SATURDAY ADA INVITATIONAL Winners: Girls Team Scores: Minster 110, Versailles 107, Spencerville 78, Bluffton 52, (tie) Bucyrus and Carey 47, USV 38, New Knoxville 35, Allen East 30.5, Lima Central Catholic 25, McComb 24, Hardin Northern 19.5, Ada 18, Cory-Rawson 14, Mohawk 13, Vanlue 0. 3,200-meter relay: Minster 9:53.24. 100-meter hurdles: Haley Horstman (N) 15.81 100-meter dash: Brittany Holbrook (U) 12.46. 800-meter relay: Versailles 1:49.54. 1,600-meter run: Tammy Berger (VE) 5:08.29. 400-meter relay: Minster 51.41. 400-meter dash: Kelli Ley (S) 59.35. 300-meter hurdles: Haley Horstman (N) 48.91. 800-meter run: Hannah ChappellDick (BL) 2:18.17. 200-meter dash: Kelli Ley (S) 26.44. 3,200-meter run: Natalie Grilliot (VE) 12:13.57. 1,600-meter relay: Minster 4:12.79. Long jump: Kelly Ahman (L) 16-2.75. High jump: Kayah Myers (BU) 5-2. Discus: Becca Leppelmeier (MC) 136-1. Shot put: Becca Leppelmeier (MC) 37-8. Pole vault: Kayla Wuebker (MI) 12-3. Boys Team Scores: Minster 160, Versailles 78, LCC 70, Bluffton 69.5, Spencerville 63, Carey 40, New Knoxville 32, Ada 27, Bucyrus 26, Mohawk 25, McComb 24, Allen East 18, Vanlue 14.5, Hardin Northern 6, Cory-Rawson 5, USV 2. 3,200-meter relay: Minster 8:14.8. 110-meter hurdles: Brandon Meyer (S) 15.83. 100-meter dash: Jamir Coleman (L) 11.22. 800-meter relay: Lima Central Catholic 1:33.40. 1,600-meter run: Sam Prakel (VE) 4:22.59. 400-meter relay: Lima Central Catholic 44.62. 400-meter dash: Noah Stratton (BL) 52.51. 300-meter hurdles: Brandon Meyer (S) 42.34. 800-meter run: Sam Prakel (VE) 1:55.96. 200-meter dash: MyKale Rogers (L) 23.62. 3,200-meter run: Eric Dahlinghaus (MI) 10:28.63. 1,600-meter relay: Minster 3:36.09. Long jump: Derek Collins (MI) 21-3. High jump: Paul Dues (MI) 6-1. Discus: Jacob Winner (MI) 1645. Shot put: Ryan Will (MI) 50-7.5. Pole vault: Cory Larrick (CA) 13-6. -----Oak Harbor Invitational Points 10-8-6-5-4-3-2-1 Girls Team Rankings: Eastwood 114.50, Perrysburg 108, Napoleon 96, Edison 74, Van Wert 66, Oak Harbor 60, Port Clinton 54.50, Lake 43, Woodmore 42, Cardinal Stritch 1. Girls 100 Meter Dash: 1. Amanda Clay (V) 12.85; 2. Cromwell (ED) 13.04; 3. Keaton (W) 13.24; 4. Williamson (PE) 13.25; 5. Hollister (EA) 13.39; 6. Boos (L) 13.45; 7. Boice (EA) 13.50; 8. Gastier (ED) 13.68; ... 15. Allyssa Hill (V) 14.27. 200 Meter Dash: 1. Amanda Clay (V) 26.55; 2. Cromwell (ED) 26.68; 3. Jackson (EA) 27.09; 4. LaVoy (EA) 27.10; 5. Keaton (W) 27.49; 6. Jett (O) 28.35; 7. Timmons (L) 28.36; 8. Williamson (PE) 28.45; ... 17. Allyssa Hill (V) 29.12. 400 Meter Dash: 1. Amanda Clay (V) 1:02.07; 2. Keaton (W) 1:02.77; 3. Zemenski (L) 1:02.92; 4. St. Clair

RESULTS

(O) 1:03.08; 5. Avers (W) 1:04.07; 6. Waisner (N) 1:04.10; 7. Doore (PE) 1:04.61; 8. Pierce (ED) 1:05.29; ... 15. Riley Jones (V) 1:08.94. 800 Meter Run: 1. Emily Wyrick (PE) 2:17.94*; 2. Robison (N) 2:27.12; 3. Grooms (N) 2:30.97; 4. Klammer (PE) 2:33.08; 5. Dunnavant (ED) 2:33.36; 6. Jacey Eikenberry (V) 2:34.46; 7. Hablitzel (PC) 2:35.02; 8. Dresser (O) 2:36.41; ... 11. Cheyenne Handy (V) 2:41.74. 1,600 Meter Run: 1. Clody (PE) 5:21.70; 2. Sonnenberg (N) 5:30.72; 3. Gephart (O) 5:37.20; 4. Andi Foster (V) 5:40.13; 5. Renollet (EA) 5:43.06; 6. Stallkamp (ED) 5:43.08; 7. Chura (PC) 5:44.09; 8. Kaminski (EA) 5:44.78; ... 12. Erin Dingle (V) 6:18.28. 3,200 Meter Run: 1. Monheim (PE) 11:45.56; 2. Hoops (N) 12:03.20; 3. Andi Foster (V) 12:06.78; 4. Renollet (EA) 12:18.51; 5. Willeman (N) 12:36.85; 6. Weaver (PC) 12:57.69; 7. Phillips (EA) 13:07.22; 8. Baum (PE) 13:11.85; ... 10. Schealissa Williams (V) 13:33.65. 100 Meter Hurdles: 1. Jones (PE) 16.37; 2. McNay (EA) 16.54; 3. Lee (N) 16.80; 4. Wolff (EA) 17.03; 5. Weis (O) 17.17; 6. Danda (ED) 17.29; 7. Huntebrinker (O) 17.51; 8. Johnson (L) 17.78; ... 11. Marrissa Sperry (V) 17.60; ... 16. Clair Butler (V) 19.37. 300 Meter Hurdles: 1. McNay (EA) 48.92; 2. Silcox (N) 50.50; 3. Whitney Meyers (V) 50.55; 4. Weis (O) 51.69; 5. Gruenhagen (N) 51.72; 6. Danda (ED) 51.80; 7. Dombrowsky (O) 51.98; 8. Petersen (PC) 52.1; ... 11. Marrissa Sperry (V) 53.24. 4x100 Meter Relay: 1. Eastwood 52.11; 2. Lake 52.32; 3. Perrysburg 52.77; 4. Oak Harbor 52.88; 5. Van Wert (Cheyenne Handy, Whitney Meyers, Alyssa Hill, Alexis Dowdy) 54.01; 6. Edison 54.02; 7. Napoleon 54.90; 8. Woodmore 56.60. 4x200 Meter Relay: 1. Perrysburg 1:50.40; 2. Edison 1:51.27; 3. Oak Harbor 1:51.39; 4. Van Wert (Alexis Dowdy, Whitney Meyers, Allyssa Hill, Amanda Clay) 1:51.91; 5. Napoleon 1:52.01; 6. Eastwood 1:54.82; 7. Port Clinton 2:02.28. 4x400 Meter Relay: 1. Perrysburg 4:11.70; 2. Napoleon 4:13.22; 3. Oak Harbor 4:15.07; 4. Eastwood 4:22.02; 5. Port Clinton 4:25.08; 6. Van Wert (Cheyenne Handy, Whitney Meyers, Alexis Dowdy, Jacey Eikenberry) 4:27.43; 7. Edison 4:30.09; 8. Lake 4:34.86. 4x800 Meter Relay: 1. Perrysburg 9:46.71; 2. Napoleon 10:00.99; 3. Port Clinton 10:27.62; 4. Edison 10:35.19; 5. Van Wert (Cheyenne Handy, Jacey Eikenberry, Erin Dingle, Andi Foster) 10:36.79; 6. Eastwood 10:50.84. High Jump: 1. Day (PC) 5-0; 2. Timmons (L) 4-10; 3. Thorpe (O) 4-10; 4. (tie) Brown (PC), Pierce (ED), Selhorst (EA) and Hill (ED) 4-6; 8. (tie) Martin (O) and Gruenhagen (N) 4-6. Pole Vault: 1. Dunbar (N) 9-6; 2. LaCourse (EA) 9-6; 3. Bohnenkamp (PE) 9-3; 4. Lorensen (PC) 8-6; 5. Keck (PC) 8-6; 6. Wolff (EA) 8-6; 7. Gornek (ED) 8-6; 8. (tie) Barnes (N) and Barton (O) 8-0. Long Jump: 1. LaVoy (EA) 16-6.50; 2. Johnson (L) 16-3.50; 3. Timmons (L) 15-11.50; 4. Gornek (ED) 15-8.50; 5. Firsdon (EA) 15-3; 6. Bohnenkamp (PE) 15-0.50; 7. Huntebrinker (O) 14-10; 8. Bakies (PE) 14-9.50; ... 13. Riley Jones (V) 13-0. Shot Put: 1. Dunn (PC) 39-9; 2. Caruloff (ED) 35-7.75; 3. Pendleton (W) 34-11.25; 4. Ashbaugh (N) 34-5.25; 5. Williams (PE) 34-2.50; 6. Saenz (ED) 34-2.25; 7. Jacoby (EA) 33-6.25; 8. Tolek (EA) 33-3; ... 11. Alexis Dowdy (V) 31-7.25; ... 17. Haley Ramey (V) 25-2.25. Discus: 1. Jacoby (EA) 128-6; 2. Pendleton (W) 123-1; 3. Turnow (O) 123-0; 4. Baer (W) 115-4; 5. Williams (PE) 111-3; 6. Ashbaugh (N) 110-2; 7. Zam (PC) 105-4; 8. Trumble (C) 103-11; ... 9. Haley Sinning (V) 99-10; ... 18. Haley Ramey (V) 80-4.

Pair of Wildcats advance in Division III baseball


jmetcalfe@delphosherald.com

SPORTS

www.delphosherald.com

By JIM METCALFE

See TRACK, page 8A

SHAWNEE The first game Saturday afternoon was a rematch of a Jefferson 7-6 baseball victory over Bluffton April 23 in Delphos. This time, it was a Division III sectional matchup at Shawnee and it was the same result, different score, as the Wildcats dispatched the Pirates 6-2. In the nightcap, it was an old-fashioned pitchers duel as Baths Nate Heffner and Parkways John Rollins matched 3-hit gems. It was a run in the Bath second that was the difference as the Wildcats nudged the Panthers 1-0. In the opener, senior Curtis Miller (1-1) got the win in his three innings as the Jefferson (9-12) starter, throwing a pitchcount limit of 70 in ceding three hits, five walks and two earned runs. He also fanned four. Classmate Mike Joseph got the save in four innings of 3-hit relief. He walked two and whiffed two. This was on the second start for Curtis and hed only pitched 3 2/3 innings before Monday. He was on a strict pitch count of about 70 and we planned on using any pitchers we needed, Jefferson coach Doug Geary noted. We had good pitching again outside of some wildness by Curtis; hes still a work in progress coming back from a shoulder injury from wrestling. Fortunately, Mike did a good enough job of throwing strikes that we didnt need to bring in anyone else. We were planning on using Zach (Ricker) in that situation but he got hurt early today. Matthew Gillett threw a complete game (6 innings), giving up eight hits, two free passes and six runs (5 earned), while fanning six. We hit the ball pretty well and created some offense. Its always good to get off to a quick start at the plate, Geary added. The second thing is that we didnt commit an error. We havent the last two games after averaging about 4.5 for several games before that. We have worked hard on that when we can and hopefully, were putting that area together. We need our defense to play well because we dont have the strikeout pitchers. The Pirates (3-15) had a chance in the opener, getting walks to Jeremy Basinger (2-for-2, 2 runs batted in) and Drake Lugibuhl around a Trent Phillips sacrifice and a strikeout, but could not dent the scoreboard.

Zach Kimmett follows through as he watches his shot clear the left-field fence for a 2-run HR in the first inning Saturday at Shawnee. That dinger helped Jefferson dispose of Bluffton 6-2 in a Division IV sectional baseball contest.
The Red and White Wildcats did dent the scoreboard with three in the home half. With one down, Austin Jettinghoff singled to center and scored on a double to deep left by Ross Thompson. An out later, he scored as Zach Kimmett dialed long distance to left field for a 3-0 edge. Bluffton did get two back in the top of the second, combining two hits, two walks, a wild pitch and a fielders choice to do so. Both runs (Michael Sheehan and Austin Bricker) came home courtesy of a 2-run single to left by Basinger. The Pirates again left a pair of runners on base (11 for the afternoon). The Pirates again combined a leadoff walk (Lugibuhl) and a 2-out single to right center by Jordan Skilliter (2-for-4) in the third but for the third straight inning, left two on base. The Jeffcats made it 4-2 in the home half as Tony George (2-for-3, 2 runs) led off with a 1-bounce double to the fence in left, advanced on a 1-out wild pitch and touched the dish courtesy of a Thompson sacrifice fly to right. Miller (2-for-3) beat out an infield hit to the hole at short and Kimmett walked but they were left on base. Bluffton wasted a leadoff walk (Bricker) by Joseph in the fourth. The youthful Pirates (12 of their roster of 17 are sophomores and freshmen) missed a chance in the fifth on a 1-out opposite-field double to left center by Chris McClain. The Jeffcats did not in their half of the frame. George again led off with a triple down the left-field line and score two outs later on a RBI rip up the middle by Miller. He stole second, advanced on a balk and scored on a passed ball to make it 6-2. Kimmett again walked but pinch-runner Evan Neubert was caught stealing by Tyler Belcher. The Pirates mounted a 1-out challenge in the sixth on backto-back knocks by Bricker and Basinger but Joseph retired the next two. Jefferson tried to add to its lead in the bottom half with a leadoff bloop hit to right by pinch-hitter Kyle Anspach (batting for Jeff Schleeter, who subbed in for Ricker), a steal by pinch-runner Zavier Buzard, a 1-out free pass to Seth Wolenhaupt and a 2-out balk. However, they remained at their respective bases. McClain walked with one out in the Pirate seventh and a wild pitch advanced pinchrunner Braden Skilliter to second. However, Joseph finished off the next two batters to end the contest. The Jeffcats advance to play top-seeded Coldwater 5 p.m. Thursday. They continue regular-season play 5 p.m. this afternoon at Kenton. In the nightcap, Heffner (2 BBs, 5 Ks; 88 pitches, 8 strikes) and the southpaw Rollins (3-2; 1 BB, 1 hit batter, 1 balk, 4 Ks; 74 pitches, 49 strikes) matched pitch-forpitch. Parkway had a chance in the top of the second, getting a 2-out walk to the leftyswinging Rollins, but couldnt punch him in. A leadoff double in the second by Baths Matt Wise started their only scoring sequence. Myles Holliday walked and after a balk, Doug Sanders delivered a 1-out grounder to second that plated Wise for the only tally. After Bath got its first two batters on in the third (Eric Heffner on a bunt and Caleb Norton on an infield single), Seth Collins forced Heffner at third and then Parkway turned a 1-5-3 double play to end that threat. The Panthers first real chance came in the fourth as Bryce Bedwell had a 2-out infield hit to short, followed by a walk to Jonathan Fent, but they became two of the six they left on base. Cain Pontsler got to second in the Parkway fifth on a 1-out error by Bath and a stolen base but a run-producing hit was not in the cards. Bath had a chance to add to its margin in the fifth on a 2-out error on E. Heffners grounder and a disputed hit

Tom Morris photo

batter (Norton) but Rollins shut it down. Parkway (10-8) had what turned out to be its last opening in the sixth as Riley Bransteter had a 1-out single-eye single to right and a 2-out liner to right by Fent that put runners at third and second (Fent taking the extra base on the throw to third) but it was to no avail. N. Heffner sent down the Panthers in order in the seventh to end the contest. The Panthers continue regular-season action at Wayne Trace 5 p.m. today. Bath (14-7) will take on second-seeded Lima Central Catholic 5 p.m. Friday in the next round. They visit Defiance today in regular-season action.

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The Associated Press National League East Division W L Pct Washington 18 10 .643 Atlanta 18 11 .621 New York 15 13 .536 Miami 14 14 .500 Philadelphia 14 15 .483 Central Division W L Pct St. Louis 17 11 .607 Cincinnati 14 13 .519 Houston 13 15 .464 Milwaukee 12 16 .429 Pittsburgh 12 16 .429 Chicago 11 17 .393 West Division W L Pct Los Angeles 18 10 .643 San Francisco 14 14 .500 Arizona 14 15 .483 Colorado 12 15 .444 San Diego 9 20 .310 Sundays Results N.Y. Mets 3, Arizona 1 Cincinnati 5, Pittsburgh 0

MLB GLANCE
St. Louis 8, Houston 1 Chicago Cubs 4, L.A. Dodgers 3, 11 innings Atlanta 7, Colorado 2 Miami 6, San Diego 3 San Francisco 4, Milwaukee 3, 11 innings Philadelphia 9, Washington 3 Todays Games N.Y. Mets at Philadelphia, 7:05 p.m. Atlanta at Chicago Cubs, 8:05 p.m. Miami at Houston, 8:05 p.m. Cincinnati at Milwaukee, 8:10 p.m. St. Louis at Arizona, 9:40 p.m. Colorado at San Diego, 10:05 p.m. San Fran. at L.A. Dodgers, 10:10 p.m. ---American League East Division W L Pct GB Baltimore 19 9 .679 Tampa Bay 19 10 .655 1/2 16 13 .552 3 1/2 Toronto New York 15 13 .536 4 Boston 11 16 .407 7 1/2 Central Division W L Pct GB Cleveland 15 11 .577

JEFFERSON 6, BLUFFTON 2 BLUFFTON (2) ab-r-h-rbi Jeremy Basinger cf 2-0-2-2, Trent Phillips ss 2-0-0-0, Matt Gillett p 4-0-0-0, Drake Lugibuhl lf 2-0-0-0, Chris McClain 1b 3-0-1-0, Braden Skilliter pr 0-0-0-0, Tyler Belcher c 4-0-0-0, Jordan Skilliter dh 4-0-2-0, Zach Kuhlman 3b 0-00-0, Michael Sheehan rf 3-1-0-0, Austin Bricker 2b 1-1-1-0. Totals 25-2-6-2. JEFFERSON (6) ab-r-h-rbi Tony George 2b/cf 3-2-20, Austin Jettinghoff ss 3-1-1-0, Ross Thompson 3b/2b 2-1-1-2, Curtis Miller p/1b 3-1-2-1, Zach Kimmett lf 1-1-1-2, Evan Neubert pr 0-0-0-0, Zach Ricker 1b 1-0-00, Jeff Schleeter ph/3b 1-0-0-0, Kyle Anspach ph 1-0-1-0, Zavier Buzard pr 0-0-0-0, Drew Kortokrax dh 3-0-0-0, Justin Rode c 0-0-00, Seth Wollenhaupt rf 2-0-0-0, Mike Joseph cf/p 3-0-0-0. Totals 23-6-8-5. Score by Innings: Bluffton 020 000 0-2 Jefferson 3 0 1 0 2 0 x - 6 LOB: Bluffton 11, Jefferson 4; 2B: McClain, George, Thompson; 3B: George; HR: Kimmett; SB: Miller, Buzard; CS: Neubert (by Belcher); Sac: Basinger, Phillips; SF: Thompson. IP H R ER BB SO BLUFFTON Gillett (L) 6.0 8 6 5 2 6 JEFFERSON Miller (W, 1-1) 3.0 3 2 2 5 4 Joseph (S, 1) 4.0 3 0 0 2 2 WP: Gillett, Miller, Joseph; Balk: Gillett 2. ---BATH 1, PARKWAY 0 PARKWAY (0) ab-r-h-rbi Jordan Stephenson dh 3-00-0, Evan Cheek cf 0-0-0-0, Brandon Moorman 3b 3-0-0-0, Riley Bransteter ss 3-0-1-0, Bryce Bedwell 1b, Jonathan Fent c 2-01-0, John Rollins p 2-0-0-0, Brett Swygart lf 3-0-0-0, Cain Pontsler rf 3-0-0-0, Derek Luth 2b 3-0-0-0. Totals 25-0-3-0. BATH (1) ab-r-h-rbi Caleb Norton c 2-0-1-0, Seth Collins 1b 3-0-0-0, Colin Gossard ss 3-0-0-0, Matt Wise dh 3-1-10, Austin Best 2b 0-0-0-0, Myles Holliday cf 2-0-0-0, Keaton Sullivan 3b 2-0-0-0, Doug Sanders rf 2-0-01, Nate Heffner p 2-0-0-0, Eric Heffner lf 2-0-1-0. Totals 21-1-3-1. Score by Innings: Parkway 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 - 0 Bath 010 000 x-1 E: Bransteter, Sullivan; DP: Parkway 1; LOB: Parkway 6, Bath 4; 2B: Wise; SB: Pontsler. IP H R ER BB SO PARKWAY Rollins (L, 3-2) 6.0 3 1 1 1 4 BATH N. Heffner (W) 7.0 3 0 0 2 5 HBP: Norton (by Rollins); Balk: Rollins.

GB 1/2 3 4 4 1/2 GB 2 1/2 4 5 5 6 GB 4 4 1/2 5 1/2 9 1/2

Detroit 14 13 .519 1 1/2 Chicago 13 15 .464 3 Kansas City 9 18 .333 6 1/2 Minnesota 7 20 .259 8 1/2 West Division W L Pct GB Texas 18 10 .643 Oakland 15 14 .517 3 1/2 Seattle 13 17 .433 6 Los Angeles 12 17 .414 6 1/2 Sundays Results Detroit 3, Chicago White Sox 1 Cleveland 4, Texas 2 Baltimore 9, Boston 6, 17 innings Oakland 9, Tampa Bay 5 N.Y. Yankees 10, Kansas City 4 L.A. Angels 4, Toronto 3 Seattle 5, Minnesota 2 Todays Games Chicago White Sox at Cleveland, 1:05 p.m., 1st game Chicago White Sox at Cleveland, 7:05 p.m., 2nd game Texas at Baltimore, 7:05 p.m. Boston at Kansas City, 8:10 p.m. L.A. Angels at Minnesota, 8:10 p.m. Detroit at Seattle, 10:10 p.m.

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Lady Jeffcats, Lancers move on in tourney


Times Bulletin Correspondent

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Monday, May 7, 2012

The Herald 7A

Ottoville ousts archrivals, Lancers batter Archers


By SEAN LAFONTAINE and Brian Bassett sports@timesbulletin.com CONVOY The Ottoville Big Green faced the Fort Jennings Musketeers in Division IV sectional play held at the Crestview Athletic Complex Saturday afternoon. Errors doomed Fort Jennings, which allowed Ottoville to get on top early and the Big Green never looked back on the way to a 9-4 victory. In the second contest, the Lincolnview bats came through in a big way at a big time, getting a 6-run inning and a 7-run frame to roll to a 13-2, 5-inning victory over Antwerp. In the opener, Ottoville struck first in the top of the first inning against Musketeer starter Cody Warnecke. After the first two Big Green batters struck out, Luke Schimmoeller reached base on an error by the Musketeer infield. Bryan Hohlbein singled and Austin Markward then came through in a big way by hitting a 2-run double over the leftfielders head to put the Big Green up 2-0. Fort Jennings answered in the bottom of the inning. With one out, Nolan Neidert was hit by a pitch by Travis Maag to put him on base and then advanced to second on an errant pickoff attempt to first base. After a popout for the second out, Warnecke helped out his own cause by hitting a double that scored Neidert from second and pulled the Musketeers within one run. Both pitchers settled down and threw a scoreless second and third inning but Ottoville struck in a big way in the fourth inning. With one out, a pitch-hit by Cory Fischer started it and Jacob Turnwald followed with another single. Derek Schimmoeller singled, scoring Fischer. After a strikeout, Maag hit a ball in the gap for a triple, scoring both runners on base to put Ottoville up 5-1. Maag scored a few pitches later on a wild pitch, which gave the Big Green a 6-1 lead. After Ottoville added another run in the top of the sixth, the Musketeers tried to mount a comeback in the bottom of the sixth. With one out, Neidert got the rally started with another single. After he advanced to second and third on wild pitches, Hellman walked to put runners on first and third. Warnecke then came up with another big hit for the Musketeers, this time hitting a single to score one run and again leaving runners on first and third. Nick Verhoff drew a walk to load the bases. After an infield fly for the second out of the inning, Alex Vetter came though with a 2-RBI single to get Fort Jennings within three runs, 7-4; however, the Musketeers left two runners stranded to end the inning. Ottoville added two more runs in top of the seventh to

By JIM COX

MIDDLE POINT - Jefferson junior pitcher Taylor Branham escaped bases-loaded jams in the sixth and seventh innings, preserving a 5-2 Lady Wildcat win over Ottoville in Saturdays second Division IV sectional softball game at Lincolnview. Thitoff Next up for Delphos (3-15) is Crestview in Wednesdays 5 p.m. sectional final. Ottoville is now 0-15. In the first contest, it was a pitchers duel for three innings but Lincolnview busted loose in the fourth and eventually run-ruled Spencerville 12-1 to advance to Tuesdays 5:00 final against Parkway. The Lancers are now 10-8. The Lady Bearcats are 4-16. In the nightcap, trailing 4-1, the feisty Lady Green loaded the bases with none out in the top of the sixth via singles by catcher Kelsey Hoersten, centerfielder Marissa Nienberg and second baseman Lindsey Eickholt (bunt) but Branham got out of that one by striking out the next two batters and retiring shortstop Angelina Keeran on a bouncer to third -- a bang-bang play that was disputed loudly by many of the Ottoville faithful. After Jefferson stretched its lead to 5-1, Ottoville threatened seriously again in the seventh when leftfielder Haley Landwehr led off with a walk and DP Robyn Turnwald reached on a throwing error. Turnwald was then forced at second on a bouncer off the bat of rightfielder Paige Lucas. Hoersten made it interesting by bouncing a ground-rule double over left-field fence, scoring Landwehr. Nienburg loaded the bags by walking but Branham again rose to the occasion, striking out the next two batters to end it. They made the last two innings a little uncomfortable -- loaded the bases with nobody out and loaded the bases with one out, said Jefferson coach David Wollenhaupt. To Taylors credit in the circle, she really focused in and did a nice job to finish things out. Weve had lapses this year where our defense has let an inning like that get away. She just decided to step up and take control. I thought she pitched as well in the last two innings as she has in a long time. The Jeffcats started the scor-

Indians crunch Lady Dawgs out of tourney BATH TOWNSHIP Shawnees Samantha Bullock continued her comeback from Tommy John surgery with a 4-hitter as the Lady Indians dispensed Elida 12-2 (6 innings) in a Division II sectional victory Saturday at Bath. The Lady Indians take on Bath 5 p.m. Tuesday at Bath in sectional action. Britt Lauck had three hits and two runs batted in, while Bullock helped her cause with two hits and two RBIs. Also registering two hits out of the 14-hit attack against Caitlin Shroyer (4-10) were Tori Runneals (2 RBIs), Kaitlin Mulcahy and Megan Buettner (2 RBIs). Liz Aller had a 2-run dinger in the fourth. Jenn Eilerman had two hits for the Bulldogs (6-14) and Jenna Halpern had an RBI.

LOCAL ROUNDUP

ing in the bottom of the first. With one out, second baseman Corinne Metzger reached second when her fly ball was dropped. She stole third, then came in on a single up the middle by catcher Cassidy Bevington. Delphos scored two more in the third. Shortstop Samantha Thitoff led off with a single through the third/short hole, went to second on a groundout and scored when centerfielder Fallon Van Dyke bounced a ground-rule double over the fence in left. Van Dyke then scored on a single by third baseman Shayla Rice -- 3-0, Jefferson, after three innings. The Lady Green closed to within 3-1 in the top of the fifth on singles by third baseman Krista Schimmoeller, Keeran and Turnwald but Branham immediately trumped that run with a homer to left to make it 4-1 after five. Jefferson got its fifth run in the bottom of the sixth via singles from right fielder Rachel Miller, Thitoff and Metzger. Both pitchers were impressive. Branham went the distance, giving up two runs, both earned, on eight hits, striking out nine and walking two. She threw 128 pitches, of which 84 were strikes. Ottoville freshman hurler Courtney Von Sossan was remarkably efficient during her six innings of work, throwing only 72 pitches, of which 53 were strikes. She yielded five runs (4 earned) on 10 hits, striking out one and walking one. Big Green coach Joe Modica employed an unusual defense for most of the game, bringing rightfielder Lucas into the second-base position and playing three other infielders between second and third, thus leaving only two players to patrol the outfield, one in left and one in left center. Weve been doing that because we dont have that much speed, enough quickness to get to the ball, explained Modica. She (Von Sossan) has learned to throw all inside pitches (to right-handed batters). We try to judge the batters as they come up. Theres not a girl who can hit it over there (to right field) on an inside pitch. The 10 Delphos hits were scattered among eight batters, led by Thitoff (2-for-2, 2 runs) and Metzger (2-for-4, 1 run, 1 RBI). Van Dyke, Bevington, Branham and Rice each had a hit and an RBI.

Ottovilles offense was led by Turnwald (2-for-4, 2 RBIs) and Hoersten (2-for-3, a double). Jefferson visits OttawaGlandorf tonight in regularseason action. Ottoville hosts Kalida 5 p.m. Wednesday. In the opener, sophomore pitchers Tori Johnston (Spencerville) and Ashley McClure (Lincolnview) were in control during three scoreless innings. In the top of the fourth, though, Johnston gave herself a 1-0 lead by blasting one over the fence in center. That lead was short-lived, however, as the Lady Lancers put up an 8-run bottom half, aided by three misjudged flyball doubles and a Bearcat error, although Lincolnview did pound the ball hard. DP Macey Ahsbaugh led off by reaching on an error. Rightfielder Devann Springer ripped a line single to center and first baseman Carley Springer was plunked by a Johnston fastball, filling the bases. Shortstop Baylee Neate plated Ashbaugh and Devann Springer with a double to deep left. Carley Springer scored on a wild pitch, then catcher Lauren Calvert duplicated Neates double, scoring Neate to make it 4-1, Lancers. Third baseman Kelsey Mohr walked and second baseman Morgan Peel bunted pinch-runner Julia Thatcher and Mohr over. Both came in on a pop-fly double to shallow right by leftfielder Holly Diller. Centerfielder Jodie Donor whacked a single up the middle and Ashbaugh blooped an opposite-field single down the left-field line, scoring Diller. Devann Springers sacrifice fly brought in Doner and it was 8-1 after four. Neate started the bottom of the fifth by striking out but reached on a passed ball. She advanced to second on another passed ball, then scored on a Mohr double. Carley Springer ended the game promptly in the bottom of the sixth by blasting a 3-run homer over the centerfield fence, following an Ashbaugh single and a Devann Springer double. McClure threw a 6-inning masterpiece, striking out 10 and walking only one, while giving up one run and four hits. She threw 95 pitches, of which 63 were strikes. Lincolnview coach Kent McClure credits assistant coach Calli Coppus with the vast improvement in Ashley McClures pitching. Coppus, incidentally, played on Sycamore Mohawks 2003 state championship team, which beat Crestview 6-1 in the final game that year. I wasnt worried, Coach

McClure said of Spencervilles 1-0 lead after 3 1/2 innings. We just had to see her (Johnston) and time her. Were notoriously slow starters. Throughout the lineup, I tell you, were hitting. This was good, going into the Parkway game, because Parkway is a really good team. Parkway run-ruled Lincolnview during the season. For the Bearcats, Johnston took the loss, although she left the game after facing only the first three batters in the disastrous fourth inning. All three of those runners eventually scored. Relievers Hanna Keller, Kaytlynn Warnecke and Haleigh Mull followed Johnston to the circle but none of them were able to stop the Lancer onslaught. The Lincolnview offense was led by Ashbaugh (2-for4, 2 runs, 1 RBI), Devann Springer (2-for-3, including a double, 2 runs, 1 RBI), Calvert (2-for-3, 2 doubles, one RBI), Carley Springer (homer, 2 runs, 3 RBIs), Neate (double, 2 runs, 2 RBIs) and Diller (double, 1 run, 2 RBIs). Johnston led Bearcat hitters, going 2-for-3, including her homer, accounting for a run and an RBI. Spencerville is scheduled to play at St. Marys 5 p.m. Thursday in regular action.
JEFFERSON 5, OTTOVILLE 2 Ottoville (ab-r-h-rbi) Landwehr lf 3-1-0-0, Turnwald dp 4-0-2-2, Lucas rf 4-0-0-0, Hoersten c 3-0-2-0, Nienberg cf 3-0-1-0, Eickholt 2b 4-0-1-0, Schimmoeller 3b 4-1-10, Burgei 1b 2-0-0-0, Beining ph 1-00-0, Keeran ss 3-0-1-0, Schlagbaum pr 0-0-0-0, Von Sossan p 0-0-0-0. Totals 31-2-8-2. Jefferson (ab-r-h-rbi) Thitoff ss 4-2-2-0, Metzger 2b 4-1-2-1, Van Dyke cf 4-1-1-1, Bevington c 3-0-1-1, Branham p 2-1-1-1, Rice 3b 3-0-1-1, Kimber Kill lf 2-0-0-0, Cook pr/ph 1-0-00, Hohlbein dp 3-0-1-0, Kayla Kill 1b 0-0-0-0, Miller rf 3-0-1-0. Totals 29-5-10-5. Score by Innings: Ottoville 000 010 1-2 83 Jefferson 1 0 2 0 1 1 X - 5 10 2 WP - Branham; LP - Von Sossan. LOB: Ottoville 11, Jefferson 7. 2B Hoersten (OV), Van Dyke (DJ). HR - Branham (DJ). LINCOLNVIEW 12, SPENCERVILLE 1 Spencerville (ab-r-h-rbi) Alyssa Mulholland ss 3-0-1-0, Mull c-p 3-0-0-0, Johnston p-rf-3b 3-1-2-1, Keller rf-p 1-0-0-0, Lee rf 1-0-0-0, Ringwald lf 2-0-0-0, Crider lf 1-0-0-0, Merriman 1b 2-0-0-0, Warnecke 3b-p 2-0-1-0, Gilroy 2b 2-0-0-0, Shelby Mulholland cf 2-0-00. Totals 22-1-4-1. Lincolnview (ab-r-h-rbi) Doner cf 4-1-1-0, Ashbaugh dp 4-2-2-1, Devann Springer rf 3-2-2-1, Carley Springer 1b 3-2-1-3, Neate ss 3-2-1-2, Calvert c 3-0-2-1, Thatcher pr 0-1-0-0, Mohr 3b 2-1-1-1, Peel 2b 1-0-0-0, Diller lf 3-1-1-2, McClure p 0-0-0-0. Totals 26-12-11-11. Score by innings: Spencerville 0 0 0 100- 1 41 Lincolnview 0 0 0 8 1 4 - 12 11 1 No outs in 6th when game ended WP - McClure; LP - Johnston. LOB - Spencerville 4, Lincolnview 3. 2B - Calvert 2 (LV), Devann Springer (LV), Neate (LV), Mohr (LV), Diller (LV). HR - Johnston (SV), Carley Springer (LV).

Elida hosts Kalida 5 p.m. today in regular-season action and visits Coldwater 5 p.m. Tuesday.

Elida 002 00- 2 43 Shawnee 0 6 0 4 2 - 12 14 2 WP: Samantha Bullock; LP: Caitlin Shroyer. 2B: Samantha Bullock (S). 3B: Jenna Halpern (E), Megan Buettner (S). HR: Liz Aller (S).

The Associated Press CONFERENCE SEMIFINALS (Best-of-7) Saturdays Result Washington 3, NY Rangers 2, tied 2-2 Sundays Results Los Angeles 3, St. Louis 1, Los Angeles wins series 4-0

NHL PLAYOFFS NBA PLAYOFFS

New Jersey 4, Philadelphia 2, New Jersey leads series 3-1 Todays Games Washington at NY Rangers, 7:30 p.m. Nashville at Phoenix, 10 p.m., Phoenix leads series 3-1 Tuesdays Game New Jersey at Philadelphia, 7:30 p.m.

---Shawnee wraps up WBL boys tennis title - again LIMA The Shawnee boys tennis team has ruled the Western Buckeye League roost for a long time, winning the last three titles. Winning three of the five individual titles during Saturdays finals at the University of Northwestern Ohio courts, the Indians ran away with the team-tournament title. The Division II District competition is Thursday and
See ROUNDUP, page 8A

The Associated Press FIRST ROUND (Best-of-7) Saturdays Results Indiana 101, Orlando 99, OT, Indiana leads series 3-1 L.A. Clippers 87, Memphis 86, L.A. Clippers leads series 2-1 Oklahoma City 103, Dallas 97, Oklahoma City wins series 4-0 San Antonio 102, Utah 90, San Antonio leads series 3-0 Sundays Results Philadelphia 89, Chicago 82, Philadelphia leads series 3-1

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New York 89, Miami 87, Miami leads series 3-1 Boston 101, Atlanta 79, Boston leads series 3-1 L.A. Lakers 92, Denver 88, L.A. Lakers lead series 3-1 Todays Games San Antonio at Utah, 8 p.m. Memphis at L.A. Clippers, 10:30 p.m. Tuesdays Games Orlando at Indiana, 7 p.m. Boston at Atlanta, 8 p.m. Philadelphia at Chicago, 9:30 p.m. Denver at L.A. Lakers, 10:30 p.m.

put the game away. Maag threw a complete game for the Big Green, giving up four earned runs on five hits and two walks, while striking out five. Maag also led the way for the Big Green at the plate, recording three hits. Hohlbein and Turnwald each added two hits and Markward added a double. Travis threw a heck of a game for us and our seniors really came though for us as well, said Big Green coach Tony Castronova. We jumped on them early and swung the bat well and put the ball in play. They had some errors that really hurt them and gave us confidence. The defense was really solid today as well and we did a good job of finishing innings and didnt fall apart when we got in trouble like we have in the past. We are still playing and thats the best part. Warnecke picked up the loss on the mound for the Musketeers, throwing four innings in giving up seven runs on six hits and two free passes while striking out seven. The Musketeer defense struggled as a whole by having six errors as a team. Warnecke, who had two hits, led Fort Jennings at the plate and Hellman added a double as well. When you have six errors, youre not going to win any ball games, I dont care who youre playing, said Musketeer coach Jeff Swick. We have been able to hide a lot of our flaws all year but today our Achilles heel really showed. When you give a team extra at-bats and extra opportunities and you put that much more pressure on your pitcher; that is what happens. Our errors gave them baserunners and allowed them to gain some confidence and get some runs and that allowed their pitcher to settle down. Maag is a good pitcher anyway and when a kid like that can settle in, the outcome isnt going to be good. We got a few runs in the sixth but we needed to do that from the beginning. Im just disappointed. We had a good week of games and practice but today we got the result that six errors is going to give you. Ottoville will move on to play Spencerville next Friday with the start time set for 5 p.m. Fort Jennings hosts Miller City today. In game 2, Lincolnview fell behind early after surrendering a run in the top of the first but came back with seven runs in the second inning - a boost that put the game out of reach. It was a lot of fun. We had a nice string there in the second inning - seven runs. Had a lot of fun out there today, got some big hits, played good defense. It was a good win, said Lincolnview coach Brad Mendenhall. Antwerp drew first blood in the top of the first when second baseman Drew Taylor led the game off with a single and came around to score on
See OTTOVILLE, page 8A

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8A The Herald

Monday, May 7, 2012

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Roundup

Tournament Team: Shawnee 58, Ottawa-Glandorf 46, Wapakoneta 38, Celina 32, Van Wert and St. Marys 16, Elida 12, Defiance 11, Kenton 1, Bath 0. Individual: First Singles: Jonny Rutter (SH), Alex Schroeder (O), Nic Oen (W), Nathan Knodel (V). Second Singles: John Lammers (O), Jason Barton (SH), Aaron Seibel (C), Joey Jose (W). Third Singles: Zach Diltz (SH), Nathan Schmiedebusch (O), Andy Faller (W), Jeremy Walls (C). First Doubles: Derek Smith/ Garrett Diltz (SH), Isaac Elston/Kris Lejeune (C), Rez Azbell/Anthony Kennard (W), Josh Parker/Kevin Dammeyer (SM). Second Doubles: Brian Guillen/ Josh Thomas (W), Jeff Tobe/Zac Bruskotter (O), Josh moots/David Gerstner, Luke Stevens/Alex Bair (V). Regular Season Team: Shawnee 9-0, Ottawa-Glandorf 8-1, Celina 7-2, St. Marys 6-3, Wapakoneta 5-4, Van Wert 4-5, Elida 3-6, Defiance 2-7, Bath 1-8, Kenton 0-9. Coach of the Year: Rob Cusick (Shawnee). Sportsmanship Award: Troy Newlove (St. Marys).

Saturday at Port Clinton.

(Continued fromPage 7A)

---Hornets get revenge, oust Bulldogs

By Dave Boninsegna The Delphos Herald

(Continued from Page 7A) an Andy Coleman single. Lancer pitcher Kyle Williams then closed the door on the Archer bats. The Lancers were blanked in the home half of the first frame but, after a shutout inning on the mound by Williams, they went to work in the bottom of the second. Second baseman Tyler Lovett opened the frame with a double before third baseman Conner McCleey was hit by a pitch and leftfielder Brady Niese pushed an attempted sacrifice bunt past the Antwerp pitcher to load bases. Designated hitter Derek Friesner came through with a bases-clearing triple to give Lincolnview its first lead of the day, 3-1. Antwerp finally recorded an out but the Lancer offense was far from done in the frame. Centerfielder Dalton Kayser and Williams were hit with consecutive pitches to

Ottoville

COLUMBUS GROVE Its not often when two teams from different leagues meet

twice in a single season but such was the case on Saturday afternoon when the Columbus Grove Bulldogs took on the Cory-Rawson Hornets in Division IV sectional baseball action at Grove. On April 14, the Bulldogs no-hit the Hornets in a 10-0 run-ruled regular season contest. Tyler Harris had an RBI single and Jeremiah Alspach added a 2-run single in the third inning to jump-start Cory-Rawsons offense as the Hornets upset Columbus Grove 10-1. Austin Heath had a stellar performance on the mound for the Hornets, pitching a complete-game 5-hitter, giving up just three walks. Matt Alspach had a 2-run single and Mason Ward drove in a run with a walk for C-R. Brandon Benroth had Groves only extra-base hit, a double, in the first inning. C-R got the scoring started in the third when the first three batters reached. Aaron Welch led off the inning with a single and Matt Alspach got aboard on a error. Harris again load bases. Lincolnview then got its second 3-RBI triple of the inning, this time off the bat of shortstop Nick Leeth, making the score 6-1. The final Lancer run of the inning came when catcher Clayton Longstreth notched a single to bring Leeth in to score. Colton Hamman then entered on the mound in place of Coleman and forced consecutive outs to stop the bleeding. The actual ignitor of the inning was Brady Nieses bunt that got past the pitcher. (Hes) a guy who has maybe had one sacrifice bunt in his career. He pushed it past the pitcher and got a single out of it - it sparked the dugout, explained Mendenhall. Williams continued to deal on the mound for Lincolview in the meantime, throwing two shutout innings before the Lancers got six insurance runs in the home half of the fourth.

singled home a run to make it 1-0. Jeremiah Alpauch singled home M. Alspach and Harris two batters later to give the Hornets a 3-0 advantage. The Hornets broke the game open in the fourth, striking for four more runs: Zach Smith led off with a single, followed by consecutive hits by Chase Oler and Grant Risner to load the bases. Matt Alspach hit into a 6-2 fielders choice as Zach Barrietes threw out Smith at the plate. However, with two outs, Ward drew a bases-loaded walk from relief pitcher Trey Roney, making it 4-0. It appeared that the Bulldogs would get out of the inning without any more damage as J. Alspauch hit a fly ball to right but with the wind whipping, the ball eluded the Grove rightfielder, allowing all three base-runners to score, giving Cory-Rawson a 7-0 lead. The Hornets tacked on two more runs in the fifth. For the third time in as many innings, the first three batters reached; back-to-back walks to Heath and Smith and a fielders choice by Oler loaded Williams helped himself to start the stanza by reaching on a single. He advanced on a passed ball and Leeth ripped a single to put runners at the corners with none out. Longstreth plated Williams when he hit into a fielders choice and Leeth scored on a wild pitch to make the score 9-1. Lovett walked, which ushered the exit of Hamman, and Joe Buerkle entered on the mound. To no avail, however, as Niese forced a walk and Friesner brought Lovett home with a single. First baseman Mike Klausing plated Niese and Friesner on a 2-RBI double. Finally, Klausing scored on an RBI single off the bat of pinch-hitter Tory Patterson. The Lancer rally gave them a 13-1 lead heading into the top of the fifth inning. Taylor reached to open the inning, his second hit of the game. He then stole second and advanced to third on a passed ball. Taylor scored on a sacrifice fly off the bat of Coleman but Williams buckled down on the mound and forced a groundout to finish the frame and the game, with Lincolnview sealing the run-rule victory. Mendenhall credited the entire Lancer offense with getting involved in the win: Obviously, Friesners triple and the Leeth triple - a lot of people got involved today. Williams claimed the win

the bases. M. Alspach singled home two more runs and the Hornets were up 9-0. C-R threatened to run-rule the Bulldogs by adding a 10th run in the sixth after J. Alspach led off the frame with a double and scored on two Roney wild pitches. However, the Bulldogs mustered up a run in the bottom of the sixth after a nearflawless performance by the Hornets in the field; the CoryRawson defense committed two errors. Matt Jay led off the inning and reached on an error by the rightfielder, a position that saw numerous errors on the day due to the wind conditions. Roney benefited on a throwing error by the Hornets second baseman, putting runners on the corners for the Bulldogs with none out. Jay later scored on a fielders choice by Kody Griffith, making it a 10-1 game.
Game 1: Score by Innings Cory-Rawson 0 0 3 Col. Grove 001 WP: Heath; LP: Vorst. Game 2: Score by Innings: Pandora-Gilboa 0 0 0 Miller City 001 4 2 1 0 10 10 2 000 0-1 51

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for Lincolnview. He went five innings, allowing a pair of earned runs on three hits. Williams walked three and struck out three. Kyle had a couple of walks. Hopefully, we can take care of that but solid defense is all you can ask for. And when the ball is put in play, we can make a play. We can compete if we can throw strikes and play defense, Mendenhall added. Coleman took the loss for the Archers. He went 1 1/3 innings, allowing seven earned runs on six hits and three hit batters; he struck out one. Taylor picked up a pair of hits and scored a pair of runs to lead Antwerp. Friesner was the top Lincolnview bat: 2-3 with a triple and four RBIs. The win improves the Lancers to 8-14 on the season, they advance to face county and conference rival Crestview Wednesday at 5 p.m. - on Crestviews home field.
OTTOVILLE 9, FORT JENNINGS 4 Score by Innings: Ottoville 200 401 2-991 Ft. Jennings 1 0 0 0 0 3 0 - 4 5 6 WP Travis Maag; LP Cody Warnecke. 2B (OV) Austin Markward, (FJ) Troy Hellman. 3B (OV) Travis Maag. LINCOLNVIEW 12, ANTWERP 1 Score by Innings: Antwerp 100 01- 2 31 Lincolnview 0 7 0 6 x - 13 10 1 WP - Williams; LP - Coleman. 2B - (LV) Longstreth, Lovett, Klausing. 3B - (LV) Friesner, Leeth.

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(Continued from Page 6A) Boys Team Rankings: Eastwood 174, Edison 97, Van Wert 82, Lake 72.75, Perrysburg 63.50, Port Clinton 49.50, Oak Harbor 36, Woodmore 35.25, Napoleon 31.50, Woodward 13.50, Cardinal Stritch 7. 100 Meter Dash: 1. Conkle (EA) 10.94; 2. Rogers (EA) 11.44; 3. Lohmann (L) 11.53; 4. Wamer (C) 11.61; 5. Schlade (N) 11.62; 6. Darrington (WW) 11.76; 7. Moore (PC) 11.78; 8. Hetrick (O) 11.87; ... 17. Quincey Salcido (V) 12.68; ... 20. Deshaum Eddins (V) 13.31. 200 Meter Dash: 1. Conkle (EA) 22.23; 2. Schroeder (L) 22.86; 3. Dierke (EA) 23.04; 4. Chadd Phillips (V) 23.07; 5. Brown (WM) 23.48; 6. Seth Kopp (V) 23.50; 7. Funchion (N) 23.74; 8. Schlade (N) 23.88. 400 Meter Dash: 1. Chadd Phillips (V) 50.76; 2. Seth Kopp (V) 52.80; 3. Sanabria (ED) 54.61; 4. Sullivan (PE) 54.74; 5. Conkle (EA) 55.33; 6. Schabel (ED) 55.38; 7. Glorioso (PE) 55.57; 8. Matthews (C) 55.67. 800 Meter Run: 1. Pierce (ED) 2:01.93; 2. Risner (ED) 2:02.58; 3. Byrd (PE) 2:02.67; 4. Hasselbach (O) 2:05.63; 5. Schrof (EA) 2:08.01; 6. Connor Holliday (V) 2:08.02; 7. Luke Brubaker (V) 2:10.28; 8. Weiss (PE) 2:11.37 1,600 Meter Run: 1. Jared Fleming (V) 4:28.88; 2. Byrd (PE) 4:37.52; 3.Shephard (ED) 4:44.15; 4. Brittenham (L) 4:44.94; 5. Kase Schalois (V) 4:47.76; 6. Fredricks (EA) 4:52.17; 7. Sievert (O) 4:53.31; 8. Wallace (ED) 4:54.84. 3,200 Meter Run: 1. Jared Fleming (V) 10:12.30; 2. Rickman (L) 10:17.85; 3. Bayes (PE) 10:20.18; 4. Kase Schalois (V) 10:23.96; 5. Calvin (PE) 10:44.04; 6. Perez (WM) 10:54.75; 7. Hoffman (ED) 10:58.48; 8. Yates (ED) 11:00.24. 110 Meter Hurdles: 1. Kohring (EA) 14.83; 2. Travis (WM) 15.22; 3. Hirzel (L) 15.38; 4. Rosebrock (N) 15.44; 5. Christianson (EA) 16.06; 6. Church (ED) 16.56; 7. OFlaherty (ED) 17.15; ... 9. Tyson Crone (V) 17.16; ... 12. Hunter Hernandez (V) 17.82. 300 Meter Hurdles: 1. Snowden (EA) 40.85; 2. Hirzel (L) 40.86; 3. Kohring (EA) 41.10; 4. Rosebrock (N) 41.49; 5. Zunk (PC) 42.99; 6. Hunter Hernandez (V) 44.39; 7. McDonald (PE) 44.49; 8. Lowery (PE) 45.06; ... 10. Tyson Crone (V) 45.56. 4x100 Meter Relay: 1. Eastwood 43.86; 2. Lake 45.04; 3. Edison 45.87; 4. Oak Harbor 45.92; 5. Port Clinton 46.24; 6. Woodmore 46.61; 7. Perrysburg 47.68; 8. Van Wert (Quincey Salcido, Hunter Hernandez, Tyson Crone, Nathan Wilhelm) 47.95. 4x200 Meter Relay: 1. Eastwood 1:32.31; 2. Lake 1:33.92; 3. Oak Harbor 1:35.19; 4. Port Clinton 1:35.93; 5. Van Wert (Nathan Wilhelm, Seth Kopp, Quincey Salcido, Chadd Phillips) 1:36.46 2 4x400 Meter Relay: 1. Eastwood 3:31.91; 2. Edison 3:34.30; 3. Van Wert (Seth Kopp, Nathan Wilhelm, Chadd Phillips, Tyson Crone) 3:38.11; 4. Napoleon 3:38.49; 5. Perrysburg 3:42.29; 6. Lake 3:46.26; 7. Port Clinton 3:52.47; 8. Woodmore 3:53.41. 4x800 Meter Relay: 1. Edison 8:12.07; 2. Van Wert (Connor Holliday, Kase Schalois, Nathan Wilhelm, Jared Fleming) 8:12.99; 3. Perrysburg 8:29.03; 4. Lake 8:30.56; 5. Eastwood 8:41.77; 6. Oak Harbor 8:53.78; 7. Napoleon 9:16.53; 8. Port Clinton 9:38.11. High Jump: 1. Frankboner (ED) 6-1; 2. Rogers (WW) 6-0; 3. (tie) Sprinski (WM) and Hoodlebrink (EA) 5-10; 5. (tie) Youngbar (PC) and Snowden (EA) 5-8; 7. (tie) Roediger (WM), Witt (N), Smith (L) and Behnfeldt (N) 5-6. Pole Vault: 1. Schlumbohm (EA) 13-0; 2. Dierker (EA) 12-6; 3. (tie) Apple (O) and Thornton (PE) 11-6; 5. Majewski (N) 10-6; 6. (tie) Rutledge (O) and Rogers (WW) 10-0; 8. Sandwisch (WM) 10-0. Long Jump: 1. Dev. Snowden (EA) 22-1; 2. Der. Snowden (EA) 20-3; 3. Cushler (ED) 20-0.50; 4. Moore (PC) 19-10.50; 5. Pitts (L) 19-3.25; 6. Weirich (O) 18-10.50; 7. Homan (N) 18-9.50; 8. Sprinski (WM) 18-3.50; ... 18. Deshaum Eddins (V) 15-0. Shot Put: 1. Smith (PC) 50-3; 2. Timbs (ED) 45-0; 3. Heckman (EA) 44-5.50; 4. Wright (WM) 43-10.50; 5. Connor (PE) 41-8.75; 6. Santi (ED) 41-6.50; 7. Adkins (L) 41-2.75; 8. Hopkins (O) 41-2.50; ... 15. James Hardman (V) 35-8; ... 17. Mitch Vargus (V) 34-9.25. Discus: 1. Smith (PC) 135-10; 2. McBride (EA) 133-7; 3. Shaffer (EA) 131-5; 4. Connor (PE) 1259; 5. Jensen (ED) 125-9; 6. Beck (PC) 124-0; 7. Lawrence (O) 123-1; 8. Wills (L) 122-10; ... 17. James Hardman (V) 101-0; ... 20. Daniel Patterson (V) 86-4. * - New meet record ----LATE FRIDAY Antwerp Invitational Points 10-8-6-4-2-1 Girls Team Scores: Jefferson 121, Edon 101, Paulding 90, Wayne Trace 89.5, Fairview 74.5, Blackhawk 23, Antwerp 22. Discus: 1. Gutting (E) 118-3.5; 2. Long (W) 115-7.5; 3. Siebenaler (E) 109-5; 4. Laney (W) 94-9: 5. Kohart (P) 89-4.5; 6. Bethany Kaverman (J) 80-1. Shot put: 1. Gutting (E) 36-0; 2. Siebenaler (E) 35-7; 3. Noggle (W) 32-0; 4. Kohart (P) 30-0; 5. Wannamacher (W) 28-5; 6. Meyers

(F) 28-5. Long jump: 1. Stoll (E) 16-9.25; 2. Rileigh Stockwell (J) 15-10; 3. Wetli (A) 14-5.2; 4. Mueller (F) 14-3.25; 5. Jewel (W) 13-6.5; 6. Hill (F) 13-3.75. High jump: 1. Kennedy Boggs (J) 5-4; 2. Shuherk (W) 5-2; 3. Katie Goergens (J) 4-8; 4. Wannemacher (W) 4-8; 5. C. Mueller (F) 4-2; 6. Blisk (B) 4-2. Pole vault: 1. Salinas (P) 10-0; 2. Rileigh Stockwell (J) 9-0; 3. Ankney (F) 7-0; 4. Sliter (F) 7-0; 5. Riter (E) 7-0. 4x800-meter relay: 1. Paulding 10:51; 2. Jefferson 10:57; 3. Wayne Trace 11:12; 4. Fairview 11:42; 5. Edon 14:06. 100-meter high hurdles: 1. Mannino (F) 17.23; 2. Chelsey Bishop (J) 17.63; 3. Vancleeve (P) 18.05; 4. Sigman (A) 19.02; 5. Slattman (A) 19.25; 6. Luke (E) 20.59. 100-meter dash: 1. Stoll (E) 12.8; 2. Weller (P) 12.99; 3. Culler (F) 13.57; 4. Critten (W) 12.59; 5. Grant (W) 13.6; 5. Mueller (F) 13.61. 4x200-meter relay: 1. Jefferson 1:50; 2. Wayne Trace 1:54; 3. Fairview 2:02; 4. Paulding 2:03; 5. Edon 2:04. 1,600-meter run: 1. Fiedler (B) 5:46; 2. Breninger (F) 5:52; 3. Cvikel (E) 6:03; 4. Johanns (P) 6:06; 5. Kenidi Ulm (J) 6:10; 6. Sinn (W) 6:20. 4x100-meter relay: 1. Jefferson 53.5; 2. Fairview 53.8; 3. Paulding 54.53; 4. Wayne Trace 55.52; 5. Edon 58.31. 400-meter dash: 1. Kennedy Boggs (J) 58.86; 2. Zartman (W) 1:02.0; 3. Brooke Teman (J) 1:05.0; 4. Salinas (P) 1:06.0; 5. Trausch (E) 1:07.0; 6. Saubeck (B) 1:08.0. 300-meter low hurdles: 1. Stoll (E) 46.85; 2. Mannino (F) 50.47; 3. Vancleeve (P) 51.2; 4. Chelsey Bishop (J) 51.43; 5. Wannamacher (W) 53.71; 6. Mooner (B) 54.84. 800-meter run: 1. Sigman (A) 2:39; 2. Shepard (W) 2:40; 3. Kenidi Ulm (J) 2:44; 4. Nardone (P) 2:44; 5. Johanns (P) 2:45; 6. Breininger (F) 2:45. 200-meter dash: 1. Stoll (E) 27.09; 2. Rileigh Stockwell (J) 28.7; 3. Weller (P) 28.98; 4. Heather Pohlman (J) 29.36; 5. Critten (W) 29.4; 6. Grant (W) 29.5. 3,200-meter run: 1. Fielder (B) 12:55; 2. Criker (E) 13:18; 3. Clemens (P) 13:32; 4. Matthews (W) 13:47; 5. Stephanie Koenig (J). 4x400-meter relay: 1. Jefferson 4:23; 2. Paulding 4:30; 3. Wayne Trace 4:33; 4. Fairview 4:35; 5. Edon 4:49. Boys Team Scores: Fairview 156, Jefferson 84, Wayne Trace 67, Antwerp, Edon and Paulding 61, Blackhawk 28. Discus: 1. Dunlap (A) 149-3; 2. Arend (F) 131-3.5; 3. Kortokrax (W) 128-2.5; 4. Gere (E) 118-0.5; 5. Worden (W) 115-4; 6. Schindler (P) 111-1. Shot put: 1. Kortokrax (W) 52-7; 2. Dunderman (A) 47-6; 3. Lee (A) 44-1; 4. Timbrook (F) 37-4; 5. Stoller (W) 37-3; 6. Geren (E) 37-0. Long jump: 1. Cuilford (F) 19-6.5; 2. Olwin (W) 18-8.5; 3. Carnahan (P) 18-7.5; 4. Womack (A) 18-0.5; 5. Singer (F) 18-0.25; 6. Bowling (E) 17-8.75. High jump: 1. Peeples (E) 6-2; 2. Schwarzbek (F) 6-0; 3. Winright (E) 5-10; 4. Echols (P) 5-8; 5. Womack (A) 5-6; 6. Olwin (W) 5-6. Pole vault: 1. Darren Edinger (J) 11-0; 2. Gerren (E) 11-0; 3. Giovel (E) 10-0; 4. Chris Truesdale (J) 10-0; 5. Seffernick (W) 9-6; 6. Brogan (F) 9-0. 4x800-meter relay: 1. Paulding 9:03; 2. Blackhawk 9:05; 3. Fairview 9:10; 4. Wayne Trace 9:18; 5. Edon 10:07. 110-meter high hurdles: 1. Cody Biglow (J) 15.33; 2. Lanbert (F) 16.03; 3. Timbrook (F) 16.44; 4. Peeples (E) 17.19; 5. Geren (E) 17.93; 6. Kuhn (W) 18.79. 100-meter dash: 1. Tobin (F) 10.99; 2. Carter Mox (J) 11.3; 3. Cody Biglow (J) 11.51; 4. Hug (F) 11.63; 5. Winright (E) 11.89; 6. Ekland (W) 11.94. 4x200-meter relay: 1. Jefferson 1:34; 2. Fairview 1:36; 3. Wayne Trace 1:38; 4. Edon 1:45; 5. Paulding 1:46. 1,600-meter run: 1. Grahman (F) 4:51; 2. Krick (A) 4:54; 3. Lengacher (B) 4:58; 4. Stoller (W) 5:09; 5. Layman (P) 5:11; 6. Minic (F) 5:12. 4x100-meter relay: 1. Jefferson 45.2; 2. Fairview 45.7; 3. Wayne Trace 47.89; 4. Paulding 48.47; 5. Antwerp 48.56. 400-meter dash: 1. Tobin (F) 49.69; 2. Winright (E) 53.25; 3. Huss (A) 53.66; 4. Bostater (F) 55.12; 5. Nick Gallmeier (J) 57.22; 6. Showalter (W) 59.09. 300-meter low hurdles: 1. Cody Biglow (J) 43.11; 2. Schwarzbek (F) 43.36; 3. Echols (P) 44.37; 4. Goings (W) 45.92; 5. Arnett (W) 46.41; 6. Peeples (E) 47.56. 800-meter run: 1. Barnett (P) 2:08; 2. Eisel (F) 2:10; 3. Swygart (B) 2:12; 4. Hilton (A) 2:15; 5. Lengarcher (B) 2:16; 6. Arend (F) 2:17. 200-meter dash: 1. Tobin (F) 22.52; 2. Nick Gallmeier (J) 23.57; 3. Carter Mox (J) 24.2; 4. Huss (A) 24.39; 5. Winright (E) 24.4; 6. Bickford (W) 24.74. 3,200-meter run: 1. Graham (F) 10:45; 2. Krick (A) 10:47; 3. Layman (P) 10:58; 4. Mitchell (B) 11:35; 5. Dunalin (P) 11:37; 6. Thomas (F) 14:40. 4x400-meter relay: 1. Fairview 3:48; 2. Paulding 3:35; 3. Wayne Trace 3:51; 4. Antwerp 3:58; 5. Blackhawk 3:59.

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Monday, May 7, 2012

The Herald 9A

Engagement

Engagement

Engagement

Art and Linda Klausing of Delphos announce the engagement of their daughter, Emily Ann, to Joshua Gerald Maag, son of Gerald and Teresa Maag of Leipsic. The couple will exchange vows on June 2 at St. John the Evangelist Catholic Church in Delphos. The bride-elect is a 2004 graduate of St. Johns High School and a 2008 graduate of the University of Toledo, with a bachelors degree in secondary education. She is currently pursuing her masters degree in curriculum and teaching at Bowling Green State University. She is employed as an English teacher at St. Marys Memorial High School. Her fiance is a 2003 graduate of Leipsic High School and a 2007 graduate of Kettering University, with a bachelors degree in mechanical engineering. He is employed as a mechanical engineer at Potash Corporation in Lima.

Klausing/Maag

Teen points out inaccurate map to NYCs Met museum


WEST HARTFORD, Conn. (AP) A Connecticut seventh-grader says workers at the Metropolitan Museum of Art in New York City didnt believe him when he pointed out an inaccuracy with a map that was on exhibit. The map purported to show the Byzantine Empire at its largest size in the 6th century, but he noticed that Spain and part of Africa were missing from the depiction. Benjamin Lerman Coady knew he was right, because he had just studied the empire in school before last summers trip to the museum with his mother. He was told to fill out a form. The front desk didnt believe me, Benjamin told The Hartford Courant. Im only a kid. The 13-year-old West Hartford resident filled out the form and never expected a response, but a museum official wrote him in September saying his comments were

Avengers smashes record: $200.3 million debut


By DAVID GERMAIN The Associated Press LOS ANGELES Hulk, smash. Thats what Captain America tells the Incredible Hulk to do in The Avengers, and thats what the Marvel Comics superhero mash-up did at the box office, smashing the domestic revenue record with a $200.3 million debut. Its by far the biggest opening ever, shooting past the previous record of $169.2 million for the debut of last years Harry Potter finale. The Avengers added $151.5 million overseas over the weekend to bring its total to $441.5 million since it began opening internationally a week earlier. That raised the films worldwide haul to $641.8 million in barely a week and a half, more than its Marvel superhero forerunners Iron Man, Iron Man 2, Thor and Captain America took in during their entire runs. If distributor Disneys domestic estimate Sunday holds when the final weekend count is released Monday, The Avengers would be the first movie ever to haul in $200 million in a single weekend. While the number could dip below $200 million come Monday, Disney spent the weekend revising its forecasts upward as business kept growing. Directed by Joss Whedon (Buffy the Vampire Slayer), The Avengers features Robert Downey Jr. as Iron Man, Chris Evans as Captain America, Chris Hemsworth as Thor, Mark Ruffalo as the Hulk, Scarlett Johansson as Black Widow, Jeremy Renner as Hawkeye and Samuel L. Jackson as Nick Fury. A $200 million total for every movie in release is considered a great weekend for the business as a whole, so The Avengers redefines the standards for a blockbuster debut. Hollywood launched a potentially record-shattering summer with a vengeance, The Avengers landing as just the first of three huge superhero tales that highlight a lineup filled with other blockbusters in the making. The Amazing Spider-Man follows on July 3 and The Dark Knight Rises wraps up the current Batman series on July 20. As admission prices rise, Hollywoods record-breakers often take in more money but sell fewer tickets than previous blockbusters. But The Avengers took in so much money that its the undisputed champ among debuts. Based on average admission prices the years they were released, The Dark Knight and Spider-Man 3 had led with about 22 million tickets sold each over opening weekend. Todays average prices put The Avengers tally at around 25.6 million tickets sold. Along with the superhero films, Hollywoods summer lineup includes the action tales Men in Black 3, G.I. Joe: Retaliation, Battleship, Total Recall and Prometheus, director Ridley Scotts return to the sci-fi territory of his horror hit Alien. Big family fare includes the animated adventures Brave, from Toy Story creator Pixar Animation, and the sequels Ice Age: Continental Drift and Madagascar 3: Europes Most Wanted. The comedy lineup features Adam Sandlers Thats My Boy, Will Ferrells The Campaign and Sacha Baron Cohens The Dictator. Estimated ticket sales for

Ed and JoAnn Merricle of Fort Jennings announce the engagement of their daughter, Melissa Ann, to Chad Michael Hosking, son of Karen Hosking of Delphos and the late Ted Hosking. The couple will exchange vows on June 23 in an outside ceremony in Fort Jennings. The bride-elect is a graduate of Fort Jennings High School and is a self-employed and a homemaker. Her fiance is a graduate of Jefferson High School and is employed by Double A Trailers.

Merricle/Hosking

Chris and Traci Wells of Delphos announce the engagement of their daughter, Courtney Lynn, to Joseph John Knopick, son of Mark and Corinne Knopick of Rootstown. The couple will exchange vows on June 30 at St. John the Evangelist Catholic Church in Delphos. The bride elect is a 2007 graduate of St. Johns High School and a 2010 graduate of The University of Findlay with an intervention specialist degree (mild to moderate disabilities). She is employed as an intervention specialist for grades K-2 for Plain Local Schools in Canton. Her fiance is a 2006 graduate of Southeast High School and a 2010 graduate of The University of Findlay, with a degree in AYA integrated social studies. He is employed as a teacher for Jackson Local Schools in Massillon.

Wells/Knopick

under review. Then came an email in January from Helen Evans, the museums curator for Byzantine art. You are, of course, correct about the boundaries of the Byzantine Empire under Justinian, Evans wrote, and she invited Benjamin to return to the museum. Benjamin took up the offer and met Evans at the museum in February. He brought her notepads from his school, and Evans gave him a tour of the museum including a sneak preview of a new exhibit. She also asked Benjamin to draw what the map should really look like. Hes still working on that project. Evans said this week that the museum is still deciding what to do about the error, including possibly displaying other maps reflecting the empires history. She said the mistake probably stems from a map reprint a few years ago.

Friday through Sunday at U.S. and Canadian theaters, according to Hollywood.com. Where available, latest international numbers are also included. Final domestic figures will be released today. 1. The Avengers, $200.3 million ($151.5 million international). 2. Think Like a Man, $8 million. 3. The Hunger Games, $5.7 million ($4.3 million international). 4. The Lucky One, $5.5 million ($5.5 million international). 5. The Pirates! Band of Misfits, $5.4 million ($2.6 million international). 6. The Five-Year Engagement, $5.1 million ($2.3 million international). 7. The Raven, $2.5 million. 8. Safe, $2.47 million ($2.2 million international). 9. Chimpanzee, $2.4 million. 10. The Three Stooges, $1.8 million.

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US airstrike kills alQaida leader in Yemen


BY AHMED AL-HAJ Associated Press SANAA, Yemen An airstrike Sunday killed a top al-Qaida leader on the FBIs most wanted list for his role in the 2000 bombing of the USS Cole warship, Yemeni officials said. The drone attack was carried out by the CIA, U.S. officials said. Fahd al-Quso was hit by a missile as he stepped out of his vehicle, along with another alQaida operative in the southern Shabwa province, Yemeni military officials said. They were speaking on condition of anonymity in accordance with military regulations. The drone strike that killed Quso was carried out by the CIA, after an extended surveillance operation by the CIA and U.S. military, two U.S. officials said. They spoke on condition of anonymity because they were not authorized to speak to the media. The strike was authorized by the Yemeni government, which then made the announcement after the operation was complete, the officials said, part of the U.S. strategy to give the host government more public ownership of the operation being carried out on Yemeni soil. The airstrike came as the U.S. and Yemen cooperate in a battle against al-Qaida in southern Yemen. Al-Quso, 37, was on the FBIs most wanted list, with a $5 million reward for information leading to his capture. He was indicted in the U.S. for his role in the 2000 bombing of the USS Cole in the harbor of Aden, Yemen, in which 17 American sailors were killed and 39 injured. He served more than five years in a Yemeni prison for his role in the attack and was released in 2007. He briefly escaped prison in 2003 but later turned himself in to serve the rest of his sentence. A telephone text message claiming to be from al-Qaidas media arm confirmed al-Quso was killed in the strike. Al-Quso was also one of the most senior al-Qaida leaders publicly linked to the 2009 Christmas airliner attack. He allegedly met with the suspected Nigerian bomber, Umar Farouk Abdulmutallab, in Yemen before he left on his way to execute his failed attack over Detroit with a bomb concealed in his underwear. In December 2010, al-Quso was designated a global terrorist by the State Department, an indication that his role in

10A The Herald

Monday, May 7, 2012

www.delphosherald.com

New Yorkers give firsthand look at al-Qaida


By TOM HAYS and LARRY NEUMEISTER Associated Press NEW YORK By the time a wayward kid from Long Island named Bryant Neal Vinas joined al-Qaida in 2008, the sight of trainees swinging from monkey bars was a thing of the past. The Afghani terror camps had been replaced by safe houses tucked away in the border region of Pakistan houses made of mud. Theres no carpet. Theres no wood floors, Vinas told a Brooklyn jury on April 23. Just mud. Vinas description of the crude Waziristan hideout came during the trial of Adis Medujanin, a New York City man convicted last week in a foiled plot to attack the subway system in 2009. Prosecutors had accused Medunjanin of receiving terror training and instructions from al-Qaida in Pakistan during a trip with two former high school classmates who pleaded guilty. At Medunjanins trial, jurors heard Vinas and another high-value government cooperator born in Great Britain, Saajid Badat, testify as expert witnesses. They provided an unprecedented, firsthand look at al-Qaida in the heady days following the Sept. 11 attacks By MATTHEW LEE Associated Press and in more recent years as it struggled to survive. The pairs insights suggested that the terror group never lost its desire to strike again on U.S. soil but its means and goals became more modest. It also became more reliant on late-bloomer jihadists who sometimes proved half-hearted or inept. The testimony also gave the U.S. attorneys office in Brooklyn and British authorities a chance to show off two trophies in the civilian prosecution of terrorists sworn enemies of America who, after their arrests, were persuaded to switch sides and tell everything they know. Badat, 33, described growing disillusioned with al-Qaida. After hearing that admitted Sept. 11 mastermind Khalid Sheik Mohammed would face American justice, he said he felt ... almost a moral obligation to give evidence specifically against KSM. The once-bearded Badat appeared on a videotape looking like a clean-cut banker. His testimony had been recorded at a secret location outside London after being freed early from a 13-year prison term as a reward for his cooperation. Born in Gloucester, England, to immigrants from the tiny African nation of

al-Qaidas Yemen offshoot, al-Qaida in the Arabian Peninsula, had grown more prominent. Local Yemeni official Abu Bakr bin Farid and the Yemeni Embassy in Washington confirmed al-Quso was killed in Rafd, a remote mountain valley in Shabwa. It is the area where many al-Qaida leaders are believed to have taken cover, including the U.S.-born cleric Anwar al-Awlaki, who was killed in a U.S. airstrike in Yemen last year. Yemeni government officials reported that al-Quso and al-Awlaki were killed in an airstrike in 2009 in Rafd, but they both resurfaced alive. Al-Quso was known for his ability to move in disguise. He was from the same tribe as al-Awlaki, and local tribesmen said he was a close aide. He studied ultraconservative Salafi Islam as a teenager in northern Yemen, then returned home to learn welding. The White House and the State Department had no immediate comment. Yemens government has been waging an offensive on al-Qaida militants, who have taken advantage of the countrys political turmoil over the last year to expand their hold in the south.

Clinton presses India to cut oil imports from Iran


NEW DELHI U.S. Secretary of State Hillary Rodham Clinton urged energy-starved India today to reduce its Iranian oil imports to keep up pressure on the Islamic republic to come clean about its nuclear program. In meetings in the capital, New Delhi, Clinton was expected to push for India to find alternative sources of oil on the international market. Earlier today, she told a town hall meeting in the eastern city of Kolkata that theres an adequate supply in the market for India to find other suppliers. Clinton noted India has taken some steps to reduce its imports from Iran but she says the U.S. wants to see more. If there werent an adequate supply ... we would understand, but we believe that there is adequate supply, she said. India could face U.S. sanctions by the end of June if the Obama administration determines it has not made significant cuts in imports under a law aimed at squeezing Irans petroleum industry to press the country to prove its nuclear program is peaceful. India, with a growth rate of about 7 percent, has a nearly insatiable need for oil. About 9 percent of its oil imports are from Iran, though officials say it has reduced its dependency on Iranian oil in recent months, We appreciate what has been done and, of course, we want to keep the pressure on Iran, Clinton said. However, India remains dependent on the imports, and Iran is its second largest oil supplier after Saudi Arabia. With international sanctions making it difficult to find banks willing to handle Iranian oil payments, India and Iran reached an agreement earlier this year that would allow India to pay for about 45 percent the purchases in rupees. Iran would then use the Indian currency to buy goods from India. Clinton said the U.S. remained focused on putting global pressure on Iran. We believe, at this moment in time, the principle threat is a nuclear-armed

Malawi, Badat was the product of a stable childhood. He attended respected schools while playing soccer and rugby. Prodded by his father to become an imam, he memorized the Quran by age 12. His aspirations turned violent when he learned more about the oppression of Muslims in Bosnia. While in London in 1997, he became convinced he needed to take up arms in the name of Islam. It was almost the glamour factor of it drawing me in, he said of heading off to Afghanistan at age 19 for violent jihad. By 2001, he was firmly in al-Qaidas grasp at the height of its post-Sept. 11 infamy. He recalled Osama bin Laden telling him in a meeting of just the two of them that hiding explosives in shoes in suicide attacks could get huge results. So he said the American economy is like a chain, Badat said. If you break one link of the chain, the whole economy will be brought down. The highest ranks of alQaida, including Khalid Sheik Mohammed, picked him and Richard Reid for a shoe bomb plot in September 2001. Reid was caught aboard a plane in December with explosives; Badat backed out.

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Iran, she said. We need India to be part of the international effort. When asked whether India could get a waiver from the Iran sanctions, Clinton said it was too early to discuss that possibility. Clinton also met today with West Bengal Chief Minister Mamata Banerjee, a key partner of Indias ruling coalition who has stymied government efforts to lift restrictions on foreign-owned investments in the country. Clinton had a long conversation with Banerjee about allowing multi-brand retailers, such as Wal-Mart, enter the market, U.S. officials said after the meeting. Last year, Indias Cabinet had to rescind a decision to open up its market to major foreign retailers after Banerjee balked at the move, saying it would crush small domestic retailers. Banerjee described the meeting with Clinton as positive, constructive, creative and concrete, and said they discussed the possibility of increased U.S. investment in everything from tourism to education in West Bengal.

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Monday, May 7, 2012

The Herald 11A

Bain had frequented the Siskovic said the bodies restaurant and never indicated were found in a residence, but anything was wrong. it wasnt clear if it was a house, WHITEVILLE, Tenn. She seemed so happy, mobile home or apartment. He Authorities were working Kirkland said. also wasnt sure if the resiSunday to identify two bodJo Ann and the kids, every- dence belonged to Mayes or an ies found at a Mississippi one loves them. Were just hop- acquaintance. Siskovic said the residence associated with a ing to hear that theyre safe. bodies were found in Guntown. man suspected of abducting a Bains daughters are Siskovic said authorities Wednesday Monday Tuesday Mayes early on Friday woman and her three young 14-year-old Adrienne, 12-year- talked to Thursday in the daughters. old Alexandria and 8-year-old investigation, but he fled when 9am - 7pm 9am - 7pm 9am - 5pm The FBI has said two bod- Kyliyah. An Amber Alert has they tried to contact him again. ies were found over the week- been issued for the girls, and The FBI says agents were not end at a home connected to Mayes is charged with kidnap- immediately aware of Mayes 35-year-old Adam Mayes in ping in Tennessee. having a criminal record. Guntown, Miss., but agents FBI spokesman Joel Siskovic Melvin Herron, 42, lives have released few other details. said Sunday that efforts to iden- next door to the Bain family in Authorities believe that Mayes tify the bodies continued on Tennessee. He recalled seeing abducted the woman, Jo Ann Sunday. He would not say if the girls playing outside, running Bain, and her three daughters, they were children. They were and going down water slides. ages 8 to 14. found late Friday night or early Herron said he hoped the On Sunday, forensic scien- Saturday morning. bodies found in Mississippi Wednesday Monday Tuesday Thursday Friday tists with the Tennessee Bureau The Bains were last seen were not the girls or their th thWednesday Monday Tuesday Thursday Friday of Investigation searched the April 27 in Hardeman County, mother. 9am - 7pm August 99am - 5pm August 13,9am - 7pm - Friday, 2010 - 7pm 9am 9am Monday, - 7pm 9am - 5pm garage and backyard at the Tenn., which is about 70 Im praying to God its not Hardeman County, Tenn. miles east of Memphis. The those little girls, he said. Wednesday Monday Tuesday Thursday Friday home where Bain, her husband womans husband reported her Authorities had said that 9am - 7pm 9am - 7pm 9am - 5pm and their children lived. missing, and her vehicle was Mayes could be in Mississippi An Associated Press report- found abandoned.our ofce for a chance tohe has ties to Arizona, but that win one of two Stop by Wednesday er saw the agents searching Authorities said Mayes was Texas, North Carolina, South Monday Tuesday Thursday Friday before being told to leave at the familys home on the Carolina and Florida. 9am - 7pm 9am - 5pm the street where the home night that Jo Ann Bain went Authorities described 9am - 7pm Monday, August 9 - Friday, August 13, 2010 was located. Bains husband missing late last month. They Adrienne as a white girl with declined to comment Sunday. were trying to determine if Jo brown hair and eyes. Shes Wednesday Monday Tuesday Thursday Friday Meanwhile, a Bain fam- Ann Bain went with Mayes 5 feet 4 inches tall and 129 9am - 7pm 9am - 7pm ily friend said Sunday that the willingly. pounds. Alexandria has brown 9am - 5pm One for each ofce. woman and her daughters were Mayes was last seen hair and hazel eyes and is moving to Arizona because Tuesday in Guntown, problems with your and 105 or hearing aid, wed like to schedule an If youve noticed any Miss., 5 feet tall hearing pounds. two of the girls had asthma. about 80 miles for you during our Free Clinic. Appointment times are limited. Call for your appointment southeast of Kyliyah has blonde hair and Linda Kirkland, a cook at the Bains Tennessee home. brown eyes and is 4 feet tall 10 point ofce for a chance to win one of two by by hearing a chance to win one of two the Country Cafe in Whiteville, appointment today and take advantage of this opportunity for a FREEStopStopour our ofce foraid Hed been described as a fam- and 57 pounds. Tenn., said that the Bains and performance check up on any make or model (normally, up to a $189 cost).byby our office a chance to win one of two ily friend. Mayes has brown hair and Stop our ofce for for a Stop FREE hearing chance to win a their daughters were back in screenings and FREE demos and trialsand isalso be inches The FBI and U.S. Marshals blue eyes will 6 feet 3 available. We are excited to serve your the Whiteville area taking care Service announced hearing care tall and and we175 pounds. to seeing you! Saturday a needs weighs look forward of some business after a death reward of up to $50,000 for Authorities said Mayes may in the family. information that leads to the have cut his hair, as well as One for each ofce. One for each ofce. Tennessee authorities said location of the missing victims cut and dyed the girls hair to One for each ofce. the family had not yet moved. and the arrest of Mayes. disguise their identities. If youve noticed any problems with your hearing or hearing aid, wed likelikeschedule an an or hearing aid, wed to to schedule If youve noticed any problems with your hearing or hearing aid, wed like to schedule an If youve noticed any problems with your hearing appointment for you during our Free Clinic. Appointment times are limited. Call Callyour your Appointment times are limited. for for appointment for you during our Free Clinic. Appointment times are limited. Call for your appointment Stop by Stop byfor you during our Freewin one of two our ofce for chance to Clinic. of two our take advantage of one appointment today andofceafor a chance to of this opportunity for a FREE 10 10 point hearing aid appointment today and take advantagewinthis opportunity for a FREE point hearing aid appointment today and take advantage of this opportunity for a FREE 10 point hearing aid performance check up up on any makeor model (normally, up toto $189 cost). FREE hearing performance check on any make or model (normally, up a a $189 cost). FREE hearing screenings and FREE demos and trials will also be available. We are excited to serve your screenings andand FREE demos and trialswill also be available. We areare excited to serve your screenings FREE demos and trials will also be available. We excited to serve your hearing care needs and we look forward to seeing you! hearing care needs and we look forward toto seeing you! hearing care needs and we look forward seeing you!

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Answers to Saturdays questions: If youve noticed any problems One youreach ofce. with for hearing or hearing aid, wed like to schedule an Hollywood leading man Antonio Badersas provided the voice of the cartoon bee in TV appointment for you during our Free Clinic. Appointment times are limited. Call for your ads for Nasonex allergy medication? appointment today and take with your this opportunity for a aid, 10 point hearing aid Steve Wozniak, founder of Apple Computer, $phoned the Pope in Vatican City pre- If youve noticed any problemsadvantage ofhearing or hearingFREE wed like to schedule an performance check up on any make or model (normally, up a $189 cost). FREE hearing appointment for you during our Free Clinic. Appointmenttotimes are limited. Call for your tending to be Henry Kissinger calling from a summit meeting in Moscow in the early screenings and FREE demos and trials will also take care needs of we opportunity for a FREE 10 point your 1970s. The scam ended quickly when a Vatican bishop told Wozniak, Youre not Henry appointment today andhearingadvantage andthislookbe available. We are excited to serve hearing aid forward to seeing you! Kissinger. I just spoke to Henry Kissinger. performance check up on any make or model (normally, up to a $189 cost). FREE hearing Todays questions: screenings and FREE demos and trials will also be available. We are excited to serve your What is unusual about the shape of the droppings or scat of the wombat? hearing care needs and we look forward to seeing you! $ In baseball, what is the Mendoza line? 22 a Month with Appropriate Credit Answers in Wednesdays Herald. $ $ Todays words: Bandog: a tethered watchdog Rabiator: a violent man

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12A The Herald

Monday, May 7, 2012

www.delphosherald.com

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www.delphosherald.com

Monday, May 7, 2012

The Herald 1B

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133 E. Fifth St., Delphos Ph. 419-695-8085


545 S. Main St. Delphos

Dont Let Mom Cook...

Dine in or Carry Out!

Go To Marys A&W

& enjoy our delicious

BROASTED $ 00 CHICKEN OFF and $25 or more purchase POTATOES corsages & boutonnieres

Bring this ad for

PANDORA Gift Set April 26thMay 13th


PANDORA Cherished Mothers Gift Set.*
*See our store for details.

MARYS A&W ROOT BEER

Please call ahead for large orders.

fresh flowers hanging baskets gift items cemetery memorials


Expires June 1, 2012

LAUDICKS JEWELRY
1244 S. Shannon St. Van Wert, OH 45891 419.238.2266 Hours: MonFri 105:30 Sat 91

924 E. Fifth St., Delphos 419-695-1632


Open daily at 10:30 AM., Sun. thru Thurs. till 9 pm, Fri. & Sat. till 10 pm

Flowers (419) 692-6856 on Fifth


940 E. Fifth St. Delphos, OH 45833

flowersonfifth@woh.rr.com

2B The Herald

To place an ad phone 419-695-0015 ext. 122 www.delphosherald.com LAMP REPAIR FREE ADS: 5 days free if item is free THANKS TO ST. JUDE: Runs 1 day at the Minimum Charge: 15 words, Deadlines: Table or floor. or less than $50. Only 1 item per ad, 1 price of $3.00. 2 times - $9.00 11:30 a.m. for the next days issue. ad per month. Each word is $.30 2-5 days Come you come GARAGE SALES: Each day is $.20 per word. $8.00 SaturdaysLostis 11:00 a.m. Friday BOX REPLIES: $8.00 ifto our store. minimum charge. paper & Found Card Of Thanks $.25 6-9 days and pick them up. $14.00 if we have to I WILL NOT BE RESPONSIBLE FOR Mondays paper is 1:00 p.m. Friday Hohenbrink DEBTS: Ad must be placed inIDW seeks persons TV. $.20 10+ days person by send them to you. Herald Extra is 11 a.m. Thursday CARD OF THANKS: $2.00 base the person whose name will appear in the ad. to learn the wanting Each word is $.10 for 3 months 419-695-1229show ID & pay when placing ad. ReguMust charge + $.10 for each word. or more prepaid We accept lar rates apply window cleaning trade. THE FAMILY of Mel FOUND: ADULT male Gable wishes to express Golden Retriever, neu Must be able to do physical work, climb ladders, their thanks to all our fam- tered. Found 2 miles Help Wanted ily and friends for their S o u t h of Landeck. good driving record. support and kindness dur- 567-204-5418. Must undergo drug testing ing this difficult time of 2ND SHIFT Warehouse. & background checks. Mels death. We deeply STOLEN FROM 728 N. Dependable, hard-working Good wages & benefits. appreciate all the food, Main St.: US Passport individual needed to pull Send resume to visits, memorial gifts, (born in Costa Rica, and load product for delivlisa@idowindowsllc.com naturalized citizen) and cards and prayers. ery trucks. Position is with 3 references An extra thank you goes $190 cash. Call 239Full-time: Sunday 8a-finNo phone calls please. to all those special people 634-0758. ish, Mon-Thurs night 4pm in our lives who so generuntil loads are completed. ously supported both Mel Requirements include: HIRING DRIVERS and June during these ability to learn tire knowl- with 5+ years OTR experipast few years with their edge; handle constant, ence! Our drivers average time, help, love and conheavy lifting up to 75 lbs. 42cents per mile & higher! cern. Home every weekend! We also wish to thank Send work experience to : $55,000-$60,000 annually. Dr. Bryant, St. Ritas 6K, K&M Tire 99% no touch freight! ICU, and 5K staff and Fa965 Spencerville Road PO We will treat you with ther Charles for their care Box 279 respect! and support during his Delphos, OH 45833 PLEASE CALL stay at the hospital. RachelM@kmtire.com 419-222-1630 Thank you, Father Jacob 419-695-1061 ext. 1193 for the comforting words Fax 419-879-4372 HIRING LPNS for private and the meaningful funeral duty care. 8-12 hr shifts, mass. Also thanks to Hardays and nights in Lima ter and Schier Funeral and Van Wert. Also lookHome and the VFW for Are you looking for a child ing for STNA/HHAs for Lawn Care their help. care provider in your various hours in Van Wert, Mel will be deeply area? Let us help. Call Delphos and Lima. missed by all of us. YWCA Child Care Re - Call Interim HealthCare at June Gable source and Referral at: NEW TODAY! 419-228-2535 Clint & Diane Gable 1-800-992-2916 or and family (419)225-5465 HYDROGEN OTR SEMI DRIVER Mike & Vina Gable NEEDED and family PEROXIDE 7% Benefits: Vacation, Kim & Dustin Hostetler 5 gallon case $19.99 Holiday pay, 401k. Home and family & most nights. LAYMAN FEED DRIVERS: LOCAL. Home weekendsUlm!s Inc. Call daily. New pay package & & LAWN 419-692-3951 On State Rt. 309 - Elida excellent benefits. Avg. 2000 miles a week. CDL-A 419-339-6800 1yr experience required. THE OTTOVILLE Local schools is advertising for 419-232-3969 two potential paraprofesMillers Textile Services sional positions. Appli cants must hold at least a in Wapakoneta has an immediate opening for a full time ELITE NATURESCAPES two-year degree. Both positions will be a 178-day is accepting Applications contract at the aide rate of for 2nd shift. This position requires a daily trip to Deance and Resumes for and several other locations. Monday thru Friday, delivering landscape crew positions. pay of $8.69/hr. These and picking up carts. Must have an Ohio class A CDL with exPick up, Drop off or Send positions will be aides in cellent driving record with two years minimum driving experithe primary classrooms. to: 10740 Elida Rd., ence and excellent attendance record. Must be able to push/ These positions will be asDelphos, OH 45833 pull carts to load/unload trailer and lift up to 50 lbs. sisting with kindergarten We offer competitive wages with a benet package that instudents in the classroom cludes medical, dental, vision, life and disability insurance, as well as other duties 401k, etc. We are an Equal Opportunity /Afrmative Action, FULL-TIME TRUCK within the elementary M/F employer. Qualied candidates should email their reDriver. Must have Class school. sume to vroby@millerstextile.com or fax to: 419-738-6528. A CDL License, MiniInterested applicants for mum 2 years experience, these potential positions Home every night, 1800 should send their resume miles minimum per week. and credentials to: Mr. Email or Mail resumes to: Scott Mangas, SuperintenD&A Transport dent/Elementary Principal, 520 E. Sycamore PO Box 248, Ottoville, OH Van Wert, OH 45891 45876. Deadline for subbatteryrecycling@ missions is May 18, 2012. centurylink.net

Classifieds
001 005

Monday, May 7, 2012

DELPHOS 040 Services


THE

Telling The Tri-Countys Story Since 1869

080 Help HERALD Wanted

080 Help Wanted


Would you like to be an in-home child care pro vider? Let us help. Call YWCA Child Care Re source and Referral at: 1-800-992-2916 or (419)225-5465.

580 For Rent or Lease


DELPHOS SELF Storage on Gressel Drive: Maximum security achieved inside our fenced facility with access via your personal gate code. Why settle for less? Phone anytime 419-692-6336.

Window Cleaner

080

020

Place Your Ad Today

TRACTOR TRAILER DRIVER

SPECIAL

$100 off the move in + $15 application fee!!!

2 Bedroom:

440/mo. $ 3 Bedroom: 529/mo.

Delphos Senior Villas Delphos


Senior senior IndependentVillas living 55+
Spacious 2 bdrm., 2 full bath, att. garages, washer/dryer connection, walk-in closets. Fitness center, pet friendly.

Deer Creek Apartments

S
950 Cakes
Order your special occasion cakes by
419-203-4784

1000 Lima Ave. Delphos, OH 45833 www.YourNextPlaceToLive.com 419-692-9996

Now Leasing!

419-692-0141 or 419-238-6558
2 Bedroom / 2 Full Baths Attached Garages Washer / Dryer Connections Vaulted Ceilings Walk-In Closets Pet-Friendly

263 Elida Road Delphos, OH 45833

ervice
419-238-6558
See site for restrictions.

AT YOUR

Spacious Villa Style Apartment Homes

POHLMAN POURED
CONCRETE WALLS
Residential & Commercial Agricultural Needs All Concrete Work

SPEARS
LAWN CARE
Total Lawncare & Snow Removal
22 Years Experience Insured

950 Pets

BRENDAS
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Commercial & Residential

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Nikkis Cakes

419-339-9084 cell 419-233-9460

950 Car Care


OIL - LUBE FILTER

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Lindell Spears

GroomingBoarding Day Care


1333 N. Main, Delphos

KENNELS
419-692-1075 419-695-9735

950 Tree Service

TEMANS
OUR TREE SERVICE
Trimming Topping Thinning Deadwooding Stump, Shrub & Tree Removal Since 1973

$
Only

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419-695-8516
check us out at

Mark Pohlman

FLANAGANS CAR CARE


816 E. FIFTH ST. DELPHOS Ph. 419-692-5801 Mon.-Fri. 8-6, Sat. 8-2

*up to 5 quarts oil

419-339-9084 cell 419-233-9460

www.spearslawncare.com

950 Home Improvement


A S HOME IMPROVEMENT LLC
WINDOWS-DOORS
DECKS-CUSTOM TRIM FLOORING-SIDING TEXTURED CEILINGS
Be sure to get my quoteQuality Service-Best Price! Andy Schwinnen

419-692-7261
Bill Teman 419-302-2981 Ernie Teman 419-230-4890

Geise
Transmission, Inc.
automatic transmission standard transmission differentials transfer case brakes & tune up
2 miles north of Ottoville

FREE ESTIMATES

Your Full Service Lawn & Landscape Provider www.ElwerLawnCare.com

L.L.C.

(419) 235-3708
Travis Elwer

419-303-0844
KLIMAS

Trimming & Removal Stump Grinding 24 Hour Service Fully Insured

Dear Annie: I from taking the chilhave a never-ending dren across the borsituation with my der, so we urge you husband, whom I to find a way to work 095 Child Care love very much. We this out. Dear Annie: I am have two preteen 600 Apts. for Rent FORT JENNINGS area daughters he insists getting married in Babysitter has openings. October. Everything Smoke-free, Pet-free HOUSE FOR Rent. 3 bed- on taking across the home. Call 567-204-0934 room, 2 bath, with garage. border to Mexico to was going smoothly if interested. Available at the end of visit his family. With until my fiance menMay. Call 419-692-3951 the recent drug wars tioned that his mom 270 Auctions and violence there, I wanted her cousins Auto Repairs/ am beside myself in daughter, Michelle, 810 Parts/Acc. allowing this to hap- to be a bridesmaid. pen. The arguments I have never met Midwest Ohio have been so heated Michelle, she doesnt that weve actually speak English, and I Auto Parts talked to lawyers. would feel uncomEvery Saturday Specialist Neither one of us fortable having her at 6pm Windshields Installed, New wants to end up in play such an imporLarge Variety of Lights, Grills, Fenders,Mirrors, divorce court, but we tant role. My fiance Merchandise Hoods, Radiators are both firm in our said it would be a Everyone Welcome 4893 Dixie Hwy, Lima nice thing to do, espepositions. Porter Auction He takes the cially since Michelle 1-800-589-6830 19326 CO. Rd. 60 VISA has cancer, kids to visit Grover Hill, OH MC For info call DISCOVER but he left about once (419) 587-3770 the decision a week, and 840 Mobile Homes to me. Im strongly 290 Wanted to Buy I decided RENT OR Rent to Own. 2 against it. My bedroom, 1 bath mobile lawyer said against it, home. 419-692-3951. but was adathat since we Raines mant that she live in a borJewelry 850 Recreational attend the der town, he wedding as didnt think a Vehicles Cash for Gold a guest. My court would Scrap Gold, Gold Jewelry, 204 JAYCO Eagle Silver coins, Silverware, my Annies Mailbox fiances fam5th wheel, 3 slides, extras, prevent Pocket Watches, Diamonds. ily, however, husband from very clean, new tires, $15,000. 419-604-9331 2330 Shawnee Rd. taking the kids to felt it was an attack Lima Mexico. Im not so on them. His mom (419) 229-2899 sure. I hate to say said she wouldnt 999 Legals it, but if it keeps my feel welcome at our girls safe, Im willing wedding and refuses Garage Sales 340 WASHINGTON TOWNto attend if Michelle SHIP of Van Wert County to leave him if that isnt a bridesmaid. Zoning Commission will means he wont be 409 W. Wayne. hold a public hearing for able to transport them Then my fiances sisThurs 10-7, Fri 10-3, the purpose of reclassifi- out of the country to Boys 0-3T, Plus size ter (who is a bridesWomen & Men and Mater- cation of a portion of land Mexico. Any advice? maid) said she wasnt owned by Crop Production nity clothing, bed sheets, going to attend, Services at 11713A -- Texas toddler bed, books and Spencerville-Delphos Rd., Dear Texas: The either. DVDs, misc. items Delphos, OH 45833, from U.S. recently issued I was heartbroken A1-R1 to I1. travel warnings for and confused, and my Hearing 550 Pets & Supplies Townshipto be held at the Mexico. Your hus- fiance is trapped in Office located at 22693 Lincoln Hwy West band undoubtedly the middle. I now feel AT LAST!! Website is up. Delphos, Ohio at 7:00 PM feels there is no Michelle has to be a Find us at -May 22, 2012. undue risk in visit- bridesmaid in order garwicksthepetpeople.com 5/7/12 Then come see our ing his family, but he to keep the peace. nice selection of puppies. is not accepting the Was I selfish to deny 419-795-5711. reality of the situation her in the first place? there. Go online and My fiances mom FREE KITTENS, 7 weeks get some up-to-date says no matter what old, Orange/White Tiger. Litter trained, on regular statistics about the I do, she will never Call today food. Mother- house cat, increase in violence, look at me the same had shots. 419-692-0423, 419-695-0015 and see whether you way. -- Bride-to-Be 419-233-1907 Dear Bride: Lets can convince him to 604 W. 7th St., Delphos be more careful with get a couple of things his daughters lives. Is straight. Yes, the bride Open House there any possibility selects her brides9am-5pm that the in-laws could maids, and the future Fri., Sat. & Sun. meet your husband in in-laws should not be Texas? Would they pressuring and threat$0 Down $0 Closing be willing to arrange ening you. However, Home warranty. a visit in a safer area this particular choice Remodeled! of Mexico (there are means a great deal 3 bedroom, 3 car garage. several)? Keep in to them, and it is New roof, new furnace & central air, updated kitchen, bath, and more! $70,500. mind that a divorce wise for a bride to Approx. monthly payment - $376.48 would not necessarily periodically please details, pics and more chbsinc.com 419-586-8220 prevent your husband her future in-laws. Including Michelle from the start would have been a minor WANNEMACHER inconvenience to you while gaining lots of TOTAL LOGISTICS brownie points with your fiance and his family. Now you appear to be heartWTL currently has two positions available in our Van Wert less. If you stick to facility. your guns, youll end up with nothing. So Industrial Engineer Responsible for planning and conductsuck it up, apologize ing projects for food processing and packaging operation. profusely, and say Conduct studies to develop and expand product capabilities, you didnt realize increase automation and analyze efficiencies and distribution how important it was processes. Plan layout of production equipment and facility to to include Michelle maximize work flow, space utilization and labor requirements. and youd be proud and happy to do so. Set-up & Filtration Experience in a food processing faDear Annie: I cility with startup, operation and maintenance for filtration agree with Friend equipment and ovens. Sanitation and general maintenance of of a Young Cancer equipment and facility. Skills and knowledge required include Victim that its betstrong mechanical aptitude, HACCP/GMP regulations, basic ter to donate to charimath and forklift certification. ty or medical research than spend the money Send resumes to: 400 E. Hanthorn Rd. Lima, Ohio 45804 on flowers at a funerFax 419-225-9071 Email bethn@wanntl.com al. However, when I have done this, more often than not, I am inundated with endless requests for further donations. This makes me not want to donate at all. -Another Fan

Hubby takes kids to Mexico

www.delphosherald.com

PUBLIC AUCTION

IS YOUR AD HERE?

SALES REPRESENTATIVE
The Delphos Herald is accepting resumes from candidates to fill a high-profile, part-time sales position.
Responsibilities include calling on new and existing customers in a geographical territory, selling a variety of print and on-line products. Hourly pay rate, commission, bonus and more! Send resume and letter to:

IMMEDIATE OPENING

KEVIN M. MOORE

(419) 235-8051
Mulch Topsoil Purina Feeds

419-453-3620

950 Construction
Tim Andrews

CARPET CLEANING
Residential, auto, commercial Free Estimates Certied Warranty Work Locally Owned, Operated

950 Welding
Quality
Fabrication & Welding Inc.

Delphos Herald Customer Service Hotline


419-695-0015
Please call if

419-339-0110

MASONRY RESTORATION

Call Bob Klima

419-339-6800
On S.R. 309 in Elida

GENERAL REPAIR - SPECIAL BUILT PRODUCTS

1-888-872-1445

TRUCKS, TRAILERS FARM MACHINERY RAILINGS & METAL GATES


CARBON STE EL S T AINL E S S S T E E L ALUMIN UM

extension 126

950 Lawn Care


AFFORDABLE PROPERTY MAINTENANCE
LAWN CARE LANDSCAPING EDGING

950 Miscellaneous

Chimney Repair

Larry McClure

419-204-4563

COMMUNITY SELF-STORAGE
GREAT RATES NEWER FACILITY

5745 Redd Rd., Delphos

Shop Herald Classifieds for Great Deals

Advertise Your Business


For a low, low price!

419-692-0092

Insured!

419-692-0032
Across from Arbys

DAILY

The Delphos Herald


Attn: Donald R. Hemple
405 N. Main St. Delphos, Ohio 45833

You would like to order home delivery. Your paper has not arrived by 5 p.m. Monday-Friday; 8 a.m. Saturday. Your paper is damaged. You have a problem with a newsrack. You are going on vacation. You have questions about your subscription.

We want to ensure your satisfaction.

www.delphosherald.com

Monday, May 7, 2012

The Herald 3B

Tomorrows Horoscope
By Bernice Bede Osol
TUESDAY, MAY 8, 2012 A number of endeavors on which youve expended diligent but unrewarded effort will begin paying off in the coming months. Continue to be patient, but be expectant. TAURUS (April 20-May 20) -If you believe you have a better way to do something at work, it behooves you to offer your suggestion to a person who can make things happen. GEMINI (May 21-June 20) -You can reap rewards for yourself at work by being helpful to someone who is struggling. The bigwigs will most likely notice, and the other party will remember your aid, as well. CANCER (June 21-July 22) -This could be a very productive day for you, owing to your ability to put everything in its proper perspective. Youll know what to tackle and how to do so effectively. LEO (July 23-Aug. 22) -- With your exceptional leadership and organizational skills, it shouldnt be too difficult to get others to follow your directives. Theyll see that what you ask is good for them as well. VIRGO (Aug. 23-Sept. 22) -- Overall conditions specifically favor projects that would enhance your material security in ways that could be long-lasting. Things look very promising in this regard. LIBRA (Sept. 23-Oct. 23) -- An associate of yours might get an ingenious idea that would put a new twist on a group project. This new concept will work wonders for the material security of everyone involved. SCORPIO (Oct. 24-Nov. 22) -- The interests of you and your associates can be advanced if you treat people the way that youd want to be treated. Its an old formula, but one that always works. SAGITTARIUS (Nov. 23-Dec. 21) -- If you need the assistance of an old friend, state your case clearly and factually. When she or he realizes your need, your pal will come through for you without having to be badgered. CAPRICORN (Dec. 22-Jan. 19) -- Your chances for successfully fulfilling a large personal ambition are above normal. In addition to your strong will to do so, Lady Luck will help things fall in line for you. AQUARIUS (Jan. 20-Feb. 19) -- Recognition that escaped you in the past regarding a certain project is likely to come at last. Its a situation that appears to be taking on a life of its own. PISCES (Feb. 20-March 20) -- When it comes to accomplishing your career objectives, stick to proven methods and procedures. What functioned well for you before will work even better for you now. ARIES (March 21-April 19) -Because your intuitive perceptions are likely to be accurately zeroing in on the potential outcome of events, trust your instincts with impunity. WEDNESDAY, MAY 9, 2012 Its likely that youll have ample opportunities in the year ahead to further multiply some excellent situations in which youre already involved. However, it will be up to you to make sure that this happens. TAURUS (April 20-May 20) -- Over the years, youve acquired much valuable information that you use in bits and pieces from time to time. It behooves you to market what you know in greater measure. GEMINI (May 21-June 20) -- Dont hesitate to go along with changing conditions, even if they appear to have no practical purpose. They could carry you into greener pastures, where new things are happening. CANCER (June 21-July 22) -- Carefully consider all decisions that would affect others as well as yourself. A misjudgment on your part could have far-reaching, negative consequences. LEO (July 23-Aug. 22) -Carefully examine all the facets when considering a job change. Be sure any move you make will be a step up the ladder and not an ignominious descent. VIRGO (Aug. 23-Sept. 22) -- If your social life has been a bit hollow lately, dont wait for the mountain to come to you. Take the initiative to get out, be friendly and mingle with as many new people as possible. LIBRA (Sept. 23-Oct. 23) -Before surging ahead on a brandnew idea, activity or project, bring to a satisfactory conclusion what you already have on your plate. Overlapping activities could tangle up your life. SCORPIO (Oct. 24-Nov. 22) -- A good idea youve been mulling over that you havent been able to get off the ground can be transformed into something that would fulfill a pressing need. Try it and see. SAGITTARIUS (Nov. 23-Dec. 21) -- There is some kind of channel available to you that you havent utilized yet, but which could possibly contribute to your material security. Stop dawdling and do something about it. CAPRICORN (Dec. 22-Jan. 19) -- You have excellent chances for success if you take personal control over your life and make things happen without being subject to committee approval. AQUARIUS (Jan. 20-Feb. 19) -- Because youre innately endowed with keen intuition and good powers of perception, you have betterthan-average chances of arriving at accurate conclusions. Dont hesitate to use this gift. PISCES (Feb. 20-March 20) -Whether you realize it or not, youre endowed with sound instincts and excellent powers of perception. The trick to using them well is to make sure your attitude remains positive at all times. ARIES (March 21-April 19) -- Something to do with your career and/or finances that would have farreaching, beneficial results can be achieved by applying a little extra effort. Make it your primary task.
COPYRIGHT 2012 United Feature Syndicate, Inc.

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2009 Hometown Content, listings by Zap2it

4B The Herald

Monday, May 7, 2012

www.delphosherald.com

DELPHOS TRADING POST

WEVE GOT ALL NEW INVENTORY COMING IN AND NEED TO MAKE ROOM.

HURRY IT L ASTS WHILE

DISCOUNTS FROM

10% TO 75%

ON MARKED ITEMS

Sale Beg Tues., Ma ins ends Sat y 8 ., May 19

PRICES H ARD TO BEAT!

Tues.-Thurs. 8:30-5, Fri. 8:30-6, Sat. 9-2

528 N.Washington St. Delphos 419-692-0044


On the corner of 5th St. and Washington St. just look for the sign!

BUY GOLD WE & SILVER

DISCOUNT PRICES DAILY!


More value for your buying $$.

NO DISCOUNTS ON FIREARMS

Silverado Sell down


GM Supplier Pricing for Everyone
1/2 ton, 3/4 ton, 1 tons ALL ON SALE
SILVERADO 1500
REGULAR CAB
Stk #12NT939 W/T pkg., power windows, power locks, 4x4, H.D. trailering MSRP $29,900.00 Delpha Disc. 911.96 GM Supplier 28,988.04 Rebate 2,000.00 26,988.04 Trade In Bonus 1,000.00 Farm Bureau 500.00

SILVERADO 1500
CREW CAB
Stk #12NT897 LT pkg., 5.3 V8, flex fuel, 18 alum. wheels, all star pkg., Z71 pkg., 4x4 MSRP Delpha Disc. GM Supplier Rebate Trade In Bonus Farm Bureau $38,575.00 2,192.33 36,382.67 3,000.00 33,382.67 1,000.00 500.00

SILVERADO 1500
EXTENDED CAB
Stk #12NT932 LT pkg., 5.3 V8, Flex Fuel, 20 chrome wheels, 4x4, convenience pkg. w/custom sport pkg. MSRP $37,670.00 Delpha Disc. 2,189.95 GM Supplier 35,480.05 Rebate 4,000.00 31,480.05 Trade In Bonus 1,000.00 Farm Bureau 500.00

SILVERADO 1500
ETENDED CAB
Stk #12NT950 W/T pkg., power windows, power locks, H.D. trailering $33,519.00 1,159.33 32,259.67 3,000.00 1,000.00 500.00

SILVERADO 1500
EXTENDED CAB
Stk #12NT980 LS pkg., H.D. trailering, locking axle $34,940.00 1,909.95 33,030.05 3,000.00 1,000.00 500.00

FINAL $ PRICE

31,88267*

ONLY

29,98005*

SILVERADO 2500
REGULAR CAB
Stk #12NT930 4x4, Duramax Diesel, p. seat, H.D. trailering, 18 wheels, LT pkg. MSRP Delpha Disc. GM Supplier Rebate Trade In Bonus Farm Bureau $47,570.00 3,230.96 44,339.04 2,500.00 2,000.00 500.00

SILVERADO 3500
CREW CAB
Stk #12NT937 4x4, Duramax Diesel, convenience pkg., 18 wheels, snow plow prep. MSRP Delpha Disc. GM Supplier Rebate Trade In Bonus Farm Bureau $53,200.00 3,532.50 49,667.50 2,500.00 47,167.50 2,000.00 500.00

OVER 25 TRUCKS TO CHOOSE FROM $ 00 99 OR NEWER CAR GM EMPLOYEE $ 00 OR TRUCK SAVE EXTRA

ONLY

25,48840*

MSRP Delpha Disc. GM Supplier Rebate Trade In Bonus Farm Bureau

ONLY

27,75967*

MSRP Delpha Disc. GM Supplier Rebate Trade In Bonus Farm Bureau

ONLY

28,53005*

1,000 500

TRADE IN BONUS CASH ON 1/2 TONS

2,500

00 EXTRA FOR OHIO FARM $ BUREAU MEMBERS


N.A. W GM EMPLOYEE 6 MOS. MEMBERSHIP REQUIRED.

NOW

39,33904*

NOW

44,66750*

2,000

IN 00 TRADEFORBONUS CASH 99 OR

NEWER TRADE ON DURAMAX

* Plus tax, title & dock fee

09 DODGE JOURNEY RT

08 CHEVY EQUINOX

08 PONTIAC TORRENT

PRE-OWNED CROSSOVERS
07 BUICK RENDEZVOUS

06 PONTIAC TORRENT

06 PONTIAC TORRENT

04 MERC MOUNTAINEER

#12D40. Only 50K mi., local trade

19,900

#I105. Only 34K mi. Silver.

17,900

#J41A. All wheel drive. Local trade.

16,900

#L163. CX pkg. Silver

SUMMER SPECIALS ON MINI VANS


08 DODGE GRAND CARAVAN 08 CHRYSLER TOWN & COUNTRY TOURING 07 CHEVY UPLANDER LT

16,700

#A6. 1 owner local trade, 70K mi.

12,900

#C127A. 75K mi. Black, local trade.

12,900

#C16A. All wheel drive. Great for towing.

10,100

1725 East Fifth Street, Delphos VISIT US ON THE WEB @ www.delphachevy.com


Service - Body Shop - Parts Mon., Tues., Thurs. & Fri. 7:30 to 5:00 Wed. 7:30 to 7:00 Closed on Sat.

CHEVROLET BUICK

10 CHRYSLER TOWN & COUNTRY TOURING

05 PONTIAC MONTANA

IN DELPHOS 419-692-3015 TOLL FREE 1-888-692-3015

Sales Department Mon. & Wed. 8:30 to 8:00 Tues., Thurs. & Fri. 8:30 to 5:30; Sat. 8:30 to 1:00

#12D41. 10K mi., local trade

19,900

#12C22. Local trade, DVD player.

14,900

#12C29. 2 DVDs. Local trade.

15,500

#12C30. 41K mi., DVD player, local trade.

13,900

10,700

#12B18. DVD, local trade.

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