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Educators train how to handle shooters, p3

Telling The Tri-Countys Story Since 1869

Monday, April 1, 2013

HERALD
Delphos, Ohio
sion for the people. I come back to the office and it makes me realize how much more fortunate I am to have the life that I have versus the life I could have had growing up. I do feel bad for people but it makes me more apt to help these people. And I can only help them if they want to be helped. Theres only so much I can do and I realize that, she reasoned. Eversole graduated from Vantage Police Academy in 1998 and hired onto the Delphos Police Auxiliary to begin what she was sure would be a career in law enforcement. She graduated from Tiffin University in 2008 with a bachelors degree in criminal justice. She remembered, At that point in time, I applied to the different law enforcement agencies, but there was a huge layoff around the time I graduated, so I wasnt sure what I was going to do. I applied with the Sheriffs Office. I got on their auxiliary to hold See EVERSOLE, page 2

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Upfront

Its My Passion

Eversole uses experience to help victims


BY ED GEBERT DHI CORRESPONDENT tions, not blaming the past or family circumstances, but encouraging people to take the next step forward. Nobody in our family is affected long-term by it, explained Eversole. Were not abusers ourselves. I think weve learned that this isnt what we want for our family. A lot of people like to fall back on that and use it as a crutch for themselves, saying Oh, Im an alcoholic because my dad was an alcoholic, or Im an abuser because my mom and dad were abusers. I dont feel that way at all and I want people to realize they can break this trend. The workload of cases certainly can tug at the heartstrings of most anyone, especially someone who has lived through tough situations as she has. However, Eversole said she is also struck by the way her life has changed for the better since childhood, so her days are not overwhelming. It doesnt take an emotional toll on me. I have empathy and compas-

Delphos Area Art Guild is having registration for Spring Session now. Classes will begin April 8, with registration needed by Friday. Call 614-309-7843 or visit www.delphosareaartguild.com to view additional details and register online. Beginners Guitar, taught by Tim Zerkel Eight weeks begins April 8. Cost is $150. Ages 8-12 from 6- 6:50 p.m. Ages 13-adult from 7-7:50 p.m. Participants should bring a guitar.

VAN WERT Christina Eversole has been the executive director of Van Wert County Victim Services, Inc., for just over a year now but her experience runs much deeper than that. She took over the job when the position opened in 2012 and since then, she has found her calling. I love, love my job. Its my career and I plan on staying here for as long as I possibly can, she declared. Eversole finds herself helping people through some difficult circumstances like home break-ins, abuse and domestic violence. She can help people by speaking from the voice of experience. I have compassion for the people because I grew up with a lot of Ballroom/ Swing Dance, domestic violence in my family, taught by Carol Febus she revealed. Back then, they didnt Six weeks begins April 9. charge like they do today. They told Cost is $30/couple for ages us we would have to leave the house. 13-adult from 6:30-7:30 p.m. They didnt take the abuser out of the Line Dance lessons, taught by Carol Febus Six weeks begins April 9. The cost is $20 for ages 13-adult from 7:30-8:30 p.m. Get Hooked on Crochet, taught by Jolene Talboom Six weeks begins April 10. The cost is $42 . Ages 13-adult from 10-11 a.m. Ages 8-13 from 5-6 p.m. Ages 13-adult from 6-7 p.m. Coil and Slab Techniques in Ceramics, taught by Sherry Kahle Four weeks begins April 11. The cost is $115. Ages 13-adult from 6:30-8 p.m. Toddler Musik with Sherri, taught by Sherri Fetzer Eight weeks begins May 9. The cost $100. Ages 1.5-3.5 from 9:30 -10 a.m. Ages 1.5-3.5 from 5:30-6 p.m.

Eversole home at that time, so I grew up in a lot of this. Ive seen a lot of domestic violence, abuse and alcoholism. There was a lot of that in my family. I see so many people making bad decisions for themselves, then I realize there is more hope for you. And Im hoping that I can get them out of that situation. She said that her life experience has given her perspective on situa-

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Jeffcats still taking teams for cage tourneys Jefferson is still taking teams for the 8th annual Wildcat 4th- through 6thgrade boys cage tourneys April 12-14 at Jefferson HS. Each team is guaranteed a minimum of three games. Entry fee is $100. Contact Ron Ebbeskotte 419-6927191 or head coach Marc Smith 419-615-7233. Mostly sunny Tuesday. Highs in the lower 40s. Lows in the lower 20s. Mostly sunny Wednesday. Highs in the mid 40s. Lows in the upper 20s. See page 2.

Sports

Hundreds of local children flocked to Stadium Park Saturday afternoon for the annual Optimist Easter Egg Hunt. The Optimists stuffed more than 3,000 eggs with candy and a few slips of paper for bigger prizes. Above left: A successful hunter checks her eggs. Above right: children ages 2-4 gather eggs. (Delphos Herald/Stacy Taff)

Forecast

Index

Obituaries State/Local Announcements Community Sports Classifieds TV World News

2 3 4 5 6-7 8 9 10

GALAX, Va. (AP) Nearly 100 vehicles crashed Sunday along a mountainous, foggy stretch of interstate near the VirginiaNorth Carolina border, killing three people and injuring 25 others. Police said traffic along Interstate 77 in southwest Virginia backed up for about 8 miles in the southbound lanes after the accidents. Authorities closed the northbound lanes so that fire trucks, ambulances and police could get to the series of chain-reaction wrecks. Virginia State Police determined there were 17 separate crashes involving 95 vehicles within a mile span near the base of Fancy

3 killed in 95-vehicle pileup at Virginia-NC line


Gap Mountain, spokeswoman Corinne Geller said. The crashes began around 1:15 p.m. Sunday when there was heavy fog in the area. This mountain is notorious for fog banks. They have advance signs warning people. But the problem is, people are seeing well and suddenly theyre in a fog bank, said Glen Sage of the American Red Cross office in the town of Galax. Since 1997, there have been at least six such pileups on the mountain but Sundays crash was the most deadly, according to The Roanoke Times. Two people died in crashes involving dozens of vehicles in both 2000 and 2010. Overhead message boards warned drivers since about 6 a.m. Sunday to slow down because of the severe fog, Geller said. The crashes were mostly caused by drivers going too fast for conditions. At the epicenter was a wreck involving up to eight vehicles, some of which caught fire, Geller said. Photos from the accident scene showed a burned out tractor-trailer and several crumpled vehicles badly charred. Those taken to hospitals had injuries ranging from serious to minor. School buses took stranded people to shelters and hotels. Nina Rose, 20, and her mother, were driving home to Rochester, N.Y., when they encountered the pileup. With so much fog we didnt see much around it, Rose told the Roanoke newspaper. As we got further up we just saw a bunch of people standing on the median, just with their kids and families all together. There were cars smashed into other cars, and cars just underneath other semitrucks. Darrell Utt, 17, of Moore County, N.C., was stuck in the northbound lanes for about three hours as he traveled to Huntington, W. Va. It was really foggy at first, he said. We probably saw over 50 tow trucks. We

saw about five cars come down and three semi-trucks. One of them, it didnt even look like a car, it looked like a chunk of metal. Utt said motorists were calm, despite the traffic jam. There was no road rage or anything, everyone understood the severity of how bad this was before we even began to figure out what exactly happened, he said. Authorities reopened the northbound lanes Sunday night and hoped to have the other side cleared later in the evening. Police did not immediately release the names of those killed.

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Friday, April 1, 2013

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Delphos man may face multiple domestic violence charges


A Delphos man faces a domestic violence charge from Delphos Police and possibly another from Van Wert County following several incidents reported at 9:19 p.m. Sunday. Delphos Police were called to the area of the intersection of North Clay and W e s t T h i r d streets in reference to a domestic violence c o m plaint in Murray that area. U p o n making contact with the victim, it was found her husband, Randall Murray, 55, of Delphos had allegedly pushed her out of a moving vehicle. Another family member who was inside the vehicle was

POLICE REPORT

Eversole

For The Record


OBITUARIES
(Continued from page 1)

25 Years Ago 1988 Lori Brinkman, sixth grader and top speller is the runner-up in the Van Wert County spelling bee held recently in Marsh Foundation auditorium. Nineteen stuor Gluten dents from grades five through eight participated. lb. representBeth Kirocofe ed Franklin and Benjamin Rahrig represented Landeck. Brian Heitz struck Save up toSenior $2.00 lb. out 11 Antwerp hitters and drove in three runs as St. Johns beat the Archers 11-1 in nine innings Thursday at Antwerp. Heitz allowed just five hits and walked one through eight innings. Freshman Mark Mueller pitched the ninth inning,

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At 1:15 p.m. on Saturday, Delphos Police came into contact with Amanda Teman, 23, of Delphos, at which time she was arrested on an active arrest warrant issued out Save to $1.81 of up Lima Municipal Court on a contempt Teman of court charge. selected varieties Teman was later turned over to deputies from the Allen County Sheriffs Department.

Delphos woman Delphos driver cited arrested on Delphos police investiwarrant gated an accident occuring

able to exit the vehicle before it sped away. Upon speaking with the victim, it was found another domestic disturbance was threatened to another family, who was at a residence and unaware of the current situation. A call was placed to the Van Wert Sheriffs Department to have units dispatched to the rural residence. Delphos officers also responded to the residence due to the close proximity to the city limits. When officers arrived, they located Murray and he was arrested for the domestic violence complaint inside the city limits. He was transported to the Van Wert County Jail and will appear in Van Wert Municipal Court on the Delphos charge. An additional charge of domestic violence is being investigated by the Van Wert County Sheriffs Department.

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IT WAS NEWS THEN

Friday afternoon in the 100 block of East Third Street. A vehicle owned by Kathleen Feathers of 1110 South Clay St. in Delphos was parked facing the southeast, as was a vehicle owned by Sue A. Verhoff of 903 Metbliss Ave. of Delphos. Verhoff attempted to back out of the parking space and struck Feathers, causing minor damage to both vehicles and no injuries. Verhoff did leave the scene but was located a short time later. Verhoff was listed as at fault.

my commission open. In the meantime I was also working at Westwood Behavioral Health Center. I worked there for two years, and then I realized that my heart just wasnt there. It just wasnt my niche. She transported prisoners for the Van Wert Sheriffs Office, but admitted, I felt like a counselor more than just an officer. Then last spring the position opened in Victims Services, and Eversole knew what she was meant to do. It was an amazing interview, she stated. I was bound and determined that this was where I was going to be my career; this was where I was going and was where I needed to be. Eversole has an amazing ability to leave her work at work and not be pulled down by the emotional situations she finds herself in the midst of many days. But the work has affected her spiritual life. Since Ive started this job, Ive really poured myself into church, Eversole related. Ive been compelled to pray for people and hope they are able to find their self-worth. Beyond prayer, she admitted she sometimes feels very limited as far as finding ways to help. Eversole shared, Whats frustrating sometimes are the lack of some services, or the time it takes to get those services. We do have the facilities to be able to get people into a safe environment with Crisis Care and the YWCA. Thats there, and were very fortunate for that. But financially we dont have the financial means to help them or give them groceries. I do try to work with the churches and direct people to the churches and the food banks and with JFS (Department of Job and Family Services), but it is all dependent on time. If it happens on a Friday afternoon, my services are limited. With the voice of experience on her side, Eversole believes she can assist victims through the legal system, provide various means of help, and encourage them to break the cycle of abuse. From robbery victims to those dealing with physical, sexual, or emotional abuse, Van Wert County Victim Services provides as much assistance as possible to help the hurting. And for those struggling with an abuse situation, Eversole has some straight advice: Get out. They need to get out of the situation, especially if they have children involved. That may mean getting set up with another family member or getting set up with the transitional home through the YWCA. Just get out. They dont need to be there. They are important, and they dont need to be abused. Abuse is not love.

The Delphos Herald


Nancy Spencer, editor Ray Geary, general manager, Delphos Herald Inc. Don Hemple, advertising manager Tiffany Brantley, circulation manager
Vol. 143 No. 203

Janice M. Kleman

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Dear children! Also today I call you to prayer. Sin is pulling you towards worldly things and I have come to lead you towards holiness and the things of God, but you are struggling and spending your energies in the battle with the good and the evil that are in you. Therefore, little children, pray, pray, pray until prayer becomes a joy for you and In become the a Bakery your life will simple walk towards God. Thank you for having Iced orresponded Lemon to my call.

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High temperature Sunday The Associated Press in Delphos was 58 degrees, low was 41. A trace of rain TONIGHT: Mostly Regular or Thick was recorded. High a year ago Cut clear. A 20 percent chance of today was 72, low was 40. snow showers through midRecord high for today is 79, night. Lows in the lower 20s. set in 1946. Record low is 18, Northwest winds 5 to 10 mph. set in 1964. TUESDAY: Mostly sunny. Highs in the lower 40s. Northwest winds 5 to 15 mph. TUESDAY NIGHT: didnt allow a hit, struck out ed Mrs. Lowell Jenkins, Clear. Lows in the lower 20s. Mrs. Richard John and Mrs. Northwest one and walked one. winds around 10 lb. Twenty members were Roscoe Thompson. After mph. Product the United States FORECAST was of prepresent for the monthly meet- dinner a program EXTENDED ing of Ottoville Catholic sented beginning with selecWEDNESDAY: Mostly Ladies of Columbia of tions by the Boys Ensemble sunny. Highs in the mid 40s. Jefferson Ottoville at Dew Dropp from DelphosSave Northwest winds around 10 $7.96 onHigh 4 Inn Restaurant. Delegates School. Ann Dienstberger mph. All Varieties were named for the conven- served as accompanist. WEDNESDAY NIGHT tion to be held June 13-15 AND THURSDAY: Mostly 75 Years Ago 1937 at Worthington. Delegates clear. Lows in the upper 20s. More complete Highs in the mid 50s. are Pat Horstman, Jean for the Hilvers and Dorothy Ruen. arrangements THURSDAY NIGHT Alternates are Barb Landin, Easter Dance were made THROUGH FRIDAY Sharon Fischbach, Ruth Wednesday evening at the NIGHT: Mostly clear. Lows Miller, Eileen Kemper, Elma regular monthly meeting of in the mid 30s. Highs in the the Young Ladies Sodality mid 50s. Kaufman and Joan Wessel. of St. Johns Church held at SATURDAY: Partly the school. The sodality is cloudy. Highs in the upper 50s. 50 Years Ago 1963 Melvin Pohlman of sponsoring the dance which SATURDAY NIGHT: pk. Limit 4 - Additionals 2/$5 in the 12 will be given school Partly cloudy with a 30 perPohlman Brothers Supply, Delphos, recently attended auditorium beginning at 9 cent chance of showers. Lows a three-day training school p.m. Easter Sunday. Music in the mid 40s. Save $1.80 3 by on Carl for Jamesway pipeline milk- will be furnished SUNDAY: Mostly cloudy er dealers held at the home Hotz and his orchestra and with a 40 percent chance of office of James Mfg. Co., a floor show will provide showers. Highs in the upper Fort Atkinson, Wis. He is added entertainment. 50s. The Jefferson High sales and service representative in this area. Highlight School physical education OCAL PRICES of the course was the instal- classes will present their Corn $6.95 lation of pipeline milkers for annual demonstration Friday Wheat $6.63 both stanchion barns and for night at the Jefferson gymSoybeans $14.15 milking parlors. nasium. A small admission Jack Keith, new golf charge will be made and the pro at the Delphos Country proceeds will be used to purClub, has assumed his duties chase additional gymnasium CLEVELAND (AP) here and will be at the club- equipment. The program will 16 Ohio oz. lotteries were Limit 3 Additionals $1.29 These house, where his services include dances, games, tumdrawn Sunday: will be available to golf- bling and other gymnasium Mega Millions ers every day of the week work. Boys and girls will Estimated jackpot: $42 M participate. except Mondays. Members Save up to $1.00 Pick 3 Evening James Moots, presiof the 1963 golf committee 7-5-6 include E. M. Wiecher and dent of the Allen County Pick 3 Midday Howard Huysman, co-chair- (Delphos) Fair Board, Frank 3-0-9 men, Dr. E. E. Laman, Robert Kurber, member of the board Pick 4 Evening and Art. O. Wulfhorst, secMcDonald and A. J. Meyer. 4-0-2-1 Approximately 90 mem- retary, were in attendance Pick 4 Midday bers of the Order of the Eastern Wednesday at the annual 1-3-9-2 Star and their families were spring meeting of the fair Pick 5 Evening present at the annual indoor officials of the northwestern 4-4-9-1-2 Save S $2.11; $2 11 select l t varieties i ti picnic held Thursday eve- district which was held at Pick 5 Midday ning at the Masonic Temple. Van Wert. Fair boards of 16 4-2-4-8-4 Powerball Members of the committee in counties were represented. Estimated jackpot: $40 M charge of the dinner includ- The entire group inspected 4 qt. Cash 5 ea. improvements at the Van Rolling 04-23-25-28-32 Wert County Fairgrounds Estimated jackpot: which are being made under $100,000 the WPA.

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July 12, 1930-March 29, 2013 Janice M. Kleman, 82, of Fort Jennings, died 7:20 p.m. Friday at Vancrest Healthcare Center in Delphos, surrounded by her loving family. She was born July 12, 1930 in Hamler, to Edward and Agnes (Okuley) Collins, who preceded her in death. On June 24, 1950, she married James W. Kleman, who survives in Fort Jennings. Also surviving are her children, Gary (Rhonda) Kleman, Terry (Judy) Kleman and Diane (Garry) Stennett of Fort Jennings, Dave (Cheryl) Kleman of Ottoville, Kevin (Carol) Kleman of Ludlow Falls, Kim (Kent) McCracken of Delphos, Keith (Misty) Kleman of Celina and Monte (Kate) Kleman of Herndon, Va.; 31 grandchildren; 23 great-grandchildren; a sister, Juanita Arend of Archbold; and a brother: Dale Gerschutz of Smithville, Mo. She was also preceded in death by a granddaughter, Katherine. Mrs. Kleman retired as an accountant with First Federal Savings and Loan, Lima. Before beginning her job there, she had previously worked for the Black Angus, Kalida. She was a member of St. Joseph Catholic Church, Fort Jennings. Mass of Christian Burial will begin at 10 a.m. Wednesday at St. Joseph Catholic Church, Fort Jennings, the Rev. Charles Obinwa officiating. Burial will follow in the church cemetery. Visitation will be from 2 to 8 p.m. Tuesday at LoveHeitmeyer Funeral Home, Jackson Township, where a scripture service will begin at 5:30 p.m. Memorial contributions may be made to American Cancer Society or to the Alzheimers Association. Condolences may be expressed at www.lovefuneralhome.com

The Delphos 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 Delphos 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 DELPHOS HERALD, 405 N. Main St. Delphos, Ohio 45833

A girl, Harper Ann, was born March 30 at St. Ritas Medical Center to Wade and Lianne Pohlman of Delphos. She weighed 6 pounds, 6 ounces and was 19 1/2 inches long. She was welcomed home by big sisters Cheyenne, Isabella and Pippa. Grandparents include Roger and Sally Pohlman and George and Karen Bockey of Delphos. Great-grandparents include Ruth Pohlman and Josephine Bockey of Delphos. ST. RITAS A boy was born March 30 to Cosette and Jeffrey Ridenour of Delphos.

BIRTHS

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By DAN ELLIOTT

Esther L. Shorty Kirtland Patten, 95, of Delphos, died at 1:30 p.m. March 28 at St. Ritas Medical Center. Funeral services will begin at noon on Wednesday at Chiles-Laman Funeral & Cremation Services, Shawnee Chapel, the Rev. Gary Hohman officiating. Burial will be in Benton Ridge Cemetery. Friends may call from 10 a.m. until the time of the service on Wednesday. Further arrangements are incomplete at the funeral home.

BENDELE, Elizabeth L. Betty, 86, of Delphos, Mass of Christian Burial will be at 11 a.m. on Tuesday at St. John Evangelist Church, with Father Melvin Verhoff officiating. Burial will follow in Resurrection Cemetery. Visitation will be held from 2-8 p.m. today at Harter and Schier Funeral Home, where there will be a Parish Wake beginning at 7:30 p.m. Memorial contributions may be made to the Alzheimers Assoc., Autism Speaks or Delphos St. Johns. DIENSTBERGER, Mary H., 88, of Delphos, Mass of Christian Burial will be at 1:30 p.m. Tuesday at St. John the Evangelist Catholic Church, with Father Melvin Verhoff officiating. Burial will follow in Resurrection Cemetery. Visitation will be held from 2-8 p.m. today at Harter and Schier Funeral Home, with a Parish Wake beginning at 7 p.m. Memorial contributions may be made to St. Johns Parish Foundation or Van Wert Inpatient Hospice Center.

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CENTENNIAL, Colo. (AP) After a week of legal twists and turns, James Holmes will find out today if he could face execution if convicted in the Colorado theater attack that killed 12 people. Behind-the-scenes maneuvering erupted into a public quarrel between prosecutors and the defense over Holmes public offer to plead guilty, but the two sides could still come to an agreement that would spare Holmess life in exchange for spending the rest of his life in prison. Even if they give notice today that they are seeking the death penalty, they can come off that and enter into a plea bargain any time, said attorney Dan Recht, a past president of the Colorado Criminal Defense Bar. As the tangled and bloody case returns to court, survivors and families of the victims are uncertain about what happens next. If the case goes to trial, all of us victims would be dragged along potentially for years, said Pierce OFarrill, who was shot three times.

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Monday, April 1, 2013

The Herald 3

COLUMBUS (AP) Nobody should be surprised to hear that the state of Ohio spent a lot more money on snow removal this winter than last. Last years warm, mild winter couldnt have been more different from the winter that wont go away this year. And state spending shows it. The Columbus Dispatch reports that the Ohio Department of Transportation has spent $79.2 million statewide on snow-and-ice removal this winter. Last year, the agency spent $43.8?million in the state in the same period. Two years ago, the agency spent about $85 million. This season, ODOT has spread 720,241 tons of salt on Ohio roads. Thats compared with 368,667 tons at this time a year ago.

Snowier, colder winter hikes costs for Ohio

ASHTABULA (AP) Police in northeast Ohio are investigating a shooting outside a church that has reportedly left one man dead after an Easter service. Ashtabula police would not immediately confirm the fatality; an officer answering the telephone would say only that authorities were investigating. A member of the Hiawatha Church of God in Christ said the man was shot soon after Easter services ended, at about 1:15 p.m. Sunday. Joan Crockett said the man knew the shooter, and that a suspect was taken into custody. She said the wounded man died. The Plain Dealer of Cleveland reported that the churchs pastor said congregants were leaving the church when they heard a gunshot. People pushed me into a back office and said, Somebodys here with a gun, said Rev. David Howard Jr. The guy was outside hollering and acting crazy. There were no immediate reports of any other injuries. He said the church has about 175 members. He said people at the church didnt know what led to the shooting. Its such a tragic loss, Crockett said.

Shooting reported outside northeast Ohio church

BRIEFS

Columbus getting new traffic system


COLUMBUS (AP) Ohios capital is getting a $38.1 million overhaul of its traffic system, which should mean some travel time benefits for Columbus commuters and visitors. The Columbus Dispatch reports that work to replace a 1970s era system will by 2018 give city traffic managers control over every traffic signal to help them keep motorists moving. Monitors can adjust stoplight signal timing in response to backups and new links will provide more ability to work with systems in the citys suburbs and Franklin County. Traffic cameras will triple to 150, and fiber-optic cable and wireless connections will ease fragmentation of traffic control efforts. Coaxial cable currently connects 625 traffic signals to the downtown command center, but some 400 other signals are on their own systems or cant be controlled remotely. Traffic is kind of like water, said Patti Austin, a city planning and operations administrator. If you clog up one drain, its going to overflow into other places.

STATE/LOCAL

Educators train how to handle shooters


COLUMBUS (AP) Two dozen Ohio educators have gotten firearms training through a pilot program organized by a gun rights group after the Connecticut school shootings. The three-day course organized by the Buckeye Firearms Association taught participants tactical maneuvers for reacting to school shooters. As part of the program, educators used model guns with plastic pellets while playing roles in gunman scenarios based on reallife situations, The Columbus Dispatch reported. The Armed Teacher Training Program was conducted for the first time recently at the Tactical Defense Institute in West Union, in southern Ohio. The Buckeye Firearms Foundation paid $30,000 for the 24 educators to receive the training, said Jim Irvine, chairman of the association. Those selected to participate were among more than 1,400 applicants, the newspaper reported. The program was organized after the December shootings at Sandy Hook Elementary School in Newtown, Conn., that killed 20 students and six staff members. A part of the training includes role-playing, where class members posing as good guys shoot at those playing the bad guys. An instructor at the institute said the pellets from the guns do hurt some, but that makes the scenarios seem more real. Angie, a substitute teacher from northeast Ohio who was not identified by the newspaper other than by her first name, agreed. She said she found the role-playing valuable.

It should be good news for the citys commuters, who can expect quicker travel times to work and home. It definitely will make the commute smoother, Austin said. What you find in most cities today is that you have fragmented systems, said Hani Mahmassani, an engineering professor at Northwestern University. Signal control has a 5 to 10 percent potential improvement that is just not being tapped. Upgraded software will also provide ability to adjust quickly to major events such as Ohio State University football games and the Red, White & Boom summer celebration. Were pretty limited in what we can do certain times of day, said project manager Ryan Bollo. This new software will be able to do whole corridors and have pre-timed systems we can do any time of day. Columbus is paying $12.8 million to design the system, and the Mid-Ohio Regional Planning Commission will use more than $25 million in federal funding for construction

YOUNGSTOWN (AP) A $36,000 brass soldier that stood guard at the front of a northeast Ohio veterans cemetery for decades was cut off at the ankles, stolen and sold as scrap in bits, leaving the memorial parks caretakers outraged at what they perceive as disrespect toward those buried there. A hand, a rifle and five other pieces of the 4-foot statue were turned over to police by a recycling center this week and then returned to officials at Mahoning Valley Memorial Park, The Vindicator in Youngstown reported. Parts of the statue were scrapped for only about $25, the newspaper said. What I got back was a bucket full of tiny pieces, said Gary Pollock, who helps oversee the park. He was called by police on Thursday about the pieces of the dismantled bronze statue recovered at the scrapyard, which had a receipt for the metal. Pollock said he was shocked that someone would steal and dismantle a veterans memorial. That statue has been there for at least the last 40 years,

Brass soldier stolen from Ohio cemetery, scrapped

he said. To replace it will cost thousands of dollars. The cost factor aside, who would be that disrespectful? Police have a suspect but didnt immediately make an arrest in the case, the newspaper reported. The parks caretakers and relatives of the military veterans buried there are hoping police track down whoever is responsible for the theft. A bronze memorial marker also is missing, apparently after being dug up.

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Ohio University admission applications top 20,000

You can walk through a scenario, you know, just mapping it out a hundred times, and its not going to be as memorable, she said. The scenarios were set in areas simulating school commons areas such as hallways and auditoriums and more enclosed spaces such as offices. Irvine said arming teachers is the best way to stop more mass murders, and gun control cant help. Gun control is purely political and has no place in this conversation, Irvine told the newspaper. But Toby Hoover, executive director of the Ohio Coalition Against Gun Violence, told The Associated Press that gun violence is a cultural and policy issue, and anyone carrying a weapon into a school doesnt make policy or culture any better. Course officials said all participants have gone through concealed-weapons training covering basic firearm safety and marksmanship, and obtained a permit. But school employees would need permission from their school boards to carry a gun at school. Dick Caster, a senior consultant with the Ohio School Boards Association, said he isnt aware of any Franklin County school district that has allowed teachers with concealed guns into classrooms, although he said some districts in other parts of the state are considering it. Irvine said some participants in the pilot program hope to persuade their boards to let them carry weapons, but he would not identify any districts.

ATHENS (AP) Applications for admission to Ohio University have topped 20,000 for the first time in the schools 209-year history. The Athens Messenger reports that freshman applications for the main campus were running more than 3,000 ahead of last years pace, and some 7,000 ahead of 2011. Craig Cornell is vice provost for enrollment management. He says 20,512 applications had been received as of last Thursday. He says the growth in widespread, with increases from both in-state and out-ofstate students, and also among international students. He credits extensive marketing by the school, but adds that Ohio University doesnt want to grow too rapidly. Only about 4,025 students will be accepted for the next freshman class. The current class is 3,900, with some 17,000 undergraduate students campuswide in Athens.

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4 The Herald

Monday, April 1, 2013

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Engagement

Engagement

Caroline Kennedy returns to poetry for tenth book


By JOCELYN NOVECK The Associated Press NEW YORK Beginning work a few years ago on her latest book, an anthology of poems for young people, Caroline Kennedy found herself looking through one of her mothers scrapbooks. She burst into laughter, she says, as she came across a poem that her brother John, as a youngster, had picked out and copied as a gift to their poetry-loving mom. Willie with a thirst for gore, Nailed his sister to the door, went the poem, by an unknown author. Mother said with humor quaint, Careful, Willie, dont scratch the paint! The poem brought back memories of our relationship, Kennedy told a bookstore audience this week. I laughed so hard. But for Kennedy, now 55 and a mother of three grown children, theres a deeper meaning to that irreverent ditty. Poetry was a central part of her home life growing up. She and John regularly copied out and illustrated poems for their mother, Jackie, upon birthdays and Mothers Days. Sometimes, theyd recite them too, if we were feeling competitive. And at family gatherings with their grandmother, there were frequent challenges to recite Henry Wadsworth Longfellows famous (and famously lengthy) Paul Reveres Ride. Only Uncle Ted, it seems, was able to recite it in its entirety. Now, with her 10th book, Kennedy wants to share with young readers the love for the written word that she feels her poetry-filled childhood helped instill in her (even though her own son, she quips, hates reading and only likes two poems.) Hence the title: Poems to Learn By Heart. It was a combination of remembering my own childhood and thinking about gifts Id been given, she said in an interview last week at her husbands downtown Manhattan design firm, explaining the genesis of the latest book. And working in schools and seeing the role that poetry can play in kids lives. Its also an effort to promote literacy, a cause Kennedy has supported in a number of ways. Fourteen percent of American adults cant read, Kennedy says. Its a slow-motion disaster. She believes poetry can help. Kids need a way in, she says, and reading needs to be fun. Poetry can give them that with the current emphasis on poetry slams, and these other open mic events. Thats actually why I think poetry has a chance. Kennedys current book a collection of poems from various authors, with introductions by her to each section, and vivid illustrations by John J Muth is her fourth to focus on poetry. Her earlier books, especially The Best Loved Poems of Jacqueline Kennedy Onassis, have been huge sellers, pulling in numbers unheard of for poetry anthologies. Shes committed to becoming an advocate for the written word and poetry in particular, says Gretchen Young, who edited all of Kennedys poetry books at Hyperion, working with the author to cull down huge numbers of beloved poems. And she knows she can do that. As to what else Kennedy can do with her high profile and the unique and powerful celebrity status shes held since she was a little girl in the Kennedy White House that is a question that people never cease to ask. The latest rumor has her up for an ambassadorship, perhaps to Japan, perhaps to Canada. Asked about those rumors during a recent TV appearance, she responded with typical restraint: Id love to serve in any way. She added that she hadnt been asked yet, and her response is still No comment. But many expect Kennedy, who considered seeking an appointment to the Senate from New York in 2009 but then withdrew her name from contention amid a flurry of publicity, to take up some high-profile position in the near future. She was an important and avid supporter of President Barack Obama, both in the 2008 and the 2012 elections.

Burnett/Suever
Thomas and Linda Burnett of Venedocia announce the engagement of their daughter, Leslie Kay, to Brandyn Suever, son of Patrice Suever of Perrysburg and Richard and Beth Suever of Delphos. A June wedding is planned. The bride-elect is a graduate of Spencerville High School and is currently attending Rhodes State College in the nursing program. She is employed at American Nursing Care in Lima. Her fiance is a graduate of St. Johns High School and is currently self-employed.

Larry Turnwald and Jane Turnwald, both of Ottoville, announce the engagement of their daughter, Andrea Lynn, to Tyler Joseph Hovest, son of Richard and Terry Hovest of Ottawa. The couple will be united in marriage on Aug. 24 at Ottoville Immaculate Conception Church. The bride-elect is a graduate of Ottoville High School and obtained a bachelors degree in civil engineering from Ohio Northern University. She is employed as a project engineer at Marathon Petroleum Company in Findlay. Her fiance is a graduate of Pandora-Gilboa High School. He is employed with Five Star Ag in Gilboa.

Turnwald/Hovest

Gas trade group seeks probe of Artists Against Fracking


By MICHAEL GORMLEY The Associated Press ALBANY, N.Y. A formal complaint filed with New Yorks lobbying board asks it to investigate whether Artists Against Fracking, a group that includes Yoko Ono and other A-List celebrities, is violating the states lobbying law, according to the document obtained by The Associated Press. The Independent Oil & Gas Association, an industry group that supports gas drilling, filed the complaint Tuesday with the states Joint Commission on Public Ethics. The complaint is based on an AP story that found that Artists Against Fracking and its members, including Ono, her son Sean Lennon, actors Mark Ruffalo and Robert De Niro and others, arent registered as lobbyists and therefore didnt disclose their spending in opposition to hydraulic fracturing, or fracking, to remove gas from underground deposits. The public has been unable to learn how much money is being spent on this effort, what it is being spent on, and who is funding the effort, said Brad Gill, executive director of the Independent Oil & Gas Association of New York. I understand the power of celebrity that this organization has brought to the public discussion over natural gas development, but I do not understand why this organization is not being required to follow the states lobbying law. The group confirmed it filed the complaint but didnt comment further. Artists Against Fracking, formed by Ono and Lennon, says its activities are protected as free speech. The group was created last year amid the Cuomo administrations review to determine whether to allow hydraulic fracturing to remove gas from vast underground shale formations in southern and central New York. Gov. Andrew Cuomo continues his review as public opinion has shifted from initial support based on the promise of jobs and tax revenue from drilling in economically depressed upstate New York to mixed feelings because of concerns over potential environmental and health effects. Seven months after Artists Against Fracking was formed, the Quinnipiac University Polling Institute on March 20 found that New York voters were for the first time opposed to fracking, 46 percent to 39 percent. Theres no doubt the celebrities had an effect, Quinnipiac pollster Maurice Carroll said. As far as I can tell, they made all the difference. A spokesman for Artists Against Fracking said the group and its individual members dont have to register as lobbyists. As private citizens, Yoko and Sean are not required to register as lobbyists when they use their own money to express an opinion and theres also no lobbying requirement when you are engaged in a public comment period by a state agency, spokesman David Fenton said. If the situation changes then, of course, Artists Against Fracking will consider registering, Fenton said. Up to now, there has been no violation because they are entitled to do this as private citizens with their own money. On its website, the group implores readers: Tell Governor Cuomo: Dont Frack New York. Celebrities supporting the group have led rallies and performed in the song Dont Frack My Mother, also carried on the Internet. Ethics commission spokesman John Milgrim didnt immediately respond to a request for comment on Friday. By law, the commission doesnt confirm or deny pending investigations. New Yorks former lobbying regulator, attorney David Grandeau, said he believed the group and the supporting artists, including musicians Paul McCartney and Lady Gaga and actress Anne Hathaway, should be registered and required to disclose details on their efforts to spur public opposition to gas drilling. When you are advocating for the passage or defeat of legislation or proposed legislation and spend more than $5,000, you are required to register, Grandeau said Friday. Just because you are a celebrity doesnt mean that lobbing laws dont apply to you. Your celebrity status does not protect you in Albany. Hip-hop mogul Russell Simmons and developer Donald Trump are among the high-profile figures who clashed with the commission when Grandeau was regulator.

Exhibit of Jews in Germany raises interest, ire


By KIRSTEN GRIESHABER The Associated Press BERLIN Are there still Jews in Germany? Are the Jews a chosen people? Nearly 70 years after the Holocaust, there is no more sensitive an issue in German life as the role of Jews. With fewer than 200,000 Jews among Germanys 82 million people, few Germans born after World War II know any Jews or much about them. To help educate postwar generations, an exhibit at the Jewish Museum features a Jewish man or woman seated inside a glass box for two hours a day through August to answer visitors questions about Jews and Jewish life. The base of the box asks: Are there still Jews in Germany? A lot of our visitors dont know any Jews and have questions they want to ask, museum official Tina Luedecke said. With this exhibition we offer an opportunity for those people to know more about

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BERLIN (AP) An entire troupe of performing fleas has fallen victim to the freezing temperatures currently gripping Germany. Flea circus director Robert Birk says he was shocked to find all of his 300 fleas dead inside their transport box Wednesday morning. The circus immediately scrambled to find and train a new batch so it could fulfill its engagements at an open-air fair in the western town of Mechernich-Kommern. Michael Faber, who organizes the fair, told The Associated Press that an insect expert at a nearby university was able to provide 50 fleas in time for the first show Sunday. Faber says he hopes theyll get through this without any more fatalities. Birk said it was the first time his circus had lost all of its fleas to the cold in one go.

Freezing weather wipes out German flea circus

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Jews and Jewish life. But not everybody thinks putting a Jew on display is the best way to build understanding and mutual respect. Since the exhibit The Whole Truth, everything you wanted to know about Jews opened this month, the Jew in the Box, as it is popularly known, has drawn sharp criticism within the Jewish community especially in the city where the Nazis orchestrated the slaughter of 6 million Jews until Adolf Hitlers defeat in 1945. Why dont they give him a banana and a glass of water, turn up the heat and make the Jew feel really cozy in his glass box, prominent Berlin Jewish community figure Stephan Kramer told The Associated Press. They actually asked me if I wanted to participate. But I told them Im not available. The exhibit is reminiscent of Holocaust architect Adolf Eichmann sitting in a glass booth at the 1961 trial in Israel which led to his execution. And its certainly more provocative than British actress Tilda Swinton sleeping in a glass box at a recent performance at the Museum of Modern Art in New York. Eran Levy, an Israeli who has lived in Berlin for years, was horrified by the idea of presenting a Jew as a museum piece, even if to answer Germans questions about Jewish life. Its a horrible thing to do completely degrading and not helpful, he said. The Jewish Museum absolutely missed the point if they wanted to do anything to improve the relations between Germans and Jews. But several of the volunteers, including both German Jews and Israelis living in Berlin, said the experience in the box is little different from what they go through as Jews living in the country that produced the Nazis.

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Monday, April 1, 2013

The Herald 5

LANDMARK

COMMUNITY
PVFF director speaks to Optimists

Blood drives collect 39 pints


The American Red Cross held a blood drive at the Delphos Eagles on March 7 and collected 39 pints, reaching the goal for the day. Gallon doners are: James

CALENDAR OF
EVENTS

Pleasant Twp. Building

TODAY 6:30 p.m. Shelter from the Storm support group meets in the Delphos Public Library basement. 7 p.m. Delphos City Council meets at the Delphos THE DELPHOS HERALD Municipal Building, 608 N. HAPPY BIRTHDAY COLUMN Canal St. Name Delphos Parks and Recreation board meets at Address the recreation building at Stadium Park. Washington Township Name Birthday trustees meet at the township house. Name Birthday 7:30 p.m. Spencerville Name Birthday village council meets at the mayors office. Name Birthday Delphos Eagles Auxiliary meets at the Eagles Lodge, Telephone (for verification) Thirty four members and guests of the winners. 1600 Fifth St. Landeck Catholic Ladies of Columbia Quadrennial convention personnel Check one: 8 p.m. The Veterans of opened its March meeting with a prayer. were chosen as follows: Tess Rahrig, Kay Foreign Wars meet at the hall. Prayer and get well wishes were sent to all Siefker, Sue Radabaugh, Catherine Heitz, add to birthday list Please Please delete from birthday list sick members. Janet Siefker, Velma Wehri and Ruthie TUESDAY Frank Bonifas enlightened all present Hammons with Kathy Siefker as alternate. Please make change on birthday list 11:30 a.m. Mealsite with an educational presentation on his This event is scheduled for Aug. 4-6. at Delphos Senior Citizen extraordinary life living with Tourettes Make a lasting gift for your loved ones Center, 301 Suthoff Street. disease. His book Fu Fu Fu Frank will be by seeing Velma Wehri or Janet Siefker to 7 p.m. Delphos Coon donated to Delphos Jefferson, Delphos St. purchase CLC life insurance or annuity/IRA and Sportsmans Club meets. Johns and the Delphos Public Library. See today. Its never too early or too late. 7:30 p.m. Alcoholics your local library to check out this amazing Meeting closed with prayer. Refreshments Anonymous, First story. were provided by the committee. Presbyterian Church, 310 W. Birthday wishes were sent out for March The next meeting will begin at 7 p.m. Second St. birthdays. Pot of gold winner for February on April 9 at CFO Hall in Landeck with was Joann Merricle and March was Christina guest speaker Jane Byrne, who will speak WEDNESDAY Koverman, who wasnt present. The 50/50 on organ and tissue donation. Guests are 9 a.m. - noon Putnam winners were Thelma Hoersten, Velma welcome. News About Y our Community Committee will be Catherine Heitz and County Museum is open, 202 Wehri and Joann Merricle. Club 25 winners was Loretta Schaffer. Congratulations to all Jane Rahrig. E. Main St., Kalida. 11:30 a.m. Mealsite THE at Delphos Senior Citizen ELPHOS ERALD Putting Your Center, 301 Suthoff Street. Telling The Tri-Countys Story Since 1869 Noon Rotary Club World in 405 N. Main St., Delphos, OH 45833 419-695-0015 www.delphosherald.com meets at The Grind. PersPective 6 p.m. Shepherds of Our local, national and international Got a news tip? A Get Sold on St. Jude Kids event benefiting St. Christ Associates meet in the news coverage is insightful and concise, to Jude Childrens Research Hospital will be held at at 4 keep you in the know without keeping you St. Johns Chapel. W ant to promote an event or business? 6:30 p.m. Delphos p.m. on May 11 at Porters Auction, 19326 Co. Rd. 60, tied up. It's all the information you need to stay on top of the world around you, Kiwanis Club meets at the Grover Hill. Nancy Spencer, editor Don Hemple, advertising manager 419-695-0015 ext. 134 419-695-0015 ext. 138 By participating in or attending the auction, you will delivered straight to your door everyday. Eagles Lodge, 1600 E. Fifth nspencer@delphosherald.com dhemple@delphosherald.com If you aren't already taking advantage help raise funds for children of the world who are stricken St. of our convenient home delivery service, 7 p.m. Bingo at St. with diseases like Cancer, AIDS and Sickle Cell Anemia. please call us at 419-695-0015. This is the 17th annual auction benefiting St. Judes. Johns Little Theatre. THE DELPHOS HERALD Delphos Civil Service Over the last 16 years, more than $99,000 was raised. 405 N. Main St. Delphos Commission meets at Municipal Building. 7:30 p.m. Hope Lodge 214 Free and Accepted Masons, Masonic Temple, North Main Street. But the April 15 Deadline for IRA 9 p.m. Fort Jennings Contributions Isnt. Lions Club meets at the Outpost Restaurant. Few things are as for stressful as worrying about work. Because You have only so many years to prepare

Donna Dickman, executive director of Partnership for Violence Free Families, was the guest speakers at the Delphos Optimist club meeting. The PVFF serves communities and schools in Allen, Auglaize and Hardin counties with prevention services including abuse, suicide, alcohol/drug abuse and more. The organization was started in 2001 and the office is locations at 658 W. Market Street in Lima. (Submitted photo)

Wenzlick (10 gallons), and Kenneth Wagner (11 gallons). The next blood drive at the Delphos Eagles is on May 9, 2013. Thank you to all donors and volunteers.

Announce you or your family members birthday in our Happy Birthday column. Complete the coupon below and return it to The Delphos Herald newsroom, 405 North Main St., Delphos, OH 45833. Please use the coupon also to make changes, additions or to delete a name from the column.

COLUMN

Bonifas shares living with Tourettes with CLC

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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 Store is open for shopping. 6:30 p.m. Delphos Ladies Club, Trinity United Methodist Church. 7 p.m. Delphos Emergency Medical Service meeting, EMS building, Second Street. 7:30 p.m. Delphos Chapter 23, Order of Eastern Star, meets at the Masonic Temple, North Main Street.

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6 The Herald

Monday, April 1, 2013

Louisvilles Kevin Ware resting after surgery


The Associated Press INDIANAPOLIS Louisville guard Kevin Ware had successful surgery on his broken right leg Sunday night. Now his teammates and coaches are waiting to find out when the sophomore will return to campus Tuesday and whether he can travel with them later this week to the Final Four in Atlanta. Ware sustained a horrifying fracture in the first half of Sundays Midwest Regional final when he landed awkwardly after trying to contest a 3-point shot, breaking his leg in two places. He was taken off the court on a stretcher as his stunned teammates openly wept. A few hours later, his coach showed up at the hospital with a gift: The regional championship trophy. He was groggy, in good spirits. He saw us win the trophy and was crying and said it was all worthwhile, coach Rick Pitino told The Associated Press. We didnt cut down the net but I left him the trophy. Pitino said he and his son Richard, who recruited Ware, and an equipment manager spent the night in Indy, along with the teams doctors. School officials reported doctors reset the bone and inserted a rod into the tibia during the 2-hour procedure. Ware has played a key role in the Cardinals second straight Final Four run, scoring 11 points on 5-for-7 shooting in 25 minutes in the regional semifinal win over Oregon, and on Sunday he was the primary motivator. Before leaving the court, he called his teammates over to prod them to win the game and not worry about him, a message he continued to express at halftime. And he was eager to return to Atlanta, where he played high school basketball. For television viewers, it was a gruesome sight that prompted many to express their sentiments on social media sites. CBS even stopped showing the replay, which was not seen inside Lucas Oil Stadium. For Louisville players and coaches, it was far worse. Guard Russ Smith said he didnt see the play but heard the bone snap. And forward Chane Behanan, Wares closest friend, said the sight was almost unimaginable. Pitino, one of college basketballs top winners, thought he had seen just about everything in the sport until Wares injury. I went over and I was going to help him up and then all of a sudden, I saw what it was and I almost literally threw up, Pitino explained. Wares teammates were overcome with emotion, too. Luke Hancock patted Ware on the chest after Ware rolled himself to the sideline and right in front of the Louisville bench. Behanan and several other players sat on the floor as Ware was treated and some, including Behanan, cried. Duke guard Tyler Thornton covered his eyes when he realized what had happened and Blue Devils coach Mike Krzyzewski even told Pitino that he would agree to let the teams warm up again if they wanted. They didnt, though Pitino did summon Wares teammates so he could speak to them. His message was simple: Win the game. I said, Were going to dig in. Were going to play this game to the end. Were going to play this game to get him back home, Pitino recalled, explaining his halftime speech. Well get him back home, nurse him to good health and were going to get him to Atlanta. Louisville trainer Fred Hina told Pitino it was the same injury that derailed the Heisman Trophy hopes of running back Michael Bush, who also played at Louisville. Bush recovered from the injury and has had a productive NFL career with Oakland and Chicago. As it turned out, he was watching. I just cried, he wrote on Twitter. I feel so bad. Flashback of myself. Anyone if he needs anything please let me know. The reaction was the same everywhere. Louisville forward Wayne Blackshear fell to the floor, crying, and Behanan looked as if he was going to be sick on the court, kneeling on his hands and feet. Peyton Siva sat a few feet away, a hand covering his mouth. Someone finally pulled Behanan to his feet but he doubled over and needed a few seconds to gather himself. Condolences poured in on social media, too. Former Washington Redskins quarterback Joe Theismann, who famously sustained a broken leg on Monday Night Football in a game against the New York Giants, tweeted that Watching Duke/ Louisville my heart goes out to Kevin Ware. Louisville, the top overall seed in

SPORTS
the tourney, missed four of its next five shots but regained its composure to take a 35-32 halftime lead and went on to an 85-63 victory. Behanan switched into Wares No. 5 jersey near the end of the game.
Michigan 79, Florida 59 ARLINGTON, Texas Trey Burke grew up in the shadow of another Big Ten university. Mitch McGary was more of a baseball fan as a kid and still dreams of a World Series for the Chicago Cubs. They are now part of a new generation of fabulous young Wolverines going to the Final Four, the first for Michigan since the Fab Five two decades ago, after a dominating performance Sunday in the South Regional final. Michigan scored the games first 13 points and led by double figures the rest of the way in a 79-59 rout of Florida, the Southeastern Conference regular-season champion with a senior-filled roster and playing its third consecutive regional final. McGary scored eight points and had six rebounds in that opening spurt and is one of three freshman starters. That fast start was much different than two days earlier against top-seeded Kansas, when the No. 4 Wolverines (30-7) had to wipe out a 14-point deficit in the final 7 minutes. They forced overtime on Burkes long 3-pointer just to get to their first regional final in 19 years. Burke, a sophomore from Columbus, cheered for Buckeyes football and Duke basketball. Florida (29-8) was quickly staggering and never recovered, ending another season one victory shy of the Final Four. Coach Billy Donovans Gators havent been there since winning consecutive national titles in 2006 and 2007. Nik Stauskas scored 22 points while making all six of his 3-point attempts for Michigan. Burke, the South Regions most outstanding player and Big Ten player of the year as a sophomore, scored 15 points even while dealing with some spasms in his upper back. McGary finished with 11 points and nine rebounds. Michigan hadnt reached the Final Four since consecutive national championship game appearances in 1992 and 1993, the freshman and sophomore seasons of the Fab Five: Chris Webber, Jalen Rose, Juwan Howard, Ray Jackson and Jimmy King. Webber was gone before that teams 1994 regional final loss to Arkansas played in the nowdemolished Reunion Arena in Dallas, with Rose and Howard following him to the NBA after that. With four wins in this NCAA tourney, the Wolverines already have more tournament victories than their combined three from the end of the Fab Five era to this season. The Gators, meanwhile, are the first team to make it to three consecutive regional finals without winning at least one of them, according to STATS. Wyoming lost in the round of eight from 1947-49 but that stretch ended two years before the NCAA tournament expanded to more than eight teams. Kenny Boynton and Will Yeguete had 13 points apiece for the Gators, who missed their first seven shots. Erik Murphy, a senior like Boynton who arrived in Gainesville four years ago with hopes of getting a title of his own, was 0-for-11 shooting and had his first scoreless game since his sophomore season.

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Jefferson junior Austin Jettinghoff connects for a deep double in the first game Saturday at Wildcat Field, bringing home Ross Thompson. Jettinghoff would also score as the Wildcats grabbed a 13-5 win in the opener. However, the visiting Van Wert Cougars won the nightcap with a 15-5 triumph. (Delphos Herald/Tom Morris)

Wildcats, Cougars split opening twin-bill


By JIM METCALFE jmetcalfe@ delphosherald.com

The Associated Press American League Sundays Result Houston 8, Texas 2 Todays Games Boston at N.Y. Yankees, 1:05 p.m. Detroit at Minnesota, 4:10 p.m. Kansas City at Chicago White Sox, 4:10 p.m. L.A. Angels at Cincinnati, 4:10 p.m. Seattle at Oakland, 10:05 p.m. Tuesdays Games Baltimore (Hammel 0-0) at Tampa Bay (Price 0-0), 3:10 p.m.

NCAA WOMENS CAPSULES


Cleveland (Masterson 0-0) at Toronto (Dickey 0-0), 7:07 p.m. Texas (Darvish 0-0) at Houston (Harrell 0-0), 8:10 p.m. Seattle (Iwakuma 0-0) at Oakland (Parker 0-0), 10:05 p.m. National League Sundays Results No games scheduled Todays Games Miami at Washington, 1:05 p.m. San Diego at N.Y. Mets, 1:10 p.m.

Jennings opens with doubleheader sweep FORT JENNINGS Eric Schwab;s debut as head of the Fort Jennings baseball nine was pretty successful Saturday afternoon at Fort Jennings Village Park. They swept Lima Senior 6-1 and 12-2 in five innings. Senior right-hander Kurt Warnecke went five innings of 2-hit, 1 run ball in the opener and Mark Metzger wrapped up the combined 7-hitter. Metzger was 2-for-4 with two runs batted in to pace the Musketeers. In game 2, the Musketeers jumped all over Spartan starter Graham with three in the first and six in the second. They totaled 11 hits, led by a 2-of-3 game at the plate by Jared Hoersten (2 RBIs) and 2-for-4 by Dylan Van Loo, and nine free passes, Metzger scored three runs. Ryan Rau went the distance in a 7-hitter, fanning five and throwing 106 pitches (60 for strikes). Fort Jennings visits Elida 5 p.m. today.
Game 1 Lima Senior (1) AB R H RBI Holobaugh LF 4 1 1 0, Allen SS 2 0 0 0, Reed C 3 0 1 0, Kellum P/2B 3 0 1 1, Delgado 1B/DH 1 0 0 0, Williams DH/1B 2 0 1 0, Lawrence 3B 2 0 1 0, Graham CF 3 0 0 0, Mericle RF 3 0 0 0, Wilcutt 2B/P 3 0 2 0. Totals 26 1 7 1. Fort Jennings (6) Jared Hoersten 2B 2 0 0 0, Mark Metzger RF/P 4 1 2 2, Bret Clay SS 2 1 1 0, Spencer Dray CF 1 0 0 0, Caleb Bankey RF 0 0 0 0, Kurt Warnecke P/ SS 3 1 1 1, Ryan Rau 1B 2 0 1 0, Josh Wittler C 4 1 1 1, Alex Vetter 3B 4 0 1 0, Alex Seats DH 0 0 0 0, Connor Wallenhorst CF 2 1 1 1, Dylan Van Loo LF 3 1 1 0. Totals 27 6 9 5. Score by Innings: Lima Senior 1 0 0 0 0 0 0 - 1 7 3 Fort Jennings 0 4 0 0 2 0 x - 6 9 1 E: Graham, Mericle, Wilcutt, Clay. Lima Senior Kellum (L) 5.0 6 6 6 3 5 Wilcutt 2.0 3 0 0 3 1 Fort Jennings Warnecke (W) 5.0 2 1 1 1 3 Metzger 2.0 5 0 0 0 0 HBP: Allen (by Warnecke), Hoersten (by Kellum); WP:
IP H R ER BB SO

Warnecke 3, Kellum 2, Wilcutt. Game 2 Lima Senior (2) Holobaugh RF 2 2 0 0, Allen SS/P 3 0 1 0, Reed 1B 3 0 1 1, Kellum C 2 0 1 0, Delgado CF/SS 2 0 0 0, Williams DH 2 0 2 1, Lawrence 3B 2 0 0 0, Graham P/CF 2 0 1 0, Mericle LF 2 0 1 0, Wilcutt 2B 2 0 0 0. Totals 22 2 7 2. Fort Jennings (12) Dylan Van Loo LF 4 1 2 0, Mark Metzger C 3 3 1 1, Alex Seats 2B 2 1 1 0, Bret Clay 1 2 1 1, Kurt Warnecke 1B 3 1 1 1, Ryan Rau P 3 1 1 0, Alex Vetter 3B 2 2 1 2, Spencer Dray RF 1 0 0 0, Caleb Bankey 2 0 0 0, Connor Wallenhorst CF 2 0 1 0, Ryan Koester 0 0 0 0, Jared Hoersten SS 3 1 2 2, Alex Seats 2B 0 0 0 0. Totals 26 12 11 7. Score by Innings: Lima Senior 100 01- 2 7 1 Fort Jennings 3 6 0 0 3 - 12 11 1 E: Reed, Rau; 2B: Allen. Lima Senior Graham (L) 1.1 5 9 9 4 1 Allen 3.1 6 3 3 5 3 Fort Jennings Rau (W) 5.0 7 2 2 0 5 HBP: Kellum (by Rau), Vetter (by Graham), Lawrence (by Rau), Holobaugh (by Rau); WP: Allen; BK: Graham.
IP H R ER BB SO

LOCAL ROUNDUP

Chicago Cubs at Pittsburgh, 1:35 p.m. Colorado at Milwaukee, 2:10 p.m. L.A. Angels at Cincinnati, 4:10 p.m. San Francisco at L.A. Dodgers, 4:10 p.m. Philadelphia at Atlanta, 7:05 p.m. St. Louis at Arizona, 10:05 p.m. Tuesdays Games Colorado (De La Rosa 0-0) at Milwaukee (Estrada 0-0), 8:10 p.m. St. Louis (Garcia 0-0) at Arizona (Cahill 0-0), 9:40 p.m. San Francisco (Bumgarner 0-0) at L.A. Dodgers (Ryu 0-0), 10:10 p.m.

Perry sweeps Lady Bearcats PERRY TOWNSHIP Spencervilles varsity softball team lost a doubleheader to Perry on Saturday, 4-3 and 8-7. Both games went 8 innings. In the opener, Tori Johnston was the losing pitcher for the Bearcats, going the distance in giving up one earned run, six hits and two walks and fanning five. Perrys Abbie Patton was the winning pitcher, also going the distance in giving up three runs, eight hits and no walks; she added 11 strikeouts. Leading hitters for Spencerville were Maddy Hollar (2-4 with a double), Mackenzie Ringwald (2-4 with a triple and 2 RBIs) and Tori Johnston (a double and an RBI). Alyssa Mulholland, Hanna Keller and Abbie Lee each had a single. The Bearcats outhit Perry

8-6 but made a few very costly errors in the fourth inning to allow two unearned runs. In the second game, Alex Shumate took the loss for the Bearcats, pitching all eight innings, giving up nine hits and walking two, striking out 14. Patton picked up the win for Perry, also pitching all eight innings, giving up 17 hits and no walks, striking out six. Leading hitters for Spencerville were Hollar (3-4 with a double and 2 RBIs), Haleigh Mull (3-4 with a double), Shumate (3-4 with a double), Johnston (2-4 with a double and RBI and Mulholland (2-5, double, RBI, 2 stolen bases). Ringwald, Lee, Keller and Alli Gilroy each added a single. Perry jumped out to a quick 7-0 lead after two innings on six hits and two walks but then freshman pitcher Shumate settled in and gave up only three more hits over the next six innings while striking out 14. The Bearcat bats also woke up, out-hitting Perry 17-9 for the game. Once again, a few very costly mistakes on defense let a game slip away we could have been won, Spencerville first-year coach Jeff Johnston noted. Spencerville visits Parkway today. Lady Dawgs split softball twin-bill

knocked off the Lady Flyers 7-1. Aryanna Brown took the loss for the Lady Dawgs in the opener, walking four and striking out five. The Bulldogs scored five runs in the top of the seventh to secure the win. In the second game, freshman Michaela Black twirled a 2-hitter. She walked five and fanned 12. She also homered in both games in compiling six hits and five runs batted in her debut. Elida visits Crestview 5 p.m. Wednesday.
Game 1 Edgerton 0 0 2 1 1 2 5 - 11 10 3 Elida 3 0 0 0 1 2 1 - 7 13 3 WP: Lolonde; LP: Aryanna Brown. 2B: Edgerton (Newman, Flower, Nickells, Rowe), Elida (Aryanne Brown, Michaela Black). 3B: Edgerton (Rowe). HR: Edgerton (Lalonde), Elida (Michaela Black). RBIs: Edgerton (Nickells 2, Lalonde 2, Herman 2, Sack, Flower), Elida (Michaela Black 3, Aryanna Brown, Jenna Halpern, Caitlyn Shroyer). MULTIPLE HITS: Edgerton (Rowe 3, Nickells 2), Elida (Michaela Black 3, Sabrina Kline 3, Caitlyn Shroyer 2). Game 2 Mar. Loc. 0 0 0 0 0 1 0 - 1 2 5 Elida 3 2 1 1 0 0 x - 7 10 0 WP: Michaela Black; LP: Homan. 2B: Marion Local (Wendell), Elida (Michaela Black. Sabrina Kline, Ericka Smith). HR: Elida (Michaela Black). RBIs: Elida (Sabrina Kline 3, Michaela Black 2, Ericka Smith, Kylee Makin). MULTIPLE HITS: Elida (Michaela Black 3, Sabrina Kline 2). -

Versailles Lady Tiger Classique

ELIDA Elidas fastpitch softball unit split a pair of games at its own quadrangular with Crestview, Marion Local and Edgerton to open the season Saturday afternoon at Dorothy Edwards Field. The Lady Dawgs lost 13-7 to Edgerton and then

Results (10-8-6-5-4-3-2-1): Orange Team Rankings: Russia 139.50, Spencerville 130.50, Covington 100, Botkins 66, Franklin Monroe 55, Crestview 39, Bradford and New Knoxville 35, Newton Local 33, Ansonia 25. Black Team Rankings: Minster 188, W. LibertySalem 127, Marion Local 110, Versailles 87, Greenville 67.50, St. Henry 21, New Bremen 19, Houston 16, Versailles B 15, Arcanum 11.50. 4x800 Meter Relay Orange: 1. Russia 10:33.85; 2. Spencerville 10:57.20; 3. Covington 11:10.60; 4. Bradford 12:17.12; 5. Ansonia 12:27.44; 6. Botkins 12:49.90; 7. Crestview 12:52.04; 8. Newton Local 14:02.64.

See ROUNDUP page 7

DELPHOS Jefferson and Van Wert opened the 2013 baseball regular season with a doubleheader on a nice Saturday afternoon at Wildcat Field in Delphos. The host Wildcats used 16 bases-on-balls against three Van Wert left-handers, including starter Andrew Todd, to grab a 13-5 victory in the opener that took two hours and 50 minutes. In the nightcap, the Cougars averted the sweep with a 15-5, 6-inning triumph. The game was moved from Van Werts home field due to wet conditions. A 10-run inning in the bottom of the fourth in the first game put the Wildcats (1-1) up 13-5. Drew Kortokrax (1-0) went four innings, ceding four hits and five runs (4 earned), walking two and fanning eight. He also went 2-for-3 at the plate, knocking in three. Jordan Herron threw the last three frames and struck out four. Austin Jettinghoff went 4-for-4 with four runs batted in and three runs scored, while Zavier Buzard was 2-for-4 with two RBIs. Leadoff man Ross Thompson walked four times and scored twice. With the first game beginning in brilliant sunshine, the Cougars went up 2-0 in the top of the first against Kortokrax (4 innings, 4 hits, 5 runs, 4 earned, 2 walks, 8 Ks) on a leadoff infield hit by Joey Hurless, a stolen base, a Nathan Stoller sacrifice, a solid 2-base knock to left center by Brandt Henry that scored Hurless and two misplayed grounders (Terin Contreras and Tyler Williams) that plated Henry. The Wildcats tied it up right away against Todd (3 1/3 IPs, 6 hits, 5 earned runs, 5 walks, 4 Ks). Thompson walked, stole second and scored on a double to left by Jettinghoff. He moved up on a wild pitch and after Zach Kimmett walked, Kortokrax lined a shot up the gut to plate Jettinghoff for a 2-2 tie. Jefferson went up 3-2 in the second. With one down, Gage Townsend-Schleeter hit a sharp single to left and stole second. Thompson walked but was eliminated on a grounder by Zach Ricker that put TownsendSchleeter at third, from where he scored on a bloop to center by Jettinghoff. Stoller was hit by a pitch to commence the third inning and stole second with one out but was left there. The Wildcats left the bases loaded (2-out infield hit by Buzard, a walk to Seth Wollenhaupt and a wild pitch on a third strike to TownsendSchleeter) in the third, three of 14 Cats were left stranded. Van Wert went back up 5-3 in the fourth. Todd walked and an out later, Kevin Agler walked. Sean Miller doubled to right center that scored pinch-runner Justice Tussing. Hurless bounced out to short to score Agler and put Miller at third, from where he scored

on a grounder to left by Stoller. The Wildcats then sent 16 to the plate in the bottom half. They pieced together four hits and nine walks against three pitchers. With one out, Jettinghoff walked and Kimmett doubled to deep right, chasing Todd for Henry (0-1; 1/3 innings, 4 hits, 8 earned runs, 7 walks). He faced nine batters, retiring only one. Kortokrax greeted him with a 2-run triple to right center to tie the game at 5. Tyler Wrasman walked. Buzard sharply singled to left to score Kortokrax. Wollenhaupt walked to load the bases. An out later, Thompson and Ricker walked to score Wrasman and Buzard. Jettinghoff hit a sinking liner to center that fell for a hit to plate Wollenhaupt and Thompson for a 10-5 lead, putting runners on the corners. Jettinghoff stole second and a wild pitch scored Ricker. Kimmett walked and stole second. Kortokrax and Wrasman walked to force in Jettinghoff for a 12-5 lead and end Henrys time on the mound, bringing in Ryan Stoller (2 1/2 IPs, 2 hits, 4 walks, 3 Ks). He walked Buzard to score Kimmett but finally got the third out. Herron came on in the top of the fifth and put together three straight 1-2-3 innings, fanning four. The Red and White left a pair of runners on in each of the next two innings but could not add more runs to their total. In the nightcap, with more overcast skies, an 8-run fourth frame put the Cougars in the drivers seat. The Cougars compiled 13 hits and seven walks against four Jefferson hurlers, including starter Thompson (0-1). The left-handed Hurless (1-0) got the win with 3 1/3 innings of starting pitching (3 hits, 5 runs, 3 earned, 10 walks, 6 Ks). He also went 4-for-4, scoring four times, knocking in two RBIs and stealing three bases. Williams went 3-for-4 (2 runs, 2 RBIs), Todd 2-for-3 (2 RBIs) and Nathan Stoller 2-for-3 (2 RBIs). Kortokrax went 2-for-2 (2 doubles) with two RBIs. The Cougars went up 3-0 in the top of the first against Thompson (2 IPs, 8 hits, 5 earned runs, 1 BB, 1 K). Hurless doubled to left center, moved up on a wild pitch and scored on a single to right by N. Stoller. He was eliminated on Henrys grounder and Henry stole second. He scored as Williams singled to center and the batter took second on the throw home. Contreras walked. An out later, Todd grounded a hit into center that plated Williams for a 3-0 edge. The Wildcats answered with two in the bottom half. Thompson walked to lead it off. Ricker singled to left. Jettinghoff bounced into a double play that put Thompson at third. Kimmett walked. Kortokrax doubled to deep right to score Thompson; See WILDCATS, page 7

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Monday, April 1, 2013

The Herald 7

Wildcats

Roundup
walked. An out later, Buzard grounded to short and in the process of Van Wert trying to turn a double play, Kortokrax was called for interference, ending the game. We showed good patience at the plate in both games. We fell behind both games, which is not what you want to do; we battled back the first game but we couldnt the second, Jefferson coach Doug Geary said. Its a long day for the opener. Its nice to get some games in and see what we need to work on. We didnt get a lot of hits but we were disciplined at the plate; we didnt swing at a lot of bad pitches. Van Wert coach Charlie Witten was just happy to get on the field. This is really the first day weve been able to get on the field, so it wasnt bad, Witten added. I didnt like how we walked so many batters, so that is an area we have to work on. Still, it was the first live batters weve faced this year. I like how we came back in the second game. Both teams return to the diamond Monday: Jefferson hosting Kalida and Van Wert hosting Spencerville.
Game 1 VAN WERT (5) ab-r-h-rbi Joey Hurless cf 4-1-1-1, Nathan Stoller ss 1-0-1-1, Jacob Braun ph 1-0-0-0, Brandt Henry lf/p 3-11-1, Ryan Stoller p 1-0-0-0, Terin Contreras 3b 3-0-0-0, Tyler Williams rf 3-0-0-0, Andrew Todd p/1b 2-0-0-0, Justice Tussing pr 0-1-0-0, Mason Krugh 2b 3-0-0-0, Kevin Agler 1b 1-10-0, Jacob Hoverman lf 1-0-0-0, Sean Miller c 3-1-1-1. Totals 26-5-4-4. JEFFERSON (13) ab-r-h-rbi Ross Thompson ss/3b 1-2-0-1, Zach Ricker 3b/1b 3-1-1-1, Austin Jettinghoff c/ss 4-3-4-4, Zach Kimmett 1b/c 3-2-1-0, Drew Kortokrax p 3-1-2-3, Jordan Herron p 1-0-0-0, Tyler Wrasman 2b 2-1-0-1, Tyler Rice ph/2b 1-0-1-0, Zavier Buzard cf 4-1-22, Seth Wollenhaupt lf 2-1-0-0, Dylan Haehn rf 0-0-0-0, Gage TownsendSchleeter rf/lf 5-1-1-0. Totals 29-1311-12. Score by Innings: Van Wert 2 0 0 3 00 Jefferson 2 1 0 (10) 0 0 0- 5 x - 13

(Continued from Page 6)

(Continued from Page 6)


4x800 Meter Relay Black: 1. Minster 10:23.19; 2. W. LibertySalem 10:26.23; 3. St. Henry 11:03.20; 4. Houston 11:09.82; 5. Versailles 11:13.26; 6. Marion Local 11:15.00; 7. New Bremen 11:22.32; 8. Greenville 11:26.67. 100 Meter Hurdles Orange: 1. Siefring (CO) 15.65; 2. LaFollette (BR) 16.15; 3. Francis (RU) 16.42; 4. Horstman (NK) 17.06; 5. Shook (AN) 17.21; 6. Bornhorst (BO) 18.12; 7. Schylar Miller (SV) 18.17; 8. Darrian Hoerig (CV) 18.26. 100 Meter Hurdles Black: 1. Rabenstein (WL) 17.75; 2. Richard (MI) 18.23; 3. Foreman (GR) 18.38; 4. Meiring (MI) 18.73; 5. Pierron (ML) 18.77; 6. Francis (VE) 19.00; 7. Berning (ML) 19.25; 8. Platfoot (VE) 19.27. 100 Meter Dash Orange: 1. Manning (FM) 13.67; 2. Cavender (NL) 14.29; 3. Katie Merriman (SV) 14.65; 4. Claire Zaleski (CV) 14.80; 5. Beacom (NL) 14.82; 6. Bornhorst (RU) 14.85; 7. Barlage (RU) 14.92; 8. Fortner (CO) 14.97. 100 Meter Dash Black: 1. Freyhof (WL) 13.20; 2. Keller (GR) 13.45; 3. Barga (MI) 13.62; 4. Stewart (MI) 14.09; 5. Keihl (VE) 14.14; 6. Momon (HO) 14.36; 7. Wuebker (MI) 14.59; 8. Fear (NB) 14.69. 4x200 Meter Relay Orange: 1. Spencerville 1:56.09; 2. Russia 1:58.87; 3. Botkins 1:59.37; 4. Newton Local 2:02.63; 5. Franklin Monroe 2:03.36; 6. Crestview 2:04.55. 4x200 Meter Relay Black: 1. Minster 1:52.64; 2. Marion Local 1:53.20; 3. Versailles 1:53.84; 4. W. Liberty-Salem 1:54.65; 5. Versailles B 1:58.82; 6. Greenville 2:01.22; 7. Arcanum 2:01.58; 8. St. Henry 2:03.00. 1,600 Meter Run Orange: 1. Shell (CO) 5:31.01; 2. Borchers (RU) 5:35.28; 3. Francis (RU) 5:37.20; 4. Boyle (NK) 5:43.27; 5. Snipes (CO) 5:51.55; 6. Tori Hardesty (SV) 5:57.97; 7. Privette (NK) 6:04.66; 8. Cierra Adams (SV) 6:11.65. 1,600 Meter Run Black: 1. Vogel (WL) 5:27.19; 2. Slonkosky (MI) 5:42.26; 3. Smith (WL) 5:55.79; 4. Karns (GR) 5:59.19; 5. Barlage (MI) 5:59.51; 6. Grow (VE) 6:00.18; 7. Burke (MI) 6:04.06; 8. Grilliot (VE) 6:05.87. Girls 4x100 Meter Relay Orange: 1. Franklin Monroe 55.34; 2. Russia 56.23; 3. Newton Local 57.39; 4. Spencerville 57.63; 5. Crestview 59.80; 6. Covington 59.88; 7. Botkins 64.73. 4x100 Meter Relay Black: 1. W. Liberty-Salem 53.68; 2. Greenville 53.86; 3. Marion Local 54.06; 4. Versailles 54.19; 5. Versailles B 56.43; 6. St. Henry 58.73; 7. New Bremen 59.40; 8. Arcanum 59.86. 400 Meter Dash Orange: 1. Heaton (RU) 61.49; 2. Kacie Mulholland (SV) 62.96; 3. Heuker (BO) 66.34; 4. Claire Zaleski (CV) 66.69; 5. Voisard (RU) 68.53; 6. Dues (RU) 69.11; 7. Leslie Skelton (CV) 71.26; 8. Wise (NL) 1:20.62. 400 Meter Dash Black: 1. Barga (MI) 64.48; 2. Hemmelgarn (ML) 65.66; 3. Winner (VE) 66.13; 4. Wuebker (MI) 66.25; 5. Thomas (WL) 66.41; 6. Berning (ML) 67.65; 7. Monnin (VE) 67.90; 8. Karg (WL) 69.82. 300 Meter Hurdles Orange: 1. Siefring (CO) 47.94; 2. Jaycee Grisby (SV) 50.90; 3. Horstman (NK) 51.38; 4. Bornhorst (BO) 51.78; 5. Francis (RU) 54.47; 6. Jenna Kahle (SV) 55.87; 7. Cavender (NL) 56.24; 8. Sherman (RU) 56.92. 300 Meter Hurdles Black: 1. Enneking (MI) 49.78; 2. Meiring (MI) 51.55; 3. Rabenstein (WL) 51.87; 4. Berning (ML) 54.24; 5. Richard (MI) 54.92; 6. Pierron (ML) 55.67; 7. Francis (VE) 56.52. 800 Meter Run Orange: 1. Flora (BO) 2:31.01; 2. Kari Purdy (SV) 2:32.38; 3. Snipes (CO) 2:33.13; 4. Borchers (RU) 2:36.38; 5. Heaton (RU) 2:48.54; 6. Brewer (BR) 2:53.88; 7. Guckes (BO) 2:54.95; 8. Caitlin Wurst (SV) 2:55.37. Girls 800 Meter Run Black: 1.

an error on the play allowed Kimmett to score for a 3-2 scoreboard. However, two runners were left stranded, two of The 11 they left on base in the second game. The visitors went up 5-2 in the second. With one out, Hurless lined a shot up the gut, stole the next two bases and scored on a 2-out 2-bagger to the base of the fence in left by Henry. A wild pitch put Henry at third and he scored on a line single to right by Williams for that 5-2 edge. The Wildcats got within 5-3 in the second. With one down, Townsend-Schleeter walked and Thompson was safe on an error. Both runners stole the next base, with an error on the throw to third allowing Townsend-Schleeter to score. Thompson advanced to third on a wild pitch. An out later, Jettinghoff walked but he was eliminated on a grounder by Kimmett to end the threat. Todd greeted Jefferson reliever Ricker (1 1/3 IPs, 3 hits, 6 runs, 3 earned, 4 BBs, 1 K) with a single to center to start the third but a Buzard-Thompson-Wrasman relay got him at second. The Wildcats left the bases juiced in the home half leadoff walk to Kortokrax (and two stolen bases), 1-out walks to Buzard (advancing to second on a wild pitch) and Herron. The Cougars then put together that 8-run frame in the fourth. Hurless led off with a bunt single and N. Stoller singled. Henry laid down a sacrifice bunt. A wild pitch plated Hurless and moved Stoller up to third. Williams walked. A misplayed grounder hit by Contreras scored Stoller and put runners on the corners. Back-to-back-toback free passes to Tussing, Todd and Ryan Stoller plated Williams and Contreras for a 9-3 lead and ended the pitching of Ricker, bringing in Jettinghoff (1 2/3 IPs, 2 hits, 2 unearned runs, 2 Ks). An out later, Hurless singled to right to score Tussing and Todd and put R. Stoller at third; the throw home sent Hurless to second. Both runners scored on a misplayed grounder hit by N. Stoller for a 13-3 edge. In the fourth, Ricker walked to start and Jettinghoff was hit by a pitch. An out hence, Kortokrax whacked a double to deep center that scored Ricker and put Jettinghoff at third. Wrasman walked to finish Hurless on the mound, with Mason Krugh taking over (2 2/3 IPs, 1 hit, 2 BBs). Buzard greeted him with a fly ball to left that scored Jettinghoff. After a wild pitch advanced Kortokrax and Wrasman up a base, Herron walked to load the bases. Krugh recorded the third out to end the uprising and keep the score at 13-5, Van Wert. Van Wert stranded Williams on third in the fifth. The Cougars got their final two runs in the sixth against fourth pitcher Wrasman. R. Stoller walked to lead it off and a misplayed grounder hit by pinch-hitter Mason Krugh allowed everyone to be safe. Hurless laid down a sacrifice bunt and all runners were safe on an error on the play. N. Stoller walked to send R. Stoller home and Henry flied out to right to score Krugh for a 15-5 score. Kimmett led off the bottom half with a double down the right-field line and Kortokrax

E: Thompson 2, Hurless; LOB: Van Wert 4, Jefferson 14; 2B: Henry, Jettinghoff, Kimmett; 3B: Kortokrax; SB: Hurless, N. Stoller, Thompson, Jettinghoff, Kimmett, TownsendSchleeter; Sac: N. Stoller. IP H R ER BB SO VAN WERT Todd (L, 0-1) 3.1 6 5 5 5 4 Henry 0.1 4 8 8 7 0 R. Stoller 2.1 2 0 0 4 3 JEFFERSON Kortokrax (W, 1-0) 4.0 4 5 4 2 8 Herron 3.0 0 0 0 0 4 WP: Todd 3, Henry; HBP: N. Stoller (by Kortokrax). -----Game 2 VAN WERT (15) ab-r-h-rbi Joey Hurless p/cf 4-4-4-2, Nathan Stoller ss 3-1-2-2, Brandt Henry cf/ lf 3-2-1-2, Tyler Williams rf 4-2-3-2, Terin Contreras 3b 4-1-1-0, Justice Tussing 2b 3-1-0-0, Andrew Todd 1b 3-1-2-2, Ryan Stoller c 2-2-0-1, Cody Keirns dh 3-0-0-0, Mason Krugh 2b/ ph 1-1-0-0. Totals 30-15-13-11. JEFFERSON (5) ab-r-h-rbi Ross Thompson p/ss/c 3-1-00, Zach Ricker 1b/p 3-1-1-0, Austin Jettinghoff ss/c/p/2b 2-1-0-0, Zach Kimmett c/ph 1-1-1-0, Tyler Rice ph/1b 2-0-0-0, Drew Kortokrax dh 2-0-2-2, Tyler Wrasman 2b/p 2-0-00, Zavier Buzard cf 2-0-0-0, Jordan Herron 3b 1-0-0-0, Gage TownsendSchleeter lf 2-1-0-0. Totals 20-5-4-3. Score by Innings: Van Wert 3 2 0 8 0 2 - 15 Jefferson 2 1 0 2 0 0 - 5 E: N. Stoller, Williams, R. Stoller, Jettinghoff, Wrasman, Herron; DP: Van Wert 2; LOB: Van Wert 8, Jefferson 11; 2B: Kortokrax 2, Hurless, Henry, Kimmett; SB: Hurless 3, Kortokrax 2, N. Stoller, Henry, Thompson, Townsend-Schleeter; Sac: Hurless, Henry; SF: Henry, Buzard. IP H R ER BB SO VAN WERT Hurless (W, 1-0) 3.1 3 5 3 10 6 Krugh 2.2 1 0 0 2 0 JEFFERSON Thompson (L, 0-1) 2.0 8 5 5 1 1 Ricker 1.1 3 6 3 4 1 Jettinghoff 1.2 2 2 0 0 2 Wrasman 1.0 0 2 0 2 0 WP: Thompson 2, Hurless, Krugh, Ricker, Jettinghoff; HBP: Jettinghoff (by Hurless); PB: Thompson.

Vogel (WL) 2:26.79; 2. Fausey (MI) 2:33.40; 3. Arnold (MI) 2:40.26; 4. Hayes (GR) 2:41.27; 5. Brackman (NB) 2:42.04; 6. Heitkamp (ML) 2:42.06; 7. Smith (WL) 2:43.91; 8. Langenkamp (SH) 2:44.23. 200 Meter Dash Orange: 1. Siefring (CO) 27.36; 2. Kacie Mulholland (SV) 28.53; 3. Claire Zaleski (CV) 30.81; 4. Bornhorst (RU) 30.93; 5. Guckes (BO) 31.11; 6. Tebics (NL) 31.51; 7. Fortner (CO) 31.73; 8. Woodruff (BO) 31.91. 200 Meter Dash Black: 1. Freyhof (WL) 28.92; 2. Dahlinghaus (MI) 29.08; 3. Jutte (MI) 29.35; 4. Homan (ML) 30.10; 5. Thomas (WL) 30.39; 6. Hemmelgarn (VE) 30.55; 7. Adams (NB) 30.95; 8. Luttmer (SH) 31.59. 3,200 Meter Run Orange: 1. Shell (CO) 12:05.23; 2. Francis (RU) 12:12.73; 3. Boyle (NK) 12:34.61; 4. Cierra Adams (SV) 12:37.68; 5. Kearns (RU) 12:38.35; 6. Privette (NK) 13:10.93; 7. Tori Hardesty (SV) 13:25.78; 8. Meyer (RU) 14:13.25. 3,200 Meter Run Black: 1. Bornhorst (MI) 12:46.66; 2. Hooks (HO) 12:56.72; 3. Strickland (WL) 12:57.90; 4. Kunk (SH) 12:59.14; 5. Henault (WL) 13:01.14; 6. Wenig (VE) 13:01.24; 7. Grilliot (VE) 13:09.40; 8. Schulze (SH) 13:13.65. 4x400 Meter Relay Orange: 1. Spencerville 4:25.31; 2. Russia 4:28.65; 3. Botkins 4:32.70; 4. Crestview 4:52.42; 5. Covington 5:00.15; 6. Ansonia 5:17.96; 7. Newton Local 5:49.85. 4x400 Meter Relay Black: 1. Minster 4:17.62; 2. Marion Local 4:24.32; 3. Versailles 4:34.89; 4. W. Liberty-Salem 4:38.17; 5. Versailles B 4:40.79; 6. St. Henry 4:50.72; 7. New Bremen 4:51.30; 8. Greenville 4:52.62. Shot Put Orange: 1. Abby Freewalt (SV) 33-4.50; 2. Greve (BO) 30-1; 3. LaFollette (BR) 29-4.25; 4. Katie Merriman (SV) 28-5; 5. Schaar (FM) 28-1.50; 6. Doseck (BO) 27-7.50; 7. Bekka Tracey (CV) 27-6.75; 8. Fig (FM) 27-3. Shot Put Black: 1. Eiting (MI) 34-5.50; 2. Bruns (VE) 33-9; 3. Gantz (WL) 33-2.50; 4. Mescher (ML) 30-5; 5. Kensinger (GR) 30-1; 6. Lawrence (VE) 29-6.75; 7. Jones (NB) 29-6; 8. Schemmel, Kendra 11 Marion Local 29-5. Discus Orange: 1. Beth Griffin (SV) 99-2; 2. Rindler (CO) 98-3; 3. Counts (BO) 95-11; 4. Megan Miller (SV) 86-4; 5. Thwaits (AN) 83-10; 6. Schaar (FM) 83-2; 7. Abby Freewalt (SV) 82-6; 8. Courtney (NL) 80-0. Discus Black: 1. Bruns (VE) 110-6; 2. Chrisman (ML) 106-4; 3. ODonnell (AR) 94-3; 4. Schemmel (ML) 93-4; 5. Maurer (NB) 92-2; 6. Reed (VE B) 90-10; 7. Meyer (ML) 90-6; 8. McGowan (MI) 90-0. Long Jump Orange: 1. Siefring (CO) 16-3.50; 2. Horstman (NK) 15-1.50; 3. LaFollette (BR) 14-8; 4. Voisard (RU) 13-7; 5. Lucas (FM) 13-5.75; 6. Sherman (RU) 13-2.75; 7. Fortner (CO) 12-9.75; 8. Shellabarger (FM) 12-8.75. Long Jump Black: 1. Thobe (ML) 16-3; 2. Francis (MI) 15-0; 3. Jutte (MI) 14-11.50; 4. Keller (GR) 14-10; 5. Shimp (VE) 13-8.25; 6. McGowan (MI) 13-7.75; 7. Etgen (WL) 13-7.50; 8. Hemmelgarn (ML) 13-2.25. High Jump Orange: 1. York (RU) 5-0; 2. (tie) LaFollette (BR) and Borchers (RU) 4-10; 4. Hartzell (FM) 4-8; 5. Paige Michael (CV) 4-6; 6. Jaycee Grisby (SV) 4-6; 7. (tie) Kari Purdy (SV) and Poling (RU) 4-4. High Jump Black: 1. Kramer (ML) 5-0; 2. Guillozet (GR) 4-10; 3. Bey (VE) 4-8; 4. Wehrman (MI) 4-8; 5. (tie) Monnin (VE), V. Francis (VE), McGowan (MI) and M. Francis (MI) 4-6. Pole Vault Orange: 1. Shook (AN) 11-0; 2. Lucas (FM) 9-0; 3. Schylar Miller (SV) 8-6; 4. Kreitzer (FM) 7-6; 5. Snyder (CO) 7-6; 6. Poling (RU) 7-0; 7. York (RU) 6-6; 8. Buehler (BO) 6-6. Pole Vault Black: 1. Hemmelgarn (ML) 10-6; 2. Kolling (GR) 10-0; 3. (tie) Etgen (WL) and Keller (GR) 9-6; 5. Heckman (MI) 8-0; 6. (tie) Markin (WL) and Cetnar (AR 7-6; 8. Huelsman (MI) 7-6.

The Associated Press MEN NCAA EAST REGIONAL At The Verizon Center, Washington S a t u r d a y s Regional Championship Result Syracuse 55, Marquette 39 SOUTH REGIONAL At Cowboys Stadium, Arlington, Texas Sundays Regional Championship Result Michigan 79, Florida 59 MIDWEST REGIONAL At Lucas Oil Stadium, Indianapolis Sundays Regional Championship Result Louisville 85, Duke 63 WEST REGIONAL At The Staples Center, Los Angeles S a t u r d a y s Regional Championship Result Wichita State 70, Ohio State 66 FINAL FOUR At The Georgia Dome, Atlanta National Semifinals Saturdays Games Louisville (33-5) vs. Wichita State (30-8), 6 p.m. Michigan (30-7) vs. Syracuse (309), 8:30 p.m. National Invitation Tournament At Madison Square Garden, New York Tuesdays Semifinals BYU (24-11) vs. Baylor (21-14), 7 p.m. Maryland (25-12) vs. Iowa (24-12), 9:30 p.m. CollegeInsider.com Tournament Saturdays Semifinal Results East Carolina 81, Evansville 58 Weber State 59, Northern Iowa 56 Tuesdays Championship East Carolina (22-12) vs. Weber State (30-6), 8 p.m. College Basketball Invitational Championship Series (Best-of-3) (x-if necessary) Todays Game George Mason (21-14) at Santa Clara (24-11), 10 p.m. Wednesdays Game Santa Clara at George Mason, 7 p.m. Division II

TOURNEY GLANCE

The Associated Press EASTERN CONFERENCE Atlantic Division W L x-New York 46 26 x-Brooklyn 42 31 Boston 38 35 Philadelphia 30 43 Toronto 27 46 Southeast Division W L z-Miami 58 15 x-Atlanta 41 33 Washington 27 46 Orlando 19 55 Charlotte 17 56 Central Division W L x-Indiana 47 27 x-Chicago 40 32 Milwaukee 35 37 Detroit 24 50 Cleveland 22 50 WESTERN CONFERENCE Southwest Division W L x-San Antonio 55 18 x-Memphis 49 24 Houston 40 33 Dallas 36 37 New Orleans 26 48 Northwest Division W L x-Oklahoma City 54 20

NBA GLANCE
Pct .639 .575 .521 .411 .370 Pct .795 .554 .370 .257 .233 Pct .635 .556 .486 .324 .306 Pct .753 .671 .548 .493 .351 Pct .730 GB 4 1/2 8 1/2 16 1/2 19 1/2 GB 17 1/2 31 39 1/2 41 GB 6 11 23 24 GB 6 15 19 29 1/2 GB x-Denver Utah Portland Minnesota Pacific Division x-L.A. Clippers Golden State L.A. Lakers Sacramento Phoenix 50 38 33 26 W 49 42 38 27 23

At Louisville, Ky. Saturdays Semifinal Results Metro State 83, West Liberty 76 Drury 107, Western Washington 97 At Atlanta Sundays Championship Metro State vs. Drury, 4 p.m. --------WOMEN NCAA OKLAHOMA CITY REGIONAL Oklahoma City Sundays Regional Semifinal Results Tennessee 74, Oklahoma 59 Louisville 82, Baylor 81 Tu e s d a y s Regional Championship Tennessee (27-7) vs. Louisville (278), 9 p.m. SPOKANE REGIONAL Spokane, Wash. Saturdays Regional Semifinal Results Georgia 61, Stanford 59 California 73, LSU 63 Todays Regional Championship Georgia (28-6) vs. California (31-3), 9:30 p.m. NORFOLK REGIONAL Norfolk, Va. Sundays Regional Semifinal Results Notre Dame 93, Kansas 63 Duke 53, Nebraska 45 Tu e s d a y s Regional Championship Notre Dame (34-1) vs. Duke (33-2), 7 p.m. BRIDGEPORT REGIONAL Bridgeport, Conn. Saturdays Regional Semifinal Results Kentucky 69, Delaware 62 Connecticut 76, Maryland 50 Todays Regional Championship Kentucky (30-5) vs. Connecticut (32-4), 7:30 p.m. National Invitation Tournament Saturdays Quarterfinal Results Florida 85, James Madison 80 Utah 58, Saint Marys (Cal) 55 Kansas State 66, Illinois 48 Drexel 56, Auburn 43 Wednesdays Semifinals Florida (28-8) at Drexel (26-10), 7 p.m. Utah (22-13) at Kansas State (1917), 8 p.m. Womens Basketball Invitational Saturdays Championship Result Detroit 73, McNeese State 62

24 36 40 46 L 25 32 36 47 51

.676 .514 .452 .361 Pct .662 .568 .514 .365 .311

4 16 20 1/2 27 GB 7 11 22 26

The Associated Press American League Sundays Result Houston 8, Texas 2 Todays Games Boston at N.Y. Yankees, 1:05 p.m. Detroit at Minnesota, 4:10 p.m. Kansas City at Chicago White Sox, 4:10 p.m. L.A. Angels at Cincinnati, 4:10 p.m. Seattle at Oakland, 10:05 p.m. Tuesdays Games Baltimore (Hammel 0-0) at Tampa Bay (Price 0-0), 3:10 p.m. Cleveland (Masterson 0-0) at Toronto (Dickey 0-0), 7:07 p.m. Texas (Darvish 0-0) at Houston (Harrell 0-0), 8:10 p.m. Seattle (Iwakuma 0-0) at Oakland (Parker 0-0), 10:05 p.m. National League Sundays Results

MLB GAMES

No games scheduled Todays Games Miami at Washington, 1:05 p.m. San Diego at N.Y. Mets, 1:10 p.m. Chicago Cubs at Pittsburgh, 1:35 p.m. Colorado at Milwaukee, 2:10 p.m. L.A. Angels at Cincinnati, 4:10 p.m. San Francisco at L.A. Dodgers, 4:10 p.m. Philadelphia at Atlanta, 7:05 p.m. St. Louis at Arizona, 10:05 p.m. Tuesdays Games Colorado (De La Rosa 0-0) at Milwaukee (Estrada 0-0), 8:10 p.m. St. Louis (Garcia 0-0) at Arizona (Cahill 0-0), 9:40 p.m. San Francisco (Bumgarner 0-0) at L.A. Dodgers (Ryu 0-0), 10:10 p.m.

The Associated Press EASTERN CONFERENCE Atlantic Division GP W L OT Pts GF GA Pittsburgh 36 28 8 0 56 123 84 New Jersey 35 15 11 9 39 88 97 N.Y. Rangers 34 16 15 3 35 78 84 N.Y. Islanders 35 16 16 3 35 100 112 Philadelphia 35 15 17 3 33 95 108 Northeast Division GP W L OT Pts GF GA Montreal 34 22 7 5 49 107 83 Boston 34 22 8 4 48 97 75 Ottawa 35 19 10 6 44 89 76 Toronto 36 20 12 4 44 112 100 Buffalo 36 13 17 6 32 94 113 Southeast Division GP W L OT Pts GF GA Winnipeg 36 18 16 2 38 89 106 Carolina 33 16 15 2 34 92 97 Washington 35 16 17 2 34 102 101 Tampa Bay 34 15 18 1 31 110 103 Florida 36 11 19 6 28 88 125 WESTERN CONFERENCE Central Division GP W L OT Pts GF GA Chicago 34 26 5 3 55 116 74 Detroit 35 17 13 5 39 91 92 Columbus 36 15 14 7 37 87 97 St. Louis 33 17 14 2 36 94 93 Nashville 35 14 14 7 35 87 96 Northwest Division

NHL GLANCE
GP Minnesota 34 Vancouver 35 Edmonton 34 Calgary 33 Colorado 34 Pacific Division GP Anaheim 35 Los Angeles 35 San Jose 34 Dallas 34 Phoenix 35

x-clinched playoff spot z-clinched conference Sundays Results New Orleans 112, Cleveland 92 Washington 109, Toronto 92 Chicago 95, Detroit 94 Miami 88, San Antonio 86 New York 108, Boston 89 Todays Games Detroit at Toronto, 7 p.m. Cleveland at Atlanta, 7:30 p.m. Orlando at Houston, 8 p.m. San Antonio at Memphis, 8 p.m. Boston at Minnesota, 8 p.m. Charlotte at Milwaukee, 8 p.m. Portland at Utah, 9 p.m. Indiana at L.A. Clippers, 10:30 p.m. Tuesdays Games Chicago at Washington, 7 p.m. New York at Miami, 8 p.m. Dallas at L.A. Lakers, 10:30 p.m.

W 21 19 14 13 12 W 23 20 17 16 14

L OT Pts GF GA 11 2 44 97 86 10 6 44 92 90 13 7 35 87 95 16 4 30 93 114 18 4 28 84 108 L OT Pts GF GA 7 5 51 107 90 12 3 43 103 88 11 6 40 85 84 15 3 35 94 103 15 6 34 94 101

NOTE: Two points for a win, one point for overtime loss. Sundays Results Chicago 7, Detroit 1 Philadelphia 5, Washington 4, OT Los Angeles 3, Dallas 2 Columbus 2, Anaheim 1, OT Boston 2, Buffalo 0 Todays Games N.Y. Islanders at New Jersey, 7 p.m. Winnipeg at N.Y. Rangers, 7 p.m. Carolina at Montreal, 7:30 p.m. Colorado at Detroit, 7:30 p.m. St. Louis at Minnesota, 8 p.m. Nashville at Chicago, 8:30 p.m. Anaheim at Dallas, 8:30 p.m. Calgary at Edmonton, 9:30 p.m. Vancouver at San Jose, 10:30 p.m.

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week at a time. Includes display setup, tear down, working the show and 8 The Herald Monday, April 1, 2013 driving. Good communication skills, sales expeTHE 592 Wanted 720 Handyman 080 Help Wanted to Buy rience and farm equipment knowledge helpful, but not required. Position Telling The Tri-CountysHOMETOWN Story Since 1869 HANDYMAN A-Z is part-time and seaTo place an ad phone 419-695-0015 SERVICES ext. 122 sonal. Send resume to www.delphosherald.com doors & windows Hthe uman Resources, FREE ADS: 5 days free if item is free THANKS TO ST. JUDE: Runs 1 day at Minimum Charge: 15 words, Deadlines: decks 13540 Spencerville Rd., $3.00. plumbing or less than $50. Only 1 item per ad, 1 price of 2 times - $9.00 11:30 a.m. for the next days issue. GARAGE SALES: roofing Each day is $.20 per ad per month. drywall Spencerville, OH 45887 280 word 210 Child Care Work Each isWanted $.30 2-5 days105 Announcements Gold, Gold REPLIES: $8.00 if Jewelry, you come word. $8.00 minimum charge. Saturdays paper is 11:00 a.m. Friday BOX Scrap concrete or call 800-368-7773 ext. $.25 6-9 days Silver coins, Silverware, I WILL NOT BE RESPONSIBLE FOR and pick them up. $14.00 if we have to Mondays paper is 1:00 p.m. Friday Complete remodel. $.20 10+ days Ad must be placed in person by send them to you. 153. Pocket Watches, Diamonds. DEBTS: ADVERTISERS: YOU ARE YOU looking for a Herald Extra is 11 a.m. Thursday whose name will appear in the ad. CARD OF THANKS: $2.00 base the person Each word is $.10 for 3 months 567-356-7471 2330 Shawnee Rd. Must show ID & pay when placing ad. Regucharge + $.10 for each word. can place a 25 word child care provider in or more prepaid We accept lar rates apply classified ad in more your area? Let us help. Lima than 100 newspapers Call YWCA Child Care (419) 229-2899 Auto Parts and 810 BUILDING with over one and a half Resource and Referral Accessories MAINTENACE Interior, Exterior, Residential, million total circulation at: 1-800-992-2916 or Commercial, Decks, Fences, across Ohio for $295. Its (419)225-5465 Your Hometown Stations has 640 Financial Houses, Log Homes, Stripping, easy...you place one ora full-time opening in buildder and pay with one WOULD YOU like to be Cleaning, Sealing, Staining, ing maintenance opening on an in-home child care check through Ohio Barn Painting, Barn Roofs May 19, 2013. This position provider? Let us help. IS IT A SCAM? The DelScan-Ohio Advertising is forty hours a week plus FREE ESTIMATES phos Herald urges our Call YWCA Child Care Network. The Delphos benefits. Duties include; Insured References readers to contact The Windshields Installed, New facility and grounds mainteA+ rating with the Better Herald advertising dept. Resource and Referral Better Business Bureau, can set this up for you. at: 1-800-992-2916 or nance, some non-technical Lights, Grills, Fenders,Mirrors, Business Bureau (419) 223-7010 or No other classified ad (419)225-5465 broadcast equipment mainteHoods, Radiators 1-800-462-0468, before buy is simpler or more nance, and occasional setup 4893 Dixie Hwy, Lima entering into any agreeand field support on live cost effective. Call Mobile Homes 325 ment involving financing, 1-800-589-6830 broadcast remotes. Shift is 419-695-0015 ext. 138 For Rent business opportunities, typically Monday-Friday, with possible weekends. AppliRENT OR Rent to Own. or work at home opporcant must be able to be pro2 bedroom, 1 bath mo- tunities. The BBB will as125 Lost and Found ductive, dependable, and pay 080 Help Wanted bile home. 419-692-3951 sist in the investigation attention to details. Carpenof these businesses. try, painting, electrical, and LOST: CAT -Male, gray (This notice provided as & white; area of S. Clay. a customer service by AGRICULTURAL COM- general maintenance skills Family pet. Call PANY seeking qualified needed. Send resume to The Delphos Herald.) 419-234-6283 salesperson(s) to work Frederick R. Vobbe @ Your trade shows. Must be Hometown Stations, 1424 willing to travel up to a Rice Avenue, Lima, Ohio 670 Miscellaneous In the Classifieds week at a time. Includes 45805, and must be received by April 26th. Resumes may display setup, tear down, th be e-mailed in MS/Word or Call working the show and PDF to fvobbe@wlio.com. LAMP REPAIR driving. Good communi- No phone calls. Your HomeTable or Floor. The Daily Herald cation skills, sales expe- town Stations is an equal opCome to our store. (Just 30 min. from Ft. Wayne, or Lima) rience and farm equip- portunity employer. Hohenbrink TV. Auction is located at the American Way Auction ment knowledge helpful, 419-695-1229 Facility 16477 Convoy Road, just 3 miles north but not required. Position of Van Wert on US127 and then go east on is part-time and seaConvoy Rd. sonal. Send resume to Customer Specialist American Way Auction & Gary Holdgreve have Huma n R e s o uRelationship rces, TUESDAY APRIL 16th, 2013 13540 Spencerville Job Rd., been commissioned to sell at auction the #10950 7:00 p.m. Sharp! Spencerville, OH 45887 personal property of Angeline (Mom) Miller Farm Credit Mid-America is seeking AUCTION LOCATION: or call 800-368-7773 ext. a Customer Relationship Specialist from Delphos, Ohio and others. to serve Delphos, Ohio. The Customer Relationship Specialist provides DELPHOS EAGLES HALL @ 1600 E Fifth 153. exceptional first-level internal and external customer service. Responsibilities Partial Listing: Kroehler corner desk & matching hutch Street, Delphos, OH include helping market, cross-sell and deliver credit and other financial cabinet, drop leaf coffee table and matching lamp table, Broyservices to our customers and prospective customers. This position also hill love seat & chair, several sofas, glass front cabinet, 2 tier provides administrative support for others in the field business development 21.91 +/- ACRES FARMLAND division, and maintains information and reporting as directed. table, solid cherry chest & hutch, Temple Stuart maple drop * FRONTAGE on STATE ROAD leaf table and matching chairs, hutch cabinet, cedar chests, CUSTOMER RELATIONSHIPS: Establishes, develops and maintains strong 3 piece cabinet set, antique commode, Tell City swivel stools, Section 33 * Marion Twp. * internal and external customer relationships by consistently providing quality set of twin beds, queen size bed &chest, swivel rocker recliner, service that is timely, thorough and responsive and exceeds customer Allen County, Ohio * recliner, rocking chair, oak round kitchen table & chairs, bakers expectations. Receives walk-in customers and incoming customer calls rack, freezers, bench, desk, Dell Computer, several TVs, cabiand provides administrative support to field business development division PARCEL #1: 21.91 +/- Acres in SW of team members, including sales office staff, as well as crop insurance and net stereo, tapes & CDs, Electrolux sweeper, Hoover sweeper, Section 33 in Marion Twp., Allen Co., Ohio Agribusiness team members. portable Singer sewing machine, student lamp, other lamps, w/ Mostly Blount Silt Loam, Pewamo Silty New Haven antique clock, Seiko clock, cuckoo clock, 50 colThis is an entry-level position for a Customer Relationship Specialist. The lectible plates, Norman Rockwell books, St. Johns year books, Clay Loam, and Sloan Silty Clay Loam primary responsibility is to coordinate customer information and become Beatles & Monkees trading cards, Davey Crockett lamp base, a fully functional Customer Relationship Specialist through training and Soils, App. 20.4 Acres Farmable, 1.3 Acres Davey Crockett glasses, Boyd bears, ladies hats & hat boxes, on-the-job experience. Woods, Good Frontage on State Road Goebel/Hummel figurines, 1904 miniature calendar, 1902 DelMinimum Qualifications: High school diploma and at least one year of phos shot glass, Jim Beam decanters, Homer Laughlin set of App. 1 Miles East of St. Rt. 66, Great experience in two or more of the following areas: administrative support, dishes, set of stainless flatware, corning ware, Fenton, dishes Small Acreage Parcel / Good Productive financially related customer service or computer operations. & glassware, Bunn coffee pot, toaster, George Forman grill, Farm, Delphos Schools slow cocker, blankets & linens, Hudson Bay blanket, rugs, oil To be considered an applicant, you must: lamps, boot umbrella stand, pictures & prints, sandcast puppy, Meet minimum qualifications for the position FOR TERMS, MAPS, BROCHURE, & leather bottles, beer steins, card table & chairs, tread mill, Submit your resume, indicating position of interest, by 04/12/2013 FURTHER DETAILS Contact: Aaron wicket settee, fans, Craftsman radio arm saw, router, power to: www.e-farmcredit.com Careers, Job Opportunities, indicating tools, hand tools, several tool boxes, organizer drawers, mtier Siefker 419-235-0789 Cell the specific position for which you are applying saw, cordless drills, Wagner paint gun, torch set, work bench, Owner: Harold Heidlebaugh oil cans, small weight set, weights & weight bench, yard tools, Check out our Benefits! NOTE: Harold is just cutting back on leaf blower, golf clubs, golfer yard sprinkler, lawn chairs, radio Once on our Web site, click on Careers, Employee Benefits, then flyer wagon, lots of items not listed acres, he is still going to raise sheep click on Employee BenefitsPresentation Items of Special Interest: and make hay on his other acres Beautiful Table Top Oak Show Case CONTACT: Trading Card Machines SIEFKER REAL ESTATE & Apple Butter Copper Kettle AUCTION CO. * OTTAWA, OH For Pictures go to auctionzip.com, zip code 45891 AARON SIEFKER, Broker/ Auctioneer Auctioneer: Gary Holdgreve, Mike Jackson

www.delphosherald.com
080 Help Wanted
CARRIERS WANTED DELPHOS ROUTES AVAILABLE NOW Route 14 N. Main St. N. Washington St. Route 28 N. Franklin St. No Collecting Call the Delphos Herald Circulation Department at 419-695-0015 ext 126 K&M TIRE Corporate Office support positions available: Administrative Assistant in the Marketing dept. to manage spreadsheets and tracking reports. Logistics Specialist to manage driver file compliance paperwork, log books, truck tracker reports, freight invoices and routing. Inventory Specialist to handle updating order points in AS400 system, running/analyzing sales reports to assist in setting order points for 16+ locations IT Help Desk support person to assist with front line information for customers & employees at 16+ locations, including setup, maintenance of computers and other IT duties. Must have 6+months of PC experience or Associates degree in computer-related field. Event Coordinator to manage all details of event planning including choosing event location, negotiations of space contracts, organizing event activities, etc. while meeting budget . Must be willing to travel. Experienced candidates must have BA in Business, Hospitality or Marketing or 5+ years of experience in event planning. All above positions full-time 8am-4:30pm Mon-Fri. Candidates must have 12 years general education or equivalent; must have strong knowledge of all Microsoft Office Programs. Please send work experience to: K&M Tire 965 Spencerville Rd., PO Box 279 Delphos, OH 45833 HR@kmtire.com FAX 419-695-7991

DELPHOS
Raines Jewelry
Cash for Gold

HERALD

080 Help Wanted


GLM TRANSPORT hiring four our regional fleet. Safety performance and referral bonus programs. 401(k) and direct deposit. Home weekends. Mileage paid via PC Miler practical miles. For details, call (419)238-2155

Midwest Ohio Auto Parts Specialist

Hiring Home Health Aides and STNAs

419-303-3020

Is Your Ad Here?
Call Today

419 695-0015

PERSONAL PROPERTY AUCTION


Saturday, April 6 10:05 a.m. 16477 Convoy Rd - Van Wert, OH

Place A Help Wanted Ad

for Delphos, Lima, Mendon, and Wapak areas. Do you have a passion for caring for others? Do you have healthcare experience or have you helped care for a family member or friend? Do you have a desire to make a difference in the lives of the elderly and disabled? If you answered yes to these questions, please call Interim HealthCare at 419-228-2535 or apply at 3745 Shawnee Rd. Suite 108, Lima, OH 45806.

419 695-0015

Receptionist/clerical:

PUBLIC AUCTION

IMMEDIATE OPENING for a family practice located in Lima Ohio. Seeking a full time Medical Assistant or Medical Administrative Assistant: electronic medical records system, detail oriented, organized, able to prioritize tasks, computer knowledgeable and efficient. Please send references and resume to: P.O. Box 108, c/o The Delphos Herald, 405 N. Main St., Delphos, OH 45833

VANCREST
We need you...
Health Care Centers

Now hiring
at Vancrest of Delphos
Vancrest of Delphos is a long-term care facility providing skilled rehabilitation services, assisted living, post acute medical care and more. We are looking for caring, outgoing, energetic STNAs to join our team. We currently have full time and part time positions available for skilled STNAs. Please stop by our Delphos location and fill out an application. Vancrest of Delphos 1425 E. Fifth St. Delphos, OH 45833

The best way to beat the high cost of living is buy the American Way

American Way Auction (419) 968-2955

419-538-6184 Office or 419-235-0789 Cell TOM ROBBINS & DARREL D. YODER, Assisting Auctioneers View on Web @ www.siefkerauctions.com

PUBLIC AUCTION
THURSDAY, APRIL 11, 2013 3:00PM
Location: From US 30, take 127 South through Van Wert to the Fairgrounds.
HIGHLIGHT OF THE SALE: Mahindra 5500 55hp 2003 Tractor with only 186 hours on itvery niceselling with a reserve. Woods Brush Bull Mower 72selling with a reserve; Grasshopper Mower 16hp 48 cutselling with a reserve; Cub Cadet Mower 26hp LT 1050 hydrostatic drive 50 cutNO RESERVE; Go Cart American Cruiser by Fox 5.0hpneeds work; 1989 Oldsmobile 98 LS 4-door Teal Green, new tires and new brakes HOUSEHOLD: Lots of really nice household items. Some very modern, some with age. Household selling in Ring 2 at 3pm. ANTIQUES AND COLLECTIBLES: Huge Offering again this month. Awesome selection to include: Approx 30 really nice Barbie Dolls, 12 Collectible Pottery Cookie Jars including American Bisque, McCoy and Shawnee; Cookson Pottery; Hull Pottery; Upco Pottery; Brush McCoy; Shawnee Pottery; California Pottery including Pasadena; Stanforware Pottery; 4 Fire King D style Mugs; several Crocks, Jugs and Small Churns; Several Pictures and Frames; Early Childs Rocking Horse; Industrial Vance Scales; several Industrial Scales; Early Printing Set; Rotary Phone; Wood Patterns for New Idea Parts; 1963 Gambling Supplies from Harolds Club in Reno; Early Wood Ammunition Boxes including Winchester; Lots of Shotgun Shells and Ammunition; Small amount of WWII Military Items, including Marine Corps Belt and Buckle; Large Nazi Flag; 2 Gun Cases; Ronson Cigarette Lighter; Lots of Primitive Furniture; Cupboard Tops and Bottoms; Small Early Tables and Modern Tables; End Tables; Coffee Tables; Lamps in all Shapes and Sizes; Boxes of Material and Fabric; Pyrex Baking Dishes; Fire King Jadeite Mixing Bowl; Some Modern Dishes; Lots of Fenton & L.E. Smith Moon and Star Pattern Glasswareall kinds of shapes and sizes and colors including Beautiful Blue Large Oil Lamp; Granite Early Canister Set; Wagner Cast Iron Cornbread Trays; Van Briggle Creamer and Sugar; Van Briggle Pitcher and Tumbler Set; Blake Island Indian Pottery made with Mount St. Helens ash from Washington Statebeautiful; Lots of Red Ruby Avon Cape Cod Glassware, many still in original boxes including lots of dinner plates and serving pieces; lots of Pink and Green Depression Glass; 2 Star Potato Chip Containers from the old Star Potato Chip Company, North Star, Ohio (Darke County); Heisey Glass Crystolite Pattern and Ridgeleigh Pattern; 1940s Youth Fairy Nightlight; the Lennon Sisters Round Brush; Childs 1950s Bozo the Clown Utensils; 2 Auburn Rubber Cars; 2 Mechanical Rocket Ship Banks from Napolean, Ohio; Very large Marigold Carnival Glass Footed Punch Bowlnice; Early Findlay Water Pitcher; large Pattern Glass Compote and other pattern glass pieces; 2 Fenton Glass Bells; Neon Budlight Bull Rider Beer Sign; Brewery 8 Horse Hitch Wagon Toy; Chinese Checkerboard in original box; Ferris Wheel Tin wind-up Toy; Several Crocks and Jugs; Sausage Press; 1950s Metal Outdoor Round Tablenice; Pitcher Pump; 12 Gallon Crockreally nice; 2 old suitcases; Old Milk Stool; Tonka and Nylint Toys; Door Hardware; Oil Bottle; Defiance Ice Cream Company half pint Milk Bottle; Wagner Griddle; Griswold #5 Skillet; Boot Scraper; Primitive Coffee Mill 3 ft. tall; Child Size Steam Enginerare; Buckeye Rootbeer Mug; Mini Slaw Cutter; Hastings Filters Advertising Shelf; Bridge Lamp; Wood Money Tray; Van Wert Advertising Items; Rectangular Primitive Kitchen Table; Iron Bedreally nice. 10 Longaberger Items; 10 Hummels; 10 Fenton Glass Pieces; Enamelware Items; Ohio Art Pieces; 10 Slag Glass Horses; Lady Glass Bells; Westmoreland Glass including Mary Gregory items; Alfred Meakin Tealeaf Ironstone; Several Pyrex Items; Lots of Costume Jewelry including Sterling Silver; Barware Cocktail Shakers; Cookie Jars; Linens and Embroidery work; 2 or 3 Quilts. Plus many many more items too numerous to mention...

Van Wert County Fairgrounds Junior Fair Building Van Wert, OH.

S
2013 NAS (Media: delete copyright notice)

We are proud to be an EEO/AA employer, M/F/D/V.

Shop Herald Classifieds for Great Deals

Delphos Herald Paulding Progress Putnam County Sentinel 2.5" x 5" Van Wert Times Bulletin 2.528" x 5" B&W
Car Care

ervice
Joe Miller Construction
Miscellaneous Tree Service
Experienced Amish Carpentry Roofing, remodeling, concrete, pole barns, garages or any construction needs. Cell

AT YOUR

Transmission, Inc.
automatic transmission standard transmission differentials transfer case brakes & tune up

Geise

COMMUNITY SELF-STORAGE
419-692-0032
Across from Arbys

Mueller Tree Service


Tree Trimming, Topping & Removal

567-644-6030

GREAT RATES NEWER FACILITY

419-453-3620
Construction

2 miles north of Ottoville

Home Improvement

bjpmueller@gmail.com Fully insured

419-203-8202

POHLMAN BUILDERS
GARAGES SIDING ROOFING BACKHOE & DUMP TRUCK SERVICE FREE ESTIMATES FULLY INSURED

Harrison Floor Installation


Reasonable rates Free estimates harrisonfloorinstallation.com Phil 419-235-2262 Wes 567-644-9871 You buy, we apply

Carpet, Vinyl, Wood, Ceramic Tile

ROOM ADDITIONS

Style Trends
Tanning
10 sessions $30 15 sessions $35 20 sessions $40 Get 5 FREE

L.L.C.

Hair & Tanning Salon 413 Skinner St. Delphos (419)692-7002

Trimming & Removal Stump Grinding 24 Hour Service Fully Insured

KEVIN M. MOORE

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

(419) 235-8051
OUR TREE SERVICE

Home Improvement
Windows, Doors, Siding, Roofing, Sunrooms, Kitchens & Bathroom Remodeling, Pole Buildings, Garages

Hohlbeins

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

For photos, visit Auctionzip.com, auctioneer Mark Hoaglin. Preview Wednesday, April 10th from 3-6pm. Doors open Sale Day at 12 Noon.
SALE ORDER: Antiques and Collectibles in Ring 1 at 3pm. Household in Ring 2 at 3pm. Tractor, Car and Machinery sells at 4pm in Ring 2. AUCTIONEERS NOTE: This is a wonderful offering of partial estates from Putnam, Paulding, Allen, Van Wert and Adams Counties. Never a Buyers Premium. Terms of Sale: Cash or Good Check. Statement made sale day have preference. Auctioneers who will cry this sale for you: Mark Hoaglin, Barry L. Thatcher and Kent Bowen.

419-339-9084 cell 419-233-9460

Mark Pohlman

Amish Crew
Roofing Remodeling Bathrooms Kitchens Hog Barns Drywall Additions Sidewalks Concrete etc. FREE ESTIMATES

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

DELPHOS

SAFE & SOUND

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

419-692-7261
NEW AT

Needing work

419-692-6336
Repairs
Tim Andrews

LAWN CARE inc.


FREE ESTIMATES

SPEARS
Tree Trimming Stump Grinding Tree Removal

MARK HOAGLIN AUCTION AND APPRAISAL SERVICE 12378 Greenville Road, Van Wert, OH 419-238-0928 Evenings 419-203-2946 Daytime Next Auction May 11 at the Van Wert Junior Fair Building. Large Estate, Chock full of Antiques!
Now accepting Antiques and Quality Collectibles for early June auction at Van Wert Junior Fair Building. 20% Commission if items are brought to us. Special rates for Furniture. Selling Western Ohio and Eastern Indiana Antiques since 1970. Please Do Not Sell Privately. You will lose money every time. THE AUCTION WAY IS THE ONLY WAY TO GAIN TOP DOLLAR. Mark and his Crew will work hard for you! Sales Tax will be Charged. Supper served by Gibsons Tasty BBQ Auctioneers licensed and bonded by the Ohio Department of Agriculture. Members of National Ohio and Indiana Auctioneers Association and the Certified Appraisers Guild of America. We regularly attend all State Auctioneer meetings. We want your auction! Always very competitive rates.

419-733-9601

Ph. 419-339-4938 or 419-230-8128


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For all your metal siding and roofing needs contact us.

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419-695-8516

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419-204-4563
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Monday, April 1, 2013

The Herald 9

Tomorrows Horoscope
By Bernice Bede Osol
TUESDAY, APRIL 2, 2013 In coming months, you could be luckier than usual in bringing things to successful conclusions. Although you should be able to depend on Lady Lucks help, you must also lend a hand. ARIES (March 21-April 19) -Be extremely careful that you dont achieve your purposes at the expense of someone else. It would severely damage your image. TAURUS (April 20-May 20) -- Usually you can do quite well in partnership situations, but this isnt likely to be the case if your aims differ considerably from the other party. GEMINI (May 21-June 20) -- A potentially profitable endeavor that has been dormant for quite some time could become active, but youll need to redesign it in order to capitalize on it. CANCER (June 21-July 22) -- Dont get too closely involved with someone who has a dubious reputation. Take plenty of time to really find out what your potential partners are all about. LEO (July 23-Aug. 22) -- If youre giving a price quote for a job or service, be sure your estimated cost is as accurate as possible. If not, you might work very hard but earn little. VIRGO (Aug. 23-Sept. 22) -When required to manage a serious situation for another, dont treat it indifferently. If you make a mistake, everyone will pay. LIBRA (Sept. 23-Oct. 23) -- If youre not on top of things, someone might seize the reins and make a decision in his or her best interests, not yours. SCORPIO (Oct. 24-Nov. 22) -Guard against an inclination to hold on to an idea long after it has proven to be unproductive. Its important to think on your feet and change your mindset to suit new circumstances. SAGITTARIUS (Nov. 23Dec. 21) -- Strive to be logical when making an assessment that would directly affect your financial position. It would likely prove to be disastrous to put all of your hopes on Lady Luck. CAPRICORN (Dec. 22-Jan. 19) -- In order to be a true leader, you must not be afraid to take charge of situations, even if you dont have a lot personally invested in their outcome. AQUARIUS (Jan. 20-Feb. 19) -- Several important objectives can be achieved today, provided you dont trip over your own feet. Chances are it will be self-inflicted obstacles that will be your nemesis. PISCES (Feb. 20-March 20) -- Be careful, because a wellintentioned friend might offer you some advice that, if you treat it as gospel, could prove to be costly. Listen to more than one source for counsel. WEDNESDAY, APRIL 3, 2013 Endeavors that you share with friends in the year ahead will be successful, as long as you allow everyone to do his or her part. It should be a fun and profitable ride. ARIES (March 21-April 19) -You are always desirous of acknowledgement, but you could crave it more than usual today. If you dont get it, dont make a big deal about it. TAURUS (April 20-May 20) -- Even though youll take most of your involvements seriously, youll still be philosophical about their outcomes. This attitude will help you handle whatever occurs with grace and aplomb. GEMINI (May 21-June 20) -One of your greater satisfactions will come from working with another on something of mutual importance. Enjoy the productive relationship. CANCER (June 21-July 22) -- It is advisable to get your mates opinion before making a major decision. They may have ideas that surprise you. LEO (July 23-Aug. 22) -- Dont think that you wont feel guilty if you fail to use your time productively. Get rid of your excuses and do the right thing from the get-go. VIRGO (Aug. 23-Sept. 22) -Business and pleasure can make a compatible mix, provided you have respect for both and split your time between the two as circumstances dictate. LIBRA (Sept. 23-Oct. 23) -- The possibility for doing what you set out to is very strong, provided you sustain your motivation. Keep your motivations in the forefront of your mind at all times. SCORPIO (Oct. 24-Nov. 22) -- If you get into a situation that is too narrow or constricted, you could be extremely uncomfortable. Dont allow others to put restrictions on your movement. SAGITTARIUS (Nov. 23-Dec. 21) -- The best asset you possess is your ability to make the most of whatever you are dealing with. This is especially true with financial matters. CAPRICORN (Dec. 22-Jan. 19) -- Treat your colleagues with respect, but dont let them take over something that youre already handling adeptly. Youll find a way to set boundaries respectfully. AQUARIUS (Jan. 20-Feb. 19) -- If you have to work on something that requires deep concentration, do your best to find quiet surroundings. Noise, disruptions or interference will negatively affect your performance. PISCES (Feb. 20-March 20) -Because your aspirations are likely to be more practical than most peoples, the possibilities for realizing your hopes are correspondingly greater.
COPYRIGHT 2013 United Feature Syndicate, Inc.

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Texas DAs killing puts other prosecutors on alert


BY NOMAAN MERCHANT and NICHOLAS RICCARDI KAUFMAN, Texas (AP) After one of his assistant prosecutors was gunned down in January, Kaufman County District Attorney Mike McLelland carried a gun everywhere, even when walking the dog. He was extra careful when answering the door at his home outside of Forney, about 20 miles east of Dallas. And a neighbor said a sheriffs deputy was stationed outside the home for about a month after the killing. On Saturday, McLelland and his wife, Cynthia, were found shot to death in their house. Authorities havent said much about their investigation, including whether they have any leads or a theory about why the couple was killed. But law enforcement throughout Texas is on high alert, and steps are being taken to better protect other DAs and their staffs. Tarrant County District Attorney Joe Shannon said his staff has been cautioned, but he declined to discuss the specific security measures that have been taken. Dallas County District Attorney Craig Watkins declined to comment on the issue, citing safety concerns. Harris County District Attorney Mike Anderson said he accepted the Houston sheriffs offer of 24-hour security for him and his family after learning about the slayings, mostly over concerns for his familys safety. Anderson said he also would take precautions at his office, the largest one in Texas, which has more than 270 prosecutors. Kaufman County Sheriff David Byrnes said little at a brief news conference Sunday about the McLelland investigation, and he deflected questions about possible suspects. He said security would be stepped up at the courthouse in Kaufman, but he declined to say what other steps might be taken to protect the other prosecutors in McLellands office. The DAs Office will remain closed today. McLelland, 63, is the 13th prosecutor killed in the U.S. since the National Association of District Attorneys began keeping count in the 1960s. Byrnes would not give details Sunday of how the killings unfolded and said there was nothing to indicate for certain whether the DAs slaying was connected to Hasses. El Paso County, Colo., sheriffs spokesman Sgt. Joe Roybal said investigators had found no evidence so far connecting the Texas killings to the Colorado case, but added: Were examining all possibilities.

10 The Herald

Monday, April 1, 2013

www.delphosherald.com

Drug maker Novartis loses India patent battle


BY NIRMALA GEORGE

Cartels dispatch agents deep inside US


BY MICHAEL TARM CHICAGO (AP) Mexican drug cartels whose operatives once rarely ventured beyond the U.S. border are dispatching some of their most trusted agents to live and work deep inside the United States an emboldened presence that experts believe is meant to tighten their grip on the worlds most lucrative narcotics market and maximize profits. If left unchecked, authorities say, the cartels move into the American interior could render the syndicates harder than ever to dislodge and pave the way for them to expand into other criminal enterprises such as prostitution, kidnappingand-extortion rackets and money laundering. Cartel activity in the U.S. is certainly not new. Starting in the 1990s, the ruthless syndicates became the nations No. 1 supplier of illegal drugs, using unaffiliated middlemen to smuggle cocaine, marijuana and heroin beyond the border or even to grow pot here. But a wide-ranging Associated Press review of federal court cases and government drug-enforcement data, plus interviews with many top law enforcement officials, indicate the groups have begun deploy-

McLelland, elected DA in 2010, said his office had prosecuted several cases against racist gangs, who have a strong presence around Kaufman County, a mostly rural area dotted with subdivisions, with a population of about 104,000. The number of attacks on prosecutors, judges and senior law enforcement officers in the U.S. has spiked in the past three years, according to Glenn McGovern, an investigator with the Santa Clara County, Calif., district attorneys office who tracks such cases. The FBI and the Texas Rangers joined the investigation into the McLellands deaths. McLelland and his wife, Cynthia, 65, were the parents of two daughters and three sons. One son is a police officer in Dallas. The couple had moved into the home a few years ago, Forney Mayor Darren Rozell said.

NEW DELHI (AP) Indias Supreme Court today rejected drug maker Novartis AGs attempt to patent an updated version of a cancer drug in a landmark decision that health activists say ensures poor patients around the world will get continued access to cheap versions of lifesaving medicines. Novartis had argued that it needed a patent to protect its investment in the cancer drug Glivec, while activists said the drug did not merit intellectual property protection in India because it was not a new medicine. In response to the ruling, Novartis said it would not invest in drug research in India. The courts decision has global significance since Indias $26 billion generic drug industry, which supplies much of the cheap medicine used in the developing world, could be stunted if Indian law allowed global drug companies to extend the lifespan of patents by making minor changes to medicines. Once a drugs patent expires, generic manufacturers can legally produce it. They are able to make drugs at a fraction of the original manufacturers cost because they dont carry out the expensive research and development.

Immigration deal at hand, focus turns to details


BY PHILIP ELLIOTT

WASHINGTON (AP) Big business and big labor have settled on a political framework for an immigration overhaul. Now, the lawmakers writing bipartisan legislation need to resolve the nitty-gritty and keep their parties political flanks mollified. Business and labor negotiators late last week agreed on a deal that would allow tens of thousands of low-skilled workers into the country and pay them fair wages. It was a last major sticking point before the deal goes to the eight senators four Democrats, four Republicans to sign off on the details and propose legislation. They are looking to set in motion the most dramatic changes to the faltering U.S. immigration system in more than two decades. There are a few details yet. But conceptually, we have an agreement between business and labor, between ourselves that has to be drafted, said Sen. Lindsey Graham, R-S.C. The so-called Gang of Eights plan would provide a new class of worker visas for low-skilled workers, secure the border, crack down on employers, improve legal immigration and create a 13-year pathway to citizenship for the millions of illegal immigrants already here.

ernment agency that tracks are now. crime trends in the region, Riley sounds a similar said it considers Joaquin alarm: People think, The El Chapo Guzman even borders 1,700 miles away. more menacing than Capone This isnt our problem. because Guzman leads Well, it is. These days, we the deadly Sinaloa cartel, operate as if Chicago is on which supplies most of the the border. narcotics sold in Chicago Border states from Texas and in many cities across to California have long the U.S. grappled with a cartel presYears ago, Mexico faced ence. But cases involving Jack Riley, head the same problem of then- cartel members have now of the Drug Enforcement nascent cartels expanding emerged in the suburbs of Administrations their power and didnt Chicago and Atlanta, as Chicago office nip the problem in the bud, well as Columbus, Ohio, said Jack Killorin, head of Louisville, Ky., and rural an anti-trafficking program North Carolina. Suspects ing agents from their inner in Atlanta for the Office have also surfaced in Indiana, circles to the U.S. Cartel of National Drug Control Michigan, Minnesota and operatives are suspected of Policy. And see where they Pennsylvania. running drug-distribution networks in at least nine non-border states, often in middle-class suburbs in the Midwest, South and Northeast. Its probably the most serious threat the Answers to Saturdays questions: United States has faced The family-owned Crane & Company of Dalton, from organized crime, Massachusetts, has been the sole paper supplier for U.S. said Jack Riley, head of currency since 1879. the Drug Enforcement TV celebrity doctor Mehmet Oz earned an MBA Administrations Chicago along with his medical degree in 1986. He received a office. joint MD and MBA from the University of Pennsylvania The cartel threat looms so School of Medicine and Wharton Business School. large that one of Mexicos most notorious drug kingTodays questions: pins a man who has Who is pictured on the obverse side of the series of never set foot in Chicago coins honoring Harry Potter, issued in 2001 as legal ten was recently named the der by the Isle of Man? citys Public Enemy No. How did the cutthroat trout, the state fish of Idaho, get 1, the same notorious label its ominous name? once assigned to Al Capone. Answers in Wednesdays Herald. The Chicago Crime Commission, a non-gov-

Its probably the most serious threat the United States has faced from organized crime.

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