DH 0308
DH 0308
Wednesdays Results
Utah 99, Charlotte 93
Toronto 116, Houston 98
Washington 106, L.A. Lakers 101
Philadelphia 103, Boston 71
Miami 89, Atlanta 86
Oklahoma City 115, Phoenix 104
Minnesota 106, Portland 94
Chicago 106, Milwaukee 104
New Jersey 101, L.A. Clippers 100
San Antonio 118, New York 105
Cleveland 100, Denver 99
Sacramento 99, New Orleans 98
Memphis 110, Golden State 92
Todays Games
Orlando at Chicago, 8 p.m.
Dallas at Phoenix, 10:30 p.m.
Fridays Games
New Jersey at Charlotte, 7 p.m.
Utah at Philadelphia, 7 p.m.
Portland at Boston, 7:30 p.m.
Atlanta at Detroit, 7:30 p.m.
Cleveland at Oklahoma City, 8 p.m.
L.A. Lakers at Minnesota, 8 p.m.
L.A. Clippers at San Antonio, 8:30 p.m.
New York at Milwaukee, 8:30 p.m.
New Orleans at Denver, 9 p.m.
Dallas at Sacramento, 10 p.m.
NBA GLANCE
The Associated Press
Big Sky Conference
At Reed Gym, Pocatello, Idaho
Todays First Round
Eastern Washington vs. Sacramento
State, 7 p.m.; Montana State vs.
Montana, 9:30 p.m.
Fridays Semifinals
Northern Colorado vs. higher-remain-
ing seed, 7 p.m.; Idaho State vs. lower-
remaining seed, 9:30 p.m.
Big South Conference
At The Millis Center, High Point,
N.C.
Fridays First Round
Liberty vs. UNC Asheville, Noon;
Campbell vs. Charleston South., 2 p.m.;
High Point vs. Coastal Carolina, 5:30
p.m.; Winthrop vs. Radford, 7:30 p.m.
Big 12 Conference
At Municipal Auditorium, Kansas
City, Mo.
Wednesdays First Round Results
Texas Tech 81, Texas 58; Missouri 72,
Oklahoma State 68
Todays Quarterfinals
Iowa State vs. Kansas State, Noon;
Baylor vs. Texas Tech, 2:30 p.m.;
Oklahoma vs. Missouri, 6 p.m.; Texas
A&M vs. Kansas, 8:30 p.m.
Fridays Semifinals
Iowa State-Kansas State winner vs.
Baylor-Texas Tech winner, 1 p.m.;
Oklahoma-Missouri winner vs. Texas
A&M-Kansas winner, 3:30 p.m.
Big West Conference
At Honda Center, Anaheim, Calif.
Fridays Semifinals
Cal Poly vs. Long Beach St., 3 p.m; UC
Santa Barbara vs. Pacific, 5:30 p.m.
Colonial Athletic Association
At Show Palace Arena, Upper
Marlboro, Md.
Todays First Round
Old Dominion vs. Towson, Noon; UNC
Wilmington vs. Georgia State, 2:30 p.m.;
George Mason vs. Northeastern, 5 p.m.;
VCU vs. William & Mary, 7:30 p.m.
Fridays Quarterfinals
Delaware vs. Old Dominion-Towson win-
ner, Noon; Hofstra vs. UNC Wilmington-
Georgia St.e winner, 2:30 p.m.; James
Madison vs. George Mason-Northeastern
winner, 5 p.m.; Drexel vs. VCU-William &
Mary winner, 7:30 p.m.
Conference USA
At Elma Roane Fieldhouse,
Memphis, Tenn.
Wednesdays First Round Results
East Carolina 59, Tulsa 49; SMU 53,
Marshall 52; Southern Mississippi 71,
UCF 49; Rice 64, Houston 50
Todays Quarterfinals
Tulane vs. East Carolina, Noon;
Memphis vs. SMU, 2:30 p.m.; UTEP vs.
Southern Mississippi, 6 p.m.; UAB vs.
Rice, 8:30 p.m.
Fridays Semifinals
Memphis-SMU winner vs. Tulane-
East Carolina winner, 11 a.m.; UTEP-
Southern Mississippi winner vs. UAB-
Rice winner, 1:30 p.m.
Great West Conference
(Non-automatic bid)
At The Jones Convocation Center,
Chicago
Todays First Round
NJIT vs. Houston Baptist, 6 p.m.;
Texas-Pan American vs. Chicago State,
8:30 p.m.
Fridays Semifinals
Utah Valley vs. NJIT-Houston Baptist
winner, 6 p.m; No. Dakota vs. Texas-Pan
American-Chicago St. winner, 8:30 p.m.
Horizon League
Wednesdays Quarterfinals Results
Detroit 79, Cleveland State 43; Wright
State 91, Loyola of Chicago 67; Green
Bay 77, Valparaiso 53; Illinois-Chicago
66, Butler 53
At Green Bay, Wisconsin
Fridays Semifinals
Detroit vs. Wright State, TBA; Green
Bay vs. Illinois-Chicago, TBA
Mid-American Conference
At Quicken Loans Arena, Cleveland
WOMENS CONFERENCE TOURNAMENT
See WOMENS, page 7A
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Andy North
Financial Advisor
.
1122 Elida Avenue
Delphos, OH 45833
419-695-0660
Thursday, March 8, 2012 The Herald 7A
www.delphosherald.com
AGRIBUSINESS
Photos submitted
Elida Greenhand Quiz Team takes 5th
The Elida FFA Greenhand Quiz Team placed 5th out of 109 schools in the Ohio FFA Greenhand Career Development Event. This contest is an
internet test taken by 1,455 first-year Ohio FFA members. The contest tests students knowledge about the Ohio FFA, National FFA, FFA history
and parliamentary procedure skills. Elida team members are, front from left, Lexi Shafer - 45th individual; Ali Skinner - 134th; Will Legge - 44th;
Trey Wheeler - 225th;Travis Watkins - 18th; Andrew Troyer - 297th; Vanessa Stoltzenburg - 49th; Hailey Skeins -115th; Cera Savage - 142nd; and
back, Makenzie Poling - 40th; Sierra Harris - 132nd; Grace Nartin - 63rd; Tyler Heaphy -
688th; Jared Carmean - 165th; Taj Jackson - 278th; Jake Hunter - 100th; Ashland Cotrell
- 125th; Riley Overholt - 52nd; Jared Blymyer - 21st; and Trey Archer - 113th.
Legge places
third at District
4 FFA Creed
Contest
Elida FFA member Will
Legge placed 3rd out of 8
contestants at the District
4 FFA Creed Contest held
at Hardin Northern High
School. To qualify for the
district contest, Legge
placed 2nd out of 10 con-
testants at the sub-district
contest which was held at
Jefferson High School. The
FFA Creed contest consists
of memorizing the FFA
Creed and answering ques-
tions on its meaning.
The Associated Press
Atlantic Coast Conference
At Philips Arena, Atlanta
Todays First Round
Maryland vs. Wake Forest, Noon; N.C.
State vs. Boston College, 2:30 p.m.;
Clemson vs. Virginia Tech, 7 p.m.; Miami
vs. Georgia Tech, 9:30 p.m.
Fridays Quarterfinals
North Carolina vs. Maryland-Wake
Forest winner, Noon; Virginia vs. N.C.
State-Boston College winner, 2:30 p.m.;
Duke vs. Clemson-Virginia Tech winner,
7 p.m.; Florida State vs. Miami-Georgia
Tech winner, 9:30 p.m.
Atlantic 10 Conference
At Boardwalk Hall, Atlantic City, N.J.
Fridays Quarterfinals
Temple vs. UMass, Noon; Saint
Bonaventure vs. Saint Josephs, 2:30
p.m.; Saint Louis vs. La Salle, 6:30 p.m.;
Xavier vs. Dayton, 9 p.m.
Big East Conference
At Madison Square Gar, New York
Wednesdays Second Round Results
UConn 71, West Virginia 67, OT;
Georgetown 64, Pittsburgh 52; Louisville
61, Seton Hall 55; USF 56, Villanova 47
Todays Quarterfinals
Syracuse vs. UConn, Noon; Cincinnati
vs. Georgetown, 2:30 p.m.; Marquette
vs. Louisville, 7 p.m.; Notre Dame vs.
USF, 9:30 p.m.
Fridays Semifinals
Syracuse-UConn winner vs. Cincinnati-
Georgetown winner, 7 p.m.; Marquette-
Louisville winner vs. Notre Dame-USF
winner, 9:30 p.m.
Big Sky Conference
Wednesdays Championship Result
Montana 85, Weber State 66
Big Ten Conference
At Bankers Life Fieldhouse,
Indianapolis
Todays First Round
Iowa vs. Illinois, 11:30 a.m.; Indiana
vs. Penn State, 1:55 p.m.; Northwestern
vs. Minnesota, 5:30 p.m.; Purdue vs.
Nebraska, 7:55 p.m.
Fridays Quarterfinals
Michigan State vs. Iowa-Illinois win-
ner, Noon.; Wisconsin vs. Indiana-Penn
State winner, 2:30 p.m.; Michigan vs.
Northwestern-Minnesota winner, 6:30
p.m.; Ohio State vs. Purdue-Nebraska
winner, 9 p.m.
Big 12 Conference
At The Sprint Center, Kansas City,
Mo.
Wednesdays First Round Results
Texas A&M 62, Oklahoma 53;
Oklahoma State 76, Texas Tech 60
Todays Quarterfinals
Baylor vs. Kansas State, 12:30 p.m.;
Kansas vs. Texas A&M, 3 p.m.; Missouri
vs. Oklahoma State, 7 p.m.; Iowa State
vs. Texas, 9:30 p.m.
Fridays Semifinals
Baylor-Kansas State winner vs. Kansas-
Texas A&M winner, 7:30 p.m.; Missouri-
Oklahoma State vs. Iowa State-Texas
winner, 10 p.m.
Big West Conference
At The Honda Center, Anaheim,
Calif.
Todays First Round
UC Santa Barbara vs. Pacific, 3 p.m.;
Cal State Fullerton vs. UC Irvine, 5:30
p.m.; Long Beach State vs. UC Davis, 9
p.m.; Cal Poly vs. UC Riverside, 11:30
p.m.
Fridays Semifinals
Highest-remaining seed vs. lowest-
remaining seed, 9:30 p.m.; Middle-
remaining seeds, Mid
Conference USA
At FedEx Forum, Memphis, Tenn.
Wednesdays First Round Results
East Carolina 68, Rice 66; Marshall
74, SMU 56; UTEP 67, Houston 62, OT;
UAB 72, Tulane 64
Todays Quarterfinals
Southern Mississippi vs. East Carolina,
1 p.m.; Tulsa vs. Marshall, 3:30 p.m.;
Memphis vs. UTEP, 7:30 p.m.; UCF vs.
UAB, 10 p.m.
Fridays Semifinals
Southern Mississippi-East Carolina win-
ner vs. Tulsa-Marshall winner, 4 p.m.;
Memphis-UTEP winner vs. UCF-UAB
winner, 6:30 p.m.
Great West Conference
(Non-automatic bid)
At Emil and Patricia A. Jones
Convocation Center, Chicago
Todays First Round
NJIT vs. Houston Baptist, 3:30 p.m.
Fridays Semifinals
Utah Valley vs. NJIT-Houston Baptist
winner, 1 p.m.; North Dakota vs. Texas-
Pan American, 3:30 p.m.
Mid-American Conference
At Quicken Loans Arena, Cleveland
Wednesdays Second Round
Results
Western Michigan 71, Northern Illinois
54; Toledo 75, Central Michigan 72
Todays Third Round
Kent State vs. Western Michigan, 7
p.m.; Ohio vs. Toledo, 9:30 p.m.
Fridays Semifinals
Akron vs. Kent State-Western Michigan
winner, 7 p.m.; Buffalo vs. Ohio-Toledo
winner, 9:30 p.m.
Mid-Eastern Athletic Conference
At Lawrence Joel Veterans Memorial
Coliseum, Winston-Salem, N.C.
Wednesdays Quarterfinals Results
Hampton 59, Savannah State 46;
Norfolk State 71, Howard 61
Todays Quarterfinals
Delaware State vs. Florida A&M, 6 p.m.;
N.C. Central vs. Bethune-Cookman, 8
p.m.
Fridays Semifinals
Hampton vs. N.C. Central-Bethune-
Cookman winner, 6 p.m.; Norfolk State
vs. Delaware State-Florida A&M winner,
8 p.m.
Mountain West Conference
At The Thomas & Mack Center, Las
Vegas
Todays First Round
San Diego State vs. Boise State, 3
p.m.; Colorado State vs. TCU, 5:30 p.m.;
New Mexico vs. Air Force, 9 p.m.; UNLV
vs. Wyoming, 11:30 p.m.
Fridays Semifinals
San Diego State-Boise State winner
vs. Colorado State-TCU winner, 9 p.m.;
New Mexico-Air Force winner vs. UNLV-
Wyoming winner, 11:30 p.m.
Northeast Conference
Wednesdays Championship Result
LIU 90, Robert Morris 73
Pacific-12 Conference
At The Staples Center, Los Angeles
Wednesdays First Round Results
Oregon State 69, Washington State 64;
UCLA 55, Southern Cal 40; Stanford 85,
Arizona State 65; Colorado 53, Utah 41
Todays Quarterfinals
Washington vs. Oregon State, 3:10
p.m.; Arizona vs. UCLA, 5:40 p.m.;
California vs. Stanford, 9:10 p.m.; Oregon
vs. Colorado, 11:40 p.m.
Fridays Semifinals
Washington-Oregon State winner
vs. Arizona-UCLA winner, 9:10 p.m.;
California-Stanford winner vs. Oregon-
Colorado winner, 11:40 p.m.
Patriot League
Wednesdays Championship Result
Lehigh 82, Bucknell 77
Southeastern Conference
At New Orleans Arena
Todays First Round
LSU vs. Arkansas, 1 p.m.; Alabama vs.
South Carolina, 3:30 p.m.; Mississippi
vs. Auburn, 7:30 p.m.; Mississippi State
vs. Georgia, 10 p.m.
Fridays Quarterfinals
Kentucky vs. LSU-Arkansas winner,
1 p.m.; Florida vs. Alabama-South
Carolina winner, 3:30 p.m.; Tennessee
vs. Mississippi-Auburn winner, 7:30 p.m.;
Vanderbilt vs. Mississippi State-Georgia
winner, 10 p.m.
Southland Conference
At The Leonard E. Merrell Center,
Katy, Texas
Wednesdays First Round Results
Stephen F. Austin 68, Sam Houston
State 46; Lamar 76, Northwestern State
69; Texas-Arlington 96, Nicholls State
48; McNeese State 78, UTSA 74, OT
Todays Semifinals
Stephen F. Austin vs. Lamar, 7:05
p.m.; Texas-Arlington vs. McNeese
State, 9:33 p.m.
Southwestern Athletic Conference
At The Special Events Center,
Garland, Texas
Wednesdays First Round Results
Texas Southern 75, Alabama A&M 62;
MVSU 63, Jackson State 60
Todays First Round
Prairie View vs. Alcorn State, 1:30
p.m.; Alabama State vs. Arkansas-Pine
Bluff, 9 p.m.
Fridays Semifinals
Texas Southern vs. Prairie View-
Alcorn State winner, 3:30 p.m.; MVSU
vs. Alabama State-Arkansas-Pine Bluff
winner, 9 p.m.
Western Athletic Conference
At Orleans Arena, Las Vegas
Todays First Round
Idaho vs. Hawaii, 3 p.m.; New Mexico
State vs. Fresno State, 5:30 p.m.;
Nevada vs. San Jose State, 9 p.m.; Utah
State vs. Louisiana Tech, 11:30 p.m.
Fridays Semifinals
Idaho-Hawaii winner vs. New Mexico
State-Fresno State winner, 9 p.m.;
Nevada-San Jose State winner vs. Utah
State-Louisiana Tech winner, 11:30
p.m.
MENS CONFERENCE
TOURNAMENT
By JIM METCALFE
[email protected]
No. 1 versus No. 2.
A matchup wor-
thy of the state title
game.
Instead, that
matchup involving
top-ranked Ottoville
(23-0) and number
2 Arlington (23-1)
will occur in the
Elida Division IV
Regional semifinal
on the Union Bank
Court of the Elida
Fieldhouse.
Lady Big Green mentor
Dave Kleman figures that the
veteran Lady Red Devils will
be very aggressive
with six seniors out
of their top seven,
especially since they
reached this point
last year.
I expect them to
be hungry with their
seniors. They start
five seniors and
bring one off the
bench, as well as a junior,
Kleman began. They will
press us all over the court
with a lot of different looks;
they remind me a lot
of teams we played
during the regular
season and tourna-
ment like Bath, Kalida
and Jefferson in their
desire to force the
tempo. Were used to
that. They arent very
big: they have two of
the Recker triplets that
go 5-9 and are strong
and powerfully-built
but everyone else is not very
big but very quick. They also
shoot the ball extremely well.
The Hunter girl is a dead-eye
3-point shooter.
For us, we have
to handle that pres-
sure. That is the key
tonight; if we do that,
I like our matchups
inside, especially with
the size advantage.
The Lady Green
employ a starting
five of senior guards
Lauren Koch (5-4) and
Lauren Kramer (5-8), along
with senior forward Megan
Bendele (5-10), 6-2 junior
center Abby Siefker and 5-6
junior guard Rachel
Turnwald.
Off the bench
are 5-5 junior
guard Nicole Vorst,
6-0 junior forward
Rachel Beining
and 5-6 sopho-
more guard Tonya
Kaufman.
As well, Kleman
can also dig deep-
er with 5-8 senior Krista
Schimmoeller and 5-10 soph-
omore guard Taylor Mangas.
Its that depth and versatil-
ity, plus the teams
share-t he-weal t h
mentality, that has
keyed the Lady
Green unbeaten
season.
Of f ensi vel y,
we have a variety
of people that can
score points. We
really distribute and
share the ball well, Kleman
added. You might think that
Abby (averaging 14 points
as the teams leading scorer)
would get a lot of shots but
she averages under
10 a game. There are
nights when she will
get more depend-
ing on the matchups
and the situations
and other nights
she will get less and
it doesnt matter. We
average over 50 shots
a game, so we spread
the offense out.
We score over 60 points a
game and give up 35. Defense
has always been what we build
around. We give up around
33-percent shooting
to our opponents and
shoot around 50 per-
cent ourselves. We also
have made more free
throws than our oppo-
nents have shot. That
is usually the sign of a
good team.
Tipoff tonight is at
approximately 8 p.m.
Ottoville/Arlington matchup tonight
Basketball preview
Bendele
Kramer
Koch Schimmoeller
Wednesdays Second Round
Results
Central Michigan 58, Ohio 55; Northern
Illinois 61, Akron 60
Todays Third Round
Miami (Ohio) vs. Cen. Michigan, Noon;
Toledo vs. Northern Illinois, 2:30 p.m.
Fridays Semifinals
Bowling Green vs. Miami (Ohio)-Cen.
Michigan winner, Noon; East. Michigan vs.
Toledo-Northern Illinois winner, 2:30 p.m.
Mid-Eastern Athletic Conference
At Lawrence Joel Veterans Memorial
Coliseum, Winston-Salem, N.C.
Wednesdays Quarterfinal Results
Hampton 61, Norfolk State 40; Howard
57, S.C. State 42
Todays Quarterfinals
Florida A&M vs. Maryland-Eastern
Shore, Noon; Coppin State vs. N.C. A&T,
2:30 p.m.
Fridays Semifinals
Hampton vs. Coppin State-N.C. A&T
winner, Noon; Howard vs. Florida A&M
Maryland-Eas. Shore winner, 2:30 p.m.
Missouri Valley Conference
At Family Arena, St. Charles, Mo.
Todays First Round
Bradley vs. Southern Illinois, 5:05 p.m.;
Drake vs. Evansville, 8:05 p.m.
Fridays Quarterfinals
Missouri State vs. Bradley-Southern
Illinois winner, 1:05 p.m.; Creighton vs.
Northern Iowa, 3:35 p.m.; Illinois State
vs. Drake-Evansville winner, 7:05 p.m.;
Wichita State vs. Indiana State, 9:35 p.m.
Mountain West Conference
At Thomas & Mack Center, Las Vegas
Wednesdays First Round Results
San Diego St. 68, Air Force 58; Wyoming
61, TCU 44; New Mexico 61, UNLV 58;
Boise State 68, Colorado State 63
Fridays Semifinals
San Diego State vs. Wyoming, 3 p.m.;
New Mexico vs. Boise State, 5:30 p.m.
Pacific-12 Conference
At The Galen Center, Los Angeles
Wednesdays First Round Results
Washington 72, Oregon 56; Arizona
61, UCLA 57; Colorado 55, Utah 41;
Washington State 65, Oregon State 56
Todays Quarterfinals
Stanford vs. Washington, 3 p.m.;
Arizona State vs. Arizona, 5:15 p.m.;
California vs. Colorado, 8 p.m.; Southern
Cal vs. Washington State, 10:15 p.m.
At The Staples Center, Los Angeles
Fridays Semifinals
Stanford-Washington winner vs.
Arizona State-Arizona winner, 3 p.m.;
California-Colorado winner vs. Southern
Cal-Washington State winner, 5:30 p.m.
Southland Conference
At Leonard E. Merrell Center, Texas
Todays Semifinals
McNeese State vs. Texas State, 1:05
p.m.; Nicholls State vs. Stephen F.
Austin, 3:33 p.m.
Fridays Championship
Semifinal winners, 8 p.m.
Southwestern Athletic Conference
At Special Events Center, Texas
Wednesdays Quarterfinal Results
Alcorn State 54, Southern 44; MVSU
70, Texas Southern 47
Todays Quarterfinals
Alabama A&M vs. Grambling St., 11 a.m
Alabama St. vs. Prairie View, 6:30 p.m.
Fridays Semifinals
Alcorn St. vs. Alabama A&M-Grambling
State winner, 1 p.m.; MVSU vs. Alabama
State-Prairie View winner, 6:30 p.m.
Western Athletic Conference
At Orleans Arena, Las Vegas
Wednesdays First Round Results
Louisiana Tech 63, Hawaii 54; Utah
State 75, Nevada 66; Fresno State 66,
New Mexico State 58; Idaho 67, San
Jose State 63
Fridays Semifinals
Louisiana Tech vs. Utah State, 3 p.m.;
Fresno State vs. Idaho, 5:30 p.m.
Womens
Continued from Page 6A
Shell shines in win
over Baldwin-Wallace
KISSIMMEE, Florida -
The Bluffton University soft-
ball team picked up where it
left off Wednesday afternoon
when the Beavers avenged
their only loss of the season
(5-1) with a convincing 6-1
victory over Baldwin-Wallace
on Wednesday at the Rebel
Spring Games.
The Beavers jumped out to
a 2-0 lead in the first inning
of game two despite a pair of
groundouts to start the game.
Lindsay Robertson (Cincinnati/
Northwest), who leads the team
with a .533 batting average,
continued her torrid play with
a 2-bagger to left field which
picked up fellow freshman Katie
Clark (New Palestine, Ind.).
Emily Manahan (Columbus/
Watterson) followed with a
run-scoring single to left.
Chel si e Osborne
(Chillicothe/Waverly) knocked
in Alexandra Haugh (Highland,
Ind./Andrean) following her
double over the third base bag
in the top of the fourth inning
and two frames later, pinch-hit-
ter Amanda Wooley (Tipp City/
Miami East) plated Osborne for
a 4-0 advantage.
Following a walk to Brittany
Baker (Springboro) in the sev-
enth, Clark launched an RBI
double to the wall in right cen-
ter. Pinch-runner Jo Bondra
(Highland Heights/Mayfield)
crossed the dish on Manahans
base hit to left.
The Yellow Jackets picked
up three of their seven hits for
the game in the seventh frame
but one run was all the Yellow
Jackets could muster in the 6-1
loss to the Beavers.
Freshman Chloe Shell (2-0)
was lights out for the second
consecutive day, allowing just
a seventh-inning run on seven
hits in her complete-game vic-
tory. She continued to make
batters earn their way on base,
having tossed 18 innings this
season without giving up a
walk.
Robertson went 3-of-4.
Manahan, Osborne and Clark all
rapped two hits apiece. Bluffton
pounded 13 hits, including four
doubles in the 6-1 win over the
Yellow Jackets, avenging a 7-3
loss at the hands of B-W on
Tuesday.
Bluffton returns to Oren
Brown for a 9 a.m. meet-
ing today with Westminster
College before a clash versus
Methodist at 11 a.m.
Bluffton University 6 (5-1)
Player ab-r-h-rbi
Meagan Price c 4-0-1-0, Brittany
Baker 2b 3-1-1-0, Katie Clark dh 3-1-2-
1, Chelsea Weitz pr 0-0-0-0, Johanna
Bondra pr 0-1-0-0, Lindsay Robertson
3b 4-1-3-1, Jessica Kuzara 3b 0-0-0-
0, Emily Manahan 1b 4-0-2-2, Jenelle
Theisen pr 0-0-0-0, Alexandra Haugh
rf 4-1-1-0, Chelsie Osborne lf 4-1-2-1,
Shelby Wade cf 4-0-1-0, Shelby Erford
ss 2-0-0-0, Amanda Wooley ph 1-0-0-
1. Totals 33-6-13-6.
Baldwin-Wallace 1 (5-3)
Player ab-r-h-rbi
Brittany Lightel ss 3-0-2-0, Ashley
Elber cf 3-0-0-0, Tabitha Murray dh/p
3-0-1-0, Alyssa Brown rf 3-0-0-0, Kaity
Mullen 1b 3-1-2-0, Sarah Baker lf 3-0-
1-0, Katie Carabin pr 0-0-0-0, Lauren
Feciuch 3b 2-0-0-1, Katie Finley 2b 3-0-
1-0, Justina Wise p 1-0-0-0, Mackenzie
Brua dh 2-0-0-0. Totals 26-1-7-1.
Score by Innings:
Bluffton University. 200 101 2 - 6 13 0
Baldwin-Wallace..... 000 000 1 - 1 7 1
E - Sarah Baker. DP - Bluffton 1.
LOB - Bluffton 8; B-W 5. 2B - Clark,
K.(2); Robertson(3); Haugh, A.(2);
Osborne, C.(2); Kaity Mullen. SF - L.
Feciuch. CS - Price, M.(1).
WP - Wise. Pitches/strikes: Shell
88/61; Wise 44/31; Murray 51/32;
Peskura 25/12.
----
Beavers fall to
No. 12 Heidelbarg
By Keisha Holtsberry
Sports information assistant
PORT CHARLOTTE,
Florida - The Bluffton
University baseball team fell to
#12 Heidelberg University 5-4
on Wednesday. The Beavers
stand 2-5 overall and 2-3 in the
Snowbird Classic. Heidelberg
improved to 3-2 with the vic-
tory.
The Beavers plated two runs
in the second inning and one in
both the fifth and sixth innings.
Heidelberg plated three runs
in the first inning, one run in
the third, and one run in the
seventh. The three runs in the
first inning gave Heidelberg the
advantage over the Beavers.
Mark Hadaya (Beavercreek)
started the game for the
Beavers and went six innings.
He allowed four runs while
striking out four batters and
walking four. Kyle Stover
(Tipp City) pitched the seventh
inning and took the loss when
Heidelberg scored the go-ahead
run thanks to a stolen base,
a wild pitch and a Bluffton
error. Kelly Barnes (Toledo/
Christian) came in to finish out
the game and struck out one
batter in two shutout innings
of relief.
Airic Steagall (Hillsboro)
was the first Beaver to cross the
plate. He reached on a fielders
choice and moved to second on
Greg Franks (Smithville) sin-
gle. Steagall went to third when
Doug Paullin (Jeromesville/
Hillsdale) walked and he
crossed the dish when Kyle
Niermann (Napoleon) deliv-
ered a run-scoring single which
also picked up Franks.
Miles Richardson
(Granville/Newark Catholic)
scored in the fifth inning. He
ripped a double, advanced to
third on a Tyler Stephenson
(Springfield/Northwestern) sin-
gle and crossed the plate when
Tyler Wright (Troy) followed
with a base knock.
Franks was the only Beaver
to cross the plate in the sixth
inning. He reached first on
an error by Heidelberg and
advanced to second on the
same play. Franks moved to
third on a base hit by Paullin
and crossed the plate when
Richardson laced a single.
Richardson led the Beavers
with four hits and one RBI.
Wright and Paullin both had
two hits in the loss. Niermann
finished with two RBIs and
Franks scored twice.
Bluffton returns to action
today when the Beavers meet
Baldwin-Wallace at 12:30 p.m.
Heidelberg 5 (3-2)
Player ab-r-h-rbi
E. Williams cf 4-1-2-1, A. Squibb lf 1-1-
0-0, L. Long ph 1-0-0-0, D. Kilger lf 0-0-0-0,
R. Lizcano ss 4-0-0-0, D. Cooper dh 4-0-0-1,
S. Kisan 2b 4-2-1-0, E. Monroe 1b 3-0-0-0,
D. Miller 1b 0-0-0-0, R. Pruitt rf 4-1-2-2, T.
Oldham 3b 2-0-1-0, J. Martin c 4-0-0-0. Totals
31-5-6-4.
Bluffton University 4 (2-5)
Player ab-r-h-rbi
Kyle Niermann rf 5-0-1-2, Miles Richardson
cf 5-1-4-1, Nick Broyles ss 5-0-1-0, Tyler
Stephenson 3b 5-0-1-0, Tyler Wright dh 5-0-
2-1, Airic Steagall 1b 5-1-1-0, Greg Franks c
4-2-1-0, Doug Paullin 2b 3-0-2-0, Kevin Martin
lf 4-0-1-0. Totals 41-4-14-4.
Score by Innings:
Heidelberg................ 301 000 100 - 5 6 1
Bluffton University... 020 011 000 - 4 14 3
E - T. Oldham(1); Broyles, N.(7); Steagall,
A.(1); Franks, G.(1). DP - HEID 1. LOB - HEID
12; BLUF 11. 2B - Richardson(2). HBP - S.
Kisan; E. Monroe 2; T. Oldham. SH - A.
Squibb(1); T. Oldham(1). SF - D. Cooper(1).
SB - A. Squibb 2(3); S. Kisan 2(1).
WP - Stover, K.(1). HBP - by Hadaya, M. (S.
Kisan); by Hadaya, M. (E. Monroe); by Hadaya,
M. (T. Oldham); by Stover, K. (E. Monroe).
COLLEGE ROUNDUP
8A The Herald Thursday, March 8, 2012
www.delphosherald.com
Answers to Wednesdays questions:
The Terminator, played by Arnold Schwarzenegger,
was included as both a hero and a villain on the American
Film Institutes list os 100 Years...100 Heroes and
Villains. He placed 22nd as a villain in the film The
Terminator (1984), and 48th as a hero in Terminator 2:
Judgement Day (1991).
When it comes to geography, a col is a gap or saddle-
like depression between mountain peaks that often serves
as a pass.
Todays questions:
How did the Daily Telegraph newspaper help the
British Secret Intelligence Service find code-breaking
recruits during World War II?
What Revolutionary War hero was the inspiration
behind actor Marion Morrisons name change to John
Wayne?
Answers in Fridays Herald
Todays words:
Domiculture: home economics
Qhythsontyd: the obsolete form of the seventh Sunday
after Easter
More work needed to stop youth tobacco use
By MICHAEL FELBERBAUM
Associated Press
RICHMOND, Va. More work needs to
be done to keep young Americans from using
tobacco, including creating smoking bans
and increasing taxes on tobacco products, the
U.S. Surgeon Generals office said in a report
released today.
Almost one in five high school-aged teens
smokes, down from earlier decades, but the
rate of decline has slowed, the report said.
It says its particularly important to stop
young people from using tobacco because
those who start smoking as teenagers can
increase their chances of long-term addiction.
They also quickly can experience reduced
lung function, impaired lung growth, early
heart disease and other health problems like
asthma.
More than 80 percent of smokers begin by
age 18 and 99 percent of adult smokers in the
U.S. start by age 26, according to the 920-page
report, which is the first comprehensive look
at youth tobacco use from the surgeon gen-
erals office in nearly two decades.
In order to end this epidemic, we need to
focus on where we can prevent it and where we
can see the most effect, and thats with young
people, Surgeon General Regina Benjamin
said in an interview with The Associated
Press. We want to make our next generation
tobacco-free, and I think we can.
The report details youth tobacco use, health
impacts, and tobacco marketing and pre-
vention efforts in the U.S. Officials hope
the information will reinvigorate anti-tobacco
efforts and spark public activism in reducing
death and disease caused by tobacco use.
The report also recommended anti-smoking
campaigns and increased restrictions under the
U.S. Food and Drug Administrations author-
ity to regulate tobacco as other ways to pre-
vent adolescents and young adults from using
tobacco products.
Benjamin did not point fingers on why
youth tobacco use continues in the U.S.
Instead, she wants to see how the nation as a
whole can best address the issue, she said.
I dont want to focus on blame, I want
to focus on prevention, she said. I want to
make sure were doing everything that we can
to prevent kids from ever starting to smoke or
use tobacco products.
The surgeon generals office last issued a
report on youth tobacco use in 1994, the first
wide-ranging report on the topic by federal
health officials. The new report is the 31st
issued by U.S. surgeons general to warn the
public about tobaccos risks. The first report in
1964 declared tobacco to be deadly.
Since the 1994 report, smoking among
high school students has declined from 27.5
percent to 19.5 percent, or about 3 million
students, but the rate of decline has slowed in
recent years. About 5.2 percent, or 600,000
middle school students also are current smok-
ers. According to the report, every day in the
U.S., more than 3,800 people under the age of
18 smoke their first cigarette and more than
1,000 of them become daily smokers. They
replace the 1,200 people who die each day in
the U.S. from smoking.
The report also examined advertising and
promotional activities by tobacco companies,
which have been shown to cause the onset
and continuation of smoking adolescents and
young adults.
Tobacco companies have spent increasing
amounts of money on marketing efforts to
reduce prices, which health officials said in the
report could influence access to price-sensitive
youth and make cigarettes more affordable.
Nearly $10 billion was spent in 2008 on
cigarette marketing by the nations five big-
gest tobacco companies, a 48 percent increase
from what was spent in 1998, when some of
the companies agreed with state attorneys gen-
eral to curtail or stop some of their marketing
efforts. That 25-year, $206 billion settlement
also pays states for smoking-related health
care costs and to support tobacco prevention
and cessation programs.
We have come a long way since the
days of smoking on airplanes and in college
classrooms, but we have a long way to go,
Secretary of Health and Human Resources
Kathleen Sebelius said in a statement accom-
panying the latest report. The prosperity and
health of our nation depend on it.
In a statement today, Richmond, Va.-based
Altria Group Inc., parent company of the
nations largest cigarette maker, Philip Morris
USA, which makes the top-selling Marlboro
brand, said it agrees that kids shouldnt use
tobacco products and that it markets its prod-
ucts to adult tobacco users through age-verified
direct communications and at retail stores.
Underage tobacco use is a difficult issue,
and there is not a simple solution, the com-
pany said. We agree theres still more work
to be done.
US big at world cheese contest
NJ FBI: NYPD monitoring
damaged public trust
Hackers charged in NY,
Chicago united by discord
Retweets becoming digital
version of autographs
MADISON, Wis. (AP) Watching 40 judges in white lab
coats nibble on cheese and then spit the samples into garbage
cans might not sound like the most elegant evening. But hun-
dreds of cheese lovers have paid $25 each for a close-up view of
Wednesdays World Championship Cheese Contest finals.
This is the first year the international contest has charged
admission to its finals, which historically have been low-key
affairs, drawing just a handful of spectators and reporters. As a
growing number of foodies try to outdo one another in their pur-
suit of local, sustainable, organic and handcrafted fare, the artisan
cheese competition has become a hot ticket for those looking to
get their gouda on.
The sold-out contest, held every two years in Madison,
typically draws more than 2,000 entries from nearly two-dozen
nations. Usually, only the judges taste the cheese, but this years
400 ticketholders will be able to sample 15 of the top entries while
they mingle with Wisconsin cheesemakers and the international
panel of judges.
In the past, unless you were a super cheese geek, this is not
something you went to, said Jeanne Carpenter, executive director
of Wisconsin Cheese Originals, an organization of artisan cheese
fans. But getting to try 15 different cheeses from 15 different
countries, plus meeting the best of Wisconsins cheesemakers,
people love that.
Experts compare specialty cheeses to wines: Both have subtle
variations based on their region of origin, year of creation and the
techniques employed by master craftsmen.
Judging in cheese and wine contests is similar as well. Judges
roll entries in their mouths, search for nuanced characteristics and
then discard the samples. Some cheese judges wipe their tongues
with napkins between tastings.
One of the paid spectators was Steve Ceder, a painting contrac-
tor from Madison.
This is Wisconsin, he said, as he nibbled on a few samples.
I enjoy cheese a lot, and to have a chance to try so many different
cheeses is just such a wonderful experience.
The three-day contest began Monday, with judges grading
2,500 entries in 82 cheese and butter classes on flavor, texture,
body and color. The winner in each class advanced to the semifi-
nals, where the top 16 were chosen for Wednesday nights finals.
As expected, cheesemakers from the U.S. and Switzerland
came out strong. Seven finalists are from the U.S. five from
Wisconsin and one each from Utah and Vermont.
Five other finalists are from Switzerland, which has produced
champions in each of the last three contests. The Netherlands has
two finalists, and Canada and Spain each have one.
Landing best in show can translate into big business. Some
previous winners have talked about crushing demand for their
cheese following the announcement. When Swiss cheesemaker
Christian Wuethrich won in 2006 with an Emmentaler, he raised
its price more than 10 percent, from $8 to $9 per pound.
Switzerland has dominated recent championships, taking top
honors in each of the past three contests. Wisconsin is consistently
the top-performing U.S. state. True to form, the Dairy State won
30 of the 82 categories this year.
Estela Roustan, a Spanish teacher from the Wisconsin Dells,
tried several cheeses from Switzerland and France, and said she
was eager to try the samples from Croatia and Spain.
Theres so much variety and diversity here, the 67-year-old
said. Its so wonderful. When you get to taste them, its almost
like youre traveling to different countries.
By SAMANTHA HENRY
Associated Press
NEWARK, N.J. In a rare public criticism of the New
York Police Department, the top FBI official in New Jersey
said Wednesday that the departments surveillance of Muslims
in the state has hindered investigations and created additional
risks in counterterrorism.
The monitoring of Muslims in Newark and across the state
has damaged the publics trust in New Jersey law enforcement
and jeopardized some of the relationships agents had sought to
build in the community since 9/11, said Michael Ward, agent
in charge of the FBIs Newark division.
When people pull back cooperation, it creates additional
risks, it creates blind spots, Ward told reporters at a press
briefing that he called to address the FBIs role in the NYPD
monitoring of Muslims, reported in a series of stories by The
Associated Press. It hinders our ability to have our finger on
the pulse of whats going on around the state, and thus it causes
problems and makes the job of the Joint Terrorism Task Force
much, much harder.
Ward said the NYPD had worked effectively in the state
multiple times on terror cases we have a great relationship
with the NYPD citing the arrests last year of two New
Jersey men who admitted to conspiring to join an al-Qaida
affiliate. But he said he knew little about the departments
intelligence operations in the state.
When you have someone thats conducting a unilateral
investigation and its not being coordinated with the terror
task force, he said, you run the risk of missing something, of
not connecting the dots.
NYPD spokesman Paul Browne responded Wednesday
by pointing to several cases worked in conjunction with New
Jersey law enforcement, such as the June arrests of Mohamed
Alessa and Carlos Eduardo Almonte, who admitted to plan-
ning to travel to Somalia to get training with a group with ties
to al-Qaida.
The NYPD has established strong ongoing relations in the
Muslim community, and our intelligence gathering has led to
the capture of the radical converts Almonte and Alessa in New
Jersey, Browne said. He cited other cases where relations in the
community have led to terror prosecutions, most notably a plot
to bomb the Herald Square train station in New York in 2004.
By DON BABWIN, VERENA DOBNIK
and DAVID B. CARUSO
Associated Press
NEW YORK Online, he was the elite, combustible
hacker known as Sabu. But at home, Hector Xavier Monsegur
seemed like the white sheep of a troubled family.
After his father and an aunt went to jail for drug dealing, the
28-year-old took over the job of raising his two young nieces,
his New York neighbors said. At the large public housing proj-
ect where he lived, in a building where the elevator reeks of
urine, he looked to some outsiders like a family man avoiding
the trouble plaguing his relatives.
He was a quiet man, but he would smile when he passed
by, and he talked to everybody, said neighbor Jorge Santiago,
a 78-year-old retired truck driver who said he has known
Monsegur all his life. Everybody knew him.
All the while, federal prosecutors said, Monsegur was living
a double life as an Internet saboteur. During the Arab spring,
he hacked into government websites in Tunisia, Yemen and
Algeria. He helped coordinate attacks on credit card companies
after they refused to accept donations to Wikileaks, the orga-
nization that spilled a trove of U.S. military and diplomatic
secrets. Then, they said, he added another layer to the subter-
fuge by informing on his accomplices after he was caught by
the FBI last spring.
His cooperation led to charges filed Tuesday against five
people in the United States, Scotland, Ireland and England,
including one other American, Jeremy Hammond, a 27-year-
old from Chicago.
Hammonds mother told The Associated Press on
Wednesday that her son was a brilliant computer whiz but
apparently couldnt stop himself from applying his genius to
get the goat of America.
He does have a good heart, but, I dont know, he just wants
to make those who disagree with him suffer, Rose Collins in a
telephone interview from her home outside Austin, Texas. He
thinks America is evil, has done everything wrong.
That made for some tension in the family. Collins described
herself as a staunch conservative who has attended tea party
rallies. Hammonds father, now jailed in a Chicago suburb
awaiting trial on a charge of aggravated sexual abuse of a
minor, was very, very far left, Collins said. So far off the
charts that one more step hes going to fall off the planet.
Hammond, she said, was raised by his father after the
couple split up and adopted his politics.
He wants to end capitalism, she said.
Collins said her son could have done anything with his com-
puter skills but had a penchant for using them to raise a ruckus.
In high school, she said, he hacked into the schools mainframe
computer to demonstrate its security vulnerabilities. He did the
same thing when he went to college at the University of Illinois
at Chicago, which earned him an expulsion, Collins said.
The university confirmed that Hammond was a computer
science major but left without a degree in 2004. It wouldnt say
whether he was kicked out, citing federal privacy laws.
A year later, Hammond was caught hacking in to a conser-
vative website and stealing credit card information. He pleaded
guilty and was sentenced to two years in prison.
Collins said she hopes her son is innocent.
Im praying for that, she said.
But she added that she has long admired his courage and
passion for his political beliefs, even if she didnt share them.
Hes a braver man than me, she said.
Hammond is now jailed pending transport to New York,
where he will face charges in a case in which Monsegur has
already pleaded guilty.
By NANCY ARMOUR
Associated Press
Forget standing in line for hours, hoping for a scribbled, barely
legible autograph on a wrinkled piece of paper. Or jockeying for
spots behind the dugout, on the off chance a signed ball or batting
glove gets tossed your way.
When it comes to souvenirs from your favorite athlete, the
retweet is where its at these days.
Fans have turned Twitter into a digital version of the autograph
session, asking sometimes begging stars from every sport
for a shoutout. Oh, sure, some requests are designed to raise the
profile of a charitable cause. But most fans are simply looking for
a little love from their favorite athletes.
(at)SHAQ the real superman, can i get a birthday retweet
from the most dominant big man of all time?
Its my birthday and all I want is for (at)KingJames to tweet
me !!
(at)DonaldDriver80 I love you so much. I have a piece of
your jersey, I want more. I want(need) an RT from you. See ya in
a lambeau leap!!
(at)serenawilliams please dont let me go 0-5 for (hash)ser-
enafriday RT from my favorite female tennis player?
Its almost like capturing a photo of yourself with that per-
son, said Chris Abraham, senior vice president at Social Ally,
a social media firm. For a second there, youve breached their
celebrity. Theyve actually allowed you to come over and take
a camera shot of you two together, and you can share it with all
your friends.
Now, a retweet might not sound all that thrilling. You cant
frame it and hang it on a wall (though you could do a screen grab
and print it out), and it cant be passed down to your kids and
grandkids. You cant collect retweets in a book and show it off to
your friends. And no ones going to pay six figures for a retweet,
as someone once did for a baseball signed by Babe Ruth.
But thats the old-school way of thinking. An autograph is
going to be seen by 15, maybe 20 people. Get a retweet from
Shaquille ONeal, and youre now the coolest thing ever with the
5 million-plus people who follow the Big Tweeter. To say noth-
ing of the bragging rights youll get when the folks who follow
you see it.
DNA tests link convicted killer to other murders
By P. SOLOMON BANDA
Associated Press
DENVER Authorities all along had the DNA evidence
to link a convicted triple-murderer to three additional murders
from 1979, and they say he could have been responsible for as
many as 20 slayings.
But the process of developing an identifying DNA finger-
print was still five years away when authorities say Vincent
Groves killed a prostitute, a banker, and a store clerk.
By the time Groves had been let out of prison in 1987 and
went on a suspected killing spree that left police discovering a
body a month in and around Denver for about a year, authori-
ties were still struggling with how to handle DNA. Colorado
was the first state to require DNA but only from sex offenders
in 1988 and the FBIs national database was a decade away
from becoming fully operational.
On Wednesday, Denver District Attorney Mitch Morrissey
announced that through federal grants for a cold case unit in
the Denver Police Department and his office, four slayings
had been solved though DNA matches.
Groves, who died in prison in 1996 at age 42, was tied
by DNA to the 1979 killings of women found strangled and
partially nude in an alley, an industrial park and a bathtub in
Denver. Police used a DNA profile of Groves they recently
found from an old murder investigation and linked it to the
four separate crime scenes, authorities said.
So often times, a serial offender can fly below the DNA
radar screen, maybe leaving DNA, but because their criminal
history occurred at a time when they werent eligible to go
into the database or there was no database, they stay at large
continuing to commit their crimes, Morrissey said.
The 1979 slayings of Emma Jenefor, 25; a store clerk in a
tony area of Denver; Joyce Ramey, 23, a suspected prostitute,
and Peggy Cuff, 20, a banker, bore strong resemblances to
Groves past killings and the disappearance of a woman that
Groves was suspected in, authorities said. Police also linked
Groves to the 1988 strangulation death of Pamela Montgomery,
35, a suspected prostitute found dead in an alley.
Groves would target women he knew who were addicted to
cocaine or prostitutes he picked up on Colfax Avenue, a street
in Denver historically known for prostitution, said Morrissey
and Mylous Yearling, cold-case investigator for Denvers
police department.
Groves strangled most of his victims; many were found
nude or partially clothed, left in the mountains west of Denver,
alleys and fields outside the city, police said.
When he died, Groves was serving a life sentence for the
1980s strangling of two young women. He had been released
on parole in 1987 after serving five years in prison for killing
a third woman in suburban Denver.
Authorities launched a task force in the late 1980s to
investigate a string of slayings after authorities began finding
an average of a body a month, all possibly killed by the same
person, Morrissey said. At that time, Grove was suspected of
up to 20 killings between 1979 and 1988, he said. In one case
from 1980, investigators had seminal fluid, but could only
develop a blood type from the sample.
It was frustrating in that we didnt have DNA like we do
now, Morrissey said of their efforts.
More DNA testing is pending to determine if Groves is
linked to other victims, Morrissey said.
Theres families out there that deserve answers and thats
what this works about, Morrissey said. If theyre (the sus-
pects) still there, still alive, we want to hold them accountable.
So when theyre not still alive, were able to give families
answers, tell them what happened to their loved ones.
Groves DNA profile was recovered from the case file
related to 17-year-old Tammy Woodrum. Groves brought her
body in a camper to a suburban Denver police department in
1981, according to a court document, after his wife convinced
him to turn himself in.
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facility and competitive wage and
benefit programs including
gainsharing.
Please submit resumes to:
Vanamatic Company
701 Ambrose Drive
Delphos, OH
Attn: Scott Wiltsie
[email protected]
(p) 419-692-6085
(f) 419-692-3260
Unity, Empowerment, Teamwork
The Right People, Making the Right
Decision, At The Right Time
SCREW MACHINE OPERATORS
Positions Open
Roberts Manufacturing Co., Inc. of Oakwood, OH is
looking for a qualified Quality Assurance Inspector.
Roberts is an established manufacturer with an out-
standing quality and delivery reputation. Roberts is
a growing business and is looking for people to grow
with us.
Web site www.robertsmanufacturing.net
Quality Assurance Inspector
Desired qualifications and abilities:
Geometric Tolerancing
Blueprint Reading
CMM operation and programming
Gaging usage and knowledge
Must be self-motivated and dependable
ISO background a plus
Experience a major plus
CNC Machinists
Desired qualifications and abilities:
Blueprint Reading
Gage Usage
CNC program knowledge
Strong mathematics background
Must be self-motivated and dependable
Experience a major plus
We offer a quality benefit package including 401k,
health insurance, paid vacation, paid holidays, profit
sharing and competitive wages (commensurate with
experience).
Walk in applications accepted Monday-Friday be-
tween 8:30 am and 4:00 pm or you can send your
resume to:
Roberts Manufacturing Co., Inc.
Attn: Chuck Behrens
24338 CR 148
Oakwood OH 45873
Phone: (419)594-2712 or Fax (419)594-2900
Or email to: [email protected]
005
Lost & Found
FOUND - Medium size
Black Dog near Jefferson
Middle School. Please call
419-692-1182 to identify.
010
Announcements
ADVERTISERS: YOU can
place a 25 word classified
ad in more than 100 news-
papers with over one and
a half million total circula-
tion across Ohio for $295.
It's easy...you place one
order and pay with one
check t hrough Ohi o
Scan-Ohi o St at ewi de
Classified Advertising Net-
work. The Delphos Herald
advertising dept. can set
this up for you. No other
classified ad buy is sim-
pler or more cost effective.
Call 419-695-0015, ext
138.
010
Announcements
Kreative
Learning
Preschool
340 W. Fifth St.
Delphos, OH
45833
419-695-5934
2012/2013
Registration
Going On
040
Services
LAMP REPAIR
Table or floor.
Come to our store.
Hohenbrink TV.
419-695-1229
080
Help Wanted
Are you looking for a child
care provider in your
area? Let us help. Call
YWCA Child Care Re -
source and Referral at:
1-800-992-2916 or
(419)225-5465
BLUE STREAM DAIRY
Blue Stream Dairy located
in Convoy, OH has open-
ings for the following posi-
tions:
MILKER , milks cows in
double 20 parlor, sorts any
animal needing medical
attention or breeding.
Night shift 5pm til 4am
day rotation. Experience
wi th cattl e preferred.
Housing available.
FEEDER, feeds herd daily
and keeps feed areas
clean. Operate pay loader
and tractors. Day shift
5am til 4pm, day rotation.
ASSI STANT HERDS-
MAN, duties include gen-
eral cow health, vaccina-
tions, calving, and record
keeping. Must have prior
experience and be bi-lin-
gual. Day or night shift
with variable hours and
days.
If interested apply in per-
son between the hours of
9-3 Monday-Friday at:
Blue Stream Dairy
3242 Mentzer Church Rd.
Convoy, OH 45832
080
Help Wanted
DRIVER NEEDED: Local
business is seeking a
part-time driver for late
night/early morning. Ap-
proximately 10 hours per
week plus additional deliv-
eries as needed, up to 30
hours per week. No CDL
required. Driver must sub-
mit to pre-employment
physical/drug screening
and random drug screen-
ing during employment.
Retirees welcome. Please
send replies to Box 166
c/o Delphos Herald, 405
N. Main St., Delphos, OH
45833
FULL TIME Graphic Artist
is needed by local com-
pany. Website knowledge
and able to do page lay-
outs a plus. Benefits pack-
age includes: Health, Den-
tal, 401K & Vacation.
Send replies to Box 165
c/o Delphos Herald, 405
N. Main St., Delphos, OH
45833
HELP WANTED - Local
embroidery shop needs
computer literate self
starter. $10-13 per hour.
Send replies to Box 167
c/o Delphos Herald, 405
N. Main St., Delphos, OH
45833
OTR SEMI DRIVER
NEEDED
Benefits: Vacation,
Holiday pay, 401k. Home
weekends & most nights.
Call Ulm!s Inc.
419-692-3951
Would you like to be an
in-home child care pro -
vider? Let us help. Call
YWCA Child Care Re -
source and Referral at:
1-800-992-2916 or
(419)225-5465.
120
Financial
IS IT A SCAM? The Del-
phos Herald urges our
readers to contact The
Better Business Bureau,
( 419) 223- 7010 or
1-800-462-0468, before
entering into any agree-
ment involving financing,
business opportunities, or
work at home opportuni-
ties. The BBB will assist
in the investigation of
these businesses. (This
notice provided as a cus-
tomer service by The Del-
phos Herald.)
290
Wanted to Buy
Raines
Jewelry
Cash for Gold
Scrap Gold, Gold Jewelry,
Silver coins, Silverware,
Pocket Watches, Diamonds.
2330 Shawnee Rd.
Lima
(419) 229-2899
501
Misc. for Sale
FIREWOOD FOR Sale.
$70.00 a truckload. Deliv-
ery available for a fee. Call
419-286-3861
800
House For Sale
FOR SALE Beautiful Old
Home brought back to life.
110 W Main St., Pandora.
2,500 SqFt, 4 bedroom, 2
bath. 14x26 eat-in kitchen
wi th new cupboards,
counter seating and appli-
ances. Wood floors on
main level, enclosed porch
with Electric Fireplace.
Pack your things, its
ready t o move i n.
$114,900. 419-302-9308
810
Auto Repairs/
Parts/Acc.
Midwest Ohio
Auto Parts
Specialist
Windshields Installed, New
Lights, Grills, Fenders,Mirrors,
Hoods, Radiators
4893 Dixie Hwy, Lima
1-800-589-6830
840
Mobile Homes
RENT OR Rent to Own. 2
bedroom, 1 bath mobile
home. 419-692-3951.
920
Free & Low Price
Merchandise
CLOSET DOORS - 2 pair
with rollers and track.
$50.00. Call 419-605-8255
FOR SALE - Darkish
brown 2 piece bathroom
cabinets -each 27 long x
21 wide. Also Top Lighted
bathroom cabinet - 36
long x 13 wide. Set all for
$40.00. Leave message
419-286-2821
HOSPITAL BED with con-
trols for head and foot.
$50.00. Call 419-905-7458
Classifieds Sell
Find it in the
Classifieds
Shop Herald
Classifieds for
Great Deals
080
Help Wanted
080
Help Wanted
Wanted: Diabetic Test
Strips. Paying up to $15.00
per 100 strips. Call Alan
(888) 775-3782. www.
diabeticteststripswanted.
com.
Adoption A happily
married couple seeks to
adopt. Financial security.
Expenses paid. Christa &
Paul. 1-800-936-1631.
Automotive CARS
WANTED! PayMax Car
Buyers pays the MAX!
One call gets you TOP
DOLLAR offer on any
year, make or model car.
1-888-PAYMAX-7 (1-888-
729-6297).
Business Services REACH
2 MILLION NEWSPAPER
READERS with one ad
placement. ONLY $295.00.
Ohios best community
newspapers. Call Kathy
at AdOhio Statewide
Classified Network, 614-
486-6677, or E-MAIL at:
[email protected]
or check out our website
at: www.adohio.net.
Business Services REACH
OVER 1 MILLION OHIO
ADULTS with one ad
placement.
Only $975.00. Ask
your local newspaper
about our 2X2 Display
Network or Call Kathy
at 614-486-6677/E-mail
[email protected].
or check out our website:
www.adohio.net.
Health/Beauty Take
VIAGRA? 100MG and
CIALIS 20mg! 40 Pills + 4/
Free for only $99. #1 Male
Enhancement, discreet
Shipping. Save $500.00,
Call Blue Pill Now! 1-800-
491-8289.
Help Wanted Averitt Starts
Regional CDL-A Drivers at
37-42.5cpm w/1+ Years.
Experience (Depends on
Location). 4-12 Months
Experience? Paid Refresher
Course. 888-362-8608
or AVERITTcareers.
com Equal Opportunity
Employer.
Help Wanted Class A
CDL Drivers Midwest
Regional 38-40 CPM. Paid
Orientation Paid from 1st.
Dispatch. Full Benefits.
$1500 Sign On. Online
Transport 877-997-8999
www.DriveForOnline.com
Help Wanted Driver - $0
Tuition CDL (A) Training
& a Job! Top Industry
Pay, Quality Training.
Stability & Miles! Short
employment commitment
required. 800-326-2778
www.JoinCRST.com
Help Wanted Driver
- CDL-A. Drive With
Pride. Up to $3,000 Sign-
on Bonus for Qualified
Drivers! CDL & 6 mo.
OTR exp. Reqd USA
Truck 1-877-521-5775
www.usatruck.jobs
Help Wanted Drivers
- CDL-A. DRIVERS
NEEDED! Plenty of
Miles! Including West
Coast Runs! Top Pay for
Experienced Drivers.
Even More for Hazmat!
800-942-2104 Ext. 7307 or
7308 www.totalms.com.
Help Wanted Drivers -
Daily Pay! Up to $.42/
mile plus $.02/mile
quarterly safety bonus
- New trucks - Van and
Refrigerated CDL-A, 3
months recent experience
required. 800-414-9569
www.driveknight.com
Help Wanted Drivers: No
Experience? Class A CDL
Training. We Train and
Employ! New Pay Increases
coming soon. Experienced
Drivers also Needed!
Central Refrigerated
(877)369-7209 www.
centraltruckdrivingjobs.net
Help Wanted Drivers
- Sign On Bonus $2000-
$7500 Solo & Teams. 1
year OTR. High Pay &
Benefits. 877-628-3748
www.driveNCTrans.com
Help Wanted Experienced
CDL-A Van Drivers
Needed. $1,500 Sign-on/
Stay-on Bonus! Hometime
Options! National &
Regional Fleets include
Van, Refrigerated &
Curtain Side. AA?EOE.
Call Roehl at 877-774-
5313 or GoRoehl.com
Help Wanted Owner
Operators: Up to a $2,000
Sign-On Bonus. Great
Pay & paid FSC. Paid
OH & IN Tolls. Fuel &
Tire Discounts. Hometime
throughout the week. 3rd
Party Lease Purchase
program available. Call
Comtrak at 866-722-0291,
or apply online at www.
comtrakinc.com
Help Wanted Werner
Needs Driver Trainees
Now! Tired of living
paycheck to paycheck?
Stop the cycle! No CDL?
No Problem! 16-Day CDL
training w/Roadmaster!
1-866-467-0061.
Help Wanted WOOD
TRUCKING, Inc./MCT.
Job Guaranteed after
FREE 3 week CDL-A
Training. Live within 100
mile radius of Wauseon,
Ohio 1-800-621-4878.
Also, Hiring Drivers!
Help Wanted You got
the drive, We Have the
Direction OTR Drivers
APU Equipped Pre-Pass
EZ-pass. Pets/Passenger
Policy. Newer equipment.
100% No touch. 1-800-
528-7825.
Instruction Attend College
Online from Home. Medical,
Business, Criminal Justice,
Hospitality. Job Placement
Assistance. Computer
Available. Financial Aid
if Qualified. SCHEV
certified. Call 877-295-
1667. www.CenturaOnline.
com.
Misc. Airlines Are Hiring -
Train for hands on Aviation
Career. FAA approved
program. Financial aid if
qualified - Job Placement
assistance. Call Aviation
Institute of Maintenance.
877-676-3836.
Misc. CABINS FOR
RENT IN CANADA.
Walleyes, perch,
northerns, birds, wildlife,
pristine nature. Boats,
motors, gas included. Call
Hugh 800-426-2550 for
free brochure. website
www.bestfishing.com
OHIO SCAN NETWORK CLASSIFIEDS
Answer
to
Puzzle
Todays Crossword
Puzzle
ACROSS
1 Kickback
4 Extremely
8 Crumple
11 Melt
13 Jazzy -- James
14 Iron source
15 One, in Munich
16 Fridge device
18 Love -- No. 9
20 Try a case
21 Helium or neon
22 ESPN feature
24 Radiance
27 Stood in line
30 Informal talk
31 Deli sandwich
32 Clock numeral
34 Pixel
35 Change
36 Sure thing
37 Men and women
39 Like some stadi-
ums
40 Wyo. clock setting
41 Install tile
42 Then (2 wds.)
45 Warm-up act
49 Glance off
53 Plump and juicy
54 -- Ray Hutton
55 Drive the getaway
car
56 Lose traction
57 9-digit no.
58 Mrs. Lennon
59 Kind of system
DOWN
1 Dance move
2 Michigan neigh-
bor
3 Struggle for air
4 Places for ore
5 Common abbr.
6 AAA sugg.
7 Candied tuber
8 Roused up
9 Region
10 Earl -- Biggers
12 Pounds
17 At the drop of -- --
19 Feedbag morsel
22 None at all
23 Thumbnail sketch
24 Arith. term
25 Flapjack chain
26 Slalom obstacle
27 Wolf lead-in
28 Quiz
29 Reno rollers
31 Sentrys command
33 -- be an honor!
35 CEO aides
36 Vestibules
38 Melville novel
39 Skip stones
41 Jackpot game
42 Purple ower
43 Shark giveaways
44 Read
46 Winged goddess
47 DeMille genre
48 Change decor
50 Low reef
51 Cable movie chan-
nel
52 Mouse alert
FIND IT
FAST
in the
CLASSIFIEDS
2B - The Herald Thursday, March 8, 2012 Thursday, March 8, 2012 The Herald 3B
CONGRATULATIONS
CURTIS
from Jefferson
High School
Bank with the people you know and trust
DELPHOS
230 E. Second St.
(419) 695-1055
MEMBER
FDIC Visit us online: www.rst-fed.co
KNIPPEN
CHRYSLER-DODGE-JEEP
800 W. Fifth St. Delphos, OH 45833
www.knippenchrysler.com
Over 30 years in Business
419-695-4976 or 800-464-8434
Check us out on
our new website
www.spearslawncare.com
Corner of 5
th
& Main St. in Delphos, Ohio
419-695-1060
Congratulations Curtis!!!!!
150 W. Fifth St., Delphos
(corner of Fifth and Canal)
419-692-BACK (2225)
Dr. Jay M. DeWitt 924 E. Fifth St., Delphos 419-695-1632
MARYS
A&W ROOT BEER
John Odenwellers
Lion Clothing
Formalwear Headquarters
206 N. Main St.
Phone 419-692-9981
For Weddings
Grooms tux
FREE
with party of
5 or more.
234 S. Jefferson St.
Delphos, Ohio
Ph. 419-692-6010
Curtis Miller
State Champion
Delphos Jefferson
CLARA L. HANF, CPA
Financial Advisor
T 419.692.4133 202 N. Main Street
T 800.999.2701 Delphos, OH 45833
F 419.692.2260 [email protected]
www.raymondjames.com/clarahanf
Raymond James Financial Services, Inc., member FINRA/SIPC
939 E. Fifth St, Delphos
419-692-2695 (BOWL)
Delphos
Recreation
Center
Proudly Serving the Tri-County Area Since 1869
Delphos Herald
News
419-695-0015 Ext. 134
Fax 419-692-7704
[email protected]
Advertising
419-695-0015 Ext. 138
Fax 419-692-7116
[email protected]
405 North Main Street,
Delphos, Ohio
visit our website at:
www.delphosherald.com
The
The UNION BANK Co.
www.theubank.com
114 E. Third St., Delphos
Member FDIC
SCHRADER
REALTY LLC
Put your dreams in our hands
202 N. Washington Street
Delphos, OH 45833
Office: 419-692-2249
Fax: 419-692-2205
Ruth Baldauf-Liebrecht ... 419-234-5202
Amie Nungester ............... 419-236-0688
Janet Kroeger .................. 419-236-7894
CONGRATULATIONS CURTIS MILLER!
Krista Schrader ................ 419-233-3737
Jodi Moenter ............ 419-296-9561
Stephanie Clemons .. 419-234-0940
Judy M.W. Bosch ..... 419-230-1983
WWW.SCHRADERREALTY.NET
CONGRATULATIONS CURTIS!
from your friends at
DELPHOS
TRADING
POST
WERE AN ANYTHING
YOU NEED STORE!!
528 N.Washington St., Delphos
419-692-0044
MAN CAVE ITEMS
WOMENS
JEWELRY
NAME BRAND
TOOLS
WE BUY
GOLD & SILVER
DVDs, GAMES,
CONSOLES MUCH MORE!
PRICES HARD
TO BEAT!
DISCOUNT PRICES DAILY!
More value for your buying $$.
Large enough to serve you, small enough to know you
www.ottovillebank.com
The Ottoville
Bank Co.
MAIN OFFICE
161 W. Third St.
Ottoville, OH 45876
419-453-3313
LENDING OFFICE
940 E. Fifth St.
Delphos, OH 45833
419-695-3313
Michelle Snyder
419-879-3491
John Fisher
419-879-3489
Joe Laudick
419-879-4840
Steve Oren
419-879-3498
Timothy A. Sprague
419-879-3497
Mark Stechschulte
419-879-3493
SuperiorFCU.com
Delphos
485 Moxie Ln.
419-692-3405
OUTPATIENT ~ HOME HEALTH ~ FITNESS
[email protected] www.midwestrehab.net
'HOSKRV
3K\VLFDO7KHUDS\
Physical~Occupational~Speech
Therapy Centers
Better, Stronger, Faster!
Van Wert
1196 Westwood Dr.
419-238-3405
Lima
3077 W. Elm St.
419-225-3405
Ada
1200 S. Main St.
419-634-8655
419-695-PEAK (7325)
Stadium Park Office Complex 333 North Street
Delphos, OH
Email: [email protected]
Phone: 419-692-8055
Fax: 419-692-8065
209 W. Third St., Delphos, OH 45833
Harter and Schier
Funeral Home
Locally Owned and Operated
NATIONAL
LIME & STONE COMPANY
SINCE 1903
419-692-0931
Locations in:
Delphos, Rimer, Buckland
Health Care and Rehabilitation Center
Independent Plus
and Assisted Living Apartments
VANCREST
1425 East Fifth Street, Delphos, Ohio 45833
419-695-2871
www.vancrest.com
306 N. Main St. Delphos
(419) 692-2207
Dreams Happen Here Everyday
Gary Suever, Agent
An Independent Associate Representing Aflac
PO Box 225 Delphos, Ohio 45833
419.692.1030 office 419.303.9510 cell
419.692.1030 fax
[email protected] aflac.com
Delphos II
24086 State Route 697, P.O. Box 393
Delphos, Ohio 45833
Phone: 419-692-6022
FAX: 419-692-8058
Toledo Molding & Die, Inc.
12805 W. State Rd.
Delphos, Oh 45833
419-692-2624
W
C
WOOD
CREATIONS
CUSTOM CABINETRY &
INTERIOR DOORS & TRIM
Mark Wurst, owner
Cabinetry Woodworking Laminate Flooring
Hardwood Flooring
For Remodeling Or New Construction
Interior Doors & Trim
Complete Finishing & Installation
by Delphos Discount East of St. Johns
Open 5 a.m.-9 p.m.
662 Elida Ave.,
Delphos
419-692-0007
The Delphos Tri-County Wrestling Club says ...
CONGRATULATIONS
CURTIS MILLER
FROM ALL THE CURRENT
TRI-COUNTY WRESTLERS!
Grothouse Plumbing & Heating, Inc.
901 S. Main Street, Delphos
419-695-3081
[email protected]
HVAC/Refrig/Hydronics Lic#25576
Plumbing Lic # 14379
Plumbing Heating A/C Sewers
Septic Tanks Water Treatment Geothermal
Restaurant Equipment Parts & Service
CONGRATULATIONS
TO ALL STATE QUALIFYING WRESTLERS
Were On Your Side!
Gilden Insurance Agency
403 North Main Street
Delphos, Ohio 45833
Phone 419-695-4656 or
1-800-234-9899
email: [email protected]
217 N. Market Street
Van Wert, Ohio 45891
Phone 419-238-6580
On Your Side
NATIONWIDE
INSURANCE
Nationwide Mutual Insurance
Company and Affiliated Companies
Home Office: Columbus, OH
43215-2220 MISC22 11/00
Since 1928
STOP IN AT
ONE OF OUR
3 LOCATIONS
EAST WEST
DOWNTOWN
K
TIRE
4
226 S. Pierce St.
Delphos
419-692-2034
Martin Auto Service
Tim Martin
Martin
Auto
Service
567 204 8209
7442 Bliss Road
Elida, Ohio 45807
www.blissful-bride.com [email protected]
Congratulations Curtis!
Delphos
Hardware
242 N. Main St. Ph. 419-692-0921
Mon.-Fri. 8-7:30; Sat. 8-5
By JIM METCALFE
[email protected]
DELPHOS In wrestling, as in any sport, to get to the
heights of the sport, one must be talented, lucky and healthy,
with the last two more a function of hard work than chance.
Plus, he had the previous example of his older brother,
Stuart, winning a state title just three years before.
That is what Jefferson senior Curtis Miller had going for
him as he celebrates his 220-pound Division III state cham-
pionship.
It felt good to have my hand raised after winning the title
Saturday, as well as a sense of relief. It was a great feeling
to finally accomplish what I had set out to do, Miller noted.
There was pressure. One, because I had qualified the year
before but couldnt wrestle. There was that concern from oth-
ers that I had to stay healthy and get back down there. I was
confident I would and I worked hard all year to make sure of
that; that was my motivation last year and that bad luck.
That was after qualifying to state as a sophomore but not
placing.
As with his older brother, Stuart, who claimed the 215-
pound title in 2009, he had to wait after the impressive Parade
of Champions.
Actually, it wasnt too bad to wait. That is, until I was
called to the warm-up room; then the nerves started to hit me,
Miller acknowledged. Fortunately, I was able to calm my
nerves, go out there and wrestle my style.
He had a different perspective as a freshman while watch-
ing Stuart win his title in 2009, his senior campaign.
I was pretty nervous then; I remember constantly getting
up and down in my seat. I can imagine he went through the
same thing this year watching me, he continued. His match
was a dominant one, while my match was a lot closer. Still we
came out on top.
I had a lot of support during this whole thing. I was con-
fident because of that: coaches, family, teammates, even oth-
ers. I wanted to be dominant all year and for the most part, I
was.
As for his immediate future, that means healing up a sore
shoulder before getting ready for the upcoming baseball sea-
son.
Beyond that, I am leaning more toward playing football in
college. Saturdays match then would be my final match ever,
he added. I am open to the possibility of wrestling in college
should the right offer come along that matches what I want
and need. I will wait and see there.
First-year Jefferson head coach Mike Wilson was happy to
go along for the ride.
I wish I had coached him all four years. That would have
been great for me, Wilson noted. Curtis deserves everything
hes gotten over the years. He has worked hard to get to this
point.
Wilson also credited the family aspect of the success.
Stuart won his title. Its in the blood, Wilson added. All
you had to do was watch the emotion that Stuart, his dad
(Scott) and mom (Cammy) had to see how much this meant to
them. This is what they wanted to accomplish all along.
One thing that I noticed that Curtis did well perhaps the
key to his success was he never got caught out of position;
he was always in the right spot, even when he was shooting.
That is why I was never worried about him during the finals.
Again, that is a function of his work ethic and how much
time he put in.
Miller finished at 56-0 this campaign and 167-11 for his
four seasons.
Its all in the family
C
o
n
g
r
a
t
u
l
a
t
i
o
n
s
C
u
r
t
i
s
Photos courtesy of June Orr & Linda Cermule
2B - The Herald Thursday, March 8, 2012 Thursday, March 8, 2012 The Herald 3B
CONGRATULATIONS
CURTIS
from Jefferson
High School
Bank with the people you know and trust
DELPHOS
230 E. Second St.
(419) 695-1055
MEMBER
FDIC Visit us online: www.rst-fed.co
KNIPPEN
CHRYSLER-DODGE-JEEP
800 W. Fifth St. Delphos, OH 45833
www.knippenchrysler.com
Over 30 years in Business
419-695-4976 or 800-464-8434
Check us out on
our new website
www.spearslawncare.com
Corner of 5
th
& Main St. in Delphos, Ohio
419-695-1060
Congratulations Curtis!!!!!
150 W. Fifth St., Delphos
(corner of Fifth and Canal)
419-692-BACK (2225)
Dr. Jay M. DeWitt 924 E. Fifth St., Delphos 419-695-1632
MARYS
A&W ROOT BEER
John Odenwellers
Lion Clothing
Formalwear Headquarters
206 N. Main St.
Phone 419-692-9981
For Weddings
Grooms tux
FREE
with party of
5 or more.
234 S. Jefferson St.
Delphos, Ohio
Ph. 419-692-6010
Curtis Miller
State Champion
Delphos Jefferson
CLARA L. HANF, CPA
Financial Advisor
T 419.692.4133 202 N. Main Street
T 800.999.2701 Delphos, OH 45833
F 419.692.2260 [email protected]
www.raymondjames.com/clarahanf
Raymond James Financial Services, Inc., member FINRA/SIPC
939 E. Fifth St, Delphos
419-692-2695 (BOWL)
Delphos
Recreation
Center
Proudly Serving the Tri-County Area Since 1869
Delphos Herald
News
419-695-0015 Ext. 134
Fax 419-692-7704
[email protected]
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Fax 419-692-7116
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405 North Main Street,
Delphos, Ohio
visit our website at:
www.delphosherald.com
The
The UNION BANK Co.
www.theubank.com
114 E. Third St., Delphos
Member FDIC
SCHRADER
REALTY LLC
Put your dreams in our hands
202 N. Washington Street
Delphos, OH 45833
Office: 419-692-2249
Fax: 419-692-2205
Ruth Baldauf-Liebrecht ... 419-234-5202
Amie Nungester ............... 419-236-0688
Janet Kroeger .................. 419-236-7894
CONGRATULATIONS CURTIS MILLER!
Krista Schrader ................ 419-233-3737
Jodi Moenter ............ 419-296-9561
Stephanie Clemons .. 419-234-0940
Judy M.W. Bosch ..... 419-230-1983
WWW.SCHRADERREALTY.NET
CONGRATULATIONS CURTIS!
from your friends at
DELPHOS
TRADING
POST
WERE AN ANYTHING
YOU NEED STORE!!
528 N.Washington St., Delphos
419-692-0044
MAN CAVE ITEMS
WOMENS
JEWELRY
NAME BRAND
TOOLS
WE BUY
GOLD & SILVER
DVDs, GAMES,
CONSOLES MUCH MORE!
PRICES HARD
TO BEAT!
DISCOUNT PRICES DAILY!
More value for your buying $$.
Large enough to serve you, small enough to know you
www.ottovillebank.com
The Ottoville
Bank Co.
MAIN OFFICE
161 W. Third St.
Ottoville, OH 45876
419-453-3313
LENDING OFFICE
940 E. Fifth St.
Delphos, OH 45833
419-695-3313
Michelle Snyder
419-879-3491
John Fisher
419-879-3489
Joe Laudick
419-879-4840
Steve Oren
419-879-3498
Timothy A. Sprague
419-879-3497
Mark Stechschulte
419-879-3493
SuperiorFCU.com
Delphos
485 Moxie Ln.
419-692-3405
OUTPATIENT ~ HOME HEALTH ~ FITNESS
[email protected] www.midwestrehab.net
'HOSKRV
3K\VLFDO7KHUDS\
Physical~Occupational~Speech
Therapy Centers
Better, Stronger, Faster!
Van Wert
1196 Westwood Dr.
419-238-3405
Lima
3077 W. Elm St.
419-225-3405
Ada
1200 S. Main St.
419-634-8655
419-695-PEAK (7325)
Stadium Park Office Complex 333 North Street
Delphos, OH
Email: [email protected]
Phone: 419-692-8055
Fax: 419-692-8065
209 W. Third St., Delphos, OH 45833
Harter and Schier
Funeral Home
Locally Owned and Operated
NATIONAL
LIME & STONE COMPANY
SINCE 1903
419-692-0931
Locations in:
Delphos, Rimer, Buckland
Health Care and Rehabilitation Center
Independent Plus
and Assisted Living Apartments
VANCREST
1425 East Fifth Street, Delphos, Ohio 45833
419-695-2871
www.vancrest.com
306 N. Main St. Delphos
(419) 692-2207
Dreams Happen Here Everyday
Gary Suever, Agent
An Independent Associate Representing Aflac
PO Box 225 Delphos, Ohio 45833
419.692.1030 office 419.303.9510 cell
419.692.1030 fax
[email protected] aflac.com
Delphos II
24086 State Route 697, P.O. Box 393
Delphos, Ohio 45833
Phone: 419-692-6022
FAX: 419-692-8058
Toledo Molding & Die, Inc.
12805 W. State Rd.
Delphos, Oh 45833
419-692-2624
W
C
WOOD
CREATIONS
CUSTOM CABINETRY &
INTERIOR DOORS & TRIM
Mark Wurst, owner
Cabinetry Woodworking Laminate Flooring
Hardwood Flooring
For Remodeling Or New Construction
Interior Doors & Trim
Complete Finishing & Installation
by Delphos Discount East of St. Johns
Open 5 a.m.-9 p.m.
662 Elida Ave.,
Delphos
419-692-0007
The Delphos Tri-County Wrestling Club says ...
CONGRATULATIONS
CURTIS MILLER
FROM ALL THE CURRENT
TRI-COUNTY WRESTLERS!
Grothouse Plumbing & Heating, Inc.
901 S. Main Street, Delphos
419-695-3081
[email protected]
HVAC/Refrig/Hydronics Lic#25576
Plumbing Lic # 14379
Plumbing Heating A/C Sewers
Septic Tanks Water Treatment Geothermal
Restaurant Equipment Parts & Service
CONGRATULATIONS
TO ALL STATE QUALIFYING WRESTLERS
Were On Your Side!
Gilden Insurance Agency
403 North Main Street
Delphos, Ohio 45833
Phone 419-695-4656 or
1-800-234-9899
email: [email protected]
217 N. Market Street
Van Wert, Ohio 45891
Phone 419-238-6580
On Your Side
NATIONWIDE
INSURANCE
Nationwide Mutual Insurance
Company and Affiliated Companies
Home Office: Columbus, OH
43215-2220 MISC22 11/00
Since 1928
STOP IN AT
ONE OF OUR
3 LOCATIONS
EAST WEST
DOWNTOWN
K
TIRE
4
226 S. Pierce St.
Delphos
419-692-2034
Martin Auto Service
Tim Martin
Martin
Auto
Service
567 204 8209
7442 Bliss Road
Elida, Ohio 45807
www.blissful-bride.com [email protected]
Congratulations Curtis!
Delphos
Hardware
242 N. Main St. Ph. 419-692-0921
Mon.-Fri. 8-7:30; Sat. 8-5
By JIM METCALFE
[email protected]
DELPHOS In wrestling, as in any sport, to get to the
heights of the sport, one must be talented, lucky and healthy,
with the last two more a function of hard work than chance.
Plus, he had the previous example of his older brother,
Stuart, winning a state title just three years before.
That is what Jefferson senior Curtis Miller had going for
him as he celebrates his 220-pound Division III state cham-
pionship.
It felt good to have my hand raised after winning the title
Saturday, as well as a sense of relief. It was a great feeling
to finally accomplish what I had set out to do, Miller noted.
There was pressure. One, because I had qualified the year
before but couldnt wrestle. There was that concern from oth-
ers that I had to stay healthy and get back down there. I was
confident I would and I worked hard all year to make sure of
that; that was my motivation last year and that bad luck.
That was after qualifying to state as a sophomore but not
placing.
As with his older brother, Stuart, who claimed the 215-
pound title in 2009, he had to wait after the impressive Parade
of Champions.
Actually, it wasnt too bad to wait. That is, until I was
called to the warm-up room; then the nerves started to hit me,
Miller acknowledged. Fortunately, I was able to calm my
nerves, go out there and wrestle my style.
He had a different perspective as a freshman while watch-
ing Stuart win his title in 2009, his senior campaign.
I was pretty nervous then; I remember constantly getting
up and down in my seat. I can imagine he went through the
same thing this year watching me, he continued. His match
was a dominant one, while my match was a lot closer. Still we
came out on top.
I had a lot of support during this whole thing. I was con-
fident because of that: coaches, family, teammates, even oth-
ers. I wanted to be dominant all year and for the most part, I
was.
As for his immediate future, that means healing up a sore
shoulder before getting ready for the upcoming baseball sea-
son.
Beyond that, I am leaning more toward playing football in
college. Saturdays match then would be my final match ever,
he added. I am open to the possibility of wrestling in college
should the right offer come along that matches what I want
and need. I will wait and see there.
First-year Jefferson head coach Mike Wilson was happy to
go along for the ride.
I wish I had coached him all four years. That would have
been great for me, Wilson noted. Curtis deserves everything
hes gotten over the years. He has worked hard to get to this
point.
Wilson also credited the family aspect of the success.
Stuart won his title. Its in the blood, Wilson added. All
you had to do was watch the emotion that Stuart, his dad
(Scott) and mom (Cammy) had to see how much this meant to
them. This is what they wanted to accomplish all along.
One thing that I noticed that Curtis did well perhaps the
key to his success was he never got caught out of position;
he was always in the right spot, even when he was shooting.
That is why I was never worried about him during the finals.
Again, that is a function of his work ethic and how much
time he put in.
Miller finished at 56-0 this campaign and 167-11 for his
four seasons.
Its all in the family
C
o
n
g
r
a
t
u
l
a
t
i
o
n
s
C
u
r
t
i
s
Photos courtesy of June Orr & Linda Cermule
BEETLE BAILEY
SNUFFY SMITH
BORN LOSER
HAGAR THE HORRIBLE
BIG NATE
FRANK & ERNEST
GRIZZWELLS
PICKLES
BLONDIE
HI AND LOIS
Thursday Evening March 8, 2012
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4B - The Herald Thursday, March 8, 2012
Tomorrows
Horoscope
By Bernice Bede Osol
Friend belittles
husband in
public
Dear Annie: My best
friend, Maggie, and I are
like sisters. We have great
fun, can talk about nearly
anything and have supported
each other through our tough-
est times. Our husbands also
get along well, and we often
do things together.
Over the past year, Maggie
has become
increasingly criti-
cal of her husband,
Scott. He is a
likeable guy, but
Maggie scolds and
picks on him, rolls
her eyes and basi-
cally treats him
with contempt.
Granted, Scott can
be a little blunt,
and his attempts
at humor dont
always succeed,
but her responses are worse.
She will say, Youre such
an idiot. Why dont you just
keep your mouth shut? Yet,
the next minute, they will
have their arms around each
other.
We often see Maggie and
Scott at parties, and it is clear
that others feel embarrassed
by this behavior. Maggie
has never mentioned marital
problems to me. In fact, she
says sweet and complimen-
tary things about Scott when
its just the two of us. I dont
want to jeopardize our ter-
rific friendship, so how do I
approach this subject? She
doesnt take criticism well,
no matter how gentle. --
Baffled Friend
Dear Baffled: Some mar-
ried couples fall into the habit
of letting criticisms become
common and public. We
think Maggie might sim-
ply need a little push in the
right direction. The next time
she says or does something
critical of Scott, you might
take her aside and say, Are
you angry with Scott? You
seem to dislike him so much
lately. You also could give
positive reinforcement when
you witness affection, add-
ing, Its so nice to see you
two getting along.
Dear Annie: Ive been
asked to be the maid-of-hon-
or for a friend. I was planning
to throw a bridal shower with
10 to 15 guests at my apart-
ment. I had a nice luncheon-
type party in mind.
The other day, my friend
informed me that she wants
to invite 65 guests and, since
my apartment is too small
for that crowd, said I should
host it at a local restaurant.
I checked with the venue,
and it is way too pricey for
my budget. Even if I involve
the other two bridesmaids,
this will be a much bigger
expense than I can afford.
Are there rules when it
comes to bridal shower guest
lists? I dont want to hurt her
feelings or lose her friend-
ship, but combined with the
expense of the dress, shoes,
hair and bachelorette party, I
may need to take out a loan.
How can I handle this? After
all, its her wedding. -- Soon
To Be Poor Maid of Honor
Dear Maid: The bride is
allowed to give you the guest
list, but she must keep to
the hostesss limit.
When you told her
you would give a
shower for 15 peo-
ple, she should have
kept the guest list
at 15. It is incon-
siderate of a bride
to force anyone to
shell out more than
they can afford for
a shower. We rec-
ommend you tell
her so sorry, this
isnt in your bud-
get, and you will have to
decline as hostess, but that
you would be happy to give
a smaller event in your apart-
ment for 15 guests. We dont
care if its her wedding. It
doesnt entitle her to become
Bridezilla.
Dear Annie: Your
response to Stuck in the
Middle was spot on. Its
never too late to learn good
fiscal behavior, but its never
too early, either. Americas
Credit Unions sponsors a
public television series called
Biz Kid$ that teaches
young people the impor-
tance of good money man-
agement and business skills
they can use for life. With a
website of resources and a
free curriculum that teach-
ers and parents can access,
Biz Kid$ teaches kids that
being fiscally responsible can
be fun. Will you tell them,
Annie? -- Jamie Hammond,
Executive Producer
Dear Jamie Hammond:
With pleasure. We hope our
readers, young and old, will
check out Biz Kid$ at biz-
kids.com.
Annies Mailbox
www.delphosherald.com
FRIDAY, MARCH 9, 2012
Youre likely to form two new
alliances in the year ahead, both
of which youll be able to rely on.
Although each will be totally different
from the other and formed for different
reasons, both will be successful
relationships.
PISCES (Feb. 20-March 20)
-- Even if youre usually pragmatic
when it comes to the management
of your resources, today might be
an exception. Unfortunately, you
could yield to powerful, impractical
inclinations.
ARIES (March 21-April 19)
-- If you are especially bewitched by
a certain product, you might not be
able to distinguish between a good
deal and a bad one. Take some time to
check out its true worth, and dont be
fooled by the razzle-dazzle.
TAURUS (April 20-May 20)
-- Its good to be optimistic and
hopeful, but be sure your thinking is
grounded in realism as well. If your
thoughts are founded upon illusions,
disappointment is probable.
GEMINI (May 21-June 20) -- If
a certain clique youve been hanging
out with contains a few members who
think they are superior to other people,
you might want to take some time to
reconsider your involvement.
CANCER (June 21-July 22)
-- You should take care that you
dont lower your standards if you
find yourself hanging out with a few
people who seem to be operating on
a substandard level. If you sense this,
excuse yourself immediately.
LEO (July 23-Aug. 22) --
Although normally youre a pretty
easy person to get along with, there are
times that you can be contrary. If you
find you are challenging everything
that others say or do, get a grip.
VIRGO (Aug. 23-Sept. 22) --
There are certain hot spots pertaining
to your material affairs that need to
be handled with asbestos gloves. Be
particularly cautious when it comes to
any financial dealings.
LIBRA (Sept. 23-Oct. 23) -- Keep
in mind that what may be important to
you might not be of equal significance
to your associates. Face the facts and
you wont get caught off guard.
SCORPIO (Oct. 24-Nov. 22) -- It
behooves you to pay closer attention
than usual to assignments or tasks that
you consider to be unpleasant. When
we resist doing something, there is
greater risk of blowing the job.
SAGITTARIUS (Nov. 23-Dec.
21) -- If you find that someone in your
group is doing something that you
consider to be dishonest or stupid,
back away quietly, without making a
huge fuss.
CAPRICORN (Dec. 22-Jan.
19) -- Try to be open-minded and
forgiving if there is someone in your
household who is acting rebellious. If
you respond in kind and make waves,
the storm will only linger longer.
AQUARIUS (Jan. 20-Feb. 19)
-- Be above it all and dont take it
personally if every suggestion you
make is rejected or put down. There
is nothing wrong with your ideas, its
just that others will be promoting their
own.
COPYRIGHT 2012 United Feature Syndicate,
Inc.