Professional Documents
Culture Documents
p6
DELPHOS
The
HERALD
www.delphosherald.com
75 daily
Delphos, Ohio
Middle Point
man faces
drug charges
DHI Media Staff Report
news@delphosherald.com
VAN WERT A Middle
Point man was arrested after
a brief investigation and
search of his home. Norman
D. Haynie, 36, was arrested
after the West Central Ohio
Crime Task Force searched
Haynies Railroad Street
residence Friday and found
suspected heroin, suspected
marijuana and suspected prescription pills, several small
scales, money and miscellaneous drug paraphernalia.
Haynie
Also found during
the search was a young
child that had reportedly been left alone in the home
for a long period of time. Van Wert County Sheriff
Thomas M. Riggenbach stated that Van Wert County
Child Services was called to respond to the scene.
Riggenbach stated that Haynie was arrested upon returning
to his residence and was charged with third-degree felony possession of heroin, fifth-degree felony possession of marijuana,
misdemeanor endangering children and misdemeanor OVI.
He was taken to the Van Wert County Correctional Facility to
await arraignment, which is scheduled for today.
Riggenbach advised that a nuisance abatement letter will
be sent to the property owner to make that person aware of
what allegedly occurred on this property that were illegal
actions. The letter directs property owners to take action in the
hopes it will prevent any future illegal activity. According to
Riggenbach, the law does allow for the seizure of property if
the property owner knowingly permits illegal activity there.
See DRUG, page 10
Upfront
Blood drive set
Feb. 4 at K of C
The American Red Cross
will hold a blood drive from
2-7 p.m. Feb. 4 at the Knights
of Columbus hall in Delphos.
Donors should weigh
at least 110 pounds, be at
least 17 years of age and
be in good general health.
Call 1-800-RED CRoss
or visit redcrossbloood.org,
sponsor code kofcdel to
schedule an appointment.
Forecast
Partly cloudy
today and
mostly cloudy
tonight. Colder.
Highs in the
lower 20s.
Wind chills zero to 10 above
zero this morning. Lows
around 15. See page 2.
Index
Obituaries
State/Local
Entertainment
Community
Sports
Classifieds
Comics and Puzzles
World News
2
3
4
5
6-7
8
9
10
www.delphosstjohns.org
2 The Herald
www.delphosherald.com
TODAY IN HISTORY
Associated Press
Today is Monday, Jan. 26, the 26th day of 2015. There
are 339 days left in the year.
Todays Highlight in History:
On Jan. 26, 1915, President Woodrow Wilson signed
the Rocky Mountain National Park Act, which created
Americas 10th national park.
On this date:
In 1784, in a letter to his daughter Sarah, Benjamin
Franklin expressed unhappiness over the choice of the
bald eagle as the symbol of America, and stated his own
preference: the turkey.
In 1788, the first European settlers in Australia, led by
Capt. Arthur Phillip, landed in present-day Sydney.
In 1837, Michigan became the 26th state.
In 1870, Virginia rejoined the Union.
In 1925, actor Paul Newman was born in Shaker
Heights, Ohio.
In 1939, during the Spanish Civil War, rebel forces led
by Gen. Francisco Franco captured Barcelona.
In 1942, the first American Expeditionary Force to
go to Europe during World War II arrived in Belfast,
Northern Ireland.
In 1950, India officially proclaimed itself a republic
as Rajendra Prasad took the oath of office as president.
In 1962, the United States launched Ranger 3 to land
scientific instruments on the moon but the probe
ended up missing its target by more than 22,000 miles.
In 1979, former Vice President Nelson A. Rockefeller
died in New York at age 70.
In 1988, Australians celebrated the 200th anniversary
of their country as a grand parade of tall ships re-enacted
the voyage of the first European settlers. The Andrew
Lloyd Webber musical Phantom of the Opera opened
at Broadways Majestic Theater.
In 1998, President Bill Clinton forcefully denied
having an affair with a former White House intern, telling reporters, I did not have sexual relations with that
woman, Miss Lewinsky.
Ten years ago: A U.S. Marine helicopter crashed
in western Iraq, killing 30 Marines and a Navy medic
aboard. A man parked his SUV on railroad tracks in
Glendale, California, setting off a crash of two commut-
LOTTERY
CLEVELAND (AP)
These Ohio lotteries were
drawn Sunday:
Mega Millions
Estimated jackpot: $25
million
Pick 3 Evening
8-2-3
Pick 3 Midday
0-7-5
Pick 4 Evening
3-7-8-8
Pick 4 Midday
6-2-7-7
Pick 5 Evening
6-8-1-8-5
Pick 5 Midday
0-8-9-6-9
Powerball
Estimated jackpot: $261
million
Rolling Cash 5
02-30-32-35-36
Estimated
jackpot:
$140,000
ANDY NORTH
Financial Advisor
www.edwardjones.com
www.raabeford.com
11260 Elida Rd., Delphos
419-692-0055
Member SIPC
Vernon F. Hobbs
May 27, 1932-Jan. 24, 2015
MIDDLE POINT
Vernon F. Hobbs of Middle
Point, Ohio, passed away
Saturday, January 24, 2015,
at 1:27 a.m. at the Van Wert
Inpatient Hospice Center.
He was born on May 27,
1932, to Harrison and Mattie
(Hibbard) Hobbs. He was
raised by his mother, Mattie,
his stepfather, Everett Starrett,
and his grandparents, John
and Laura Hibbard. All preceded him in death.
He was united in marriage
to Leota Long on Sept. 23,
1954. She preceded him in
death on June 28, 2007.
He is survived by three
daughters, Deborah Fair of
Venedocia, Gwenda (Jack)
Blackmore of Van Wert and
Cathy (Dan) Cline of Van Wert;
one son, Vernon E. (Elizabeth)
Hobbs of Spencerville; one
brother, Virgil Emmett of
Kentucky; 10 grandchildren, Joshua (Diana), David,
Corey and Audrey Hobbs,
Ryan (Chelsea), Scott and
Kevin Fair, Ashley (Daniel)
Brown, Megan Smith and
Emily Blackmore; and eight
great-grandchildren.
Also preceding him in
death is his brother, Fred
Starrett.
Vernon retired from the
Lima Carpenters Hall after
over 25 years of service. He
attended Salem Presbyterian
Church. After his retirement,
he enjoyed woodworking at
home in his shop. He didnt
know a stranger and enjoyed
visiting with and making new
friends. He always had a smile
and never lost his sense of
humor.
Funeral services will be
held on Wednesday at Salem
Presbyterian Church in
Venedocia. The service will
begin at 11 a.m. with visitation one hour prior to the service. The Rev. Thomas Emery
will officiate. Burial will be at
the Venedocia Cemetery.
Visitation will be from 4-8
p.m. Tuesday at Harter and
Schier Funeral Home.
Memorial contributions
may be made to Salem
Presbyterian Church or the
Van Wert Inpatient Hospice
Center.
To view funeral service
online, please visit harterandschier.com at the time of the
service. (Password: webcast9)
To leave condolences,
please go to www.harterandschier.com.
The
Delphos
Herald
(USPS 1525 8000) is published
daily except Sundays, Tuesdays
and Holidays.
The Delphos Herald is delivered by carrier in Delphos for
$1.82 per week. Same day
delivery outside of Delphos is
done through the post office
for Allen, Van Wert or Putnam
Counties. Delivery outside of
these counties is $117 per year.
Entered in the post office
in Delphos, Ohio 45833 as
Periodicals, postage paid at
Delphos, Ohio.
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,
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Delphos, Ohio 45833
CORRECTIONS
WEATHER
WEATHER FORECAST
Tri-County
Associated Press
TODAY: Partly cloudy.
Colder. Highs in the lower
20s. North winds 5 to 15 mph
becoming northeast up to 5
mph in the afternoon. Wind
chills zero to 10 above zero in
the morning.
TONIGHT: Mostly cloudy
through midnight then becoming cloudy. Lows around 15.
Northeast winds around 5
mph.
TUESDAY:
Mostly
cloudy. Highs in the upper
20s. North winds 5 to 10 mph.
TUESDAY NIGHT: Partly
cloudy through midnight then
becoming mostly clear. Lows
around 15. Northwest winds
around 10 mph.
WEDNESDAY: Mostly
sunny. Highs around 30.
WEDNESDAY NIGHT:
Cloudy with a 40 percent
chance of snow. Lows in the
mid 20s.
THURSDAY: Rain and
snow likely. Highs in the mid
30s. Chance of rain and snow
60 percent.
THURSDAY NIGHT:
Mostly cloudy with a 20 percent chance of snow. Lows in
the lower 20s.
FRIDAY AND FRIDAY
NIGHT: Partly cloudy. Highs
in the upper 20s. Lows around
15.
FUNERAL
VASQUEZ, Adolfo Doc, 89, of Lima, the family will
receive friends 4-7 p.m. today and the funeral will begin at 7
p.m. with Pastor Terry Davy officiating. Military rites will be
provided by V.F.W. Post 8445 following the service. Memorial
contributions may be given to the family and online condolences may be shared at BayliffAndSon.com.
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The Herald 3
STATE/LOCAL
BRIEFS
Church plans
community meal
INFORMATION
SUBMITTED
ELIDA Immanuel
United Methodist Church will
host its monthly community
meal at 5:30 p.m. Feb. 15.
The menu is chili soup,
sandwiches, carrots, pudding
and beverages. Following the
meal, there will be story time
for the children. Mark your
calendars now and plan to be
there!
This event is free and open
to the public and the church
would love to have you join
them! Bring your friends and
neighbors.
If you have any questions
regarding this event, please
contact the church at 419-3312366.
The church is located at
699 Sunnydale Avenue, Elida.
Lawmakers to
hold hearing
about Lake Erie
TOLEDO (AP) A
committee of state lawmakers will travel to western Ohio to talk about
water quality issues facing
Lake Erie and the rest of
the state.
The Ohio Houses agriculture committee will
meet in Van Wert next
Thursday.
High-ranking members
in the Legislature and officials within Ohio Gov.
John Kasichs administration say a top priority this
year will be tackling the
algae fouling the water in
Lake Erie.
The House agriculture
committee plans to hear
from farmers and researchers at the upcoming hearing.
New House Speaker
Cliff Rosenberger says he
wants to work on water
quality solutions without
singling out anyone.
Health department
addresses flu concerns
INFORMATION
SUBMITTED
VAN WERT COUNTY
The Van Wert County Health
Department would like to
remind the public it is not too
late to obtain a flu vaccine
for this seasons influenza.
Vaccination remains the best
protection against the flu, its
severity and potential serious
complications.
If you have not received
a flu shot this season and
would like to obtain one:
Ages 6 months to 18
years and ages 65 and older
may receive a flu shot at
the Van Wert County Health
Department. Please call 419238-0808, extension 103 or
107, to schedule an appointment.
Ages 19-64, please visit
a pharmacy to obtain a flu
shot.
Influenza is a respiratory
disease caused by a virus.
Symptoms may include fever,
cough, sore throat, body
aches, headache, chills and
fatigue.
If you have any of these
symptoms, please contact
your physician.
Anti-viral medications
are most effective when
used early in the course of
the disease. Other effective
ways to avoid getting or
spreading influenza include
hand washing; covering
coughs and sneezes; avoiding touching eyes, nose and
mouth and staying home
when sick until fever-free
for 24 hours.
When submitting a
DIGITAL
PHOTO
Please email the original jpg file
as an attachment to:
nspencer@delphosherald.com
Include the information for the
picture along with a phone number
to contact with any questions in the
email text.
The Delphos Herald charges $32.50*
for any wedding with a photo
Laudicks Jewelry
1225418
Coldwater
Van Wert
215 W. Main St.
1244 S. Shannon St.
419-678-2929
419-238-2266
laudick@laudicks.com
4 The Herald
www.delphosherald.com
r!
and deliver it all to your doo
From
local news
and sports
to what's
on sale
at the
supermarket,
the Delphos Herald & the Van Wert Times
keeps you in the local loop.
Times Bulletin
media The Delphos Herald
700 Fox Road, Van Wert OH 45891
www.timesbulletin.com
Call 419-238-2285
Ext. 204 or 206
to start your subscription today
Call 419-695-0015
Ext. 126
to start your subscription today
Birdman wins
Producers Guilds
top trophy
LOS ANGELES (AP)
Birdman received a welcome
lift on its flight to the Oscars
after winning the Producers
Guild of Americas highest
film award Saturday night at a
ceremony in Los Angeles.
The win delivers needed momentum to Alejandro
Inarritus showbiz romp following its upset loss to The
Grand Budapest Hotel in the
Golden Globes comedy category earlier this month. Its
now neck and neck in the Oscar
race with Richard Linklaters
Boyhood, which won in the
Globes drama category.
Other trophies presented
Saturday night included The
Lego Movie for animated feature, Life Itself for documentary film, Fargo for television
movie or miniseries, Breaking
Bad for TV drama series,
Orange is the New Black
for TV comedy series and
Comedians in Cars Getting
Coffee for digital series.
Al Pacino looks
Do You Prepare
to diversify, not
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Pacino says he can relate to
Yourself
at
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You Do
for
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Where
Was That?Simon Axler, the lead characNow, Now,
Where
Was That?
www.edwardjones.com
www.edwardjones.com
www.edwardjones.com
www.edwardjones.com
Member SIPC
www.delphosherald.com
The Herald 5
COMMUNITY
LANDMARK
Presbyterian Church
CALENDAR OF
EVENTS
TODAY
9 a.m. to 7 p.m. Ottoville
Branch Library is open.
11:30 a.m. Mealsite
at Delphos Senior Citizen
Center, 301 Suthoff St.
6:30 p.m. Shelter from
the Storm support group meets
in the Delphos Public Library
basement.
7 p.m. Ottoville village
council meets at the municipal
building.
Marion Township Trustees
meet at the township house.
7:30 p.m. Delphos
Eagles Aerie 471 meets at the
Eagles Lodge.
WEDNESDAY
9 a.m. - noon Putnam
County Museum is open, 202
E. Main St. Kalida.
10 a.m. to 3 p.m. The
Delphos Museum of Postal
History, 339 N. Main St., is
open.
11:30 a.m. Mealsite
at Delphos Senior Citizen
Center, 301 Suthoff St.
Noon Rotary Club
meets at The Grind.
6 p.m. Shepherds of
Christ Associates meet in the
St. Johns Chapel.
THURSDAY
9-11 a.m. The Delphos
Canal Commission Museum,
241 N. Main St., is open.
10 a.m. to 3 p.m. The
Delphos Museum of Postal
History, 339 N. Main St., is
open.
11:30 a.m. Mealsite
at Delphos Senior Citizen
Center, 301 Suthoff St.
3-7 p.m. The Interfaith
Thrift Store is open for shopping.
7 p.m. Bingo at St.
Johns Little Theatre.
FRIDAY
7:30 a.m. Delphos
Optimist Club, A&W DriveIn, 924 E. Fifth St.
10 a.m. to 3 p.m. The
Delphos Museum of Postal
History, 339 N. Main St., is
open.
11 a.m.-4 p.m. Interfaith
Thrift Store is open for shopping.
11:30 a.m. Mealsite
at Delphos Senior Citizen
Center, 301 Suthoff St.
Putting Your
World in
PersPective
JAN. 27
Carrie Lieurance
Margee Mesker
Kacie Wannemacher
Fred Gengler
JAN. 28
Marlene Schroeder
Charlene Slygh
Kelsey Rekart
Kyle Truman
Geoff Ketcham
COLUMN
Name
Address
Name
Birthday
Name
Birthday
Name
Birthday
Name
Birthday
Visit delphosherald.com
TUESDAY
11:30 a.m. Mealsite
at Delphos Senior Citizen
Center, 301 Suthoff St.
10 a.m. to 3 p.m. The
Delphos Museum of Postal
History, 339 N. Main St., is
open.
7 p.m. Delphos Area
Simply Quilters meets at the
Delphos Area Chamber of
Commerce, 306 N. Main St.
7:30 p.m. Alcoholics
Anonymous, First Presbyterian
Church, 310 W. Second St.
7:30 p.m. Elida village
council meets at the town hall.
BRAGGING TIMES
ITS TIME TO SHOW OFF YOUR PICTURES!
CHILDS NAME
To Be Published
Mail to:
BRAGGING TIMES
c/o Delphos Herald
405 North Main St.
Delphos, Ohio 45833
Childs Name(s)
Birthday(s)
Parents
Address
City_________________________State
Phone (Number to contact if questions)
Grandparents
6 The Herald
www.delphosherald.com
SPORTS
Local Capsules
DHI Media Staff Reports
Lancers respond with rout of
Archers
MIDDLE POINT If Lincolnview
head coach Brett Hammons had questions about how his team would respond
following a rivalry loss to Crestview the
game before, he didnt have to wait long
for the answer on Saturday night.
The Lancers forced turnovers on each
of the first three possessions of the game
and shot 71 percent in the first quarter
on their way to an easy 67-32 win over
visiting Antwerp.
Senior guard Justis Dowdy was the
catalyst on both ends of the floor for the
Lancers as he scored 15 of his gamehigh 27 points in the opening period. He
wound up with a double-double on the
night, grabbing 10 rebounds, dishing out
five assists and collecting three steals.
In fact, Dowdy outscored the Archers
all by himself through three periods as
the Lancers held a 56-26 lead heading to
the final quarter.
The Archers put only one player, 6-6
senior Trenton Copsey, in double figure with 16 points and eight rebounds.
Antwerps offense was held to 12-for-39
(31%) from the floor while committing
21 turnovers.
The Lancers moved the ball willingly
and found open teammates for easy baskets throughout the game.
Junior Austin Leeth turned in a strong
evening with eight points, three steals
and eight assists.
points in the first quarter. Bellman tallied 18 markers, 12 the first half.
Amanda Simon paced the guests with
12 points, all in the second stanza.
After a quick start of the game, the
hosts continued the pace in the second
quarter by going on an 11-0 spurt.
Lynea Diller added to the low-post
dominance for Grove with 11 points.
Grove was up 58-36 after 24 minutes
of play.
Grove kept to form to start off the
final frame by scoring nine unanswered
points to stretch the home team lead to
67-38.
Carlee McCluer collected nine points
and seven assists for the hosts; Bellman,
Kyrah Yinger and Becca Endicott delivered seven assists apiece.
Miller City (44)
Cassie Niese 4-0-8, Liz Klear 0-2-2,
Megan Niese 1-0-3, Tiffany Welty 1-1-3,
Amanda Simon 6-0-12, Jenelle Kuhlman
1-0-2, Megan Warnimont 2-0-4, Chrissy
Berger 3-0-6, Paige Wenzinger 2-0-4.
Totals 20-3-44.
Columbus Grove (67)
Jade Clement 10-2-25, Becca
Endicott 2-0-4, Lynea Diller 5-1-11,
Carlee McCluer 3-1-9, Paige Bellman
7-4-18. Totals 27-8-67.
Score by Quarters
Miller City 6 18 12 8 44
Col. Grove 21 21 16 9 67
Three-point goals: Miller City, Niese;
Columbus Grove, Clement 3, McCluer
2.
FRIDAY
Boys Basketball
Jefferson at Lincolnview (NWC), 6 p.m.
Fort Jennings at Ottoville (PCL), 6 p.m.
Columbus Grove at Spencerville
(NWC), 6 p.m.
Elida at Shawnee (WBL), 6 p.m.
Bath at Van Wert (WBL), 6 p.m.
Crestview at Paulding (NWC), 6 p.m.
OG at Kenton (WBL), 6 p.m.
Ayrsville at Wayne Trace, 6 p.m.
Vanlue at Leipsic (BVC), 6 p.m.
PG at North Baltimore (BVC), 6 p.m.
St. Henry at St. Johns (MAC), 6:30 p.m.
Minster at Parkway (MAC), 6:30 p.m.
Wrestling
St. Johns, Spencerville, Lincolnview,
Columbus Grove and Wayne Trace at
LCC Invitational, 5:30 p.m.
SATURDAY
Boys Basketball
Spencerville at St. Johns, 6 p.m.
Jefferson at Arlington, 6 p.m.
Paulding at Ottoville, 6 p.m.
Lincolnview at Parkway, 6 p.m.
Elida at Toledo CC, 6 p.m.
Leipsic at Kalida (PCL), 6 p.m.
Columbus Grove at Ottawa-Glandorf,
6 p.m.
Van Wert at Coldwater, 6 p.m.
Celina at Crestview, 6 p.m.
Fort Jennings at New Knoxville, 6:30
p.m.
Lincolnview at Parkway, 7:30 p.m.
Girls Basketball
Elida at Marion Local, noon
OG at Bryan, noon
Ottoville at Jefferson, 1 p.m.
Kalida at Miller City (PCL), 1 p.m.
Continental at Pandora-Gilboa (PCL),
1 p.m.
Lincolnview at Parkway, 6 p.m.
Wrestling
Van Wert at Celina WBL tri meet, 9 a.m.
St. Johns, Spencerville, Lincolnview,
Columbus Grove and Wayne Trace at
LCC Invitational, 9:30 a.m.
Elida at Indian Lake Duals, 10 a.m.
Swimming
WBL Swimming at Defiance, 11 a.m.
Bowling
Parkway vs. Versailles at McBos Lanes
(Versailles), 1 p.m.
Van Wert vs. New Bremen at McBos
Lanes (Versailles), 1 p.m.
College Roundup
BU women, men split basketball twin-bill with Anderson
By Ryan Schadewald
Sports information assistant
ANDERSON, Ind. Bluffton University and Anderson
University split a womens/mens basketball doubleheader
Saturday at Anderson.
The BU women rode a 17-0 first-half run to a convincing
68-43 Heartland Collegiate Athletic Conference win. The win
pushed the Beavers to 7-3 in HCAC play (12-5 overall) and
helps them keep pace in the hotly-contested battle for second
place in the conference. The loss puts Anderson at 1-16 overall
and 0-10 in conference play.
After the Ravens opened with a 6-4 advantage, they went
ice cold, not scoring a point for over 12 minutes of game action
while the Beavers scored 17 straight markers. The run included seven tallies from junior guard Abby Jerger (Middletown/
Madison) which topped her career-high of four points in a
game in that spurt alone. Anderson finally put points on the
board again late in the half as Bluffton carried a 30-16 lead
into the break.
The second half began with a triple from Taylor Whitaker
(Mansfield/Lexington) and a freebie by Rachel Beining
(Ottoville), who both were forced to sit much of the first half
with foul trouble. Anderson trimmed the deficit to 12 on two
separate occasions early in the half but Bluffton would always
have an answer, including a 6-0 run that was capped by a triple
from Whitaker to get the lead over 20 points, and another three
from Kaitlyn Pennekamp (Hamilton/Ross), topping off a 7-0
run that pushed Blufftons lead to 26.
The visitors were able to force 25 turnovers in the contest
in contrast to just 15 of their own. Bluffton was also able to
win the rebound battle, 41-40. The Beavers shot 42.4 percent
(25-of-59) from the floor and a sparkling 50 percent (7-of14) from beyond the arc following an 0-of-11 performance
in Wednesdays win over Manchester. The Ravens shot just
14-of-51 (27.5 percent) from the floor in the loss.
The Beavers were led by Whitaker with her 14 points, 10 in
the second half. She was efficient, hitting 5-of-8 from the floor,
including 4-of-6 from deep. Jerger finished with a career-high
11 points on 5-of-6 shooting, along with five boards. Freshman
Macey Sheerer (Bucyrus) added 10 points and six rebounds.
Jessica Boggan (Cincinnati/Princeton) also added a careerhigh eight boards in extended minutes for the Beavers.
Anderson was led by Courtney Skinner with 17 counters
and Megan Williams with 10 points and eight boards in the
loss.
The Beavers hit the road again on Wednesday as they make
the return trip to Defiance to play the archrival Yellow Jackets
in a 6 p.m. tip.
The Beaver men suffered another tough road loss 84-61.
The Ravens improved to 8-9 and 7-3 in the HCAC while
Bluffton fell below the .500 mark to 8-9 overall and 4-6 in
Heartland Conference play.
The Ravens started with a quick 9-4 lead in the early going.
The Beavers were able to keep it within two possessions until
the home team made their first run at the 11:01 mark, when
they took their 4-point lead and extended it to 11 with seven
straight markers. Their lead was nine before the home team
finished the period on a 14-4 spurt to hold a 42-23 halftime
advantage.
Anderson extended the lead to 22 at the 15:52 mark of the
second stanza before three straight triples, two from Austin
Rohde (Shelby) and one from Blake Green (Delta), would cut
the lead to 13. The Beavers pulled within 10 points on another
three from Ryan Ebbeskotte (Delphos/Jefferson) with 11:30
remaining. However, with Anderson leading 60-49, the Ravens
answered with a 15-2 jag to all but end the Beavers hopes.
AU finished shooting a red-hot 61.2 percent (30-of-49) from
the floor and 45.5 percent (5-of-11) from deep. Bluffton continued its shooting woes, hitting just 36.1 percent (22-of-61)
from the floor and 26.3 percent (5-of-19) from deep. Anderson
also outrebounded Bluffton, 34-31, however, Bluffton was able
to grab 12 offensive boards to Andersons five. The Ravens
committed 16 turnovers, while Bluffton turned it over 13 times.
The visitors were 12-of-15 (80.0 percent) from the stripe.
The Beavers were led by Thayne Recker (Arlington), who
scored 20 points and ripped down seven boards. Andrew
Finley (Cincinnati/Walnut Hills) would add 11 markers and six
rebounds while Rohde finished with 10 off the bench.
Anderson received a huge performance from Nathan Gross
who scored a game-high 28 points on 11-of-14 shooting and
also grabbed eight rebounds. Max Mollaun stuffed the stat
sheet with 26 points (9-of-15 shooting), five rebounds, four
assists and three steals in the win.
See COLLEGE, page 7
www.delphosherald.com
The Herald 7
Wildcats
Kalida
Columbus Grove opened the second half with a 9-2 run that had them
within 30-26 after two free throws by
Stechschulte. That would be as close
as the Bulldogs would get as 3-pointers by Drew Hovest and Laudick
helped stem the Bulldog run as the
Wildcats would take a 40-31 lead to
the fourth quarter.
In the final quarter, the Bulldogs
were able to make one more run
as two 3-pointers by Stechschulte,
around a Logan Roebke basket,
College
VARSITY
PANDORA-GILBOA (53)
Chase Huffman 1-0-3, Ethan Steiner 0-00, Cole Schwab 0-0-0, Josh Wauters 0-0-0, Tyler
Morris 0-0-0, Ryan Lee 2-4-9, Drew Johnson 3-0-6,
Cooper McCullough 1-0-3, Grant Murphy 1-0-2, Colin
Fenstermaker 13-4-30. Totals 18-3-8-53.
JEFFERSON (77)
WOMEN
Bluffton University 68
Taylor Whitaker 5-8 4-6 0-0 14, Brenna Kurilec 2-4 0-1
1-3 5, Taylor Knight 1-2 0-0 2-2 4, Kaitlyn Pennekamp 3-9 2-3
0-0 8, Rachel Beining 3-6 0-0 1-2 7, Ashley Salyer 0-1 0-1 0-2
0, Abby Jerger 5-6 1-1 0-1 11, Gwen Downing 0-1 0-0 0-0 0,
Jessica Boggan 1-6 0-0 0-0 2, Macey Sheerer 2-5 0-1 6-6 10,
Kaycee Rowe 2-9 0-1 0-0 4, Abigail ODonnell 1-2 0-0 0-0 2,
Marina Lyons 0-0 0-0 1-2 1. Totals 25-59(42.4%) 7-14(50%)
11-18(61.1%) 68.
Anderson University 43
Brenell Williams 2-4 1-2 0-0 5, Courtney Skinner 4-10 3-7
6-6 17, Jaclyn Liming 2-6 0-0 0-3 4, Megan Williams 1-9 0-0
1-3 3, Cori Conner 3-12 0-3 1-2 7, Shannon Gavaghan 2-7 0-0
1-1 5, Sabrina Yeary 0-3 0-0 2-2 2, Kayla Kaiser 0-0 0-0 0-0 0.
Totals 14-51(27.5%) 4-12(33.3%) 11-17(64.7%) 43.
Rebounds: BU 41/8 off. (Boggan 8), AU 40/9 off. (Williams
VARSITY
CRESTVIEW (48)
Terra Crowle 1-0-2, Kennis Mercer
0-0-0, Claire Zaleski 0-0-0, Mackenzie
Riggenbach 3-0-7, Paige Motycka 2-0-5,
Emily Bauer 7-3-18, Lindsey Motycka
5-2-12, Megan Hartman 0-0-0, Brady
Guest 1-2-4. Totals 11-3-7-48.
ST. JOHNS (28)
Tara Vorst 0-0-0, Rebekah Fischer
0-0-0, Madilynn Schulte 2-1-6, Emilee
Grothouse 0-0-0, Rachel Pohlman 1-0-3,
Maddie Pohlman 0-0-0, Halie Benavidez
0-1-1, Lexie Hays 5-3-14, Sydney
Fischbach 1-2-4. Totals 6-3-7-28.
Score by Quarters:
Crestview 14 13 6 15 - 48
St. Johns 14 3 3 8 - 28
Three-point goals: Crestview,
Riggenbach, P. Motycka, Bauer; St.
Johns, Schulte, R. Pohlman, Hays.
JUNIOR VARSITY
CRESTVIEW (15)
Lyvia Black 2-0-6, Leslie Skelton
0-0-0, Alyssa Gent 1-0-3, Ally McCoy
0-0-0, Hannah Bowen 0-0-0, Ashley
Dealey 0-0-0, Maci Baker 2-2-6. Totals
2-3-2/2-15.
ST. JOHNS (16)
Brooke Richardson 2-2-6, Ellie
Csukker 1-0-2, Maddy Jettinghoff 1-0-2,
Maddie Pohlman 1-0-2, Lauren Ladd
0-0-0, Hannah Bockey 2-0-4. Totals 7-02/2-16.
Score by Quarters:
Crestview 7 8 - 15
St. Johns 8 8 - 16
Three-point goals: Crestview, Black
2, Gent; St. Johns, none.
conference tussle
By JIM METCALFE
DHI Media Sports Editor
jmetcalfe@delphosherald.com
VARSITY
MINSTER (40)
LeAnn Huelsman 0-0-0, Mariah McKenzie 1-1-3, Rosie Westerbeck 1-4-6, Logan
Arnold 5-3-13, Lauren Roetgerman 2-2-6, Alexis Wuebker 2-0-5, Marissa Luthman
0-0-0, Hannah Schmitmeyer 1-1-3, Alicia Arling 1-0-2, Lindsay Roetgerman 1-0-2.
Totals 13-1-11-40.
OTTOVILLE (48)
Bridget Landin 1-5-7, Nicole Kramer 3-0-8, Brooke Mangas 3-1-8, Alicia Honigford
0-0-0, Courtney Von Sossan 0-0-0, Haley Landwehr 0-0-0, Annie Lindeman 5-2-16,
Lexie Wannemacher 3-1-7, Lyndsey Wannemacher 1-0-2. Totals 9-7-9-48.
Score by Quarters:
Minster 6 10 13 11 - 40
Ottoville 15 11 7 15 - 48
Three-point goals: Minster, Wuebker; Ottoville, Lindeman 4, Kramer 2, Mangas.
JUNIOR VARSITY
MINSTER (30)
Alli Fischer 2-0-4, Lisa Borges 1-0-2, Hayley Baumer 3-1-9, Leah Brandewie 0-0-0,
Lindsay Roetgerman 1-1-4, Savanah Luthman 3-1-7, LeAnn Huelsman 0-2-2, Paige
Thobe 0-0-0, Taylor Kogge 1-0-2. Totals 8-3-5/9-30.
OTTOVILLE (24)
Madison Knodell 3-2-10, Emily Landin 0-0-0, Nicole Williams 0-0-0, Amber Miller
1-1-3, Autumn Neer 0-0-0, Alexis Thorbahn 1-2-4, Abi Hilvers 0-0-0, C.J. Kemper 3-1-7.
Totals 6-2-6/10-27.
Score by Quarters:
Minster 6 8 10 6 - 30
Ottoville 12 6 6 0 - 24
Three-point goals: Minster, Baumer 2, Roetgerman; Ottoville, Knodell 2.
Brett Anderson 2-6 1-4 0-0 5, Max Mollaun 9-15 2-4 6-6 26,
Nathan Gross 11-14 0-0 6-10 28, Cory Kreiger 1-1 0-0 0-1
2, Levi Gleason 1-3 0-0 0-0 2, Brant Gadberry 0-0 0-0 0-0
0, Cameron Etzler 3-3 0-0 0-0 6, Jacob Stephenson 0-0 0-0
1-2 1, Nathaniel Acree 1-3 1-2 2-2 5. Totals 30-49(61.2%)
5-11(45.5%) 19-26(73.1%) 5-29 34 15 84 14 16 1 9 200
Rebounds: BU 31/12 off. (Recker 7), AU 34/5 off. (Gross
8). Assists: BU 6 (Woodrich 2), AU 14 (Jordan 6). Steals: BU
8 (Finley 3), AU 9 (Mollaun 3). Blocks: BU 3 (Recker 2), AU 1
(Gross). Turnovers: BU 13, AU 16. Fouls: BU 22, AU 15.
Score by Halves
Bluffton 23 38 - 61 Record: (8-9, 4-6 HCAC)
Anderson 42 42 - 84 Record: (8-9, 7-3 HCAC)
Officials: Michael Grundman, Dan Beauchamp, Jason
Enrique
Attendance: 392
INFORMATION SUBMITTED
OU-Chillicothe downs Lady Barons
CHILLICOTHE Ohio UniversityChillicothe downed Ohio State University-
44-41.
***
Kalida 22-44 7-9 57: Verhoff 6; Kortokrax
10; Unverferth 15; Roebke 7; Hovest 3; Gerding
6; Laudick 10.
Columbus Grove 16-32 4-6 44: Darbyshire
5; Warnecke 8; Bogart 4; Stechschulte 13; Diller
4; Clement 0; From 5; Grothaus 3; Sharrits 2.
Score by Quarters:
Kalida 17 11 12 17 - 57
Columbus Grove 12 5 14 13 - 44
Junior Varsity: Columbus Grove 44-41 (OT).
Three-point goals: Kalida 6-15 (Laudick 2,
Unverferth 2, Hovest, Roebke); Columbus Grove
8-32 (Stechschulte 3, Warnecke 2, Darbyshire,
From, Grothaus).
Rebounds: Kalida 22 (Kortokrax 8); Columbus
Grove 28 (Darbyshire 6, Diller 5).
Turnovers: Kalida 9, Columbus Grove 5.
8 The Herald
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Mark Pohlman
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and daily cab fare isnt cost effective. We know his parents arent
happy transporting him back and
forth, and we think they need to
push him toward more independence. His social life is limited to
family events, and dating is out of
the question.
We worry about what will happen as his parents are getting older,
and none of us plan on assuming
the responsibility of transporting
him. Any suggestions? -- CONCERNED AUNT IN FLORIDA
DEAR
CONCERNED
AUNT: How do you know the
parents arent happy about transporting him? Have they said it?
If so, the next time they vent,
tell them youre concerned about
their son and why. He may have
additional problems that you are
unaware of. He may simply be a
late bloomer or have no incentive
to be independent because his parents are happy with him snug in
their nest.
However, if this is the elephant in the room that no one -including the parents -- wants to
acknowledge, keep mum because
if you dont, you will be resented
for it.
Dear Abby is written by Abigail
Van Buren, also known as Jeanne
Phillips, and was founded by her
mother, Pauline Phillips. Contact
Dear Abby at www.DearAbby.com
or P.O. Box 69440, Los Angeles,
CA 90069.
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For confidential consideration please send a resume
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On
Health
trouble remembering to take
medicines more than once
a day. Not taking the new
medicines exactly as directed
-- for this reason, or because
theyre expensive -- can increase the risk of clots.
So when I have a patient
on warfarin whose dose has
proved to be very stable, and
who has not had any adverse
effects despite taking it for
many years, I think twice
about switching to the new
medicines -- even though I
agree with Dr. Ruff that they
do have some clear advantages. Call me old-fashioned,
but Im waiting for more information about the possible
adverse effects of the new
drugs before recommending
them to every person who
needs an anti-clotting drug.
(Dr. Komaroff is a physician and professor at Harvard Medical School. To send
questions, go to AskDoctorK.
com, or write: Ask Doctor
K, 10 Shattuck St., Second
Floor, Boston, MA 02115.)
DISTRIBUTED BY UNIVERSAL UCLICK FOR
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Todays
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Crossword Puzzle
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one
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Answer to Sudoku
Hi and Lois
The Herald 9
10 The Herald
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Trivia
Answers to Fridays questions:
Good Night Moon author Margaret Wise
Brown bequeathed her royalties to a neighbors
9-year-old son. When she died in 1952, the royalties earned by her meager books sales didnt
amount to much. That changed to millions of
dollars through the years as her books became
more popular.
The size of standard dinner plate in the 1960s
was nine inches. The size of a standard plate today
is 12 inches.
Todays questions:
What unusual geological formation sacred to
American Indians was declared the U.S.s first
national monument in 1906?
What designer dog was the result of the
unplanned mating of one of Queen Elizabeth IIs
beloved corgis and a dachshund belonging to her
sister, Princess Margaret?
Answers in Wednesdays Herald.