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And so it goes, p5

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DELPHOS
The
50 daily www.delphosherald.com BY NANCY SPENCER Herald Editor nspencer@delphosherald.com Winter Storm Hercules moved through the Midwest Wednesday and Thursday dropping as much as a foot of snow in places like Chicago. Lincolnview, Fort Jennings, Ottoville and other area schools were closed Thursday due to falling and drifting snow, giving students an extra day at the end of their Christmas vacation. While snow- and ice-covered roadways are always a concern this time of year, the National Weather Services prediction of subzero temperatures and wind chills between -30 and -35 for the early part of next week have school administrators taking notice as well. Delphos Public and Parochial schools are set to resume classes on Monday. We will be watching the temperature and wind chills pretty closely, Delphos City Schools Superintendent Kevin Wolfe said

Telling The Tri-Countys Story Since 1869

Subzero wind chills could close schools


Thursday afternoon. With wind chills like that, we cant have students walking to school or standing outside waiting on a bus. Wolfe says he would never cancel on a prediction but he will be out Sunday evening checking the roadways and watching the thermometer and windchill reports. Ottoville Local Schools Superintendent Scott Mangas will also keep an eye on the temperature. We bus all our children but some in town would have to walk to the bus stop and wait, which could be a problem, he said. If the temperatures do get that cold, we would at least have a delay so the in-town children are not walking to the bus stops in the dark. None of the stops are more than two blocks from the children using them so the buses can wait a little bit for the kids to get there. Students living in the country are picked up at their homes so they can stay inside where its warm until the bus arrives. See CHILLS, page 10

Friday, January 3, 2014

HERALD
Delphos, Ohio

More snow, Blood drive set severe cold on the way


Upfront
There will be a Red Cross Blood Drive at the Delphos Eagles from 10:30 a.m.-4:30 p.m. on Thursday. Please call 1-800-RedCross or go to redcrossblood.org, sponsor code eaglesdel to schedule a blood donation appointment. Donors should be at least 17 years of age, weigh at least 110 pounds and be in good general health. BY LINDSAY MCCOY Times Bulletin News Writer lmccoy@timesbulletin.com

City council meets Monday

Delphos City Council will meet Monday for the first time in 2014 at 7 p.m. Monday. Newly-elected councilmen Del Kemper and Andrew Knueve will take their seats.

Sports
Makeup game dates announced
Dates for girls basketball games postponed by weather Thursday evening have been announced. The Kalida at Ottoville PCL game will be played Jan. 16, with a 6 p.m. JV start. The St. Johns at Coldwater game was postponed to Jan. 20, also with a 6 p.m. JV start.

Forecast
Mostly sunny today and clear tonight. Highs around 15 with wind chills -5 to -15 this morning. Lows 5 to 10 above. See page 2.

VAN WERT - The first measurable snowfall of 2014 brought between 4-5 inches to the area. The next storm system is following only days behind and expected to arrive between Saturday and Sunday evening. But with the second storm, snow will not be the biggest concern, as temperatures are expected to drop to a rare and dangerous low. It looks like the next system expected to move through our area will be a big snowmaker with projected areas across Northern Ohio expected to receive 8-12 inches of snow with lesser amounts falling around this main area but its still too early to project where the heavy snow will settle, noted Van Wert County Emergency Management Director Rick McCoy. Gusty winds are again expected to be an issue with the Saturday-Sunday system. McCoy believes the greatest concern will be the dangerously cold temperatures that are expected to follow this storm into the first half of next week. These snow events are normal for winter but cold temperatures of this magnitude are a very rare event, said McCoy. Frost bite can occur very quickly if outdoors for even a short period of time and people should avoid being outside. Temperatures barely exceeding zero are expected Monday, Tuesday, and Wednesday, with a wind chill of negative 40 degrees. Today, a high of 14 degrees with a wind chill of negative 10 degrees is expected. Saturday will be the warmest day with a high of 31 degrees but with 30-mph winds. Sundays low of three degrees will be Mondays high with a wind chill of negative 30 degrees. Monday nights low of negative 15 degrees will finally bring the expected negative 40-degree wind chill into Northern Ohio. Tuesdays high of minus four degrees will bring a negative 35 degree wind chill. Tuesday night is expected to see a low of minus 11 degrees with the wind chill again falling to 40 below. These bitterly cold temperatures will be a result of an incredible amount of cold air coming down from Siberia. According to the National Weather Service of Northern Indiana, the last time Fort Wayne temperatures stayed below zero for the entire day, as they are expected to this coming week, was in January 1994; it has only occurred 10 times in its history. Animals will also need protection from this extreme cold just like we do, reminded McCoy. These temperatures also pose a threat to our furry friends, and McCoy encouraged people to bring their animals indoors or fortify their enclosures to keep out this extreme cold.

Hercules keeps city, residents moving snow

City crews were out in force Thursday cleaning up after Winter Storm Hercules. Interim Delphos Safety Service Director Sherryl George said seven city employees were working snow plows and other snow removal equipment Thursday at a cost of approximately $150 per worker for the day. Above: A pair of city plows worked in tandem to clear lanes on Cleveland Street. Below: a Jackson Street resident works on a 2 1/2-foot drift in front of her garage Thursday afternoon. (Delphos Herald/Nancy Spencer)

Index

Obituaries State/Local Religion Community Sports Classifieds Television World briefs

2 3 4 5 6-7 8 9 10

By STEPHANIE GROVES Staff Writer sgroves@delphosherald.com

Jennings board reinstates Schimmoeller as president


Fitzpatrick was sworn in. There is one additional open board position which will be appointed during the next board meeting. A d d i t i o n a l l y , Schimmoeller appointed the following committees: Legislative Liaison for the OSBA Network, himself; Building, Weiging and Aaron Ricker; Negotiations, himself and Weiging; Small School District Advisory Committee Delegate, Fitzpatrick; Small School District Advisory Committee Alternate, Ricker; Audit Committee, himself; and Student Achievement Liaison, Fitzpatrick. Monthly board meetings were set for 7:30 p.m. on the third Wednesday of each month. Members approved the rate of compensation for Treasurer Valerie Maag, as provided in ORC 3313.12, which was established by the board. A handful of resolutions were passed during the meeting. The first resolution was to authorize Maag to request advances of tax settlements, invest active and interim funds, to pay bills as they are presented, to report monthly to the board of education and the authority to transfer funds with later approval. Board members also designated Cheryl Schnipke, Mary Jean Schweller, Teresa Wurst and Marianne VonSossan as cashiers permitting them to make daily bank deposits for the 2014 school year. Members approved the establishment of a service fund for the board and re-

FORT JENNINGS The Fort Jennings School Board held its 2014 re-organizational meeting Thursday night and reinstated Karl Schimmoeller as board president. Schimmoeller appointed Cliff Weiging as the new vice president of the school board. This is Weigings second term as vice president. New board member Tim

appointed Superintendent Nicholas Langhals as the purchasing agent with a limit of $25,000. Langhals served as the purchasing agent in 2013. In addition, Weiging was appointed Vantage board member for a 3-year term. Langhals was also given the authorization to approve staff members attendance at appropriately-called professional meetings. The next board meeting will be held in the school library at 7:30 p.m. on Jan. 13.

2 The Herald

Friday, January 3, 2014

www.delphosherald.com

Strong winter storm pushes into Northeast


RODRIQUE NGOWI Associated Press BOSTON A storm expected to bring more than a foot of snow, stiff winds and punishing cold pushed into the Northeast on Thursday, extending Christmas break for some students while posing the first test for New Yorks new mayor and perhaps the last challenge for Bostons outgoing one. Some schools in New England and New York closed well ahead of the snow, while cities mobilized plows and salt spreaders, and state offices sent workers home early. Some major highways were ordered shut down overnight. U.S. airlines canceled more than 2,300 flights nationwide on Thursday in advance of the storm. The heavy weather began rolling in just a day after New York Mayor Bill de Blasio was sworn in to lead the nations largest city and a few days before Boston Mayor Thomas Menino ends 20 years in office. Menino announced a parking ban and said schools would be closed today in Boston, where up to 14 inches of snow was expected. Bostons airport said it would not handle any flights after 8:30 p.m. Thursday. What a New Years gift, to receive one last snowstorm as mayor, said Menino, whose successor takes office Monday. De Blasio, who as public advocate in 2010 criticized his predecessor Mayor Michael Bloomberg for his handling of a post-Christmas storm, said hundreds of plows and salt spreaders would be on the streets as soon as the snow started falling Thursday night. We have to get it right, no question about it, de Blasio said. We are focused like a laser on protecting this city and getting everyone ready. We have all hands on deck. Snow began falling overnight Wednesday in parts of New England and New York state but the brunt of the storm wasnt expected until late Thursday. Forecasters said temperatures would plummet, with some areas seeing highs just above zero and wind-chill readings of minus-10 and colder. The National Weather Service issued a blizzard warning for Cape Cod, coastal areas north and south of Boston and part of Maine as well as New Yorks Long Island, where 8 to 10 inches of snow could fall and winds could gust to 45 mph. Were going to see a lot of snow and a lot of wind, forecaster Jason Tuell said. Were concerned about whiteout conditions possibly tonight with the blowing and drifting snow. Douglass Bibule shopped for rock salt and other supplies at a home improvement store in Watertown, Mass. Well, there will be some shoveling that I will have to do and some sanding. Ive got to go home and do some stretching

For The Record

Court grants law license to man in US illegally


SAN FRANCISCO (AP) The California Supreme Court granted a law license Thursday to a man who has lived in the U.S. illegally for two decades, a ruling that advocates hope will open the door to millions of immigrants seeking to enter other professions such as medicine, nursing and accounting. The unanimous decision means Sergio Garcia, who attended law school and passed the state bar exam while working in a grocery store and on farms, can begin practicing law immediately. Its the latest in a string of legal and legislative victories for people who are in the country without permission. Other successes include the creation of a path to citizenship for many young people and the granting of drivers licenses in some states. This is a bright new day in California history and bodes well for the future, the Coalition for Humane Immigrant Rights of Los Angeles said in a statement. The court sided with state officials in the case, which pitted them against the White House over a 1996 federal law that bars people who are in the U.S. illegally from receiving professional licenses from government agencies or with the use of public money, unless state lawmakers vote otherwise. Bill Hing, a law professor at the University of San Francisco, said the court made clear the only reason it granted Garcias request is that California recently approved a law that specifically authorizes the state to give law licenses to immigrants who are here illegally. The new law, inspired by Garcias situation, took effect Wednesday. It was unclear how many people would qualify to practice law under the ruling and whether it would influence other

Breaking Bad winner arrested on drug charges

SMITH, Howard James Smitty the Cop, 87, of Delphos, services will begin at 11 a.m. today at Harter and Schier Funeral Home, the Rev. Pam King officiating. The Delphos Veterans Council will conduct military graveside rites following the service. Burial will take place at Walnut Grove Cemetery. Memorial contributions may be made to the family. To 405 North Main St. leave online condolences for TELEPHONE 695-0015 Office Hours the family, visit www.hart8 a.m.-5 p.m. Mon.-Fri. erandschier.com. POSTMASTER: MEYER, John S., 66, of Send address changes rural Spencerville, the family DELPHOS HERALD, will receive friends from 4-8 to THE405 N. Main St. p.m. Saturday at the Thomas Delphos, Ohio 45833 E. Bayliff Funeral Home in Spencerville. Private family services will be held at a later date. Memorials may be made ORRECTIONS to the Allen County Cancer Society or to the Spencerville The Delphos Herald wants states. Legislatures and governors in more conservative EMS. Condolences may be states such as Alabama and Arizona are likely to be less sent to tbayliff@woh.rr.com. to correct published errors in its news, sports and feature receptive to the idea. Garcia, who plans to be a personal injury attorney in his articles. To inform the newshometown of Chico, said he hoped the decision would serve room of a mistake in published as a beacon of hope to others in the same situation. information, call the editorial He can hang up a shingle and be his own company, said Wheat $5.70 department at 419-695-0015. Hing, who represented the state bar association in the case. Corn $4.01 Corrections will be published Once he does that, a client can retain him as a lawyer. Soybeans $12.78 on this page. But some questions remained unresolved, such as whether Garcia can appear in federal court or in other states. Federal law makes it illegal for law firms to hire him. Chief Justice Tani Cantil-Sakauye, who wrote the opinWEATHER FORECAST ion, said the new state law removed any barrier to Garcias Tri-county quest for a license. And no other federal statute purports to Associated Press preclude a state from granting a license to practice law to an undocumented immigrant, Cantil-Sakauye wrote. TODAY: Mostly sunny. Highs around 15. West winds 5 to Garcia, 36, arrived in the U.S. as a teenager to pick almonds with his father, who was a permanent legal resident. 10 mph shifting to the south in the afternoon. Wind chills 5 His father filed a petition in 1994 seeking an immigration below to 15 below zero in the morning. TONIGHT: Cold. Mostly clear. Lows 5 to 10 above. South visa for his son. It was accepted in 1995, but because of the backlog of visa applications from people from Mexico, winds 10 to 20 mph. Wind chills 10 below to zero. SATURDAY: Partly cloudy in the morning then becoming Garcia has never received a visa number. He applied for citizenship in 1994 and is still working mostly cloudy. Not as cold. Highs in the lower 30s. Southwest winds 15 to 20 mph with gusts up to 30 mph. Wind chills 5 toward that goal. The U.S. Department of Justice argued that Garcia was below to 5 above zero in the morning. SATURDAY NIGHT: Snow likely. Light snow accumulabarred from receiving his law license because the courts entire budget comes from the public treasury, a violation of tions possible. Not as cold. Lows in the mid 20s. Southwest the federal mandate that no public money be used to grant winds 15 to 20 mph decreasing to 5 to 10 mph after midnight. licenses to people who are in the country without permission. Chance of snow 60 percent. SUNDAY: Snow likely. Heavy snow accumulations posAssistant U.S. Attorney Daniel Tenney, who argued the sible. Highs in the upper 20s. Chance of snow 70 percent. case, did not immediately return a call seeking comment.

exercises to make sure I dont hurt myself while doing that, and do a little shopping to make sure that we have all the supplies that we need. We need food because we have three older children at home. Interior southern New England and New York state could get up to a foot of snow. New York City was expecting 8 inches, while Philadelphia could see 3 to 7. In New York, Con Ed spokesman Sidney Alvarez said the utility was expecting the snow to be powdery rather than wet and heavy, but with any type of snow, youre looking at extra weight on branches that can snap and bring power lines down. As the storm pushed eastward on New Years Day and Thursday, it dropped as much as 18 inches on suburban Chicago and up to 10 inches on Michigan, prompting the cancellation Wednesday of hundreds of flights in and out of Chicagos OHare Airport. Below-zero cold is expected across the region over the next few days. AAA Michigan said it received 3,100 calls Thursday from drivers dealing with spinouts, cars in ditches and dead batteries. Accidents and delays were also reported from Missouri to New Hampshire. Anything below 25 degrees and the salt isnt nearly as effective, said Becky Allmeroth, a maintenance engineer with the state of Missouri, where crews were mixing chemicals and beet juice with salt to try to make roads passable.

Phyllis J. Neiford

OBITUARY

Phyllis J. Neiford, 86, of Delphos passed away at 12:45 p.m. Thursday at Vancrest Healthcare Center. Arrangements are incomplete at Harter and Schier Funeral Home.

The Delphos Herald


Nancy Spencer, editor Ray Geary, general manager Delphos Herald, Inc. Don Hemple, advertising manager Lori Goodwin Silette, circulation manager The Delphos Herald (USPS 1525 8000) is published daily except Sundays, Tuesdays and holidays. The Delphos Herald is delivered by carrier in Delphos for $1.48 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 $110 per year. Entered in the post office in Delphos, Ohio 45833 as Periodicals, postage paid at Delphos, Ohio.
Vol. 144 No. 144

FUNERALS

LOCAL PRICES

WEATHER

25 Years Ago 1989 LaVera Hanf hosted the Changing Times League Christmas party recently in her home. Co-hosting were Gwen Rohrbacher and Millie Spitnale. The 50 Years Ago 1964 meeting was presided over by presiOfficers for the ladies branch, No. dent June Korte with devotions given 75 Years Ago 1939 by Gert Fischer. Win, lose or draw 868, Catholic Knights of America were F. H. King, Phar. D., dean of retail was played. Marilyn Lause, Fischer, installed during the branchs annual June Korte, Marie Swick and Sylvilla Christmas party held this past week druggists in Ohio, was confirmed by Odenweller were winners and were at the K of C club rooms on Elida unanimous vote Saturday by the speAvenue. The social part of the eve- cial session of the Ohio Senate as a given Christmas ornaments. With the retirement of two of its ning was spent playing cards. Prizes member of the Ohio State Board for cooperative extension agents in agri- went to the following: high, Marcile his 10th consecutive term. He began culture it could be that rural residents Grothaus; low, Viola Grothause; and his business career with the firm of Evans and Evans in this city on Jan. CLEVELAND (AP) of Van Wert and Putnam counties will door award, Mary K. Williams. 31, 1883. On April 1, 1887, King At the December meeting of lose many years of invaluable expeThese Ohio lotteries were drawn Thursday: Mega Millions Est. jackpot: $61 million Pick 3 Evening 8-3-4 Associated Press Court said that states had the right to ban closed Elementary School in Newtown, Conn., reconvened Pick 3 Midday shops. at a different building in the town of Monroe about 3-5-5 Today is Friday, Jan. 3, the third day of 2014. In 1958, the first six members of the newly three weeks after the massacre that had claimed the Pick 4 Evening There are 362 days left in the year. formed U.S. Commission on Civil Rights held their lives of 20 first-graders and six educators. The new 9-2-2-1 Todays Highlight in History: first meeting at the White House. 113th Congress opened for business, with House Pick 4 Midday On Jan. 3, 1959, Alaska became the 49th state as In 1967, Jack Ruby, the man who shot and killed Speaker John Boehner re-elected to his post despite 3-7-1-3 President Dwight D. Eisenhower signed a proclama- accused presidential assassin Lee Harvey Oswald, a mini-revolt in Republican ranks. No. 5 Oregon Pick 5 Evening tion. died in a Dallas hospital. beat No. 7 Kansas State, 35-17, in the Fiesta Bowl. 4-9-7-0-4 On this date: In 1977, Apple Computer was incorporated in Todays Birthdays: Record producer Sir George Pick 5 Midday In 1521, Martin Luther was excommunicated Cupertino, Calif., by Steve Jobs, Steve Wozniak and Martin is 88. Actor Robert Loggia is 84. Actor 4-3-0-2-4 from the Roman Catholic Church by Pope Leo X. Mike Makkula Jr. Dabney Coleman is 82. Journalist-author Betty Powerball In 1777, Gen. George Washingtons army routed In 1980, conservationist Joy Adamson, author Rollin is 78. Hockey Hall-of-Famer Bobby Hull Est. jackpot: $60 million Rolling Cash 5 the British in the Battle of Princeton, N.J. of Born Free, was killed in northern Kenya by a is 75. Singer-songwriter-producer Van Dyke Parks 02-04-07-08-24 In 1861, more than two weeks before Georgia former employee. is 71. Musician Stephen Stills is 69. Rock musiseceded from the Union, the state militia seized Fort In 1990, ousted Panamanian leader Manuel cian John Paul Jones (Led Zeppelin) is 68. Actress Van Wert Cinemas Pulaski at the order of Gov. Joseph E. Brown. The Noriega surrendered to U.S. forces, 10 days after Victoria Principal is 64. Actor-director Mel Gibson FRI JAN 3-THU JAN 9 Delaware House and Senate voted to oppose seces- taking refuge in the Vaticans diplomatic mission. is 58. Actress Shannon Sturges is 46. Jazz musiCINEMA 1: 2D/3D: Frozen PG sion from the Union. Ten years ago: A Boeing 737 owned by Egyptian cian James Carter is 45. Contemporary Christian The Hunger Games: Catching Fire PG13 CINEMA 2: 2D/3D: Walking with Dinosaurs PG In 1870, groundbreaking took place for the charter tour operator Flash Airlines crashed into the singer Nichole Nordeman is 42. Musician Thomas The Hobbit: The Desolation of Brooklyn Bridge. Red Sea, killing all 148 people aboard, most of them Bangalter (Daft Punk) is 39. Actor Jason Marsden is Smaug PG13 CINEMA 3: Grudge Match PG13 In 1911, the first postal savings banks were French tourists. NASAs Mars rover, Spirit, touched 39. Actress Danica McKellar is 39. Actor Nicholas CINEMA 4: Anchorman 2: The Legend Continues PG13 opened by the U.S. Post Office. (The banks were down on Mars. Gonzalez is 38. Singer Kimberley Locke (American CINEMA 5: Paranormal Activity: The Marked Ones R abolished in 1966.) Five years ago: After seven days of pummeling Idol) is 36. NFL quarterback Eli Manning is 33. 100% DIGITAL PROJECTION We have 3D Capability In 1938, the March of Dimes campaign to fight the Gaza Strip from the air, Israel launched a ground Actress Nicole Beharie (TV: Sleepy Hollow Film: All seats before 6pm: $5 After 6pm: Adults-$7/ Children 11 and under and seniors-$5 polio was established by President Franklin D. offensive; Hamas vowed that Gaza would be a 42) is 29. Pop musician Mark Pontius (Foster the 3D seats before 6pm: $7 3D after 6pm: Adults $9/ Children 11 and under and seniors $7 Roosevelt, who himself had been afflicted with the graveyard for the Israelis. Veteran actor Pat Hingle People) is 29. Rhythm-and-blues singer Lloyd is WE DO NOT ACCEPT CREDIT OR DEBIT CARDS OR CHECKS! crippling disease. died in Carolina Beach, N.C., at age 84. 28. Pop-rock musician Nash Overstreet (Hot Chelle www.vanwertcinemas.com 419-238-2100 In 1949, in a pair of rulings, the U.S. Supreme One year ago: Students attending Sandy Hook Rae) is 28. Actor Alex D. Linz is 25.

FORT MYERS, Fla. (AP) Authorities say a Florida man who won a raffle to watch the series finale of AMCs Breaking Bad with the cast has been charged with running a drug distribution operation. The Lee County Sheriffs Office reports that Ryan Lee Carroll sold synthetic marijuana and shipped it across the U.S. from his Fort Myers home with two other men. He was arrested on New Years Eve. Authorities seized more than $1 million in synthetic marijuana during the bust. According to deputies, the suspects used a cement mixer to create the drugs. The drugs were shipped through the U.S. Postal Service.

One Year Ago Another historic building in Paulding is slated to hit the ground as county commissioners have taken steps toward demolishing the old jail building on South Williams Street. The jail was built in 1876 and operated continuously until a new facility opened in 2007. Plans call for it to be demolished as soon as mid-January using county engineer department employees.

rience that may never be replaced. Long-time agricultural agents of the Ohio Cooperative Extension Service Donald Kimmet of Putnam County and George Roop of Van Wert County retired Dec. 31. St. Johns gymnasts will ring in the new year with their first meet Jan. 3 at Shawnee. The gymnastics team includes Sue Hempfling, Ami Anderson, Erin Kesler, Julie Hanser, Marcy Vonderwell, Cindy Alder, Nikki Wellman, Nykky Sanchez, Trish Sterling, Katie Hanser, Amie Feathers, Marianne Brinkman, Bonnie Langhals, assistant coach Teresa Burnett and Coach Sue Miller.

FROM THE ARCHIVES

the Putnam County Commanders American Legion, plans were made for the fourth annual county-wide banquet for all past commanders and past auxiliary presidents of the eight posts in the county. The banquet will be held Feb. 1 at Fort Jennings. Music for the round and square dancing, which will follow the banquet, will be furnished by Urban Becker and his Montanna Ramblers. Pope Paul VI devoted himself Friday to preparations for his journey to the Holy Land Saturday. The pontiff will be making history in many ways on his pilgrimage. He will be the first Pope to visit the Holy Land and the first to fly. He will be the first to leave Italy since 1812.

LOTTERY

and Arnold B. King associated themselves under the name King Bros and were in business together for many years. Then F. H. King and Thomas A. Williams formed a business and were together for eight years under the name of King and Williams. The New Years card party and dance held in the K. of C. rooms Monday evening for the Knights of Columbus and their ladies was well attended. The following received awards in the card games: in fivehundred, Mrs. James McNamara and Hubert Ricker, high; Mrs. Harold Remlinger and Michael Evans, second; and in pinochle, Mrs. Aloysius Kimmett and A. J. Sever, high; and Mr. and Mrs. A. N. Gengler, second. The Bow Bridgettes and their escorts enjoyed a formal dinner dance New Years night at the Berglioff in Fort Wayne. In the party were the following: Rita Stallkamp, Alice Lindemann, Dorothy Weger, Patricia Heyser, Alma Gerdemann, Mary Walterick, Eva Yochum, Elmer Scherger, Jerome Schmit, Louis Simmons, Ronald Patton, Paul Gladen, Paul Kaskel and Arthur Grone.

TODAY IN HISTORY

www.delphosherald.com

Friday, January 3, 2014

The Herald 3

Late-season deer hunting opportunities available


Information submitted COLUMBUS As the calendar turns to 2014, Ohio hunters have another opportunity to pursue white-tailed deer when muzzleloader season opens Saturday, according to the Ohio Department of Natural Resources. Deer-muzzleloader season runs through Tuesday. Muzzleloader season offers a great lateseason opportunity for hunters to bag a white-tailed deer and enjoy Ohios outdoors with friends and family, said Scott Zody, chief of the ODNR Division of Wildlife. Ohio is one of the top white-tailed deer destinations in the United States. Ohio ranks No. 7 nationally for the number of trophy deer as compiled by the Boone and Crockett Club through 2011. Hunters can pursue deer in Ohio with a muzzleloader or bow during this four-day season. Deer-archery season remains open through Feb. 2. Hunters checked 21,555 deer during the 2013 four-day muzzleloader season. Muzzleloaders are traditional hunting implements that emphasize accuracy and the value of the first shot. The popularity of muzzleloading rifles for hunting and target shooting continues to grow. Types of muzzleloaders include flintlock, percussion cap, in-line percussion and muzzleloading shotgun. Hunting time is extended 30 minutes for all deer-gun seasons. Hunters were already allowed to hunt deer 30 minutes before sunrise and this year; an additional 30 minutes has been added after sunset for gun seasons. Ohios small game, furbearer and waterfowl seasons are also open during the muzzleloader season. All hunters (except waterfowl hunters) must wear a visible solid hunter orange or camouflage hunter orange coat, jacket, vest or coveralls during the muzzleloader season. Hunting is the best and most effective management tool for maintaining Ohios healthy deer population. Hunters have harvested more than 167,000 deer so far in the 2013 hunting seasons.

STATE/LOCAL

BRIEFS
About 17,000 apply online for Medicaid
COLUMBUS (AP) Ohio officials say theyve received more than 17,000 applications from people seeking Medicaid health coverage through a new state website. The online enrollment option became available Dec. 9 to eligible low-income families, along with individuals who fell under an expansion of the federal-state program for the poor and disabled. It wasnt clear how many online applications came from those newly eligible under the Medicaid extension. A spokesman for the states Medicaid department says the website has been working smoothly. County caseworkers will have to finalize most of the initial online applications. But the state expects the enrollment process to be more automated in the coming months. Gov. John Kasichs administration moved forward with expanding Medicaid last fall. Coverage for the newly eligible took effect Wednesday.

National Archery in the Schools registration starts today

2014 BRAGGING TIMES

Troopers report 3 New Years crash deaths


COLUMBUS (AP) State troopers say three people died on Ohio roads during the two-day New Years holiday period. Three fatal crashes Tuesday and Wednesday occurred in Adams and Fayette counties in southwest Ohio and in Holmes County near the Knox County line, about halfway between Columbus and Cleveland. The State Highway Patrol reports none of the people killed were wearing a seatbelt. A year ago, six people died after fatal crashes during the same two-day period. Preliminary data from the patrol shows Ohio had a record low number of traffic deaths in 2013. At least 966 crash fatalities are confirmed and 16 more deaths are under review. It would be Ohios first year with fewer than 1,000 traffic deaths since recordkeeping began in 1936. The previous low was 1,016 in 2011.

Tea party activist set to challenge GOP gov


CINCINNATI (AP) A southwest Ohio tea party leader appears ready to announce a Republican primary challenge to Gov. John Kasich. Tea party activists say Ted Stevenot has scheduled a news conference Tuesday in Columbus. They say in a statement that Stevenot will introduce Brenda Mack of Canfield as his running mate. She is former president of the Ohio Black Republicans Association. Stevenot is among Ohio conservatives who think Kasich has been moving away from the right. They have been particularly criti-

DAYTON (AP) A just-right amount of mated that nearly 14 billion bushels of corn rainfall in 2013 pleased Ohio growers. were produced in 2013, a record. Thats The right amount of rain at the right times almost 30 percent more than 2012, when there made for a big boost in corn production in were widespread drought conditions. Ohio and the rest of the nation last year. It During a five-month period in the middle was welcome, too, after a too-wet 2011 and of 2012, at least two-thirds of Ohio was cona too-dry 2012. stantly experiencing some form of drought. Ohios estimated 631.6 million bushels of Much of the state did not fully pull itself from corn last year would be a 40 percent boost dry conditions until December 2012. from 2012, The Dayton Daily News reported. Farmers say precipitation this past In the 49 years from 1964-2012, Ohios corn December has helped set up the soil for a solid production averaged 381.2 million bushels. start to the spring. It was a very good year, especially for the Even though December is outside the corn crop, said Joe Cornely, spokesman for growing season, growers say precipitation in the Ohio Farm Bureau. We had a lot of high any month is helpful for the farming industry. Information submitted yields, and in some areas of the state there Farmers said its important to help the soil for were record high yields. the coming months by building up groundCOLUMBUS Sign-ups and registration for the Ohio The U.S. Department of Agriculture esti- water. National Archery in the Schools Program State Tournament opens at 8 a.m. today, according to the Ohio Department of Natural Resources. More than 40,000 Ohio students participated in NASP as part of their physical education curriculum during the 2012-13 acaITS TIME TO SHOW OFF YOUR PICTURES! demic year. The state tournament has openings for 1,512 student archers from certified NASP schools across Ohio. Registrations will close once the 1,512 openings are filled. Last year, more than 1,000 students were registered for the 2013 tournament in less than three hours. ODNR will host the 2014 State NASP Tournament from 8 a.m.9 p.m. Feb. 28 in conjunction with the 2014 Arnold Sports Festival at Veterans Memorial located at 300 West Broad St., Columbus. NASP is a school curriculum currently taught in 650 Ohio schools, making Ohio the third-largest program in the United States. Instruction takes place during two weeks of physical education classes and is designed to teach international target archery skills to students in grades 4-12. Students with high-ranking scores may be eligible for scholarships through Hocking College in Nelsonville. Individual archers CHILDS NAME and teams may also qualify for the NASP National Championship, PARENTS NAME which will be held May 9-10 at the Kentucky Exposition Center in Louisville, Ky. To Be Published April Bartenschlag of Philo High School in Duncan Falls scored a 296 out of 300 at the 2013 NASP National Tournament in Louisville, Ky. She was named the top high school female archer, top overall female archer, won a $5,000 college scholarship and was named to the NASP All-American Team. Last year, ODNR certified 370 new instructors from 57 schools in 49 different school districts as Basic Archery Instructors and CHILDREN ARE ELIGIBLE. awarded $57,000 in grants to help with startup costs. New schools can apply for up to $2,500 in grant money to start an archery proEnclose check for $13.00 per single Mail to: gram at their school. child and $20.00 for group picture BRAGGING TIMES Ohio was the 10th state to participate in NASP. The ODNR (Price includes return of your picture by mail) Division of Wildlife introduced NASP in 2004 with 12 pilot schools. c/o Delphos Herald Twins/Triplets may be submitted in one picture for Statewide expansion began in January 2005. Growth in NASP has 405 North Main St. $16.00. One picture featuring a group of children, continued across the state and more than half of Ohios 88 counties maximum of 3 children per picture, will be $20.00; Delphos, Ohio 45833 currently have at least one school participating in NASP. 4 children in picture $30.00; 5 or more children in picture Schools interested in learning more about NASP may con$35.00; and will be an enlarged size. tact Matt Neumeier, shooting sports coordinator for the ODNR NOTE: If you have a digital picture to submit, please email the original jpg file to Division of Wildlife, at 614-265-6334 or at matt.neumeier@dnr. state.oh.us. Visit ohionasp.com for more information. graphics@delphosherald.com

The ODNR Division of Wildlife remains committed to properly managing Ohios deer populations through a combination of regulatory and programmatic changes. The goal of Ohios Deer Management Program is to provide a deer population that maximizes recreational opportunities, while minimizing conflicts with landowners and motorists. This ensures that Ohios deer herd is maintained at a level that is both acceptable to most and biologically sound. Until recently, the populations in nearly all of Ohios counties were well above their target numbers. In the last few years, through increased harvests, dramatic strides have been made in many counties to bring those populations closer toward their goal. Once a countys deer population is near goal, harvest regulations are adjusted to maintain the population near that goal. Ohio deer bag limits are determined by county. The statewide bag limit is nine deer but a hunter cannot exceed an individual county bag limit. Hunters may harvest only one antlered deer, regardless of hunting method or season. More deer hunting information can be found in the 2013-14 Ohio Hunting and Trapping Regulations and at wildohio.com. Hunters can share photos by clicking on the Photo Gallery tab online. Hunters who received a 2013-14 Ohio deer hunter effort and harvest survey are encouraged to complete it when the season ends. This survey is an important tool in Ohios deer-management program and information provided in the survey is vital for establishing hunting regulations. The survey is conducted with a random sampling of hunters to help eliminate bias. Ohio ranks fifth nationally in resident hunters and 11th in the number of jobs associated with hunting-related industries. Hunting has a more than $853 million economic impact in Ohio through the sale of equipment, fuel, food, lodging and more, according to the National Shooting Sports Foundations Hunting in America: An Economic Force for Conservation publication.

Wassenberg Camera Club to meet Thursday


Information submitted The Wassenberg Camera Clubs first meeting of the new year is scheduled for 7 p.m. Thursday in the Wassenberg Art Center at 214 South Washington St. in Van Wert. The competition theme in prints and slides that evening is: Happy Holidays 2013. The results of the clubs questionnaire will be presented and the competition themes and programs for 2014 will be determined. President Chris Wilson reminds all who attend (you dont have to be a member) that being able to accomplish all items on the agenda will be determined by two key factors. The first is that the questionnaires (they can be found online at vanwert. com/CameraClub) be returned to him by Tuesday at either PO Box 253 or emailed to vwcameraclub@gmail.com. Secondly, slides also need to be emailed to Chris by Tuesday at vwcameraclub@ gmail.com. You only have to be interested in photography to attend, so mark your calendars and get your questionnaires and slides to Chris by Tuesday. If you would like further information regarding the classes or programs of the Wassenberg Art Center, please call 419-238-6837 or email info@wassenbergartcenter. org. You may also register for classes online at wassenbergartcenter.org. Hours during exhibits are 15 p.m. Tuesday through Sunday.

Christmas Tree decorations by Rex Dolby. (Submitted photo)

2013 was great year for growers

BRAGGING TIMES

WEDNESDAY, FEBRUARY 12, 2014 DEADLINE IS MONDAY, FEB. 3, 2014


ALL

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(Please Print )

Childs Name(s)

cal of his push to expand Medicaid under President Barack Obamas health care overhaul, a move that drew Obamas public praise. Some of them suggest that Kasich, a former congressman and Fox News commentator, is trying to position himself as a national candidate. Stevenot is past president of the statewide Ohio Liberty Coalition, a Clermont County tea party leader and co-founder of a suburban Cincinnati insurance company. He and Mack have been talking in recent weeks with other tea party activists about running. He didnt immediately return a telephone call Thursday.

Birthday(s) Parents Address City_________________________State Phone (Number to contact if questions) Grandparents

Popes come and popes go, with a new pope elected every few years or decades. Thus, when viewed through the lens of history, the resignation of Pope Benedict XVI was a stunning event in the history of Roman Catholicism and, thus, all of Western Christianity. He was the first man to resign St. Peters throne in 600 years. Surely this was the most important religion-news story of 2013? But when seen through the lens of the mainstream press, the bookish Benedicts exit was a mere ripple in the news flow compared to the tsunami of headlines inspired by the rise of Cardinal Jorge Mario Bergoglio of Buenos Aires as the first Latin American pope. During his remarkable media honeymoon, Pope Francis has been humble and savvy, pragmatic and charismatic. Most of all, this pope has shown that he wants a mission-minded church that balances a defense of Catholic doctrine with a renewed commitment to offering mercy and pastoral care to the poor, the powerless and those of little or no faith. He wants to build a church defined by its actions, not just by words. To no ones surprise, the election of Pope Francis was selected as the years No. 1 religion story by the journalists in the Religion Newswriters Association (RNA), with the resignation of Pope Benedict XVI the No. 2 story. Pope Francis was also named Religion Newsmaker of the Year.

Pope Francis and the top stories of 2013


4 The Herald Friday, January 3, 2014

www.delphosherald.com

TERRY MATTINGLY

On Religion
But here is an interesting question to ponder: Based on his own words and actions, what 2013 event or trend would Pope Francis have selected as the most important? As the year came to a close, it appeared the popes attention was increasingly focused on the persecution of believers around the world, especially endangered Christian minorities in Egypt, Syria and throughout the Middle East. In a sermon on Nov. 28, he even urged his listeners to recall that when people are forbidden to worship, and faith is driven from public life, the end times could be near. What does this mean? It will be like the triumph of the prince of this world: the defeat of God. It seems that in that final moment of calamity, he will take possession of this world, that he will be the master of this world, he said, in remarks that drew little commentary from world media. When this happens, explained Pope

Francis, religion cannot be spoken of, it is something private, no? Publicly it is not spoken about. The religious signs are taken down. The laws that come from the worldly powers must be obeyed. You can do so many beautiful things except adore God. The rest of the RNA Top 10 list included these events and trends: 3. In another 5-4 vote, the U.S. Supreme Court cleared the way for gay marriage in California and voided the ban on federal benefits to same-sex couples. Supporters of gay marriage celebrated victories in other states as well, with Illinois and Hawaii becoming the 15th and 16th states to legalize same-sex marriage. 4. Legal battles continued in courts nationwide over the Health and Human Services mandate requiring most nonprofit ministries to offer health-insurance plans covering sterilizations and all FDA-approved contraceptives, including morning-after pills. The U.S. Supreme Court accepted a case brought by Hobby Lobby, a for-profit corporation led by conservative Christians who claim that the mandate violates their freedom of religious expression. 5. Battles continued in the Middle East over the political role of Islam, with violence escalating in Syria and continuing in Egypt -- where the military ousted the freely elected Muslim Brotherhood-led government and vio-

lently cracked down on its Islamist supporters. 6. Nelson Mandela died at age 95 and was remembered as a prophet of nonviolence and reconciliation in South Africa. 7. Attacks on religious minorities continued around the world, including bloody attacks on Christians in Egypt, Syria, Pakistan and Kenya. 8. A Pew Research Center survey found that more than 1 in 5 American Jews now claim no ties to Judaism as a faith. The number of professing Jewish adults is now less than 2 percent of the U.S. population, although Jewish identity remains strong. 9. Leaders of the Boy Scouts of America voted to accept openly gay Scouts but not Scoutmasters. While most evangelicals opposed this change, Catholic and Mormon leaders were divided. 10. Muslims joined others in condemning the Boston Marathon bombing committed by two young Muslim men who attended colleges in the area. (Terry Mattingly is the director of the Washington Journalism Center at the Council for Christian Colleges and Universities and leads the GetReligion.org project to study religion and the news.) COPYRIGHT Universal Uclick

Our local churches invite you to join them for their activities and services.
dElphos
A.C.T.S. NEW TESTAMENT FELLOWSHIP 8277 German Rd, Delphos Rev. Linda Wannemacher-Pastor Jaye Wannemacher -Worship Leader For information contact: 419-695-3566 Thursday - 7:00 p.m. Bible Study with worship at 8277 German Rd, Delphos Sunday - 7:00 p.m. For Such A Time As This. Tri-County Community Intercessory Prayer Group. Everyone welcome. Biblical counseling also available. DELPHOS BAPTIST CHURCH Pastor Jerry Martin 302 N Main, Delphos Contact: 419-692-0061 or 419-302-6423 Sunday - 10:00 a.m. Sunday School (All Ages) , 11:00 a.m. Sunday Service, 6:00 p.m Sunday Evening Service Wednesday - 7:00 p.m. Bible Study, Youth Study Nursery available for all services. FIRST UNITED PRESBYTERIAN 310 W. Second St. 419-692-5737 Pastor Harry Tolhurst Sunday: 11:00 Worship Service Everyone Welcome Communion first Sunday of every month. Communion at Van Crest Health Care Center - First Sunday of each month at 2:30 p.m., Nursing Home and assisted living. ST. PETER LUTHERAN CHURCH 422 North Pierce St., Delphos Phone 419-695-2616 Rev. Angela Khabeb MARION BAPTIST CHURCH 2998 Defiance Trail, Delphos 419-339-6319 Services: Sunday - 11:00 a.m. and 6:00 p.m.; Wednesday - 7:00 p.m. DELPHOS CHRISTIAN UNION Pastor: Rev. Gary Fish 470 S. Franklin St., (419) 692-9940 9:30 Sunday School 10:30 Sunday morning service. Youth ministry every Wednesday from 6-8 p.m. Childrens ministry every third Saturday from 11 to 1:30. TRINITY UNITED METHODIST CHURCH 211 E. Third St., Delphos Rev. David Howell, Pastor Week beginning Jan. 5 Sunday - 8:15 a.m. Worship Service; 9:30 a.m. Church School for all ages; 10:30 a.m. Worship Service; 11:30 Radio Worship on WDOH; 7:30 p.m. Ladies Bible Fellowship. Wednesday - 7:00 p.m. Chancel Choir practice. Thursday - 10:30 am-4:30 pm Blood Drive at Eagles; 4:30 p.m.6:30 p.m. Suppers On Us.. Friday - 3:00 p.m. Mustard Seeds. ST. JOHNS CATHOLIC CHURCH 331 E. Second St., Delphos 419-695-4050 Rev. Dave Reinhart, Pastor Rev. Chris Bohnsack, Associate Pastor Wednesday: 7:00 p.m. Worship service. SPENCERVILLE CHURCH OF THE NAZARENE 317 West North St. 419-296-2561 Pastor Tom Shobe 9:30 a.m. Sunday School; 10:30 a.m. Morning Worship; 7:00 p.m. Wednesday Service TRINITY UNITED METHODIST Corner of 4th & Main, Spencerville Phone 419-647-5321 Rev. Jan Johnson, Pastor Christmas Eve services: 6:3 p.m. Message - Christmas Uncensred Sunday - 9:30 a.m. Sunday School; 10:30 a.m. Worship service. UNITED CHURCH OF CHRIST 102 Wisher Drive, Spencerville Rev. Elaine Mikesell, Interim Pastor Sunday 9:30 a.m. Cafe; 10:00 a.m. Worship Service. AGAPE FELLOWSHIP MINISTRIES 9250 Armstrong Road, Spencerville Pastors Phil & Deb Lee Sunday - 10:00 a.m. Worship service. Wed. - 7:00 p.m. Bible Study HARTFORD CHRISTIAN CHURCH (Independent Fundamental) Rt. 81 and Defiance Trial Rt. 2, Box 11550 Spencerville 45887 Rev. Robert King, Pastor Sunday - 9:30 a.m. Sunday school; 10:30 a.m. Worship Service; 7:00 p.m. Evening worship and Teens Alive (grades 7-12). Wednesday - 7:00 p.m. Bible service. Tuesday & Thursday 7- 9 p.m. Have you ever wanted to preach the Word of God? This is your time to do it. Come share your love of Christ with us. IMMANUEL UNITED METHODIST CHURCH 699 Sunnydale, Elida, Ohio 454807 Pastor Bruce Tumblin Sunday - 8:30 a.m. traditional; ZION UNITED METHODIST CHURCH Corner of Zion Church & Conant Rd., Elida Pastors: Mark and D.J. Fuerstenau Sunday - Service - 9:00 a.m. LIGHTHOUSE CHURCH OF GOD Elida - Ph. 222-8054 Rev. Larry Ayers, Pastor Service schedule: Sunday 10 a.m. School; 11 a.m. Morning Worship; 6 p.m. Sunday evening. FAITH BAPTIST CHURCH 4750 East Road, Elida Pastor - Brian McManus Sunday 9:30 a.m. Sunday School; 10:30 a.m. Worship, nursery available. Wednesday 6:30 p.m. Youth Prayer, Bible Study; 7:00 p.m. Adult Prayer and Bible Study; 8:00 p.m. - Choir. Worship - 10:25 a.m. Wednesday - Youth Prayer and Bible Study - 6:30 p.m. Adult Prayer meeting - 7:00 p.m. Choir practice - 8:00 p.m. TRINITY FRIENDS CHURCH 605 N. Franklin St., Van Wert 45891 Ph: (419) 238-2788 Sr. Pastor Stephen Savage Outreach Pastor Neil Hammons Sunday - Worship services at 9:00 a.m., 10:30 a.m. & 6:30 p.m. Wednesday-Ministries at 7:00 p.m. FIRST BAPTIST CHURCH 13887 Jennings Rd., Van Wert Ph. 419-238-0333 Childrens Storyline: 419-238-2201 Email: fbaptvw@bright.net Pastor Steven A. Robinson Sunday 9:30 a.m. Sunday School for all ages; 10:30 a.m. Family Worship Hour; 6:30 p.m. Evening Bible Hour. Wednesday - 6:30 p.m. Word of Life Student Ministries; 6:45 p.m. AWANA; 7:00 p.m. Prayer and Bible Study. MANDALE CHURCH OF CHRIST IN CHRISTIAN UNION Rev. Justin Sterrett, Pastor Sunday 9:30 a.m. Sunday School all ages. 10:30 a.m. Worship Services; 7:00 p.m Worship. Wednesday - 7 p.m. Prayer meeting. PENTECOSTAL WAY CHURCH Pastors: Bill Watson Rev. Ronald Defore 1213 Leeson Ave., Van Wert 45891 Phone (419) 238-5813 Head Usher: Ted Kelly 10:00 a.m. - Sunday School 11:10 a.m. - Worship 10:00 a.m. until 11:30 a.m. - Wednesday Morning Bible Class 6:00 p.m. until 7:00 p.m. - Wednesday Evening Prayer Meeting 7:00 p.m. - Wed. Night Bible Study. Thursday - Choir Rehearsal Anchored in Jesus Prayer Line - (419) 238-4427 or (419) 232-4379. Emergency - (419) 993-5855 6:00 p.m. Evening Service Wednesday - 7:00 p.m. Evening Service ST. ANTHONY OF PADUA CATHOLIC CHURCH 512 W. Sycamore, Col. Grove Office 419-659-2263 Fax: 419-659-5202 Father Tom Extejt Masses: Tuesday-Friday - 8:00 a.m.; First Friday of the month - 7 p.m.; Saturday - 4:30 p.m.; Sunday - 8:30 a.m. and 11:00 a.m. Confessions - Saturday 3:30 p.m., anytime by appointment. HOLY FAMILY CATHOLIC CHURCH Rev. Robert DeSloover, Pastor 7359 St. Rt. 109 New Cleveland Saturday Mass - 7:00 p.m. Sunday Mass - 8:30 a.m. IMMACULATE CONCEPTION CATHOLIC CHURCH Ottoville Rev. Jerry Schetter Mass schedule: Saturday - 4 p.m.; Sunday - 10:30 a.m. ST. JOSEPH CATHOLIC CHURCH 135 N. Water St., Ft. Jennings Rev. Charles Obinwa Phone: 419-286-2132 Mass schedule: Saturday 5 p.m.; Sunday 7:30 a.m. and 9:30 a.m. ST. MICHAEL CHURCH Kalida Fr. Mark Hoying Saturday 4:30 p.m. Mass. Sunday 8:00 a.m. & 10:00 a.m. Masses. Weekdays: Masses on Mon., Tues., Wed. and Friday at 8:00 am; Thurs. 7:30 p.m. CAIRO UNITED METHODIST CHURCH 210 West Main St. Cairo, Ohio Smorgasbord - Saturday November 2, 2013 Serving begins at 4:30 until 7:00 p.m. Menu - Meats: Swiss Steak, ham, turkey; Sides: mashed potatoes, dressing, gravy, noodles, green beans, salads, desserts.

Van WErt County


BREAKTHROUGH 101 N. Adams St., Middle Point Pastor Scott & Karen Fleming Sunday Church Service - 10 a.m, 6 p.m. Wednesday - 7:00 p.m. CALVARY EVANGELICAL CHURCH 10686 Van Wert-Decatur Rd. Van Wert, Ohio 419-238-9426 Rev. Clark Williman. Pastor Sunday- 8:45 a.m. Friends and Family; 9:00 a.m. Sunday School LIVE; 10:00 a.m. SALEM UNITED PRESBYTERIAN CHURCH 15240 Main St. Venedocia Rev. Wendy S. Pratt, Pastor Church Phone: 419-667-4142 Sunday - 8:30 a.m. - Adult Bell Choir; 8:45 a.m. Jr. Choir; 9:30 a.m. - Worship; 10:45 a.m. Sunday school; 6:30 p.m. - Capital Funds Committee. Monday - 6 p.m. Senior Choir. ST. MARYS CATHOLIC CHURCH 601 Jennings Rd., Van Wert Sunday 8:30 a.m., 10:30 a.m.; Monday 8:30 a.m.; Tuesday 7 p.m.; Wednesday 8:30 a.m.; Thursday 8:30 a.m. - Communion Service; Friday 8:30 a.m.; Saturday 4 p.m. VAN WERT VICTORY CHURCH OF GOD 10698 US 127S., Van Wert (Next to Tracys Auction Service) Pastor: E. Long Sunday worship & childrens ministry - 10:00 a.m. Wednesday Service: 7:00 p.m. www.vwvcoh.com facebook: vwvcoh TRINITY LUTHERAN 303 S. Adams, Middle Point Rev. Tom Cover Sunday 9:30 a.m. Sunday School; 10:30 a.m. Worship service. GRACE FAMILY CHURCH 634 N. Washington St., Van Wert Pastor: Rev. Ron Prewitt Sunday - 9:15 a.m. Morning worship with Pulpit Supply. KINGSLEY UNITED METHODIST 15482 Mendon Rd., Van Wert Phone: 419-965-2771 Pastor Chuck Glover Sunday School - 9:30 a.m.;

Sunday - 8:30 AM Breakfast with InReach/OutReach; 10:00 AM Worship. Tuesday - 9:45 AM Good Morning/Good Shepherd; 6:00 PM Mission: Slimpossible Meeting. Wednesday - 7:00 PM InReach/ OutReach. Saturday - 8:00 AM Prayer Breakfast. Sunday 9:00 AM Sunday School; 10:00 AM Worship; 11:00 AM Council Meeting.
Where Jesus is Healing Hurting Hearts!

FIRST ASSEMBLY OF GOD

808 Metbliss Ave., Delphos One block so. of Stadium Park. 419-692-6741 Lead Pastor - Dan Eaton Sunday - 10:30 a.m. - Worship Service with Nursery & Kids Church; 6:00 pm. Youth Ministry at The ROC & Jr. Bible Quiz at Church Monday - 7:00 p.m. Teen Bible Quiz at Church Wednesday 7:00 p.m. Discipleship Class in Upper Room For more info see our website: www.delphosfirstassemblyofgod. com. DELPHOS WESLEYAN CHURCH 11720 Delphos Southworth Rd. Delphos - Phone 419-695-1723 Pastor Rodney Shade 937-397-4459 Asst. Pastor Pamela King 419-204-5469 Sunday - 10:30 a.m. Worship; 9:15 a.m. Sunday School for all ages. Wednesday - 7 p.m. Service and prayer meeting. ST. PAULS UNITED METHODIST 335 S. Main St. Delphos Pastor - Rev. David Howell Sunday 9:00 a.m. Worship Service

Mary Beth Will, Liturgical Coordinator; Mel Rode, Parish Council President; Lynn Bockey, Music Director Celebration of the Sacraments Eucharist Lords Day Observance; Saturday 4:30 p.m., Sunday 7:30, 9:15, 11:30 a.m.; Weekdays as announced on Sunday bulletin. Baptism Celebrated first Sunday of month at 1:00 p.m. Call rectory to schedule Pre-Baptismal instructions. Reconciliation Tuesday and Friday 7:30-7:50 a.m.; Saturday 3:30-4:00 p.m. Anytime by request. Matrimony Arrangements must be made through the rectory six months in advance. Anointing of the Sick Communal celebration in May and October. Administered upon request.

Fred Lisk and Dave Ricker, Deacons

Elida/GomEr
10:45 a.m. contemporary PIKE MENNONITE CHURCH 3995 McBride Rd., Elida Phone 419-339-3961 CORNERSTONE BAPTIST CHURCH 2701 Dutch Hollow Rd. Elida Phone: 339-3339 Rev. Frank Hartman Sunday - 10 a.m. Sunday School (all ages); 11 a.m. Morning Service; 6 p.m. Evening Service. Wednesday - 7 p.m. Prayer Meeting. Office Hours: Monday-Friday, 8-noon, 1-4- p.m. GOMER CONGREGATIONAL CHURCH 7350 Gomer Road, Gomer, Ohio 419-642-2681 gomererucc@bright.net Sunday 10:00 a.m. Worship NEW HOPE CHRISTIAN CENTER 2240 Baty Road, Elida Ph. 339-5673 Rev. James F. Menke, Pastor Sunday 10 a.m. Worship. Wednesday 7 p.m. Evening service.

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

landECk
Landeck - Phone: 419-692-0636 Rev. Dave Reinhart, Pastor Administrative aide: Rita Suever Masses: 8:30 a.m. Sunday. Sacrament of Reconciliation: Saturday. Newcomers register at parish. Marriages: Please call the parish house six months in advance. Baptism: Please call the parish.
ST. JOHN THE BAPTIST CHURCH

putnam County

week at the church of your choice.

Worship this

spEnCErVillE
ST. PATRICKS CHURCH 500 S. Canal, Spencerville 419-647-6202 Saturday 4:30 p.m. Reconciliation; 5 p.m. Mass, May 1 - Oct. 30. Sunday - 10:30 a.m. Mass. SPENCERVILLE FULL GOSPEL 107 Broadway St., Spencerville Pastor Charles Muter Home Ph. 419-657-6019 Sunday: Morning Services - 10 a.m. Evening Services - 7:00 p.m.

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

11260 Elida Road DELPHOS, OH 45833 Ph. 692-0055 Toll Free 1-800-589-7876

RAABE FORD LINCOLN

10098 Lincoln Hwy. Van Wert, OH www.AlexanderBebout.com

419-238-9567

Alexander & Bebout Inc.

HARTER & SCHIER FUNERAL HOME


209 W. 3rd St. Delphos, Ohio 45833 419-692-8055

PITSENBARGER SUPPLY
Professional Parts People

BALYEATS Coffee Shop


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

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

234 N. Canal St. Delphos, O. Ph. 692-1010

www.delphosherald.com

Friday, January 3, 2014

The Herald 5

Landmark

In the Waiting Room ...


with Dr. Celeste Lopez
Its that time of year again, when we make our New Years resolutions. I dont usually make one because I have found that I am not very good at keeping them. This year, I decided that I probably should give it a try again. My resolution is to be more patient. My sons resolution is to think before he acts. This all stems from an incident that happened just after Christmas. My son got a remote control helicopter for Christmas and I got a new pair of shoes. One evening he decided it would be a good idea to go outside and fly his helicopter. I informed him that this wasnt a good idea because it was dark and he was going to lose it but he persisted. I went back to visiting with my family and I noticed he came back inside briefly but then went back outside again. I didnt pay much attention until he called my sister to come outside. I still didnt think too much about it until she hadnt come back in after 20 minutes or so. When they did come back in, she said the three words that all parents dread Dont be mad. OK, now this phrase conjures up all sorts of ideas in my head and none of them are good. Did he get the helicopter stuck somewhere? Thats why I told you not to go outside in the dark. Well, he did but he got it back out of the tree, my sister responded. Is it broken? No, it works fine. Now I am getting worried because I am still not sure what it is Im not supposed to be mad about. OK, what did you do? Finally my son spills the beans on what he did. Apparently, he was able to get his helicopter out of the tree by using one of my new shoes. But now my shoe was stuck in the tree and he couldnt get it out. My sister said she tried to help him with a ladder and a rake but it was too precarious and he almost fell out, so she made him get down. Given the choice between my son breaking his neck or losing a shoe, the choice seems relatively simple. However, you can see how my resolution this year is to be more patient. When you have a teenage boy in the house, patience is something

COMMUNITY

At the movies ...


Van Wert Cinemas 10709 Lincoln Hwy., Van Wert Paranormal Activity: The Marked Ones (R) Fri.-Sat.: 1:00/3:00/5:00/7:00/9:00; Sun.: 2:00/4:00/6:00/8:00; Mon.Thurs.: 5:00/7:00 Walking With Dinosaurs (PG) Fri.-Sat.: 1:00; Sun.: 2:00; Mon.-Thurs.: 5:00 The Hobbit: The Desolation of Smaug (PG-13) Fri.-Sat.: 2:45; Sun.: 3:45; Mon. and Wed.: 7:00 The Hobbit: The Desolation of Smaug 3D (PG-13) Fri.-Sat.: 6:30; Sun.: 7:00; Tues. and Thurs.: 7:00 Frozen 3D (PG) Fri.-Sat.: 1:00/5:00; Sun.: 2:00/6:00; Tues. and Thurs.: 5:oo Frozen (PG) Fri.-Sat.: 3:00/7:00; Sun.: 4:00; Mon. and Wed.: 5:00 The Hunger Games: Catching Fire (PG-13) Fri.-Sat.: 9:00; Sun.: 8:00; Mon.-Thurs.: 7:15 Anchorman II: The Legend Continues (PG-13) Fri.Sat.:1:00/3:30/6:00/8:30; Sun.: 2:00/4:30/7:00; Mon.-Thurs.: 5:00/7:15 Grudge Match (PG-13) Fri.-Sat.:1:00/3:30/6:00/8:30; Sun.: 2:00/4:30/7:00; Mon.-Thurs.: 5:00/7:15 American Mall Stadium 12 2830 W. Elm St., Lima Saturday and Sunday Paranormal Activity: The Marked Ones (R) 11:20/1:40/4 :15/6:50/7:20/9:25/10:00 47 Ronin 3D (PG-13) 11:45/6:45/9:45 47 Ronin (PG-13) 3:25 Grudge Match (PG-13) 11:00/2:05/4:50/7:40/10:30 The Secret Life of Walter Mitty (PG) 11:15/2:00/4:45/7:30/10:25 The Wolf of Wall Street (R) 10:50/3:50/7:50/9:30 Walking With Dinosaurs (PG) 11:25/1:55/4:20 Anchorman 2: The Legend Continues (PG-13) 11:05/1:45/4:30/7:15/10:05 American Hustle (R) 11:35/3:45/6:55/10:10 Saving Mr. Banks (PG-13) 11:40/3:35/7:10/10:15 The Hobbit: The Desolation of Smaug 3D (PG-13) 3:05/9:55 The Hobbit: The Desolation of Smaug (PG-13) 10:30/6:30 Frozen (PG) 10:10/1:50/4:25/7:00 The Hunger Games: Catching Fire (PG-13) 11:55/3:30/6:40/9:50 Eastgate Dollar Movies 2100 Harding Hwy., Lima Saturday and Sunday Enders Game (PG-13) 7:00/9:30 Free Birds (PG) 1:00/3:00/5:00 Jackass Presents: Bad Grandpa (R) 1:00/3:10/5:30/7:30/ (Sat. only 9:40) Cloudy With a Chance of Meatballs 2 (PG) 1:00/3:10/5:15/7:15/(Sat. only 9:15) Lee Daniels The Butler (PG-13) 1:00/3:45/6:50/9:30 Shannon Theatre, Bluffton Through Jan. 9 Frozen (PG) 2D show times are 7 p.m. every evening with 1:30 p.m. Saturday and Sunday matinees. 3D showtimes are 9:30 every evening with 4 p.m. Saturday and Sunday matinees.

Jefferson Middle School

Calendar of Events

And so it goes

TODAY 7:30 a.m. Delphos Optimist Club meets at the A&W Drive-In, 924 E. Fifth St. 11:30 a.m. Mealsite at Delphos Senior Citizen Center, 301 Suthoff St. 1-4 p.m. Interfaith Thrift Store is open for shopping. SATURDAY 9 a.m.-noon Interfaith Thrift Store is open for shopping. St. Vincent dePaul Society, located at the east edge of the St. Johns High School parking lot, is open. 10 a.m.-2 p.m. Delphos Postal Museum is open. 12:15 p.m. Testing of warning sirens by Delphos Fire and Rescue. 1-3 p.m. Delphos Canal Commission Museum, 241 N. Main St., is open. 7 p.m. Bingo at St. Johns Little Theatre. SUNDAY 1-3 p.m. The Delphos Canal Commission Museum, 241 N. Main St., is open. MONDAY 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. Delphos City Council meets at the Delphos Municipal Building, 608 N. Canal St. Delphos Parks and Recreation board meets at the recreation building at Stadium Park. Washington Township trustees meet at the township house. 7:30 p.m. Spencerville village council meets at the mayors office. Delphos Eagles Auxiliary meets at the Eagles Lodge, 1600 Fifth St. 8 p.m. The Veterans of Foreign Wars meet at the hall. TUESDAY 11:30 a.m. Mealsite at Delphos Senior Citizen Center, 301 Suthoff St. 7 p.m. Delphos Coon and Sportsmans Club meets. 7:30 p.m. Alcoholics Anonymous, First Presbyterian Church, 310 W. Second St. WEDNESDAY 9 a.m. - noon Putnam County Museum is open, 202 E. Main St. Kalida. 11:30 a.m. Mealsite at Delphos Senior Citizen Center, 301 Suthoff St. Noon Rotary Club meets at The Grind. 4 p.m. Delphos Public You Put Them In Library board members meet at the library conference room.

that can sometimes be in very short supply. Teenage boys are capable of coming up with the dumbest ideas at the same time they are asking to have more freedom. This is a frightening thought for parents. This is where his resolution comes inthink before you act. It doesnt seem like a lot to ask. But to a 14-yearold boy, it must seem like an impossible task. Getting him to try and think before he acts is a resolution well worth trying to keep. For me to have patience when he fails to keep his resolution is something that I will definitely need. Wish me luck; Im going to need it. Dr. Celeste Lopez graduated cum laude from The University of Utah College of Medicine. She completed her Pediatric residency training at the Childrens Hospital of Michigan. She is certified with The American Board of Pediatrics since 1992. In 2003, she moved her practice, Wishing Well Pediatrics, to Delphos and is located at 154 W. Third Street. She is the proud mother of a 14-yearold son.

Santa visits nice residents at Sarah Jane


Joyce Anderson visited with Santa and Mrs. Claus at the Sarah Jane Living Center Christmas party. All of the residents must have been on the Nice list this year as Mr. and Mrs. Claus had a gift to deliver for every resident in the facility. (Submitted photo)

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6 The Herald

Friday, January 3, 2014

Final Regular Season Stats PASS ATT COM PCT YARDS GAIN TD PCT INT PCT LONG Dalton 586 363 61.9 4296 7.33 33 5.6 20 3.4 82t Sanu 1 1 100.0 25 25.00 0 0.0 0 0.0 25 TEAM 587 364 62.0 4321 7.36 33 5.6 20 3.4 82t OPPONTS 614 362 59.0 3623 5.90 22 3.6 20 3.3 74t RUSHING ATT YARDS AVG LONG Green-Ellis 220 756 3.4 25 Bernard 170 695 4.1 35t Dalton 61 183 3.0 12 M. Jones 8 65 8.1 34 Jo. Johnson 7 20 2.9 10 Peerman 8 17 2.1 5 Sanu 4 16 4.0 9 A. Hawkins 2 3 1.5 6 Huber 1 0 0.0 0 TEAM 481 1755 3.6 35t OPPONTS 385 1544 4.0 51 RECEIVING NO. YARDS AVG LONG A.. Green 98 1426 14.6 82t Bernard 56 514 9.2 41 M. Jones 51 712 14.0 45 Sanu 47 455 9.7 32 J. Gresham 46 461 10.0 30 Eifert 39 445 11.4 61 A. Hawkins 12 199 16.6 50 Sanzenbacher 6 61 10.2 23 Green-Ellis 4 22 5.5 10 Ale. Smith 3 12 4.0 7 O. Charles 1 8 8.0 8 Br. Tate 1 6 6.0 6 TEAM 364 4321 11.9 82t OPPONENTS 362 3623 10.0 74t INTERCEPTIONS NO. YARDS AVG LONG Ad. Jones 3 60 20.0 60t Kirkpatrick 3 21 7.0 21t Crocker 2 41 20.5 32t R. Nelson 2 0 0.0 0 Newman 2 8 4.0 9 Rey 2 29 14.5 25t Burfict 1 12 12.0 12 L. Hall 1 0 0.0 0 J. Harrison 1 9 9.0 9 Iloka 1 -1 -1.0 -1 Mic. Johnson 1 7 7.0 7 Maualuga 1 14 14.0 14 TEAM 20 200 10.0 60t OPPONENTS 20 369 18.5 94t

Cincinnati Team Stax Meyer, Swinney guide teams back to BCS stage
RATE 88.8 118.8 89.0 74.2 TD 7 5 2 0 0 0 0 0 0 14 6 TD 11 3 10 2 4 2 0 0 0 1 0 0 33 22 TD 1 1 1 0 0 1 0 0 0 0 0 0 4 2

SPORTS
Associated Press

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See CINCINNATI, page 7

Final Regular Season Stats

Cleveland Team Stax


PASSING ATT COM PCT YARDS GAIN TD PCT INT PCT LONG RATE

wins and a Sugar Bowl victory while at defense. Each of the Buckeyes last Florida, and a Fiesta Bowl triumph from four opponents have completed at least 60 percent of their passes, throwing for MIAMI GARDENS, Fla. Ohio when he coached Utah. Its a chance to go compete, Meyer 1,363 yards in that stretch. And with States Urban Meyer has never had any issue acclimating to the biggest said. Whether its checkers or ping that side of the ball dealing with some stages in college football. Clemsons pong, were going to try to win the injury concerns for the Orange Bowl, Dabo Swinney is sounding like some- game. Our job every time we keep its clearly to Clemsons advantage. RUN (AND) HYDE: Ohio State RB one whos getting comfortable under the score is to win. Its the mentality we try to create within our Carlos Hyde has 1,408 yards in 10 brightest lights as well. program. Whether its the games this season and says hed like Meyer has coached in four Orange Bowl, whether its to cap his college career by setting the previous BCS games. Hes the eighth game of the sea- Orange Bowl record for yards in a game. never lost. son, were trying to win the Hyde has averaged 7.7 yards per carry; Swinney has taken his Clemsons defense has yielded 3.7 per game. team to the BCS one other Clemson lost the Orange attempt. Hyde is the first running back time and lost by 37 points. Bowl two years ago to West to top 1,000 yards under Meyer and is Of course, come tonight, Virginia, 70-33 the game 116 yards away from fifth all-time on none of that will matter. The turning when the Tigers Ohio States list. seventh-ranked Buckeyes WELCOME HOME: The Buckeyes fumbled the ball away in (12-1) and the 12th-ranked the second quarter, on a and Tigers both recruit the Sunshine Tigers (10-2) will be squarplay where they would have State heavily. Together, the teams have ing off in the Orange Bowl, Meyer taken the lead. Instead, the 13 players from the state, including six where Meyer will aim to keep starters. Among the notables: Clemson floodgates opened. his BCS record perfect and WR Sammy Watkins (who may be playThe Tigers are 21-4 since. Swinney will try to have his team, as he This team has more than respond- ing his college finale), Clemson DB put it, continue to climb the mountain. Jayron Kearse; Ohio State When you have an opportunity to ed, Swinney added. top tackler Ryan Shazier; ___ come to a BCS ball game and lose it, Hyde, the Ohio State runHeres five things to watch you want to get back and have another ning back; and Ohio State opportunity, Swinney said Thursday. in the Orange Bowl: DL Joey Bosa, who hails THE QB BATTLE: Theres only six teams, I think, in the from Fort Lauderdale, Fla. country that have been in two BCS Tickets to the Orange Bowl and the powerhouse St. bowls the last three years and were one arent inexpensive but the Thomas Aquinas program. of them. So its a great opportunity for shows that Clemson quarKICKERS: If the game terback Tajh Boyd and Ohio us to have a chance to win one. comes down to a kick, odds Meyer would say the same thing. State quarterback Braxton are that either Clemsons His team had visions of playing in Miller can put on may make Chandler Catanzaro or Ohio Pasadena, Calif. for the BCS national the admission price seem like Swinney States Drew Basil will championship next week but the loss in a bargain. Boyd has accountdeliver. Catanzaro has made the Big Ten title game the first under ed for 38 touchdowns this seaMeyer in 25 games since he took over in son; Miller has scored 32 with either his all 56 of his extra-point tries and is 13 Columbus knocked the Buckeyes out arm or his feet. Its Boyds finale; it may of 14 on field-goal attempts. Basil is 74 be Millers as well if he elects to go pro, for 75 on extra-points and 9 for 10 on of the title picture. field goals. So instead, Ohio State headed to as some expect he may. BUCKEYE D: If theres a weakness South Florida, where Meyer will look to See ORANGE, page 7 add the Orange Bowl to his BCS collec- on a team thats 24-1 in the past two tion that already includes two title-game seasons, it may be Ohio States pass

J. Campbell 317 180 56.8 2015 6.36 Weeden 267 141 52.8 1731 6.48 Hoyer 96 57 59.4 615 6.41 Lanning 1 1 100.0 11 11.00 TEAM 681 379 55.7 4372 6.42 OPPONTS 605 363 60.0 3723 6.15 RUSHING ATT YARDS AVG McGahee 138 377 2.7 Ogbonnaya 49 240 4.9 E. Baker 43 171 4.0 J. Campbell 14 107 7.6 T. Richardson 31 105 3.4 J. Gordon 5 88 17.6 Whittaker 28 79 2.8 Benjamin 1 45 45.0 Weeden 12 44 3.7 M. Gray 6 43 7.2 Aubrey 1 34 34.0 B. Rainey 13 34 2.6 Hoyer 6 16 2.7 A. Edwards 1 0 0.0 TEAM 348 138 3 4.0 OPPONTS 462 1781 3.9 RECEIVING NO. YARDS J. Gordon 87 1646 Cameron 80 917 Ogbonnaya 48 343 Bess 42 362 Little 41 465 Whittaker 21 155 Barnidge 13 127 Jos. Cooper 9 60 E. Baker 8 57 McGahee 8 20 T. Richardson 7 51 Benjamin 5 105 B. Rainey 4 19 M. Gray 2 8 Tyms 2 12 A. Edwards 1 10 Gurley 1 15 TEAM 379 4372 OPPONENTS 363 3723 INTERCEPTIONS NO. YARDS AVG Gipson 5 143 28.6 Haden 4 57 14.3 Ward 2 57 28.5 D. Jackson 1 0 0.0 C. Robertso 1 12 12.0 Skrine 1 5 5.0 TEAM 14 274 19.6 OPPONS 20 206 10.3 SACKS NO. Sheard 5.5 Mingo 5.0 P. Kruger 4.5 De. Bryant 3.5 C. Robertson 3.0 C. Owens 2.5 A. Bryant 2.0 Groves 2.0 Rubin 2.0 P. Taylor 2.0 Winn 2.0 D. Jackson 1.5 Ward 1.5 Jo. Hughes 1.0 J. Posey 1.0 Skrine 1.0 TEAM 40.0 OPPONENTS 49.0

11 3.5 8 2.5 80t 76.9 9 3.4 9 3.4 95t 70.3 5 5.2 3 3.1 47t 82.6 1 100.0 0 0.0 11t 152.1 26 3.8 20 2.9 95t 75.7 29 4.8 14 2.3 50 84.1 LONG TD 16 2 43 0 20 2 21 0 10 0 34 0 11 0 45 0 11 0 18 0 34 0 7 0 11 0 0 0 45 4 54t 13 AVG LONG TD 18.9 95t 9 11.5 53 7 7.1 17 2 8.6 20t 2 11.3 47 2 7.4 35t 2 9.8 40t 2 6.7 16 0 7.1 16 0 2.5 9 0 7.3 18 0 21.0 39 0 4.8 15 0 4.0 5 0 6.0 6 0 10.0 10 0 15.0 15 0 11.5 95t 26 10.3 50 29 LONG TD 44t 1 29t 1 44t 1 0 0 12 0 5 0 44t 3 43t 2

No. 9 Mizzou vs. familiar No. 13 Okla St in Cotton


Associated Press ARLINGTON, Texas Missouri coach Gary Pinkel is constantly asked to compare the SEC to the Big 12. The ninth-ranked Tigers left the Big 12 two years ago, got off to a rocky start but won the SEC East Division this season in somewhat of a surprise. The question came up again with Missouri (11-2) representing the SEC in the Cotton Bowl tonight against No. 13 Oklahoma State (102), its former Big 12 and Big Eight rival. We didnt change anything, how we recruit or how we train our student-athletes other than trying to keep our players healthy in the grind you go in, replied Pinkel, whose team lost to No. 2 Auburn in the SEC championship game. The Big 12 has some real good football teams but the SEC just has more. That is the difference. Pinkel diplomatically pointed out Thursday that there are 14 teams in the SEC. The Big 12 has 10. Like it has in recent national championship games, the SEC has dominated the Cotton Bowl winning nine of the last 10 games in the Dallas area, all against Big 12 teams. The lone exception was Missouri, then in the Big 12, defeating Arkansas six years ago. Oklahoma State came close to an overall league title this season, falling short of a Big 12 championship and the Bowl Championship Series after losing 33-24 at home to Oklahoma in the regular season finale. Its been tough, said All-Big 12 cornerback Justin Gilbert, one of 28 Oklahoma State seniors. Were just grateful that we get another opportunity so we dont have to end on that. When they were Big 12 rivals, Oklahoma State won the last three games, including a 45-24 victory in Columbia in 2011 when Missouri quarterback James Franklin threw three interceptions. Oklahoma State is trying to win 11 games for the third time in four seasons. Before Mike Gundy became the coach in 2005, the Cowboys had never won 11 games. Missouri is going for its 12th win, which would match the school record set with its Cotton Bowl victory six years ago. This is already their fourth season with at least 10 wins in that span. 2007 was important for us, it was kind of us getting going, Pinkel said. We got a pretty good boost out of it, but its all about consistency. Here are five things to know when former Missouri and Oklahoma State meet in a bowl for the first time: FRANKLIN AND CHELF: James Franklins last two seasons at Mizzou have been plagued by injuries. Oklahoma State senior Clint Chelf lost his starting job for parts of this season. The senior quarterbacks wrap up their college careers starting the Cotton Bowl. Franklin missed most of four games during the middle of this season with a shoulder sprain. He has 8,481 total yards and 72 touchdowns in his 41 career games. Chelf started the opener for the Cowboys, but was replaced for several weeks before regaining his starting spot. He has thrown for 1,792 yards with 15 TDs and six interceptions this season. BIG 12 REUNIONS: Missouri and Texas A&M both left the Big 12 for the SEC after the 2011 season. Ironically, in both seasons since, theyve represented the SEC in the Cotton Bowl, which through this years game has matched teams from those two leagues. When a 4-team playoff replaces the BCS next season, the Cotton Bowl will become part of the rotation to host semifinal games. BEEN ON BOTH SIDES: When Gundy was the offensive coordinator at Oklahoma State from 2001-04 before becoming the Cowboys coach, the tight ends coach and recruiting coordinator was Josh Henson, who stayed for Gundys first year as head coach before going to LSU and then Missouri in 2009. Gundy and Henson, who spent countless hours together preparing game plans, are on opposite sides in the Cotton Bowl. Henson wraps up his first season as the Tigers offensive coordinator, a promotion he got after last season. ONE TO BE BEST: Pinkel has 101 wins in his 13 seasons as Missouris coach, matching Don Faurot (193542, 46-56) for the most in school history. Pinkel, who went to Missouri after 10 seasons at Toledo, is 174-100-3 overall. Of the current 14 SEC coaches, none has been at their school longer than Pinkel. Mark Richt arrived at Georgia in 2001, the same year Pinkel joined the Tigers. FINISH AND START: Oklahoma State is playing the first of consecutive games at the Dallas Cowboys massive NFL stadium. After ending this season tonight in the Cotton Bowl, Oklahoma State will be back in the stadium to start their 2014 season against Florida State on Aug. 30 in the annual Labor Day weekend college game at the stadium. See COTTON, page 7

Bengals have turned into model of NFL stability


By JOE KAY Associated Press CINCINNATI Losing season after losing season, they were the same old Bungles. Changed quarterbacks every couple of years. Wasted high draft picks on lowertalented players. Signed players with a lot of baggage and wound up making excuses for their arrests. Fired the coach and started the cycle all over again. Nobody could argue when one television commentator referred to them as the NFLs Siberia, a place where nobody wanted to end up if they could avoid it. Look at them now. The Bengals (11-5) have become a model of stability in a league where everything seems to change overnight. Up the interstate in Cleveland, the last head coach got run out of town less than a year after he was hired. While coaches and quarterbacks come and go in other places, Cincinnati is an example of how patience can succeed. The AFC North champions have gotten to the playoffs for the third year in a row by keeping their head coach and coordinators and spending a lot of money to return the core of their team intact. To me, probably the most disheartening, saddest part about this level of football is too many CEOs and owners just toss coaches around like hotcakes and dont realize that the reason college football is what it is, offensive lineman Andrew Whitworth said. Systems determine success and longevity. Theres no coach on the face of this earth that can have a system in one year or two years. It takes years. And sometimes it takes resetting a system over a couple of years. Weve done that here and kind of cleaning house and saying all right, we had a couple guys here that we think we need to get rid of and let those (other) guys kind of become the leadership of this team. This time, theyve gotten it right. Lewis readily acknowledges that on any other NFL team, he would have been fired after going 0-4 in the playoffs and posting a losing record overall in 10 seasons. In Cincinnati, he got an 11th season and another chance to win a playoff game Sunday against San Diego (9-7). In the last three years, a lot has changed. All of the things that have been written all of the time and the shots taken, thats way in the past, Lewis said. Not entirely. The Bengals still havent won a playoff game since the 1990 season, tied for seventh-longest streak of futility in NFL history. Theyve emerged from their years of languishing as a down-and-out franchise by reaching the playoffs three years in a row for the first time in their history. The turning point came after a 4-12 finish in 2008. Things were so bad that franchise quarterback Carson Palmer demanded a trade, insisting he would retire rather than stay in Cincinnati. Lewis contract was up and he wasnt sure if hed be returning, either. After several days of discussions with owner Mike Brown, he got a new deal with some new parameters. Brown changed some of his teams operating philosophies. He stopped drafting and signing troubled players in hopes he could redeem them. Rather than letting star players leave when they were in line for big contracts, they began keeping them. See BENGALS, page 7

See CLEVELAND, page 7

Report: Browns to interview Arizonas Todd Bowles


By TOM WITHERS Associated Press CLEVELAND The Browns will reportedly meet with an old friend today. The team has scheduled an interview with Arizona defensive coordinator Todd Bowles in the Cleveland area, NFL Network reported. Bowles was an assistant with Cleveland from 2001-04, coaching defensive backs on Butch Davis staff. In his first season with the Cardinals, the 50-year-old Bowles helped Arizona to a 10-6 record. He spent 2012 with Philadelphia, starting the season coaching the secondary before finishing as coordinator when Juan Castillo was fired.

Bowles played eight seasons in the NFL with Washington and San Francisco. He won a Super Bowl with the Redskins in 1988. An interview with Bowles would satisfy the Rooney Rule, requiring teams to meet with at least one minority candidate. Bowles is also expected to interview for Minnesotas head coaching vacancy. On Saturday, Browns owner Jimmy Haslam and CEO Joe Banner are expected to interview New England offensive coordinator Josh McDaniels, considered the favorite to replace Rob Chudzinski, fired after one season.

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Friday, January 3, 2014

The Herald 7

Associated Press Wednesdays Results Heart of Dallas Bowl At Dallas North Texas 36, UNLV 14 Gator Bowl At Jacksonville, Fla. Nebraska 24, Georgia 19 Capital One Bowl At Orlando, Fla. South Carolina 34, Wisconsin 24 Outback Bowl At Tampa, Fla. LSU 21, Iowa 14 Rose Bowl At Pasadena, Calif. Michigan State 24, Stanford 20 Fiesta Bowl At Glendale, Ariz. UCF 52, Baylor 42 Thursdays Result Sugar Bowl At New Orleans Alabama (11-1) vs. Oklahoma

College Football FBS Bowl Glance

FSUs Joyner, Auburns Uzomah are hybrid stars


By RALPH D. RUSSO Associated Press NEWPORT BEACH, Calif. Lamarcus Joyner is listed on Florida States depth chart as a cornerback. That fails to tell the whole story of the AllAmerica defensive back. Auburns C.J. Uzomah is the Tigers No. 1 tight end, though hes almost as likely to line up out wide or in the back field. In college football today, it helps to have players who are hard to define because it also makes them hard to neutralize. Hybrid is the term that gets thrown around a lot. Joyner and Uzomah fit the description and could have a major impact on the BCS championship game Monday night, when the topranked Seminoles and No. 2 Tigers meet in the Rose Bowl. Joyner is the Swiss Army knife of Florida States stingy and fast defense, which ranks tops in the nation in yards per play (3.95) and third in yards per game (268.5) allowed. First of all, hes very intelligent, Florida State defensive coordinator Jeremy Pruitt said Thursday. Hes got a lot of football savvy about him. We play six defensive backs and he can play all six positions. Hes a really good manto-man guy. He can play the ball in the deep part of the field. He can tackle in space. Hes a great blitzer. Hes just an all-around good football player. If Joyner was a basketball player, hed be a point guard who fills up the stat sheet. The 5-8, 190-pound senior and former 5-star recruit from Fort Lauderdale, Fla., was second on the team in tackles with 64, led the team in sacks with five, had two interceptions, four passes broken up and three forced fumbles this season. Hes been asked to do a lot and wished he could do even more. If its important enough to you, you would do it and the passion that I have for the game it allows me to do so, he said. Whatever I have to learn I will do it. If the dear Lord blessed me to be 50 pounds heavier and 3 more inches taller, I may go to linebacker or d-end or something. I just love football. While most cornerbacks become stars because of their ability to play on an island, isolated with an elite receiver, Joyner thrives on being in on the action. I love being around that ball, he added. You have some lockdown corners and they dont get any action. I get to roam around on the football field, stick my nose in everyones business and always be around the football. Auburn offensive coordinator Rhett Lashlee compared Joyner to former Alabama All-America cornerback Gilbert Arenas. Hes a guy we have to know where hes at, Lashlee said. We have to account for him because you see some plays some teams run the ball one way and hes making a play 20 yards on the other side of the field before guys on that side of the field are. You can tell hes got a high football IQ. Uzomah does most of his work away from the ball. The former high school quarterback from Suwanee, Ga., made the transition to tight end when he got to college in 2011 and added wide receiver to his title last year when Auburn was playing a pro-style offense under former coach Gene Chizik. But in coach Gus Malzahns spread hes back to being a tight end in name, if not strictly by definition. CJ is extremely versatile, Lashlee said. He can play tight end. He can flex out and be a receiver. He can be in the backfield like an H-back. He can play inside or outside receiver. Hes got enough size and strength to block defensive linemen, linebackers. Hes got enough speed and quickness. He has that ability to separate or great ball skills that allow him to play out on the perimeter some, too. Uzomahs made only nine catches this season for 146 yards while being limited at times by a leg injury. He has caught three touchdown passes, including the game-winner with 10 seconds left in the Mississippi State game. But playing for the No. 1 rushing offense in the nation, the 6-4, 258-pound junior knows his most important role is as a blocker. I love the physicality aspect of it now, he said. I think thats something we take pride in on the perimeter. Texas-sized cloud hangs over BCS title game: A Texassized cloud of uncertainty looms over college footballs biggest game of the season. As No. 1 Florida State and No. 2 Auburn prepare in Southern California, the University of Texas is still looking for a new football coach. And until the Longhorns make a hire, just about every successful coach can be considered a candidate including Florida States Jimbo Fisher and Auburns Gus Malzahn. Ive been amazed about how quiet this thing has been, ESPN analyst Kirk Herbstreit said earlier this week. Because of that it leads me to speculate and believe that somebody still involved in coaching, whether its the NFL or college, must be one of their primary candidates. I think the longer this goes on, I think its very, very clear that its somebody whos still coaching. Who that might be, I have no idea. Some leaks have sprung in the last couple of days and it appears frontrunners are emerging. Published reports out of Texas stated the Longhorns were interested in Fisher, Baylors Art Briles, Vanderbilts James Franklin and Louisvilles Charlie Strong. Michigan States Mark Dantonio has also been mentioned as a coach Texas athletic director Steve Patterson is looking at. Patterson said he wants the search complete by Jan. 15. Texas, theyre going to be calling on everybody they possibly can because theyre going to try to get the best coach they possibly can, Florida State AD Stan Wilcox said. Meanwhile, everybodys trying to keep their coaches because they all feel that the people that Texas is looking at are the best coaches out there. Florida State hopes it has put all the speculation about Fishers future to rest. The fourth-year head coach and Nick Saban disciple finally got around on Tuesday to signing a new contract that runs through the 2018 season and pays him about $4.1 million annually. Auburn agreed to a new deal with Malzahn the day before the Southeastern Conference championship game last month. The 6-year contract is worth $3.85 million annually to the first-year Tigers coach. Briles got a 10-year deal in November from Baylor. Michigan State is working on a new deal for Dantonio that could double his $1.9 million salary. The Dallas Morning News and Austin American-Statesmen reported Patterson has met with Strong and that Briles, now that Baylors season ended Tuesday night with a 52-42 loss to UCF in the Fiesta Bowl, could be next to interview. And, of course, Saban, the object of so many Longhorns desires, agreed to a new multi-year deal with Alabama that will pay him $7 million a year after months of stories and speculation connecting the 4-time national championship winning coach and Texas. But what do those extensions really mean? Are Fisher, Malzahn, Briles and even Saban truly off the market? A contract is written to be broken, replied Kansas State athletic director John Currie, who doesnt have to worry about his football coach, 74-year-old Bill Snyder, going anywhere. The trend in college sports, especially college football, is for schools to quickly lock up successful coaches and hand out raises. Mississippi extended Hugh Freezes contract after a 7-5 regular season and bumped his pay to $3 million per year. Washington States Mike Leach got the Cougars back into a bowl by winning six games in his second season at Pullman. He got a two-year extension for his work. Texas A&M made the boldest move of all this season with coach Kevin Sumlin, who was drawing interest from NFL teams last year. The Aggies made Sumlin (20-6 in two seasons at A&M) a $5 million-per-year coach with a new 6-year deal. Arizona AD Greg Byrne said the contract numbers that make headlines can often be deceiving. When you get down into the details the interesting numbers are whats guaranteed, both sides. If the coach were to leave, whats the buyout? And then if you were to dismiss your coach without cause, what percent of the contract is guaranteed? Byrne asked. Sometime youll see someone with an 8-year contract but half the contract is guaranteed, so in some ways its a 4-year contract instead.

(10-2), 8:30 p.m. (ESPN) Todays Games Orange Bowl At Miami Ohio State (12-1) vs. Clemson (10-2), 8 p.m. (ESPN) Cotton Bowl At Arlington, Texas Missouri (11-2) vs. Oklahoma State (10-2), 7:30 p.m. (FOX) Saturdays Game BBVA Compass Bowl At Birmingham, Ala. Vanderbilt (8-4) vs. Houston (8-4), 1 p.m. (ESPN) Sundays Game GoDaddy.com Bowl At Mobile, Ala. Arkansas State (7-5) vs. Ball State (10-2), 9 p.m. (ESPN) Mondays Game BCS National Championship At Pasadena, Calif. Florida State (13-0) vs. Auburn (12-1), 8:30 p.m. (ESPN)

Associated Press ThroughWednesday Conference Sun Belt Southeastern Pac-12 Independents Conference USA Mountain West American Athletic Big Atlantic Coast Big Ten Mid-American

2013-14 Conference Bowl Records


W 1 5 6 2 3 3 2 12 3 2 0 L 0 1 3 1 3 3 2 2 6 4 4 Pct. 1.000 .833 .667 .667 .500 .500 .500 .500 .333 .333 .000

Orange

(Continued from page 6)

Cotton

Orange Bowl Preview Capsule ORANGE BOWL No. 7 Ohio State (12-1) vs. No. 12 Clemson (10-2), 8:30 p.m. (ESPN) Line: Ohio State by 5. Series Record: Clemson leads 1-0. WHATS AT STAKE Meyer has a chance to win his fifth BCS game in as many tries and with a third different school. A top-5 finish in the national rankings is there for the taking by the Buckeyes. For Clemson, which has won only five of its last 16 bowl appearances, maybe the biggest opportunity that comes today is a chance to forever move past the Orange Bowl debacle of two years ago, when the Tigers lost 70-33 to West Virginia. KEY MATCHUP Clemson DE Vic Beasley vs. Ohio State LT Jack

Mewhort. This game might be Beasleys finale with the Tigers and if he leaves, he might be leaving a game too late for the Buckeyes liking. Hes the prototypical disruptive defensive end, though will be lined up against an elite player in Mewhort. PLAYERS TO WATCH Ohio State: Hyde carried the ball 183 times this season for the Buckeyes. He lost yardage on exactly two of those carries. With more than 1,400 yards in just 10 games and averaging nearly 8 yards per rush, Hyde will surely test the Tigers. Clemson: Boyd makes everything on offense click for Clemson and in his final collegiate game, hell likely be inspired to make quite a finishing statement. He completes more than two-thirds of his passes, threw for 29 touchdowns, ran for nine more and completes 73 percent of his first-down passes.

(Continued from page 6)

Cotton Bowl Preview Capsule COTTON BOWL No. 9 Missouri (11-2) vs. No. 13 Oklahoma State (10-2), 8 p.m. (FOX) Line: Oklahoma St. by 1 Series Record: Missouri leads 28-23. WHATS AT STAKE The former Big 12 and Big Eight Conference rivals from bordering states meet in a bowl for the first time. Missouri, wrap-

ping up its second SEC season after leaving the Big 12, will try to match a school record with its 12th victory. Oklahoma State is trying to get 11 wins for the third time in four seasons, after never reaching 11 before that. KEY MATCHUP Missouris big, physical receivers against the Oklahoma State secondary. Mizzou receivers Dorial Green-Beckham (55 catches, 830 yards, 12 TDs) and LDamian Washington (47-853-10) are both 6-foot-4, an inch shorter than Marcus Lucas (55-646-2).

Bengals

(Continued from page 6) We knew it was going to take a lot of change on everybodys part, Lewis said. I got a chance to start over again here as a new coach. The last four drafts have brought a trea-

sure trove of talent Jermaine Gresham, Carlos Dunlap, Geno Atkins, Andy Dalton, A.J. Green, Dre Kirkpatrick, Kevin Zeitler, Mohamed Sanu, Marvin Jones, Tyler Eifert, Giovani Bernard. They took a gamble on a player with a trouble

past by signing linebacker Vontaze Burfict as an undrafted free agent and it paid off. The Bengals finished in the top 10 in offense and defense for the first time since 1989 and the coaches think the recent continuity is a big part of it.

Cleveland

(Continued from page 6) LONG BLK 59 1 34 0 59 1 66 0 LONG TD 79t 1 38 0 11 0 12 0 79t 1 36 0 LONG TD 56 0 30 0 33 0

PUNTING NO. YARDS AVG AVG 20 Lanning 84 3679 43.8 37.9 28 Cundiff 1 34 34.0 14.0 0 TEAM 86 3713 43.2 37.6 28 OPPONTS 88 3849 43.7 37.6 32 PUNT RET NO. FC YARDS AVG Benjamin 22 7 257 11.7 Poyer 8 7 114 14.3 Bess 4 14 19 4.8 A. Edwards 4 0 28 7.0 TEAM 38 28 418 11.0 OPPONTS 38 25 357 9.4 KICKOFF RET NO. YARDS AVG Whittaker 23 482 21.0 Little 7 151 21.6 B. Rainey 6 147 24.5

Benjamin 3 146 48.7 L. McFadden 1 5 5.0 TEAM 40 931 23.3 OPPONTS 27 612 22.7 OFF. DEF. FUMBLES/RECOVERIES Benjamin Bess Cameron J. Campbell Jo. Hughes D. Jackson A. Mack E. Martin McGahee Ogbonnaya C. Owens C. Robertson

86 5 86 40 FUM 2 1 1 3 0 0 1 0 1 2 0 0

0 0 0 0 REC. REC. 1 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 1 0 1 1 0 0 1 0 0 0 0 0 1 0 1

Sheard J. Thomas Ward Weeden Whittaker TEAM OPPONENTS SCORE BY Q 1 2 TEAM 56 105 OPPONENTS 67 121 TOUCHDOWNS LONG Cundiff J. Gordon Cameron Bess E. Baker Barnidge 0 9 7 2 2 2 0 0 0 0 2 0 0 9 7 2 0 2 0 0 0 0 0 0

0 0 0 6 0 17 13 3 71 73 21 26 00 00 00 00 00

0 1 2 0 0 1 0 0 1 0 6 7 6 9 4 OT TOT 76 0 308 145 0 406 51 0 0 0 0 0


SAF PTS

TOT RUS REC RET XP/XPA FG/FGA FG

32 32 00 00 00 00 00

0 0 0 0 0 0

95 54 42 14 12 12

Little 2 0 McGahee 2 2 Ogbonnaya 2 0 Ward 2 0 Whittaker 2 0 Benjamin 1 0 Gipson 1 0 Haden 1 0 Lanning 0 0 TEAM 35 4 OPPONTS 46 13 FGS 1-19 Cundiff 0/ 0 TEAM 0/ 0 OPPONTS 0/ 0

2 0 00 00 0 0 0 0 00 00 0 0 2 0 00 00 0 0 0 2 00 00 0 0 2 0 00 00 0 0 0 1 00 00 0 0 0 1 00 00 0 0 0 1 00 00 0 0 0 0 11 00 0 0 26 5 33 33 21 26 51 0 29 4 43 43 27 32 52 1 20-29 30-39 7/ 7 5/ 6 7/ 7 5/ 6 5/ 5 9/ 9

12 12 12 12 12 6 6 6 1 308 406 40-49 50+ 7/ 9 2/4 7/ 9 2/4 9/11 4/7

Cincinnati

(Continued from page 6)

SACKS NO. C. Dunlap 7.5 Gilberry 7.5 Atkins 6.0 Rey 4.0 Mic. Johnson 3.5 Burfict 3.0 Peko 3.0 J. Harrison 2.0 Crocker 1.5 B. Thompson 1.5 Kirkpatrick 1.0 Maualuga 1.0 R. Nelson 1.0 M. Hunt 0.5 TEAM 43.0 OPPONENTS 29.0 PUNTING NO. YARDS AVG AVG 20 Huber 66 2982 45.2 40.5 24 S. Powell 7 268 38.3 34.7 3 Nugent 2 80 40.0 40.0 0

LONG BLK 75 0 52 0 43 0

TEAM 75 3330 44.4 39.9 27 OPPONTS 90 3984 44.3 39.3 37 PUNT RETURNS NO. FC YARDS AVG Br. Tate 36 16 336 9.3 Ad. Jones 11 0 88 8.0 TEAM 47 16 424 9.0 OPPONTS 27 22 254 9.4 KICKOFF NO. YARDS AVG Br. Tate 35 914 26.1 Peerman 4 66 16.5 TEAM 39 980 25.1 OPPONTS 52 1219 23.4 OFF. DEF. FUMBLES/RECOVERIES FUM Bernard 1 Burfict 0 Dalton 4 C. Dunlap 0 Green-Ellis 2 A.. Green 1 J. Gresham 3 J. Harrison 0 A. Hawkins 1

75 0 65 1 LONG TD 43 0 27 0 43 0 67t 1 LONG TD 71 0 26 0 71 0 48 0 REC. REC. 1 0 0 2 0 0 0 1 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 1 1 0

Huber 1 Iloka 0 Jo. Johnson 1 Ad. Jones 0 Kirkpatrick 0 T. Mays 0 R. Nelson 2 Newman 0 Peerman 0 Rey 0 Sanu 1 Ale. Smith 1 Br. Tate 2 Whitworth 0 TEAM 20 OPPONENTS 16 SCORE BY QUARTERS 1 2 3 4 TEAM 87 123 103 114 OPPONENTS 88 71 83 58 TOUCHDOWNS LONG Nugent 0 0 A.. Green 11 0 0 0 11 0 52 53 18 22 0 0 00

1 0 1 0 1 0 0 1 1 0 0 0 1 1 9 5 OT 3 5

0 1 2 0 0 1 0 0 0 0 11 10 TOT 430 305

0 1 0 2

TOT RUS REC RET XP/XPA FG/FGA FG SAF PTS

54 0 106 0 0 66

M. Jones 10 0 Bernard 8 5 Green-Ellis 7 7 J. Gresham 4 0 Dalton 2 2 Eifert 2 0 Sanu 2 0 Burfict 1 0 Crocker 1 0 Dye 1 0 Ad. Jones 1 0 Kirkpatrick 1 0 Newman 1 0 Rey 1 0 Ale. Smith 1 0 TEAM 54 14 OPPONTS 32 6 FIG 1-19 Nugent 0/ 0 TEAM 0/ 0 OPPONTS 2/ 2

10 0 3 0 0 0 4 0 0 0 2 0 2 0 0 1 0 1 0 1 0 1 0 1 0 1 0 1 1 0 33 7 22 4 20-29 2/ 2 2/ 2 6/ 6

0 0 00 0 0 60 0 0 00 0 0 48 0 0 00 0 0 42 0 0 00 0 0 24 0 0 00 0 0 12 0 0 00 0 0 12 0 0 00 0 0 12 0 0 00 00 6 0 0 00 00 6 0 0 00 00 6 0 0 00 00 6 0 0 00 00 6 0 0 00 00 6 0 0 00 00 6 0 0 00 00 6 52 53 18 22 54 0 430 31 31 26 31 58 1 305 30-39 40-49 50+ 6/ 7 7/ 9 3/4 6/ 7 7/ 9 3/4 5/ 8 9/11 4/4

Scan-Ohio Advertising Network. The Delphos Herald advertising dept. can set this up for you. No other classified ad buy is simpler or more cost effective. Call 419-695-0015 ext. 138

For Rent FREE ADS: 5 days free if item is free Minimum Charge: 15 Duplex words, Deadlines: or less than $50. Only 1 item per ad, 1 ADVERTISERS: YOU can 1 2 times - $9.00 BEDROOM, 228 N. LAMP REPAIR table or 11:30, a.m. for the next days issue. ad per month. ACROSS place a 25 word classified Jefferson. Stove & floor. Come to our store. Each word is $.30 2-5 days 1 Zippys cry BOX REPLIES: $8.00 if you come Saturdays ad in more than 100 news- refrigerator. $350/mo. H o h e n b rink T V . paper is 11:00 a.m. Friday $.25 6-9 days 4 Handle papers with over one and and pickroughly them up. $14.00 if we have to +deposit, water included! 419-695-1229 Mondays paper is 1:00 p.m. Friday 7 Disease causer a half million total circula$.20 10+ days send them to you. 419-996-9870 11 Mr. Baba tion across Ohio for $295. Herald Extra is 11 a.m. Thursday Musical CARD OF THANKS: $2.00 base Each word is one $.10 for 3 months 12 Untainted 580 Its easy...you place Instrumental 13 Eager, plus charge + $.10 for each word. order and pay with one 3 - Bor prepaid We accept Putnam County D Rmore M DU PLEX, 14 Relations check through Ohio

Classifieds
105 Announcements

8 The Herald

Friday, January 3, 2014

www.delphosherald.com

www.delphosherald.com Apartment/ 305 577 Miscellaneous

ESTATE TRANSFERS

REAL

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

DELPHOS
THE

Telling The Tri-Countys Story Since 1869

HERALD

THANKS TO ST. JUDE: Runs 1 day at the Todays Crossword Puzzle price of $3.00.

washer/dryer hookup. FREE: LOWRY Chord $475/mo +security de- Organ, debut model L-70 posit. Call or Text Call 419-642-6761 419-233-0083

583
DOWNTOWN APT. Very nice & newly remodeled. Large second story apt. in Downtown Delphos. 4Bdrms, dining room, large kitchen, 2BA, a very large family room, partially furnished. $800/mo +utilities. Call 419-236-6616 for viewing.

Pets and Supplies

IS IT A SCAM? The Delphos Herald urges our readers to contact The Better Business Bureau, (419) 223-7010 or 1-800-462-0468, before entering into any agreement involving financing, business opportunities, or work at home opportunities. The BBB will assist in the investigation of these businesses. (This notice provided as a customer service by The Delphos Herald.)

FREE: CHIHUAHUA, 1yr old, male, good w/kids & house trained. 419-296-3047

592 Wanted to Buy

320 House For Rent


2-3 BEDROOM, 1 bath home for rent in Delphos. Ulms Mobile Home. Phone: 419-692-3951.

Raines Jewelry
Scrap Gold, Gold Jewelry, Silver coins, Silverware, Pocket Watches, Diamonds.

Cash for Gold


2330 Shawnee Rd. Lima (419) 229-2899

235 General

325

DANCER LOGISTICS is looking for a shop fore- RENT OR Rent to Own. man. Must: Have expe- 1,2 or 3 bedroom mobile rience in Volvo and home. 419-692-3951 Freightliner 2010 and newer emissions Live close to Delphos. Great 425 Houses For Sale benefits, Apply at 900 Gressel Dr., Delphos, 3BR, 2-1/2BA Country OH 45833 home. Electric and solar back-up, 1-1/2 wooded acre. Spencerville school Asking $134,000. By Knueve & Sons, Inc. appt. only. 419-234-7554

Mobile Homes For Rent

845 Commercial
1998 GMC W5R 20ft. Box Truck, diesel. 59,600 miles. $2800. 419-302-1038

895 Vans/Mini-Vans
2006 FORD E Series 1 ton Cargo Van. 168,000 miles. $3995. 419-302-1038

2 WALNUT bathroom or kitchen cupboards, (1) R&R EMPLOYMENT 2 9 L x 1 2 W x 1 8 H . has openings! Clean matching Criminal Background 27Lx12Wx18H. All $17. preferred. Apply online 419-286-2821, leave www.rremployment.com message or call 419-232-2008. R&R Medical Staffing is Lawn and placing in Indiana and 570 Garden Accepting applications for CNA classes. Visit JOHN DEERE 214 Ridhttp://www.rremployment ing Lawn Mower. Works .com/rrmedical call R&R good. $275 or best offer. Medical Staffing at 419-796-0230, leave 260-724-4417 message.

00082535

is experiencing growth and has a HVAC Installer Opportunity. Previous HVAC installation experience is a plus. Also knowledge in sheet metal and duct board installation, installing furnaces, air conditioners, heat pumps and geothermal equipment. Electrical and construction experience is a plus. We offer competitive wages, health insurance, retirement plan, paid holidays, paid vacations, and uniforms. Send resumes to: service@knueve.com. or Knueve & Sons Inc. PO Box 265 Kalida, Ohio 45853.

080 Help Wanted

DANCER LOGISTICS is currently looking for a warehouse worker. VERY NICE collection of Please apply at 900 40 bells, all different. $50 Gressel Dr., Delphos, Ph: 419-695-9646 Ohio. The perfect candidate would fit the following criteria: Not afraid of 510 Appliance heavy lifting and hard work. Energetic and enMAYTAG, LARGE ca- thusiastic. A team pacity clothes dryer. In player. Reliable transgood condition, works portation. well. $75 OBO. Call OTR SEMI-DRIVER 419-339-9742 NEEDED. Benefits: Va-

505

Antiques and Collectibles

Home 560 Furnishings

cation, Holiday pay, 401k. Home weekends, & most nights. Call Ulms Inc. 419-692-3951

Timothy A. Pohl and Michelle Lynn Pohl, .911 acre Pleasant Township and 1.510 acres Pleasant Township, to Timothy A. Pohl and Michelle Lynn Pohl. Bob Meyer Builder Inc., Lot 1470, Ottawa, to David A. Kersh and Cheryl A. Kersh. Gregg C. Miller and Nata A. Miller, Lot 218, Lot 219 and Lot 87, Columbus Grove, to Gregg C. Miller and Nata A. Miller. Amy L. Laibe, Lot 376, Lot 388 and Lot 389, Ottawa, to Samuel E. Laibe. Amy L. Laibe, 1.05 acres Ottawa Township, to Samuel E. Laibe. Aubrey Markward, 1.149 acres Jackson Township to Jason Markward. John T. Knueven TR, 36.00 acres Van Buren Township and 46.0 acres Van Buren Township to Green Door Land LLC. Marlyn K. Knueven TR, 57.0 acres Van Buren Township and 80.0 acres Van Buren Township, to Green Door Land LLC. William D. Schroeder and Tamara A. Schroeder, 7.135 acres Pleasant Township to Shady Lawn Farms Inc.

16 17 18 19 20 21 24 27 28 30 32 34 36 37 39 41 42 43 45 48 49 52 53 54 55 56 57

Spyglass part Monsters No mans -Comanche kin Ick! Mold and mildew Handles dough Sorority letter Voucher Ape studier Fossey Yours and mine White Wedding singer Juans gold Chopped Like the tabloids Ancient Wool cap Glooms partner Plenty SF transit system Mooch Got it (2 wds.) Attaches U.K. part Son of Odin Week unit Keep after Talk on Mishmash Annex Nurses concern Hot Springs st. Unseld of the NBA Round Table knight Level Peel

GARAGE SALES: Each day is $.20 per word. $8.00 minimum charge. I WILL NOT BE RESPONSIBLE FOR DEBTS: Ad must be placed in person by the person whose name will appear in the ad. Must show ID & pay when placing ad. Regular rates apply

DOWN 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9

10 12 15 18 20 21 22 23 24 25 26 29 31

JAMA subscribers Lyrical 1960s dance Size above med. Golden Rule word Tos opposite No (hyph.) Mrs. Charles Notorious pirate Designer label Hindu attire Made tracks Silent OK

33 35 38 40 42 43 44 46 47 48 49 50 51

Tots vehicle Andean animals Dutch airline Out callers Running late Smidgen Three-part cookie Property claim Long-active volcano Morsel Water lily leaf Tooth-fillers org. Ovum

Most people exposed to HPV never develop symptoms


DEAR DOCTOR K: A famous actor recently said he got throat cancer from oral sex. Could this be true? DEAR READER: I assume youre referring to actor Michael Douglas, who recently divulged that his throat cancer could have been brought on by oral sex. Hes right. Oral sex is a common way to become infected with the human papilloma virus (HPV), and HPV is a leading cause of mouth and throat cancers. There are about 200 different strains of HPV. Some strains cause warts; other strains cause cancer of the cervix, anus, penis and throat (including the base of the tongue and tonsils). Sexual contact, including oral sex and deep kissing, can transmit HPV from one person to another. Many men who have sex with other men are infected with HPV. Fortunately, most people sexually exposed to HPV never develop symptoms or health problems. Thats true even of the strains of HPV known to cause cancer. Most HPV infections go away by themselves. But in some people, the infection can persist and cause long-term problems, including cancer. There are ways to prevent HPVrelated oral cancer, depending on your age. Pre-teens, teens and young adults of both sexes can get vaccinated against HPV. The Centers for Disease Control (CDC) recommends that both young women and young men be vaccinated with the HPV vaccine. The two available HPV vaccines provide excellent protection against sexually transmitted HPV. Avoiding oral sex will also protect against oral cancer, although not all cases of oral cancer are caused by this virus. These two vaccines were approved in 2006 and 2009. They have been available just a few years, and only about a third of the kids and young adults for whom the vaccines are recommended have received the vaccine. Nevertheless, a recent study by the CDC found that the number of young people infected with HPV has dropped considerably. Prior studies have shown that the vaccines given to girls and young women also reduce the risk of cancer of the cervix later in life. Vaccination wont help people beyond their mid-20s or the millions of people already infected with HPV. Using condoms can prevent the spread of the virus during penilevaginal, penile-anal or penile-oral sex. Using a dental dam (a thin piece of latex) can help prevent the spread of the virus during oral-vaginal sex. If youve been infected with the virus, diagnosing an HPV-related oral cancer as early as possible greatly improves the chance of cure. See your doctor if you

Ask Doctor K

Dr. Anthony L. Komaroff, M.D.

When help wanted is an urgent matter, you want a fast, effective way to reach qualified local candidates. Thats why advertising in The Delphos Herald is the solution more employers turn to when they want results. For rates and placement information, call one of our helpful sales reps today!

S
610 Automotive

The Delphos Herald 419-695-0015

ervice
625 Construction 665 Lawn, Garden, Landscaping 670 Miscellaneous

AT YOUR

Garver Excavating
Digging Grading Leveling Hauling Fill Dirt Topsoil Tile and Sewer Repair Stone Driveways Concrete Sidewalks Demolition Ditch Bank Cleaning Snow Removal Excavator Backhoe Skid Loader Dump Truck

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automatic transmission standard transmission differentials transfer case brakes & tune up

Geise

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Locally Owned and Operated | Registered Van Wert Contractor Registered and Bonded Household Sewage Treatment System Installer Fully Insured

419.203.0796 rgarv42@yahoo.com

have any of these symptoms for more than two to three weeks: -- A sore in your mouth or on your tongue that doesnt heal. -- Persistent pain with swallowing or sore throat. -- A lump in your neck that persists. The discovery that HPV was the major cause of cancer of the cervix led to diagnostic tests for the virus, as well as to the HPV vaccines. These discoveries and inventions have been honored with the Nobel Prize and have saved hundreds of thousands of lives. It was governmentsupported research that made the discoveries possible. *** (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.)

419-453-3620
625 Construction

2 miles north of Ottoville

KEVIN M. MOORE

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

(419) 235-8051
TEMANS
Trimming Topping Thinning Deadwooding Stump, Shrub & Tree Removal Since 1973

419-692-6336
700 Painting

Sales Representative Position


Times Bulletin Media is searching for a full-time sales representative. If you appreciate working as part of a team, enjoy working with businesses large and small, thrive in a busy and creative environment, and love using the web and social media sites, this position may be a perfect match for you. Candidates who succeed in sales possess above average written and oral communications skills, work with multiple deadlines and projects, and demonstrate effective organizational, time management, and planning skills. The successful applicant will learn and work with Times Bulletin Medias many products. Applicants must demonstrate a working knowledge of the internet and active participation in social networking and media. The successful candidate will play a key role in developing the companys online campaigns and social media strategies. We pay our sales representatives using a draw and commission plan. The parent company offers a full schedule of benefits including Health Insurance, 401K and Vacation. We are an equal opportunity employer. For consideration, please forward a professional resume and cover letter detailing how you will apply your skills and experience to the marketplace. Incomplete applications will not be considered. Mail to: Kirk Dougal, Publisher P.O. Box 271, Van Wert, Ohio 45891 E-mail to kdougal@timesbulletin.com Or deliver to The Times Bulletin Media office: 700 Fox Road, Van Wert, Ohio
00070858

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419-339-9084 cell 419-233-9460

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

419-692-7261

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Premium Painting
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Lima, Ohio

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Friday, January 3, 2014

The Herald - 9

Brother needs to work on own yard before sisters

As for your sister, you cannot Dear Annie: My wife and I recently had several relatives dictate someone elses behavover for a family gathering. ior. Either invite her or dont, During the evenings events, although you certainly can set my 10-year-old nephew rules in your own home about threw a tantrum and threat- what behavior you will tolerate. But we hope ened to hurt my you will use your 1-year-old son. He nephews presence said, If someone as an opportunity doesnt get him off to teach him, gently of me, I am going and lovingly, how to to throw him. I behave around your called for my son son. Encourage him to come to me, to be the boys prohoping that my tector instead of his sister would corcompetition. rect her sons beDear Annie: Could havior. But my son didnt move, and Annies Mailbox you please perform a public service my nephew said again, Someone get him off, about smart phones? Some people behave as if the planet or I will throw him off. I removed my son from the belongs to them alone. They situation and hoped my neph- should know that (a) nobody ews parents would intervene, wants to hear your personal but they didnt. My wife and I conversation at ear-splitting talked about the situation af- volume in a public place, and terward, and, being new par- (b) if you are texting while on ents, we were not sure what a sidewalk, stairwell or other to do. Our conclusion was public thoroughfare, please that the safety of our son is lift your head and watch primary, and we do not want where you are going. Others anyone threatening him in our are under no obligation to clear a pathway for you. home. Before the next family gath- Irritated Dear Irritated: Weve ering at our home, we sent an invitation to my sister with heard plenty of stories about the caveat that this behavior people who are so absorbed is not acceptable, saying if her in their texting while crossson threatens ours during one ing the street that they dont of his tantrums, they would be notice the car coming right at asked to leave. She proceeded them. Or they walk into walls to blame my wife and me for and trip over dogs. Also, too many people think they have the fracas. Since this conversation, my to shout into a cellphone, sister has been very divisive when they are perfectly auwith my parents and their in- dible (and much easier on the teraction with my son, carry- ears) at a lower volume. But ing a sour mood with her to of course, the worst offenders other family events. Were we never think you mean them. wrong in making it clear that We hope they see this and this behavior is not accept- shape up. Dear Annie: Id like to add able? How do we address my sisters behavior? Are we be- to your answer to Bound, ing overprotective? Con- Gagged and Furious, who was the victim of a home cerned Parents Dear Parents: You are not invasion. Although she and overprotective, but were go- her friend seem to be taking ing to ask the obvious: Why it in stride now, it would be was your son on top of your perfectly normal for them to nephew, and why didnt you have some lingering trauma remove him sooner? Your after the adrenaline and attennephew did not, in fact, hurt tion have subsided. People routinely seek counthe boy, throw him off or do anything other than yell for seling for less intense events. assistance. That is when you, I think theyd benefit from a the parents, should have im- couple of sessions to make mediately removed your son sure theyre OK. J. in order to protect him. Were not sure what you expected your nephew to do. He may be much older than your toddler, but he is still a child.

Tomorrows Horoscope
By Bernice Bede Osol

HI AND LOIS

SATURDAY, JANUARY 4, 2014 If you are not careful, indecisiveness will cause stagnation. Lack of confidence in your abilities may make you overly impressionable. Surround yourself with inspiring people who will reassure you that youre making good choices. This is the year to exorcise your demons and think positively. CAPRICORN (Dec. 22-Jan. 19) -Its best to lie low and allow someone else to take the lead. You will discover far more about this person if you remain passive. Dont be forthcoming about your plans, or someone may try to beat you to the finish line. AQUARIUS (Jan. 20-Feb. 19) -- Be honest; it will be impossible to hide your feelings. Make your needs clear and search for a way to sort out existing problems. People who dont understand your values should be regarded as acquaintances -- not friends. PISCES (Feb. 20-March 20) -Make a point of mingling today. This will be a good time to network. If you are in the right place at the right time, an investment opportunity will arise. Stay motivated. ARIES (March 21-April 19) -- Decisions may be clouded by emotional issues. To avoid a misunderstanding, be open about whatever is distracting you. Face difficulties methodically so they dont resurface later. TAURUS (April 20-May 20) -- A physical activity may lead to new friendships. Someone from your past may turn up unexpectedly. Be cautious in order to avoid this person taking advantage of you. GEMINI (May 21-June 20) -- Meeting up with chums will be inspiring. Travel will stimulate you, and you may make new friends. As long as you are conservative with your money, investments can be made. CANCER (June 21-July 22) -- Reading will lead to valuable information. Idleness is the enemy. Make adjustments to your home environment, but stick to a budget. Keeping busy will help your mood. LEO (July 23-Aug. 22) -- Your ego will be bruised if you have allowed someone to make a fool of you. Trying to feel better through extravagance will not help. Choose to be a passive observer today. VIRGO (Aug. 23-Sept. 22) -- A financial endeavor may leave you disillusioned. Dont allow loved ones to meddle in your finances -- their suggestions wont pay off. Offer advice, but dont lend money. LIBRA (Sept. 23-Oct. 23) -- Now is a great time to travel. You can learn, have fun and make new friends. Conversations with fascinating and unique individuals will inspire and energize you. SCORPIO (Oct. 24-Nov. 22) -Professional changes are necessary. Look into taking a new direction or starting your own business. Others are unlikely to be helpful, but you will find satisfaction in doing the work yourself. SAGITTARIUS (Nov. 23-Dec. 21) -- Today, you will need to say no. Avoid projects that make you uneasy. Employ tact when handling other peoples concerns. Try not to get wrapped up in someone elses drama. COPYRIGHT 2014 United Feature Syndicate, Inc.

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Passengers rescued off ship stuck in Antarctic ice


CANBERRA, Australia (AP) All 52 passengers trapped for more than a week on an icebound Russian research ship in the Antarctic were rescued Thursday when a Chinese helicopter swooped in and plucked them from the ice a dozen at a time. The dramatic international rescue operation became possible once the weather finally cleared. Blinding snow, strong winds, fog and thick sea ice forced rescuers to turn back time and again. The twin-rotor helicopter its red and yellow colors contrasting starkly against the ice and snow carried the scientists and tourists from the Russian ship MV Akademik Shokalskiy to an Australian icebreaker, according to the Australian Maritime Safety Authoritys Rescue Coordination Centre, which oversaw the rescue. At one point, the passengers linked arms and stomped out a landing site in the snow next to the Russian ship for the helicopter, which is based on a Chinese icebreaker. The eagerly anticipated rescue came after days of failed attempts to reach the vessel, which was trapped since Christmas Eve. The icebreaker Aurora Australis will take the passengers to the Australian island state of Tasmania, a journey expected to last two weeks. I think everyone is relieved and excited to be going on to the Australian icebreaker and then home, expedition leader Chris Turney told The Associated Press by satellite phone from the Antarctic. Sydney resident Joanne Sim, a paying passenger, wept as she boarded the Australian icebreakers. She said the passengers had spent their time watching movies and playing games. It really has been an emotional rollercoaster, she told a The Sydney Morning Herald newspaper reporter aboard the ship. ASMA said the Aurora today was cracking through heavy ice at 460 meters (1,500 feet) an hours and was expected to reach open sea late today. The 22 crew members of the Akademik Shokalskiy stayed with the icebound vessel, which is not in danger of sinking and has enough supplies on board to last for weeks. They will wait until the ice that surrounds the ship breaks up.

Confusion, relief mark start of new health reforms


SACRAMENTO, Calif. (AP) The new year brought relief for Americans who previously had no health insurance or were stuck in poor plans, but it also led to confusion after the troubled rollout of the federal health care reforms sent a crush of late applications to overloaded government agencies. That created stacks of yet-to-be-processed paperwork and thousands if not millions of people unsure about whether they have insurance. Mike Estes of Beaverton, Ore., finally received his insurance card on Dec. 27 after applying in early November. Still, the family was thrilled to have insurance through the Oregon Health Plan, Oregons version of Medicaid, because their previous $380-a-month premium literally crushed our familys finances, Estes said. Obama administration officials estimate that 2.1 million consumers have enrolled so far through the federal and state-run health insurance exchanges that are a central feature of the federal law. But even before coverage began, health insurance companies complained they were receiving thousands of faulty applications from the government, and some people who thought they had enrolled for coverage have not received confirmation. Tens of thousands of potential Medicaid recipients in the 36 states relying on the federal exchange also are in limbo after the federal website that was supposed to send their applications to the states failed to do so. Reports of complications were scattered around the country. In Burlington, Vt., the states largest hospital had almost two dozen patients seek treatment with new health insurance policies, but more than half of those did not have insurance cards. Minnesotas health care exchange said 53,000 people had enrolled for coverage through its marketplace, but it was unable to confirm the insurance status of an additional 19,000 people who created accounts but did not appear to have purchased the plans. In Connecticut, officials were pleading for patience as call centers fielded calls from people who are concerned because they had yet to receive a bill for premiums or an insurance identification card. This is an unprecedented time, because there are a record number of people who have applied for coverage with an effective date of Jan. 1, said Donna Tommelleo, a spokeswoman for the Connecticut Department of Insurance. The major pieces of the Affordable Care Act that took effect with the new year mean people with pre-existing medical conditions cannot be denied coverage, yearly out-ofpocket medical expenses will be capped new insurance policies must offer a minimum level of essential benefits, ranging from emergency room treatment to maternity care. Some parts of the law took effect previously, such as the ability of young people to remain on their parents insurance policies until age 26. Minnesota and Rhode Island were among the states that extended their sign-up period to the final day of 2013, leading to a crush of new paperwork that government agencies and insurance companies were still scrambling to process. Many consumers have yet to receive bills or insurance cards.

Study finds Medicaid expansion drove up ER visits


SALEM, Ore. (AP) A new study has found that people enrolled recently in Medicaid went to the emergency room 40 percent more frequently than others, often seeking help for conditions that could be treated less expensively in a doctors office or an urgent care clinic. The research, published Thursday by the journal Science, comes as millions of Americans gain health insurance this week under the federal health care law, many of them through Medicaid. The findings help inform a long-running debate about the effect of expanding Medicaid and suggest that hospitals and health officials around the nation should be prepared for an increase in emergency room trips in the coming months. The study is the third to arise from a limited expansion of Medicaid in Oregon five years ago. Demand exceeded the available funding, so the state used a lottery to randomly choose people for coverage from a waiting list. The lottery created two groups of similar people, one consisting of new Medicaid patients, the other a comparison group of people who werent selected. It gave scientists a rare chance to evaluate the program in a randomized, controlled study the goldstandard for scientific research. Taken together with the earlier findings, the latest research indicates that expanding Medicaid improves mental health and leaves patients more financially stable in the first two years. But it increases spending for hospitals, primary care and prescriptions and doesnt produce significant improvements in measures of physical health like blood pressure or cholesterol. Weve been able to eliminate some extreme views about the program, said Sarah Taubman of the National Bureau of Economic Research, the studys lead author. In the absence of that evidence, there were some unduly pessimistic views and some unduly optimistic views about the effects of Medicaid. Researchers used hospital records to look at ER use over 18 months for 25,000 people in the Portland area who entered the Medicaid lottery, some who were chosen for coverage and some who were not. Patients with Medicaid made, on average, 1.43 ER visits, compared with 1.02 for those who lost the lottery, an increase of 40 percent. The study also found that 35 percent of people who werent selected for Medicaid made an ER visit during the research period. For those who gained coverage, however, the number was 7 points higher at 42 percent.

Factory, construction growth boost 2014 outlook


WASHINGTON (AP) Expectations are rising for a stronger U.S. economy in 2014 after reports Thursday showed solid growth in manufacturing and construction spending at the end of last year. Factory activity in December stayed near a 2 -year high. Americans are buying more cars and homes, increasing demand for steel, furniture and other manufactured goods. Manufacturers have boosted hiring to meet that demand and may add jobs at a healthier pace this year. And builders stepped up spending on home construction in November, despite recent increases in borrowing rates. That suggests many remain confident in the housing recovery. The economy has had bursts of healthy growth since the recession ended in June 2009, only to be followed by disappointing slowdowns. But many analysts think growth is now more sustainable. There was strength in some important sectors of the economy at the end of last year, Paul Dales, an economist at Capital Economics, said. 2014 could be the year where the recovery really starts to gain some ground.

Snapchat suffers security breach


NEW YORK (AP) Snapchat, the disappearingmessage service popular with young people, has been quiet following a security breach that allowed hackers to collect the usernames and phone numbers of some 4.6 million of its users. Company spokeswoman Mary Ritti said Thursday that the company is assessing the situation, but did not have further comment. The breach occurred after security experts warned the company at least twice about a vulnerability in its system. Snapchats seemingly detached response is causing some security specialists to wonder whether the young company can handle the spotlight that its been thrust into over the last year as its service has become enormously popular. In response to a warning by Gibson Security Dec. 25 which followed an earlier alert in August Snapchat said in a blog post last Friday that it had implemented various safeguards over the past year that would make it more difficult to steal large sets of phone numbers. Snapchat hasnt detailed the changes it made. Even so, regarding Snapchats response, Gartner security analyst Avivah Litan said it doesnt seem that responsible to be so nonchalant about it. As Americans rang in the New Year, hackers reportedly published 4.6 million Snapchat

Chill

usernames and phone numbers on a website called snapchatdb. info, which has since been suspended. The breach came less than a week after the most recent warning from security experts that an attack could take place. The incident bruises the companys image and may threaten its rapid growth. Los Angeles-based Snapchat has no source of revenue, but its rapid rise to an estimated 20 million U.S. adult users prompted Facebook to extend a reported $3 billion buyout last year. Snapchats 23-yearold CEO Evan Spiegel turned down the overture. The user number estimate is based on census data and data from the Pew Research Center.

(Continued from page 1)

Marines delay female fitness plan after half fail


WASHINGTON (AP) More than half of female Marines in boot camp cant do three pullups, the minimum standard that was supposed to take effect with the new year, prompting the Marine Corps to delay the requirement, part of the process of equalizing physical standards to integrate women into combat jobs. The delay rekindled sharp debate in the military on the question of whether women have the physical strength for some military jobs, as service branches move toward opening thousands of combat roles to them in 2016. Although no new timetable has been set on the delayed physical requirement, Marine Corps Commandant Gen. James Amos wants training officials to continue to gather data and ensure that female Marines are provided with the best opportunity to succeed, Capt. Maureen Krebs, a Marine spokeswoman, said Thursday. Starting with the new year, all female Marines were supposed to be able to do at least three pullups on their annual physical fitness test and eight for a perfect score. The requirement was tested in 2013 on female recruits at Marine Corps Recruit Depot, Parris Island, S.C., but only 45 percent of women met the minimum, Krebs said. The Marines had hoped to institute the pullups on the belief that pullups require the muscular strength necessary to perform common military tasks such as scaling a wall, climbing up a rope or lifting and carrying heavy munitions. Officials felt there wasnt a medical risk to putting the new standard into effect as planned across the service, but that the risk of losing recruits and hurting retention of women already in the service was unacceptably high, she said. Because the change is being put off, women will

Both schools are fortunate enough to have bus garages so their fleet is not exposed to the subzero temperatures. Mangas said his buses were all started today despite school being canceled. According to the NWS, with a wind chill temperature of -32, frostbite is a concern after just 10 minutes of exposure. Areas most commonly affected by frostbite are exposed areas and areas with less blood flow such as hands, feet, ears, nose and face. The elderly and children are particularly susceptible. In addition, persons with circulation problems (such as those with diabetes, peripheral neuropathy, peripheral vascular disease, and Raynauds syndrome/phenomenon); history of previous cold injuries; and those who ingest particular drugs (such as alcohol, tobacco, marijuana and beta-blockers) are at higher risk. Although there is no medical reason, it seems that persons from southern or tropical climates may also be more at risk. Preventing frostbite Proper clothing for winter weather insulates from the cold, lets perspiration evaporate and provides protection against wind, rain, and snow. Wear several layers of light, loose clothing that will trap air, yet provide adequate ventilation. This is better protection than one bulky or heavy covering. The best fabrics for the cold are wool, polyester or polypropylene and water-repellent materials (not waterproof, which holds in perspiration). Down coats and vests are warm; however, if down gets wet it loses its insulating properties. Coverings for the head and neck are

important. Hats, hoods, scarves, earmuffs and facemasks are good protection. Protect feet and toes. Wear two pairs of socks wool is best, or cotton socks with a pair of wool on top. Wear wellfitted boots that are high enough to cover the ankles. Hand coverings are vital. Mittens are warmer than gloves but may limit what the wearer can do with their fingers. Wear lightweight gloves under mittens so theres still protection if the mittens are taken off to use fingers. Be sure clothing and boots are not tight. A decrease in blood flow makes it harder to keep the body parts warm and increases the risk of frostbite. When in frostbite-causing conditions, dress appropriately, stay near adequate shelter, avoid alcohol and tobacco and avoid remaining in the same position for long periods. Signs and symptoms of frostbite Mild frostbite (frostnip) affects the outer skin layers and appears as a blanching or whitening of the skin. The first symptom is a pins and needles sensation. Other symptoms include swelling, itching, burning and deep pain as the area is warmed. Usually, these symptoms disappear as warming occurs but the skin may appear red for several hours. In more severe cases, the frostbitten skin will appear waxy-looking with a white, grayish-yellow or grayish-blue color. The affected part(s) will be numb. The tissue will feel frozen or wooden to touch. More severe frostbite will result in blisters filled with clear or milky fluid. This indicates a very serious condition. Very severe frostbite may cause gangrene (blackened, dead tissue) and dam-

age to deep structures such as tendons, muscles, nerves and bone, with resultant loss of tissue. In even mild cases of frostbite, it is strongly recommended to seek medical assistance. Do Have your injury re-warmed under medical supervision, if possible. Get to a warm place where you can stay warm after thawing. Rest the injured areas (avoid walking on frostbitten feet, etc.). Use water 100F (should be warm to the touch - not hot) for 30-45 minutes until a good color (flush) has returned to the entire area. This process may be painful, especially the final 10 minutes. Leave the blisters intact. Cover with a sterile or clean covering if protection is needed to prevent rupturing. Keep the affected part(s) as clean as possible to reduce the risk of infection. Elevate the area above the level of the heart. Make sure your tetanus booster is within 10 years. Do not Allow the injury to thaw then refreeze. This is very dangerous and can cause serious or permanent injury. It is better to delay warming. For example, keep walking to a permanent shelter rather than warm frozen toes at a temporary shelter and then expose them to more cold on the rest of the trip. Use dry heat (sunlamp, radiator, heating pad, etc.) to thaw the injured area. Thaw the injury in melted ice. Rub the area with snow. Use alcohol, nicotine, marijuana or other drugs that may affect blood flow.

Answers to Thursdays questions: The last U.S. president born in a log cabin was James Garfield, the 20th president. He was born in a log cabin in 1831 in the Ohio frontier town of Orange, which is now known as Moreland Hills. The only facial hair male boxers are permitted to have when they compete at the Olympics is a thin mustache that is limited to the length of the upper lip. Beards are banned. Todays questions: Why did Harry Potter author J.K. Rowling pick Londons Kings Cross railroad station as the board site for the Hogwarts Express? In the world of mythological creatures, what is a sea dog? Answers in Saturdays Herald. The Outstanding National Debt as of 6 p.m. Thursday was $17,233,975,120,863. The estimated population of the United States is 317,362,531, so each citizens share of this debt is $54,304. The National Debt has continued to increase an average of $2.54 billion per day since Sept. 30, 2012.

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be able to choose which test of upper-body strength they will be graded on in their annual physical fitness test. Their choices: Pullups, with three the minimum. Three is also the minimum for male Marines, but they need 20 for a perfect rating. A flexed-arm hang. The minimum is for 15 seconds; women get a perfect score if they last for 70 seconds. Men dont do the hang in their test. Officials said training for pullups can change a persons strength, while training for the flex-arm hang does little to adapt muscular strength needed for military tasks.

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