Documentos de Académico
Documentos de Profesional
Documentos de Cultura
DELPHOS HERALD
The
50 daily
Delphos, Ohio
Telling The Tri-Countys Story Since 1869
Scout leader ousted in Ohio, p3
Locals face losses on diamonds, p6
Upfront
Sports
Forecast
Obituaries 2
State/Local 3
Politics 4
Community 5
Sports 6-7
Church 8
Classifieds 9
TV 10
World News 11
Index
70 percent
chance of
rain Saturday.
High in
upper 30s.
See page 2.
MAGAZINE
A S u p p l e m e n t T o T h e D e l p h o s H e r a l d A p r i l 2 0 1 2
www.delphosherald.com
Dont miss The Heralds
Showcase of Homes in
Mondays newspaper.
Glenn to receive
Presidential
Medal of Freedom
WASHINGTON, D.C.
Former Ohio senator
John Glenn will receive
the Presidential Medal of
Freedom. The ceremony
will take place at a date to
be determined this spring.
In June 2011, U.S. Senator
Sherrod Brown spoke to
President Obama and person-
ally handed him a letter nom-
inating Glenn for the award.
Now 90 years oldand
having served as a Marine
aviator, an astronaut, a United
States Senator, and a noted
educatorJohn Glenn has
received quite a few recogni-
tions and awards. But wheth-
er he was flying a fighter jet
or floating in space, he has
always remained grounded
in his New Concord roots,
Brown said. Those of us
fortunate to know him well
know that there is so much to
his life: his devotion for his
wife Annie; his fierce advo-
cacy of science, technology,
and NASA; and finally, his
deep patriotism and love for
his country. He is a worthy
recipient for the Presidential
Medal of Freedom and it is a
privilege to congratulate him
on this tremendous honor.
Glenn became the first
American to orbit the Earth
on Feb. 20, 1962. Born in
Cambridge and raised in
New Concord, Glenn is
a veteran of World War
II and served as an Ohio
senator for 24 years.
Primary
won by big
spenders
BY MIKE FORD
mford@delphosherald.com
While a total of 12 Putnam
County candidates only spent
$4,438 between them in the
March primary, the Allen
County numbers reflect a
national trend: The winners
were the ones who spent the
most.
Many candidates spent
no money but the seven
Allen County candidates
who did spent $46,416.92.
Half of it was spent by Cory
Noonan alone, to the tune
of $23,654.41 filed in three
reports with the county elec-
tions board. Noonan will
face Connie Miller and Don
Kissick in one commission-
er race in November. The
other will see Jay Begg vie
for the other commissioner
seat up for grabs, having
spent $18,695.73 to defeat
Lynn Mohler in the primary.
Mohler spent just $724.89.
Neither Noonan or Begg had
big windfalls from a small
number of donors; the bulk
of their contributions were
moderate and from long lists
of supporters.
Door-to-door visits can
be effective in local cam-
paigns where fewer voters are
involved compared to nation-
al campaigns. Nonetheless,
the Allen County primary
reflected the role campaign
cash plays in national races.
University of Northwestern
Ohio political science profes-
sor Dr. Phil McMurry says
much of the spending is for
advertising, which is tied to
name-recognition and image-
creation. He also thinks many
American voters pay more
attention to image than to
substance.
Our politics is based
largely on image and less on
substance. So, we see money
going toward things that put
the candidates image out
there we see them more,
he said.
McMurry said the 1960
presidential race was the first
time debates were televised,
making that election a pivot
point.
This goes back to the
Kennedy/Nixon debates.
Before the first televised
By JOHN ROGERS
The Associated Press
LOS ANGELES An
ex-Marine filmmaker whose
unit carried pocket digital
cameras into some of the
worst fighting in Iraq is using
that footage, and post-war
interviews, to open viewers
eyes about combat and help
himself deal with the lasting
emotional impact.
The videos are stark. One
Marine is so badly hurt he
filmed himself giving himself
the Last Rites.
Some of the fighters seem
unaffected years later in civil-
ian life, while others have
gone through severe bouts
of post-traumatic stress and
one man, who in Iraq saved
fellow Marines lives, wound
up in prison back home.
Garrett Anderson hopes
to show this all up close
with And Then They Came
Home, a documentary he
is making from footage he
and his comrades gathered
on Nov. 22, 2004, one of
the bloodiest days of fighting
during Iraqs second battle of
Fallujah.
One of Andersons com-
rades died that day and six
others in his platoon were
wounded as they fought
building to building in the
city of Fallujah, searching
for snipers. One of those shot
was so badly wounded that
he pulled out his digital cam-
era and hit the record button
as he gave himself the Last
Rites so his family would
have a record of it. Anderson
plans to include that footage
in his film.
We were probably the
first group of people who
were allowed to go into com-
bat with a digital camera in
your pocket, Anderson said
recently from his home in
Portland, Ore.
The Marines carried their
own pocket cameras from
their private lives and never
saw a reason to leave them
behind. Anderson said their
commanders never said any-
thing about it or tried to stop
them.
And so the whole battle
was documented from the
perspective of the guys who
fought it, and were going to
be able to use some of that
footage, he said.
Anderson and his col-
leagues hope it will be a heal-
ing experience for them, as
well as an eye-opening one
for those who have never
seen war.
I hope that they see how
it really affects these young
men that come back, said
Nathan Douglass, who was
badly wounded on that day
and is one of the 12 Marines
who will recount their experi-
ences in interviews Anderson
plans to film this summer.
Its not just a video
game, Douglass added.
There are long-term effects,
whether you are physically
wounded or not. Sometimes
I think the mental effects can
be so much worse.
Several of those to be fea-
tured suffered severe bouts
of post-traumatic stress dis-
order, some even attempting
suicide. One of the worst
afflicted, a Marine who saved
the lives of several comrades
when he shot to death a
would-be suicide bomber, is
now in a Texas prison, serv-
ing a lengthy sentence for
sexual assault.
Others, like Lance Cpl.
Luis Munoz, who gave him-
self the Last Rites, seem large-
ly unaffected by what they
experienced. The naturalized
U.S. citizen has returned to
his native Mexico, where he
works now as a police officer
in the state of Coahuila, a
region plagued by drug cartel
violence.
To those who have known
Anderson for years, the
26-year-old filmmaker also
appears, at least on the sur-
face, to have been largely
unaffected.
Since returning to civilian
life in 2007, he has shed his
Marine buzz cut, grown a
beard and is engaged to be
married in the fall. He works
for a private company that
enforces parking regulations
in Portland, and he likes to
take in Trailblazers games
in his free time, although he
laments with good humor
that it will likely be years
before the team contends for
an NBA title.
Truth is, though, he was
one of the most seriously
affected.
He was never the same
boy afterward, says his
father, Dennis Anderson,
longtime editor of the
Antelope Valley Press in
the Los Angeles suburb of
Palmdale, where the younger
Anderson grew up.
Old friends say they did
notice upon his return that he
was drinking heavily. They
initially dismissed that as
just an ex-Marine blowing
off steam. That was until he
ended up in a hospital follow-
ing a mental breakdown after
a night of binge drinking.
To this day, he says, the
first thing he thinks of each
morning is the name of the
fellow Marine who was killed
on Nov. 22, 2004.
This documentary is
going to be a healing process
for me, he says.
Anderson and his col-
leagues have talked for years
Ex-Marine aims camera at self to heal
I hope that they
see how it really
affects these
young men that
come back. ... Its
not just a video
game. There
are long-term
effects, whether
you are physi-
cally wounded or
not. Sometimes I
think the mental
effects can be so
much worse.
Nathan Douglass,
who was badly
wounded on that day
See VIDEO, page 11
See PRIMARY, page 11
TODAY (5 p.m.)
BB: NB at St.
Johns (MAC); Kalida
at Ft. Jennings (PCL);
Spencerville at Ottoville;
O-G at Elida (WBL).
SB: Spencerville at ML;
Lincolnview at Kalida;
Elida at O-G (WBL).
T & F: Ottoville at
Edgerton, 4 p.m.; St.
Johns/Elida in AC Inv.
(Shawnee), 4:30 p.m.
SATURDAY (noon)
BB: Elida at Pding
(DH), 10 a.m.; Spencerville
at St. Johns (DH);
LTC at Ottoville.
SB: Spencerville at
MC (DH); Lincolnview
at Leipsic (DH).
T & F: Spencerville/
Lincolnview at NB
Inv., 9 a.m.
Coming home
Photos submitted
Optimists plant trees for those lost
In celebration of Arbor Day, a tree was planted at Stadium Park today in memory
of Delphos Optimist Club member Sue McMahon, who passed away in March. Her
son, Rob Czerwinski, right of tree, and granddaughter, Hailey Czerwinski, next to
him, assisted in planting the tree. Also assisting were Optimist Club members Lisa
Williams, left, Maggie Wannemacher and Optimist Club President Harry Flanagan,
along with Chad Luersman, right, from Elite Naturescapes, that donated supplies and
labor for the planting. Below: Another tree was planted in the park in memory of
Delphos Optimist Club member Doris Dickmans husband, Dale, who passed away in
2011. Assisting in planting were Doris Dickman, great-grandson Michael Friedrich,
Flanagan and Jimmy Mox from Mox Nursery Company, that donated supplies and
labor for the planting.
Nancy Spencer photo
City filling swimming pool
With repairs and maintenance completed at the
Delphos Municipal Swimming Pool, water is now being
added for the upcoming season. Parks Superintendent
Craig Mansfield said the pool will fill at 70,000 gallons
per day and should be full by Thursday.
2
T
H
U
R
S
D
A
Y
9
-
S
F
R
l
D
A
Y
9
-
8
S
A
T
U
R
D
A
Y
9
-
S
products.
**See dealer for details or visit Lennox.com. 2012 Lennox Industries Inc. See your participating
Lennox dealer for details. Lennox dealers include independently owned and operated businesses.
TRUSTED SERVICE TRUSTED SERVICE
TRUSTED PRODUCT TRUSTED PRODUCT
18 Months, No Interest,
Equal Monthly Payments**
through GE Capital
OR
Columbus;Reliable Plbg & Htg;A00238;3x6
205 West Second St.
Delphos, OH 45833
www.reliablePandH.com
Reliable Plumbing & Heating. Our name says it all.
Receive up to $1,375 in Rebates
*
on a qualifying Lennox
Thursdays Results
Toronto 98, New Jersey 67
Utah 96, Portland 94
Chicago 107, Cleveland 75
Houston 84, New Orleans 77
Denver 131, Minnesota 102
Memphis 88, Orlando 76
Atlanta 106, Dallas 89
Boston 87, Milwaukee 74
New York 104, Charlotte 84
Detroit 108, Philadelphia 86
Washington 104, Miami 70
San Antonio 107, Golden State 101
Sacramento 113, L.A. Lakers 96
End of regular season
NBA GLANCE
The Associated Press
National League
East Division
W L Pct GB
Washington 14 5 .737
Atlanta 12 7 .632 2
New York 11 8 .579 3
Philadelphia 9 10 .474 5
Miami 7 11 .389 6 1/2
Central Division
W L Pct GB
St. Louis 12 7 .632
Cincinnati 9 10 .474 3
Milwaukee 9 10 .474 3
Pittsburgh 8 10 .444 3 1/2
Houston 7 12 .368 5
Chicago 6 13 .316 6
West Division
W L Pct GB
Los Angeles 13 6 .684
San Francisco 10 9 .526 3
Colorado 9 9 .500 3 1/2
Arizona 9 10 .474 4
San Diego 6 14 .300 7 1/2
Thursdays Results
San Francisco 6, Cincinnati 5
N.Y. Mets 3, Miami 2
San Diego 2, Washington 1
Todays Games
Chicago Cubs (Maholm 1-2) at
Philadelphia (Halladay 3-1), 7:05 p.m.
Arizona (J.Saunders 1-1) at Miami
(Zambrano 0-1), 7:10 p.m.
Houston (W.Rodriguez 1-2) at Cincinnati
(Leake 0-2), 7:10 p.m.
Pittsburgh (A.J.Burnett 1-0) at Atlanta
(Hanson 2-2), 7:35 p.m.
Milwaukee (Gallardo 1-1) at St. Louis
(Westbrook 2-1), 8:15 p.m.
N.Y. Mets (Schwinden 0-0) at Colorado
(Pomeranz 0-1), 8:40 p.m.
Washington (Detwiler 2-0) at L.A.
Dodgers (Kershaw 1-0), 10:10 p.m.
San Diego (Luebke 2-1) at San
Francisco (Hacker 0-0), 10:15 p.m.
Saturdays Games
Milwaukee (Estrada 0-0) at St. Louis
(Lohse 3-0), 1:05 p.m.
Houston (Harrell 1-1) at Cincinnati
(Cueto 2-0), 4:10 p.m.
Chicago Cubs (R.Wells 0-0) at
Philadelphia (Blanton 1-3), 7:05 p.m.
Arizona (I.Kennedy 3-0) at Miami
(A.Sanchez 1-0), 7:10 p.m.
Pittsburgh (Bedard 0-4) at Atlanta
(Delgado 2-1), 7:10 p.m.
N.Y. Mets (Gee 1-2) at Colorado
(Guthrie 2-1), 8:10 p.m.
San Diego (Bass 1-2) at San Francisco
(Lincecum 1-2), 9:05 p.m.
Washington (Strasburg 2-0) at L.A.
Dodgers (Billingsley 2-1), 9:10 p.m.
----
American League
East Division
W L Pct GB
Baltimore 12 7 .632
Tampa Bay 12 7 .632
New York 10 8 .556 1 1/2
Toronto 10 9 .526 2
Boston 8 10 .444 3 1/2
Central Division
W L Pct GB
Cleveland 9 8 .529
Chicago 10 9 .526
Detroit 10 9 .526
Kansas City 5 14 .263 5
Minnesota 5 14 .263 5
West Division
W L Pct GB
Texas 15 4 .789
Oakland 10 10 .500 5 1/2
Seattle 10 10 .500 5 1/2
Los Angeles 6 13 .316 9
Thursdays Results
Kansas City 4, Cleveland 2
Seattle 5, Detroit 4
Tampa Bay 4, L.A. Angels 3
Baltimore 5, Toronto 2
Boston 10, Chicago White Sox 3
Todays Games
Detroit (Verlander 2-1) at N.Y. Yankees
(Nova 3-0), 7:05 p.m.
L.A. Angels (Weaver 3-0) at Cleveland
(Masterson 0-2), 7:05 p.m.
Oakland (McCarthy 0-3) at Baltimore
(Arrieta 1-1), 7:05 p.m.
Seattle (Beavan 1-2) at Toronto
(R.Romero 3-0), 7:07 p.m.
Tampa Bay (Shields 3-0) at Texas
(M.Harrison 3-0), 8:05 p.m.
Boston (Bard 1-2) at Chicago White Sox
(Danks 2-2), 8:10 p.m.
Kansas City (Teaford 0-1) at Minnesota
(Pavano 1-2), 8:10 p.m.
Saturdays Games
L.A. Angels (Haren 0-1) at Cleveland
(J.Gomez 1-0), 1:05 p.m.
Kansas City (B.Chen 0-2) at Minnesota
(Marquis 1-0), 1:10 p.m.
Detroit (Smyly 0-0) at N.Y. Yankees
(F.Garcia 0-1), 4:05 p.m.
Seattle (Millwood 0-1) at Toronto
(Morrow 1-1), 4:07 p.m.
Oakland (T.Ross 1-0) at Baltimore
(W.Chen 1-0), 7:05 p.m.
Boston (Lester 0-2) at Chicago White
Sox (Peavy 3-0), 7:10 p.m.
Tampa Bay (Niemann 1-2) at Texas
(Lewis 2-0), 8:05 p.m.
MLB GLANCE
By RICHARD ROSENBLATT
The Associated Press
NEW YORK Once
the NFL draft got past quar-
terbacks Andrew Luck and
Robert Griffin III, it was
like a day on Wall Street.
Everybody wanted to make
a trade.
The wheeling and
dealing started even
before the Colts
opened the proceed-
ings as expected
Thursday night by
taking Luck and the
Redskins followed by
selecting RG3.
Behind closed doors, gen-
eral managers around the
league were gabbing away,
jockeying to position their
teams to land the most cov-
eted player on their draft
board.
When it was over, there
were eight trades involving 12
of the leagues 32 teams and
draftniks breathlessly trying
to keep up with the organized
mayhem. It all started when
Minnesota swapped its No. 3
choice for Clevelands No. 4
pick. The Browns, who also
gave up a fourth, fifth and
seventh-rounder, desperately
wanted Alabama running
back Trent Richardson. The
Vikings still got the guy they
sought in Southern California
tackle Matt Kalil.
Unfortunately, we had to
make a little trade to secure
the pick, said Browns coach
Pat Shurmur, who later added
QB Brandon Weeden with
the No. 22 selection. We
knew as we went through
the process that he was our
guy and so we did what we
had to do to secure it. We
had pretty good knowledge
that there were teams behind
that wanted him as well, so
we gave up a couple of picks
to make sure we got him.
Were thrilled a bunch about
Trent.
The move allowed the
Vikings to deal for anoth-
er first-round pick, gaining
the No. 29 spot in a trade
with Baltimore and choosing
Notre Dame safety Harrison
Smith.
The Jaguars, Cowboys and
Eagles also traded up and the
Patriots did it twice to select
players they wanted.
Credit the rookie wage
scale for so much buying and
selling, with GMs making
last-minute moves knowing
that extravagant salaries for
top picks have been replaced
by a compensation plan.
There were no such con-
cerns for Indianapolis and
Washington.
Stanfords Luck heads for
Indianapolis and the burden
of replacing Peyton Manning,
who merely won four MVP
awards and a Super Bowl.
Baylors RGIII answers the
call in Washington, where he
will try to soothe a devout but
highly critical fan base.
You dont really replace
a guy like that, Luck said.
You cant. You just try to do
the best you can. Obviously,
he was my hero growing
up.
His selection as
the top pick was
hardly a stunner.
The Colts informed
Luck last week that
Commissioner Roger
Goodell would
announce his name
first. Right behind
him was Griffin; no suspense
attached to that pick, either.
After being loudly booed
at the start, Goodell told a
raucous crowd at Radio City
Music Hall that the season
begins tonight, so lets kick
itoff.
Luck left the stage,
slapped hands with some fans
in Colts shirts and headed to
the interview room.
To get Griffin, Washington
had dealt a second-round
pick this year and its first-
rounders in 2013 and 14 to
St. Louis to move up four
spots. They wound up with
the QB that beat out Luck for
the Heisman Trophy.
RG3 sang the teams fight
song during a conference
call: Hail to the Redskins!
Hail vic-tor-y! Thats how I
felt. It felt that good.
After Minnesota took
Kalil, Jacksonville jumped
up two spots to No. 5, trading
with Florida neighbor Tampa
Bay to get Oklahoma States
Justin Blackmon, the top
receiver in this crop.
St. Louis must have liked
dealing down because the
Rams did it again, trading
with Dallas, which was 14th
overall. The Cowboys select-
ed LSUs Morris Claiborne,
the top cornerback, adding
him to free-agent signee
Brandon Carr and shoring up
what was a Swiss cheese sec-
ondary.
St. Louis got a second-
rounder in the deal.
Tampa Bay finished off a
wild 30 minutes of bartering
by grabbing Alabama safety
Mark Barron seventh overall.
A third quarterback went
eighth where Miami stayed
put. The Dolphins took Texas
A&Ms Ryan Tannehill, who
played wide receiver for
most of his time in college.
His coach at A&M, Mike
Sherman, is the Dolphins
offensive coordinator.
Carolina selected Boston
College linebacker Luke
Kuechly, the nations leading
tackler. Buffalo chose cor-
nerback Stephon Gilmore of
South Carolina and Memphis
defensive tackle Dontari Poe
went to Kansas City before
the next trade occurred.
Philadelphia moved up
from 15 to 12, giving Seattle
two later picks, then took
Mississippi State defensive
tackle Fletcher Cox.
Notre Dame receiv-
er Michael Floyd went to
Arizona, then the Rams
got involved, taking LSU
defensive tackle Michael
Brockers.
New Englands first deal
was with Cincinnati to get
Syracuse DE Chandler Jones
at No. 21; the second was with
Denver to draft Crimson Tide
linebacker Donta Hightower
at No. 25.
Like Minnesota, Tampa
Bay also got back into the
first round, at No. 31 after
dealing with Denver. The
Bucs took Boise State run-
ning back Doug Martin.
The Super Bowl cham-
pion Giants concluded a swift
but hectic round by choosing
Virginia Tech running back
David Wilson.
Bengals coach Marvin
Lewis may have summed up
the first of three draft ses-
sions.
I guess maybe this one-
night format is a good thing,
he added. Everybody was
fired up to do something on
the night.
2012 NFL Draft First-Round
Selections
1. Indianapolis, Andrew Luck, qb,
Stanford.
2. Washington (from St. Louis),
Robert Griffin III, qb, Baylor.
3. Cleveland (from Minnesota), Trent
Richardson, rb, Alabama.
4. Minnesota (from Cleveland), Matt
Kalil, ot, Southern Cal.
5. Jacksonville (from Tampa Bay),
Justin Blackmon, wr, Oklahoma State.
6. Dallas (from Washington through
St. Louis), Morris Claiborne, db, LSU.
7. Tampa Bay (from Jacksonville),
Mark Barron, db, Alabama.
8. Miami, Ryan Tannehill, qb, Texas
A&M.
9. Carolina, Luke Kuechly, lb, Boston
College.
10. Buffalo, Stephon Gilmore, db,
South Carolina.
11. Kansas City, Dontari Poe, nt,
Memphis.
12. Philadelphia (from Seattle),
Fletcher Cox, dt, Mississippi State.
13. Arizona, Michael Floyd, wr,
Notre Dame.
14. St. Louis (from Dallas), Michael
Brockers, dt, LSU.
15. Seattle (from Philadelphia), Bruce
Irvin, de, West Virginia.
16. N.Y. Jets, Quinton Coples, de,
North Carolina.
17. Cincinnati (from Oakland), Dre
Kirkpatrick, db, Alabama.
18. San Diego, Melvin Ingram, lb,
South Carolina.
19. Chicago, Shea McClellin, de,
Boise State.
20. Tennessee, Kendall Wright, wr,
Baylor.
21. New England (from Cincinnati),
Chandler Jones, de, Syracuse.
22. Cleveland (from Atlanta), Brandon
Weeden, qb, Oklahoma State.
23. Detroit, Riley Reiff, ot, Iowa.
24. Pittsburgh, David DeCastro, g,
Stanford.
25. New England, (from Denver),
Donta Hightower, lb, Alabama.
26. Houston, Whitney Mercilus, lb,
Illinois.
27. Cincinnati (from New Orleans
through New England), Kevin Zeitler, g,
Wisconsin.
28. Green Bay, Nick Perry, lb,
Southern Cal.
29. Minnesota (from Baltimore),
Harrison Smith, db, Notre Dame.
30. San Francisco, A.J. Jenkins, wr,
Illinois.
31. Tampa Bay (from New England
through Denver), Doug Martin, rb, Boise
State.
32. N.Y. Giants, David Wilson, rb,
Virginia Tech.
Luck, RG3 go 1-2 as expected,
deal-a-thon follows
(Continued from Page 6)
baseman Gretchen Klinker
started things off with a
single and first baseman
Brittany Bigham followed
with a walk. Centerfielder
Maggie Allmandinger plated
Klinker with a single and
Bigham scored when pitch-
er Jessica Klausing hit into
a fielders choice. Catcher
Kelsey Saylor then brought
Allmandinger and Klausing
home with a 2-run double and
Saylor scored on an RBI sin-
gle by leftfielder Saige Royer
to give the Lady Cougars a
5-2 lead after one.
Van Wert went back to
work in the bottom of the
second: Klinker walked, stole
second, advanced to third on
an error and came in to score
when rightfielder Melissa
Roop hit into a fielders
choice as the Lady Cougar
led 6-2.
Ottoville finally answered
with a run in the top half of
the fourth. Pitcher Courtney
Von Sossan walked and
scored on an RBI single by
Landwehr.
The Lady Cougars coun-
tered with four in the bottom
of the frame. Roop picked
up a 1-out single before
three consecutive doubles by
Bigham, Allmandinger (scor-
ing Roop and Bigham) and
Klausing (Allmandinger).
Saylor brought Klausing
home with an RBI single to
make the score 10-3 after
four complete.
The Lady Green would
not go away quietly and put
up three runs in the top of the
fifth inning. Shortstop Megan
Risner opened with a single
and scored on an RBI triple
off the bat of centerfielder
Marissa Nienberg. First base-
man Krista Schimmoeller
then plated Neinberg with an
RBI single and Schimmoeller
came in to score on a single
by rightfielder Paige Lucas,
bringing Ottoville within
four, 10-6.
Van Wert picked up an
insurance run in the home
half of the fifth, when third
baseman Alyssa Bowen sin-
gled, stole second and scored
on a sac fly off the bat of
Bigham.
Klausing held the Lady
Green scoreless in the sixth
and seventh innings to seal
the Lady Cougar win.
McClure credited
Klausing with keeping nine
Lady Green base-runners
stranded on the night: She
threw the ball like she was
throwing at the beginning of
the season. If she throws the
ball like that, we can win ball
games.
Klausing picked up the
win. She went all seven
innings, allowing six earned
runs on 11 hits. She walked
four and struck out three.
Von Sossan took the loss
for Ottoville. She went six
innings, allowing 11 earned
runs on 14 hits. She walked
five and struck out one.
Saylor and Allmandinger
led the Lady Cougar charge
on offense, each with three
hits. Allmandinger added a
pair of RBIs and a pair of
runs scored.
Landwehr led the Lady
Green at the plate. She went
3-3 with a walk, a run scored
and an RBI.
With the win, the Lady
Cougars (who host Defiance
this evening) pull back to
.500 on the season (10-10).
Ottoville is 0-12 and visits
O-G 5 p.m. Monday.
Ottoville 200 103 0 - 6 11 1
Van Wert 510 401 x - 11 14 0
WP - Klausing; LP - Von Sossan.
2B - (VW) Bigham, Allmandinger,
Klausing, Saylor. 3B - (O) Nienberg.
Van Wert
PITSENBARGER
SUPPLY
234 N. Canal St.
Delphos, O.
Ph. 692-1010
Professional Parts People
RAABE FORD
LINCOLN
11260 Elida Road
DELPHOS, OH 45833
Ph. 692-0055
Toll Free 1-800-589-7876
HARTER
& SCHIER
FUNERAL
HOME
209 W. 3rd St.
Delphos, Ohio 45833
419-692-8055
130 N. MAIN ST.
DELPHOS
PHONE
419-692-0861
CARPET
FURNITURE
Daily 9-5:30
Sat. 9-4, Sun. 12-4
Vanamatic
Company
AUTOMATIC
AND HAND
SCREW MACHINE
PRODUCTS
701 Ambrose Drive
Delphos, O.
A.C.T.S.
NEW TESTAMENT FELLOWSHIP
Rev. Linda Wannemacher-Pastor
Jaye Wannemacher-Worship Leader
Contact: 419-695-3566
Sunday - 7:00 p.m. Bible Study with
worship @ ACTS Chapel-8277 German
Rd., Delphos
Thursday - 7:00 p.m. For Such A
Time As This All & Non Denominational
Tri-County Community Intercessory
Prayer Meeting @ Presbyterian Church
(Basement), 310 W. 2nd St. Delphos -
Everyone Welcome.
DELPHOS BAPTIST CHURCH
Pastor Terry McKissack
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
Saturday-8:00 a.m. Prayer Breakfast;
8:30 a.m. TDTR Retreat
Sunday-8:45 a.m. Sunday School;
10:00 a.m. Worship Service
Monday - 7:00 p.m. SW Conference
Delegate Meeting
Tuesday - 7:00 p.m. Altar Guild
Wednesday - 11:00 a.m. Good
Morning/Good Shepherd; 7:00 p.m.
InReach/OutReach Meeting
Thursday - 12:00 p.m. National Day
of Prayer at City Building
Friday - 1:30 p.m. Church Women
United
Saturday - 8:00 a.m. Prayer
Breakfast; 10:00 a.m. Worship Service;
11:00 a.m. Pot Luck Dinner
FIRST ASSEMBLY OF GOD
Where Jesus is Healing
Hurting Hearts!
808 Metbliss Ave., Delphos
One block south of Stadium Park.
419-692-6741
Lead Pastor - Dan Eaton
Sunday - 10:30 a.m. - Celebration of
Worship with Kids Church & Nursery
provided.; 6:00 p.m. Youth Ministry at
The ROC
Wednesday - 7:00 p.m. Discipleship
in The Upper Level
For more info see our website: www.
delphosfirstassemblyofgod.com.
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.
ST. PAULS UNITED METHODIST
335 S. Main St. Delphos
Pastor - Rev. David Howell
Sunday - 9:00 a.m. Worship Service
DELPHOS WESLEYAN CHURCH
11720 Delphos Southworth Rd.
Delphos - Phone 419-695-1723
Pastor Wayne Prater
Sunday - 10:30 a.m. Worship; 9:15
a.m. Sunday School for all ages.
Wednesday - 7 p.m. Service and
prayer meeting.
TRINITY UNITED
METHODIST CHURCH
211 E. Third St., Delphos
Rev. David Howell, Pastor
Sunday - 8:15 a.m. Worship
AGAPE FELLOWSHIP MINISTRIES
9250 Armstrong Road, Spencerville
Pastors Phil & Deb Lee
Sunday - 10:00 a.m. Worship ser-
vice.
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 ser-
vice.
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 Kimberly R. Pope-Seiberlin
Sunday - 8:30 a.m. traditional; 10:45
a.m. contemporary
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 ser-
vice.
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.
ZION UNITED METHODIST CHURCH
Corner of Zion Church & Conant Rd.,
Elida
Pastors: Mark and D.J. Fuerstenau
Sunday - Service - 9:00 a.m.
PIKE MENNONITE CHURCH
3995 McBride Rd., Elida
Phone 419-339-3961
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 avail-
able.
Wednesday 6:30 p.m. Youth
Prayer, Bible Study; 7:00 p.m. Adult
Prayer and Bible Study; 8:00 p.m. -
Choir.
GOMER UNITED CHURCH
OF CHRIST
7350 Gomer Road, Gomer, Ohio
419-642-2681
gomererucc@bright.net
Rev. Brian Knoderer
Sunday 10:30 a.m. Worship
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
Saturday - 8:45 a.m.-2:00 p.m.
Youth-Trash-A-Thon
Sunday- 8:45 a.m. Friends and
Family; 9:00 a.m. Sunday School
LIVE; 10:00 a.m. Worship LIVE No
Kidmo/Communion Service; 1:30
p.m. Jubilee Class Leading Worship
Service
Tuesday - 9:00 a.m. - MUMS
Wednesday - 6:45 p.m. Calvary
Youth, AWANA; 7:00 p.m. Mens Bible
Study
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)
Tommy Sandefer, lead pastor
Ron Prewitt, sr. adult pastor
Sunday worship & childrens minis-
try - 10:00 a.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 wor-
ship with Pulpit Supply.
KINGSLEY UNITED METHODIST
15482 Mendon Rd., Van Wert
Phone: 419-965-2771
Pastor Chuck Glover
Sunday School - 9:30 a.m.; 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 - 8:15 a.m. - Prayer time;
9:00 a.m. Worship, Sunday School,
SWAT, Nursery; Single; 10:30 a.m.
Worship, Nursery, Childrens Church,
Discipleship class; Noon - Lunch
Break; 2:00 p.m. Service for men
at Van Wert Correctional Fac.; 3:00
p.m. Service for women at Van Wert
Correctional Fac., Service at Paulding
jail
Tuesday - 1:00 p.m. - Share, Care,
Prayer Group in Fireside Room;
10-noon - Banquet Table Food
Pantry; 6:30 p.m. Quilting Friends
in Fellowship Hall; 7 p.m. B.R.E.A.L.
Womens group in Room 108.
Wednesday - 6:30 p.m. Small
groups, Discipleship Series in sanc-
tuary, Christian Life Club, Nursery,
Preschool; 7 p.m. R.O.C.K. Youth; 8
p.m. Worship Team rehearsal.
Thursday - 4-5:30 p.m. Banquet
Table Food Pantry.
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. Don Rogers, 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 meet-
ing.
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
FAITH MISSIONARY
BAPTIST CHURCH
Road U, Rushmore
Pastor Robert Morrison
Sunday 10 am Church School;
11:00 Church Service; 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.
CHURCH OF GOD
18906 Rd. 18R, Rimer
419-642-5264 Fax: 419-642-3061
Rev. Mark Walls
Sunday - 9:30 a.m. Sunday
School; 10:30 a.m. Worship Service.
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. John Stites
Mass schedule: Saturday - 4 p.m.;
Sunday - 10:30 a.m.
ST. BARBARA CHURCH
160 Main St., Cloverdale 45827
419-488-2391
Fr. John Stites
Mass schedule: Saturday 5:30 p.m.,
Sunday 8:00 a.m.
ST. JOSEPH CATHOLIC CHURCH
135 N. Water St., Ft. Jennings
Rev. Joe Przybysz
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.
Service/Vorst Baptism; 9:30 a.m. Church
School for all ages; 10:30 a.m. Worship
Service; 11:30 a.m. Radio Worship on
WDOH: 4:00 Confirmation Class
Monday - 7:00 p.m. Trustees Meeting;
7:30 p.m. Administrative Council
Tuesday - 7:00 p.m. Outreach
Committee
Wednesday - 7:00 p.m. Chancel Choir
Thursday - 7:30 a.m. Students meet
around the flag pole for prayer; 12:00
Noon National Day of Prayer @ City
Building; 4:30 p.m.-6:30 p.m. Suppers
On Us
Friday - 1:30 p.m. Church Women
United May Fellowship Tea @ St. Peter
Lutheran Church; 3:00 p.m. Last Mustard
Seeds of this school year
MARION BAPTIST CHURCH
2998 Defiance Trail, Delphos
Pastor Jay Lobach 419-339-6319
Services: Sunday - 11:00 a.m. and
6:00 p.m.; Wednesday - 7:00 p.m.
ST. JOHNS CATHOLIC CHURCH
331 E. Second St., Delphos
419-695-4050
Rev. Mel Verhoff, Pastor
Rev. Jacob Gordon, Asst. Pastor
Fred Lisk and Dave Ricker, Deacons
Mary Beth Will, Liturgical
Coordinator; Mrs. Trina Shultz, Pastoral
Associate. Mel Rode, Parish Council
President
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 1:30 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.
ST. JOHN THE BAPTIST CHURCH
Landeck - Phone: 419-692-0636
Rev. Mel Verhoff, 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. 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 - 10:00
a.m. Evening Services - 7:00 p.m.
Wednesday: 7:00 p.m. Worship ser-
vice.
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 Fourth & Main, Spencerville
Phone 419-647-5321
Rev. Jan Johnson, Pastor
Sunday - 9:30 a.m. Sunday School;
10:30 a.m. Worship service.
UNITED CHURCH OF CHRIST
Spencerville
Rev. Ron Shifley, Pastor
Sunday 9:30 a.m. Church School;
10:30 a.m. Worship Service.
ELIDA/LIMA/GOMER
VAN WERT COUNTY
PUTNAM COUNTY
LANDECK
DELPHOS
SPENCERVILLE
Our local churches invite you to join them for their activities and services.
L
e
h
m
a
n
n
s
We thank the sponsors of this page and ask you to please support them.
8 The Herald
www.delphosherald.com Friday, April 27, 2012
Religion news deja vu
The late, great Associated Press religion reporter George
Cornell noticed a striking pattern as he dug into a 1981 sur-
vey of journalists in elite newsrooms such as The New York
Times, Washington Post, Wall Street Journal, Time, News-
week, ABC, CBS and NBC.
In the space marked religion, 50 percent of these elite
journalists wrote one word -- none.
They wrote none and many even underlined that word,
said Cornell, in an interview conducted for my graduate
project at the University of Illinois in Urbana-Champaign.
Parts of the interview were included in my 1983 cover story
on religion-news coverage for The Quill, the journal of the
Society of Professional Journalists.
In the religion slot, he noted, they didnt just say none.
They said NONE.
Other numbers jumped out of that controversial report by
researchers S. Robert Lichter and Stanley Rothman, such as
the fact that 8 percent of the journalists said they attended
worship services weekly, while 86 percent said they seldom
or never did so. In contrast, the Gallup Organization has
consistently reported that about 40 percent of Americans
claim to attend services each week.
Ever since then, I have heard clergy quote those numbers
as evidence of a deep chasm of hostility between journalists
and religious believers, especially religious traditionalists. I
have returned to this topic many times during the 24 years
-- the anniversary was this past week -- that I have written
this column for the Scripps Howard News Service.
In response, I keep quoting commentator Bill Moy-
ers, who once said many journalists are tone deaf when
it comes to hearing the music of faith. Im also convinced
were dealing with a blind spot that has two sides, be-
cause leaders on both sides of the First Amendment simply
do not respect each other and the roles their institutions play
in public life.
Readers of this column, and of the GetReligion.org blog,
constantly ask me if I have seen signs of progress through
the years. Yes, there were some ickers of hope in the late
1990s and early in the following decade, as a few more
news organizations hired journalists with the experience
and training to improve religion-news coverage.
You see, almost everyone agrees coverage improves
when editors hire trained religion specialists and then give
them the time and space they need to do their jobs -- just
like journalists on other complicated beats. Also, religious
believers can do ne work on this beat and so can skeptics.
The key is that they need to know what theyre doing and be
committed to accuracy and fairness.
The question people like me keep asking is this one: Why
dont more editors hire pros to cover such a pivotal beat in
national and international news?
Alas, this is where recent polls have, for me, caused some
nasty ashbacks.
Consider, for example, that recent survey by the Pew
Forum on Religion and Public Life indicating that a mere
19 percent of Americans feel that journalists are friendly
toward religion in this culture. Only 11 percent of Repub-
licans see the press as faith-friendly, while 24 percent of
Democrats hold that view.
Meanwhile, researchers with the University of Southern
Californias Knight Program in Media and Religion and the
University of Akrons Ray C. Bliss Institute of Applied Poli-
tics have released a new survey indicating that two-thirds of
the American public says that mainstream religion coverage
is too sensationalized and focuses too much on scandals
and politics. Just under 30 percent of the journalists agreed.
In this survey, nearly 60 percent of the journalists said
they think religious people are far too sensitive about reli-
gion stories. At the same time, a sizable minority of news
consumers -- 37 percent -- remain convinced that journalists
are hostile to religion and religious people.
Wait a minute. That 37 percent gure is uncomfortably
similar to the consistent Gallup nding (the previously men-
tioned 40 percent) on the number of Americans who claim
to attend weekly worship services. Is there a connection?
This correlation is relevant, but these groups do not
overlap completely, said veteran religion-news researcher
John C. Green of Akron.
Nevertheless, he said, there is a connection between
regular worship attendance and the perception that the news
media are hostile to religious people. At the same time,
less religious journalists are more likely to agree that reli-
gious people are too sensitive.
The standoff continues. Its kind of like deja vu all over
again.
(Terry Mattingly is the director of the Washington Journalism Center at
the Council for Christian Colleges and Universities and leads the GetReli-
gion.org project to study religion and the news.)
** ** **
(EDITORS: For editorial questions, please contact Kendra Phipps
at kphipps@amuniversal.com.)
COPYRIGHT 2012 United Feature Syndicate
DISTRIBUTED BY UNIVERSAL UCLICK FOR UFS
PITSENBARGER
SUPPLY
234 N. Canal St.
Delphos, O.
Ph. 692-1010
Professional Parts People
RAABE FORD
LINCOLN
11260 Elida Road
DELPHOS, OH 45833
Ph. 692-0055
Toll Free 1-800-589-7876
HARTER
& SCHIER
FUNERAL
HOME
209 W. 3rd St.
Delphos, Ohio 45833
419-692-8055
130 N. MAIN ST.
DELPHOS
PHONE
419-692-0861
CARPET
FURNITURE
Daily 9-5:30
Sat. 9-4, Sun. 12-4
Vanamatic
Company
AUTOMATIC
AND HAND
SCREW MACHINE
PRODUCTS
701 Ambrose Drive
Delphos, O.
A.C.T.S.
NEW TESTAMENT FELLOWSHIP
Rev. Linda Wannemacher-Pastor
Jaye Wannemacher-Worship Leader
Contact: 419-695-3566
Sunday - 7:00 p.m. Bible Study with
worship @ ACTS Chapel-8277 German
Rd., Delphos
Thursday - 7:00 p.m. For Such A
Time As This All & Non Denominational
Tri-County Community Intercessory
Prayer Meeting @ Presbyterian Church
(Basement), 310 W. 2nd St. Delphos -
Everyone Welcome.
DELPHOS BAPTIST CHURCH
Pastor Terry McKissack
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
Saturday-8:00 a.m. Prayer Breakfast;
8:30 a.m. TDTR Retreat
Sunday-8:45 a.m. Sunday School;
10:00 a.m. Worship Service
Monday - 7:00 p.m. SW Conference
Delegate Meeting
Tuesday - 7:00 p.m. Altar Guild
Wednesday - 11:00 a.m. Good
Morning/Good Shepherd; 7:00 p.m.
InReach/OutReach Meeting
Thursday - 12:00 p.m. National Day
of Prayer at City Building
Friday - 1:30 p.m. Church Women
United
Saturday - 8:00 a.m. Prayer
Breakfast; 10:00 a.m. Worship Service;
11:00 a.m. Pot Luck Dinner
FIRST ASSEMBLY OF GOD
Where Jesus is Healing
Hurting Hearts!
808 Metbliss Ave., Delphos
One block south of Stadium Park.
419-692-6741
Lead Pastor - Dan Eaton
Sunday - 10:30 a.m. - Celebration of
Worship with Kids Church & Nursery
provided.; 6:00 p.m. Youth Ministry at
The ROC
Wednesday - 7:00 p.m. Discipleship
in The Upper Level
For more info see our website: www.
delphosfirstassemblyofgod.com.
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.
ST. PAULS UNITED METHODIST
335 S. Main St. Delphos
Pastor - Rev. David Howell
Sunday - 9:00 a.m. Worship Service
DELPHOS WESLEYAN CHURCH
11720 Delphos Southworth Rd.
Delphos - Phone 419-695-1723
Pastor Wayne Prater
Sunday - 10:30 a.m. Worship; 9:15
a.m. Sunday School for all ages.
Wednesday - 7 p.m. Service and
prayer meeting.
TRINITY UNITED
METHODIST CHURCH
211 E. Third St., Delphos
Rev. David Howell, Pastor
Sunday - 8:15 a.m. Worship
AGAPE FELLOWSHIP MINISTRIES
9250 Armstrong Road, Spencerville
Pastors Phil & Deb Lee
Sunday - 10:00 a.m. Worship ser-
vice.
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 ser-
vice.
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 Kimberly R. Pope-Seiberlin
Sunday - 8:30 a.m. traditional; 10:45
a.m. contemporary
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 ser-
vice.
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.
ZION UNITED METHODIST CHURCH
Corner of Zion Church & Conant Rd.,
Elida
Pastors: Mark and D.J. Fuerstenau
Sunday - Service - 9:00 a.m.
PIKE MENNONITE CHURCH
3995 McBride Rd., Elida
Phone 419-339-3961
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 avail-
able.
Wednesday 6:30 p.m. Youth
Prayer, Bible Study; 7:00 p.m. Adult
Prayer and Bible Study; 8:00 p.m. -
Choir.
GOMER UNITED CHURCH
OF CHRIST
7350 Gomer Road, Gomer, Ohio
419-642-2681
gomererucc@bright.net
Rev. Brian Knoderer
Sunday 10:30 a.m. Worship
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
Saturday - 8:45 a.m.-2:00 p.m.
Youth-Trash-A-Thon
Sunday- 8:45 a.m. Friends and
Family; 9:00 a.m. Sunday School
LIVE; 10:00 a.m. Worship LIVE No
Kidmo/Communion Service; 1:30
p.m. Jubilee Class Leading Worship
Service
Tuesday - 9:00 a.m. - MUMS
Wednesday - 6:45 p.m. Calvary
Youth, AWANA; 7:00 p.m. Mens Bible
Study
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)
Tommy Sandefer, lead pastor
Ron Prewitt, sr. adult pastor
Sunday worship & childrens minis-
try - 10:00 a.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 wor-
ship with Pulpit Supply.
KINGSLEY UNITED METHODIST
15482 Mendon Rd., Van Wert
Phone: 419-965-2771
Pastor Chuck Glover
Sunday School - 9:30 a.m.; 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 - 8:15 a.m. - Prayer time;
9:00 a.m. Worship, Sunday School,
SWAT, Nursery; Single; 10:30 a.m.
Worship, Nursery, Childrens Church,
Discipleship class; Noon - Lunch
Break; 2:00 p.m. Service for men
at Van Wert Correctional Fac.; 3:00
p.m. Service for women at Van Wert
Correctional Fac., Service at Paulding
jail
Tuesday - 1:00 p.m. - Share, Care,
Prayer Group in Fireside Room;
10-noon - Banquet Table Food
Pantry; 6:30 p.m. Quilting Friends
in Fellowship Hall; 7 p.m. B.R.E.A.L.
Womens group in Room 108.
Wednesday - 6:30 p.m. Small
groups, Discipleship Series in sanc-
tuary, Christian Life Club, Nursery,
Preschool; 7 p.m. R.O.C.K. Youth; 8
p.m. Worship Team rehearsal.
Thursday - 4-5:30 p.m. Banquet
Table Food Pantry.
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. Don Rogers, 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 meet-
ing.
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
FAITH MISSIONARY
BAPTIST CHURCH
Road U, Rushmore
Pastor Robert Morrison
Sunday 10 am Church School;
11:00 Church Service; 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.
CHURCH OF GOD
18906 Rd. 18R, Rimer
419-642-5264 Fax: 419-642-3061
Rev. Mark Walls
Sunday - 9:30 a.m. Sunday
School; 10:30 a.m. Worship Service.
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. John Stites
Mass schedule: Saturday - 4 p.m.;
Sunday - 10:30 a.m.
ST. BARBARA CHURCH
160 Main St., Cloverdale 45827
419-488-2391
Fr. John Stites
Mass schedule: Saturday 5:30 p.m.,
Sunday 8:00 a.m.
ST. JOSEPH CATHOLIC CHURCH
135 N. Water St., Ft. Jennings
Rev. Joe Przybysz
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.
Service/Vorst Baptism; 9:30 a.m. Church
School for all ages; 10:30 a.m. Worship
Service; 11:30 a.m. Radio Worship on
WDOH: 4:00 Confirmation Class
Monday - 7:00 p.m. Trustees Meeting;
7:30 p.m. Administrative Council
Tuesday - 7:00 p.m. Outreach
Committee
Wednesday - 7:00 p.m. Chancel Choir
Thursday - 7:30 a.m. Students meet
around the flag pole for prayer; 12:00
Noon National Day of Prayer @ City
Building; 4:30 p.m.-6:30 p.m. Suppers
On Us
Friday - 1:30 p.m. Church Women
United May Fellowship Tea @ St. Peter
Lutheran Church; 3:00 p.m. Last Mustard
Seeds of this school year
MARION BAPTIST CHURCH
2998 Defiance Trail, Delphos
Pastor Jay Lobach 419-339-6319
Services: Sunday - 11:00 a.m. and
6:00 p.m.; Wednesday - 7:00 p.m.
ST. JOHNS CATHOLIC CHURCH
331 E. Second St., Delphos
419-695-4050
Rev. Mel Verhoff, Pastor
Rev. Jacob Gordon, Asst. Pastor
Fred Lisk and Dave Ricker, Deacons
Mary Beth Will, Liturgical
Coordinator; Mrs. Trina Shultz, Pastoral
Associate. Mel Rode, Parish Council
President
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 1:30 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.
ST. JOHN THE BAPTIST CHURCH
Landeck - Phone: 419-692-0636
Rev. Mel Verhoff, 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. 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 - 10:00
a.m. Evening Services - 7:00 p.m.
Wednesday: 7:00 p.m. Worship ser-
vice.
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 Fourth & Main, Spencerville
Phone 419-647-5321
Rev. Jan Johnson, Pastor
Sunday - 9:30 a.m. Sunday School;
10:30 a.m. Worship service.
UNITED CHURCH OF CHRIST
Spencerville
Rev. Ron Shifley, Pastor
Sunday 9:30 a.m. Church School;
10:30 a.m. Worship Service.
ELIDA/LIMA/GOMER
VAN WERT COUNTY
PUTNAM COUNTY
LANDECK
DELPHOS
SPENCERVILLE
Our local churches invite you to join them for their activities and services.
L
e
h
m
a
n
n
s
We thank the sponsors of this page and ask you to please support them.
8 The Herald
www.delphosherald.com Friday, April 27, 2012
Religion news deja vu
The late, great Associated Press religion reporter George
Cornell noticed a striking pattern as he dug into a 1981 sur-
vey of journalists in elite newsrooms such as The New York
Times, Washington Post, Wall Street Journal, Time, News-
week, ABC, CBS and NBC.
In the space marked religion, 50 percent of these elite
journalists wrote one word -- none.
They wrote none and many even underlined that word,
said Cornell, in an interview conducted for my graduate
project at the University of Illinois in Urbana-Champaign.
Parts of the interview were included in my 1983 cover story
on religion-news coverage for The Quill, the journal of the
Society of Professional Journalists.
In the religion slot, he noted, they didnt just say none.
They said NONE.
Other numbers jumped out of that controversial report by
researchers S. Robert Lichter and Stanley Rothman, such as
the fact that 8 percent of the journalists said they attended
worship services weekly, while 86 percent said they seldom
or never did so. In contrast, the Gallup Organization has
consistently reported that about 40 percent of Americans
claim to attend services each week.
Ever since then, I have heard clergy quote those numbers
as evidence of a deep chasm of hostility between journalists
and religious believers, especially religious traditionalists. I
have returned to this topic many times during the 24 years
-- the anniversary was this past week -- that I have written
this column for the Scripps Howard News Service.
In response, I keep quoting commentator Bill Moy-
ers, who once said many journalists are tone deaf when
it comes to hearing the music of faith. Im also convinced
were dealing with a blind spot that has two sides, be-
cause leaders on both sides of the First Amendment simply
do not respect each other and the roles their institutions play
in public life.
Readers of this column, and of the GetReligion.org blog,
constantly ask me if I have seen signs of progress through
the years. Yes, there were some ickers of hope in the late
1990s and early in the following decade, as a few more
news organizations hired journalists with the experience
and training to improve religion-news coverage.
You see, almost everyone agrees coverage improves
when editors hire trained religion specialists and then give
them the time and space they need to do their jobs -- just
like journalists on other complicated beats. Also, religious
believers can do ne work on this beat and so can skeptics.
The key is that they need to know what theyre doing and be
committed to accuracy and fairness.
The question people like me keep asking is this one: Why
dont more editors hire pros to cover such a pivotal beat in
national and international news?
Alas, this is where recent polls have, for me, caused some
nasty ashbacks.
Consider, for example, that recent survey by the Pew
Forum on Religion and Public Life indicating that a mere
19 percent of Americans feel that journalists are friendly
toward religion in this culture. Only 11 percent of Repub-
licans see the press as faith-friendly, while 24 percent of
Democrats hold that view.
Meanwhile, researchers with the University of Southern
Californias Knight Program in Media and Religion and the
University of Akrons Ray C. Bliss Institute of Applied Poli-
tics have released a new survey indicating that two-thirds of
the American public says that mainstream religion coverage
is too sensationalized and focuses too much on scandals
and politics. Just under 30 percent of the journalists agreed.
In this survey, nearly 60 percent of the journalists said
they think religious people are far too sensitive about reli-
gion stories. At the same time, a sizable minority of news
consumers -- 37 percent -- remain convinced that journalists
are hostile to religion and religious people.
Wait a minute. That 37 percent gure is uncomfortably
similar to the consistent Gallup nding (the previously men-
tioned 40 percent) on the number of Americans who claim
to attend weekly worship services. Is there a connection?
This correlation is relevant, but these groups do not
overlap completely, said veteran religion-news researcher
John C. Green of Akron.
Nevertheless, he said, there is a connection between
regular worship attendance and the perception that the news
media are hostile to religious people. At the same time,
less religious journalists are more likely to agree that reli-
gious people are too sensitive.
The standoff continues. Its kind of like deja vu all over
again.
(Terry Mattingly is the director of the Washington Journalism Center at
the Council for Christian Colleges and Universities and leads the GetReli-
gion.org project to study religion and the news.)
** ** **
(EDITORS: For editorial questions, please contact Kendra Phipps
at kphipps@amuniversal.com.)
COPYRIGHT 2012 United Feature Syndicate
DISTRIBUTED BY UNIVERSAL UCLICK FOR UFS
Friday, April 27, 2012 The Herald - 9 www.delphosherald.com
HERALD DELPHOS
THE
Telling The Tri-Countys Story Since 1869
Classifieds
Deadlines:
11:30 a.m. for the next days issue.
Saturdays paper is 11:00 a.m. Friday
Mondays paper is 1:00 p.m. Friday
Herald Extra is 11 a.m. Thursday
Minimum Charge: 15 words,
2 times - $9.00
Each word is $.30 2-5 days
$.25 6-9 days
$.20 10+ days
Each word is $.10 for 3 months
or more prepaid
THANKS TO ST. JUDE: Runs 1 day at the
price of $3.00.
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. Regu-
lar rates apply
FREE ADS: 5 days free if item is free
or less than $50. Only 1 item per ad, 1
ad per month.
BOX REPLIES: $8.00 if you come
and pick them up. $14.00 if we have to
send them to you.
CARD OF THANKS: $2.00 base
charge + $.10 for each word.
To place an ad phone 419-695-0015 ext. 122
We accept
www.delphosherald.com
950 Miscellaneous
Forresters
Hall
LANDECK
is available
to rent
for all occasions
Accommodates up
to 80
Full kitchen,
bathrooms,
heating & air.
BIG BACK YARD
Rent $90/day
Contact
Jim Miller
419-692-9867
COMMUNITY
SELF-STORAGE
GREAT RATES
NEWER FACILITY
419-692-0032
Across from Arbys
950 Pets
BRENDAS
CUDDLES & CUTS
1333 N. Main, Delphos
419-692-1075
419-695-9735
KENNELS
GroomingBoarding
Day Care
950 Tree Service
TEMANS
OUR TREE
SERVICE
Bill Teman 419-302-2981
Ernie Teman 419-230-4890
Since 1973
419-692-7261
Trimming Topping Thinning
Deadwooding
Stump, Shrub & Tree Removal
L.L.C.
Trimming & Removal
Stump Grinding
24 Hour Service Fully Insured
KEVIN M. MOORE
(419) 235-8051
Amish Crew
Needing work
Roofing Remodeling
Bathrooms Kitchens
Hog Barns Drywall
Additions Sidewalks
Concrete etc.
FREE ESTIMATES
419-733-9601
950 Lawn Care
AFFORDABLE
PROPERTY
MAINTENANCE
LAWN CARE
LANDSCAPING
EDGING
Insured!
419-692-0092
SPEARS
LAWN CARE
Total Lawncare &
Snow Removal
22 Years Experience Insured
Commercial & Residential
Lindell Spears
419-695-8516
check us out at
www.spearslawncare.com
LAWN MOWING
FERTILIZATION
WEED CONTROL
PROGRAMS
LAWN AERATION
SPRING CLEANUP
MULCHING & MULCH
DELIVERY
SHRUB INSTALLATION,
TRIMMING & REMOVAL
Your Full Service Lawn
& Landscape Provider
www.ElwerLawnCare.com
(419) 235-3708
Travis Elwer
Mulch
Topsoil
Purina Feeds
419-339-6800
On S.R. 309 in Elida
950 Construction
Tim Andrews
MASONRY
RESTORATION
Chimney Repair
419-204-4563
POHLMAN
POURED
CONCRETE WALLS
Residential
& Commercial
Agricultural Needs
All Concrete Work
Mark Pohlman
419-339-9084
cell 419-233-9460
POHLMAN
BUILDERS
FREE ESTIMATES
FULLY INSURED
Mark Pohlman
419-339-9084
cell 419-233-9460
ROOM ADDITIONS
GARAGES SIDING ROOFING
BACKHOE & DUMP TRUCK
SERVICE
950 Home Improvement
A S HOME
IMPROVEMENT LLC
WINDOWS-DOORS
DECKS-CUSTOM TRIM
FLOORING-SIDING
TEXTURED CEILINGS
FREE ESTIMATES
Be sure to get my quote-
Quality Service-Best Price!
Andy Schwinnen
419-303-0844
LEO E. GEISE
& ASSOCIATES
Interior & Exterior Painting
Drywall & Plaster Repair
Water Proofing
Pressure Washing
Since 1963
Residential Commercial
419-692-2002
or 419-203-9006
KLIMAS
CARPET
CLEANING
Residential, auto,
commercial
Free Estimates
Certied Warranty Work
Locally Owned, Operated
Call Bob Klima
1-888-872-1445
950 Cakes
www.elegantcakesbynikki.com
419-203-4784
Nikkis Cakes
Order your special
occasion cakes by
950 Car Care
FLANAGANS
CAR CARE
816 E. FIFTH ST. DELPHOS
Ph. 419-692-5801
Mon.-Fri. 8-6, Sat. 8-2
OIL - LUBE FILTER
Only
$
22.95*
*up to 5 quarts oil
Geise
Transmission, Inc.
419-453-3620
2 miles north of Ottoville
automatic transmission
standard transmission
differentials
transfer case
brakes & tune up
950 Computers
GERDEMANS TV
& COMPUTERS
* New Location *
203 N. Main
(old Westrich building)
LG LED/Plasma TVs
New & Used Laptops & Towers
Computer Repair
Delphos 419-692-5831
dangerd@wcoil.com
AT YOUR
S
ervice
in print & online
www.delphosherald.com
Call 419-695-0015
out with the old.
in with the new.
Sell it in
The Delphos Heralds
CLASSIFIEDS
Cash in on your collectibles
with the Classifieds.
INTERESTED
IN SPORTS?
Interested in sports, fall,
winter or spring
and doing some writing?
Would you like to make some extra
money covering the local sports
teams, no matter your age?
If so, contact Sports Editor Jim
Metcalfe at
(419) 695-0015, extension 133;
or by e-mail at
jmetcalfe@delphosherald.com
3 bedroom, 3 car garage.
New roof, new furnace & central air, updated kitchen, bath,
and more! $70,500.
Approx. monthly payment -
$
376.48
details, pics and more chbsinc.com 419-586-8220
Open House
9am-5pm
Sat. & Sun.
$0 Down $0 Closing
Home warranty.
Remodeled!
604 W. 7th St., Delphos
005
Lost & Found
FOUND- CALICO female
in the block of 900 N. Ca-
nal St. Has claws, very
friendly. Call
567-712-0952
FOUND- SMALL black
and white dog found out in
the country Friday 4/20.
Call 419-692-1075
010
Announcements
ADVERTISERS: YOU can
place a 25 word classified
ad in more than 100 news-
papers with over one and
a half million total circula-
tion across Ohio for $295.
It's easy...you place one
order and pay with one
check t hrough Ohi o
Scan-Ohi o St at ewi de
Classified Advertising Net-
work. The Delphos Herald
advertising dept. can set
this up for you. No other
classified ad buy is sim-
pler or more cost effective.
Call 419-695-0015, ext
138.
040
Services
LAMP REPAIR
Table or floor.
Come to our store.
Hohenbrink TV.
419-695-1229
080
Help Wanted
HIRING DRIVERS
with 5+ years OTR experi-
ence! Our drivers average
42cents per mile & higher!
Home every weekend!
$55,000-$60,000 annually.
99% no touch freight!
We will treat you with
respect!
PLEASE CALL
419-222-1630
OTR SEMI DRIVER
NEEDED
Benefits: Vacation,
Holiday pay, 401k. Home
weekends & most nights.
Call Ulm!s Inc.
419-692-3951
CHILDCARE PROVIDER
Openings available for
children age 6 months and
older in my smoke-free,
pet-free, Delphos home.
Lunch and afternoon
snack provided. Available
from 7:45 A.M. to 5:00
P.M. Monday thru Friday.
Many years experience.
References available. Feel
free to call Stacy at
419-236-1358
FORT JENNINGSarea
Babysitter has openings.
Smoke-free, Pet-free
home. Call 567-204-0934
if interested.
120
Financial
IS IT A SCAM? The Del-
phos Herald urges our
readers to contact The
Better Business Bureau,
( 419) 223- 7010 or
1-800-462-0468, before
entering into any agree-
ment involving financing,
business opportunities, or
work at home opportuni-
ties. The BBB will assist
in the investigation of
these businesses. (This
notice provided as a cus-
tomer service by The Del-
phos Herald.)
MAXS ANIMAL Swap &
Flea Market. May 5 and 6,
8am-? at 6440 Harding
Highway, E 309, Lima,
OH. 419- 225- 8545,
419-230-9134,
419-230-7405
Raines
Jewelry
Cash for Gold
Scrap Gold, Gold Jewelry,
Silver coins, Silverware,
Pocket Watches, Diamonds.
2330 Shawnee Rd.
Lima
(419) 229-2899
340
Garage Sales
18069 ROAD 24-R, Fort
Jennings. Dvds, TVs,
furniture, toys, video
games, household items,
clothing, lots more.
April 26&27- 8am-8pm.
April 28- 8am-1pm
340
Garage Sales
529 E. Jackson St. 6-Party
Sale. Friday-Saturday 9-6.
Professional quality NEW
tools; men, women and
children clothes 80% @
25-50. Leather, blue-
jean, rain, winter coats
and jackets; skirts, house
dresses, bluejeans, dress
pants. Knickknacks, appli-
ances, MaryKay=cheap,
dishes
8225 DEFIANCE Tr.
RV supplies and LOTS of
misc. Thurs. April 26 thru
Sat. April 28 - 8am-5pm.
DOUBLE GARAGE Sale
810 N. Main &
827 N. Washington.
Friday & Saturday 8-6.
1979 Sea Ray Sundancer
260 boat, Vera Bradley,
furniture, dishes, lots of
movies (DVDs & VHS),
r ecor ds, appl i ances,
lamps, hand guns, humidi-
fier, camp stoves, Oster
kitchen center, mens,
womens & kids clothes,
portable air compressor,
and much misc.
MULTIPLE FAMILIES
458 S. Pierce St.
Thurs & Fri 9am-7pm,
Sat 9am-2pm.
Desk, TV stand, computer
desk, electronics, printer,
fax machine, etc., many
small kitchen appliances,
dishes, pictures, luggage,
Elvis Presley memorabilia,
clothing, toys, bedding,
wood handle golf clubs, so
much more!
550
Pets & Supplies
FOR SALE - Full blooded
Golden Retriever pups.
Mom & Dad on premises.
Have papers and first
shots. $300-$400.
419-286-2868
590
House For Rent
HOME FOR RENT
2BR plus office,
basement, garage,
$650/month +deposit.
References is a must!
Call Krista Schrader with
Schrader Realty
419-233-3737
800
House For Sale
3 BEDROOM, 2 bath
Ranch home. Detached
heated garage, large yard,
patio. Ph. 419-234-5065
810
Auto Repairs/
Parts/Acc.
Midwest Ohio
Auto Parts
Specialist
Windshields Installed, New
Lights, Grills, Fenders,Mirrors,
Hoods, Radiators
4893 Dixie Hwy, Lima
1-800-589-6830
820
Motorcycles
& Mopeds
2006 HONDA Helix.
Excellent shape. Low
mileage. $2900.00 firm.
Call 419-695-6178
840
Mobile Homes
RENT OR Rent to Own. 2
bedroom, 1 bath mobile
home. 419-692-3951.
290
Wanted to Buy
IS YOUR
AD HERE?
Call today
419-695-0015
095
Child Care
280
Flea Market
Shop Herald
Classifieds for
Great Deals
Answer to Puzzle
Todays Crossword Puzzle
ACROSS
1 Spooky noise
6 Tropical trees
11 Reduces the noise
level
13 Salad vegetable
14 Divulge
15 Straightens
16 Jeer
17 -- -and-breakfast
18 Deli units
21 Cold-shoulders
23 Ocean sh
26 -- cit. (footnote
abbr.)
27 Count i ng- r hyme
start
28 Wind indicator
29 Opposed
31 Column order
32 Vicars residence
33 Home nder
35 The A in B.A.
36 Ride a wave
37 Map dir.
38 Pigs digs
39 Armload of papers
40 Do Easter eggs
41 Highlanders pair
42 Mamas boy
44 Used a shop ma-
chine
47 Sovereign decrees
51 -- -down cake
52 More risky
53 Migratory ocks
54 Job possibilities
DOWN
1 Tai -- chuan
2 Sugarcane product
3 Mind reading
4 Whaler of ction
5 Lantern fuel
6 Tent supports
7 In the course of
8 Fail to keep up with
9 Geol. formation
10 Plea at sea
12 Fruit pits
13 Brindled cat
18 Pack animals
19 Casablanca actor
20 Barely enough
22 False
23 Hauled away
24 Like some bagels
25 Court order
28 Old TV knob
30 NASA destination
31 Yellow trumpet
34 Wiped out data
36 Cast a shadow
39 Ekberg or Garbo
41 -- little piggy ...
43 Opposite of naugh-
ty
44 Drag along
45 Gorilla or chimp
46 Mao -- -tung
48 Undercover org.
49 Turner or Koppel
50 AARP members
DEAR DOCTOR K: I have an
aunt whose house is filled to the
ceiling with junk in some places. I
worry about her safety navigating
around all that stuff. I think she is
a hoarder. What causes this, and
how can I help her?
DEAR READER: If your
aunts house has become so
filled with stuff that she cant
get around easily, Im inclined to
agree with you. She may indeed
suffer from compulsive hoarding.
Hoarders accumulate objects of
questionable value in large and
disorganized amounts.
Until recently, compulsive
hoarding was considered a less-
frequent symptom of obsessive-
compulsive disorder (OCD). But
the majority of hoarders dont
have other OCD symptoms, such
as compulsions and repetitive
behaviors.
Compulsive hoarders may
have a hard time throwing things
away. This is true even when the
things in question arent valuable
or useful. One of my patients with
this problem once said, If I throw it
away, its gone forever. If it has no
value, whats wrong with it being
gone forever?
In many cases, compulsive
hoarders may accumulate so
much stuff that they can no
longer use their home the way its
supposed to be used. They may
be embarrassed at the state of the
home and withdraw socially. This
can lead to social isolation.
A hoarders home can become
so disordered and unsafe that
its difficult or impossible to
navigate. Hoarders are much
more vulnerable to falls and
serious injuries, particularly if they
are older than 60. As we age, our
reflexes and balance get worse,
and our muscles get weaker. Add
in a house full of things to trip
over, and youve got a prescription
for serious injury. Also, dust and
mold can cause asthma and other
allergic reactions.
Unfortunately, family
interventions dont always
help. They can cause rifts in
relationships. If you want to help
your aunt, be available to her, but
it may be best to leave the heavy
lifting to the professionals.
What to do? First, ask your
doctor to help you identify a
mental health professional who
can help. Most moderate-sized
communities have professionals
with special experience dealing
with compulsive behaviors. Once
you get that name, you can have
a talk with your aunt. OCD and
depression are sometimes tied to
compulsive hoarding, and there
are effective treatments for both.
Hoarding also can be an early
sign of dementia. If you think
your aunts memory, her ability
to speak or her ability to organize
her activities is starting to fail, a
neurologist can be helpful.
Another approach to finding
a therapist with experience in
the treatment of hoarding is to
check the hoarding section of the
International OCD Foundation
website, ocfoundation.org/
hoarding.
A behavioral therapy
program may help your aunt.
These programs help hoarders
recognize and deal with their
distorted thinking or beliefs. They
also help strengthen hoarders
organizational and decision-
making skills and manage anxiety.
Therapists may also make
home visits to help with sorting,
organizing and discarding. In
short, there are many options to
help your aunt.
(Dr. Komaroff is a physician
and professor at Harvard Medical
School. Go to his website to send
questions and get additional
information: www.AskDoctorK.
com.)
Distributed by Universal UClick
for UFS
Therapy can help hoarders
manage their compulsion
Dr. Anthony
L. Komaroff, M.D.
On
Health
Dear Sara: Im looking for
a homemade polish for my
kitchen cabinets. My cabinets
are dated, so Im sure most
anything is better than the
way they look now. Any
suggestions? -- Lisa H., North
Carolina
Dear Lisa: Heres a
tried-and-true recipe from a
fellow reader, Donna from
California:
My kitchen cabinets are
old, old, old, and they look
their age, so I didnt mind
experimenting on them. I tried
a recipe for furniture polish
that is one part white vinegar
to four parts olive oil. I made
up a very small batch of 1/4
cup of oil and 2 tablespoons
of vinegar. I dabbed a clean,
soft cloth into the mixture, then
rubbed it into my cabinets.
After applying only a small
amount, the polished door
looked glossy and lustrous.
You can clean with Murphy
Oil Soap before applying the
above polish.
Dear Sara: Do you have
a body wash recipe? --
Rebecca, email
Dear Rebecca: Baby
shampoo works well for hair
and skin for all ages. You can
use it as a makeup remover,
too. Here are three homemade
body wash recipes:
Body wash
2 cups Toms of Maine
moisturizing bar soap or
Dr. Bronners Castile soap
(grated)
1/2 gallon distilled water
2 tablespoons vegetable
glycerin
15 drops skin-safe
fragrance or essential oil
Mix grated soap, water and
glycerin together in a large
pan. Warm on the stove using
low heat. Stir until the soap
dissolves. Add essential oil
and mix well. Transfer to a jar
with a tight lid.
One reader, Tracy Q. from
New York, shares: I make
homemade body wash from
cheap shampoo. Use one
cup of Suave shampoo (in
your favorite scent), 1/2 cup
water and 3 tablespoons
of Epsom salt. Combine all
the ingredients together and
whisk the mixture until its
frothy. Pour it into a recycled
liquid soap container and you
have instant body wash at a
fraction of the cost!
Another reader, Constance
from New Jersey, shares her
recipe: Grate two bars of
soap (I used 4.25-ounce Olay
Shea Butter bars) with a fine
cheese grater. Pour grated
soap and 2 cups of water
into a saucepan. Heat over
medium-low heat until soap is
dissolved, about five minutes.
Cool slightly. The soap should
have the consistency of
whole milk at this point. Pour
into bottles. You can top off
your bottles with more water
if you want. Cool overnight.
The bodywash should have
the consistency of melted
ice cream when cooled. Use
a nickel-sized dollop on your
bath sponge and lather up!
Im going to get a year of use
out of two bars of soap. I also
replaced my facial cleanser
with this. It even works well
for shaving!
(Sara Noel is the owner
of Frugal Village (www.
frugalvillage.com), a website
that offers practical, money-
saving strategies for everyday
living. To send tips, comments
or questions, write to Sara
Noel, c/o Universal Uclick,
1130 Walnut Street, Kansas
City, MO, 64106, or email
sara@frugalvillage.com.)
Distributed by Universal
UClick for UFS
Make your own polish to spruce of kitchen cabinets
SARA NOEL
Frugal
Living
REAL ESTATE TRANSFERS
Van Wert County
Walter L. Lamb, Douglas R.
Lamb, Vicki L. Lamb, Luan F.
Lamb to 1022 Shannon LLC,
portion of lot 304, Van Wert
subdivision.
Jill D. Conrad Family Living
Trust to Alisa M. Boroff, portion of
section 15, Pleasant Township.
James C. Gerdeman, Jane A.
Gerdeman to Darrin J. Gerdeman,
Denise C. Gerdeman, portion of
section 26, Washington Township
(Mox Addition, lot 5).
Amy Johns, Rick Johns Jr.
to Codi A. Walser, Lindsey A.
Walser, inlot 269, Middle Point.
Laurie S. Seibert to First KLAS
Properties LLC, portion of inlot
325, Delphos.
Margaret F. Fischer, Margaret
Fischer to Margaret F. Fischer
Revocable trust, portion of
sections 35, 36, Washington
Township.
Estate of Dallas B.
Rhodenbaugh, Betty Jean
Rhodenbaugh to Mark S.
Rhodenbaugh, inlot 528, Van
Wert.
BEETLE BAILEY
SNUFFY SMITH
BORN LOSER
HAGAR THE HORRIBLE
BIG NATE
FRANK & ERNEST
GRIZZWELLS
PICKLES
BLONDIE
HI AND LOIS
Friday Evening April 27, 2012
8:00 8:30 9:00 9:30 10:00 10:30 11:00 11:30 12:00 12:30
WPTA/ABC Shark Tank Primetime: What 20/20 Local Nightline Jimmy Kimmel Live
WHIO/CBS Undercover Boss CSI: NY Blue Bloods Local Late Show Letterman Late
WLIO/NBC Who Do You Grimm Dateline NBC Local Tonight Show w/Leno Late
WOHL/FOX The Finder Fringe Local
ION Cold Case Cold Case Cold Case Flashpoint Flashpoint
Cable Channels
A & E Storage Storage Storage Storage Storage Storage Storage Storage Storage Storage
AMC Speed The Beach
ANIM Whale Wars: Bluefin Whale Wars Frozen Planet Whale Wars Frozen Planet
BET National Security Stomp the Yard 2 Wendy Williams Show
BRAVO Kathy Quantum of Solace Quantum of Solace
CMT The Singing Bee J. Garth Melissa J. Garth Melissa & Tye The Singing Bee Singing
CNN Anderson Cooper 360 Piers Morgan Tonight Anderson Cooper 360 E. B. OutFront Piers Morgan Tonight
COMEDY Sunny Sunny South Pk Goods: Live Hard South Pk Chappelle Comedy
DISC Deadliest Catch Deadliest Catch Deadliest Catch Deadliest Catch Deadliest Catch
DISN Jessie Phineas Fish Hook ANT Farm Austin Good Luck ANT Farm ANT Farm Jessie Phineas
E! Fashion Star Kate-Will Kate-Will Fashion Police Chelsea E! News Chelsea
ESPN 2012 NFL Draft SportsCenter
ESPN2 NASCAR Racing Boxing Baseball Tonight
FAM Pirates-Dead The 700 Club Prince Prince
FOOD Diners Diners Diners Diners Diners Diners Diners Diners Diners Diners
FX Forget Sarah Ultimate Fight Death Race
HGTV Celebs Celebs On Set On Set Hunters Hunt Intl Hunt Intl Hunt Intl On Set On Set
HIST American Pickers Top Shot Top Shot Top Shot American Pickers
LIFE I Survived Amer. Most Wanted Amer. Most Wanted Amer. Most Wanted I Survived
MTV Jersey Shore Jersey Shore Fame
NICK Korra Korra George George George George Friends Friends Friends Friends
SCI WWE SmackDown! Dream Machines Total Blackout Lost Girl
SPIKE The Marine 2 Gamer Deliverance
TBS Payne Payne Payne Payne Catch Me if You Can
TCM Stage Door It All Came True Million Dollar Baby
TLC Say Yes Say Yes Say Yes Say Yes Gypsy Wedding Say Yes Say Yes Gypsy Wedding
TNT Law & Order Blade: Trinity The Last Samurai
TOON Cartoon Planet King/Hill King/Hill Amer. Dad Amer. Dad Fam. Guy Fam. Guy Chicken Boondocks
TRAV Ghost Adventures Ghost Adventures The Dead Files Ghost Adventures Ghost Adventures
TV LAND Home Imp. Home Imp. Raymond Raymond Raymond Raymond Raymond Raymond King King
USA Law & Order: SVU Fairly Legal In Plain Sight Suits Fairly Legal
VH1 Behind the Music Basketball Wives New Jack City Menace II Society
WGN How I Met How I Met How I Met How I Met WGN News at Nine 30 Rock Scrubs Scrubs Death
Premium Channels
HBO Unknown Gervais Too Short Real Time/Bill Maher Real Time/Bill Maher Gervais 24/7
MAX 50 First Dates Sanctum Depravity Sex Games Lingerie Feature 7
SHOW Beastly Drive Angry Boxing
2009 Hometown Content, listings by Zap2it
10 - The Herald Friday, April 27, 2012
Tomorrows
Horoscope
By Bernice Bede Osol
Bad neighbor
needs to get a life
Dear Annie: My hus-
band, Ken, has been self-
employed for 25 years. He
owns two large trailers and
has always parked them in
our driveway. However, in
the past two months, weve
had visits from the police
department nearly every
night. A neighbor we have
never met keeps reporting
us. He complains that when
my husband gets home from
work, he sometimes parks his
truck with one tire resting in
the dirt.
A city ordinance requires
us to have the section where
we park either
rocked or paved. We
cant afford it right
now. Times have
been really tough.
Ken tries very hard
to park our trailers
and truck in our
driveway without
touching any grass,
but its difficult to
do. The police have
been sympathetic,
saying the neigh-
bor is targeting us.
They know him as the local
troublemaker. He has a view
of our driveway from his
backyard and watches it all
the time.
We are honest, hardwork-
ing people and wouldnt harm
a soul, but this situation has
become personal. Yesterday,
we asked the police officer
to file a neighbor nuisance
report. We dont know what
else to do. I cant sleep and
Im scared for my family. I
have no idea what else this
man is capable of. Im ready
to have a restraining order
placed against him, but as
far as I know, he doesnt
approach our house. He only
watches it, which creeps
me out even more. Can
we do anything? -- Illinois
Neighbor
Dear Illinois: Your
unkind, nosy neighbor has
way too much time on his
hands. He can watch your
house from a distance all
day long if he wishes and
as long as you keep violat-
ing a city ordinance, he will
keep reporting you. First, see
whether there is a neighbor-
hood association that could
help the two of you resolve
this. Sometimes, such neigh-
bors simply crave attention
and need to feel important.
Then start saving your pen-
nies to enlarge the driveway
area.
Dear Annie: My friend
Lonnie smokes both
tobacco and marijuana in
the presence of her young
child. Anytime I mention the
subject and tell her I dont
support her smoking, she
completely ignores me. I
feel terrible being associated
with a person who cant see
the effect tobacco and drug
use will have on her child. I
often wonder what will hap-
pen when her daughter real-
izes that her entire schedule
is based around Mommys
smoke break.
I am ready to move on
from this tainted friend-
ship, but hate the thought of
never spending quality time
with Lonnies little girl. She
is always put on the back
burner. Any suggestions?
-- Burned-Out Friend
Dear Friend: Lonnie is
addicted. Quitting is too dif-
ficult for her, and she doesnt
want to be lectured about
it. She is unlikely to admit
that she values her smoking
above her childs health. Is
there a father in the picture?
Would he do anything about
this? Would you
be willing to report
Lonnie for posses-
sion? Regardless,
please stick around
in order to keep an
eye on the child.
Offer to baby-sit.
Take her to your
home or to the park
as often as you can.
We hope Lonnie
will soon realize the
damage she is doing
and shape up.
Dear Annie: Saskatoon
asked whether it was rude for
someone to leave the TV on
while others were visiting.
There could be another rea-
son besides rudeness.
I am the caregiver for
someone who keeps the TV
on all day. Unfortunately,
people dont realize she has
dementia and is mostly deaf.
Since she cannot under-
stand conversations going
on around her and becomes
more confused if asked to
participate in them, the TV
provides a safe and comfort-
able haven.
Please help your readers
understand that there may
be other reasons why some-
one keeps the TV on, and
the caregivers are the ones
who would appreciate a visit
with conversation. -- New
Hampshire
Annies Mailbox is written
by Kathy Mitchell and Marcy
Sugar, longtime editors of the
Ann Landers column.
www.delphosherald.com
SATURDAY, APRIL 28, 2012
An important long-range plan of
yours could be ready
for implementation
some time in the year
ahead. Once you have
your blueprint laid
out, follow it to the
letter and you should
be able to expect good results.
TAURUS (April 20-May 20)
-- Things that are of a financial or
material nature tend to ultimately
work out quite well for you. Its OK
to envision positive results and work
toward those ends.
GEMINI (May 21-June 20) --
If there is someone youd like to get
to know better, dont wait for that
person to call you. Make the overtures
yourself and let that individual know
youre interested in him or her.
CANCER (June 21-July 22) --
Be watchful for an unexpected shift
that could produce some opportunities
in your chosen field of endeavor. A
power source could open up thatll be
perfect for you.
LEO (July 23-Aug. 22) -- There
is an appeal about you that others will
find extremely attractive. Many people
will appreciate you as a friend while
others may view you romantically.
VIRGO (Aug. 23-Sept. 22) --
People with whom youre involved
will tend to do nice things for you
purely on impulse. Be appreciative of
their overtures and try to reciprocate
later.
LIBRA (Sept. 23-Oct. 23)
-- Youre in a particularly good
cycle for improving all your one-
on-one relationships. There are two
worthwhile friends on whom you can
begin your efforts.
SCORPIO (Oct. 24-Nov. 22) --
If you apply yourself, new ways can
be found to improve certain personal
friendships. It would be best to focus
on those connections that need the
most work.
SAGITTARIUS (Nov. 23-Dec.
21) -- New ways can be found to
start generating some much-needed
additional income. At the very least,
make the small changes needed to
produce a little more fundage.
CAPRICORN (Dec. 22-Jan.
19) -- Someone with whom you have
recently begun to establish a friendship
could be particularly helpful to you.
He or she will put you in touch with a
valuable contact.
AQUARIUS (Jan. 20-Feb. 19)
-- This is a particularly good day to
make and/or sign any long-term legal
agreements. The odds will be tilted in
your favor in terms of making a deal
that will withstand the test of time.
PISCES (Feb. 20-March 20) --
As long as you think through all of
your moves first, dont be timid about
taking a well-calculated risk that
you feel would help fulfill a special,
ambitious objective.
ARIES (March 21-April 19) --
The high esteem in which your friends
hold you has you doing no wrong in
their eyes. It isnt likely that they
would deny any request you make of
them.
COPYRIGHT 2012 United Feature Syndicate,
Inc.
Annies Mailbox
Friday, April 27, 2012 The Herald 11
www.delphosherald.com
Political convention protesters could be armed
By TAMARA LUSH and MITCH WEISS
Associated Press
TAMPA, Fla. The thousands of protest-
ers expected at the Democratic and Republican
national conventions can come armed with a lot
more than signs and slogans: State law in Florida
and North Carolina allows concealed weapons,
including guns.
In Tampa, where the RNC will hold its festivi-
ties this fall, officials are starting to worry about
people toting guns in such a politically-charged
environment. The City Council voted Thursday
to ask Republican Gov. Rick Scott to help them
temporarily ban concealed weapons. Charlotte
officials have yet to publically voice concern, but
with both cities trying to balance public safety
with First and Second Amendment rights, its
likely the host city for the Democratic convention
will also have to address the issue.
The Tampa City Council wants Scott to issue
an executive order, preventing people with con-
cealed weapons permits from carrying guns.
We believe it is necessary and prudent to
take this reasonable step to prevent a potential
tragedy, council member Lisa Montelione said
in a draft letter to Scott.
Tampa city leaders have already proposed
a host of banned items (lumber, hatchets, gas
masks, chains and super soaker water can-
nons) but they are prevented from outlawing
concealed guns. Florida and North Carolina have
laws prohibiting local officials from pre-empting
state gun statutes.
Tampa Mayor Bob Buckhorn said the state
law has made the city look silly, particularly
because officials can ban water guns but not real
ones.
Were kind of constrained by the state law,
he said.
Charlotte officials also believe they are ham-
strung.
We cant change what the state legislature
has in place, said Mark Newbold, an attorney
with the police department.
Tens of thousands of delegates, journalists and
political junkies will stream into the mid-sized
cities for the multi-day conventions. Republicans
hold their event at the Tampa Bay Times Arena
during Aug. 27-30. The Democrats party is a
week later at the Time Warner Cable Arena.
Inside the arenas, the Secret Service has banned
civilians from carrying guns.
Both cities have hosted large gatherings before
Tampa has held four Super Bowls and Charlotte
has entertained the Atlantic Coast Conference
basketball tournament and the National Rifle
Association convention but neither has really
experienced an event such as this.
In the last 50 years, political conventions have
become a magnet for protesters, and they have
sometimes turned ugly.
In 1968, demonstrators tried to disrupt the
Democratic National Convention in Chicago.
Scenes of police clashing with protesters on the
streets played on TV screens in living rooms
across America. Four years later, anti-war dem-
onstrators disrupted the Republican National
Convention in Miami Beach.
More recently, thousands of protesters
descended on St. Paul, Minn., in 2008, when the
city hosted the Republican National Convention.
Some demonstrators smashed cars, punctured
tires and threw bottles in a confrontation with
pepper-spray wielding police. Hundreds of peo-
ple were arrested over a few days.
Everything we are doing is based on some-
thing that happened at another convention or
another national security event, Tampa City
Attorney Jim Shimberg said.
The federal government has given $50 million
each to Charlotte and Tampa to help them pay
for new security-related equipment, training and
officer salaries.
Tampa is proposing a Clean Zone protest
area with portable toilets, water, a stage and a
microphone for protesters. Outside that area,
people will be allowed to march down an official
parade route as long as they have a permit.
The exact location of the protest zones and
security perimeter will be decided by the city
commission in the coming weeks.
Joyce Hamilton Henry, the director of the mid-
Florida office of the American Civil Liberties
Union, said her organization is concerned about
protests that will be limited to 60 minutes, and a
ban on masks.
We feel its totally unrealistic, especially
if groups are coming in with large numbers,
Hamilton Henry said.
The Tampa Police Department is expected to
rotate most of its 1,000-officer force into conven-
tion security during the event, which could draw
up to 45,000 people. An additional 3,000 officers
from other agencies around the state will help.
The Charlotte-Mecklenburg Police
Department plans to add 2,400 to 3,400 officers
from outside departments to its force of more
than 1,750.
For the convention there, a coalition of groups
has formed because they said they are angry the
city has refused to share information about where
they can gather.
The Coalition to Protest at the DNC has
threatened to gather without permits, and prom-
ised a massive demonstration Sept. 2 in what they
call the Wall Street of the South.
Charlotte, a city of 760,000 people, is home
to Bank of America Corp., one of the nations
largest banks.
This is something we have to do. They cant
stop our right to protest, said Ben Carroll, a
coalition spokesman.
Members of the coalition said theyre still
angry about how police in February disbanded
an Occupy Charlotte tent city on the lawn outside
the old City Hall. Protesters had been camped
there since October.
The move came one week after Charlotte
adopted an extraordinary event ordinance restrict-
ing political demonstrations ahead of this years
convention. The new rules give police more
power to stop and search people when the con-
vention comes to town. And people wont be
allowed to carry backpacks and other items in
designated areas.
Answers to Thursdays questions:
The buzzards flight inspired the Wright Brothers to
develop a wing warping system for maneuvering and bank-
ing aircraft. The buzzard twists one wingtip upward and the
other downward to make banked turns.
Set has the greatest number of definitions in the Oxford
English Dictionary 464.
Todays questions:
What golfing great helped design the first golf clubs to
be given numbers instead of Scottish names like mashie,
baffie and niblick?
What product was advertised in the very first infomer-
cial aired on American television?
Answers in Saturdays Herald
Todays words:
Georgic: pertaining to agriculture and country life
Yearcock: a one-year-old hen
The Outstanding National Debt as of 6:30 a.m. today
was $15,634,437,625,209.
The estimated population of the United States is
312,655,316, so each citizens share of this debt is
$50,005.
The National Debt has continued to increase an aver-
age of $3.96 billion per day since Sept. 28, 2007.
(Continued from page 1)
debate, Nixon was well ahead
in the polls but in the debate,
he came across as lacking
the charisma of a Kennedy.
Even though Kennedy made
mistakes in the content of
his remarks, all people saw
was how handsome he was.
He looked very charismatic
and people connected with
that to the point where thats
all they paid attention to,
McMurry said.
The first of three debates
in that campaign took place
in Chicago. While the sena-
tor from Massachusetts spent
the afternoon on his hotels
roof working on his tan, the
incumbent vice president
was coming off a knee sur-
gery that left him pale and
underweight. He also refused
makeup. He didnt look good
on camera and the image
made a lasting impression on
American politics.
McMurry says the role of
television in politics works
en tandem with other super-
ficial elements of our cul-
ture.
We connect with image
more than substance espe-
cially in a culture that has
a short attention span and
is so focused on entertain-
ment. This means were in a
cultural climate where most
people spend less time doing
research and trying to get
the important information;
we just swallow the sound
bites, he said. This creates
a culture where the candi-
date who overwhelms his or
her opponent with advertis-
ing will come out on top
because a significant portion
of our population only pays
attention to sound bites and
image.
By DIRK LAMMERS
Associated Press
SIOUX FALLS, S.D.
When civil rights activist Ray
Robinson arrived at Wounded
Knee in April 1973 to stand
alongside Native Americans
in their fight against social
injustice, he excitedly called
his wife back home and told
her, This could be the spark
that lights the prairie fire.
No, its not. Come home.
Please come home, his wife,
Cheryl Buswell-Robinson,
recalled begging of him.
The African-american
activist and follower of Martin
Luther King Jr. never made it
home to Bogue Chitto, Ala.
He was declared dead, but
his body never was found and
little is known about what
happened. Not knowing has
haunted Buswell-Robinson
and the couples three chil-
dren for nearly 40 years.
The United States govern-
ment handles investigations
on reservations. Minneapolis-
based FBI spokesman Kyle
Loven said the Robinson case
is a pending investigation,
so federal prosecutors and
investigators cant discuss it.
Buswell-Robinson, 67,
flew into Sioux Falls from
Detroit on Thursday ahead of
a conference commemorat-
ing the 40th anniversary of
the 1973 American Indian
Movement takeover of the
Pine Ridge reservation vil-
lage of Wounded Knee.
Shes not looking for
arrests or prosecutions. She
just wants to know where her
husbands body is so she can
give him a proper burial.
People have information
as to where his body is bur-
ied, she said.
Two Native Americans
were confirmed to have died
during the 1973 siege, and
rumors of other deaths per-
sist. FBI documents that now
are public suggest the pos-
sibility of people buried at
Wounded Knee during the
occupation. Theres no men-
tion of Robinson in the FBI
correspondence, but two doc-
uments reveal the presence of
two black people toward the
end of the standoff:
On May 5, 1973, a
transcript of an interview
with a man who claimed to
be at Wounded Knee the
week prior stated he heard
that one black man and one
black woman had recently
arrived.
A May 21, 1973, FBI
memo reported an Indian
woman who left the village
on April 20, 1973, counted
200 Indians, 11 whites and
two blacks.
Buswell-Robinson said
those two were most likely
Robinson and a black woman
from Alabama who went with
him. The woman returned
after the standoff; Robinson
didnt.
Buswell-Robinson filed a
missing persons report with
the FBI and in October 1974
traveled to Rapid City and the
AIM headquarters in St. Paul,
Minn., but said she learned
nothing about what happened
to her husband. In the years
after Robinsons disappear-
ance, she corresponded with
writer and political activist
Barbara Deming.
In a letter dated Dec. 29,
1974, Buswell-Robinson
wrote that she had been told
Robinson backpacked into
Wounded Knee at night and
was later shot for not follow-
ing an order to immediately
report to AIM co-founder
Dennis Banks.
AIM member Richard
Two Elk of Denver told The
Associated Press in 2004 that
he had seen someone shoot
Robinson in the knees, but
the reason was because he
had refused to pick up a gun
and was constantly annoying
people in the bunker. Two
Elk declined an email request
from the AP this week to talk
further about the incident.
Banks, in a telephone
interview Thursday, said
he cant recall ever meeting
Robinson. He said the only
recollection of Robinson he
has is when his family visited
AIM in St. Paul to ask for
information.
Over the years, the
Robinson name has popped
up and Im not sure even who
would have that information
or where it was, Banks told
the AP. Thats a complete
blank to me.
By MANUEL VALDES
Associated Press
SEATTLE The American Civil Liberties Union filed a
lawsuit Thursday against the U.S. Border Patrol seeking to bar
agents from making traffic stops, saying people are being pulled
over and questioned for the way they look and without reason-
able suspicion.
The lawsuit stems from tensions between immigrants and
the expanded presence of Border Patrol agents on Washington
states Olympic Peninsula, which shares no land border with
Canada.
People are being stopped based solely on their appearance
and ethnicity. This is unlawful and contrary to American values,
said Matt Adams, legal director of the Northwest Immigrant
Rights Project, which also joined the lawsuit. No one in a car
should be stopped and interrogated by government agents unless
the law enforcement officer has a legal basis to do so.
The ACLU and the Northwest Immigrant Rights Project filed
the lawsuit on behalf of three peninsula residents who have been
stopped by Border Patrol agents.
Border Patrol spokesman Richard Sinks said U.S. Customs
and Border Protection strictly prohibits profiling on the basis
of race or religion.
In determining whether individuals are admissible into
the United States, CBP utilizes specific facts and follows the
Department of Justices Guidance Regarding the Use of Race
by Federal Law Enforcement Agencies, Sinks said.
The agency has said it is following its mandate to enforce the
countrys immigration laws and protect the border and shoreline
from terrorists, drug smugglers and other illegal activity.
But one of the plaintiffs says Border Patrol agents stopped
him numerous times, even though hes a U.S. citizen.
Jose Sanchez, a prison guard at Olympic Corrections Center
in Forks, Wash., said agents have followed him home and ques-
tioned him when hes with his family. In one instance, they told
Sanchez they were pulling him over because his windows were
too dark, but they didnt ask for his car insurance or registration,
the lawsuit says.
Another plaintiff is Ernest Grimes, a prison guard at Clallam
Bay Corrections Center and a part-time police officer from
Neah Bay, Wash. Grimes said a Border Patrol agent pulled him
over last year. According to the lawsuit, the agent approached
Grimes, who is black, with his hand on his weapon while yelling
at him to roll down his window.
The agent provided no reason for the traffic stop while he
interrogated Grimes about his immigration status, the lawsuit
alleges. Grimes was wearing his guard uniform at the time.
The third plaintiff, 18-year-old Ismael Ramos Contreras of
Forks, was with a group of friends when four agents pulled them
over. The lawsuit says one of the agents tried to take the keys out
of the ignition and interrogated the teenagers but never provided
a reason for the stop. Ramos also was asked for his immigration
status outside a courthouse in Forks.
(Continued from page 1)
among themselves about that fateful battle, the footage they gathered
and how it affected them. During one of those conversations, he said,
he realized how he and a friend had seen different things that day and
how it affected them differently. He thought the various memories of
the 12 different people in his platoon would be worth putting on film.
All 12 agreed.
Although there have been documentaries made about war for as
long as there have been cameras to film them, documentarians say it
is unusual for the warrior himself to be the one making the film and
using his own battle footage.
Live action, American, filmmaker as subject on war trauma is
not, to my mind, terribly common, said Michael Renov, associate
dean of academic affairs at USCs School of Cinematic Arts and
author of The Subject of Documentary.
Perhaps the effort that comes closest to it, he noted, was Ari
Folmans 2008 Oscar-nominated film Waltz With Bashir, in which
the filmmaker interviewed Israeli soldiers he fought with in the 1982
Lebanon war and used animation to visualize his story.
One of the hardest things for Anderson to do will be to fill in the
years between the battle and what his fellow Marines are doing now
and still be able to effectively show how war changed them, said
Mitchell Block, who produced the Oscar-nominated war documen-
tary Poster Girl.
For that film, onetime cheerleader and Iraq combat veteran
Robynn Murray allowed cameras to follow her for more than a year,
vividly capturing her struggles to overcome PTSD.
Having the close relationship he does with the people hes filming
could overcome missing out on those years between the battle and
the present day, Block said, but only if his subjects have compelling
stories to tell.
Anderson and childhood friend Antonio de la Torre of Los
Angeles hope to have the documentary finished by the fall, about the
time of his wedding and in time for next years film festival circuit.
They are making it on a budget of $30,000, most of it raised
through the website kickstarter.com.
That may seem like peanuts to most people, Anderson says with
a laugh. But me and my buddy Antonio have been working together
for more than a decade with digital editing and weve written up a
pretty clean budget and we think we can do it.
The two made their first film in high school, a mockumentary
that took the filmmakers to Nevadas infamous Area 51 in a jokey
attempt to prove long-held conspiracy theories that space aliens live
there. They have since gone on to film commercials for small local
television stations. This will be their first documentary.
With reams of war footage and 12 engrossing stories to tell,
Anderson believes they are up to the task.
By MICHAEL BIESECKER
Associated Press
GREENSBORO, N.C. John
Edwards ex-aide acknowledged Thursday
that much of nearly $1 million in cam-
paign supporters cash went to build his
North Carolina dream house, not to buy
the silence of the presidential candidates
pregnant mistress.
Andrew Young testified for a fourth
straight day at Edwards campaign finance
fraud trial, peppered with questions from
Edwards attorney Abbe Lowell about the
money from two donors that flowed into
personal accounts controlled by Young and
his wife.
Young has said he took secret payments
from wealthy donors at Edwards direction
to help conceal the presidential contenders
affair with Rielle Hunter and keep his 2008
presidential campaign viable.
Young said the checks secretly provided
by a then-96-year-old heiress were mixed
with the couples other house funds, much
of which went into renovations and con-
struction of their $1.5 million hilltop house
on 10 acres near Chapel Hill, N.C. Young
often deferred questions on the payments to
his wife, Cheri, saying my wife is the one
who handles the finances in our family.
Youngs testimony is considered key to
the prosecutions case that while campaign-
ing for the White House, Edwards directed
a scheme to use the money from the heiress
and a Texas lawyer to conceal his affair
with Hunter.
Young initially claimed he was the
father of Hunters daughter and took her
into his home with his wife.
Lowell asked Young about numerous
changes to the construction of the North
Carolina house after the payments started
coming in, including a pool, home theater
and extra bedroom.
At the time, Young and his wife were
living with Hunter in a $20,000 a month
rental mansion along the California coast,
paid for by a wealthy lawyer who served as
Edwards campaign finance chairman.
We were living out in Santa Barbara and
we lost our sense of perspective, Young said
on the witness stand. The house became
more and more extravagant.
Edwards denies knowing about the
$725,000 in checks from heiress Rachel
Bunny Mellon sent to Young through
her interior designer. In addition to the
maximum $2,300 to the Edwards cam-
paign allowed by law, Mellon also provid-
ed another $6.4 million to a political action
committee and anti-poverty foundation tied
to Edwards.
Another $200,000 was given to the
Youngs by the Texas lawyer, Fred Baron.
Records shown at trial documented pay-
ments for private jets, five-star hotels and
other expenses incurred by Hunter and the
Youngs while they were in hiding. Baron
died in 2008 of cancer at age 61.
Young testified Thursday he had sent
Baron an invoice for many of the expenses
the aide had already paid for with money
from Mellon; he said Baron then wired
another $325,000 to the builder construct-
ing the Youngs house.
The questions about the cash from
Mellon funneled to Youngs house came
towards the end of a full day of cross-
examination, in which Lowell sought to
undermine the ex-aides credibility and
paint him as a pathological liar.
Lowell pointed out inconsistencies with
Youngs account of the scandal at trial
this week and in multiple other accounts,
including grand jury testimony and his
2010 tell-all book about Edwards.
Referring to the timing of a conversa-
tion with a law partner of Edwards, Lowell
asked, And you made that up too, didnt
you?
No, sir, Young responded.
Lowell asked Young whether he first
learned Hunter, was pregnant in May 2007,
as his book says: inJune 2007, as he testi-
fied; or in early July, a date backed by phone
records and Hunters medical records.
The timeline issues could challenge the
accounts of conversations Young said he
had with Edwards in a car discussing who
to ask for money to help take care of Hunter
and discussing Hunters pregnancy.
Video
Primary
Widow of civil rights activist wants him home
ACLU sues US Border Patrol
Ex-Edwards aide: Donors cash went into NC house
2
See all of our inventory on the web! www.grevechrysler.com
GREVE
756 West Ervin Rd. / Van Wert, OH
419-238-3944 / (888) 348-5493
NEW 2011s AT
PRE-OWNED PRICES
2011 Chrysler 200
Limited Convertible
3.6L 6 cyl.
Multi-speed automatic
Silver exterior
Black interior
Stock L174
2011 Chrysler
300C Sedan
RWD
5-speed automatic
5.7L V-8 cyl.
Sapphire Crystal exterior
Black interior
Stock L201
$
35,555
$
39,990
HUGE
SAVINGS
HUGE
SAVINGS
N
E
W
N
E
W
MSRP
MSRP
12 The Herald Friday, April 27, 2012 www.delphosherald.com