June 20, 2014

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BY NANCY SPENCER

DHI Media Editor


[email protected]
DELPHOS The Delphos Senior Citizen Center has seen many
changes under the tutelage of Director Joyce Hale. On Thursday, Hale
was reminded of her service and dedication to the center and Delphos
seniors during her retirement party marking 27 years as director.
The most satisfying part of the job has been being able to help people
that need help, Hale said. Older people are slow to ask for assistance
and it was my pleasure to see they get what they deserve. They have sup-
ported the community and city and when its their turn, they need to be
connected with programs for support.
Longtime Delphos Senior Citizen Center, Inc., board member Rick
Miller called Hale a watch dog.
She ran a tight ship in order to make ends meet, Miller began. With
county and state funding going down every year, through Joyces watch-
ful eye we were able to keep services at the expectations we wanted.
Hales job was not without challenges. Delphos lies in two counties,
Allen and Van Wert, and the center serves residents from three (adding
Putnam). That meant Hale had to travel to Van Wert and Lima agencies
that assist seniors to get funding for programs and fulfill reporting obliga-
tions.
I was always going somewhere to get what we needed, Hale said. A
lot of help came from right here in Delphos.
Hale remembers an instance when she visited a woman who lived
alone and when they began talking, she realized the woman had no food
and was sustaining herself on coffee, toast and soup made from water and
ketchup.
Upfront
Obituaries 2
State/Local 3
Religion 4
Community 5
Sports 6-8
Television 9
Classifieds 10
Comics and puzzles 11
World news 12
Index
Friday, June 20, 2014 75 daily Delphos, Ohio
Forecast
DELPHOS HERALD
The
Telling The Tri-Countys Story Since 1869
Wildcats dominate Jays in ACME,
p6
Boys State delegates speak out
on event, p3
www.delphosherald.com
Vol. 145 No. 5
Showers and
thunderstorms
likely today
and a chance
tonight with
highs in
the lower
80s and lows in the
lower 60s. See page 2.
Correction
In the Thursday, June
19, 2014, issue of The
Delphos Herald, the story
headlined Club sets annual
fishing derby, the date
should read Saturday, July
19. The Herald apologizes
for any inconvenience.
The Cardinal Chorale, a
select ensemble of youth from
all over the state of Ohio, will
perform at 7:30 p.m. Monday
at Immaculate Conception
Catholic Church in Ottoville.
The chorale was organized
by Charles Snyder in 1995
to provide more challeng-
ing musical opportunities
for returning members of
the All-Ohio Youth Choir
and to serve as a demon-
stration group during the
pre-Fair rehearsal week.
Members are selected by
audition from approximately
80 returning veterans.
Cardinal Chorale
in Ottoville
The City of Delphos
Recreation Department has
announced swimming les-
sons will be held in July
at the Delphos Municipal
Swimming Pool.
The first session will begin
July 14 and the second ses-
sion will begin July 21. Both
sessions begin at 11 a.m.
The cost per session
is $50. Applications can
be obtained by contact-
ing Pool Manager Lois
MacLennan during pool
hours at 419-692-4486.
Rec. dept. sets
swim lessons
Hale retires after 27 years as senior center director
Moore
Spencerville
girl wins
state crown
INFORMATION SUBMITTED
SPENCERVILLE Chantell
Moore of Spencerville was crowned
Little Miss Ohio United States 2014
June 8 at The Anderson Theatre in
Cincinnati. Chantell is the daughter
of Kathy Moore and granddaugh-
ter of Wayne and Linda Moore of
Wapakoneta.
Moore is a Spencerville student
who dances and cheers competitively
and is involved in pageant systems
including National American Miss,
Cinderella, Miss American Girl,
Galaxy, Miss American Coed and
Miss United States.
Moore lives by her platform which
is to teach others the importance
of giving back to their community
however they can. She is involved
with organizations such as Childrens
Miracle Network, The American
Cancer Society, local food pantries,
Goodwill and West Ohio Food Bank.
Moore will now move on to the Miss
United States nationals, which are
held July 2-5 in Washington, D.C.
BY ED GEBERT
DHI Media Editor
[email protected]
VAN WERT Life on the road was much
different 100 years ago. The nations first trans-
continental highway, the Lincoln Highway was
lined with stops for food, gas, service and even
lodging, but the lodging was much different
back then than it is today. Instead of cushy
hotels with room service, turn-down service and
Internet service, staying all night on the road
was almost literally that on the road.
The Van Wert Historical Societys Larry
Webb said, People took their tent, and strapped
their water on the radiator and took their gaso-
line and a spare tire and pitched their tent where
there was a wide spot in the road.
Then around the 1920s, accommodations
improved a bit. That advancement is now on
display on the grounds of the Van Wert County
Historical Museum.
We now have an old Lincoln Highway
Tourist Cabin that has been restored by Larry
Mengerink and his students in the Building and
Grounds program at Vantage Career Center.
Webb stated. It has been fixed up to appear as
it did in that period, and it will be on display
beginning with Holiday at Home on July 4 on
the campus of the museum.
Tourist cabin to be displayed
for Holiday at Home
This cabin has been taken from its original Lincoln
Highway location where travelers would use them
to spend the night and is now refurbished and
ready for display at the Van Wert County Historical
Museum. (DHI Media/Ed Gebert)
Joyce Hale, center, retired Thursday after 27 years as the Delphos Senior Citizen Center director.
Center employees Tami Gehr, left, Angie Goodwin (office manager) and Shirley and Leonard Jarman
wish Hale well in the next chapter of her life. (DHI Media/Nancy Spencer)
D.A.R.E. Camp ends
with a splash!
Above: The three-day
Delphos D.A.R.E. Camp
ended with the annual
water fight Thursday.
After 130 campers
received awards and
prizes, they headed to
Franklin Elementary
playground to cool
off. Campers learned
teamwork and to
make good decisions
during the event. At
right: Campers wait to
hear their name called
for a prize during
closing ceremonies.
(DHI Media/Nancy
Spencer)
See MOORE, page 12
See CABIN, page 12
See HALE, page 12
2 The Herald Friday, June 20, 2014
For The Record
www.delphosherald.com
FUNERALS
BIRTHS
LOTTERY
LOCAL PRICES
WEATHER
TODAY IN HISTORY
FROM THE ARCHIVES
The Delphos Herald wants
to correct published errors in
its news, sports and feature
articles. To inform the news-
room of a mistake in published
information, call the editorial
department at 419-695-0015.
Corrections will be published
on this page.
CORRECTIONS
2
The Delphos
Herald
Nancy Spencer, editor
Ray Geary,
general manager
Delphos Herald, Inc.
Lori Goodwin Silette,
circulation manager
The Delphos Herald
(USPS 1525 8000) is published
daily except Sundays, Tuesdays
and Holidays.
The Delphos Herald is deliv-
ered by carrier in Delphos for
$1.48 per week. Same day
delivery outside of Delphos is
done through the post office
for Allen, Van Wert or Putnam
Counties. Delivery outside of
these counties is $110 per year.
Entered in the post office
in Delphos, Ohio 45833 as
Periodicals, postage paid at
Delphos, Ohio.

405 North Main St.
TELEPHONE 695-0015
Office Hours
8 a.m.-5 p.m. Mon.-Fri.
POSTMASTER:
Send address changes
to THE DELPHOS HERALD,
405 N. Main St.
Delphos, Ohio 45833
125 W. Main St. Ottawa, OH 45875 248 N. Main St. Delphos, OH 45833
OTTAWA DELPHOS
419.523.6916 419.692.7600
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Microdermabrasion
Massage Therapy
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through the toenail, instantly killing
the fungus. Over 80% success rate
in only two 15 minute treatments.
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Also Offering:
Musculoskeletal Laser
For Pain Reduction
Dermal Fillers
Botox Injections
Laser Hair removal
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Laser Skin Tightening
Laser Treatment for
Nail Fungus, Spider Veins,
Rosacea and Acne.
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Spring!
FRI JUN 20-THUR 26
CINEMA 1: 2D/3D: How to Train
Your Dragon 2 PG
CINEMA 2: 2D/3D: Edge of Tomorrow PG13
CINEMA 3: Malecent PG
CINEMA 4: The Fault in Our Stars PG13
CINEMA 5: 22 Jump Street R
COMING SOON:
Transformers: Age of Extinction
Dawn of the Planet of the Apes Planes: Fire & Rescue
Admission before 6pm: $5 After 6pm: Adults-$7/
Children 11 and under and seniors-$5. 3D seats
before 6pm: $7 3D after 6pm: Adults $9/Children
11 and under and seniors $7
WE DONOT ACCEPT CREDIT OR DEBIT CARDS OR CHECKS!
VAN-DEL DRIVE-IN
FRI JUN 20-TUE 24
SCREEN 1: How to Train Your Dragon 2 PG
Malecent PG
SCREEN 2: Edge of Tomorrow PG13
X-Men: Days of Future Past PG13
SCREEN 3: The Fault in Our Stars PG13
Blended PG13
Admission: 4 and under FREE. Children 5-10 $5 Ages 11-61 $7
Seniors 62andup$5. Gates open at 7pm; Showtime is at dusk.
MON SPECIAL: BYOB(bag or bowl ) for FREE Popcorn.
TUES: BOGO Free (Buy ticket @reg. price,
get 1 of equal or lesser value free)
Driver flees scene of crash
INFORMATION SUBMITTED
DELPHOS A driver leaving a parking spot hit the car
parked in front of him and fled the scene at 2 a.m. Thursday.
A car owned by Martha Schreiber of Lima was parked
legally in the 300 block of North Main Street.
The driver of the vehicle parked behind Schreiber attempted
to leave his parking spot when he hit Schreibers car on the left
rear portion causing minor damage.
The driver left the scene of the crash.
Two injured in
Thursday crash
INFORMATION
SUBMITTED
COLUMBUS GROVE
The Lima Post of the
Ohio State Highway Patrol
is currently investigating a
two vehicle injury crash that
occurred on at 12:56 p.m.
Thursday. The injury crash
occurred on State Route 65
at Miller Road in Monroe
Township in Allen County.
Karl Stechschulte, 81, driv-
ing a white 2011 Chevrolet
Impala, and front seat pas-
senger Blanche Stechschulte,
80, both of Columbus Grove,
were traveling northbound on
SR 65 approaching the inter-
section of Miller Road.
Stephen Diller, 64, of
Vaughnsville, driving a red
2002 Dodge Ram 1500 pick-
up truck, was traveling east-
bound on Miller Road and
failed to yield at the stop sign.
Diller struck Stechschultes
vehicle in the drivers side
door.
Both Stechschultes were
taken to St. Ritas Medical
Center by Columbus Grove
EMS with non-life threaten-
ing injuries.
Diller was not injured.
Seat belts were in use and
alcohol is not believed to be
a factor.
The Ohio State Highway
Patrol was assisted at
the scene by Columbus
Grove Police Department,
Columbus Grove Fire/EMS,
Putnam County EMS and
Blakes Towing.
Wheat $5.79
Corn $4.29
Soybeans $14.32
ST. RITAS
A boy was born June 18 to
Stacey and Andrew Vaske of
Delphos.
A boy was born June 16 to
Mary Sommer and Jerad Reid
of Elida.
One Year Ago
Last fall, the Ohio State University Forensic Anthropology
Case Team (FACT) began a survey of the Old Fort site,
which contains the gravesites of 12-14 soldiers who died in
Fort Jennings, during the War of 1812, the final phase of the
Revolutionary War. On Thursday, the team returned to com-
plete the survey of the site.
25 Years Ago 1989
Jim Friedrich, son of John and Janelle Friedrich of rural
Delphos, received the State Future Farmers of America
Degree at the organizations recent state convention held at
Ohio State University, Columbus. Friedrich has been a mem-
ber of the Delphos FFA chapter four years, during which time
he served as secretary and president, committee member, pub-
lic speaker, parliamentary procedure team and has shown his
purebred Berkshire swine at the county and state fairs.
Former Delphos resident Rhonda Monk has received her
bachelor of science degree in elementary education from The
Defiance College. Rhonda and her husband, Curt, were former
youth pastors at Delphos Assembly of God. Rhondas grandpar-
ents are Walt and Ruth Swartz and Eugene Krugh of Delphos.
President Denelda Brokamp presided at a recent meeting
of Walterick-Hemme Post 3035 Veterans of Foreign Wars
Auxiliary. It was noted that Martha Ream had donated a new
Bible to the auxiliary to be used according to the ritual. Mary
Lou Harman, community activities chairman, reported that
through the combined efforts of the post and auxiliary, over
$8,000 had been donated for projects in the city.
50 Years Ago 1964
Landecks Catholic Ladies of Columbia held a regular
meeting and social hour Tuesday in the church basement. The
door prize was won by Patricia Clement. In games played,
prizes went to Rita M. Miller, Audrey Suever, Angeline Smith,
Frances Ardner, Sophia Hugel and Evelyn Mueller.
Mrs. Carl Maas entertained the members of the Charity
Workers Club Wednesday in her home on Maple Street. The
evening was spent playing cards. In 500, high honors went
to Rose Nolte and the traveling prizes were awarded to Mrs.
Steve Eickholt and Mrs. Wilbur Mueller. Nolte will be hostess
to the club in two weeks.
The Delphos Country Club Ladies Invitational Golf
Tournament will be held June 23 beginning with a 7:40 a.m.
breakfast. All country club members who wish to play in the
tournament should register as soon as possible with Mrs.
Harold Williams, Mrs. Jack Werner, Mrs. C. W. Obermeyer or
Mrs. Walter Wolery.
75 Years Ago 1939
The members of the Delphos Volunteer Fire Department
will leave Wednesday morning for Norwalk to attend the
annual convention of the Northwestern Ohio Volunteer Fire
Association. In the absence of the regular volunteer firemen,
honorary members and local citizens are urged to cooperate in
case there is a fire call. Two regular firemen, Frank Grothouse
and John Goergens, will be on duty to drive the truck and to
direct activities.
At a meeting of Delphos Aerie of Eagles held Monday
night, plans were made for future activities of the organiza-
tion. The local delegates will leave Thursday morning to
attend the state Eagles convention to be held at Akron. Frank
Bowers, Al Huysman and Frank Holden are the delegates.
Mr. and Mrs. Harley Rupert, Spencerville Road, received
the members of the Young Peoples Class of the Presbyterian
Sunday School and a group of guests into their home Monday
evening. Guests were Mr. and Mrs. Russell Hesse and son,
Maxine Millisor of Mendon and Mr. and Mrs. Ivan Rupert.
Associated Press
Today is Friday, June 20, the 171st day of 2014. There are
194 days left in the year.
Todays Highlight in History:
On June 20, 1944, during World War II, Japanese naval
forces retreated in the Battle of the Philippine Sea after suffer-
ing heavy losses to the victorious American fleet.
On this date:
In 1782, Congress approved the Great Seal of the United
States, featuring the emblem of the bald eagle.
In 1837, Queen Victoria acceded to the British throne fol-
lowing the death of her uncle, King William IV.
In 1863, West Virginia became the 35th state.
In 1893, a jury in New Bedford, Massachusetts, found
Lizzie Borden not guilty of the ax murders of her father and
stepmother.
In 1921, U.S. Rep. Alice Mary Robertson, R-Okla., became
the first woman to preside over a session of the House of
Representatives.
In 1943, race-related rioting erupted in Detroit; federal
troops were sent in two days later to quell the violence that
resulted in more than 30 deaths.
In 1947, Benjamin Bugsy Siegel was shot dead at the
Beverly Hills, California, mansion of his girlfriend, Virginia
Hill, apparently at the order of mob associates.
In 1967, boxer Muhammad Ali was convicted in Houston
of violating Selective Service laws by refusing to be drafted.
(Alis conviction was ultimately overturned by the Supreme
Court.)
In 1974, the film noir Chinatown, starring Jack Nicholson
and Faye Dunaway, was released by Paramount Pictures.
In 1979, ABC News correspondent Bill Stewart was shot
to death in Managua, Nicaragua, by a member of President
Anastasio Somozas national guard.
In 1982, President Ronald Reagan proclaimed National
Bald Eagle Day.
In 1994, O.J. Simpson pleaded not guilty in Los Angeles
to the killings of his ex-wife, Nicole, and her friend, Ronald
Goldman. Former airman Dean Allen Mellberg went on a
shooting rampage at Fairchild Air Force Base near Spokane,
Washington, killing four people and wounding 22 others
before being killed by a military police sharpshooter.
Ten years ago: The Arab satellite TV network Al-Jazeera
aired a videotape from al-Qaida-linked militants showing a
South Korean hostage begging for his life and pleading with
his government to withdraw troops from Iraq. (The hostage,
Kim Sun-il, was beheaded two days later.) Retief Goosen cap-
tured his second U.S. Open in four years at Shinnecock Hills.
Five years ago: Iranian music student Neda Agha Soltan,
27, was gunned down during election protests in Tehran; her
dying moments were caught on video and circulated widely on
the Internet, making her name a rallying cry for the opposition
and sparking international outrage.
One year ago: In a telephone interview with The Associated
Press, the Taliban proposed a deal in which they would free
U.S. Army Sgt. Bowe Bergdahl, held since 2009, in exchange
for five of their most senior operatives at Guantanamo Bay.
(Bergdahl was handed over on May 31, 2014.) The Food
and Drug Administration approved unrestricted sales of the
morning-after pill, lifting all age limits on the emergency
contraceptive. The Miami Heat repeated as champions with
a 95-88 victory over the San Antonio Spurs in Game 7 of the
NBA Finals.
Todays Birthdays: Actor Martin Landau is 86. Actress
Bonnie Bartlett is 85. Actress Olympia Dukakis is 83. Actor
James Tolkan is 83. Actor Danny Aiello is 81. Blues musician
Lazy Lester is 81. Actor John Mahoney is 74. Movie director
Stephen Frears is 73. Singer-songwriter Brian Wilson is 72.
Actor John McCook is 70. Singer Anne Murray is 69. TV per-
sonality Bob Vila is 68. Musician Andre Watts is 68. Actress
Candy Clark is 67. Producer Tina Sinatra is 66. Rhythm-
and-blues singer Lionel Richie is 65. Actor John Goodman
is 62. Rock musician Michael Anthony is 60. Pop musician
John Taylor is 54. Rock musician Mark degli Antoni is 52.
Rock musician Murphy Karges (Sugar Ray) is 47. Actress
Nicole Kidman is 47. Country/bluegrass singer-musician
Dan Tyminski is 47. Movie director Robert Rodriguez is
46. Actor Peter Paige is 45. Actor Josh Lucas is 43. Rock
musician Jeordie White (AKA Twiggy Ramirez) is 43. Rock
singer Chino Moreno (Deftones) is 41. Country-folk singer-
songwriter Amos Lee is 37. Country singer Chuck Wicks is
35. Country musician Chris Thompson (The Eli Young Band)
is 34. Christian rock musician Chris Dudley (Underoath) is 31.
Rock singer Grace Potter (Grace Potter & the Nocturnals) is
31. Actor Mark Saul is 29. Actress Dreama Walker is 28. Actor
Chris Mintz-Plasse is 25. Actress Maria Lark is 17.
CLEVELAND (AP)
These Ohio lotteries were
drawn Thursday:
Mega Millions
Est. jackpot: $20 million
Pick 3 Evening
4-4-1
Pick 3 Midday
9-0-9
Pick 4 Evening
6-6-4-8
Pick 4 Midday
9-2-8-0
Pick 5 Evening
8-5-4-8-1
Pick 5 Midday
3-2-9-9-3
Powerball
Est. jackpot: $60 million
Rolling Cash 5
06-15-22-33-39
WEATHER FORECAST
Tri-county
Associated Press
TODAY: Showers and thunderstorms
likely. Highs in the lower 80s. Southeast
winds 5 to 10 mph shifting to the south
in the afternoon. Chance of precipitation
70 percent.
TONIGHT: Mostly cloudy with
a 40 percent chance of showers and
thunderstorms. Lows in the lower 60s.
Northeast winds 5 to 10 mph.
SATURDAY: Partly cloudy in the
morning then becoming mostly sunny.
Highs in the lower 80s. North winds 5
to 10 mph.
SATURDAY NIGHT: Partly cloudy.
Lows in the lower 60s. East winds 5 to
10 mph.
SUNDAY AND SUNDAY NIGHT:
Partly cloudy with a 20 percent chance
of showers and thunderstorms. Highs in
the lower 80s. Lows in the mid 60s.
MONDAY: Partly cloudy with a 40
percent chance of showers and thunder-
storms. Highs in the mid 80s.
MONDAY NIGHT: Partly cloudy
with a 30 percent chance of showers and
thunderstorms. Lows in the upper 60s.
TUESDAY: Partly cloudy with a 40
percent chance of showers and thunder-
storms. Highs in the lower 80s.
CRESSMAN, Gladys E., 89, of Elida, funeral services will be held at 11 a.m. today
at the Immanuel United Methodist Church, the Rev. Bruce Tumblin officiating. Burial
will be at Pike Mennonite Church. Visitation will be one hour prior to the service at the
church. Memorial contributions may be made to WTLW TV 44 or to the Immanuel United
Methodist Church in Elida. To leave condolences for the family, please visit www.hart-
erandschier.com.
ALLEN, Bruce R., 80, of Fort Worth, Texas, and formerly of Delphos, a Memorial Mass
of Christian Burial will begin at 11 a.m. today at St. John the Evangelist Catholic Church,
the Rev. Chris Bohnsack officiating. Burial will be in Walnut Grove Cemetery. To leave
condolences, visit harterandschier.com.
BUETTNER, Dorothy, 92, of Delphos, a Celebration of Life will be held on at noon
Saturday at Trinity United Methodist Church in Delphos, with visitation one hour prior
to the service. Memorial contributions may be made to Vancrest Healthcare Activities.
Arrangements are by Harter and Schier Funeral Home.
INFORMATION
SUBMITTED
VAN WERT The
YWCAs annual All Girl
Mystery Trip was filled with
adventure, surprises and fun as
a total of 96 women boarded
two buses and set out to des-
tination unknown. Newport
and Covington, Kentucky,
turned out to be the mystery
destinations. A variety of tours
and experiences filled the day
and all agreed it was a really
fun experience.
Donna Salyers Fabulous
Furs showroom featured an
amazing variety of coats, vests,
purses and many other items
made of beautiful faux fur. She
began her very successful busi-
ness in the 1980s simply by
making herself a faux fur coat.
When others saw this coat they
wanted one like it so she began
her business by making up
sewing kits for coats. This rap-
idly built up to her very large
and successful company.
She now makes merchan-
dise for Stores such as Saxs
Fifth Avenue and Neiman
Marcus. Her products are also
sold on QVC, through catalog,
internet and wholesale. She
also supplies furs for movie
stars and many famous people
who do not want to support
real fur sales. Their beauty is
comparable to real fur but the
prices are a fraction so they are
very affordable.
Friday, June 20, 2014 The Herald 3
STATE/LOCAL
www.delphosherald.com
Do You Prepare
More for Family
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You Do for College?
For a free, personalized college cost report,
call or visit today.
Having fun with your family is important. But nothing is more
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Using our education funding tool, we can estimate future
expenses at more than 3,000 schools and then recommend a
fnancial strategy based on your unique needs. True, vacations
are great. But graduation ceremonies are even better.
www.edwardjones.com
Member SIPC
Andy North
Financial Advisor
.
1122 Elida Avenue
Delphos, OH 45833
419-695-0660
Corey Norton
Financial Advisor
.
1122 Elida Avenue
Delphos, OH 45833
419-695-0660
Do You Prepare
More for Family
Vacations Than
You Do for College?
For a free, personalized college cost report,
call or visit today.
Having fun with your family is important. But nothing is more
vital than your childs future. Thats why at Edward Jones, we
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General Dentist
419.692.GRIN
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Yes...We Are
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Boys State delegates
in famous company
BY SARAH ERCHENBRECHER
FRYLING
DHI Meida Correspondent
[email protected]
BOWLING GREEN From June 8-15,
1,200 boys from all over the state of Ohio
gathered at Bowling Green State University
to participate in the 78th annual Buckeye
Boys State program. The program, spon-
sored by the American Legion Department
of Ohio, is an eight-day, hands-on simula-
tion of Ohio government at the city, county
and state levels. Buckeye Boys State is the
largest Boys State program in the coun-
try and boasts some impressive alumni,
including astronaut Neil Armstrong.
Its an important week for the soon-to-be
high school seniors who attend. A multitude
of opportunities are afforded to them, from
meeting state officials such as Governor
John Kasich, to being sworn into office
by Ohio Supreme Court Justice Sharon
Kennedy, to a college fair brimming with
representatives from over 75 colleges, uni-
versities and military academies.
However, the boys arent the only bene-
ficiaries. The Legionnaires and counselors
on staff are dedicated, not just to the suc-
cess of the program, but to the boys they
mentor during the week.
Im personally looking forward to
the interaction with the delegates, said
2014 Buckeye Boys State President Mike
Jordan. I had second thoughts about being
president because I dont get to be with a
city, but Ive got some plans to get around
and see them. Because thats the sole thing,
the number one reason why Im here.
Mark Metzger, Fort Jen-
nings, considered his
Buckeye Boys State ex-
perience a way to pre-
pare for senior American
Government.
Fanklin Elementary School
Awards Assembly
Both Bradley Walther (left), Pandora, and Logan Hes-
seling, Delphos, were Buckeye Boys State Senators.
(DHI Media/Sarah Erchenbrecher Fryling)
Nearly 100 participate in
YWCA all-girl mystery trip
People enjoy a ride on the amphibious Ride the Ducks.
(Submitted photo)
See YWCA, page 12
See DELEGATES, page 12
INFORMATION SUBMITTED
Franklin Elementary School held its
annual awards assembly on June 4 to
honor students for their achievements for
the 2013-14 school year.
Student Council Certificates were issued
for the following students: Alexa Chung,
Delaney Deuel, Emily Dienstberger, Hali
Haggard, Dalton Place and Riley Smith.
Dalton Place and Ian Wannemacher
were presented certificates for raising and
lowering the flag each school day.
Fifth-grade students who were in charge
of helping watch kindergarten students in
the morning were presented a certificate.
Those students were: Emily Dienstberger,
Sarah Metzner, Emma Mueller and Riley
Smith.
Fifth-grade students who served as
crossing guards were: Jaylin Joseph and
Kaden Overholt.
Certificates were given to Danielle
Hohlbein and Emmalee Riddell, fifth
grade students who helped in the office
during the school year.
Chloe Royster, Kaitlyn Chaffin, Austin
Maas, Samuel Maurice, Dakota Sloan and
Jaden Vincent were given certificates for
their Service to Franklin throughout the
school year.
Mentor Awards were given to Alexa
Chung, Emma Mueller, Brianna Miller,
Hali Haggard, Delaney Deuel, Riley
Smith, Sarah Metzner, Emily Dienstberger,
Emmalee Riddell, Mallory Bridges and
Tyrayna Olmeda for working with and
helping the younger students at Franklin.
Fifth-grade students who helped in
the cafeteria each day were given a cer-
tificate. They are: Ethan Dunlap, Cody
Osting, Jacob Groch, Delaney Deuel,
Brianna Miller, Alexis Merschman, Alyssa
Harshman and Jordan Moening.
The Franklin School Bee winner was
Emily Dienstberger. In second place was
Ethan Dunlap. Other spelling bee par-
ticipants were: Alexa Chung, Delaney
Deuel, Brianna Miller, Emma Mueller,
Sarah Metzner, Gregory Rose, Riley
Smith, Kaleb Jones, Madeline Weitzel,
Joseph McClure, Iszabel Anderson, Grace
Bridges, Elizabeth Chung, Makenna
Cooley, Xandra Houx, Kaylee Grant and
Connor Burris.
Quiz Bowl participants this year were:
Emily Dienstberger and Jacob Groch.
This year we had a combined team with
Landeck Elementary.
Franklin School competed in the
God, Flag and Country Speech Contest.
The winners of this activity were Delaney
Deuel, Ethan Dunlap and Riley Smith,
each received Honorable Mention. Other
participants were: Alexa Chung, Delaney
Deuel, Ethan Dunlap, Emmalee Riddell,
Riley Smith and Troy Wolfe .
The following students were award-
ed certificates for perfect attendance:
Melody Richards, Kaleb Stechschulte,
Landen Dotson, Sheldyn Fetter, Taylor
Strayer, Kyrstin Moore, Caitlin Sanchez,
Ghavin Bitters, Katelyn Knepper, Cody
Bailey, Aubriegh Foust, Paige Mericle,
Rachel Ryan, Ian Rex, Hali Haggard,
Emma Mueller, Joshua Radler, Dalton
Place and Seth Teman
The following students received a
certificate for having excellent atten-
dance. These students missed less than
two days of school during the year:
Ethan Bitters, Alex Groch, Royce Kill,
Jace Lindeman, Evan Maye, Lily Smith,
Claire Stokes, Caitlyn Wagoner, Hailey
Acheson, Ryan Bissonnette, Nakiyah
Daniel, Treyden Graham, Bailey Hile,
Karylle Lindeman, Aubrey Lybarger,
Kyle Britton, Gavin Hageman, Braxton
Hurles, Jaiden Mossing, Jackson Reid,
Dixie Richards, Aubrey Pepiot, Tanner
Hetrick, Jarrett Radler, Brock Schmitt,
Tyler Strayer, Ashlyn Dudgeon, Steven
Hesseling, Airamee Marks, Caden Sites,
Blake Wagoner, Eliza Anderson, Madison
Burris, Cameron Foust, Kendall Kill,
Elijah Mueller, Annabelle Stepleton,
Austin Coil, Nolan Kunkleman, Abigail
Sterling, Wiley Dennard, Grant Dudgeon,
Hannah Joseph, Kianna Mathison, Cole
Brooks, Daniel Myers, Serenity Sites,
Autum Springer, Kylee Dienstberger,
M.J. Finkhousen, Hailey Kimmel, Sarah
Kohler, Cierra Roeder, Tyler Springer,
Grace Bridges, Myka Donathan, Kyra
Foust, Alexis Gossett, Kaleb Jones,
Aleigha Schabbing, Ethan Smith,
Madeline Weitzel, Anthony Bodine, Kaleb
Catlett, Jessica Dudgeon, Kailey Bodine,
Ethan Dunlap, Jayden Michael, Brianna
Miller, Emily Dienstberger, Julian Grant,
Jacob Groch, Danielle Hohlbein, Danny
Schleeter III and Riley Smith,
Students who earned Citizenship or
Principals Awards on the Honor Roll
were:
Citizenship Award: Gavin Eblin, Juan
Lopez-Escamilla, Blake Morgan, Julianna
Leach, Madilynn Altman, Keaton Catlett,
Jeffrey Kowalski, Andrew McCluskey,
Dylan Royster, Brayden Rush, Caden
Sites, Brian Stechschulte, Jr., Paris Adams,
Isis Cooper, Cameron Foust, Alijah Petty,
Aaron Pohlman, Donavan Reed, Caitlin
Sanchez, Kayden Slygh, Kennadie Vizuete,
Tyler Wilkins, Chelsi Haggard, Alivia
Joseph, Malik Mays, Romelio Olmeda,
Maddisyn Waltmire, Hailey Czerwinski,
Wiley Dennard, Hannah Joseph, Vincent
Murray, Ava Armakovitch, Cody Bailey,
Libby Baker, Eli Coil, Tyler Dellinger,
Aubreigh Foust, Damon Gibson, Brooke
Hoyt, Jaden Lucas, Paige Mericle, Daniel
Myers, Abby Prine, Raiden Sams, Braxton
Sherrick, Kayla Smith, Eliza Speakman,
Autum Springer, Audrianna Taggi, Julia
Wallen, Leah Wood, Natilie Altman,
Emily Cline, Hailey Kimmel, Sarah
Kohler, Jesse Long, Payton Shade, Kylee
Smith, Tyler Springer, Mark Stemen,
Iszabel Anderson, Colin Bailey, Grace
Bridges, Audrey Coil, Alaina Cross,
Matthew Long, Joseph McClure, Ramon
Nunez, Alexis Banks, Elizabeth Chung,
Kaylee Grant, Alyssa Harshman, Sabian
Lawrence, Ulises Lopez-Escamilla, Alexis
Merschman, Cody Redmon, Garrett
Richardson, Paige Scott, Kaden Sellers,
Kaylin Wreede, Hali Haggard, Harley
Menke, Ian Wannemacher, Mallory
Bridges, Jaylin Joseph, Tyrayna Olmeda,
Cody Osting and Kimberly Schaffner.
Principals Award: Cadence Betz,
Robert Caskey, Madison Cross, Addison
Dudgeon, Braydon Fowler, Angel Garza,
Kaden James, Ava Jones, Piper Osenga,
Jarrett Radler, Kiley Rigdon, Matthew
Roberts, Jr., Brock Schmitt, Thomas
Stanton, Jr., Tyler Strayer, Olivia Taggi,
Ayden Weiss, Karder Agner, Landon
Belanger, Ariana Davis, Olivia Donathan,
Ashlyn Dudgeon, Aubrey Dudgeon, Logan
Gossett, Nathaniel Miller, Brayden Wagner,
Jaden Wallen, Mason Waltmire, Greg Cline,
Saige Frobase, Samuel Hasting, Megan
Hoersten, Morgan Kimmel, Reagan Kohli,
Airamee Marks, Audrey Sloan, Taylor
Strayer, Alexis Trentman, Blake Wagoner,
Eliza Anderson, Madison Burris, Lucy
Castiglia, Gavin Joseph, Elijah Mueller,
Annabelle Stepleton, Cheyenne Weber,
Alivia Arroyo, David Betz, Jr., Samantha
Brotherwood, Seth Catlett, Austin Coil,
Kaden Cross, Paige Cross, Katelyn
Knepper, Nolan Kunkleman, Nautica
Rader, Abigail Sterling, Matthew Weitzel,
Ashton Briem, Lucas Clay, Emma Cooley,
Alise Frick, James Hasting, Xachaary
Houx, Jislynn Thomas, Ariel Wallace, Kyle
Johnson, Rylynn Marquiss, Sonya Roeder,
Serenity Sites, Julian Calvelage, Kylee
Dienstberger, Lilly Smith, Alexis Gossett,
Kaleb Jones, Ian Rex, Ethan Smith, Kaden
Smith, Madeline Weitzel, Connor Burris,
Makenna Cooley, Jessica Dudgeon, Xandra
Houx, Alexa Chung, Delaney Deuel, Ethan
Dunlap, Brianna Miller, Madison Bremer,
Julian Grant, Sarah Metzner, Dalton Place,
Gregory Rose, Seth Teman and Troy Wolfe.
See FRANKLIN, page 12
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NEW TESTAMENT FELLOWSHIP
8277 German Rd, Delphos
Rev. Linda Wannemacher-Pastor
Jaye Wannemacher
-Worship Leader
For information contact:
419-695-3566
Thursday - 7:00 p.m. Bible Study
with worship at 8277 German Rd,
Delphos
Sunday - 7:00 p.m. For Such
A Time As This. Tri-County
Community Intercessory Prayer
Group. Everyone welcome.
Biblical counseling also avail-
able.
DELPHOS BAPTIST CHURCH
Pastor Jerry Martin
302 N Main, Delphos
Contact: 419-692-0061 or
419-302-6423
Sunday - 10:00 a.m. Sunday
School (All Ages) , 11:00 a.m.
Sunday Service, 6:00 p.m Sunday
Evening Service
Wednesday - 7:00 p.m. Bible
Study, Youth Study
Nursery available for all services.
FIRST UNITED PRESBYTERIAN
310 W. Second St. - 419-692-5737
Pastor Harry Tolhurst
Sunday: 11:00 Worship Service -
Everyone Welcome
Communion first Sunday of
every month.
Communion at Van Crest Health
Care Center - First Sunday of each
month at 2:30 p.m., Nursing Home
and assisted living.
MARION BAPTIST CHURCH
2998 Defiance Trail, Delphos
419-339-6319
Services: Sunday - 11:00 a.m.
and 6:00 p.m.; Wednesday - 7:00
p.m.
FIRST ASSEMBLY OF GOD
Where Jesus is Healing Hurting
Hearts!
808 Metbliss Ave., Delphos
One block so. of Stadium Park.
419-692-6741
Lead Pastor - Dan Eaton
Sunday - 10:30 a.m. - Worship
Service with Nursery & Kids
Church; 6:00 pm. Youth Ministry at
The ROC & Jr. Bible Quiz at Church
Monday - 7:00 p.m. Teen Bible
Quiz at Church
Wednesday - 7:00 p.m.
Discipleship Class in Upper Room
For more info see our website:
www.delphosfirstassemblyofgod.
com.
DELPHOS WESLEYAN CHURCH
11720 Delphos Southworth Rd.
Delphos - Phone 419-695-1723
Pastor Rodney Shade
937-397-4459
Asst. Pastor Pamela King
419-204-5469
Sunday - 10:30 a.m. Worship;
9:15 a.m. Sunday School for all
ages.
Wednesday - 7 p.m. Service
and prayer meeting.
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. 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
service.
SPENCERVILLE CHURCH
OF THE NAZARENE
317 West North St.
419-296-2561
Pastor Tom Shobe
9:30 a.m. Sunday School;
10:30 a.m. Morning Worship; 7:00
p.m. Wednesday Service
TRINITY UNITED METHODIST
Corner of 4th & Main,
Spencerville
Phone 419-647-5321
Rev. Jan Johnson, Pastor
Christmas Eve services: 6:3 p.m.
Message - Christmas
Uncensred
Sunday - 9:30 a.m. Sunday
School; 10:30 a.m. Worship ser-
vice.
UNITED CHURCH OF CHRIST
102 Wisher Drive, Spencerville
Rev. Michael Cassady,
Pastor
Sunday 9:30 a.m. Cafe; 10:00
a.m. Worship Service.
AGAPE FELLOWSHIP
MINISTRIES
9250 Armstrong Road,
Spencerville
Pastors Phil & Deb Lee
Sunday - 10:00 a.m. Worship
service.
Wed. - 7:00 p.m. Bible Study
HARTFORD
CHRISTIAN CHURCH
(Independent Fundamental)
Rt. 81 and Defiance Trial
Rt. 2, Box 11550
Spencerville 45887
Rev. Robert King, Pastor
Sunday - 9:30 a.m. Sunday
school; 10:30 a.m. Worship
Service; 7:00 p.m. Evening wor-
ship and Teens Alive (grades 7-12).
Wednesday - 7:00 p.m. Bible
service.
Tuesday & Thursday 7- 9
p.m. Have you ever wanted to
preach the Word of God? This
is your time to do it. Come share
your love of Christ with us.
IMMANUEL UNITED
METHODIST CHURCH
699 Sunnydale, Elida, Ohio
Pastor Bruce Tumblin
Sunday - 8:30 a.m. traditional;
10:45 a.m. contemporary
PIKE MENNONITE CHURCH
3995 McBride Rd., Elida
Phone 419-339-3961
CORNERSTONE BAPTIST
CHURCH
2701 Dutch Hollow Rd. Elida
Phone: 339-3339
Rev. Frank Hartman
Sunday - 10 a.m. Sunday
School (all ages); 11 a.m. Morning
Service; 6 p.m. Evening Service.
Wednesday - 7 p.m. Prayer
Meeting.
Office Hours: Monday-Friday,
8-noon, 1-4- p.m.
GOMER CONGREGATIONAL
CHURCH
7350 Gomer Road,
Gomer, Ohio
419-642-2681
[email protected]
Sunday 10:00 a.m. Worship
NEW HOPE
CHRISTIAN CENTER
2240 Baty Road, Elida
Ph. 339-5673
Rev. James F. Menke, Pastor
Sunday 10 a.m. Worship.
Wednesday 7 p.m. Evening ser-
vice.
ZION UNITED
METHODIST CHURCH
Corner of Zion Church & Conant
Rd., Elida
Pastors: Mark and D.J.
Fuerstenau
Sunday - Service - 9:00 a.m.
LIGHTHOUSE
CHURCH OF GOD
Elida - Ph. 222-8054
Rev. Larry Ayers, Pastor
Service schedule: Sunday
10 a.m. School; 11 a.m. Morning
Worship; 6 p.m. Sunday evening.
FAITH BAPTIST CHURCH
4750 East Road, Elida
Pastor - Brian McManus
Sunday 9:30 a.m. Sunday
School; 10:30 a.m. Worship, nurs-
ery available.
Wednesday 6:30 p.m.
Youth Prayer, Bible Study; 7:00
p.m. Adult Prayer and Bible
Study; 8:00 p.m. - Choir.
BREAKTHROUGH
101 N. Adams St., Middle Point
Pastor Scott & Karen Fleming
Sunday Church Service - 10
a.m, 6 p.m.
Wednesday - 7:00 p.m.
CALVARY EVANGELICAL
CHURCH
10686 Van Wert-Decatur Rd.
Van Wert, Ohio
419-238-9426
Rev. Clark Williman. Pastor
Sunday- 8:45 a.m. Friends and
Family; 9:00 a.m. Sunday School
LIVE; 10:00 a.m.
SALEM UNITED
PRESBYTERIAN CHURCH
15240 Main St. Venedocia
Rev. Wendy S. Pratt, Pastor
Church Phone: 419-667-4142
Sunday - 8:30 a.m. - Adult
Bell Choir; 8:45 a.m. Jr. Choir;
9:30 a.m. - Worship; 10:45 a.m. -
Sunday school; 6:30 p.m. - Capital
Funds Committee.
Monday - 6 p.m. Senior Choir.
ST. MARYS CATHOLIC CHURCH
601 Jennings Rd., Van Wert
Sunday 8:30 a.m., 10:30 a.m.;
Monday 8:30 a.m.; Tuesday 7
p.m.; Wednesday 8:30 a.m.;
Thursday 8:30 a.m. - Communion
Service; Friday 8:30 a.m.;
Saturday 4 p.m.
VAN WERT VICTORY
CHURCH OF GOD
10698 US 127S., Van Wert
(Next to Tracys Auction Service)
Pastor: E. Long
Sunday worship & childrens
ministry - 10:00 a.m.
Wednesday Service: 7:00 p.m.
www.vwvcoh.com
facebook: vwvcoh
TRINITY LUTHERAN
303 S. Adams, Middle Point
Rev. Tom Cover
Sunday 9:30 a.m. Sunday
School; 10:30 a.m. Worship ser-
vice.
ST. PAULS UNITED METHODIST
335 S. Main St. Delphos
Pastor - Rev. David Howell
Sunday - 9:00 a.m.
Worship Service
ST. PETER LUTHERAN
CHURCH
422 North Pierce St., Delphos
Phone 419-695-2616
Rev. Angela Khabeb
Sunday - 9 AM Worship Service.
Monday - 8 AM Kids Breakfast
M-F/ 8-9 AM
Tuesday - 6 PM Mission:
SLIMpossible.
Wednesday - 7 PM Worship
Service.
Saturday - 8:00 AM Prayer
Breakfast.
Sunday - 9:00 AM Worship.
TRINITY UNITED
METHODIST CHURCH
211 E. Third St., Delphos
Rev. David Howell, Pastor
Week beginning June 22, 2014
Sunday - 8:15 a.m. Worship
Service; 9:30 a.m. Adult Bible
Study; 10:30 a.m. Worship
Service; 11:30 Radio Worship on
WDOH; 11:30 a.m. SR Hi Leave
for Lakeside; 12 noon Pot Luck
for Pastor Daves Retirement; 6:00
p.m. Outreach; 7:30 p.m. Ladies
Bible Fellowship.
Monday - 7:00 p.m. Trustees
Meeting; 7:30 p.m. Administrative
Count.
Tuesday - 8:00 a.m.-3:00 p.m.
Summer Speech Therapy/Upstairs
Thursday - 8:00 a.m.-3:00
p.m. Summer Speech Therapy/
Upstairs; 4:30 p.m.-6:30 p.m.
Suppers On Us.
Friday - 6:30 p.m. Wedding
Rehearsal.
Saturday - Se. High Youth
Return from Lakeside; 3:30 p.m.
Colin Kriegle/Emily Shellabarger
wedding.
ST. JOHNS CATHOLIC
CHURCH
331 E. Second St., Delphos
419-695-4050
Rev. Dave Reinhart, Pastor
Rev. Chris Bohnsack,
Associate Pastor
Fred Lisk, Dave Ricker and
John Sheeran, Deacon
Mary Beth Will,
Liturgical Coordinator; Tom
Odenweller, Parish Council President;
Lynn Bockey, Music Director
Celebration of the Sacraments
Eucharist Lords Day
Observance; Saturday 4:30 p.m.,
Sunday 7:30, 9:15, 11:30 a.m.;
Weekdays as announced on
Sunday bulletin.
Baptism Celebrated first
Sunday of month at 1:00 p.m. Call
rectory to schedule Pre-Baptismal
instructions.
Reconciliation Tuesday and
Friday 7:30-7:50 a.m.; Saturday
3:30-4:00 p.m. Anytime by
request.
Matrimony Arrangements
must be made through the rectory
six months in advance.
Anointing of the Sick
Communal celebration in May
and October. Administered upon
request.
ST. JOHN THE BAPTIST
CHURCH
Landeck - Phone: 419-692-0636
Rev. Dave Reinhart, Pastor
Administrative aide: Rita Suever
Masses: 8:30 a.m. Sunday.
Sacrament of Reconciliation:
Saturday.
Newcomers please register at
parish.
Marriages: Please call the
parish house six months in
advance. Baptism: Please call
the parish.
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.
HOLY FAMILY
CATHOLIC CHURCH
Rev. Robert DeSloover, Pastor
7359 St. Rt. 109 New Cleveland
Saturday Mass - 7:00 p.m.
Sunday Mass - 8:30 a.m.
IMMACULATE CONCEPTION
CATHOLIC CHURCH
Ottoville
Rev. Jerry Schetter
Mass schedule: Saturday - 4
p.m.; Sunday - 10:30 a.m.

ST. JOSEPH
CATHOLIC CHURCH
135 N. Water St., Ft. Jennings
Rev. Charles Obinwa
Phone: 419-286-2132
Mass schedule: Saturday 5
p.m.; Sunday 7:30 a.m. and 9:30
a.m.
ST. MICHAEL CHURCH
Kalida
Fr. Mark Hoying
Saturday 4:30 p.m. Mass.
Sunday 8:00 a.m. & 10:00 a.m.
Masses.
Weekdays: Masses on Mon.,
Tues., Wed. and Friday at 8:00
am; Thurs. 7:30 p.m.
GROVER HILL
ZION UNITED METHODIST
CHURCH
204 S. Harrision St.
Grover Hill, Ohio 45849
Pastor Mike Waldron
419-587-3149
Cell: 419-233-2241
[email protected]
Elida/GomEr
Van WErt County
landECk
dElphos
spEnCErVillE
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4 The Herald
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RAABE FORD
LINCOLN
11260 Elida Road
DELPHOS, OH 45833
Ph. 692-0055
Toll Free 1-800-589-7876
GRACE FAMILY CHURCH
634 N. Washington St.,
Van Wert
Pastor: Rev. Ron Prewitt
Sunday - 9:15 a.m. Morning
worship with Pulpit Supply.
KINGSLEY UNITED
METHODIST
15482 Mendon Rd., Van Wert
Phone: 419-965-2771
Pastor Chuck Glover
Sunday School - 9:30 a.m.;
Worship - 10:25 a.m.
Wednesday - Youth Prayer and
Bible Study - 6:30 p.m.
Adult Prayer meeting - 7:00
p.m.
Choir practice - 8:00 p.m.
TRINITY FRIENDS
CHURCH
605 N. Franklin St.,
Van Wert 45891
Ph: (419) 238-2788
Sr. Pastor Stephen Savage
Outreach Pastor Neil Hammons
Sunday - Worship services at
9:00 a.m., 10:30 a.m. & 6:30 p.m.
Wednesday-Ministries at 7:00
p.m.
FIRST BAPTIST
CHURCH
13887 Jennings Rd., Van Wert
Ph. 419-238-0333
Childrens Storyline:
419-238-2201
Email: [email protected]
Pastor Steven A. Robinson
Sunday 9:30 a.m. Sunday
School for all ages; 10:30 a.m.
Family Worship Hour; 6:30 p.m.
Evening Bible Hour.
Wednesday - 6:30 p.m. Word
of Life Student Ministries; 6:45
p.m. AWANA; 7:00 p.m. Prayer
and Bible Study.
MANDALE CHURCH
OF CHRIST
IN CHRISTIAN UNION
Rev. Justin Sterrett, Pastor
Sunday 9:30 a.m. Sunday
School all ages. 10:30 a.m.
Worship Services; 7:00 p.m
Worship.
Wednesday - 7 p.m. Prayer
meeting.
PENTECOSTAL WAY
CHURCH
Pastors: Bill Watson
Rev. Ronald Defore
1213 Leeson Ave.,
Van Wert 45891
Phone (419) 238-5813
Head Usher: Ted Kelly
10:00 a.m. - Sunday School
11:10 a.m. - Worship 10:00 a.m.
until 11:30 a.m. - Wednesday
Morning Bible Class 6:00 p.m.
until 7:00 p.m. - Wednesday
Evening Prayer Meeting
7:00 p.m. - Wed. Night Bible
Study.
Thursday - Choir Rehearsal
Anchored in Jesus Prayer
Line - (419) 238-4427 or (419)
232-4379.
Emergency - (419) 993-5855
CHURCH OF GOD
18906 Rd. 18R, Rimer
419-642-5264
Rev. Mark Walls
Sunday - 9:30 a.m. Sunday
School; 10:30 a.m. Worship
Service.
ST. BARBARA CHURCH
160 Main St., Cloverdale 45827
419-488-2391
Rev. Jerry Schetter
Mass schedule: Saturday 5:30
p.m., Sunday 8:00 a.m.
BALYEATS
Cofee
Shop
133 E. Main St.
Van Wert
Ph. 419-238-1580
Hours: Closed Mondays
Tuesday-Saturday
6:00 a.m.-10:00 p.m.
putnam County
pauldinG County
10098 Lincoln Hwy.
Van Wert, OH
www.AlexanderBebout.com
419-238-9567
Alexander &
Bebout Inc.
Friday, June 20, 2014
TERRY MATTINGLY
On
Religion
Worship this week at the
church of your choice.
While he knows that millions of teeto-
talling Christians disagree, Father William
Miller believes he can make a theological case
for the moderate consumption of beer through
a simple use of evangelistic math.
Beer is the universal beverage. If you
want to sit down and have a friendly, personal
conversation with about 90 percent of the peo-
ple in this world, then that is probably going
to take place over a beer -- that is, if you want
them to open up and level with you, said
Miller, who is -- logically enough -- the author
of a chatty book called The Beer Drinkers
Guide to God.
Think about it. If youre serious about
talking to ordinary people about God, are you
telling me that you dont want a chance to sit
down and connect with about 90 percent of
the world?
Miller is aware that its easier for an
Episcopal priest to make this case than it
would be for clergy in many, but not all,
doctrinally conservative Protestant flocks. In
an admirable demonstration of restraint, he
resisted the temptation to open his book with
the old proverb that wherever two or three
Episcopalians are gathered together, you will
always find a fifth. Instead, he went with
Catholic wisdom from St. Bridget of Kildare:
I should like a great lake of the finest ale for
the King of Kings.
Then again, the great Protestant
Reformer John Calvin took part of his sal-
ary in barrels of wine, and the feisty German
theologian Miller Luther was, truth be told,
a German Lutheran who wrote classic hymn
texts -- such as A Mighty Fortress Is Our
God -- to fit the melodies of popular drink-
ing songs.
Since Miller grew up steeped in the tradi-
tions of the Church of Christ in Texas, he is
very familiar with conservative arguments
against the use of alcohol and he is quick to
quote biblical injunctions against drunken-
ness. This is handy since, in addition to lead-
ing St. Michael and All Angels Episcopal
Church in Kauai, Hawaii, he is part owner of
a bar called Padres in Marfa, a West Texas
community so edgy and artsy that, despite its
tiny size, has been granted its own National
Public Radio station.
The bottom line for Miller is that alcohol
is part Gods creation and can be used in ways
that are sacramental and glorious, as well as
sinful and depraved. He is convinced that
Jesus would, as his first miracle, have turned
water into beer if that particular wedding
party had been held in Texas.
God has entrusted us with many very
good gifts that can be abused and that, if we
make the wrong choices, can even be turned
into addictions, said Miller, who has long
worked with Alcoholics Anonymous to help
parishioners and others wrestle with alcohol
abuse. When doing premarital counseling,
the priest is also open about the fact that he
is divorced.
Food, money, wine, sex, sports and even
religion are all good things -- God made them
all -- but they can easily be twisted and turned
into obsessions that wreck peoples lives, he
said.
When we are facing these kinds of issues
we have to be honest and deal with all of that.
We have to be tough and tell the whole and
holy truth.
While he is quick to joke about the theo-
logical significance of beer, Miller is con-
vinced that a serious issue is looming in the
background.
Far too often, he said, religious believers
are less than honest with themselves as they
consistently try to divide their daily lives
into things that are real and things that are
religious. He noted this wisdom from the late
Johnny Cash: I am not a Christian artist. I am
an artist who is a Christian.
We have driven unnecessary wedges
between spirituality and service, politics and
piety, worship and work, argues Miller,
early in his book. We have drawn lines
in the sand between the sacred and the
secular, the profound and the profane. We
have opted for either the baptismal font or the
watering hole, for approaching the altar
rail or bellying up to the bar. We assume we
have to distill out the goofy to reveal what is
godly.
God makes no distinctions. God made it
all, blesses it all and uses it all to further Gods
living purposes in this world.
(Terry Mattingly is the director of the
Washington Journalism Center at the Council
for Christian Colleges and Universities and
leads the GetReligion.org project to study
religion and the news.)
COPYRIGHT 2014 Universal Uclick
The case for beer evangelism
Friday,June 20, 2014 The Herald 5 www.delphosherald.com
COMMUNITY
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TODAY
7:30 a.m. Delphos
Optimist Club, A&W Drive-
In, 924 E. Fifth St.
11:30 a.m. Mealsite
at Delphos Senior Citizen
Center, 301 Suthoff St.
1-4 p.m. Interfaith
Thrift Store is open for shop-
ping.
SATURDAY
9-11:30 a.m. Delphos
Project Recycle at Delphos
Fuel and Wash.
9 a.m. to noon Interfaith
Thrift Store is open for shop-
ping.
St. Vincent dePaul Society,
located at the east edge of the
St. Johns High School park-
ing lot, is open.
10 a.m. to 2 p.m.
Delphos Postal Museum is
open.
12:15 p.m. Testing of
warning sirens by Delphos
Fire and Rescue.
1-3 p.m. Delphos Canal
Commission Museum, 241 N.
Main St., is open.
7 p.m. Bingo at St.
Johns Little Theatre.
SUNDAY
1-3 p.m. The Delphos
Canal Commission Museum,
241 N. Main St., is open.
1-4 p.m. Putnam
County Museum is open, 202
E. Main St. Kalida.
1:30 p.m. Amvets Post
698 Auxiliary meets at the
Amvets post in Middle Point.
4 p.m. Amvets Post 698
regular meeting at the Amvets
post in Middle Point.
7:30 p.m. Sons of
Amvets Post 698 meet at
Amvets Post in Middle Point.
MONDAY
9 a.m. to 7 p.m.
Ottoville Branch Library is
open.
11:30 a.m. Mealsite
at Delphos Senior Citizen
Center, 301 Suthoff St.
Paws to Consider
If I could do it, anybody can
BY DR. JOHN JONES, DVM
An ounce of prevention is worth a pound of
cure. Sometimes, even a ton.
As a veterinarian, Ive essentially preached
something similar to pet owners and farmers alike
my entire career.
Heartworm test
your dogs, vac-
cinate your cats,
spay and neu-
ter them all and
de-worm your
sheep! All of this
was done with the
intent to keep ani-
mals healthy and
prevent the spread
of disease in the
population.
As a 52-year-
old, however, there
was something I
had been putting
off for quite some
time. Something
that was widely and highly recommended by
the human medical profession the dreaded
colonoscopy.
Oh, Ive had my old man prostate examined
three times already, thank you, but there was
something about this other procedure that seemed
more, for lack of a better term, invasive. Plus, I
had heard horror stories of hemorrhaging and per-
forations. The real reason, though, Im ashamed
to admit, had more to do with squeamish modesty
and privacy concerns of having my you know
what out there for all the world to see.
But this spring, in a rare mature moment, I
decided that was stupid thinking and it was time
to schedule an appointment. The young lady at the
check-in desk mentioned that I looked familiar.
You probably never forget a face, was
blurted out nervously. I thought I was hilarious.
My wife apologized.
Nonetheless, the girl was right. I was there two
months prior for my wifes colonoscopy. Okay,
so I made the mature colonoscopic decision if
Bonnie went first. It was lambing season, after
all, and I couldnt afford to be out of commission
during the preparation. Besides, truth be told,
shes braver about such things. Most women
undoubtedly are. This was her first colonoscopy,
too, however, and we are the same age. What was
her excuse? Im guessing it was me.
Thankfully, she did go first, because a valuable
lesson was learned regarding the gowns which
would have been the death of me. After giving the
order Everything off but the socks, her nurse
exited the cubicle, leaving my soon to be naked
wife and I with what appeared to be a flat sheet, a
couple of ties and snaps that made no sense. With
14 years of college education between us, youd
think we could have figured it out. Nope. After
what seemed an eternity, we called for help. The
snaps, if properly aligned, were to form the arm
holes a lesson not forgotten.
When I received that same command two
months later, the first thing checked were those
darn snaps. My gown, fortunately, came pre-
snapped, and within seconds I was up to code and
safely tucked in the bed.
Not long after, the doctor entered the room
to explain what was going to happen during the
procedure. He went on to say that colon cancer
is the most preventable cancer there is and most
colon cancers begin as a small, out-pouching
of tissue called a polyp, which over time can
become malignant. If any were found, they would
be removed and biopsied.
I really didnt think hed find any, though,
because I had no problems in that department, if
you know what I mean, and fecal occult blood
screenings after my yearly man exams were all
negative. Still, my family physician had always
cautioned me that a person can have colon cancer
with no discernible blood.
In the procedure room, I asked the nurse how
many colonoscopies they did per day. About
35, she replied. It was then I felt myself begin to
relax as I realized my you know what wasnt
going to leave much of a lasting impression on
them. After the sedation was administered, I bid
the team good luck, and as far as I was con-
cerned my first colonoscopy was over.
I awoke what seemed like seconds later to the
sound of my wife and doctor talking. Guess who
had a polyp? Apparently my own colon health
assessment was not very accurate. Because I did
have the polyp, the doctor wanted to see me back
in five years. And you know what? If he had said
five days, I would have complied.
We all die and I know something will eventu-
ally get me but that insignificant little piece of
tissue will not be the thing that does.
If you need to schedule your first colonoscopy
or are overdue for a follow-up, do it now. The
preparation part isnt much fun but the procedure
itself is not a big deal. The reason for it, however,
is. It can save your life.
If you wont do this for your family or friends,
then do it for your pets. Surely, theyll miss you.
John H. Jones, DVM owns and operates
Delphos Animal Hospital with his wife, Dr.
Bonnie Jones. The Drs. Jones invite you to attend
the Delphos Relay for Life Bark for Life mini-
relay to raise funds for the American Cancer
Society being held on Saturday, June 21 from 2-5
p.m. at Leisure Park, 910 Lima Avenue, Delphos.
Dr. John Jones, DVM
At the movies ...
Van Wert Cinemas
10709 Lincoln Hwy., Van Wert
How to Train Your Dragon 2 (PG) Fri.-Sat.: 3:00/7:00; Sun.:
4:00/8:00; Mon.-Tues.: 4:00/8:00; Wed.-Thurs.: 2:00/6:00
How to Train Your Dragon 2 3D (PG) Fri.-Sat.: 1:00/5:00/9:00;
Sun.: 2:00/6:00; Mon.-Tues.: 6:00; Wed.-Thurs.: 4:00/8:00
22 Jump Street (R) Fri.-Sat.: 1:00/3:30/6:00/8:30; Sun.-Thurs.:
2:00/4:30/7:30
Fault in Our Stars (PG-13) Fri.-Sat.: 1:00/3:30/6:00/8:30; Sun.-
Thurs.: 2:00/4:45/7:30
Edge of Tomorrow 3D (PG-13) Fri.-Sat: 3:30/8:30; Sun.: 4:30;
Mon.-Tues.: 7:00; Wed.-Thurs.: 2:00/7:00
Edge of Tomorrow (PG-13) Fri.-Sat.: 1:00/6:00; Sun.:
2:00/7:00; Mon.-Thurs.: 4:30
Maleficent (PG) Fri.-Sat.: 1:00/3:00/5:00/7:00/9:00; Sun.-
Thurs.: 2:00/4:00/6:00/8:00
Van-Del Drive In
19986 Lincoln Hwy.,
Middle Point
Friday-Tuesday
Screen 1
How to Train Your
Dragon 2 (PG)
Maleficent (PG)
Screen 2
Edge of Tomorrow
(PG-13)
X-Men: Days of
Future Past (PG-13)
Screen 3
The Fault in Our Stars
(PG-13)
Blended (PG-13)
American Mall Stadium 12
2830 W. Elm St., Lima
Saturday and Sunday
Jersey Boys (R) 11:45/3:30/6:50/9:55
Think Like A Man Too (PG-13) 11:10/1:50/2:20/4:30/7:10
/7:35/10:15
How to Train Your Dragon 2 3D (PG)
11:30/2:10/4:50/7:30/10:10
How to Train Your Dragon 2 (PG) 11:00/1:40/4:20/7:05/9:40
22 Jump Street (R) 11:20/11:55/2:00/3:20/4:45/7:20/7:45/10:
05/10:30
Edge of Tomorrow 3D (PG-13) 1:55/7:40
Edge of Tomorrow (PG-13) 11:05/4:35/10:20
The Fault in Our Stars (PG-13) 11:40/4:10/7:00/9:50
A Million Ways to Die in the West (R) 11:25/4:55/10:25
Maleficent (PG) 11:15/1:45/4:25/6:55/9:30
X-Men: Days of Future Past (PG-13) 11:50/3:40/6:40/10:00
Chef (R) 11:35/3:50/6:45/9:45
Shannon Theatre, Bluffton
Through June 26
How to Train Your Dragon 2 (PG) 2D show times are at 7 p.m.
every evening with 1:30 p.m. and 4 p.m. Saturday and Sunday
matinees. 3D show times are at 9:30 p.m. every evening.
June 21
Tonia Daniels
Eli Kimmett
John Young
June 22
Mike Miller
MaKenzie Kraft
Harold Stuttler
June 23
Logan Clay
Joe Barnhart
Check us out online:
www.delphosherald.com
For all the latest in
local news and sports...
www.delphosherald.com

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AutoZone, Inc. 527.99 +1.01
Bunge Limited 76.00 +0.48
BP plc 52.67 0.00
Citigroup Inc. 47.56 -0.37
CenturyLink, Inc. 37.29 +0.36
CVS Caremark Corporation 77.45 +0.09
Dominion Resources, Inc. 71.00 +1.05
Eaton Corporation plc 76.83 +0.24
Ford Motor Co. 16.78 -0.05
First Defiance Financial Corp. 28.19 -0.37
First Financial Bancorp. 17.37 -0.06
General Dynamics Corp. 120.04 +0.40
General Motors Company 36.37 +0.07
The Goodyear Tire & Rubber Company 27.33 +0.13
Huntington Bancshares Incorporated 9.55 0.00
Health Care REIT, Inc. 63.03 +0.94
The Home Depot, Inc. 80.44 -0.27
Honda Motor Co., Ltd. 35.65 +0.65
Johnson & Johnson 103.81 +1.00
JPMorgan Chase & Co. 57.30 -0.48
Kohls Corp. 53.20 +0.17
Lowes Companies Inc. 45.90 +0.06
McDonalds Corp. 101.91 +0.56
Microsoft Corporation 41.51 -0.14
Pepsico, Inc. 90.10 +1.20
The Procter & Gamble Company 80.24 +0.45
Rite Aid Corporation 7.18 -0.26
Sprint Corporation 8.46 -0.06
Time Warner Inc. 69.35 +0.08
United Bancshares Inc. 13.30 +0.18
U.S. Bancorp 43.28 -0.05
Verizon Communications Inc. 49.47 +0.05
Wal-Mart Stores Inc. 75.87 +0.17
Dow Jones Industrial Average 16,921.46 +14.84
S&P 500 1,959.48 +2.50
NASDAQ Composite 4,359.33 -3.51
STOCKS
Quotes of local interest supplied by
EDWARD JONES INVESTMENTS
Close of business June 19, 2014
6 The Herald Friday, June 20, 2014
SPORTS
www.delphosherald.com
Associated Press
NASCAR
SPRINT CUP
TOYOTA-SAVE MART
350
Site: Sonoma, California.
Schedule: Today, practice
(Fox Sports 1, 3-5 p.m., 6:30-
8 p.m.); Saturday, qualifying
(Fox Sports 1, 1:30-3 p.m.);
Sunday, race, 3 p.m. (TNT,
2-6:30 p.m.).
Track: Sonoma Raceway
(road course, 1.99 miles).
Race distance: 218.9
miles, 110 laps.
Last year: Martin Truex
Jr. snapped a 218-race win-
less streak to give Michael
Waltrip Racing its second
straight victory at the track.
Clint Bowyer won in 2012.
Last week: Six-time series
champion Jimmie Johnson
won at Michigan International
Speedway for his third vic-
tory in the last four races.
Fast facts: Race win-
ners get first priority for
the 16-driver Chase for the
NASCAR Sprint Cup as long
as they are in the top 30 in
the standings and attempted
to qualify for every race.
Johnson leads the series
with his three victories. Dale
Earnhardt Jr., Kevin Harvick
and Joey Logano each have
two wins, and Jeff Gordon,
Brad Keselowski, Carl
Edwards, Kyle Busch, Denny
Hamlin and Kurt Busch also
have won. Gordon leads the
standings. Gordon has a
Cup-record nine road-course
wins, five at Sonoma and four
at Watkins Glen. Tony Stewart
has seven road-course victo-
ries, two at Sonoma and five
at Watkins Glen.
Next race: Quaker State
400, June 28, Kentucky
Speedway, Sparta, Kentucky.
Online: http://www.nascar.
com
___
NATIONWIDE
GARDNER DENVER
200
Site: Elkhart Lake,
Wisconsin.
Schedule: Today, practice;
Saturday, qualifying (ESPN2,
11:30 a.m.-1 p.m.), race, 2:45
p.m. (ABC, 2:30-6 p.m.)
Track: Road America
(road course, 4.048 miles).
Race distance: 202.4
miles, 50 laps.
Last year: AJ Allmendinger
won for owner Roger Penske,
holding off Justin Allgaier on
the second attempt at a green-
white-checkered finish.
Last week: Sprint Cup
driver Paul Menard won at
Michigan. Sam Hornish Jr.
was second.
Fast facts: The race is the
first of three road-course events.
In August, the series will race at
Watkins Glen and Mid-Ohio.
Allmendinger, also the win-
ner last year at Mid-Ohio, is
racing in Sprint Cup for JTG
Daugherty. Alex Tagliani is
driving Penskes No. 22 Ford.
Lehman, offense lifts
Miller City past Jennings
By JIM METCALFE
DHI Media Sports Editor
[email protected]
FORT JENNINGS Ross Lehman shut down Fort
Jennings for 5-plus innings and Miller City compiled 12 hits
in besting the host Musketeers 8-2 in ACME summer baseball
action on a warm Thursday at Fort Jennings Community Park.
Lehman went 5 1/3 innings to get the win (7 hits, 2 earned
runs, 7 strikeouts; 77 pitches, 51 strikes). Jackson Lammers
came on in relief in the sixth and finished
the deal (1 2/3 innings; 1 base-on-balls, 1
K; 26 pitches, 17 strikes).
Mark Metzger went the first 4 2/3
innings to take the loss for the hosts (9
hits, 7 runs, 5 earned, 6 BBs, 4 Ks; 93
pitches, 48 strikes). Brandon Wehri came
on to throw the final 2 1/3 innings (3 hits,
1 earned run, 3 Ks; 35 pitches, 25 strikes).
Both teams left a runner on in the first frame.
Berner hit a misjudged fly ball for a double with one down
in the visitor first.
Austin Liebrecht led off the Musketeer first with a liner
to right, took second on a passed ball and to third on a 1-out
grounder by Metzger.
Miller City got two on via a 1-out walk to Logan Dukes
(2-for-3, walk) and a 2-out freebie to Jacob Schimmoeller
(2-for-3, 2 runs, 2 runs batted in) in the second but failed to
dent the scoreboard.
Wehri singled just off the glove of first sacker Adam
Niese with one down in the Musketeer second but Connor
Stechschulte grounded into a 1-6-3 twin-killing.
The visitors got on the board with a tally in the third. Jeremy
Balbaugh led off with a double to left but was gunned down
by a Kyle Hellman-Wehri-Austin Kehres at third. However,
Hunter Berner (3-for-4) walked, advanced on a balk and scored
on a Lammers liner to right.
Brian Hoersten singled sharply to right with one out in the
home third.
Miller City made it 3-0 in the top of the fourth. A 1-out
2-baser by Schimmoeller and two wild pitches (the second
after Trey Hermiller walked and took off for second) got him
in. Hermiller stole third and scored on a 2-out sharp slicer off
Kehres glove.
The Wildcats chased Metzger in the fifth. Back-to-back
1-out knocks by Adam Niese and Dukes started it, with both
scoring on a 2-run triple to left center by Schimmoeller. Bases-
on-balls to Hermiller and Balbaugh finished Metzger. An error
on Berners fly ball scored Schimmoeller and Hermiller for a
7-0 edge.
Jennings got its only two runs in the sixth. With one down,
Hoersten (2-for-2) doubled down the right-field line and stayed
there on an infield hit to third by Aaron Sealts. Liebrecht (2-for-
3) singled to left to load the bases. Alex Sealts grounded a hit
into left to plate Hoersten and bring Lammers to the mound.
Metzger bounced out to plate A. Sealts and Sam Vetter walked
to reload the sacks. Kehres flied out to end the uprising.
Auto Racing Glance
See JENNINGS, page 8
See AUTO, page 8
Wildcats dominate Blue
Jays with 12 to 1 victory
LARRY HEIING
DHI Media Correspondent
[email protected]
DELPHOS Total domination.
Those two words describe the perfor-
mance the Jefferson Wildcats put on
Thursday night against the St. Johns
Blue Jays in ACME action.
The Wildcats pounded out 14 hits
and the Jays only managed three late
inning singles as Jefferson won easily
12 to 1.
The game was the complete oppo-
site of the first meeting of the two
Delphos schools earlier in the season
that saw Jefferson edge their cross
town rivals 6 to 4. In that game,
Jefferson had some key players miss
the game due to basketball camp.
In the rematch, the Blue Jays actu-
ally led briefly after walks to Eric Vogt
and Gage Seffernick. Brandon Slate
moved both runners up with a ground
out to second base. Jacob Youngpeter
grounded out to first to bring home
Vogt and St. Johns led 1 to 0 without
the benefit of a hit.
Jefferson came right back in the
bottom of the inning as Hunter Binkley
got aboard with a shallow hit to center
and moved around to third on wild
pitches thrown by Vogt. The first of
many St. Johns mistakes in the field
scored Binkley on an overthrow at
third. Gaige Rassman followed with
a grounder to the mound that was
overthrown at the first base bag and
the speedy senior to be ended up at
second. Gage Mercers solid shot to
left easily scored Rassman as Jefferson
took the lead 2 to 1.
The score remained close until
Binkley ignited the Wildcat offense
with a lead off hit to open the fifth
inning against Blue Jay relief pitcher
Austin Heiing.
Tim Kreeger of St. Johns stretches for the throw to get Jace Stock-
well of Jefferson Thursday evening at Stadium Park. (DHI Media/Larry
Heiing)
Pirates beat Reds on Russell walk-off walk in 12th
By NATE BARNES
Associated Press
PITTSBURGH Pirates catcher Russell Martin didnt
start Thursdays game. Rather, he ended it.
Martin drew a bases-loaded walk off Tony Cingrani with
two outs in the 12th inning and Pittsburgh beat the Cincinnati
Reds 4-3 to avoid a three-game sweep.
Cingranis first pitch buzzed in low around the ankles of
Martin, who drew boos from those left in attendance
for not letting the ball hit him to score the winning
run.
I did wonder maybe if I wouldve got hit the
game would be over, Martin said. But when its at
your feet you just react, and I just reacted.
Later, Cingranis 3-1 pitch caught what Reds
manager Bryan Price thought was a part of the strike zone
established during the games proceedings.
Instead, it was ball four.
Im not saying we would have won this game, Price said.
But it certainly didnt give us an opportunity to go out there
and compete in the 13th.
Cingrani (2-8) took the loss after he gave up a single to
Gaby Sanchez, balked him to second, intentionally walked
Josh Harrison and hit Clint Barmes with a pitch to load the
bases.
Martin entered the game in the 10th and wound up walking
twice.
Justin Wilson (2-0) retired the Reds in order in the top of
the 12th.
Devin Mesoraco hit a solo homer in the Reds ninth off
Jason Grilli, who blew his fourth save in 15 chances this
season.
Grilli gave up a home run for the second time in three days,
and has allowed four in 20 games this year. He gave up four
homers in 54 appearances last season.
Billy Hamilton led off the game with a double against Jeff
Locke, stole third and scored on a sacrifice fly by
Joey Votto to put the Reds ahead 1-0. Votto doubled
and scored on a sacrifice fly by Jay Bruce for a 2-0
lead in the fourth.
Locke settled down though and worked six
innings in which he allowed two runs on six hits
and a walk.
Gregory Polanco opened the fourth with a single for
Pittsburghs first runner against Homer Bailey and the Pirates
later scored three times in the fifth. With runners at the corners
and Polanco at the plate, Bailey went through his pitching
motion but did not release the ball and was called for a balk.
It was one of those deals where youre thinking more
about not falling than throwing the ball, Bailey said. My
back foot slipped out from me then I land on the side of my
other the foot, so it was a circus all the way around. I was just
trying not to fall backward.
Swishers grand slam in 10th gives Indians 5-3 win
CLEVELAND (AP) Nick Swisher
was having a bad day. One swing changed
it.
It began Thursday morning when he got
stuck in traffic on his way to Progressive
Field for the Indians 12:05 p.m. game
against the Los Angeles Angels, turning a
short trip into a 45-minute drive.
Things didnt get any better once the
game started as he was hitless with three
strikeouts in his first four times up.
Swishers afternoon took a dramatic
turn when his two-out grand slam off
Ernesto Frieri in the 10th inning gave
Cleveland a 5-3 win.
One at-bat can turn a whole day
around, he said.
Several players and coaches ran into
the late-morning traffic jam, which was
the talk of the clubhouse before the game.
I almost called in saying I would be
late, Swisher said. I was freaking out.
Swisher belted a 1-2 pitch into the
right-field seats to cap an improbable
comeback after Albert Pujols two-run
single put the Angels ahead in the top of
the inning.
Swisher threw his arms in the air when
the ball cleared the wall and was mobbed
by his teammates when he reached home
plate.
When I first hit it, I said, all right,
thats a double, he said. The next thing
you know, it went out. I flipped my bat. I
was going crazy.
Pujols single with two outs gave the
Angels a 3-1 lead, but the Indians respond-
ed off rookie Cam Bedrosian (0-1).
Michael Bourn drew a leadoff walk
and took third on Jason Kipnis one-
out double. Carlos Santana walked to
load the bases and Frieri replaced
Bedrosian.
David Murphy flied out before
Swisher, who heard boos from the
crowd earlier in the game, deliv-
ered.
Thats what happens being a
baseball player, he said. Youve
got to go out there, fighting, grind-
ing, scrapping and know good
things are going to happen.
Swishers blast was the ninth walk-off
grand slam in the history of Progressive
Field, which opened in 1994. It was also
the Indians sixth walk-off win this season.
Ive never hit a walk-off grand slam,
Swisher said. Im giddy. I love being in
those spots because it can only go two
ways either youre the goat or youre
the hero.
Frieri, who allowed four runs with-
out retiring a batter in the ninth inning
Saturday against Atlanta, blew his third
save chance in 14 opportunities.
I gotta make my pitches, he said. It
stinks because we played a really good
game and its too bad for it to end like
that. We deserved to win. Today I missed
a pitch again and I got hurt. It cost us the
win.
Swisher, who has struggled most of
the season and is batting .200, was on the
disabled list for two weeks with a
knee injury before being activated
last week. His 11th-inning home
run gave the Indians a win in
Boston on Sunday, but hes 3 for
24 since returning.
He hasnt gotten a lot of hits
since coming off the DL, but the
ones hes gotten have been huge,
Indians manager Terry Francona
said.
Kyle Crockett (1-0) retired the final
hitter in the 10th for his first major league
win.
Pujols slapped a 3-2 pitch from Scott
Atchison through the open right side of
the infield to put the Angels ahead. The
Indians were playing the slugger to pull
with Kipnis near the bag at second base,
but Pujols foiled that strategy.
Indy 500 rookie Sage Karam waits for next start
Associated Press
Sage Karam wanted to treat his team to
some pizzas to say thanks for their work in
his dazzling debut at the Indianapolis 500.
Karam didnt need his money once the
delivery man arrived with three large piz-
zas and recognized the teen sensation who
rebounded from a 31st-place starting spot to
finish ninth in his first IndyCar Series start
on the sports grandest stage. The pizza was
on the house.
Stuff like that is pretty cool, Karam
said.
Its waiting around for another shot in an
Indy car thats the bummer.
Karam is waiting for more races and a
chance to prove his rookie run was no one-
hit wonder, just the birth of what could be a
successful open-wheel career.
Karam at least knows when hell get
behind the wheel again for his next race.
Karam was added Thursday
to the Tudor United SportsCar
Championship driver lineup
for the June 29 Six Hours of
the Glen. He will join Scott
Pruett and Memo Rojas in the
No. 01 car driving for Chip
Ganassi Racing with Felix
Sabates. Karam also drove for Ganassi at
the Rolex 24 at Daytona and 12 Hours of
Sebring.
He has done nothing but impress all of
us whenever he gets behind the wheel of a
car, any car, Ganassi said. Whether it is in
these prototypes or an Indy car, he has been
equally impressive. It is not often when you
have someone so young driving with such
maturity and calm when he is
behind the wheel.
The recent Pennsylvania
high school graduate and
reigning Indy Lights cham-
pion has found his weekends
free for racing karts at local
tracks this season instead of
hitting the grid for his next race. His spot as
a developmental driver for Ganassi hasnt
led to a fulltime ride, and his Indy 500 spot
came as a joint entry fielded by Ganassi
Racing and Dreyer & Reinbold Kingdom
Racing.
He made a splash in May, stealing head-
lines when he attended a makeshift prom with
his girlfriend, Anna de Ferran, at Indianapolis
Motor Speedway. Karam was runner-up to
Scott Dixon in the pit crew competition and
became an instant fan favorite and media dar-
ling with his carefree persona.
But it was his ninth-place finish that
really opened some eyes. Karam, who could
have applied a $1 million Indy Light cham-
pionship stipend to a full-time ride in 2014,
just wishes his finish would lead to more
opportunities.
See REDS, page 7
See INDIANS, page 7
See RACING, page 7
See WILDCATS, page 7
Friday, June 20, 2014 The Herald 7
www.delphosherald.com
Suarez pushes England to
edge of World Cup exit
Associated Press
Before the World Cup, Uruguay was worried about
Luis Suarezs knee and Colombia was fretting over injured
Radamel Falcao. Considering the wild celebrations Thursday,
neither should have.
Less than a month after surgery, the incomparable Suarez
came back Thursday to score two vital World Cup goals and
Colombia is through to the second round despite missing its
star striker. Both South American teams won 2-1 Thursday,
Uruguay pushing England to the brink of elimination, and
Colombia beating Ivory Coast to advance from Group C after
Greece and Japan played to a scoreless draw.
The results further underscored South Americas
dominance of the World Cup in Brazil. The conti-
nents teams now have 25 points out of a possible
30.
Colombia continued to produce goals and vic-
tories even without Falcao. For Uruguay, Suarez
reinvigorated its campaign after an opening 3-1 loss
to Costa Rica. Uruguay is level with Italy and Costa
Rica in Group D, and those teams meet Friday in
Recife.
About 15 miles from the site of the Uruguay-England game
in Sao Paulo, about 2,000 people protested against the World
Cup, some smashing windows at banks and car dealerships
and spray-painting anti-capitalist slogans on buildings.
It was the latest protest to hit Brazil, which has seen hun-
dreds of demonstrations in the past year by people expressing
anger about poor public services, corruption in government,
the billions spent to host the World Cup and a litany of other
complaints.
Inside the stadium, Suarez was hoisted aloft by teammates
after the game as if he had won the World Cup.
I dreamt this. Im enjoying this moment, because of all I
suffered, Suarez said.
Earlier in the tournament, stars have been coming through
for their nations: Neymar for Brazil, Robin van Persie for the
Netherlands, Thomas Mueller for Germany and Lionel Messi
for Argentina. Suarez got started later, but he made up for
missing a game with his star performance Thursday.
After May 22 surgery on his knee left little hope for a
World Cup appearance, Suarez looked completely healthy.
He produced his toothy smile even before his header crossed
the line to open the scoring. And after Wayne Rooney finally
scored his first World Cup goal to tie the game for England,
Suarez capped his return with something almost
magical in Sao Paulo.
With Uruguay under intense pressure in the
85th minute, Suarez gathered a long clearance that
was accidentally headed on by Englands Steven
Gerrard his Liverpool teammate. His knee was
in full flow as he unleashed a drive that goalie Joe
Hart barely had time to see fly by. Suarez fell to the
ground in disbelief before he was mobbed by deliri-
ous teammates.
He doesnt miss from there, England coach
Roy Hodgson said.
Suarez produced tears of joy.
There were also tears of anguish. In a moment as memo-
rable as many of the great goals, midfielder Serey Die sobbed
uncontrollably during the Ivory Coast anthem.
His thoughts went back to his father who died a decade
ago, but I also thought about my tough life I didnt think
that one day I would be here, playing.
The match provided little joy though, as the 2-1 loss of the
Ivory Coasts chances to advance in doubt.
Associated Press
FIRST ROUND
GROUP A
W L T GF GA Pts
Brazil 1 0 1 3 1 4
Mexico 1 0 1 1 0 4
Croatia 1 1 0 5 3 3
Cameroon 0 2 0 0 5 0
Mondays Games
At Brasilia, Brazil
Brazil vs. Cameroon, 4 p.m.
At Recife, Brazil
Croatia vs. Mexico, 4 p.m.
GROUP B
W L T GF GA Pts
x-Nlands 2 0 0 8 3 6
x-Chile 2 0 0 5 1 6
Australia 0 2 0 3 6 0
Spain 0 2 0 1 7 0
x-advanced to second round
Mondays Games
At Curitiba, Brazil
Spain vs. Australia, Noon
At Sao Paulo
Netherlands vs. Chile, Noon
GROUP C
W L T GF GA Pts
x-Colombia 2 0 0 5 1 6
Ivory Coast 1 1 0 3 3 3
Japan 0 1 1 1 2 1
Greece 0 1 1 0 3 1
x-advanced to second round
Thursdays Results
At Brasilia, Brazil
Colombia 2, Ivory Coast 1
At Natal, Brazil
Greece 0, Japan 0
Tuesdays Games
At Cuiaba, Brazil
Colombia vs. Japan, 4 p.m.
At Fortaleza, Brazil
Greece vs. Ivory Coast, 4 p.m.
GROUP D
W L T GF GA Pts
Costa Rica 1 0 0 3 1 3
Italy 1 0 0 2 1 3
Uruguay 1 1 0 3 4 3
England 0 2 0 2 4 0
Thursdays Results
At Sao Paulo
Uruguay 2, England 1
Todays Game
At Recife, Brazil
Costa Rica vs. Italy, Noon
Tuesdays Games
At Natal, Brazil
Uruguay vs. Italy, Noon
At Belo Horizonte, Brazil
Costa Rica vs. England, Noon
GROUP E
W L T GF GA Pts
France 1 0 0 3 0 3
Switzerland 1 0 0 2 1 3
Ecuador 0 1 0 1 2 0
Honduras 0 1 0 0 3 0
Todays Games
At Salvador, Brazil
Switzerland vs. France, 3 p.m.
At Curitiba, Brazil
Ecuador vs. Honduras, 6 p.m.
Wednesdays Games
At Manaus, Brazil
Switzerland vs. Honduras, 4 p.m.
At Rio de Janeiro
Ecuador vs. France, 4 p.m.
GROUP F
W L T GF GA Pts
Argentina 1 0 0 2 1 3
Iran 0 0 1 0 0 1
Nigeria 0 0 1 0 0 1
Bos-Herz 0 1 0 1 2 0
Saturdays Games
At Belo Horizonte, Brazil
Argentina vs. Iran, Noon
At Cuiaba, Brazil
Bosnia-Herzegovina vs. Nigeria, 6 p.m.
Wednesdays Games
At Porto Alegre, Brazil
Argentina vs. Nigeria, Noon
At Salvador, Brazil
Bosnia-Herzegovina vs. Iran, Noon
GROUP G
W L T GF GA Pts
Germany 1 0 0 4 0 3
U.S. 1 0 0 2 1 3
Ghana 0 1 0 1 2 0
Portugal 0 1 0 0 4 0
Saturdays Game
At Fortaleza, Brazil
Germany vs. Ghana, 3 p.m.
Sundays Game
At Manaus, Brazil
Portugal vs. United States, 6 p.m.
Thursdays Games
At Recife, Brazil
Germany vs. United States, Noon
At Brasilia, Brazil
Portugal vs. Ghana, Noon
GROUP H
W L T GF GA Pts
Belgium 1 0 0 2 1 3
Russia 0 0 1 1 1 1
S. Korea 0 0 1 1 1 1
Algeria 0 1 0 1 2 0
Sundays Games
At Rio de Janeiro
Belgium vs. Russia, Noon
At Porto Alegre, Brazil
Algeria vs. South Korea, 3 p.m.
Thursdays Games
At Sao Paulo
Belgium vs. South Korea, 4 p.m.
At Curitiba, Brazil
Algeria vs. Russia, 4 p.m.
-
SECOND ROUND
Saturday, June 28
Game 49
At Belo Horizonte, Brazil
Group A winner vs. Group B second
place, Noon
Game 50
At Rio de Janeiro
Group C winner vs. Group D second
place, 4 p.m.
Sunday, June 29
Game 51
At Fortaleza, Brazil
Group B winner vs. Group A second
place, Noon
Game 52
At Recife, Brazil
Group D winner vs. Group C second
place, 4 p.m.
Monday, June 30
Game 53
At Brasilia, Brazil
Group E winner vs. Group F second
place, Noon
Game 54
At Porto Alegre, Brazil
Group G winner vs. Group H second
place, 4 p.m.
Tuesday, July 1
Game 55
At Sao Paulo
Group F winner vs. Group E second
place, Noon
Game 56
At Salvador, Brazil
Group H winner vs. Group G second
place, 5 p.m.
-
QUARTERFINALS
Friday, July 4
Game 57
At Fortaleza, Brazil
Game 49 winner vs. Game 50 winner,
4 p.m.
Game 58
At Rio de Janeiro
Game 53 winner vs. Game 54 winner,
Noon
Saturday, July 5
Game 59
At Salvador, Brazil
Game 51 winner vs. Game 52 winner,
5 p.m.
Game 60
At Brasilia, Brazil
Game 55 winner vs. Game 56 winner,
Noon
-
SEMIFINALS
Tuesday, July 8
At Belo Horizonte, Brazil
Game 57 winner vs. Game 58 winner,
4 p.m.
Wednesday, July 9
At Sao Paulo
Game 59 winner vs. Game 60 winner,
4 p.m.

THIRD PLACE
Saturday, July 12
At Brasilia, Brazil
Semifinal losers, 4 p.m.

CHAMPIONSHIP
Sunday, July 13
At Rio de Janeiro
Semifinal winners, 3 p.m.
World Cup Glance
(Continued from page 6)
Pirates manager Clint
Hurdle offered that the call
may have helped his hitters
gain some traction against
Bailey after he started with
three perfect frames.
I think that the balk call
might have leaked in a little
bit, Hurdle said. Whether
it rattled him, I dont know,
hes a pro.
Polanco, Starling Marte
and Andrew McCutchen fol-
lowed with singles that scored
two runs for a 3-2 Pittsburgh
lead.
They hit some balls off
the end of the bat, had some
balls fall in, Bailey said.
Price pulled Bailey in the
sixth and as reliever Sam
LeCure took his warmup
pitches, heavy rain began to
fall and there was a 35-min-
ute delay.
The Pirates twice put run-
ners in scoring position after
Mesoracos tying homer.
McCutchen struck out
looking at an offspeed offer-
ing from Aroldis Chapman in
the ninth with runners at first
and second. Marte struck out
swinging in the 11th in the
same situation.
NOTES: Polancos single in
the fourth extended his hitting
streak to nine games, the longest
by any Pirates player to begin a
major league career. Barmes
finished with his first four-
hit game since May 30, 2009.
RHP Charlie Morton (4-7,
3.09) opposes Cubs RHP Edwin
Jackson (4-7, 5.11) on Friday
afternoon as the Pirates open
a three-game series at Wrigley
Field. RHP Mat Latos (0-0,
0.00) is slated to make his sec-
ond start of the season when the
Reds return home to face RHP
R.A. Dickey (6-5, 4.08) and the
Toronto Blue Jays.
(Continued from page 6)
Youve got to take something away, fortunately we were
able to come back and win the game, Francona said of the
shift. Wed do it again, but it was hard to see that ball go
through the infield.
Justin Masterson and C.J. Wilson both allowed one run in
seven innings as neither pitcher was affected by Wednesday
nights rainout, which pushed their scheduled start back a day.
Mastersons wild pitch put Los Angeles ahead in the sec-
ond, but Bourn tied it with an RBI groundout in the third.
Masterson held the Angels to four hits, walked three and
hit a batter. Wilson allowed three hits, walked four and struck
out six.
Mike Trout, who extended his hitting streak to 13 games
with a 10th-inning double, also walked twice and has reached
base in 36 of his past 37 games. Hes batting .407 (35 for 86)
in his past 23 games.
Francona said left fielder Michael Brantley (concussion)
could take batting practice Friday with the plan of playing
Saturday. Brantley sustained the concussion while trying to
break up a double play Monday.
NOTES: The teams will make up Wednesdays rainout on a mutual
day off at Progressive Field, with July 28 being the most likely pos-
sibility. The Angels begin a series in Baltimore the following day
while the Indians start a homestand the next day. Angels LHP Tyler
Skaggs (strained right hamstring) expected to throw a simulated game
Friday. The Angels return home for six games, beginning Friday
against Texas. RHP Garrett Richards (6-2) will pitch the opener.
The Indians host Detroit on Friday in the opener of a three-game
series. RHP Corey Kluber (6-4) is the scheduled starter.
Indians
Reds
(Continued from page 6)
It kind of hurts a little bit just
because we did everything we were
asked to do last year, Karam said.
We won the championship, we got
the scholarship money. It all still just
comes down to some money issues.
There are some drivers who can bring
$5 million to a team and run full season
but have never run in the States ever
before. Thats been my goal ever since
I was a little kid, and I did everything
I had to do and were still struggling.
Karam missed a chance to earn a
few more bucks when he lost out on
Indy 500 rookie of the year honors to
Kurt Busch. The NASCAR champion
attempted The Double racing 1,110
miles at Indy and the Coca-Cola 600 on
the same day and finished a robust
sixth. It was enough for the veteran to
earn the award ahead of the 19-year-old
driver.
That one hurt a little bit, Busch
said. Kurt finished ahead of me and
outqualified me. But its hard to look
at Kurt as a rookie. Look at what hes
done in his career. Hes had an out-
standing career. But I passed so many
cars in that race and had to do it twice. I
was really wanting rookie of the year.
Karam graduated from Nazareth
Area High School this month but didnt
apply to college. While his classmates
decorated the top of their caps with
logos and mascots from their colleges,
Karam colored his with the IMS logo,
the No. 22 and the SK$ symbol. When
it was time to accept his diploma, his
classmates shouted SK Money!
I just threw up the giant money
symbol to them, he said. It was a
really cool thing to graduate.
Theres little chance his friends will
be at Pocono Raceway cheering him
next month when IndyCar hits his home
track. Time is nearly out for Karam to
put together the deal needed that can
land him in the July 6 race. Karam
remained confident 2015 will truly be
his year in IndyCar.
If theres one guy and one team that
can really make it happen and get me in
a car full time, Karam said, its Chip
Ganassi.
Red Bull hope to take advantage
of home track
SPIELBERG, Austria Red Bull
doubts coming home will be an advan-
tage, as Formula One returns to Austria
this week for the first time in 11 years.
Team drivers Daniel Ricciardo
and Sebastian Vettel finally ended
Mercedes six-race winning streak by
finishing 1-3 in the Canadian Grand
Prix two weeks ago.
But just when their F1 fortunes have
taken an upturn, they dont believe their
home track, the old A1 Ring redubbed
the Red Bull Ring, will give them any-
thing more than an emotional boost in
the Austrian Grand Prix.
Even then, teams that have been eat-
ing Red Bulls exhaust for the last four
years are keen to pay them in kind on
their home track.
It adds a bit of extra motivation,
F1 leader Nico Rosberg of Mercedes
admits. It would be really special to
win on the A1 Ring.
Ricciardo and Vettel believe rival
Mercedes will bounce back from its
hiccup in Montreal, and go into the
Austrian GP as deserved favorites.
The gap is still big, Ricciardo said
on Thursday.
Weve got a bit of steam from the
last race. Were all really excited - the
home one for Red Bull - but (closing
the gap) is still going to take a bit of
time, its not going to happen over-
night.
Vettel thinks Mercedes is likely to
have sorted out the technical mishaps
from Montreal.
Everything else would surprise
me, Vettel said, adding his teams
goal was to get as close as possible to
its dominant rival. If a chance comes
up like in Canada, we want to be right
there to take it.
Only engine troubles have stymied
Mercedes this season. In Montreal,
Rosberg and Lewis Hamilton had the
same problem at about the same time,
when their rear brakes overheated.
While Hamilton went out, race leader
Rosberg managed to limit the damage
and lost just one place.
Its work in progress, Rosberg said
of his team technicians trying to solve
the problem. We are confident its not
happening again. We dont need to go
extra conservative.
Despite his second DNF of the sea-
son, Hamilton took positives out of the
Canadian GP.
Weve only gained from that expe-
rience, the 2008 world champion said.
The cars been fixed so that wont
happen again. We have a lot races
ahead of us so a couple of DNFs are
not concerning me too much now. I
have done my optimum but there is still
room for improvement.
The Austrian GP was last held in
2003, when Michael Schumacher tri-
umphed on his way to the sixth of his
seven world titles.
Only four drivers have raced on
this circuit Jenson Button, Kimi
Raikkonen, Fernando Alonso and
Filipe Massa. It will be the first time
for Ricciardo and Vettel.
Although the track has been modi-
fied only slightly, the 11-year-old race
data wont be much help as the series
has drastically changed with the intro-
duction of the hybrid cars.
To be honest, I dont remember
anything I have no memories,
Alonso said. (It) is a very short circuit,
so there are only five or six corners
around here where you can make the
time, so I expect all the cars to be very
close. One or two tenths (in time), you
can make a lot of places, so you just
need to make a perfect lap.
Teams will rely heavily on their
simulations, and need to gather as much
data as possible during practice on
Friday and Saturday morning, espe-
cially on surface characteristics. Those
could change between the first and sec-
ond practices as rain has been forecast
for Friday afternoon.
At 4.3 kilometers, the track is one of
the shortest on the calendar. However,
it has fast straights and features only
nine turns, with just the first three to be
taken in low gear, and it includes two
DRS zones after the second and the
ninth turn. In these zones, drivers are
allowed to alter the angle of their cars
rear wing flap to reduce drag while
attempting to overtake.
Until the Canadian GP, Mercedes was
racing in a league of its own. Rosberg
leads with 140 points, Hamilton has
118, and next-best was Ricciardo, on
79. Vettel was fifth with 60, but he and
Ricciardo are hoping coming home will
make a difference.
Racing
(Continued from page 6)
Jace Stockwell was hit by a pitch and Rassmans sac-
rifice bunt attempt was overthrown at first to bring home
the pair of base runners. Jacob Pulfords tapper back to the
mound was bobbled as Rassman scored the fifth run of the
game for the Wildcats.
Ryan Bullinger stroked a single and Nick Fitch knocked
in Pulford with a RBI single to right as the Cats lead 6 to 1.
Jacob Pulford held the St. Johns offense hitless for the
first four innings of the contest was relieved by Binkley to
start the fifth inning. Binkley added to the Blue Jays mis-
ery at the plate sending them down in order to hold onto
the lead.
Damion Dudgeon lead off the sixth inning with a walk
issued by the third pitcher of the night for the Jays, Jesse
Ditto. A sacrifice bunt by Binkley and a ground out by
Stockwell moved Dudgeon to third. Rassman drove home
the run with a clutch single and moved around the diamond
on wild pitches. Mercer single scored Rassman from third
as Jefferson increased the lead to 8 to 1.
Jefferson tacked on four more runs in the seventh inning
highlighted by a double hit by Easton Siefker and Jace
Stockwells second hit of the game to seal the victory 12
to 1.
The Wildcats speed on the base paths helped generate
a dozen runs as Binkley and Rassman each scored 3 runs.
Jefferson also had four players with two hits: Binkley,
Stockwell, Mercer and Fitch.
The Blue Jays didnt have an extra base hit for the fifth
straight game as Heiing, Ditto and J.R. Keirns provided the
only offense of the game with single base hits.
Jefferson (12)
ab-r-h-rbi
Hunter Binkley 2b 3-3-2-0, Jace Stockwell ss 4-1-2-2,
Gaige Rassman 1f 5-3-2-2,
Gage Mercer 3b 4-0-2-2, Jacob Pulford p 2-1-1-1, Ryan
Bullinger 1b 4-0-1-0,
Nick Fitch c 3-1-2-1, Kurt Wollenhaupt rf 3-0-1-0, Josh
Teman cf 3-0-1-0,
Colle Arroyo 2-0-0-0, Damion Dudgeon 1-2-0-0,
Brandon Herron 1-0-0-0,
Easton Siefker 1-1-1-1. Totals: 36-12-14-8
St. Johns (1)
Austin Heiing cf 3-0-1-0, Josh Warnecke 3b 3-0-0-0,
Jesse Ditto dh 1-0-1-0,
Buddy Jackson c 3-0-0-0, Eric Vogt p 3-0-0-0, Gage
Seffernick ss 2-0-0-0,
Brandon Slate 2b 1-0-0-0, Jacob Youngpeter 1f 2-0-0-1,
Ryan Hellman rf 1-0-0-0,
Tim Kreeger 1b 1-0-0-0, J.R. Keirns 2-0-1-0, Jorden
Boone 1-0-0-0,
Chad Etgen 1-0-0-0, Owen Baldauf 1-0-0-0. Totals:
22-1-3-1
Score By Innings
Jefferson 0-0-2-0-4-2-4-(12)
St.Johns 1-0-0-0-0-0-0-(1)
2B: Siefker SB: Binkley 3 Sac: Binkley
Jefferson
IP H R ER BB SO
Pulford (WP) 4.0 0 1 1 3 4
Binkley 3.0 3 0 0 0 3
St. Johns
Vogt (LP) 3.0 4 2 1 1 2
Heiing 2.0 2 4 2 0 1
Ditto 1.1 3 6 6 4 2
Seffernick 0.2 1 0 0 1 0
BB: Pulford 2,Dudgeon,Fitch,Binkley,Ditto,Vogt,Seffe
rnick
HBP: Stockwell (by Vogt), Dudgeon (by Ditto)
WP: Vogt
LOB: Jefferson 8, St. Johns 5
Wildcats
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8 The Herald Friday, June 20, 2014 www.delphosherald.com
Lewis holds 1-shot lead
over Wie in Womens Open
Associated Press
PINEHURST, N.C. Stacy Lewis
had at least one thing in common with
U.S. Open champion Martin Kaymer.
She made it around Pinehurst No. 2
without a bogey Thursday in the open-
ing round of the U.S. Womens Open
and that put her in the lead.
That was about the only worthy
comparison after one day of golfs
unique doubleheader.
Lewis managed to keep the stress
at a minimum on a steamy morning
in the North Carolina sandhills for a
3-under 67, giving her a 1-shot lead
over Michelle Wie when the opening
round was halted because of storms in
the area.
It was such an easy day, Lewis
said, referring to her game more than
the golf course. I played really, really
solid, other that I had to make a few par
putts. But other than that, I didnt put
myself in too bad of spots and made a
few birdies.
Wie made four birdies on the back
nine, and a 10-foot par save on the
par-3 17th hole, for a 68.
Comparisons were inevitable for
such an occasion the first time the
U.S. Open and the U.S. Womens Open
were held on the same course in back-
to-back weeks. Pinehurst No. 2 was
1,064 yards shorter than it was for the
first round last week.
That didnt make it any easier.
Lewis, the No. 1 player in womens
golf, and Wie were among five players
who broke par when play was suspend-
ed with 30 players still on the course.
Kaymer led 15 players under par in the
first round last week. The scoring aver-
age for the women was 75.73, about 2
1/2 shots higher than the opening round
for the men.
Former Womens Open champion So
Yeon Ryu, Katherine Kirk and 18-year-
old amateur Minjee Lee were at 69.
I think we put on a great show,
Wie said. There are a couple of red
numbers out there. There are a lot of
people hovering around even par. But
I think its great. I love that we are
playing on the same stage as the men. I
think its really interesting. It makes it
very exciting.
The show belonged to Lucy Li, the
11-year-old from the Bay Area who
became the youngest qualifier in U.S.
Womens Open history. She missed
only one fairway and was rarely out of
position, though it cost the sixth-grader
dearly when she was. Li made one tri-
ple bogey and two double bogeys, three
blemishes on her card that led to a 78.
I mean, its 8 over, Li said. Its
not bad. But I was 7 over in three holes,
so thats 1 over in 15 holes. So yeah, I
just need to get rid of the big numbers.
There were plenty of those to go
around.
At least 17 players failed to break
80, including Laura Davies. She had an
82, her worst score in a Womens Open
since Cherry Hills in 2005. Perhaps
more shocking was Lydia Ko, Cristie
Kerr and defending champion Inbee
Park, each of them at 76.
Karrie Webb and Paula Creamer
were at 70. Juli Inkster,
at 53 and playing in the
Womens Open for the 35th
time, had a 71.
I dont think the course
is on the edge at all, Webb
said. I think the USGA
had to be a little bit cau-
tious. We havent played a
tournament here with this
course setup before and it
is the second week. So I
think theyre probably try-
ing to see how the course
is playing, just to see where
theyre at with the golf
course. I think they were just sort of
seeing how we handled it.
Lewis and Wie both studied for
Pinehurst No. 2 in their own way.
Lewis played a practice round at
Pinehurst a few weeks ago. Instead
of showing up on Sunday to watch
the men in the final round, she paid
close attention over the weekend how
Kaymer played on his way to an 8-shot
victory. Much like the German, her
preferred shot is a fade.
It was cool to see the plan I had laid
out in my head. He was kind of doing
the same thing, Lewis said. So it was
nice coming into the week knowing
that y plan as going to work on this
golf course. I thought that somebody,
like the guys, can run away with this. If
youre hitting the ball well enough, you
can definitely run away with it. At the
same time, you have to know par is a
good number and keep grinding away.
Wie, who now lives in south Florida,
had the yardage books from U.S. Open
runner-up Rickie Fowler and Keegan
Bradley. Studying as hard as she did
when she was at Stanford, she took a
little from each of them and could be
headed for another week in contention
at a major. Wie was in the last group at
the Kraft Nabisco Championship.
I did a lot of homework, she said.
Just took the notes from both of the
books. It really helped just because
they played last week in similar condi-
tions. And theyre obviously great play-
ers. I definitely learned a thing or two.
Her putter helped. She rolled in long
birdie putts at Nos. 12 and 14, made the
good par save after going into a bunker
on the 17th and hit her approach to 5
feet on the final hole. It was her low-
est opening round in a U.S. Womens
Open. She had started with an 80 or
higher four of the last six years.
Steele shoots 62 to take Travelers lead
CROMWELL, Conn. Brendan Steele
changed his putter and ended up equaling the
lowest round of his career at the Travelers
Championship.
Steele shot an 8-under 62 on Thursday morn-
ing that stood up for a 1-stroke lead in the first
round at TPC River Highlands.
The 31-year-old Californian opened with an
eagle, holing a 129-yard wedge shot in the rain.
He birdied six of the next 12 holes
and closed the bogey-free round
with five straight pars.
Steele went from a long to a
short putter while trying to qualify
for the U.S. Open and though he
missed that tournament, he said
the change seems to be paying off.
He needed just 26 putts Thursday.
Steele finished two shots off
the course record set by Patrick
Cantlay in 2011 as an amateur.
Bud Cauley and Ryan Moore
shot 63 and Chad Campbell, Joe
Durant, Scott Langley, Eric Axley
and Jeff Maggert followed at 64.
Former Stanford stars Patrick
Rodgers and Cameron Wilson made
their pro debuts, with Rodgers
shooting a 66, and Wilson a 73. Rodgers won 11
college tournaments and this years Ben Hogan
and Jack Nicklaus awards as the nations top
college player. Wilson won the NCAA individual
title.
Two-time heart transplant recipient Erik
Compton, coming off a second-place tie in the
U.S. Open, had a 74.
Steele and Cauley went out in a steady rain
Thursday morning but by noon the sun had bro-
ken through.
Masters champion Bubba Watson, who shot a
67, was among 75 players to break par.
Nobody could catch Steele, who had spent
last week watching from the stands as his favorite
hockey team, the Los Angeles Kings, won the
Stanley Cup.
Cauley started on the back nine and got
his round going on the signature 15th hole. He
avoided the woods on the right and put his tee
shot within 20 feet, then made the eagle putt.
Campbell was at 7 under until he hit it into the
water on the same hole.
Moore, who has four top-10 finishes in eight
starts at this tournament, credited his 63 to a
decision not to practice after a poor round in the
pro-am Wednesday.
Trevor Immelman had the shot of the day,
making a double eagle from 246 yards on the
par-5 13th hole. He used a 3-wood and cleared a
green-side water hazard.
Immelman also had three bogeys in his round
of 68.
Defending champion Ken Duke opened with
a 65.
Louis Oosthuizen withdrew after seven holes
because of back issues.
Ilonen shoots record 64 to lead Irish Open
CORK, Ireland Mikko Ilonen of Finland
carded a course-record 7-under-par 64 while
crowd favorite Rory McIlroy finished 10 shots
behind in the first round of the Irish Open on
Thursday.
Ilonen birdied five of his closing seven holes
in superb scoring conditions to end the day with
a 2-shot lead on the Fota Island course.
Ilonen had just 26 putts on the occasion of
his 300th European Tour event. It added up to a
record on a course made over since the last Irish
Open at Fota Island in 2002.
The Finn, a 3-time winner on tour, wasnt
surprised at the fifth course record in his career.
Tied for second on 5 under were Germanys
Marcel Siem and the Swedish pair of Robert
Karlsson and Magnus Carlsson.
Lewis
MLB Glance
(Continued from page 6)
The visitors scored their
final run in the sixth. Lehman
singled sharply to right center
but was forced by A. Niese.
Dukes plated him with a dou-
ble to left center but another
relay: Austin Liebrecht to
Metzger to Kehres; nabbed
him at third.
Fort Jennings hosts
Leipsic Monday.
MILLER CITY (8)
ab-r-h-rbi
Jeremy Balbaugh cf 3-0-
1-0, T.D. Niese ph 1-0-1-0,
Hunter Berner c 4-1-3-1,
Mitchell Barlage ph 1-0-0-
0, Jackson Lammers ss/p
4-0-1-1, Ross Lehman p/ss
4-0-1-0, Adam Miese 1b 3-2-
1-0, Logan Dukes lf 3-1-2-
1, Tristan Niese rf 4-0-0-0,
Jacob Schimmoeller 3b 3-2-
2-2, Trey Hermiller 2b 2-2-0-
0. Totals 32-8-12-5.
FORT JENNINGS (2)
ab-r-h-rbi
Austin Liebrecht cf 3-0-2-
0, Alex Sealts 2b/ss 3-0-1-1,
Mark Metzger p/ss/lf 3-0-0-1,
Sam Vetter c 2-0-0-0, Austin
Kehres 3b 3-0-0-0, Brandon
Wehri ss/p 3-0-1-0, Connor
Stechschulte 1b 3-0-0-0,
Kyle Hellman lf/eh 3-0-0-0,
Brian Hoersten rf 2-1-2-0,
Alex Sealts eh/2b 2-1-1-0.
Totals 27-2-7-2.
Score by Innings:
Miller City 0 0 1 2 4 1
0 - 8
Fort Jennings 0 0 0 0 0
2 0 - 2
E: Hellman; DP: Miller
City 1; LOB: Miller
City 9, Fort Jennings 5;
2B: Balbaugh, Berner,
Dukes, Schimmoeller; 3B:
Schimmoeller; SB: Hermiller
2, Lammers, Dukes; POB:
Lambert (by Van Loo); Sac:
Van Loo.
IP H R ER BB SO
MILLER CITY
Lehman (W) 5.1 7 2 2 0 7
Lammers 1.2 0 0 0 1 1
FORT JENNINGS
Metzger (L) 4.2 9 7 5 6 4
Wehri 2.1 3 1 1 0 3
WP: Metzger 3, Wehri; PB:
Berner; Balk: Metzger; BB:
Hermiller 2, Balbaugh, A.
Niese, Dukes, Schimmoeller,
Vetter.
Jennings
(Continued from page 6)
Regan Smith leads the standings, 14 points ahead of Elliott
Sadler.
Next race: John R. Elliott Hero Campaign 300, June 27,
Kentucky Speedway, Sparta, Kentucky.
Online: http://www.nascar.com
___
CAMPING WORLD TRUCK
Next race: UNOH 225, June 26, Kentucky Speedway,
Sparta, Kentucky.
Last week: Darrell Wallace Jr. raced to his second career
victory, holding off German Quiroga at Gateway in Madison,
Illinois.
Online: http://www.nascar.com
___
FORMULA ONE
AUSTRIAN GRAND PRIX
Site: Spielberg, Austria.
Schedule: Today, practice (NBC Sports Network, 8-9:30
a.m.); Saturday, practice, qualifying (NBC Sports Network,
8-9:30 a.m.); Sunday, race, 8 a.m. (NBC Sports Network,
7:30-10:30 a.m., 2:30-5 p.m.).
Track: Red Bull Ring (road course, 2.69 miles).
Race distance: 190.1 miles, 71 laps.
Last year: No race.
Last race: Red Bulls Daniel Ricciardo won the Canadian
Grand Prix on June 8 for his first F1 victory, ending
Mercedes season-opening winning streak at six.
Fast facts: The series last raced at the track in 2002.
Mercedes Nico Rosberg leads the season standings, 22 points
ahead of teammate Lewis Hamilton. Rosberg won the season-
opening race in Australia, finished second behind Hamilton
in Malaysia, Bahrain, China and Spain, then won in Monaco.
Four-time defending series champion Sebastian Vettel is
fifth in the standings, 80 points Rosberg. Vettel won 13 races
last year for Red Bull to match Michael Schumachers record.
Next race: British Grand Prix, July 6, Silverstone Circuit,
Silverstone, England.
Online: http://www.formula1.com
___
NHRA MELLO YELLO DRAG RACING
NEW ENGLAND NATIONALS
Site: Epping, New Hampshire.
Schedule: Today, qualifying; Saturday, qualifying (ESPN2,
7-8 p.m.); Sunday, final eliminations, (ESPN2, 10-4 p.m.).
Track: New England Dragway and Motorsports Park.
Last year: Courtney Force beat father John Force in the
Funny Car final. Spencer Massey won in Top Fuel, Allen
Johnson in Pro Stock and John Hall in Pro Stock Motorcycle.
Last week: Defending Top Fuel champion Shawn Langdon
raced to his first victory of the year, beating points leader
Doug Kalitta at Bristol, Tennessee. Tommy Johnson Jr. won
in Funny Car final and Erica Enders-Stevens topped the Pro
Stock field.
Fast facts: Robert Hight, a 4-time winner in the first nine
events, leads the Funny Car standings 265 points ahead
of teammate and owner John Force. The 65-year-old Force
won the season-opening Winternationals for his record 139th
victory. Kalitta has a 120-point lead over Antron Brown
in Top Fuel. Kalitta has one victory this season; Brown has
three. Enders-Stevens, a 3-time winner this year, tops the
Pro Stock standings. Andrew Hines, a 2-time winner, leads
the Pro Stock Motorcycle points race.
Next event: Route 66 NHRA Nationals, June 26-29, Route
66 Raceway, Joliet, Illinois.
Online: http://www.nhra.com
___
VERIZON INDYCAR
Next races: Grand Prix of Houston, June 28 and 29, Streets
of Houston, Houston.
Last race: Owner-driver Ed Carpenter won at Texas Motor
Speedway on June 7, holding off Team Penskes Will Power
in a two-lap shootout.
Online: http://www.indycar.com
___
OTHER RACES
ARCA RACING SERIES: Akona 250, Saturday (CBS
Sports Network, 9-11 p.m.), Elko Speedway, Elko, Minnesota.
Online: http://www.arcaracing.com
WORLD OF OUTLAWS: Sprint Car: Today, River Cities
Speedway, Grand Forks, North Dakota; Saturday, I-94
Speedway, Fergus Falls, Minnesota. Online: http://www.
worldofoutlaws.com
U.S. AUTO RACING CLUB: Sprint Car: Today, Amsoil
Speedway, Superior, Wisconsin; Saturday, Deer Creek
Speedway, Spring Valley, Minnesota; Sunday, Angell Park
Speedway, Sun Prairie, Wisconsin. Online: http://www.
usacracing.com
Auto
Associated Press
National League
East Division
W L Pct GB
Washington 37 34 .521
Atlanta 37 35 .514
Miami 36 36 .500 1
Philadelphia 32 38 .457 4
New York 33 40 .452 5
Central Division
W L Pct GB
Milwaukee 44 30 .595
St. Louis 39 33 .542 4
Cincinnati 35 36 .493 7
Pittsburgh 35 37 .486 8
Chicago 30 40 .429 12
West Division
W L Pct GB
San Fran 43 29 .597
L Angeles 40 34 .541 4
Colorado 34 38 .472 9
San Diego 31 42 .425 12
Arizona 31 45 .408 14
___
Thursdays Games
Pittsburgh 4, Cincinnati 3, 12 innings
Milwaukee 4, Arizona 1
San Diego 4, Seattle 1
Atlanta 3, Washington 0
N.Y. Mets 1, Miami 0
Philadelphia at St. Louis, 8:15 p.m.
Todays Games
Pittsburgh (Morton 4-7) at Chicago Cubs
(E.Jackson 4-7), 4:05 p.m.
Atlanta (Minor 2-4) at Washington
(Strasburg 6-5), 7:05 p.m.
N.Y. Mets (Matsuzaka 3-0) at Miami
(H.Alvarez 3-3), 7:10 p.m.
Toronto (Dickey 6-5) at Cincinnati (Latos
0-0), 7:10 p.m.
Philadelphia (A.Burnett 4-6) at St. Louis
(J.Garcia 3-0), 8:15 p.m.
Milwaukee (Estrada 5-4) at Colorado
(Bergman 0-1), 8:40 p.m.
San Francisco (Lincecum 5-4) at Arizona
(Collmenter 4-4), 9:40 p.m.
L.A. Dodgers (Haren 7-4) at San Diego
(Kennedy 5-8), 10:10 p.m.
Saturdays Games
Milwaukee at Colorado, 4:10 p.m.
N.Y. Mets at Miami, 4:10 p.m.
Philadelphia at St. Louis, 4:10 p.m.
Toronto at Cincinnati, 4:10 p.m.
Atlanta at Washington, 7:15 p.m.
Pittsburgh at Chicago Cubs, 7:15 p.m.
L.A. Dodgers at San Diego, 10:10 p.m.
San Francisco at Arizona, 10:10 p.m.
Sundays Games
N.Y. Mets at Miami, 1:10 p.m.
Toronto at Cincinnati, 1:10 p.m.
Atlanta at Washington, 1:35 p.m.
Philadelphia at St. Louis, 2:15 p.m.
Pittsburgh at Chicago Cubs, 2:20 p.m.
L.A. Dodgers at San Diego, 4:10 p.m.
Milwaukee at Colorado, 4:10 p.m.
San Francisco at Arizona, 4:10 p.m.

American League
East Division
W L Pct GB
Toronto 41 32 .562
New York 37 33 .529 2
Baltimore 37 34 .521 3
Boston 34 38 .472 6
Tampa Bay 29 45 .392 12
Central Division
W L Pct GB
Kansas City 39 33 .542
Detroit 37 32 .536
Cleveland 37 36 .507 2
Chicago 35 37 .486 4
Minnesota 32 38 .457 6
West Division
W L Pct GB
Oakland 44 28 .611
L Angeles 38 33 .535 5
Seattle 37 36 .507 7
Texas 35 37 .486 9
Houston 32 42 .432 13
___
Thursdays Games
Cleveland 5, L.A. Angels 3, 10 innings
Detroit 2, Kansas City 1
San Diego 4, Seattle 1
Toronto at N.Y. Yankees, 7:05 p.m.
Tampa Bay 5, Houston 0
Chicago White Sox at Minnesota, 8:10
p.m.
Boston at Oakland, 10:05 p.m.
Todays Games
Baltimore (U.Jimenez 2-8) at N.Y.
Yankees (Kuroda 4-5), 7:05 p.m.
Detroit (Porcello 8-4) at Cleveland
(Kluber 6-4), 7:05 p.m.
Houston (Cosart 6-5) at Tampa Bay
(Price 5-6), 7:10 p.m.
Toronto (Dickey 6-5) at Cincinnati (Latos
0-0), 7:10 p.m.
Chicago White Sox (Noesi 2-5) at
Minnesota (Nolasco 4-5), 8:10 p.m.
Seattle (Iwakuma 5-3) at Kansas City
(Shields 8-3), 8:10 p.m.
Boston (Doubront 2-4) at Oakland (Mills
0-0), 10:05 p.m.
Texas (J.Saunders 0-2) at L.A. Angels
(Richards 6-2), 10:05 p.m.
Saturdays Games
Baltimore at N.Y. Yankees, 1:05 p.m.
Chicago White Sox at Minnesota, 2:10
p.m.
Seattle at Kansas City, 2:10 p.m.
Boston at Oakland, 4:05 p.m.
Houston at Tampa Bay, 4:10 p.m.
Toronto at Cincinnati, 4:10 p.m.
Detroit at Cleveland, 7:05 p.m.
Texas at L.A. Angels, 7:15 p.m.
Sundays Games
Detroit at Cleveland, 1:05 p.m.
Toronto at Cincinnati, 1:10 p.m.
Houston at Tampa Bay, 1:40 p.m.
Baltimore at N.Y. Yankees, 2:05 p.m.
Chicago White Sox at Minnesota, 2:10
p.m.
Seattle at Kansas City, 2:10 p.m.
Boston at Oakland, 4:05 p.m.
Texas at L.A. Angels, 8:07 p.m.
(Continued from page 7)
Africa has had a miserable showing at the World Cup, with
just 4 points out of a possible 21.
For South America, the home advantage was there for all
to see by the frenzied pro-Colombian crowd inside the Estadio
Nacional in Brasilia.
James Rodriguez and Juan Quintero produced second half
goals before a brilliant solo effort by Gervinho made it a tight
game again.
There was nothing brilliant as Japan and Greece played to
a goalless draw in the late Group C game, maintaining slim
hopes of advancing for both.
Altidore to miss World Cup game against Portugal
SAO PAULO Jozy Altidore will miss the Americans
World Cup game against Portugal on Sunday because of
his strained left hamstring and appears likely to sit out next
weeks match against Germany.
The U.S. probably needs to advance to the knockout phase
if the forward is to return to the tournament.
Altidore was hurt in the 21st minute of Mondays 2-1 win
over Ghana, and the U.S. Soccer Federation said Thursday he
will not play against the Portuguese.
Hes a big player for us, midfielder Kyle Beckerman
said. Were extremely bummed for him and for the team, but
we bring 23 players, and its just a chance for somebody to
step up. Hopefully the injurys not too bad and we can see Jozy
later in the tournament.
U.S. team spokesman Michael Kammarman did not reveal
the severity of the strain. The Americans have just three days
off between this weekends game in Manaus and their first-
round finale in Recife on June 26.
Its bad news, but I think the team will handle this, mid-
fielder Jermaine Jones said. We have to handle that.
Suarez
www.delphosherald.com Friday, June 20, 2014 The Herald - 9
Friday Evening June 20, 2014
8:00 8:30 9:00 9:30 10:00 10:30 11:00 11:30 12:00 12:30
WPTA/ABC Shark Tank What Would You Do? 20/20 Local Jimmy Kimmel Live Nightline
WHIO/CBS Undercover Boss Hawaii Five-0 Blue Bloods Local Late Show Letterman Ferguson
WLIO/NBC Dateline NBC Crossbones Local Tonight Show Meyers
WOHL/FOX 24: Live Another Day Gang Related Local
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BRAVO Office Fast & Furious Fast & Furious
CMT The Dukes of Hazzard Men in Black Cops Rel. Cops Rel. Cops Rel.
CNN Anderson Cooper 360 The Sixties Spotlight Unguarded Anthony Bourd. Anthony Bourd.
COMEDY Key Key Key Superbad Half Hour Half Hour
DISC Deadliest Catch Deadliest Catch Deadliest Catch Deadliest Catch Deadliest Catch
DISN Jessie Dog Phineas and Ferb I Didn't Liv-Mad. Jessie Austin Jessie ANT Farm
E! Live From The Red Ca Fashion Police Fashion Police Chelsea E! News The Soup
ESPN College Baseball SportsCenter SportsCenter
ESPN2 SportsCenter World Cup Tonight Olbermann ESPN FC
FAM The Smurfs Monsters, Inc. The 700 Club Prince Prince
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FX Iron Man 2 Iron Man 2
HGTV Love It or List It Love It or List It Hunters Hunt Intl Hunters Hunt Intl Love It or List It
HIST American Pickers American Pickers American Pickers American Pickers American Pickers
LIFE Celebrity Wife Swap Wife Swap Little Women: LA Little Women: LA Celebrity Wife Swap
MTV Catfish: The TV Show Catfish: The TV Show Catfish: The TV Show Catfish: The TV Show Ridic. Ridic.
NICK Fred 3 SpongeBob Full H'se Full H'se Full H'se Full H'se Friends Friends Friends
SCI WWE SmackDown! Continuum Dominion Continuum
SPIKE Coming to America Trading Places Eddie-Raw
TBS Fam. Guy Fam. Guy Fam. Guy Fam. Guy Funniest Wins Funniest Wins The Nutty Professor
TCM Against All Flags Captain Blood
TLC Say Yes Say Yes Say Yes Say Yes Gown Gown Say Yes Say Yes Gown Gown
TNT Cold Justice Cold Justice From Paris With Love Cold Justice
TOON King/Hill King/Hill Cleveland Cleveland Amer. Dad Amer. Dad Fam. Guy Fam. Guy Chicken Aqua Teen
TRAV Bizarre Foods Monumental Mysteries Mysteries-Museum Mysteries-Museum Monumental Mysteries
TV LAND Andy Griffith Show Griffith King King King King Raymond Raymond Raymond
USA Law & Order: SVU Law & Order: SVU Law & Order: SVU Playing Playing Royal Pains
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WGN Funniest Home Videos How I Met How I Met How I Met How I Met How I Met How I Met How I Met How I Met
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Friday Evening June 20, 2014
8:00 8:30 9:00 9:30 10:00 10:30 11:00 11:30 12:00 12:30
WPTA/ABC Shark Tank What Would You Do? 20/20 Local Jimmy Kimmel Live Nightline
WHIO/CBS Undercover Boss Hawaii Five-0 Blue Bloods Local Late Show Letterman Ferguson
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WOHL/FOX 24: Live Another Day Gang Related Local
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A & E Criminal Minds Criminal Minds Criminal Minds Criminal Minds Criminal Minds
AMC Shutter Island Angels & Demons
ANIM Treehouse Masters The Pool Master Treehouse Masters The Pool Master Treehouse Masters
BET Fat Albert Outkast Think ComicView Wendy Williams Show
BRAVO Office Fast & Furious Fast & Furious
CMT The Dukes of Hazzard Men in Black Cops Rel. Cops Rel. Cops Rel.
CNN Anderson Cooper 360 The Sixties Spotlight Unguarded Anthony Bourd. Anthony Bourd.
COMEDY Key Key Key Superbad Half Hour Half Hour
DISC Deadliest Catch Deadliest Catch Deadliest Catch Deadliest Catch Deadliest Catch
DISN Jessie Dog Phineas and Ferb I Didn't Liv-Mad. Jessie Austin Jessie ANT Farm
E! Live From The Red Ca Fashion Police Fashion Police Chelsea E! News The Soup
ESPN College Baseball SportsCenter SportsCenter
ESPN2 SportsCenter World Cup Tonight Olbermann ESPN FC
FAM The Smurfs Monsters, Inc. The 700 Club Prince Prince
FOOD Diners Diners Diners Diners Diners Diners Diners, Drive Diners Diners
FX Iron Man 2 Iron Man 2
HGTV Love It or List It Love It or List It Hunters Hunt Intl Hunters Hunt Intl Love It or List It
HIST American Pickers American Pickers American Pickers American Pickers American Pickers
LIFE Celebrity Wife Swap Wife Swap Little Women: LA Little Women: LA Celebrity Wife Swap
MTV Catfish: The TV Show Catfish: The TV Show Catfish: The TV Show Catfish: The TV Show Ridic. Ridic.
NICK Fred 3 SpongeBob Full H'se Full H'se Full H'se Full H'se Friends Friends Friends
SCI WWE SmackDown! Continuum Dominion Continuum
SPIKE Coming to America Trading Places Eddie-Raw
TBS Fam. Guy Fam. Guy Fam. Guy Fam. Guy Funniest Wins Funniest Wins The Nutty Professor
TCM Against All Flags Captain Blood
TLC Say Yes Say Yes Say Yes Say Yes Gown Gown Say Yes Say Yes Gown Gown
TNT Cold Justice Cold Justice From Paris With Love Cold Justice
TOON King/Hill King/Hill Cleveland Cleveland Amer. Dad Amer. Dad Fam. Guy Fam. Guy Chicken Aqua Teen
TRAV Bizarre Foods Monumental Mysteries Mysteries-Museum Mysteries-Museum Monumental Mysteries
TV LAND Andy Griffith Show Griffith King King King King Raymond Raymond Raymond
USA Law & Order: SVU Law & Order: SVU Law & Order: SVU Playing Playing Royal Pains
VH1 Rocky IV I Love the 2000s I Love the 2000s Rocky IV
WGN Funniest Home Videos How I Met How I Met How I Met How I Met How I Met How I Met How I Met How I Met
Premium Channels
HBO Game of Thrones Game of Thrones Real Time, Bill Real Time, Bill 40-Year-Old Vir
MAX Pitch Perfect The Devil's Advocate Topless P Femme
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2009 Hometown Content, listings by Zap2it
Sunday Evening June 22, 2014
8:00 8:30 9:00 9:30 10:00 10:30 11:00 11:30 12:00 12:30
WPTA/ABC Wipeout Rising Star Local
WHIO/CBS Elementary The Good Wife The Mentalist Local
WLIO/NBC Ninja Warrior America's Got Talent Local Dateline NBC
WOHL/FOX Simpsons Simpsons Fam. Guy Amer. Dad Local
Cable Channels
A & E Duck D. Duck D. Duck D. Duck D. Big Smo Big Smo Duck D. Duck D. Duck D. Duck D.
AMC Ocean's Eleven Halt and Catch Fire Halt and Catch Fire Ocean's Eleven
ANIM River Renegade Wildman Wildman Finding Bigfoot Wildman Wildman Finding Bigfoot
BET Why Did I Get Married? Phat Girlz Paid Inspir.
BRAVO Housewives/Atl. Married to Medicine Housewives/Atl. Happens Housewives/Atl. Medicine
CMT Legally Blonde 2 Party Down South Party Down South Party Down South Cops Rel. Cops Rel.
CNN The Sixties The Sixties The Sixties The Sixties The Sixties
COMEDY Kevin Hart: Grown Kevin Hart: Laugh Kevin Hart: Grown Kevin Hart: Laugh Key Key
DISC Naked and Afraid Naked and Afraid: Un Naked and Afraid Naked and Afraid Naked and Afraid
DISN Liv-Mad. I Didn't Austin Phineas and Ferb Good Luck Liv-Mad. Jessie Good Luck Good Luck
E! Kardashian Kardashian Escape Club Kardashian Escape Club
ESPN MLB Baseball SportsCenter SportCtr
ESPN2 SportsCenter World Cup Tonight ESPN FC World Cup
FAM Up Finding Nemo Chasing Life J. Osteen J. Meyer
FOOD Guy's Grocery Games Food Network Star Cutthroat Kitchen Cutthroat Kitchen Food Network Star
FX Bad Teacher Bad Teacher Horrible Bosses
HGTV Beach Beach Brother vs. Brother Hunters Hunt Intl Hunters Hunt Intl Brother vs. Brother
HIST Mountain Men Mountain Men The Hunt Pawn Pawn Mountain Men
LIFE Stolen From the Womb Drop Dead Diva Devious Maids Stolen From the Womb
MTV Catfish: The TV Show Catfish: The TV Show Catfish: The TV Show Ridic. Ridic. Ridic. Ridic.
NICK Full H'se Full H'se Full H'se Full H'se Full H'se Full H'se Friends Friends Friends
SCI Halloween II The Invasion Dominion Defiance
SPIKE Bar Rescue Rescue Rescue Frankenfo Frankenfo Frankenfo Frankenfo Rescue Rescue
TBS Hitch Hitch
TCM Godzilla, King Mighty Joe Young The Mark of Zorro
TLC Sister Wives Sister Sister Return to Amish Sister Sister Return to Amish
TNT Red The Last Ship Falling Skies The Last Ship Falling Skies
TOON King/Hill King/Hill Rick Burgers Burgers Fam. Guy Fam. Guy Robot Chicken
TRAV RV 2014 Mega RV Countdown Mega RV Countdown Extreme RVs Mega RV Countdown
TV LAND The Cosby Show Cosby Cosby King King King King Jennifer Cleveland
USA Law & Order: SVU Law & Order: SVU Law & Order: SVU Mod Fam Mod Fam Mod Fam Mod Fam
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MAX Ender's Game Runner Runner Skin-Max Topless P Good Day
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2009 Hometown Content, listings by Zap2it
Sunday Evening June 22, 2014
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WLIO/NBC Ninja Warrior America's Got Talent Local Dateline NBC
WOHL/FOX Simpsons Simpsons Fam. Guy Amer. Dad Local
Cable Channels
A & E Duck D. Duck D. Duck D. Duck D. Big Smo Big Smo Duck D. Duck D. Duck D. Duck D.
AMC Ocean's Eleven Halt and Catch Fire Halt and Catch Fire Ocean's Eleven
ANIM River Renegade Wildman Wildman Finding Bigfoot Wildman Wildman Finding Bigfoot
BET Why Did I Get Married? Phat Girlz Paid Inspir.
BRAVO Housewives/Atl. Married to Medicine Housewives/Atl. Happens Housewives/Atl. Medicine
CMT Legally Blonde 2 Party Down South Party Down South Party Down South Cops Rel. Cops Rel.
CNN The Sixties The Sixties The Sixties The Sixties The Sixties
COMEDY Kevin Hart: Grown Kevin Hart: Laugh Kevin Hart: Grown Kevin Hart: Laugh Key Key
DISC Naked and Afraid Naked and Afraid: Un Naked and Afraid Naked and Afraid Naked and Afraid
DISN Liv-Mad. I Didn't Austin Phineas and Ferb Good Luck Liv-Mad. Jessie Good Luck Good Luck
E! Kardashian Kardashian Escape Club Kardashian Escape Club
ESPN MLB Baseball SportsCenter SportCtr
ESPN2 SportsCenter World Cup Tonight ESPN FC World Cup
FAM Up Finding Nemo Chasing Life J. Osteen J. Meyer
FOOD Guy's Grocery Games Food Network Star Cutthroat Kitchen Cutthroat Kitchen Food Network Star
FX Bad Teacher Bad Teacher Horrible Bosses
HGTV Beach Beach Brother vs. Brother Hunters Hunt Intl Hunters Hunt Intl Brother vs. Brother
HIST Mountain Men Mountain Men The Hunt Pawn Pawn Mountain Men
LIFE Stolen From the Womb Drop Dead Diva Devious Maids Stolen From the Womb
MTV Catfish: The TV Show Catfish: The TV Show Catfish: The TV Show Ridic. Ridic. Ridic. Ridic.
NICK Full H'se Full H'se Full H'se Full H'se Full H'se Full H'se Friends Friends Friends
SCI Halloween II The Invasion Dominion Defiance
SPIKE Bar Rescue Rescue Rescue Frankenfo Frankenfo Frankenfo Frankenfo Rescue Rescue
TBS Hitch Hitch
TCM Godzilla, King Mighty Joe Young The Mark of Zorro
TLC Sister Wives Sister Sister Return to Amish Sister Sister Return to Amish
TNT Red The Last Ship Falling Skies The Last Ship Falling Skies
TOON King/Hill King/Hill Rick Burgers Burgers Fam. Guy Fam. Guy Robot Chicken
TRAV RV 2014 Mega RV Countdown Mega RV Countdown Extreme RVs Mega RV Countdown
TV LAND The Cosby Show Cosby Cosby King King King King Jennifer Cleveland
USA Law & Order: SVU Law & Order: SVU Law & Order: SVU Mod Fam Mod Fam Mod Fam Mod Fam
VH1 Think Like a Man Think Like a Man
WGN Funniest Home Videos Three Kings Salem Salem
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HBO The Wolverine True Blood True Blood Last Week True Blood Last Week
MAX Ender's Game Runner Runner Skin-Max Topless P Good Day
SHOW Penny Dreadful Nurse Californ. Penny Dreadful Penny Dreadful Nurse Californ.
2009 Hometown Content, listings by Zap2it
Tuesday Evening June 24, 2014
8:00 8:30 9:00 9:30 10:00 10:30 11:00 11:30 12:00 12:30
WPTA/ABC Extreme Weight Loss Celebrity Wife Swap Local Jimmy Kimmel Live Nightline
WHIO/CBS NCIS NCIS: Los Angeles Person of Interest Local Late Show Letterman Ferguson
WLIO/NBC America's Got Talent The Night Shift Local Tonight Show Meyers
WOHL/FOX Fam. Guy Brooklyn Brooklyn Mindy Local
Cable Channels
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AMC National Lampoon's Vacation Meet the Fockers Freakshow Freakshow
ANIM Wild Amazon Brazil Gone Wild Wild Amazon Brazil Gone Wild
BET Barbershop Are We There Yet? Wendy Williams Show
BRAVO Housewives/Atl. Housewives/NYC The People's Couch Happens Housewives/NYC Atlanta
CMT Legally Blonde 2 Cops Rel. Cops Rel. Cops Rel. Cops Rel.
CNN Anderson Cooper 360 CNN Special Report CNN Tonight Anderson Cooper 360 CNN Special Report
COMEDY Chappelle Chappelle Tosh.0 Tosh.0 Tosh.0 Tosh.0 Daily Colbert At Midnig Tosh.0
DISC Deadliest Catch Deadliest Catch Siberian Cut Deadliest Catch Siberian Cut
DISN Cloudy With Meatballs Liv-Mad. Phineas and Ferb ANT Farm Austin Good Luck Good Luck
E! Kardashian Botched E! News Chelsea E! News Botched
ESPN College Baseball SportsCenter SportsCenter
ESPN2 ESPN FC Baseball Tonight Olbermann Olbermann
FAM Pretty Little Liars Chasing Life Pretty Little Liars The 700 Club Chasing Life
FOOD Chopped Chopped Chopped Chopped Chopped
FX Safe House Tyrant Tyrant Tyrant
HGTV Flip or F Flip or F Flip or F Flip or F Hunters Hunt Intl Flip or F Flip or F Flip or F Flip or F
HIST Pawn Pawn Top Gear The Hunt Top Gear Pawn Pawn
LIFE Dance Moms Abby's Studio Rescue Little Women: LA Little Women: LA Dance Moms
MTV Bad Grandpa .5 Bad Grandpa .5 Jackass Jackass
NICK Full H'se Full H'se Full H'se Full H'se Full H'se Full H'se Friends Friends Friends
SCI Resident Evil Wil Whe. Wil Whe. Heroes of Cosplay Wil Whe. Wil Whe. Heroes of Cosplay
SPIKE Iron Man I Am Steve McQueen Bullitt
TBS Big Bang Big Bang Big Bang Big Bang Sullivan Sullivan Conan Office Conan
TCM Thunder in the City Another Man's Poison Sanders of the River
TLC Sextuplets Turn 10 Cake Boss:Next Cake Boss:Next
TNT Rizzoli & Isles Rizzoli & Isles Perception Rizzoli & Isles Perception
TOON King/Hill King/Hill Cleveland Cleveland Amer. Dad Amer. Dad Fam. Guy Fam. Guy Chicken Aqua Teen
TRAV Bizarre Foods Mega RV Countdown Extreme RVs Bizarre Foods Mega RV Countdown
TV LAND Andy Griffith Show Griffith King King King King Cleveland Jennifer Falls
USA Law & Order: SVU Royal Pains Covert Affairs Mod Fam Mod Fam Royal Pains
VH1 Love, Hip Hop Love, Hip Hop New Jack City Tanning
WGN Funniest Home Videos Demolition Man Salem Salem
Premium Channels
HBO The Conjuring REAL Sports Gumbel True Blood The Normal Heart
MAX Hangover III Pitch Perfect Banshee
SHOW Californ. Scary Movie V Penny Dreadful Nurse Californ. Penny Dreadful
2009 Hometown Content, listings by Zap2it
Tuesday Evening June 24, 2014
8:00 8:30 9:00 9:30 10:00 10:30 11:00 11:30 12:00 12:30
WPTA/ABC Extreme Weight Loss Celebrity Wife Swap Local Jimmy Kimmel Live Nightline
WHIO/CBS NCIS NCIS: Los Angeles Person of Interest Local Late Show Letterman Ferguson
WLIO/NBC America's Got Talent The Night Shift Local Tonight Show Meyers
WOHL/FOX Fam. Guy Brooklyn Brooklyn Mindy Local
Cable Channels
A & E Storage Storage Storage Storage Shipping Shipping Storage Storage Storage Storage
AMC National Lampoon's Vacation Meet the Fockers Freakshow Freakshow
ANIM Wild Amazon Brazil Gone Wild Wild Amazon Brazil Gone Wild
BET Barbershop Are We There Yet? Wendy Williams Show
BRAVO Housewives/Atl. Housewives/NYC The People's Couch Happens Housewives/NYC Atlanta
CMT Legally Blonde 2 Cops Rel. Cops Rel. Cops Rel. Cops Rel.
CNN Anderson Cooper 360 CNN Special Report CNN Tonight Anderson Cooper 360 CNN Special Report
COMEDY Chappelle Chappelle Tosh.0 Tosh.0 Tosh.0 Tosh.0 Daily Colbert At Midnig Tosh.0
DISC Deadliest Catch Deadliest Catch Siberian Cut Deadliest Catch Siberian Cut
DISN Cloudy With Meatballs Liv-Mad. Phineas and Ferb ANT Farm Austin Good Luck Good Luck
E! Kardashian Botched E! News Chelsea E! News Botched
ESPN College Baseball SportsCenter SportsCenter
ESPN2 ESPN FC Baseball Tonight Olbermann Olbermann
FAM Pretty Little Liars Chasing Life Pretty Little Liars The 700 Club Chasing Life
FOOD Chopped Chopped Chopped Chopped Chopped
FX Safe House Tyrant Tyrant Tyrant
HGTV Flip or F Flip or F Flip or F Flip or F Hunters Hunt Intl Flip or F Flip or F Flip or F Flip or F
HIST Pawn Pawn Top Gear The Hunt Top Gear Pawn Pawn
LIFE Dance Moms Abby's Studio Rescue Little Women: LA Little Women: LA Dance Moms
MTV Bad Grandpa .5 Bad Grandpa .5 Jackass Jackass
NICK Full H'se Full H'se Full H'se Full H'se Full H'se Full H'se Friends Friends Friends
SCI Resident Evil Wil Whe. Wil Whe. Heroes of Cosplay Wil Whe. Wil Whe. Heroes of Cosplay
SPIKE Iron Man I Am Steve McQueen Bullitt
TBS Big Bang Big Bang Big Bang Big Bang Sullivan Sullivan Conan Office Conan
TCM Thunder in the City Another Man's Poison Sanders of the River
TLC Sextuplets Turn 10 Cake Boss:Next Cake Boss:Next
TNT Rizzoli & Isles Rizzoli & Isles Perception Rizzoli & Isles Perception
TOON King/Hill King/Hill Cleveland Cleveland Amer. Dad Amer. Dad Fam. Guy Fam. Guy Chicken Aqua Teen
TRAV Bizarre Foods Mega RV Countdown Extreme RVs Bizarre Foods Mega RV Countdown
TV LAND Andy Griffith Show Griffith King King King King Cleveland Jennifer Falls
USA Law & Order: SVU Royal Pains Covert Affairs Mod Fam Mod Fam Royal Pains
VH1 Love, Hip Hop Love, Hip Hop New Jack City Tanning
WGN Funniest Home Videos Demolition Man Salem Salem
Premium Channels
HBO The Conjuring REAL Sports Gumbel True Blood The Normal Heart
MAX Hangover III Pitch Perfect Banshee
SHOW Californ. Scary Movie V Penny Dreadful Nurse Californ. Penny Dreadful
2009 Hometown Content, listings by Zap2it
Saturday Evening June 21, 2014
8:00 8:30 9:00 9:30 10:00 10:30 11:00 11:30 12:00 12:30
WPTA/ABC Bet on Your Baby The Assets Nightline Prime Local
WHIO/CBS Blue Bloods 48 Hours 48 Hours Local
WLIO/NBC Crisis Crisis The Blacklist Local Saturday Night Live
WOHL/FOX MLB Baseball Local Animation Domination Local
Cable Channels
A & E Criminal Minds Criminal Minds Criminal Minds Criminal Minds Criminal Minds
AMC Meet the Fockers Get Smart
ANIM My Cat From Hell Too Cute! America's Cutest My Cat From Hell Too Cute!
BET Act Like You Love Me Get Married? Phat
BRAVO Scary Movie 2 Scary Movie 2 I Now Pronounce You
CMT Men in Black II Dog and Beth Dog and Beth The Big Lebowski
CNN The Sixties Anthony Bourd. Anthony Bourd. The Sixties Anthony Bourd.
COMEDY HalfBaked Superbad Project X
DISC Treehouse Masters Treehouse Masters The Pool Master Treehouse Masters The Pool Master
DISN Jessie Jessie Dog Dog Lab Rats Mighty Austin ANT Farm Good Luck Austin
E! Good Luck Chuck Escape Club Escape Club Kardashian
ESPN College Baseball SportsCenter SportsCenter
ESPN2 SportsCenter World Cup Tonight ESPN FC
FAM Up Finding Nemo Holes
FOOD Chopped Cutthroat Kitchen Diners, Drive Diners, Drive Cutthroat Kitchen
FX Captain America-Avgr Captain America-Avgr
HGTV Property Brothers Property Brothers House Hunters Reno Hunters Hunt Intl Property Brothers
HIST Pawn Pawn Pawn Pawn Pawn Pawn Pawn Pawn Pawn Pawn
LIFE Stolen From the Womb The Surrogacy Trap Stolen From the Womb
MTV ATL Baby Boy Notorious
NICK Terry the Tomboy Awesome Full H'se Full H'se Friends Friends Friends
SCI Scarecrow Halloween II Halloween H2O: 20 Years Later
SPIKE GLORY 17 Cops Cops Cops Jail Jail
TBS Big Bang Big Bang Big Bang Big Bang Big Bang Big Bang Funniest Wins Bring It On
TCM I Love-Alice Georgy Girl Blow-Up
TLC Sex Sent Me to the E Sex Sent Me to the E Strange Strange Sex Sent Me to the E Strange Strange
TNT 2012 Sherlock Holmes-Game Falling
TOON King/Hill King/Hill Amer. Dad Fam. Guy Boondocks Dynamite Boondocks Attack Bleach Space Dan
TRAV Ghost Adventures Ghost Adventures The Dead Files The Dead Files Ghost Adventures
TV LAND Boss Boss Boss Boss The King of Queens King King King Raymond
USA Philadelphia Fast Five The Mechanic
VH1 I Love the 2000s I Love the 2000s I Love the 2000s Malibu's Most Wanted
WGN Funniest Home Videos Rules Rules Rules Rules Bones Bones
Premium Channels
HBO The Wolverine Game of Thrones The Wolverine
MAX Con Air South Park: Bigger Hangover III
SHOW Penny Dreadful Penny Dreadful Boxing
2009 Hometown Content, listings by Zap2it
Saturday Evening June 21, 2014
8:00 8:30 9:00 9:30 10:00 10:30 11:00 11:30 12:00 12:30
WPTA/ABC Bet on Your Baby The Assets Nightline Prime Local
WHIO/CBS Blue Bloods 48 Hours 48 Hours Local
WLIO/NBC Crisis Crisis The Blacklist Local Saturday Night Live
WOHL/FOX MLB Baseball Local Animation Domination Local
Cable Channels
A & E Criminal Minds Criminal Minds Criminal Minds Criminal Minds Criminal Minds
AMC Meet the Fockers Get Smart
ANIM My Cat From Hell Too Cute! America's Cutest My Cat From Hell Too Cute!
BET Act Like You Love Me Get Married? Phat
BRAVO Scary Movie 2 Scary Movie 2 I Now Pronounce You
CMT Men in Black II Dog and Beth Dog and Beth The Big Lebowski
CNN The Sixties Anthony Bourd. Anthony Bourd. The Sixties Anthony Bourd.
COMEDY HalfBaked Superbad Project X
DISC Treehouse Masters Treehouse Masters The Pool Master Treehouse Masters The Pool Master
DISN Jessie Jessie Dog Dog Lab Rats Mighty Austin ANT Farm Good Luck Austin
E! Good Luck Chuck Escape Club Escape Club Kardashian
ESPN College Baseball SportsCenter SportsCenter
ESPN2 SportsCenter World Cup Tonight ESPN FC
FAM Up Finding Nemo Holes
FOOD Chopped Cutthroat Kitchen Diners, Drive Diners, Drive Cutthroat Kitchen
FX Captain America-Avgr Captain America-Avgr
HGTV Property Brothers Property Brothers House Hunters Reno Hunters Hunt Intl Property Brothers
HIST Pawn Pawn Pawn Pawn Pawn Pawn Pawn Pawn Pawn Pawn
LIFE Stolen From the Womb The Surrogacy Trap Stolen From the Womb
MTV ATL Baby Boy Notorious
NICK Terry the Tomboy Awesome Full H'se Full H'se Friends Friends Friends
SCI Scarecrow Halloween II Halloween H2O: 20 Years Later
SPIKE GLORY 17 Cops Cops Cops Jail Jail
TBS Big Bang Big Bang Big Bang Big Bang Big Bang Big Bang Funniest Wins Bring It On
TCM I Love-Alice Georgy Girl Blow-Up
TLC Sex Sent Me to the E Sex Sent Me to the E Strange Strange Sex Sent Me to the E Strange Strange
TNT 2012 Sherlock Holmes-Game Falling
TOON King/Hill King/Hill Amer. Dad Fam. Guy Boondocks Dynamite Boondocks Attack Bleach Space Dan
TRAV Ghost Adventures Ghost Adventures The Dead Files The Dead Files Ghost Adventures
TV LAND Boss Boss Boss Boss The King of Queens King King King Raymond
USA Philadelphia Fast Five The Mechanic
VH1 I Love the 2000s I Love the 2000s I Love the 2000s Malibu's Most Wanted
WGN Funniest Home Videos Rules Rules Rules Rules Bones Bones
Premium Channels
HBO The Wolverine Game of Thrones The Wolverine
MAX Con Air South Park: Bigger Hangover III
SHOW Penny Dreadful Penny Dreadful Boxing
2009 Hometown Content, listings by Zap2it
Monday Evening June 23, 2014
8:00 8:30 9:00 9:30 10:00 10:30 11:00 11:30 12:00 12:30
WPTA/ABC The Bachelorette Mistresses Local Jimmy Kimmel Live Nightline
WHIO/CBS 2 Broke G Mom Mike Two Men Under the Dome Local Late Show Letterman Ferguson
WLIO/NBC Last Comic Standing Ninja Warrior Local Tonight Show Meyers
WOHL/FOX MasterChef 24: Live Another Day Local
Cable Channels
A & E Criminal Minds Criminal Minds Longmire Longmire Criminal Minds
AMC Shutter Island Legend-Bagger
ANIM Finding Bigfoot Wildman Wildman Wildman Wildman Finding Bigfoot Wildman Wildman
BET Comedy- Stars Comedy- Stars Kingdom Come Wendy Williams Show
BRAVO Housewives/OC Housewives/OC Ladies of London Happens Housewives/OC Ladies
CMT The Cable Guy Cops Rel. Cops Rel. Cops Rel. Cops Rel.
CNN Anderson Cooper 360 Anderson Cooper 360 CNN Tonight Anderson Cooper 360 Anderson Cooper 360
COMEDY Futurama Futurama South Pk South Park Daily Colbert At Midnig South Pk
DISC Street Outlaws: Full Street Outlaws Fat N Furious Street Outlaws Fat N Furious
DISN Another Cinderella Story Liv-Mad. Mickey Good Luck Jessie Austin Good Luck Good Luck
E! E! News The Soup Kardashian Kardashian Chelsea E! News Chelsea
ESPN College Baseball SportsCenter SportsCenter
ESPN2 MLB Baseball Olbermann ESPN FC
FAM Switched at Birth The Fosters Switched at Birth The 700 Club The Fosters
FOOD Rewrapped Diners Diners, Drive Mystery D Mystery D Diners Diners Diners, Drive
FX This Means War This Means War Louie Louie
HGTV Love It or List It Love It or List It Hunters Hunt Intl Love It or List It Love It or List It
HIST Swamp People Swamp People Big Rig Big Rig Swamp People Swamp People
LIFE Hoarders Hoarders Little Women: LA Little Women: LA Hoarders
MTV Teen Wolf Teen Wolf Teen Wolf Wolf Teen Wolf Ridic.
NICK Full H'se Full H'se Full H'se Full H'se Full H'se Full H'se Friends Friends Friends
SCI Jeepers Creepers 2 Resident Evil Jeepers Creepers
SPIKE Iron Man The Punisher
TBS Fam. Guy Fam. Guy Big Bang Big Bang Big Bang Good Life Conan Office Conan
TCM Dance, Girl, Dance The Night They Raided Minsky's Doll Face
TLC Undercover Boss Undercover Boss Undercover Boss Undercover Boss Undercover Boss
TNT Major Crimes Major Crimes Murder in the First Major Crimes Murder in the First
TOON King/Hill King/Hill Cleveland Cleveland Fam. Guy Boondocks Amer. Dad Fam. Guy Chicken Aqua Teen
TRAV Bizarre Foods Mega RV Countdown Extreme RVs Bizarre Foods Mega RV Countdown
TV LAND Andy Griffith Show Griffith King King King King Jennifer Hot in Cleveland
USA WWE Monday Night RAW Chrisley Mod Fam Graceland
VH1 Love, Hip Hop Hit the Floor Love, Hip Hop Hit the Floor Love, Hip Hop
WGN Funniest Home Videos Funniest Home Videos Funniest Home Videos Salem Salem
Premium Channels
HBO True Last Week The Case Against 8 True Blood Man-Iron Fists
MAX Doom The Great Gatsby Banshee
SHOW Twilight Saga-2 Penny Dreadful Nurse Californ. Penny Dreadful Nurse Californ.
2009 Hometown Content, listings by Zap2it
Monday Evening June 23, 2014
8:00 8:30 9:00 9:30 10:00 10:30 11:00 11:30 12:00 12:30
WPTA/ABC The Bachelorette Mistresses Local Jimmy Kimmel Live Nightline
WHIO/CBS 2 Broke G Mom Mike Two Men Under the Dome Local Late Show Letterman Ferguson
WLIO/NBC Last Comic Standing Ninja Warrior Local Tonight Show Meyers
WOHL/FOX MasterChef 24: Live Another Day Local
Cable Channels
A & E Criminal Minds Criminal Minds Longmire Longmire Criminal Minds
AMC Shutter Island Legend-Bagger
ANIM Finding Bigfoot Wildman Wildman Wildman Wildman Finding Bigfoot Wildman Wildman
BET Comedy- Stars Comedy- Stars Kingdom Come Wendy Williams Show
BRAVO Housewives/OC Housewives/OC Ladies of London Happens Housewives/OC Ladies
CMT The Cable Guy Cops Rel. Cops Rel. Cops Rel. Cops Rel.
CNN Anderson Cooper 360 Anderson Cooper 360 CNN Tonight Anderson Cooper 360 Anderson Cooper 360
COMEDY Futurama Futurama South Pk South Park Daily Colbert At Midnig South Pk
DISC Street Outlaws: Full Street Outlaws Fat N Furious Street Outlaws Fat N Furious
DISN Another Cinderella Story Liv-Mad. Mickey Good Luck Jessie Austin Good Luck Good Luck
E! E! News The Soup Kardashian Kardashian Chelsea E! News Chelsea
ESPN College Baseball SportsCenter SportsCenter
ESPN2 MLB Baseball Olbermann ESPN FC
FAM Switched at Birth The Fosters Switched at Birth The 700 Club The Fosters
FOOD Rewrapped Diners Diners, Drive Mystery D Mystery D Diners Diners Diners, Drive
FX This Means War This Means War Louie Louie
HGTV Love It or List It Love It or List It Hunters Hunt Intl Love It or List It Love It or List It
HIST Swamp People Swamp People Big Rig Big Rig Swamp People Swamp People
LIFE Hoarders Hoarders Little Women: LA Little Women: LA Hoarders
MTV Teen Wolf Teen Wolf Teen Wolf Wolf Teen Wolf Ridic.
NICK Full H'se Full H'se Full H'se Full H'se Full H'se Full H'se Friends Friends Friends
SCI Jeepers Creepers 2 Resident Evil Jeepers Creepers
SPIKE Iron Man The Punisher
TBS Fam. Guy Fam. Guy Big Bang Big Bang Big Bang Good Life Conan Office Conan
TCM Dance, Girl, Dance The Night They Raided Minsky's Doll Face
TLC Undercover Boss Undercover Boss Undercover Boss Undercover Boss Undercover Boss
TNT Major Crimes Major Crimes Murder in the First Major Crimes Murder in the First
TOON King/Hill King/Hill Cleveland Cleveland Fam. Guy Boondocks Amer. Dad Fam. Guy Chicken Aqua Teen
TRAV Bizarre Foods Mega RV Countdown Extreme RVs Bizarre Foods Mega RV Countdown
TV LAND Andy Griffith Show Griffith King King King King Jennifer Hot in Cleveland
USA WWE Monday Night RAW Chrisley Mod Fam Graceland
VH1 Love, Hip Hop Hit the Floor Love, Hip Hop Hit the Floor Love, Hip Hop
WGN Funniest Home Videos Funniest Home Videos Funniest Home Videos Salem Salem
Premium Channels
HBO True Last Week The Case Against 8 True Blood Man-Iron Fists
MAX Doom The Great Gatsby Banshee
SHOW Twilight Saga-2 Penny Dreadful Nurse Californ. Penny Dreadful Nurse Californ.
2009 Hometown Content, listings by Zap2it
Wednesday Evening June 25, 2014
8:00 8:30 9:00 9:30 10:00 10:30 11:00 11:30 12:00 12:30
WPTA/ABC Middle Goldbergs Mod Fam Goldbergs Motive Local Jimmy Kimmel Live Nightline
WHIO/CBS Big Brother Criminal Minds CSI: Crime Scene Local Late Show Letterman Ferguson
WLIO/NBC America's Got Talent Taxi Brooklyn Local Tonight Show Meyers
WOHL/FOX So You Think Local
Cable Channels
A & E Duck D. Duck D. Duck D. Duck D. Duck D. Big Smo Big Smo Duck D. Duck D. Duck D.
AMC The Green Mile Space Cowboys
ANIM Treehouse Treehouse Masters The Pool Master Treehouse Treehouse Masters
BET Friday After Next The Message The Message Wendy Williams Show
BRAVO Million Dollar Million--Miami Untying Untying Happens Million Dollar Million
CMT Ghost Cops Rel. Cops Rel. Cops Rel. Cops Rel.
CNN Anderson Cooper 360 Anthony Bourd. CNN Tonight Anderson Cooper 360 Anthony Bourd.
COMEDY Key Key South Pk South Pk South Pk South Pk Daily Colbert At Midnig South Pk
DISC Dual Survival Dual Survival Dual Survival Dual Survival Dual Survival
DISN Teen Beach Movie Liv-Mad. Good Luck Jessie Austin & Ally
E! Kardashian Kardashian The Soup The Soup Chelsea E! News Chelsea
ESPN College Baseball SportsCenter SportsCenter
ESPN2 MLB Baseball Olbermann ESPN FC
FAM Young Mystery Young Mystery Chasing Life The 700 Club Young Mystery
FOOD Restaurant Stakeout Restaurant Stakeout Restaurant: Im. Restaurant: Im. Restaurant Stakeout
FX Transformers Tyrant Jumper
HGTV Cousins Undercover Property Brothers Hunters Hunt Intl Brother vs. Brother Property Brothers
HIST American Pickers American Pickers American Pickers American Pickers American Pickers
LIFE Celebrity Wife Swap Celebrity Wife Swap Celebrity Wife Swap Abby's Studio Rescue Celebrity Wife Swap
MTV Catfish: The TV Show Catfish: The TV Show Catfish: The TV Show True Life Catfish: The TV Show
NICK Full H'se Full H'se Full H'se Full H'se Full H'se Full H'se Friends Friends Friends
SCI Halloween II Priest Dominion Defiance
SPIKE Men in Black Men in Black II Coming to America
TBS Fam. Guy Fam. Guy Big Bang Big Bang Big Bang Big Bang Conan Office Conan
TCM Dillinger Badman's Territory Born to Kill
TLC Return to Amish Return to Amish Return to Amish Return to Amish Return to Amish
TNT Castle Castle Castle The Last Ship Falling Skies
TOON King/Hill King/Hill Cleveland Cleveland Amer. Dad Amer. Dad Fam. Guy Fam. Guy Chicken Aqua Teen
TRAV Bizarre Foods Mega RV Countdown Extreme RVs Food Paradise Mega RV Countdown
TV LAND Griffith Griffith King King Cleveland Jennifer Cleveland Jennifer King King
USA Law & Order: SVU Suits Graceland Mod Fam Mod Fam Suits
VH1 Hollywood Exes Hollywood Exes La La Marry Love, Hip Hop Hollywood Exes
WGN MLB Baseball Rules Rules Rules Rules
Premium Channels
HBO True Blood The Wolverine Real Time, Bill Last Week
MAX The Transporter 2 Ender's Game Banshee
SHOW D.L. Hughley: Clear Penny Dreadful Californ. Nurse Seven Psychopaths
2009 Hometown Content, listings by Zap2it
Wednesday Evening June 25, 2014
8:00 8:30 9:00 9:30 10:00 10:30 11:00 11:30 12:00 12:30
WPTA/ABC Middle Goldbergs Mod Fam Goldbergs Motive Local Jimmy Kimmel Live Nightline
WHIO/CBS Big Brother Criminal Minds CSI: Crime Scene Local Late Show Letterman Ferguson
WLIO/NBC America's Got Talent Taxi Brooklyn Local Tonight Show Meyers
WOHL/FOX So You Think Local
Cable Channels
A & E Duck D. Duck D. Duck D. Duck D. Duck D. Big Smo Big Smo Duck D. Duck D. Duck D.
AMC The Green Mile Space Cowboys
ANIM Treehouse Treehouse Masters The Pool Master Treehouse Treehouse Masters
BET Friday After Next The Message The Message Wendy Williams Show
BRAVO Million Dollar Million--Miami Untying Untying Happens Million Dollar Million
CMT Ghost Cops Rel. Cops Rel. Cops Rel. Cops Rel.
CNN Anderson Cooper 360 Anthony Bourd. CNN Tonight Anderson Cooper 360 Anthony Bourd.
COMEDY Key Key South Pk South Pk South Pk South Pk Daily Colbert At Midnig South Pk
DISC Dual Survival Dual Survival Dual Survival Dual Survival Dual Survival
DISN Teen Beach Movie Liv-Mad. Good Luck Jessie Austin & Ally
E! Kardashian Kardashian The Soup The Soup Chelsea E! News Chelsea
ESPN College Baseball SportsCenter SportsCenter
ESPN2 MLB Baseball Olbermann ESPN FC
FAM Young Mystery Young Mystery Chasing Life The 700 Club Young Mystery
FOOD Restaurant Stakeout Restaurant Stakeout Restaurant: Im. Restaurant: Im. Restaurant Stakeout
FX Transformers Tyrant Jumper
HGTV Cousins Undercover Property Brothers Hunters Hunt Intl Brother vs. Brother Property Brothers
HIST American Pickers American Pickers American Pickers American Pickers American Pickers
LIFE Celebrity Wife Swap Celebrity Wife Swap Celebrity Wife Swap Abby's Studio Rescue Celebrity Wife Swap
MTV Catfish: The TV Show Catfish: The TV Show Catfish: The TV Show True Life Catfish: The TV Show
NICK Full H'se Full H'se Full H'se Full H'se Full H'se Full H'se Friends Friends Friends
SCI Halloween II Priest Dominion Defiance
SPIKE Men in Black Men in Black II Coming to America
TBS Fam. Guy Fam. Guy Big Bang Big Bang Big Bang Big Bang Conan Office Conan
TCM Dillinger Badman's Territory Born to Kill
TLC Return to Amish Return to Amish Return to Amish Return to Amish Return to Amish
TNT Castle Castle Castle The Last Ship Falling Skies
TOON King/Hill King/Hill Cleveland Cleveland Amer. Dad Amer. Dad Fam. Guy Fam. Guy Chicken Aqua Teen
TRAV Bizarre Foods Mega RV Countdown Extreme RVs Food Paradise Mega RV Countdown
TV LAND Griffith Griffith King King Cleveland Jennifer Cleveland Jennifer King King
USA Law & Order: SVU Suits Graceland Mod Fam Mod Fam Suits
VH1 Hollywood Exes Hollywood Exes La La Marry Love, Hip Hop Hollywood Exes
WGN MLB Baseball Rules Rules Rules Rules
Premium Channels
HBO True Blood The Wolverine Real Time, Bill Last Week
MAX The Transporter 2 Ender's Game Banshee
SHOW D.L. Hughley: Clear Penny Dreadful Californ. Nurse Seven Psychopaths
2009 Hometown Content, listings by Zap2it
Thursday Evening June 26, 2014
8:00 8:30 9:00 9:30 10:00 10:30 11:00 11:30 12:00 12:30
WPTA/ABC Black Box Rookie Blue NY Med Local Jimmy Kimmel Live Nightline
WHIO/CBS Big Bang Millers Big Brother Elementary Local Late Show Letterman Ferguson
WLIO/NBC Hollywood Game Night Undate Undate Last Comic Standing Local Tonight Show Meyers
WOHL/FOX Hell's Kitchen Gang Related Local
Cable Channels
A & E The First 48 The First 48 Beyond Scared Straig Beyond Scared Straig The First 48
AMC Blazing Saddles Quick-Dead Halt and
ANIM North Woods North Woods Law River Renegade North Woods Law River Renegade
BET BET Awards 2013 Wendy Williams Show
BRAVO Atlanta Housewives/Atl. Housewives/Atl. TBA Happens Housewives/OC Ladies
CMT Party Down South Party Down South Party Down South Party Down South Cops Rel. Cops Rel.
CNN Anderson Cooper 360 The Sixties Anderson Cooper 360 The Sixties
COMEDY Tosh.0 Tosh.0 Tosh.0 The Comedy Central Roast Daily Colbert At Midnig Tosh.0
DISC Mountain Monsters Mountain Monsters Mountain Monsters Mountain Monsters Mountain Monsters
DISN Toy Story 3 Liv-Mad. Jessie ANT Farm Austin Good Luck Good Luck
E! A-List Va A-List Va Escape Club Escape Club Chelsea E! News Kardas
ESPN 2014 NBA Draft SportsCenter
ESPN2 World Cup ESPN FC SportsCenter Olbermann
FAM Devil-Prada Mystery Young The 700 Club Prince Prince
FOOD Chopped Chopped Canada Chopped Diners Diners Chopped Canada
FX Transformers Tyrant 30 Min
HGTV Fixer Upper Fixer Upper Hunters Hunt Intl Fixer Upper Fixer Upper
HIST Pawn Pawn Pawn Pawn American American American American Pawn Pawn
LIFE Hiding Taken Back Hiding
MTV The Challenge: Free The Challenge: Free The Challenge: Free The Challenge: Free Ridic. Ridic.
NICK iCarly Drake Full H'se Full H'se Full H'se Full H'se Friends Friends Friends
SCI Defiance Dominion Spartacus-Sand Dominion Defiance
SPIKE Cops Cops iMPACT Wrestling I Am Steve McQueen Bullitt
TBS Fam. Guy Fam. Guy Big Bang Big Bang Big Bang Big Bang Conan Office Conan
TCM A Fine Pair Ice Station Zebra PrttyMaid
TLC Here Comes Honey Honey Honey Sextuplets Turn 10 Honey Honey Sextuplets Turn 10
TNT Castle Castle Castle Murder in the First Perception
TOON King/Hill King/Hill Cleveland Cleveland Amer. Dad Amer. Dad Fam. Guy Fam. Guy Loiter The Eric
TRAV Bizarre Foods Mega RV Countdown Extreme RVs Bizarre Foods Mega RV Countdown
TV LAND Andy Griffith Show Griffith King King King King Raymond Everybody-Raymond
USA The Bourne Supremacy The Bourne Ultimatum
VH1 Think Like a Man Think Like a Man
WGN Funniest Home Videos How I Met How I Met How I Met How I Met How I Met How I Met How I Met How I Met
Premium Channels
HBO R.I.P.D. The Case Against 8 Taxicab Confessions John Leguizamo
MAX Red Dragon A Good Day to Die Hard Banshee
SHOW Beauty Hey Bartender! Penny Dreadful Teller Californ. Nurse Teller
2009 Hometown Content, listings by Zap2it
Thursday Evening June 26, 2014
8:00 8:30 9:00 9:30 10:00 10:30 11:00 11:30 12:00 12:30
WPTA/ABC Black Box Rookie Blue NY Med Local Jimmy Kimmel Live Nightline
WHIO/CBS Big Bang Millers Big Brother Elementary Local Late Show Letterman Ferguson
WLIO/NBC Hollywood Game Night Undate Undate Last Comic Standing Local Tonight Show Meyers
WOHL/FOX Hell's Kitchen Gang Related Local
Cable Channels
A & E The First 48 The First 48 Beyond Scared Straig Beyond Scared Straig The First 48
AMC Blazing Saddles Quick-Dead Halt and
ANIM North Woods North Woods Law River Renegade North Woods Law River Renegade
BET BET Awards 2013 Wendy Williams Show
BRAVO Atlanta Housewives/Atl. Housewives/Atl. TBA Happens Housewives/OC Ladies
CMT Party Down South Party Down South Party Down South Party Down South Cops Rel. Cops Rel.
CNN Anderson Cooper 360 The Sixties Anderson Cooper 360 The Sixties
COMEDY Tosh.0 Tosh.0 Tosh.0 The Comedy Central Roast Daily Colbert At Midnig Tosh.0
DISC Mountain Monsters Mountain Monsters Mountain Monsters Mountain Monsters Mountain Monsters
DISN Toy Story 3 Liv-Mad. Jessie ANT Farm Austin Good Luck Good Luck
E! A-List Va A-List Va Escape Club Escape Club Chelsea E! News Kardas
ESPN 2014 NBA Draft SportsCenter
ESPN2 World Cup ESPN FC SportsCenter Olbermann
FAM Devil-Prada Mystery Young The 700 Club Prince Prince
FOOD Chopped Chopped Canada Chopped Diners Diners Chopped Canada
FX Transformers Tyrant 30 Min
HGTV Fixer Upper Fixer Upper Hunters Hunt Intl Fixer Upper Fixer Upper
HIST Pawn Pawn Pawn Pawn American American American American Pawn Pawn
LIFE Hiding Taken Back Hiding
MTV The Challenge: Free The Challenge: Free The Challenge: Free The Challenge: Free Ridic. Ridic.
NICK iCarly Drake Full H'se Full H'se Full H'se Full H'se Friends Friends Friends
SCI Defiance Dominion Spartacus-Sand Dominion Defiance
SPIKE Cops Cops iMPACT Wrestling I Am Steve McQueen Bullitt
TBS Fam. Guy Fam. Guy Big Bang Big Bang Big Bang Big Bang Conan Office Conan
TCM A Fine Pair Ice Station Zebra PrttyMaid
TLC Here Comes Honey Honey Honey Sextuplets Turn 10 Honey Honey Sextuplets Turn 10
TNT Castle Castle Castle Murder in the First Perception
TOON King/Hill King/Hill Cleveland Cleveland Amer. Dad Amer. Dad Fam. Guy Fam. Guy Loiter The Eric
TRAV Bizarre Foods Mega RV Countdown Extreme RVs Bizarre Foods Mega RV Countdown
TV LAND Andy Griffith Show Griffith King King King King Raymond Everybody-Raymond
USA The Bourne Supremacy The Bourne Ultimatum
VH1 Think Like a Man Think Like a Man
WGN Funniest Home Videos How I Met How I Met How I Met How I Met How I Met How I Met How I Met How I Met
Premium Channels
HBO R.I.P.D. The Case Against 8 Taxicab Confessions John Leguizamo
MAX Red Dragon A Good Day to Die Hard Banshee
SHOW Beauty Hey Bartender! Penny Dreadful Teller Californ. Nurse Teller
2009 Hometown Content, listings by Zap2it
Friday Evening May 2, 2014
8:00 8:30 9:00 9:30 10:00 10:30 11:00 11:30 12:00 12:30
WPTA/ABC Shark Tank: Swimming Shark Tank 20/20 Local Jimmy Kimmel Live Nightline
WHIO/CBS Unforgettable Hawaii Five-0 Blue Bloods Local Late Show Letterman Ferguson
WLIO/NBC Dateline NBC Grimm Hannibal Local Tonight Show Meyers
WOHL/FOX Kitchen Nightmares Local
Cable Channels
A & E The First 48 The First 48 The First 48 The First 48 The First 48
AMC Die Hard With a Vengeance Speed Town Town
ANIM Great Barrier Tanked Great Barrier
BET Nutty Professor II: The Klumps B.A.P.S Wendy Williams Show
BRAVO The Switch The Switch How to Lose
CMT '70s Show '70s Show Paul Blart: Mall Cop The Cable Guy
CNN Anderson Cooper 360 Smerconish Spotlight P Walker Inside Man Inside Man
COMEDY White Chicks The Comedy Central Roast The Improv: 50 Years
DISC Sons of Guns: Locked Sons of Guns Wild West Alaska Sons of Guns Wild West Alaska
DISN Party 2014 Radio Disney Music Awards Austin Good Luck Dog Austin Dog Good Luck
E! Giuliana & Bill Fashion Police Fashion Police Hello E! News Chelsea
ESPN NBA Basketball NBA Basketball
ESPN2 NBA Basketball NBA Basketball SportsCenter
FAM Matilda Cloudy-Mtballs The 700 Club Prince Prince
FOOD Diners Diners Diners Diners Diners, Drive Diners Diners Diners Diners
FX Thor Thor
HGTV Beach Beach Beach Beach Hunters Hunt Intl Hunters Hunt Intl Beach Beach
HIST American Pickers American Pickers American Pickers American Pickers American Pickers
LIFE Celebrity Wife Swap Celebrity Wife Swap Relative Insanity True Tori Celebrity Wife Swap
MTV Jersey Shore Jersey Shore Jersey Shore Jersey Shore The Waterboy
NICK Turtles Turtles Full H'se Full H'se Full H'se Full H'se Friends Friends Friends
SCI WWE SmackDown! Continuum Metal Metal Continuum
SPIKE Cops Cops Bellator MMA Live Countdown to Glory 16: Denver
TBS Old School Hot Tub Time Machine Bam Deal With
TCM Breaker Morant Gallipoli Tim
TLC Gypsy Wedding Say Yes Randy Gown Gown Say Yes Randy Gown Gown
TNT Terminator Salvation Terminator 2
TOON King/Hill King/Hill Cleveland Cleveland Amer. Dad Amer. Dad Fam. Guy Fam. Guy Chicken Aqua Teen
TRAV Bizarre Foods Ghost Adventures The Dead Files Dead Files Revisited Ghost Adventures
TV LAND Cosby Cosby Brady Brady Raymond Raymond King King The King of Queens
USA Mod Fam Mod Fam Mod Fam Mod Fam Mod Fam Mod Fam Mod Fam Playing Chrisley Chrisley
VH1 Space Jam Fabulous Life Fabulous Life The Roommate
WGN Funniest Home Videos How I Met How I Met How I Met How I Met How I Met How I Met How I Met How I Met
Premium Channels
HBO Game of Thrones Game of Thrones Real Time, Bill VICE Real Time, Bill VICE
MAX Admission Abraham Lincoln: Vampire Road Trip Skin-Max Sexy Wives
SHOW Billy Joe Alex Cross D.L. Hughley: Clear Nurse Californ. Division III
2009 Hometown Content, listings by Zap2it
Delphos Herald
TV
Listings
Friday, June 20 to Thursday, June 26, 2014
PBS
PBS
PBS
PBS
PBS
PBS
PBS
WBGU
WBGU
WBGU
WBGU
WBGU
WBGU
WBGU
Moments to Remember (My Music) | Burt Bacharachs Best ( My Music Presents)
Magic Moments - Elvis, Aloha From Hawaii | Moments To Remember (My Music)
Secrets of Underground London | Masterpiece Mystery! |PBS Previews| Austin City Limits
Antiques Roadshow Antiques Roadshow | POV - When I Walk | Americas Wild West
Scenic Stops | NW Ohio Journal | News Six | Bluffton, USA | Marcia Adams | Charlie Rose
Nature - Fabulous Frogs |Blenko: Behind The Scenes| Dominick Labino | The Fragile Art: Midwestern Heritage of Glassmaking
The March | Amemrican Experience l Charlie Rose
10 The Herald Friday, June 20, 2014 www.delphosherald.com
HERALD DELPHOS
THE
Telling The Tri-Countys Story Since 1869
Classifieds
To place an ad phone 419-695-0015 ext. 122
www.delphosherald.com
100 ANNOUNCEMENTS
105 Announcements
110 Card Of Thanks
115 Entertainment
120 In Memoriam
125 Lost And Found
130 Prayers
135 School/Instructions
140 Happy Ads
145 Ride Share
200 EMPLOYMENT
205 Business Opportunities
210 Childcare
215 Domestic
220 Elderly Home Care
225 Employment Services
230 Farm And Agriculture
235 General
240 Healthcare
245 Manufacturing/Trade
250 Office/Clerical
255 Professional
260 Restaurant
265 Retail
270 Sales and Marketing
275 Situation Wanted
280 Transportation
300 REAL ESTATE/RENTAL
305 Apartment/Duplex
310 Commercial/Industrial
315 Condos
320 House
325 Mobile Homes
330 Office Space
335 Room
340 Warehouse/Storage
345 Vacations
350 Wanted To Rent
355 Farmhouses For Rent
360 Roommates Wanted
400 REAL ESTATE/FOR SALE
405 Acreage and Lots
410 Commercial
415 Condos
420 Farms
425 Houses
430 Mobile Homes/
Manufactured Homes
435 Vacation Property
440 Want To Buy
500 MERCHANDISE
505 Antiques and Collectibles
510 Appliances
515 Auctions
520 Building Materials
525 Computer/Electric/Office
530 Events
535 Farm Supplies and Equipment
540 Feed/Grain
545 Firewood/Fuel
550 Flea Markets/Bazaars
555 Garage Sales
560 Home Furnishings
565 Horses, Tack and Equipment
570 Lawn and Garden
575 Livestock
577 Miscellaneous
580 Musical Instruments
582 Pet in Memoriam
583 Pets and Supplies
585 Produce
586 Sports and Recreation
588 Tickets
590 Tool and Machinery
592 Want To Buy
593 Good Thing To Eat
595 Hay
597 Storage Buildings
600 SERVICES
605 Auction
610 Automotive
615 Business Services
620 Childcare
625 Construction
630 Entertainment
635 Farm Services
640 Financial
645 Hauling
650 Health/Beauty
655 Home Repair/Remodeling
660 Home Service
665 Lawn, Garden, Landscaping
670 Miscellaneous
675 Pet Care
680 Snow Removal
685 Travel
690 Computer/Electric/Office
695 Electrical
700 Painting
705 Plumbing
710 Roofing/Gutters/Siding
715 Blacktop/Cement
720 Handyman
725 Elder Care
800 TRANSPORTATION
805 Auto
810 Auto Parts and Accessories
815 Automobile Loans
820 Automobile Shows/Events
825 Aviations
830 Boats/Motors/Equipment
835 Campers/Motor Homes
840 Classic Cars
845 Commercial
850 Motorcycles/Mopeds
855 Off-Road Vehicles
860 Recreational Vehicles
865 Rental and Leasing
870 Snowmobiles
875 Storage
880 SUVs
885 Trailers
890 Trucks
895 Vans/Minivans
899 Want To Buy
925 Legal Notices
950 Seasonal
953 Free & Low Priced
670 Miscellaneous
SAFE &
SOUND
Security Fence
DELPHOS
SELF-STORAGE
Pass Code Lighted Lot
Affordable 2 Locations
Why settle for less?
419-692-6336
419-339-0110
Fabrication & Welding Inc.
TRUCKS, TRAILERS
FARM MACHINERY
RAILINGS & METAL GATES
CARBON STEEL
STAINLESS STEEL
ALUMINUM
Larry McClure
5745 Redd Rd., Delphos
Fabrication & Welding Inc.
Quality
GENERAL REPAIR
SPECIAL BUILT PRODUCTS
715 Blacktop/Cement
40 CUSTOM COLORS OF
SEAL COAT AVAILABLE
RESIDENTIAL
DRI VEWAYS
COMMERCIAL
PARKING LOTS
CONCRETE
SE ALI NG
ASPHALT SEAL
COATING
CUSTOM LINE
S T R I P I N G
567.204.1427
FULLY INSURED
OUR PRICES WILL NOT BE BEAT!
A Star-Seal Preferred
Contractor
665
Lawn, Garden,
Landscaping
DAYS PROPERTY
MAINTENANCE
LLC
Brent Day
567-204-8488
Mowing
Landscaping
Lawn Seeding
www.dayspropertymaintenance.com
419-203-8202
[email protected]
Fully insured
Mueller Tree
Service
Tree Trimming,
Topping & Removal,
Brush Removal
670 Miscellaneous
COMMUNITY
SELF-STORAGE
GREAT RATES
NEWER FACILITY
419-692-0032
Across from Arbys
GESSNERS
PRODUCE
HOMEGROWN
STRAWBERRIES
& FRESH KALE
AVAILABLE NOW!
TENNESSEE TOMATOES,
SWEET CORN, WATERMELON
& PEACHES
Mon.-Sat. 9am-6pm Sunday 11am-4pm
9557 State Route 66
Delphos, OH 45833
419-692-5749
419-234-6566
655
Home Repair
and Remodel
Harrison
Floor Installation
Carpet, Vinyl, Wood,
Ceramic Tile
Reasonable rates
Free estimates
harrisonfoorinstallation.com
Phil 419-235-2262
Wes 567-644-9871
You buy, we apply
Hohlbeins
Ph. 419-339-4938
or 419-230-8128
Home
Improvement
Windows,
Doors, Siding,
Roofing,
Sunrooms,
Pole Buildings,
Garages
665
Lawn, Garden,
Landscaping
L.L.C.
Trimming & Removal
Stump Grinding
24 Hour Service Fully Insured
KEVIN M. MOORE
(419) 235-8051
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
610 Automotive
Geise
Transmission, Inc.
419-453-3620
2 miles north of Ottoville
automatic transmission
standard transmission
differentials
transfer case
brakes & tune up
625 Construction
POHLMAN
BUILDERS
FREE ESTIMATES
FULLY INSURED
Mark Pohlman
419-339-9084
cell 419-233-9460
ROOM ADDITIONS
GARAGES SIDING ROOFING
BACKHOE & DUMP TRUCK
SERVICE
POHLMAN
POURED
CONCRETE WALLS
Residential
& Commercial
Agricultural Needs
All Concrete Work
Joe Miller
Construction
Experienced Amish Carpentry
Roofing, remodeling,
concrete, pole barns, garages
or any construction needs.
Cell 567-644-6030
AT YOUR
S
ervice
IS YOUR
AD HERE?
Call today
419-695-0015
STAY
INFORMED:
READ YOUR
NEWSPAPER!
MedicalSocialWorker
Full-time or Part-time:
LSW/LISW
Home health, hospice & inpatient hospice care in
Van Wert area as part of interdisciplinary team.
Min.1-year health care social work experience
Current Social Worker license
Home health/hospice experience a plus
Organizational & communication skills
Submit resume by June 26 to
Community Health
Professionals
Brent Tow, President/CEO
1159 Westwood Dr., Van Wert, OH 45891
419-238-9223
www.ComHealthPro.org
K&M Tire in Delphos
is seeking to fll several positions
Credit/Collections Clerk - Candidates need
2 year business degree or equivalent
work experience in credit.
Full time position: 9a 5:30p Mon Fri.
Web Designer needed to create customized
websites. Candidates need Graphic Design and/or
Computer Science experience.
Full-time Mon-Fri 8:00am-5:00pm.
Inside Sales Representative to handle
incoming/outgoing customer service calls.
Full time position: 45-50 hours a week 9:30a-6:30p
Mon-Fri w/occasional Saturdays.
Apply online www.kmtire.com.
K&M Tire 965 Spencerville Road, Delphos, OH 45833
Email: [email protected]

105 Announcements
IS IT A SCAM? The
Delphos Herald urges
our readers to contact
The Better Business Bu-
reau, (419) 223-7010 or
1-800-462-0468, before
entering into any agree-
ment involving financing,
business opportunities,
or work at home oppor-
tunities. The BBB will as-
sist in the investigation
of these businesses.
(This notice provided as
a customer service by
The Delphos Herald.)
235 Help Wanted
DAYCARE/PRE-
SCHOOL SEEKS a car-
ing individual that has
childcare certifications
completed to fill a full- or
part-time position. Inter-
ested candidates please
contact the center at
419-339-8191 or send
resume to newcrea-
[email protected]
FULL TIME
Heavy-Duty
Semi-Trailer
Repair Mechanic
We are looking for a
motivated mechanic to
repair heavy duty
semi-trailers. Experience
or a strong mechanical
background desired.
Apply in person or
send resume to:
E&R Trailer Sales &
Service, Inc.
Attention:
Service Manager
10286 Lincoln Hwy.
Middle Point, OH 45863
or E-mail resume to:
Servicemiddlepoint@er-
trailer.com
235 Help Wanted
FULL-TIME WAITRESS
and cooks positions
available. Must apply in
person. Ramblers Roost
Restaurant, Middle Point
GERDEMANS TV &
Computer seeking tech-
nician. Upgrading and
repairing PCs, laptops,
tablets. Network trouble-
shooting and repair in
both home and business
(Server) environment.
Phone support. Associ-
ates degree and/or
equivalent experience
desired. Email resume
to: [email protected]
or mail to 203 N. Main
St., Delphos, OH 45833
HONEST & Reliable
Bar t ender Needed.
Cooking and bar knowl-
edge helpful. Hours vary.
Must be available week-
ends and nights, at least
21/ yo. Backgr ound
Check. Apply at Harolds
Bar, 723 W. Clime, Del-
phos, 2:30pm-7:00pm
INSIDE TELEPHONE
Sales Position. Local,
long-standing company
looking for a self-moti-
vated salesperson. You
will service an already
established territory of
business customers as
well as be required to
develop new customers
in the same territory. Full
Time. Monday-Friday
8am-5pm. Base salary +
commission. Holidays
and two weeks vacation.
Benefits available. Email
resume to: resumein-
[email protected]
m or Send replies to Box
126 c/o Delphos Herald,
405 N. Main St., Del-
phos, OH 45833
NURSE PRACTITIO-
NER or physician assis-
tant needed full time for
busy dermatology prac-
tice. Friendly, collegial
team environment with
opportunity to learn.
Very competitive com-
pensat i on package.
Send resume to: West
Ohio Dermatology Inc.,
1005 Bellefontaine Ave.,
Ste. 225, Lima, OH
45804, Attn: Office Man-
ager
235 Help Wanted
OTR CLASS-A CDL
Semi-driver. Home most
evenings, includes bene-
fits. Send resume to:
AWC Trucki ng, 835
Skinner St., Delphos,
OH 45833 (OR) to
[email protected],
419-692-3951
PART-TIME
OFFICE CLERK:
Duties include: paying
bills, processing ads,
light clerical work and
answering multi-line
phone system. Com-
puter skills or office ex-
perience required.
M-F Daytime, 25-27
hours per week. Please
send resume to: Del-
phos Herald Clerical Po-
sition, 405 N. Main St.,
Delphos, OH 45833 or
email
rgeary@delphosherald.
com
TRUCK DRI VERS
needed for growing com-
pany. Dancer Logistics
in Delphos, Ohio is ex-
panding and has all
modern equipment. We
have a lane for you!!
Give Glen a call at
888-465-6001
320 House For Rent
305
Apartment/
Duplex
2BR HOUSE, $500/mo
plus deposit, includes
water. 305 S. Main St.,
Delphos. 419-296-4371
NON-SUBSIDIZED,
SENIOR-CITIZEN
house. 1-1/2 BR, stove,
refrigerator, and garage.
Non-smoking, no pets.
$450, call 419-692-6646
SEVERAL MOBI LE
Homes/House for rent.
View homes online at
www.ulmshomes.com or
inquire at 419-692-3951
110 Card of Thanks
ESTATE SALE -TIME
CAPSULE: Eclectic col-
lection of turn-of-the
-century furniture and
collectibles. Impres-
sively preserved items
housed for many years
in a charismatically apt
Sears Kit Home; its an
adventure in and of itself
just to tour the premises.
Sale runs Sat 4/21 - Sun
4/22 from 9am to 4pm.
2727 US 33, Rockford,
OH. For more informa-
tion and pictures visit
www.principalestate-
sales.com
515 Auctions
ESTATE SALE -TIME
CAPSULE: Eclectic col-
lection of turn-of-the
-century furniture and
collectibles. Impres-
sively preserved items
housed for many years
in a charismatically apt
Sears Kit Home; its an
adventure in and of itself
just to tour the premises.
Sale runs Sat 4/21 - Sun
4/22 from 9am to 4pm.
2727 US 33, Rockford,
OH. For more informa-
tion and pictures visit
www.principalestate-
sales.com
555
Garage Sales/
Yard Sales
1009 MARSH Ave,
Thurs-Fri , 8am-6pm,
Sat. 8am-Noon. Kids
clothing up to 3T, col-
lectibles, toys, bike, plus
more. Check Craigslist
for pictures.
10536 ELI DA Rd.
Thurs-Sat 6/19-20-21,
9am-5pm. Men s &
Women s cl ot hi ng,
household items, linens,
lawn furniture, desk, blue
ox, buddy brake, snow
blower, slot machine,
train track, aluminum
Christmas trees, and
much more! Courtneys
1241 KRIEFT St., Del-
phos. Friday, June 20th
9am-?. Three piece
suede living room set,
doll house, kids bikes,
beer neons and signs,
46 plasma TV, antique
side table, twin bed with
mattress, many house-
hold items, and more.
127 E. Cl evel and,
Thurs-Fri, 6-19 & 6-20,
9am-5pm. Converta Cof-
fee Tabl e, puzzl es,
handmade doilies, tow-
els with crocheted tops &
scr at cher s. Ladi es
clothes med & large.
Sprayer tanks, karaoke
machine, old high chair,
air compressor, lots of
miscellaneous.
1314 PAMELA Circle
(off Ricker St.), Delphos.
June 20th 9am-?, June
21st 9am-?. Moped,
desk, snowboard, skis,
X-Box and DS games,
boys, mens and womens
clothes. Lots of miscella-
neous.
302 S. Cass St., Fri-Sat,
6/20th-21st, 8am-5pm,
i nf ant s, boys, and
womens clothes, chil-
drens books, puzzles,
miscellaneous
555
Garage Sales/
Yard Sales
AREA WIDE 8525, 8701
Shaffer Rd / 8470 Zion
Church Rd / 8121
Agerter / 2987, 3355
McBride Rd / 2121 N.
Grubb Rd / 7105, 7447,
8601 Allentown Rd /
1111, 1165, 1482, 2537,
2639, 3482 Cremean Rd
/ 525, 2207, 2255, 4210,
4696, 4746, 4825, 4857
N. Kemp Rd / 6135 Billy-
mack Rd / 2500, 2585 N.
Wapak Rd , June 19th &
20th, 8am-5pm.
ONE DAY Only!!! Fri
June 20, 9am-5pm 418
W. 5th St. Love seat,
washer & dryer, two bed-
room dressers, Weber
grill, wedding dress, nice
clothes, decorations, a
lot of nice items!
577 Miscellaneous
LAMP REPAIR, table or
floor. Come to our store.
Ho h e n b r i n k TV.
419-695-1229
586
Sports and
Recreation
FOR SALE: 4 sets of
golf clubs, $50 each. Ph.
419-956-4407.
592 Wanted to Buy
Raines
Jewelry
Cash for Gold
Scrap Gold, Gold Jewelry,
Silver coins, Silverware,
Pocket Watches, Diamonds.
2330 Shawnee Rd.
Lima
(419) 229-2899
930 Legals
TWO COPIES of the Tax
Budget as tentatively
adopted for the Town-
ship of Washington in
Van Wert County, Ohio,
are on file in the office of
the Washington Town-
ship of said Van Wert
County. These are for
public inspection; and a
Public Hearing on said
Budget will be held at
the Township Office at
22693 Lincoln Highway,
Delphos, Ohio in said
Township, on Monday
the 7th day of July,
2014, at 7:30 oclock
PM. James M. Mox,
Clerk. June 19, 2014
Brock Grain Systems
B & S Millwright 419.795.1403
Bucket
Elevators
Dump Pits
Dryers
Brock Grain Systems
Bucket
Elevators
Dump Pits
Dryers
433 S. Main St. 6/20-
21, Friday 9am-5pm,
Saturday 9am-3pm
Mens, womens and
boys clothes. Vera
Bradley, Scentsy, many
miscellaneous items.
Nice, clean, one-
bedroom apartment.
Stove, refrigerator
included. New carpet
and linoleum. $400
+deposit. 419-296-5123
The family of Paul
Krietemeyer would like
to thank everyone who
assisted Paul in the last of
his life; to the doctors and
nurses, to ICU, to Van
Wert Hospice Center. To
Father Charles for all his
visits and for the mass for
the celebration of Pauls
life. For all the family and
friends who sent a card,
said a prayer, brought
in food or sent flowers
or mementos. To Joyce
and the choir for the
beautiful music and the
church ladies who made
the meal. To Sammi for
reading a letter she wrote
to Grandpa and a special
thanks to Strayer Funeral
Home for caring.
God Bless All of You,
Carolee Krietemeyer and
Families
Dear Abby
Wife wearies of sharing house
with mans band and brother
DEAR ABBY: My husband,
Vinny, and I were married 11 years
when he left me for another woman.
Eight months later he decided the
grass wasnt greener on that side
of the fence and came back. Our
marriage is better now than it was
before the affair.
Seven months later his younger
brother Nicky got divorced and
moved in with us. A short while after
that, Vinny and Nicky joined a band.
It has been a year now, and my
brother-in-law is still here. I am more
than ready for him to move out, but
every time I mention it, Vinny says
Nicky has just gone through a
divorce and were all he has.
I hate all the time Vinny devotes
to the band. I try not to complain
because I know how much he enjoys
it, but Im miserable. They practice
in our basement on Mondays and
Wednesdays, and every Friday and
Saturday night is spent performing.
I have no privacy! How do I get
Nicky out of here? Should I push
the issue with the band or let it go?
My parents are furious with Vinny.
They say hes reliving his childhood,
Nicky is taking advantage and Vinny
is taking me for granted. Can you
offer some advice? -- HURTING IN
NEW YORK
DEAR HURTING: Your
brother-in-law should have been
out of your house a month after he
moved in. Tell Vinny youve had it
with this experiment in communal
living, set an exit date for Nicky and
stick to it. If your husband refuses to
listen to reason, then he is sending
you a strong message that your
wishes are not important.
As for Vinnys participation in the
band, he and the other band members
must be talented or they wouldnt be
booked every Friday and Saturday
night. Look at the bright side:
When theyre rehearsing in your
basement, at least you know where
your husband is and what hes doing.
Marriage is a compromise, so learn
to enjoy the music, but cultivate
interests and hobbies of your own.
And last but not least, stop
involving your parents in your
problems. Youre a big girl now.
If you dont tell all, theyll have
fewer negative feelings about your
husband.
DEAR ABBY: My 19-year-old
daughter was married last year. We
gave her a formal church wedding.
Of the 100 guests invited, several
were longtime co-workers, who took
the time to purchase lovely gifts and
travel two hours to the wedding.
Some also gave cash gifts.
My daughter still hasnt sent
out thank-you cards. I see my co-
workers week after week, and Im
humiliated. I have mentioned it to
my daughter several times, but she
says its too late to send them now.
Abby, we raised her better than this.
Every time I say anything about it,
she gives me an argument.
Please help. This eats away at me
every day. Should I take the reins
and send a short letter of apology to
these dear co-workers? -- TORN UP
IN TEXAS
DEAR TORN UP: A note of
apology from you would ease the
embarrassment you feel facing your
co-workers, but it wont put your
daughter in a better light.
All you can do is remind her that a
woman old enough to marry should
be mature enough to write thank-you
notes. And no law says her husband
cant pitch in and help. They are
equally responsible, and failure to
acknowledge any gift reflects poorly
on them both.
Dear Abby is written by Abigail
Van Buren, also known as Jeanne
Phillips, and was founded by her
mother, Pauline Phillips. Contact
Dear Abby at www.DearAbby.com
or P.O. Box 69440, Los Angeles, CA
90069.

COPYRIGHT 2014
UNIVERSAL UCLICK
Last week, for the
first time in months,
Sue and I went to the
movies. We used to go
at least once a week, but
now with Netflix and
Hulu and Roku and all
the movie channels on
cable, we could easily
watch 10 movies a day
if we were so inclined.
And better yet, we have
big-screen TV sets
in several rooms, so
Sue can watch things
that bore me and I can
watch things that bore
her at the same time.
Movie theaters
should try that. If there's
a romantic movie
at one theater in the
multiplex and a shoot
'em up in another, start
them both at the same
time so the husband can
watch one and the wife
can watch the other.
Don't start one at 4 and
one at 5:30. I can't tell
you how many times,
after watching different
movies in different
rooms, that we have
said to each other, "It
was great -- but you
wouldn't have liked it."
What can I say?
It's a well-known fact
that when it comes
to movies, men are
from "The Bourne
Supremacy" and
women are from "The
Notebook." So for
us, and I suspect for
many other couples,
going to see a film in
a theater is becoming
a rarer and rarer
occurrence. And when
there is something we
both want to see, it's
only there for about a
day. The movies we
don't want to see, the
movies for toddlers
and teenagers, linger
around for weeks. The
movie we want to see
plays for what seems
like one afternoon.
We go to the early
showings now, because
we'll fall asleep before
the 7 o'clock show
ends. This afternoon,
we are the only people
in the theater. How do
they make any money?
No wonder they only
keep it around for one
afternoon. Through the
paper-thin walls of the
multiplex, we can hear
the noise of a full-bore
action picture in the
neighboring theater.
Or maybe we're in the
middle of a bowling
ball-sized hailstorm.
The movie is set
to start at 4:05. The
lights dim and the first
preview of Coming
Attractions starts. The
seats shake, the theater
rattles and famous
landmark buildings
are shown erupting in
violent explosions, with
thousands of screaming
people running away as
the smoke and flames
shoot toward them. Out
of the rubble emerges
one man, blackened
with smoke and debris,
but nary a scratch. He
is the one man who can
save the world. He's
tough and he's hard and
he says what needs to
be said and does what
needs to be done. In real
life, the star is 5 foot
6, is scared of spiders
and snakes and pays
his agents, lawyers and
staff to say what needs
to be said and do what
needs to be done.
This blockbuster,
we're told, will open
on Christmas Day.
Because what else
would you do on
Christmas Day -- hang
around the house with
boring relatives?
The next preview is
for a horror film with
half-dressed teenagers
screaming at something
you can never quite
see. "What," I thought,
"could make a teenage
girl scream like that?"
The answer that came
to me was not vampires
and werewolves or
Freddy Krueger. They
probably just told the
teen star she had gained
a pound. There were six
or seven more trailers
we had to sit through
and after each, one of us
would say to the other,
"Remind me never to
see that." The movie
scheduled to start at
4:05 started at 4:30,
right after we were
reminded to turn off our
cellphones and visit the
the large selection of
expensive anti-health
food in the lobby.
The movie was
very good, but we'd
gotten out of the habit
of sitting for long
stretches. Every now
and then I found myself
trying to hit the pause
button so I could go
raid the fridge. Sue said
next time we went to a
movie to remind her to
bring her knitting.
I'm not sure there
will be a next time.
(Contact Jim Mullen at
JimMullenBooks.com.)
DISTRIBUTED BY
UNIVERSAL UCLICK FOR
UFS
The best seat in the house
Jim Mullen
Te Village
Idiot
Mullin
IS YOUR
AD HERE?
Call today
419-695-0015
Friday, June 20, 2014
A host of possibilities will
develop this year, but it will
be up to you to turn these
opportunities into something
viable. You are tenacious and
talented, so follow your heart
and do whatever it takes to
overcome any unfavorable
issues that could threaten your
triumph.
GEMINI (May 21-June
20) -- With your energetic
and playful way of dealing
with people, you will have
no trouble attracting new
friendships. Put your ideas
into motion to gain valuable
support.
CANCER (June 21-
July 22) -- A hardheaded
attitude will stir up trouble.
If you are unwilling to make
concessions, you will risk
getting into a confict with a
colleague, friend or lover.
LEO (July 23-Aug. 22) --
Your charm and charisma will
attract attention. Take your
place in the spotlight and enjoy
it. Your enthusiasm will lead to
an offer you cannot refuse.
VIRGO (Aug. 23-Sept.
22) -- Your personal life is
due for an interesting change.
Greater cash fow is apparent,
and it will come from an
unexpected source. Take
action and make the most of
your good fortune.
LIBRA (Sept. 23-Oct. 23)
-- Some experiences are bound
to be painful. Dont obsess
about your problems. You
dont need to blame yourself or
feel guilty for a negative event
that develops. Look for and
accentuate the positive.
SCORPIO (Oct. 24-Nov.
22) -- Major career changes lie
ahead. Take command of your
future by staying informed
and in touch with the people
and tools that you need to
advance.
SAGITTARIUS (Nov.
23-Dec. 21) -- You have been
dawdling long enough. Let
today be the starting point
for all of the alterations and
improvements you have been
considering. Its up to you to
take the initiative.
CAPRICORN (Dec. 22-
Jan. 19) -- For every step
forward, you will take two
steps back. You can save
yourself some aggravation if
you put major decisions on
hold while you reassess your
plans for the future.
AQUARIUS (Jan. 20-
Feb. 19) -- You can lighten
your load if you ask for help.
Friends and colleagues will
gladly come to your aid if they
know you are struggling. Put
your pride aside.
PISCES (Feb. 20-March
20) -- The downside of having
a vivid imagination is that
ideas may take the place of
action. You know what you
want out of life, so go out
and get it. Its time to follow
through.
ARIES (March 21-April
19) -- You dont have to be a
professional to enjoy a sporting
challenge. Find an amateur
activity that interests you, and
test your skills. Physical ftness
will improve your mindset.
TAURUS (April 20-May
20) -- You may stand out for all
the wrong reasons. Play by the
rules. Be extra careful when
dealing with authority fgures
or government agencies, or
discussing legal matters.
**
COPYRIGHT 2014 United
Feature Syndicate, Inc.
DISTRIBUTED BY
UNIVERSAL UCLICK FOR
UFS
Zits
Blondie
For Better or Worse
Beetle Bailey
Pickles
Marmaduke
Garfeld
Born Loser
Hagar the Horrible
The Family Circus

By Bil Keane
Comics & Puzzles
Barney Google & Snuffy Smith
Hi and Lois
Todays
Horoscope
By Eugenia Last
Answer to Sudoku
Crossword Puzzle
Asia range
3 Big steel
town
4 Aluminum
company
5 Deli staple
6 Use a letter
opener
7 Video com-
panion
8 Fern or moss
9 Ticklish Mup-
pet
12 Also-ran
13 Scrub, as a
launch
18 Halter
22 Discreet
summons
23 Rollover
subj.
24 Do Easter
eggs
25 Always, to
Byron
27 Old Dodge
model
29 Roll-call cry
31 Lemon
cooler
32 Outlaw
ACROSS
1 Coffee
holder
4 Tummy
muscles
7 Gorilla
10 Memorable
decade
11 Bask
13 Weed out
14 Kids card
game
15 Ad award
16 Madam,
Im --
17 Mischief-
maker
19 Madrid
youngster
20 Dustcloth
21 Orlando
attraction
23 Hunch
26 Vikings
28 Reuben
bread
29 Overactor
30 Marble
blocks
34 Cliffside
abode
36 After taxes
38 Lah-di- --
39 Not very
strong
41 Chromo-
some unit
42 Thin cookie
44 Showery
mo.
46 -- Hai
47 Almost free
(2 wds.)
52 Wheel rod
53 Disarray
54 Glamorous
wrap
55 Mock
56 Town near
Des Moines
57 Not just my
58 -- Arbor,
Michigan
59 Poem by
Keats
60 Sixth sense
DOWN
1 Cat calls
2 Europe-
Yesterdays answers
33 That yacht
35 Chancier
37 Went by,
as time
40 Good
smell
41 Watch-
dogs warning
42 Like a
candle
43 Gracie or
Fred
45 Out of
style
46 Where
Tijuana is
48 Verne
captain
49 Woodwind
instrument
50 Gehrig
and Piniella
51 Lawman
Wyatt
Friday, June 20, 2014 The Herald 11
www.delphosherald.com
Trivia
Answers to Thursdays questions:
Agatha Christie sleuths Hercule Poirot and Miss
Jane Marple appeared together in The Alphabet
Murders. The movie stars Tony Randall as Poirot
and features a brief cameo appearance by Margaret
Rutherford as Miss Marple. The two exchange curious
looks but no words when they encounter one another
on a London street.
Paul Revere, who supplemented his income as a silver-
smith by making and fitting false teeth, was the first person
to use dental evidence to identify human remains. Revere
made the first-known dental forensic identification of a
body in 1775 when he positively identified the remains of
patriot leader Dr. Joseph Warren, who was killed during
the Battle of Bunker Hill and buried in an unmarked grave
by the British. Revere identified Warren based on two false
teeth he had wired into Warrens mouth in 1774.
Todays questions:
When it comes to entertainers of the 1960s, who were
Yarrow, Stookey and Travers?
What code name was used for al Qaeda leader Osama
bin Laden when U.S. Navy SEALs raided his hideout in
Pakistan and killed him in 2011?
Answers in Mondays Herald.
The Outstanding Public Debt as of Thursday evening
was $17,574,981,733,639.
The estimated population of the United States is
318,453,680, so each citizens share of this debt is
$55,189.
The National Debt has continued to increase an aver-
age of $2.40 billion per day since Sept. 30, 2012.
12 The Herald Friday, June 20, 2014 www.delphosherald.com
(Continued from page 3)
Lunch at the Hofbrauhaus featured
wonderful German food such as hot
German potato salad and apple strudel.
The old world atmosphere and good food
make this a very popular eating place.
A stop was made at St. Marys
Cathedral Basilica of the Assumption
in Covington. The magnificent structure
was dedicated for use in 1901. It is 180
feet in length and 81 feet in height.
There are 82 stained glass windows
which were made in Munich. The win-
dows depict the life of the both the child
and adult Jesus, the apostles, saints,
doctors of the early church and Mary,
Queen of Heaven.
Two rose windows, masterful combi-
nations of design and color, measure 26
feet in diameter. The majestic north tran-
sept window, 67 feet by 24 feet, presides
here as one of the largest stained glass
windows in the world. The cathedral is
one of just 35 minor basilicas. There are
only four major basilicas, all of which
are in Rome.
The day ended with an exciting ride
on the amphibious Ducks through the
streets of Newport and also on the Ohio
River. The first use of Ducks was in
March 1942 when the U.S. landed troops
in New Caledonia. Generals Patton and
Eisenhower realized how valuable these
vehicles were so thousands were used to
bring to shore supplies and men. They
also are very important in rescue opera-
tions such as the one after Hurricane
Katrina. They now provide a unique and
fun experience as passengers are pro-
vided a duck call to blow while enjoying
the ride and hearing about the history of
the area.
Those who went on the trip:
Jane Bowers and Beth Coughlin
from Anwerp; Estella Nusbaum, Pat
Frysinger from Celina; Angie Gibson,
Ruth Ann Densel, Sandy Burk, Marsha
Owens, Kathy Thompson and Marie
Sanfilippo from Convoy; Sharon Fuller
and Bonnie Selhorst from Columbus
Grove; Sharon Genglar, Darla Rahrig,
Mary Murray, Diane Pothast, Karen
Hartman, Dorothy Hedrick, Lorene
Jettinghoff, Joyce Feathers, Sandra
Beining, Carol Greufach, Karen Ricker,
Janette Knippen and Sue Vasquez from
Delphos; Linda Vermule, Mary Ann
Rode, Martha Fischbach, Joan Moening
and Mary Lou Krietemeyer from Fort
Jennings; Ruth Ann Thompson, Alice
Berryman, Beverly Berryman and Betty
Mosier from Grover Hill; Margaret
Schimmoeller from Glandorf; Delores
Laukhuf from Haviland; and Sandra
Hahn, Jean Goes and Juanita Gallager
from Lima.
Also, Janice Kohn and Teresa Gemann
from Ohio City; Donna Roughton from
Oakwood; Janice Stemen, Judy Siefker,
Becky Grismore and Rose Ann German
from Ottawa; Marilyn Kaufman and
Jean Hilvers from Ottoville; Sharon
Whitman from Payne; Karen Aldred,
Anne Plummer, Carol Plummer and
Shirley Miller from Paulding; Fran
Sapp, Diane Fullenkamp, Cheri Schaadt,
Gloria Fisher and Cheri Schaadt from
Rockford; Donnabelle Clark from Scott;
Sue Schwinnen and Irma Schwinnen
from Spencerville; and Linda Johnson
and Diane Grilliot from St. Marys.
Also, Joan Horney, Linda Fox,
Marvel Adam, Lois Jones, Mary
Minnig, Lou Tomlinson, Sonja Knittle,
Linda Frederick, Judy Fenton, Pat Lippi,
Louise Renner, Judy Comer, Dorothy
Brown, Mary Bowen, Carol Thatcher,
Diane Mosier, Paula Giessler, Sharon
Bowersock, Cheryl Purk, Bonnie
Wermer, Susan Gates, Sandra Errett,
Rosemary Charleston, Marilyn Bebout,
Shirley Lichty, Joan Custer, Helen
Wisener, Estella Gilroy, Ellen Hemple
and Joyce Brant from Van Wert; Elaine
Price from Venedocia; Donna Githens
from Wren; Jean Owens and Janet Mohr
were the tour escorts; and Tim Ford and
Henry Godeke the bus drivers.
YWCA
(Continued from page 3)
All of the counselors are former
Boys State delegates. The senior
counselors, according to Jordan, have
a combined 150 years of experi-
ence at Boys State. The program
features a fully functional House of
Representatives and Senate, and elec-
tions are held early in the week for
every state office and agency found
in the state of Ohio, enabling the del-
egates to learn by doing.
Whether or not they are interested
in pursuing a career in government,
the boys seem to be motivated by a
common curiosity of how our govern-
ment works.
Mark Metzger, a Fort Jennings
High School student with an inter-
est in government and social studies,
said he came to Boys State to better
prepare himself for taking American
Government during his senior year.
He also enjoyed the taste of freedom
he got from the week.
I have enjoyed being able to
branch out on my own and be able
to experience the government and
job settings in my own right, said
Metzger.
Over 500 Ohio high schools are
represented each year at Boys State.
Logan Hesseling of Delphos discov-
ered a brotherhood among the del-
egates.
The guys in my city are some
of the funniest, most interesting and
genuinely awesome people I have
ever had the chance to experience,
he said.
The program concluded Sunday
with a graduation ceremony and ecu-
menical church service at BGSUs
Stroh Arena. The program featured
an awards presentation and a speech
given by 1971 American Legion Boys
State Delegate and 1993 Boys State
Hall of Fame Inductee Dr. Doug
Naylor, a surgeon at the Cleveland
Clinic.
Delegates
(Continued from page 3)
Students receiving Wildcat Honors were: Tanner
Hetrick, Nicole Stevenson, Alaina Fitch, Emma Kunz,
Gweneth Wagner, Kendall Kill, Kyrstin Moore, Rachel
Ryan, Emma Mueller, Emily Dienstberger, Jacob Groch,
Danielle Hohlbein, Emmalee Riddell and Riley Smith.
Students receiving certificates for the Presidential
Physical Fitness Awards were: Tyrayna Olmeda, Mason
Rowe, Troy Wolfe, Ian Wannemacher, Colin Bailey, Ramon
Nunez, Ethan Smith, Cody Bailey, Rylynn Marquiss, Emma
Cooley, Alivia Arroyo, Romelio Olmeda and Kyrstin Moore.
Students receiving certificates for the National
Physical Fitness Awards were: Madison Bremer, Emily
Dienstberger, Julian Grant, Alexis Johnson, Jaylin Joseph,
Cody Osting, Dalton Place, Emmalee Riddell, Gregory
Rose, Seth Teman, Alexa Chung, Delaney Deuel, Ethan
Dunlap, Hali Haggard, Zane Harter, Brianna Miller, Emma
Mueller, Kaden Overholt, Jayda Rader, Devan Samons,
Calum Shanahan, Alexis Banks, Anthony Bodine, Connor
Burris, Kaleb Catlett, Elizabeth Chung, Makenna Cooley,
Kaylee Grant, Xandra Houx, Bruce Hutchison, Garrett
Richardson, Grace Bridges, Kyra Foust, Joslynn James,
Logan Jones, Rico Olmedo, Kaden Smith, Madeline Weitzel,
Coby Anspach, Julian Calvelage, Logan Cash, Emily Cline,
Kylee Dienstberger, Morrison M.J. Finkhousen, Allisun
Hackworth, Tanner Jones, Matthew Miller, Logan Murray,
Rachel Ryan, Tyler Springer, Mark Stemen, Cole Brooks,
Jaden Lucas, Raiden Sams, Peyton Schmitt, Braxton
Sherrick, Serenity Sites, Kayla Smith, Elijah Spring, Leah
Wood, Ghavin Bitters, Alise Frick, Xachaary Houx, Hannah
Joseph, Vincent Murray, Chelsi Haggard, Mikel Hale, Nolan
Kunkleman and Malik Mays.
Pat Poling, the school librarian, presented 15 Library
Awards.
Megan Ryan presented 214 Art Awards.
Franklin
(Continued from page 1)
The cabin itself was one of four which sat behind Runyons
Hi-Speed Gasoline Station and Tourist Court at the intersec-
tion of Lincoln Highway and Mendon Road. The cabin was
donated to the historical society by Dr. Tom Wilkin in honor of
his parents, Dr. Harold and Natalie Wilkin.
The cabin was taken from its original location this past win-
ter and has been refurbished for use on display at the museum
grounds. The upcoming holiday weekend will mark its debut
there.
A look at the cabin will not remind you of luxury accommo-
dations but they were very popular along Lincoln Highway all
across Van Wert County. At that point, winter was not a time for
traveling over any distance, so basically these were used only
during the summer months.
The rates were not much like a luxury hotel either. Webb,
whose parents rented tourist cabins at a location on down the
highway, said, My parents, when we rented these, got $4 for a
single and $7 for a double but those were just a little bit bigger
than this one.
(Continued from page 1)
I asked her if it would be OK if I looked in her refrigerator
and the only thing in there was a bottle of ketchup about one-third
full, Hale said. I told her Id like to get her some food. She said
she was alright but I convinced her she needed it and it was avail-
able at a food pantry here in town. She finally relented.
Hale also opened a few local eyes during her years at the
senior center.
I remember I was talking to a group of people and they told
me, We take care of our own, she said. I remembered that
woman who was eating ketchup soup and told one of the men
there that I had a project for him. They didnt know that was
happening right here in their town.
While at the helm of center, Hale has overseen all aspects
of operation from chores, to outreach, to special activities and
more. None of which would have been possible without her
staff by her side.
I have such a wonderful staff, she said. They are willing
to do whatever it takes to make something work and assure our
members are taken care of. When I started here, I was a one-
woman show and I could have never provided everyone with
what they needed.
When Hale first took over the position, there was no meal
site and vehicles were borrowed from other agencies to get
members to doctor appointments and to run other errands.
Today, the center has its own vans and offers a daily lunch and
assistance with paperwork from Medicare and Medicaid to tax
preparation.
The size of the center has grown under Hale as well. A
garage was added to house the transportation fleet and renova-
tions ensure the center is pleasant and welcoming for members.
All the while, Hale was fighting for every penny the center
received.
It seems like every time there are cuts, its to funding for
the elderly, she said. Its a shame that the people who have
gotten us to where we are often get the short end of the stick.
Office Manager Angie Goodwin said she is going to miss
her mentor.
Joyce got things done, Goodwin said. She headed the
renovations and the addition of the garage and kept up with
day-to-day issues. She has done a lot for this agency and weve
learned a lot from her. She taught us how to treat our members
and see to their needs and sometimes even anticipate them.
Hale doesnt have plans for life after retirement. She said
she pretty much did the things she wanted as she went.
Everybodys busy but if you want to do it, you will, she
said. Theres no reason to wait.
She said shell enjoy spending time with her children and
grandchildren but hopes she can still lend her expertise to the
center in an advisory capacity.
Joyce told me as we left her party that if we ever needed
anything, to call her, Miller said. She has a lot of knowledge
and she made the boards job a lot easier because she kept up
with the ever-changing state laws. You dont see the dedication
Joyce has given to this job very often. We were very fortunate
to have her.
(Continued from page 1)
Others crowned during the
Miss Ohio United States pag-
eant were 2014 Princess of
Ohio Laila Strawn, 2014 Miss
Pre-Teen Ohio United States
Kira West, 2014 Miss Jr. Teen
Ohio United States Kaitlyn
Cantu, 2014 Miss Teen Ohio
United States Alyssa Gum,
2014 Ms. Ohio United States
Dr. Heidi Sprowls and 2014
Mrs. Ohio United States
Christina Hunt.
The 2014 edition of the
Miss Ohio United States pag-
eant is under the direction
of Angela Caliguri. Caliguri
has been elected as the
new director for Miss Ohio
United States. As Ms. Indiana
United States 2013, an NFL
cheerleader, registered nurse
and owner of AMC Events,
Caliguri brings a unique per-
spective as a director and
strives to build the best pro-
gram possible for Ohio.
Hale
Cabin
Moore
WASHINGTON (AP) Inching
back into a fight he tried to leave behind,
President Barack Obama announced
Thursday he was dispatching 300 U.S.
military advisers to Iraq to help quell
the rising insurgency in the crumbling
nation. He also challenged Iraqs embat-
tled leader to create a more inclusive
government or risk his country descend-
ing into sectarian civil war.
The test is before him and other
Iraqi leaders as we speak, Obama said
of Iraqi Prime Minister Nouri al-Maliki,
whose political fate appeared increas-
ingly in play as his rivals launched a
secretive effort to replace him.
Less than three years after Obama
heralded the end of Americas war in
Iraq, he insisted he was not sending the
military back into combat. Still, when
coupled with previously announced
steps, the presidents actions could put
about 600 additional U.S. troops in the
midst of Iraqs deeply unstable security
situation.
Underscoring the volatility was a
tenacious fight over Iraqs largest oil
refinery north of Baghdad. Iraqi soldiers
and helicopter gunships battled Sunni
militants for a third day on Thursday
for control of the refinery, the loss of
which would be a devastating symbol of
the governments powerlessness in the
face of a determined insurgency hostile
to the West.
Despite the deteriorating conditions,
Obama held off approving airstrikes
that the Iraqi government has sought to
stem an insurgency that has taken over
the cities of Mosul and Tikrit and has
pressed toward Baghdad. The president
said he could still approve targeted and
precise strikes if the situation on the
ground required it, noting that the U.S.
had stepped up intelligence gathering in
Iraq to help identify potential targets.
Officials said manned and unmanned
U.S. aircraft are now flying over Iraq 24
hours a day on intelligence collection
missions. If the U.S. were to proceed
with airstrikes, officials did not rule
out the prospect of hitting targets in
Syria, where the militant group pressing
through Iraq also has deep ties.
Even as Obama left the door open for
a direct military response, he said Iraqs
future ultimately rests with its leaders
willingness to embrace a more inclusive
political system. Al-Maliki has long
faced criticism from the U.S. for not
giving Iraqs Sunni minority a greater
role in the Shiite-dominated govern-
ment. Secretary of State John Kerry is
expected to travel to Iraq soon to press
its government to share more power.
While U.S. officials have increas-
ingly raised questions privately about
whether al-Maliki can lead his country
out of the current crisis, Obama stopped
short of calling for the prime minister
to step down, saying its not our job to
choose Iraqs leaders.
But in what appeared to be a point-
ed warning to al-Maliki, Obama said:
Only leaders that can govern with an
inclusive agenda are going to be able to
truly bring the Iraqi people together and
help them through this crisis.
A leading Sunni tribal chief said
Washingtons decision to send the mil-
itary advisers would only make the
fighting worse. Sheik Ali Hatem al-
Suleiman, whose men are involved in
the Sunni insurgency led by the al-Qaida
inspired Islamic State of Iraq and the
Levant, said the violence would end
only if al-Maliki stepped down.
Back to Iraq: Obama
sending military advisers
Rock that whizzed by Earth may be grabbed by NASA
WASHINGTON (AP)
NASA is zeroing in on the
asteroids it wants to capture,
haul near the moon and have
astronauts visit.
Officials on Thursday
described a prime candidate:
A tiny asteroid that whizzed
about 7,600 miles above
Earth in 2011.
At 20 feet long, it is the
size of a delivery truck; we
might actually be able to put
this asteroid in a garage, said
Northern Arizona University
astronomer Michael
Mommert, who studied the
rock, which goes by the inel-
egant name of 2011 MD.
That asteroid also could
be a pile of smaller rocks that
fly together in formation.
NASAs plan is to grab an
asteroid with a giant claw or
capture it with a giant inflat-
able bag. The asteroid would
be parked above the moon,
with astronauts exploring in
a later mission.
NASA executive Lindley
Johnson said there will even-
tually be about 10 possible
rocks for capture in the early
2020s, but they may not all
be small asteroids.
Theres a second option
NASA is considering:
Sending a spacecraft to a
much larger asteroid, using
a claw to pluck off a boulder
thats less than 30 feet and
taking it near to the moon.
NASA will decide which
option to pursue by the end
of the year, said Michele
Gates, program director for
the asteroid mission.
So far, NASA has three
candidates for each option.
But Johnson said he expects
more to be identified. NASA
doesnt have to choose its
final target until a year before
launch, which could be as
early as 2019.
But Thursdays press
conference highlighted 2011
MD. Thats because when
it came close to Earth in
2011, it was examined by
telescopes on Earth and the
Spitzer Space Telescope.
Details of the asteroid were
published in an astronomy
journal Thursday.
Those observations
showed that it probably
weighs around 100 tons
but is so porous that about
two-thirds is empty space
and only one-third is rock,
Mommert said.
NASA has touted the aster-
oid mission since the space
shuttle fleet retired as a stepping
stone to send crews to Mars.
The robotic cost of the
mission would be about
$1.2 billion, Gates said. But
theres no good estimate yet
for the astronaut part, which
includes using a yet-to-be-
built giant rocket, officials
said.

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