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he shifts his weight. His flowing white hair is a little reminiscent of Albert Einsteins, sticking up here and there with the need of a little combing around the edges but his thick beard is neatly trimmed and laying flat across his chest. There appears to be some cookie crumbs stuck in the bristly white mass, however. He is not wearing his normal uniform - The Suit, as he refers to it - but instead is wearing a longsleeved, red flannel shirt with a pair of black ski pants and suspenders. There are no boots, either. Just a thick pair of woolen socks covered by a pair of bunny slippers with the ears drooping over the sides. He
laughs when they are commented on and says they were a gift from some of the elves a few years ago. His laugh also places him apart from everyone else. It booms out, rattling windows and catching a listener on its waves, threatening to carry them along. It is infectious and makes this reporter smile. Claus took the time recently to sit down for an interview at an undisclosed location. Delphos Herald: Thank you for taking the time to meet with me today, Mr. Claus. I know this must be an extremely busy time of the year for you. Santa Claus: Please, call me Santa. And its not a problem to
talk with you. Jessica - Mrs. Claus - signed me up for a Pilates class to try to relieve my stress during this time of year but I would rather talk with you. DH: Speaking of being busy, I am sure that one of the questions you get asked the most is about how you do what you do delivering toys all around the world in one night. Just how do you do it? SC: Oh, theres no way I could still deliver all the toys without the TCM. DH: The TCM? SC: Time Continuum Modulator. It all has to do with quantum physics. Einstein started the process but Werner Heisenberg and his
Uncertainty Principle really made it all come together. Let me tell you, they got everything they asked for on their lists for a few years! (He laughs.) I dont want to get too technical but it has to do with the flow of time and its relationship to gravity as well as the placement of atoms. Thats really all I am able to say contractually. The placement of a distribution warehouse system around the world has helped a lot, too. Lots of re-supplying stops on Christmas Eve. DH: Even so, it must feel like you have to be a lot of places at once. Even before Christmas Eve. See SANTA, page 10A
Upfront
TODAY Girls Basketball: Bath at St. Johns, 6 p.m. Boys Basketball: Lincolnview at Kalida, 6 p.m. THURSDAY Girls Basketball: Vicki Mauk Holiday Invitational at Elida, 6/7:30 p.m. FRIDAY Girls Basketball: Jefferson/Lincolnview at Parkway Holiday Tournament, 3 p.m.; Vicki Mauk Holiday Inv. (Elida), 6/7:30 p.m. Boys Basketball: St. Johns vs. Fremont St. Joe (New Philadelphia Catholic Hol. Tour.), TBA; Fort Jennings at Lincolnview, 6 p.m.; Ada at Kalida, 6:30 p.m.; Jefferson at Parkway Hol. Tourn., 8 p.m. Wrestling: St. Johns at Marion Harding Classic, 8 a.m.; Elida at Reineke Holiday Classic (Tiffin Columbian), noon Mostly cloudy today and tonight with a chance of snow showers. Highs around 30 and lows 10 to 15. See page 2A.
Sports
I am excited about teaching this new course, MacLennan said. This will give our students another opportunity to learn and add new curriculum to the high school. I already have a student who is looking at a college for this. Zulama will be the second stepping stone for students who take the current eighth-grade computer programming class. The course will be offered to freshmen and sophomores and next year well add another course, MacLennan said. Dr. Dean Goon of Mount Vernon Nazarene University and Diocese of Toledo Technology Coordinator of Catholic Schools Joni Cori provided
training for MacLennan on Friday. Cori said the superintendent of the dioceses has been pushing for a program like Zulama. Computer science is a passion for the superintendent, she said. This program will fall right in line with that. In Games Through the Ages, students will identify common games design from ancient Babylon to the present and analyze why games are played and determine how theyve changed over time. The whole time they are studying games, they are learning history and social studies and 21st-century skills, Goon said.This course also fulfills common core standards.
MacLennan hopes that by offering the course early in the high school years, more females will become interested. We need to get more females involved, she said. This is not just a male-dominant field. Goon said the courses can lead to interest in numerous fields. Gaming encompasses a wide variety of skills, he said. It includes graphic design, marketing, computer science, social studies, as well as game design. The curriculum is challenging and rigorous. Students will learn a lot of the information at a college level and it will equip them with skills for engineering, computer programming, software design and problem-solving. Goon also said Zulama peaks interest in students which is key in the learning process. Engaged students, retain more and learning becomes fun, he said. Then it extends further and leaves the classroom.
Weak card security Health plan sticker shock ahead for some makes US top victim
Obamacare
BY CARLA K. JOHNSON Associated Press CHICAGO As a key enrollment deadline hits today, many people without health insurance have been sizing up policies on the new government health care marketplace and making what seems like a logical choice: Theyre picking the cheapest one. Increasingly, experts in health insurance are becoming concerned that many of these firsttime buyers will be in for a shock when they get medical care next year and discover theyre on the hook for most of the initial cost. The prospect of sticker shock after Jan. 1, when those who sign up for policies now can begin getting coverage, is seen as a looming problem for a new national system that has been plagued by trouble since the new marketplaces went online in the states in October. For those without insurance about 15 percent of the population the lesson is its important to understand the total cost of ownership of a plan, said Matt Eyles, a vice president of Avalere Health, a market analysis firm. You just dont want to look only at the premium. Counselors who have been helping people choose policies say many are focused only on the upfront cost, not what the insurance companies agree to pay. I am so deeply clueless about all of this, acknowledged one new buyer, Adrienne Matzen, 29, an actor in Chicago whos mostly been without insurance since she turned 21. Though she needs regular care for asthma and a thyroid condition, she says shes looking for a low monthly premium because she makes less than $20,000 a year. Hospitals are worried that those who rack up uncovered medical bills next year wont be able to pay them, perpetuating one of the problems the new health care system is supposed to solve. The new federal and state health insurance exchanges offer policies ranked as bronze, silver, gold and platinum. The bronze options have the lowest monthly premiums but high deductibles the amount the policyholder must pay before the insurer picks up any of the cost of medical care. On average, a bronze plans deductible is more than $4,300, according to an analysis of marketplace plans in 19 states by Avalere Health. A consumer who upgrades to a silver plan could reduce the deductible to about $2,500. A top-of-the-line platinum plan has the lowest average deductible: $167. See SHOCK, page 10A BY JONATHAN FAHEY Associated Press NEW YORK The U.S. is the juiciest target for hackers hunting credit card information. And experts say incidents like the recent data theft at Targets stores will get worse before they get better. Thats in part because U.S. credit and debit cards rely on an easy-to-copy magnetic strip on the back of the card, which stores account information using the same technology as cassette tapes. We are using 20th-century cards against 21st-century hackers, says Mallory Duncan, general counsel at the National Retail Federation. The thieves have moved on but the cards have not. In most countries outside the U.S., people carry cards that use digital chips to hold account information. The chip
Forecast
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generates a unique code every time its used. That makes the cards more difficult for criminals to replicate. So difficult that they generally dont bother. The U.S. is the top victim location for card counterfeit attacks like this, says Jason Oxman, chief executive of the Electronic Transactions Association. The breach that exposed the credit card and debit card information of as many as 40 million Target customers who swiped their cards between Nov. 27 and Dec. 15 is still under investigation. Its unclear how the breach occurred and what data, exactly, criminals have. Although security experts say no security system is failsafe, there are several measures stores, banks and credit card companies can take to protect against these attacks. See WEAK, page 10A
2A The Herald
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Memorial Hall. Hosts and hostesses will be Mr. and Mrs. Joe Janka and Mr. and Mrs. Alvin VonLehmden.
25 Years Ago 1988 Twenty-five area leaders were selected to participate in the AllenLima Leadership Program to look at community problems. Among leaders named were Ida Kay Keller, volunteer and president of Spencerville Board of Education; Edward A. Ulrich, farm manager of Roscoe Thompson Farms, Delphos; and Elizabeth A. Shenk, vice president of Shenks Store. Rob Friemoth of the Lincolnview Future Farmers of America hit three free throws in the final 22 seconds to seal a 54-52 win over Elida FFA at Lincolnview North Elementary gymnasium. Jerome Blankemeyer led the Lancers with 16 points. Brian Cronenwett added 15. Friemoth had eight points. Bill Evans and Troy Bowersock chipped in six each, Travis Johnson added two and Ben Etgen one. Paulding, wrestling without anyone in the upper three weight classes, needed some strong performances from its lightweights. The Panthers got those performances enroute to a 38-32 win
50 Years Ago 1963 Delphos Chapter No. 26, Order of the Eastern Star, held a regular meeting Thursday evening in the Masonic Temple with the worthy matron, Mrs. Richard John, in charge. Marking the Christmas season, the members of the chapter were entertained by the Girls Senior Chorus of Gomer High School. The Jones Sisters were on the program, which was composed of Christmas music. Linda Bartel of Gomer High School gave a reading. Members of the Ladies Bible Class of the Evangelical United Brethren Church held their annual Christmas Friday in the social rooms of the church. The meeting was opened with Mrs. George Patton at the piano with the group singing Christmas carols. Mary Brinkman gave the scriptures and Nora Link presented the lesson. Members of the Jennings Twirlers square dance club held a dance Dec. 15 in Memorial Hall with guests present from Indiana, Van Wert and Delphos. On Dec. 29, the group will hold another dance for all western square dancers in
75 Years Ago 1938 A special meeting of the Catholic Youth Organization was conducted in the clubrooms on East First Street Wednesday evening to discuss final arrangements for the New Years Eve Ball. This social affair will be held in St. Johns auditorium under the CYO auspices. Louis Scherger, chairman of the ticket committee, presented his report. Gerald Williams and Paul Baumgarte are in charge of the sale of tickets to high school students. One of the outstanding programs of the week was presented in a Christmas broadcast Wednesday night under the sponsorship of the Delphos Civic Club. The program was presented by the Presbyterian Church choir and Carl Dienstberger, violinist. Another fine program is scheduled for Thursday night when the Methodist Church choir gives the program. Mrs. Jessie Danner, leader, received the members of the Epworth League of the Methodist Church into her home Wednesday evening for a delightful Christmas party. Games provided entertainment for the evening and the honors were won by Janis Clark and Robert Ervin. Dainty refreshments, in keeping with the holiday spirit, were served.
CLEVELAND (AP) These Ohio lotteries were drawn Sunday: Mega Millions Estimated jackpot: $22 million Pick 3 Evening 8-0-3 Pick 3 Midday 1-7-5 Pick 4 Evening 2-5-6-8 Pick 4 Midday 0-0-4-9 Pick 5 Evening 3-4-2-9-6 Pick 5 Midday 5-4-6-5-4 Powerball Estimated jackpot: $74 million Rolling Cash 5 06-16-32-33-35 Estimated jackpot: $488,000
LOTTERY
Associated Press
TODAY IN HISTORY
Today is Monday, Dec. 23, the 357th day of 2013. There are eight days left in the year. Todays Highlight in History: On Dec. 23, 1913, the Federal Reserve System was created as President Woodrow Wilson signed the Federal Reserve Act. On this date: In 1788, Maryland passed an act to cede an area not exceeding ten miles square for the seat of the national government; about 2/3 of the area became the District of Columbia. In 1823, the poem Account of a Visit from St. Nicholas was published anonymously in the Troy (N.Y.) Sentinel; the verse, more popularly known as Twas the Night Before Christmas, was later attributed to Clement C. Moore. In 1893, the Engelbert Humperdinck opera Haensel und Gretel was first performed, in Weimar, Germany. In 1928, the National Broadcasting Company set up a permanent, coast-to-coast network. In 1933, President Franklin D. Roosevelt restored the civil rights of about 1,500 people whod been jailed for opposing the (First) World War. In 1941, during World War II, American forces on Wake Island surrendered to the Japanese. In 1948, former Japanese premier Hideki Tojo and six other Japanese war leaders were executed in Tokyo.
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In 1953, the Soviet Union announced the execution of Lavrentiy Beria, former head of the secret police, for treason. In 1962, Cuba began releasing prisoners from the failed Bay of Pigs invasion under an agreement in which Cuba received more than $50 million worth of food and medical supplies. In 1968, 82 crew members of the U.S. intelligence ship Pueblo were released by North Korea, 11 months after they had been captured. In 1972, in footballs Immaculate Reception, Franco Harris of the Pittsburgh Steelers caught a pass thrown by Terry Bradshaw and scored a touchdown after the ball was deflected during a collision between Jack Tatum of the Oakland Raiders and the Steelers John Fuqua; the Steelers won, 13-7. A 6.2-magnitude earthquake struck Nicaragua; the disaster claimed some 5,000 lives. In 1986, the experimental airplane Voyager, piloted by Dick Rutan and Jeana Yeager, completed the first non-stop, non-refueled round-the-world flight as it returned safely to Edwards Air Force Base in California. Ten years ago: The government announced the first suspected (later confirmed) case of mad cow disease in United States, in Washington state. A jury in Chesapeake, Va., sentenced teen sniper Lee Boyd Malvo to life in prison, sparing him the death penalty. A gas well accident in southwestern China killed 233 people. New York Gov. George Pataki posthumously pardoned comedian Lenny Bruce for his 1964 obscenity conviction. Five years ago: Rene-Thierry Magon de la Villehuchet, founder of an investment fund that had lost $1.4 billion in Bernard Madoffs Ponzi scheme, was discovered dead after committing suicide at his Madison Avenue office. A military-led group seized control of the airwaves in Guinea and declared a coup after the death of the countrys long-time dictator, Lansana Conte. One year ago: President Barack Obama, Hawaii Gov. Neil Abercrombie and other dignitaries attended a memorial service for the late Sen. Daniel Inouye at Honolulus National Memorial Cemetery of the Pacific. Jean Harris, the patrician girls school headmistress whod spent 12 years in prison for the 1980 killing of her longtime lover, Scarsdale Diet doctor Herman Tarnower, died in New Haven, Conn., at age 89. Todays Birthdays: Actor Gerald S. OLoughlin is 92. Actor Ronnie Schell is 82. Emperor Akihito of Japan is 80. Pro and College Football Hall of Famer Paul Hornung is 78. Actor Frederic Forrest is 77. Actor James Stacy is 77.
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CORRECTIONS
FUNERALS
FULLER, Luella Katherine Mary, 90, of Bucyrus, funeral services will be held in Good Hope Lutheran Church at 1 p.m. Saturday. Family will receive friends two hours prior to the service from 11 a.m.-1 p.m. at the church. Burial will be in Fort Jennings Mt. Calvary Cemetery on a later date. In lieu of flowers, donations are encouraged to go to the Good Hope Youth Ministries. Memories can be shared on Luellas obituary page at www.wisefuneral.com. WILLIAMS, Alice L., 83, of Delphos, a celebration of Alices life will begin at 11 a.m. today at Trinity United Methodist Church, Pastor David Howell officiating. Burial will follow in Walnut Grove Cemetery. Visitation will be one hour prior to services at the church. Memorials may be made to Delphos Interfaith Thrift Shop. Online condolences may be shared at www. strayerfuneralhome.com.
WEATHER FORECAST Tri-county Associated Press TODAY: Mostly cloudy with a chance of flurries in the morning. Then partly cloudy with a chance of snow showers in the afternoon. Colder. Highs around 30. West winds 10 to 15 mph. Chance of measurable precipitation 30 percent. TONIGHT: Mostly cloudy with a 20 percent chance of snow showers. Colder. Lows 10 to 15. West winds 10 to 15 mph. Wind chills zero to 10 above zero.
WEATHER
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poor districts compete by narrowing tax-base discrepancies while rewarding innovation and expanding access to vouchers. Proponents say the changes will better prepare students and make schools operate more efficiently and hold educators more accountable. There are new early elementary reading mandates, curriculum standards, teacher evaluations and changes in the way schools will be rated. Filling out the top 10 Ohio stories, in descending order, are: The Cincinnati IRS office comes under tea party fire for targeting conservative political groups for additional reviews during the 2012 election. An Amish leader found guilty in hair-cutting attacks on fellow Amish is sentenced to 15 years in federal prison. A self-styled preacher is convicted in Akron of killing three down-and-out men lured by bogus job offers posted on Craigslist. A teenager pleads guilty in March to killing three students at Chardon High School and is sentenced to life in prison. A 22-year-old man confesses in an online video to killing a man in a DUI crash in central Ohio. He is sentenced in October to 6 1/2 years in prison.
and Sinclair plans more online courses. Two Sinclair students slated to receive UAS certificates this spring are eager to start. Ryan Palm, a 31-year-old flight attendant from Vandalia, wants to be a pilot but not for an airline. He says combining the private pilots license he is getting along with his UAS certificate should prepare him for various jobs once the market for drone operators opens up. It looks like this technology will be the next big thing, and I want to be ahead of the curve, said Palm. Sinclair student Drew Tait, 21, of New York City, hopes his certificate will give him an edge toward landing a job as a first responder with the New York City Fire Department. I think UAS will be used a lot for things like checking for possible toxins in fires and searching for victims, and I want to be ahead of the pack, Tait said. Sinclair also offers a course on how to apply drones to precision agriculture, which generally involves surveying fields with an eye toward improving crop yields, more precise application of treatments and early detection of disease. Clark State Community College in Springfield also is planning a program focusing on analysis of agricultural data from drones or other sensor equipment.
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Although you may not be a customer of All American Energy we have pipeline facilities that may be on or near your property. These facilities serve our current customers in the Ottoville and Ft. Jennings area. These pipeline facilities are operated and maintained to ensure safe and reliable service for these areas.
How to recognize a gas leak: 1. A distinctive (gas) odor rotten egg smell. 2. A shrill blowing or hissing sound. 3. Dirt being blown or thrown into the air. 4. Water being blown into the air at a pond, creek or river. 5. Fire apparently coming from the ground or burning above the ground. 6. Patches or brown vegetation in a green grassy area on or near the pipeline right-of-way. 7. Dry spot on moist field. 8. Bubbles appearing on the surface of water. If you suspect a natural gas leak please call 1-877-2465100. This is our 24 hour a day emergency number. If you smell gas in your home leave immediately and go to a neighbors house to call.
If you are planning to do any digging on your property (planting trees, installing a fence, etc.) you are required by law to call the Ohio Utility Protection Service (OUPS). Their number is 1-800-362-2764. You can also reach them by dialing 811. This call must be made 48 working hours (2 working days) in advance of the planned work. This call initiates contact with your local utility companies so they can mark the location of their underground facilities on your property. Those facilities can then be avoided when you dig. Additional Information If you have questions, would like additional information or are interested in natural gas service please call All American Energys office at 1-888-527-2494.
Tickets for each concert are $30 and available by calling our office (419) 222-5701 or online at www.limasymphony.com
4A The Herald
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Engagement
Anniversary
Wedding
Clark/Hyitt
David and Cheryl Clark of Delphos announce the engagement of their daughter, Amy Marie, to James Martin Hyitt, son of James and Sharon Hyitt of Convoy. The couple will exchange vows on Jan. 25. The bride-elect is a graduate of St. Johns High School and is employed at St. Ritas Professional Services. Her fiance is a graduate of Crestview High School and Rhodes State College. He is employed with the Van Wert County Sheriff s Department.
Mr. and Mrs. Larry Basinger of Delphos celebrated 35 years of marriage on Dec. 22. Larry and the former Susan Smith were married Dec. 22, 1978, at Delphos Wesleyan Church in a candle-lit ceremony by Pastor Ross Rinehart. They are the parents of four children: Josie Basinger of Delphos, Joel Basinger of Shade and Jessica and Jordan Basinger of Delphos. They also have four grandchildren: Brooke Basinger of Defiance and Isabela, Emery and Everett Basinger of Delphos.
NEW YORK (AP) Despite all the hard work she put in on the songs and videos from her new album, Beyonce had her doubts minutes before its surprise release. I was terrified. I was so scared. I already envisioned like the worst things that could happen, Beyonce said Saturday at a screening for her new music videos. I was really nervous because this was a huge risk. The singers fifth album debuted at No. 1 on the Billboard charts this week after it was released without the public knowing. Beyonce sold 617,000 units in the U.S. in a week; it has sold more than 1 million albums worldwide. The album includes 14 songs and 17 videos, which fans were able to see during the screening at the School of Visual Arts in New York. Beyonce answered fans questions via Instagram, including one about her opening up personally on the new album. Im very private and Im very respectful, and I think it just took me no longer being someones child once I became a mother, I felt like I could tear those fourth walls and I just felt like it was time, she said. I completely feel liberated. The album features collaborations with her husband Jay Z, Justin Timberlake, Drake and her daughter, Blue Ivy. Beyonce is the follow-up to 2011s 4, the first album the singer released on her production company, Parkwood Entertainment, after parting ways professionally with her father-manager, Mathew Knowles.
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NEW YORK (AP) On a busy preChristmas weekend at the box office, The Hobbit: The Desolation of Smaug held off a very different sequel, Anchorman 2: The Legend Continues. Peter Jacksons Hobbit sequel took in $31.5 million in its second weekend of release for Warner Bros., according to studio estimates Sunday. Though the film isnt matching the pace of the first Hobbit movie, An Unexpected Journey, The Desolation of Smaug is doing well abroad. Its now made more than $400 million worldwide, including $96 million internationally over the weekend. The Hobbit topped Will Ferrells Anchorman sequel, which nevertheless opened strongly in second place. The Paramount Pictures comedy made $26.8 million over the three-day weekend and $40 million since opening Tuesday night. The much-marketed Anchorman 2 actually outperformed The Hobbit on Friday, but failed to best it over Saturday and Sunday. But the $50 million comedy, which Paramount initially turned down, also suggested it will be more popular abroad than most comedies. It made $13.4 million in six international markets. The 2004 original opened with $28.4 million, but only grossed $5.3 million internationally. Anchorman will have a much larger footprint internationally than the last Anchorman did, said Don Harris, head of domestic distribution for Paramount. Will Ferrell has done a really good job of turning this character into something that travels around the world. David O. Russells fictionalization of the 1970s Abscam investigation American Hustle earned a robust $19.1 million in its first week of nationwide expansion. The Sony Pictures film, starring Christian Bale, Amy Adams and Jennifer Lawrence, got a boost from its co-leading seven Golden Globes nominations. Its such a crowd-pleaser as well as a critical hit, said Sonys distribution head Rory Bruer. We have so much more to look forward to, including Christmas Day. The pre-Christmas weekend is a soughtafter release date, one that usually offers films especially good submitting a legs at the box office as moviegoers flood theaters over the com-
ing weeks. The weekend box office was up nearly 30 percent over the same weekend last year. But this years holiday frame will be particularly competitive. The crowded field of movie openings Wednesday includes Martin Scorseses The Wolf of Wall Street, Ben Stillers The Secret Life of Walter Mitty, the Robert De Niro and Sylvester Stallone comedy Grudge Match, the Justin Bieber documentary Justin Biebers Believe and Keanu Reeves 47 Ronin. It is going to be one heck of a crowded Christmas Day at the movie theater, said Paul Dergarabedian, senior media analyst for box-office tracker Rentrak. This is setting up to be perhaps one of the biggest Christmas Days ever. One obvious casualty from the many options at the multiplexes was 20th Century Foxs Walking With Dinosaurs, a 3-D attraction that hoped to draw moviegoers with digital dinosaurs. Made for $85 million, it fell flat with just $7.3 million over the weekend. The family market has instead been cornered by Disneys animated Frozen, which added $19.2 million over the weekend. In five weeks of release, its made $344 million worldwide. The other Oscar-hopeful that went wide over the weekend was Disneys making-of Mary Poppins tale Saving Mr. Banks. The film, starring Emma Thompson and Tom Hanks, made $9.3 million. Spike Jonzes acclaimed futuristic romance Her, starring Joaquin Phoenix and Scarlet Johansson, opened in limited release. It took in $361,000 over five days in three cities, good for a $60,000 screen average. The third film in the Indian action series, Dhoom 3, set a record for a U.S. debut for a Bollywood export. The film made $3.3 million stateside, good enough for ninth place at the box office. Despite some high-profile summer bombs, the 2013 box office is on track to narrowly surpass last years record box office of $10.8 billion, with one weekend to go in the year. Estimated ticket sales for Friday through Sunday at U.S. and Canadian theaters, according to Rentrak. Where available, latest international numbers for Friday through Sunday are also included. Final domestic figures will be released today: 1. Hobbit: The Desolation of Smaug, $31.5 million ($96 million international). 2. Anchorman 2: The Legend Continues, $26.8 million ($13.4 million international). 3. Frozen, $19.2 million ($35.1 million international).
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LOS ANGELES (AP) They invite camera crews into their homes in the hopes of high ratings, endorsement deals and a taste of fame. Yet for some reality television stars, their notoriety brings some unexpected grief from tax collectors or pricey court cases. Thats the predicament Oscarnominated actor Ryan ONeal found himself in, spending several weeks in a Los Angeles courtroom as he defended himself against allegations that he didnt own one of his most cherished possessions: an Andy Warhol portrait of longtime lover Farrah Fawcett. Some of the evidence used against him was footage shot by a reality TV crew for her series Chasing Farrah, and other projects where ONeal and Fawcett allowed cameras into their private lives. The portrait is his, a jury said Thursday. But even he had to question aloud one day toward the end of the trial how much it was all costing him. (His attorney says a lot). With families such as the Kardashians and those on the Real Housewives shows opening up their homes in cities across the country, lawyers to the stars see reality television crews as a weapon that can be used against their clients. ONeals troubles began when a disgruntled producer of Fawcetts show convinced her alma mater, the University of Texas at Austin, that the Warhol portrait didnt belong to the actor. But TV footage even just a few fleeting frames can also be used by tax collectors, bankruptcy trustees and others to wreak havoc, said Bradford Cohen, an attorney who specializes in celebrity tax and estate issues at Venable LLP. Its a really dumb idea, Cohen said of allowing film crews into ones home. He said he regularly advises celebrity cli-
ents not to do reality television, citing instances where tax officials have opened cases based on what theyve seen on TV. It just provokes inquiry, Cohen said. If it doesnt add up, it just arouses their suspicion. When federal officials indicted Teresa and Joe Giudice, stars of Bravos reality series The Real Housewives of New Jersey, they noted the couples salary from the network and accused them of hiding assets in a bankruptcy filing after the shows first season aired. Most of the charges related to loan applications the couple submitted before the show. Cohen and other lawyers see the footage of what the University of Texas lawyers saw in Chasing Farrah as evidence. Reality shows are especially dangerous because you dont know what context is going to be put around them. said Laura Zwicker, a partner at Greenberg Glusker who specializes in setting up high-value trusts and estates. From my perspective as an estate planner, the risk is not that somebody is going to see items but is going to make comments about their value that the IRS is going to come back and stick you with. But veteran reality television producer Jason Carbone said the benefits outweigh any potential risks. It makes no sense to me, said Carbone, whos CEO and founder of production company Good Clean Fun. His companys credits include Runs House featuring rapper Reverend Run and Tia & Tamera, with actresses Tia and Tamera Mowry. Carbone said whether to show off whats in someones home is just one of many considerations that go into planning a reality series. He said hes worked in homes where some areas are off limits, or he suggests valuables get moved so they arent damaged.
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COMMUNITY
Landmark
Calendar of Events
TODAY 9 a.m.-7 p.m. Ottoville Branch Library is open. 11:30 a.m. Mealsite at Delphos Senior Citizen Center, 301 Suthoff St. 6:30 p.m. Shelter from the Storm support group meets in the Delphos Public Library basement. 7 p.m. Ottoville village council meets at the municipal building. Marion Township Trustees meet at the township house. 7:30 p.m. Delphos Eagles Aerie 471 meets at the Eagles Lodge. TUESDAY 11:30 a.m. Mealsite at Delphos Senior Citizen Center, 301 Suthoff St. is closed. 7 p.m. Delphos Area Simply Quilters meets at the Delphos Area Chamber of Commerce, 306 N. Main St. 7:30 p.m. Alcoholics Anonymous, First Presbyterian Church, 310 W. Second St.
St. Johns Elementary Kindergarten Class B students include, front from left, Jacob Moenter, Carolyn Mueller, Carson Feathers, Avery Suever and Austin Shafer; middle, Nora Cox, Drake Fittro, Sydney Rostorfer, Parker Will and Lillian Grothaus; and back, Trevor Lirot, Brayden Klaus, Lydia Etzkorn, Riley Mueller, Holden Radebaugh and Jake Hemker. (Delphos Herald/Stephanie Groves)
Happy Birthday
DEC. 24 Jason Vogt Linda Seffernick Colby Schindler
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6A The Herald
SPORTS
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Local Roundup
Information submitted Raiders grab victory over Lady Musketeers HAVILAND Wayne Trace outscored the Fort Jennings Lady Musketeers 35-20 in the first and third periods to lead to a 54-45 nonleague triumph Saturday afternoon at Wayne Trace High School. Erin Mohr led the Lady Raiders with 16 counters and Brenda Feasby added 10. T h e Raiders used an 18-9 edge in the third period to give them a 43-31 edge and didnt allow the Lady Musketeers to rally in the finale. On behalf of the Lady Musketeers, Gabby Clippinger led with 17 and Cassie Lindeman added 15. The Musketeers shot a cold 19-of-51 from the floor versus 23-of-41 for the home team. Jennings hosts McComb Saturday. Tara Crowle led the victors with 17, while Lindsey Motycka and Kennis Mercer added 12 each. Briitany Kahle topped the LadyCats with 20 and Nicole Recker added 11. The LadyCats could not take advantage of 12 steals, three each by Elizabeth Turnwald and Joni Kaufman, in forcing 24 turnovers. The Knights defense forced 21 Kalida miscues. The Knights also canned a hot 7-of-12 from downtown, while the LadyCats were 6-of-20. Kalida visits Coldwater at noon Saturday, while Crestview hosts Hicksville Dec. 30.
St. Johns senior Ryan Koester tries to get around the defense of Ottoville junior Kyle Bendele Saturday night at Arnzen Gymnasium. (Delphos Herald/Randy Shellenbarger) picked up his second foul at 2:08, sending him to the bench. Ryan Koester stole the ball under the Ottoville bucket on the in-bounds play and drove the length of the floor for the left handed layup. Ottoville took the lead at the break with a bucket inside by 6-5 junior Kyle Bendele for the 10-9 advantage. Good thing Officer Clark was in the building because a lot of theft was going on at Arnzen Gymnasium. This time, a steal by Clark and a pass to Alex Odenweller for the bucket gave the lead back to Delphos. With the St. Johns man-to-man defense double teaming on the inside, the Big Green heated up outside. Schimmoeller and Roby hit back-to-back triples, giving Ottoville a 5-point advantage. Koester answered with a driving layup from the
Lady Titans smother Big Green OTTOVILLE The Ottawa-Glandorf defense smothered the Ottoville Lady Big Green 52-37 Saturday afternoon at L.W. Heckman See JAYS, page 8A Gymnasium. E. Ellerbrock led the Lady Titans with 15. Brooke Mangas topped the Lady Green with 12. since Ive been here is huge, said Ottoville hosts LibertyDalton, only the fifth quarterback in Benton at noon Saturday. NFL history to make the playoffs in each OTTAWA-GLANDORF (52) 2-pt. 3-pt. FT Pts. of his first three seasons. It gives you a M. Maag 0-2-0-6, D. Ellerbrock chance to accomplish the ultimate goal. 1-0-0-2, E. Ellerbrock 6-0-3-15, K. Something about Paul Brown Miller 3-1-0-9, A. Bellman 2-0-1-5, D. Stadium brings out the best in Dalton Schroeder 3-0-1-7, S. Hempfling 1-0and the Bengals, who are 7-0 at home. 0-2, L. Schroeder 0-0-0-0, J. Rosselit 2-0-0-4, K. White 1-0-0-2. Totals 19-3Theyve topped 40 points in each of 5/10-52. their past four home games, a franchise OTTOVILLE (37) 2-pt. 3-pt. FT Pts. first. Dalton has thrown for five, three, Nicole Kramer 0-0-5-5, Chelsea three and four TDs in those games. Boecker 0-0-0-0, Taylor Mangas 3-0He was really grooving out there 2-8, Brooke Mangas 2-0-8-12, Monica today, said A.J. Green, who caught two Sarka 0-0-0-0, Alicia Honigford 1-0-1Alexis Thorbahn 0-0-0-0, Courtney of the touchdowns. We got everybody 3, Von Sossan 0-0-0-0, Haley Landwehr involved today. 1-0-0-2, Annie Lindeman 1-0-1-3, Lexie Wannemacher 2-0-0-4, Lindsey See BENGALS, page 8A Wannemacher 0-0-0-0. Totals 10-017/22-37. Score By Quarters: Ott.-Glandorf 20 7 16 9 - 52 Ottoville 14 16 16 7 - 53
FORT JENNINGS (45) Cassie Lindeman 7-0-1-15, Emily Kehres 3-0-1-7, Erin Osting 0-0-0-0, Ashley Gable 1-0-2-4, Alyssa Schimmoeller 0-0-0-0, Gabby Clippinger 6-1-2-17, Jenna Calvelage 1-0-0-2. Totals 18/48-1/3-6/11-45. WAYNE TRACE (54) Erin Mohr 6-1-1-16, Brenda Feasby 4-0-2-10, Sylvia Young 4-0-1-9, Brooke Wilcox 3-0-0-6, Shayna Temple 2-0-15, Lauren Speice 2-0-0-4, Madi Poling 1-0-2-4, Leah Sinn 0-0-0-0. Totals 22/39-1/2-7/16-54. Score by Quarters: Fort Jennings 11 11 9 14 - 45 Wayne Trace 17 8 18 11 - 54 JV score: 33-24 Wayne Trace.
CRESTVIEW (55) 2-pt. 3-pt. FT Pts. Tara Crowle 1-5-0-17, Lindsey Motycka 4-0-4-12, Kennis Mercer 1-24-12, Emily Bauer 2-0-3-7, Mackenzie Riggenbach 1-0-3-5, Kiersten Hicks 1-0-0-2, Megan Hartman 0-0-0-0, Courtney Grote 0-0-0-0. Totals 10/257/12-14/19-55. KALIDA (48) 2-pt. 3-pt. FT Pts. Nicole Recker 3-0-5-11, Makenna Vorst 0-0-0-0, Brittany Kahle 3-4-220, Nicole Reindel 0-1-0-3, Kennedy Hoffman 0-0-4-4, Joni Kaufman 0-10-3, Kylie Osterhage 0-0-0-0, Elizabeth Turnwald 2-0-1-5, Allison Recker 1-00-2, Katelyn Siebeneck 0-0-0-0. Totals 9/24-6/20-12/19-48. Score By Quarters: Crestview 12 17 10 16 - 55 Kalida 8 12 7 21 - 48 Three-point goals: Jefferson, Goergens, Pimpas; Kalida, Kahle, Osterhage.
Titans best Kalida boys KALIDA OttawaGlandorf battled by Kalida 47-40 in boys cage action Saturday evening at the Wildcat Den. Bramlage led the Titans (4-3) with 14 points, while Trampt added 13 and Schroeder 12. Devin Kortokrax was the sole Wildcat (3-2) in double digits with 13. Kalida hosts Lincolnview 6 p.m. (JV start) Monday.
OTTAWA-GLANDORF (47) 2-pt. 3-pt. FT Pts. Bramlage 1-2-6-14, Trampt 1-2-513, Schroeder 2-1-5-12, Schroeder 0-20-6, Unterbrink 1-0-0-2, Kuhlman 0-00-0, Zender 0-0-0-0, Schnipke 0-0-0-0, Blevins 0-0-0-0, Recker 0-0-0-0, Osting 0-0-0-0. Totals 5/19-7/17-16-21-47. KALIDA (40) 2-pt. 3-pt. FT Pts. Devin Kortokrax 5-1-0-13, Joe Gerdeman 1-0-4-6, Randy Zeller 0-20-6, Luke Langhal 3-0-0-6, Adam Langhals 0-2-0-6, Miller 1-0-0-2, Logan Roebke 0-0-1-1. Totals 10/195/18-5/9-40. Score by Quarters: Ott.-Glandorf 12 11 17 7 - 47 Kalida 9 13 15 3 - 40
Commodores withstand Fort Jennings boys PERRY TOWNSHIP Perry opened with a 23-11 first-period lead and held on for a 53-52 non-league boys cage triumph over Fort Jennings Saturday night at Perry High School. Bruce Hodges led the victors with 20 and Jared Poling added 13. For the Musketeers, Connor Wallenhorst exploded for 26 and Nick Von Sossan added 11. Fort Jennings visits Lincolnview Friday.
FORT JENNINGS (52) Connor Wallenhorst 6-1-1126, Nick Von Sossan 2-1-4-11, Nate German 0-0-0-0, Mark Metzger 2-00-4, Josh Wittler 0-1-0-3, Drew Grone 2-0-0-4, Logan Sickels 0-0-0-0, Austin Kehres 2-0-0-4. Totals 14/26-3/9-15/2252. PERRY (53) Ralphael Sanders 1-0-0-2, Bruce Hodges 6-2-2-20, Jared Poling 3-14-13, Jakoby Harvey 2-0-1-5, Corey Smith 0-0-0-0, Xavier Monford 0-00, Emanuel Luster 3-0-2-8, TaeQuan Callahan 1-0-0-2, Raheem Johnson 0-03-3. Totals 16/41-3/7-12/22-53. Score by Quarters: Ft. Jennings 11 14 10 17 - 52 Perry 23 11 7 12 Rebounds: Fort Jennings 21 - 3 offensive (Wallenhorst 5), Perry 16 - 9 offensive (Hodges 7). Turnovers: Fort Jennings 10, Perry 10.
Grove boys bash Patriots COLUMBUS GROVE The Columbus Grove boys cagers used the solid inside-out combo of 6-7 senior Will Vorhees with 24 (5 boards) and Jace Darbyshire with 20 (6 steals) to bash invading Patrick Henry 61-38 Saturday night at The Dog Pound. The Bulldogs shot 22-of-45 from the floor (5-of-15 long range) and pulled away with a 29-14 fourth period. A. Scheele led the Patriots with 15. Grove visits Jackson Center Saturday.
PATRICK HENRY (38) 2-pt. 3-pt. FTs Pts. A. Scheele 15, A. Willford 2, J. Ehlers 2, AJ Wagner 6, K. Seeman 7, B. Mangas 6. Totals 12/18-3/8-5/9-38. COLUMBUS GROVE (61) 2-pt. 3-pt. FTs Pts. Will Vorhees 24, Riley Brubaker 4, Jace Darbyshire 20, Joey Warnecke 0, David Bogart 2, Elisha Jones 4, Noah Kohls 0, Logan Diller 4, Tanner Neu 3, Colton Schroeder 0, Baily Clement 0. Totals 17/30-5/15-12/21-61. Score by Quarters: Pat. Henry 7 10 7 14 - 38 Col. Grove 10 11 11 29 - 61 Rebounds: PH 13, Columbus Grove 23 (Diller 7). Turnovers: PH 18, Columbus Grove 12. Assists: PH 5, Columbus Grove 8 (Diller/Clement 2). JV Score: 46-20 (Coumbus Grove).
under their $2.15 million budget then collect as much money as, say, Purdue from a bowl pot that will be drained further by tens of thousands of unsold tickets. Conferences and schools ate nearly $21 million in tickets last year, according to USA Today. OSU athletic director Gene Smith called the ticket guarantees a hard business model that we keep fighting. His department is just one of dozens nationally struggling to unload their massive allotments to far-flung destinations. See OSU, page 8A
Knights withstand LadyCats KALIDA Crestview built up a 39-27 lead after three quarters and held off Kalida 55-48 in girls basketball action Saturday afternoon inside The Castle of Crestview High School.
Jeffcat junior high grapplers go 13-4 at Spencerville The Jefferson junior high wrestlers went 13-4 at the Spencerville tri-meet with Parkway on Saturday. Conner Anspach, Brady Welker and Bobby Stevenson each went 2-0 with two pins. Brock Klaus, Brice Metzger, Kole McKee, Cooper Chung and Jordan Bonifas each had pins for the Wildcats. Luke Ketchum and Matt Wiechart were winners by decision. In earlier tournaments this season - Stevenson and Bonifas each placed at the 16-team Wayne Trace Invitational and Anspach, McKee, Klaus and Bonifas placed in the 16-team Allen East Invitational.
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The Herald 7A
Associated Press AMERICAN CONFERENCE East W L T Pct PF y-NEngland 11 4 0 .733 410 Miami 8 7 0 .533 310 N.Y. Jets 7 8 0 .467 270 Buffalo 6 9 0 .400 319 South W L y-Indy 10 5 Tennessee 6 9 Jacksonville 4 11 Houston 2 13 North W L y-Cincinnati 10 5 Baltimore 8 7 Pittsburgh 7 8 Cleveland 4 11 West W L y-Denver 12 3 x-Kansas C 11 4 San Diego 8 7 Oakland 4 11 T Pct 0 .667 0 .400 0 .267 0 .133 T Pct 0 .667 0 .533 0 .467 0 .267 T Pct 0 .800 0 .733 0 .533 0 .267
NFL Glance
PA 318 315 380 354 PA 326 371 419 412 PA 288 318 363 386 PA 385 278 324 419 West
Green Bay 7 7 1 .500 384 400 Detroit 7 8 0 .467 382 362 Minnesota 4 10 1 .300 377 467 W L T Pct PF PA x-Seattle 12 3 0 .800 390 222 San Fran 10 4 0 .714 349 228 Arizona 10 5 0 .667 359 301 St. Louis 7 8 0 .467 339 337 x-clinched playoff spot y-clinched division ___ Sundays Results St. Louis 23, Tampa Bay 13 Indianapolis 23, Kansas City 7 Denver 37, Houston 13 Buffalo 19, Miami 0 Carolina 17, New Orleans 13 Dallas 24, Washington 23 N.Y. Jets 24, Cleveland 13 Cincinnati 42, Minnesota 14 Tennessee 20, Jacksonville 16 Arizona 17, Seattle 10 N.Y. Giants 23, Detroit 20, OT San Diego 26, Oakland 13 Pittsburgh 38, Green Bay 31 New England 41, Baltimore 7 Chicago at Philadelphia, 8:30 p.m. Todays Game Atlanta at San Francisco, 8:40 p.m. Sundays Games Green Bay at Chicago, 1 p.m. Houston at Tennessee, 1 p.m. Philadelphia at Dallas, 1 p.m. Detroit at Minnesota, 1 p.m. Tampa Bay at New Orleans, 1 p.m. Carolina at Atlanta, 1 p.m. Cleveland at Pittsburgh, 1 p.m. Washington at N.Y. Giants, 1 p.m. Baltimore at Cincinnati, 1 p.m. Jacksonville at Indianapolis, 1 p.m. N.Y. Jets at Miami, 1 p.m. Buffalo at New England, 1 p.m. Denver at Oakland, 4:25 p.m. Kansas City at San Diego, 4:25 p.m. St. Louis at Seattle, 4:25 p.m. San Francisco at Arizona, 4:25 p.m.
PF 361 346 237 266 PF 396 303 359 301 PF 572 406 369 308
NATIONAL CONFERENCE East W L T Pct PF Philadelphia 8 6 0 .571 364 Dallas 8 7 0 .533 417 N.Y. Giants 6 9 0 .400 274 Washington 3 12 0 .200 328 South x-Carolina N Orleans Atlanta Tampa Bay North W L T Pct 11 4 0 .733 10 5 0 .667 4 10 0 .286 4 11 0 .267 PF 345 372 309 271
Jefferson junior Brooke Culp works hard for this field goal attempt versus the defense of Van Werts Claire Butler Saturday night at Jefferson High School. (Delphos Herald/Randy Shellenbarger) the hosts but the visitors took complete command, building up as much as a 17-point lead (68-51 at 2:45 on two Handy freebies) before the Red and White made a late run to close within the final margin of victory. I was pleased with our overall play. I think the girls have started to understand what we have to do in practice to play winning basketball and we got back to that; its carrying over to the games, Hoffman added. Rebounding is one area where we have really struggled and we only got beat by two tonight and Thursday (at Crestview). Offensively, we were as consistent as weve been all year running our offense and getting good shots. We are far better off when were not taking a shot off the first pass. I like the direction we are heading. Both teams shot 66.7 percent from the foul line: Van Wert 12-of-18 and Jefferson 10-of-15. We have been playing well and continued that tonight. One, we handled the ball well against that pressure, so were getting more shots, Moonshower added. Our ball and people movement has been and was excellent; that allows us to get more quality looks. Our 3s came off of inside-out movement were shooting about 40 percent for the year, so I hope that can continue. In junior varsity action, Jefferson sophomore Jessica Pimpas exploded for 21 markers in leading the Lady Wildcats (3-5) to a 37-27 victory. Freshman Cassidy Sinning paced the Cougars (2-7) with 10. See WILDCATS, page 8A
Chicago
NBA Glance
Minnesota 13 14 .481 9 Utah 8 22 .267 16 Pacific Division W L Pct GB L.A. Clippers 19 9 .679 Phoenix 16 10 .615 2 Golden State 15 13 .536 4 L.A. Lakers 13 14 .481 5 Sacramento 8 18 .308 10 ___ Saturdays Results Memphis 95, New York 87 Washington 106, Boston 99 Sacramento 105, Orlando 100 Houston 114, Detroit 97 Utah 88, Charlotte 85 Chicago 100, Cleveland 84 Milwaukee 116, Philadelphia 106 Oklahoma City 113, San Antonio 100 Phoenix 123, Dallas 108 Portland 110, New Orleans 107 Golden State 102, L.A. Lakers 83 L.A. Clippers 112, Denver 91 Sundays Results Indiana 106, Boston 79 Toronto 104, Oklahoma City 98 Minnesota at L.A. Clippers, 9:30 p.m. Todays Games New York at Orlando, 7 p.m. Detroit at Cleveland, 7 p.m. Milwaukee at Charlotte, 7 p.m. Atlanta at Miami, 7:30 p.m. Indiana at Brooklyn, 7:30 p.m. Dallas at Houston, 8 p.m. Utah at Memphis, 8 p.m. Toronto at San Antonio, 8:30 p.m. L.A. Lakers at Phoenix, 9 p.m. Golden State at Denver, 9 p.m. New Orleans at Sacramento, 10 p.m.
Associated Press EASTERN CONFERENCE Atlantic Division W L Pct GB Toronto 11 14 .440 Boston 12 17 .414 1 Brooklyn 9 17 .346 2 New York 8 18 .308 3 Philadelphia 8 20 .286 4 Southeast Division W L Pct GB Miami 20 6 .769 Atlanta 15 12 .556 5 Washington 12 13 .480 7 Charlotte 13 15 .464 8 Orlando 8 19 .296 12 Central Division W L Indiana 22 5 Detroit 13 16 Chicago 10 16 Cleveland 10 16 Milwaukee 6 21 Pct .815 .448 .385 .385 .222 GB 10 11 11 16
Associated Press
NFL Capsules
HOUSTON Peyton Manning owns the NFL record for touchdown passes in a season and the Denver Broncos own the AFC West title. Manning regained his record with 51 when he threw for 400 yards and four touchdowns, including three in the fourth quarter. He surpassed the 50 TD passes Tom Brady threw in 2007 and led the Broncos (12-3) to a 37-13 win over the Texans (2-13) that extended Houstons franchise-record skid to 13 games. Manning did it on a 25-yard pass to Julius Thomas with 4:28 remaining. Just 2 minutes earlier, he tied the mark with a 20-yard pass to Eric Decker. He entered the game with 47 and his first touchdown came on a 36-yard pass to Demaryius Thomas in the second quarter. The second was a 10-yard throw to Decker earlier in the fourth period. Manning had previously established the record by throwing 49 touchdown passes in 2004. The Broncos already had a spot in the playoffs but their victory, combined with Kansas Citys loss to Indianapolis, gave them the division crown. PANTHERS 17, SAINTS 13 CHARLOTTE, N.C. Cam Newton threw a 14-yard touchdown pass to Domenik Hixon with 23 seconds left to lift the Panthers to the teams first playoff berth since 2008. Carolina (11-4) can wrap up the NFC South and a first-round bye with a win next Sunday at Atlanta. The Panthers intercepted Drew Brees twice and sacked him six times to avenge a 31-13 loss two weeks ago. Still, the Panthers needed some last-minute big plays from Newton. After being held to 116 yards passing for the games first 59 minutes, Newton led the Panthers 65 yards in 32 seconds for the winning score. The Saints (10-5) still are in position to clinch a playoff berth. The Saints have dropped five of their last six games away from the Superdome. CARDINALS 17, SEAHAWKS 10 SEATTLE Carson Palmer overcame four interceptions to throw a 31-yard touchdown to Michael Floyd with 2:13 left. The Cardinals kept their postseason hopes going while snapping the Seahawks 14-game home win streak. Arizona (10-5) had to win after Carolina beat New Orleans. And the Cardinals did thanks to a stingy defense that flustered Russell Wilson into one of his worst days as a pro, delaying any celebration of an NFC West championship. The Seahawks can still clinch the NFC West with a win over St. Louis next Sunday. Palmer twice was intercepted in the end zone, including Richard Shermans second pick of the game early in the fourth quarter. After Seattle (12-3) took a 10-9 lead with 7:26 left, Palmer led the Cardinals 75 yards and found Floyd for a juggling TD catch with 2:13 left. PATRIOTS 41, RAVENS 7 BALTIMORE Logan Ryan had two interceptions, LeGarrette Blount scored twice and the Patriots ended the Ravens 4-game winning streak. The previous time these two teams met, the AFC title hung in the balance and Baltimore used a strong second half to pull out a 28-13 victory. In this one, New England took a 17-0 lead early in
the second quarter and never let up behind a defense that forced four turnovers and had four sacks. It was Baltimores most lopsided loss since a 37-0 defeat at Pittsburgh in 1997. Things went so bad for the Ravens that Justin Tuckers run of 33 straight field goals ended when he went wide left on a 37-yarder. The Patriots (11-4) were assured their fifth straight AFC East title when Miami lost at Buffalo. Its the 11th division crown for New England coach Bill Belichick, tied with Don Shula for most since the 1970 merger. The loss dropped the Ravens (8-7) into a tie with Miami and San Diego for the final AFC wild-card slot. Baltimore gets in with a win at Cincinnati. STEELERS 38, PACKERS 31 GREEN BAY, Wis. LeVeon Bell ran for a 1-yard touchdown with 1:28 left, then Pittsburgh withstood Green Bays last throw into the end zone and dealt the Packers playoff hopes a blow. Its a long shot but the Steelers (7-8) are still mathematically in the hunt for an AFC wild-card spot. They need a lot of help. The loss meant Green Bay (7-7-1) needed Chicago to lose at Philadelphia on Sunday night to stay in playoff contention. Bells TD came soon after scrambling Packers quarterback Matt Flynn fumbled while being tackled by Troy Polamalu. The Steelers recovered at the Packers 17 and scored five plays later. Micah Hydes 70-yard kickoff return to the Steelers 31 gave the Packers one last chance. Green Bay got to the 1 but after a Packers penalty, the game ended when Flynns pass to Jarrett Boykin sailed incomplete in the end zone. CHIEFS 23, COLTS 7 KANSAS CITY, Mo. Andrew Luck threw for 241 yards and a touchdown, Donald Brown ran 51 yards for another score in a potential preview of an AFC wild-card game. The Colts (10-5), who have already wrapped up the AFC South, took advantage of four turnovers by the Chiefs (11-4) to win for the fifth time in their last six tries against Kansas City. If Indianapolis ends up as the No. 4 seed in the playoffs the Chiefs are assured the fifth seed the teams will meet again in the warmer environs of Lucas Oil Stadium. After missing his first field-goal attempt, Adam Vinatieri hit his next three despite frigid temperatures and swirling winds at Arrowhead Stadium. He came into the game needing one point to pass fellow kicker Jason Elam (1,983) for the seventh-most points in NFL history. Alex Smith threw for 153 yards but fumbled once and was picked off twice after throwing just six interceptions in his first 14 games. Jamaal Charles ran for 106 yards and the games opening score. BILLS 19, DOLPHINS 0 ORCHARD PARK, N.Y. The Dolphins had a 3-game winning streak snapped and are in jeopardy of missing the playoffs for a fifth consecutive season. With the loss, Miami (8-7) needs help from other teams. Miami hosts the New York Jets next weekend. The Dolphins loss clinched the AFC East for New England. Kyle Williams had two of Buffalos season-best seven sacks to key a stifling defensive performance.
WESTERN CONFERENCE Southwest Division W L Pct San Antonio 21 6 .778 Houston 18 10 .643 Dallas 15 12 .556 N. Orleans 11 14 .440 Memphis 11 15 .423 Northwest Division W L Pct Portland 23 5 .821 Oklahoma 22 5 .815 Denver 14 12 .538 GB 3 6 9 9 GB 8
NHL Glance
Associated Press EASTERN CONFERENCE Atlantic Division W L OT Boston 24 10 2 Tampa Bay 22 11 3 Montreal 22 13 3 Detroit 17 12 9 Toronto 18 16 4 Ottawa 14 17 7 Florida 14 18 5 Buffalo 9 24 3 Metropolitan Division W L OT Pittsburgh 27 10 1 Washington 19 13 4 New Jersey 15 15 7 Philadelphia 16 16 4 Carolina 14 14 8 Rangers 17 18 2 Columbus 15 17 4 Islanders 10 20 7 Pts GF 50 100 47 100 47 96 43 99 40 105 35 106 33 87 21 64 Pts GF 55 121 42 115 37 90 36 89 36 83 36 86 34 97 27 93 GA 75 86 84 105 111 126 117 104 GA 83 109 94 103 101 101 103 129 Vancouver 21 11 6 Phoenix 19 10 6 Calgary 13 17 6 Edmonton 11 24 3 NOTE: Two points for for overtime loss. 48 104 92 44 110 108 32 91 115 25 95 133 a win, one point
Saturdays Results Los Angeles 3, Colorado 2, SO Detroit 5, Toronto 4, SO San Jose 3, Dallas 2, SO Pittsburgh 4, Calgary 3 Phoenix 4, Ottawa 3, OT New Jersey 5, Washington 4, OT Columbus 6, Philadelphia 3 Montreal 4, Nashville 3, OT Boston 4, Buffalo 1 Tampa Bay 3, Carolina 2, OT Anaheim 5, N.Y. Islanders 3 St. Louis 6, Edmonton 0 Sundays Results N.Y. Rangers 4, Minnesota 1 Winnipeg at Vancouver, 8 p.m. Todays Games Phoenix at Buffalo, 7 p.m. Toronto at N.Y. Rangers, 7 p.m. Anaheim at Washington, 7 p.m. Columbus at Carolina, 7 p.m. Pittsburgh at Ottawa, 7:30 p.m. N.Y. Islanders at Detroit, 7:30 p.m. Tampa Bay at Florida, 7:30 p.m. Minnesota at Philadelphia, 7:30 p.m. New Jersey at Chicago, 8 p.m. Boston at Nashville, 8 p.m. St. Louis at Calgary, 8 p.m. Winnipeg at Edmonton, 9:30 p.m. Dallas at Los Angeles, 10:30 p.m. Colorado at San Jose, 10:30 p.m. Tuesdays Games No games scheduled
WESTERN CONFERENCE Central Division W L OT Chicago 25 7 6 St. Louis 24 7 4 Colorado 23 10 2 Minnesota 20 13 5 Dallas 17 12 6 Winnipeg 16 16 5 Nashville 16 16 4 Pacific Division W L OT Anaheim 26 7 5 L. Angeles 25 8 4 San Jose 22 8 6 Pts GF 56 140 52 125 48 102 45 87 40 101 37 100 36 83 Pts GF 57 124 54 104 50 116 GA 105 81 83 92 105 108 103 GA 96 71 90
8A The Herald
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Wildcat boys speed Apaches on the hardwood Wildcats Sale by starts Saturday!
By JIM METCALFE Staff Writer jmetcalfe@delphosherald.com
DELPHOS Jeffersons boys basketball squad switched gears Saturday afternoon. The Wildcats went from a slowertempo affair versus Crestview Friday night to a more helter-skelter, free-wheeling, full-court attack against invading Fairview and it worked well in an 89-67 rout at The Stage. Senior Ross Thompson went berserk in amassing a career-high 39 markers on 14-of-16 shooting, 2-of-2 on triples to bedevil the Apaches (1-5), while Save up to $1.81 tag-team partner Trey Smith sophomore added 24 points. Sophomore Dalton Hicks added nine as the Wildcats (4-4) shot a stellar 32-of-56 from the floor (6-of-12 beyond the arc) courtesy of selected varieties 22 assists for 57.2 percent and added an even better 19-of-20 from the charity line (95%). They also forced 21 turnovers to only 10 of their own. We felt that was in our best interests today, forcing their big men to run up and down the floor. I felt we could wear them down, Jefferson head man Marc Smith explained. I like to coach that way and probably 99 percent of play24 oz. ers prefer to play that style; its actually easier to coach. Also, with Ross and Trey, Fairview had Save up to $3.00 lb. to pick its poison; which one do you try and take away and Ross Kretschmar easily got his career high. We needed Virginia Brand help from others and we got that: Dalton (Hicks) had nine and Tyler (Rice) hit two 3s off the bench in the second period. Pacing the Apaches were the trio of 6-5 senior Daniel Smith with 23 counters (8 boards) and Erich Wolfrum (6 assists) and Joe Macsay with 11 each. They also shot very well, canning 29-of-53 fielders 3-of-11 from deep for 54.7 percent but only 6-of-12 singles (50%). r Gluten Smith was worried that his team might have a physical hangover from having an lb. even shorter turnaround from a game Friday night, while the Apaches did not have a game Friday. At$2.00 least Save up to lb.offensively, one would have been hard-pressed to see that from the beginning, shooting 9-of-14 from the field in pushing the pace, including 2-of-3 from deep. Thompson was unstoppable early, netting 11 points, and Trey Smith added seven. However, the Apaches also looked to push the pace and netted 10-of-20 shots behind five baskets by Daniel Smith.
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Conley (8 points) continued his scoring for the Jays with two free throws and a 13-point lead. After an Ottoville miss, Grothouse put the game away with a long 3-pointer from out top. Ottoville again couldnt get its offense going against the Delphos man-to-man defense. Koester was fouled on the offensive end and converted his two free throws for the 44-26 advantage. Robys drive to the bucket for two got the Big Greens first points of the final period. Grothouse scored the next five points of the game on a 3-pointer and a layup following a steal by Koester. Bendele grabbed an offensive rebound and was fouled, making one of the pair. Clark hit a 3-pointer to push the lead to 55-29. Brandt Landins 8-footer was good and the Big Green hung tough with a full-court press. The result was a steal by Ottoville and a Open: 24 Hours Monday-Friday layin by Roby. After a Blue Jay timeout, Delphos spread the floor try toSupermarket run off the lastlocations. three minutes and Ottoville was forced to eptember 12 to midnight Sunday, September 13, 2009 at all Chief & Rays Saturday & Sunday: 7am-midnight to foul. Ottoville did get a 3-pointer from Colin Bendele and two made free throws from Schimomeller 1102 Elida Ave., Delphos 419-692-5921 to end the scoring. After the game, a dejected coach Todd Turnwald was disapwww.ChiefSupermarkets.com pointed by the loss: We played good in the first half but we www.Facebook.com/ChiefSupermarket kept shooting ourselves in the foot. That foul at the end of the first half on a 40-foot shot at the buzzer was prime example of our mistakes. Blue Jay coach Aaron Elwer said he challenged his players at films Saturday morning and the game to step up. Tonight,
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who regularly play before scarlet-drenched road stadiums in the Big Ten, battle cool sales even for Bowl Championship Series games short of the Rose Bowl or the national championship. The five BCS games require each team to purchase 17,500 tickets. Dont sell them? Too bad. Either the school or the conference must pay for them. (The Big Ten absorbs unsold tickets.) Ohio State sold 9,983 tickets for the (Continued from page 6A)
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netted a pair of tosses at 5.0 seconds, Jeffersons lead was 48-37. Wanting to run is nice. However, what you have to get your kids to buy 12 pk. into is that an up-tempo offense starts from the defensive end, Coach Smith added. You have to force turnovers or Save onthen 3 rebound to get it going. bad $1.80 shots, I start at the defensive end and ask the players to defend with great effort; once they do that, I give them a lot of freedom offensively. The scoring pace continued into the third. The Wildcats sank 8-of-13 shots Thompson draining 13 counters but the Apaches almost kept pace at 8-of-9, led by D. Smiths six points. Jeffersons
Regan Nagel 0-0-0, Bailey Gorman 2-3-7. VARSITY Totals 13-0-11/14-37. FAIRVIEW (67) Score by Quarters: Erich Wolfrum 3-3-11, Andy Robinson 0-0-0, Van Wert 5 1 7 14 - 27 Brandon Bostater 0-0-0, Tucker ONeil 2-0-5, Joe Jefferson 6 12 11 8 - 37 Macsay 5-1-11, Aaron Schwarzbek 3-1-7, Kaleb Three-point goals: Van Wert, Jackson, Eisel 3-0-6, Bradley Ebaugh 2-0-4, Daniel Smith Eutsler; Jefferson, none. 11-1-23. Totals 26-3-6/12-67. JEFFERSON (89) Jace Stockwell 1-0-2, Drew Reiss 0-0-0, Austin Jettinghoff 2-0-5, Ross Thompson 14-9-39, Trey Smith 8-7-24, Tyler Mox 0-0-0, Nick Fitch 1-2-4, Dalton Hicks 4-1-9, Kurt Wollenhaupt 0-0-0, Tyler (Continued form page 6A) Rice 2-0-6, Ryan Goergens 0-0-0. Totals 26-619/20-89. Score by Quarters: The Vikings (4-10-1) had Fairview 21 16 20 10 - 67 knocked off playoff contendJefferson 22 26 21 20 - 89 Three-point goals: Fairview, Wolfrum 2, ers Chicago and Philadelphia ONeil; Jefferson, Rice 2, Thompson 2, Jettinghoff, in the past three weeks. Even Smith. with Adrian Peterson back from a foot injury, they couldnt keep JUNIOR VARSITY FAIRVIEW (45) up. Andy Robinson 1-0-3, Phillip Wagner 6-0-12, The Vikings had allowed the Alex Mallet 0-0-0, Riley Cooper 5-0-10, Jarid Schweifert 0-0-0, Cody Kling 0-0-0, Jacob Eisel second-most points in the league 2-0-4, Jake Schoenauer 0-3-3, Matthew Kozumplik heading into the game. They 2-6-11, Kody King 1-0-2. Totals 15-2-9/13-45. gave up 40 for the third time JEFFERSON (52) Drew Reiss 5-3-17, Josh Teman 5-2-13, Cole this season. Two of Cincinnatis Arroyo 0-0-0, Ryan Goergens 3-3-10, Grant touchdowns came off their Wallace 2-1-5, Nick Long 1-1-3, Drake Schmitt defense. 2-0-4. Totals 12-6-10/20-52. Turnovers definitely decidScore by Quarters: ed the game, said Peterson, Fairview 8 13 8 16 - 45 Jefferson 7 12 14 19 - 52 who sat out the second half with Three-point goals: Fairview, Robinson, the Vikings far behind. We put Kozumplik; Jefferson, Reiss 4, Teman, Goergens.
(Continued from page 6A) biggest lead to that point was 18 twice the second at 65-47 on a power move Jefferson plays the 4:20 game inside by T. Smith before a 10-4 Friday at the Parkway Pratt Fairview spurt closed them within 69-57 Insurance Holiday Tournament. on a triple from the left corner by Tucker Van Wert plays Fort Recovery ONeil with 2.0 ticks on the clock. Jan. 4. VARSITY Quick buckets by Thompson and T. VAN WERT (70) Smith to start the fourth put the Wildcats Riley Jones 4-0-12, Kaitlynn Hall in complete control as they took total 1-0-2, Alexis Dowdy 8-3-19, Emilie command. They steadily pulled away by Moonshower 1-0-3, Claire Butler 3-3-9, doubling up their foe 20-10 with T. Smith Cheyenne Handy 2-5-11, Erin Morrow Jenna Weigle 0-0-0, Emily Bair and sophomore Dalton Hicks netted seven 4-1-12, 1-0-2, Emma Kohn 0-0-0. Totals 14-10and Thompson six and took their biggest 12/18-70. JEFFERSON (61) lead at the final 3-point play by Hicks. Heather Pohlman 1-0-2, Brooke Jefferson played extremely well Culp 3-0-7, Lindsay Deuel 0-0-0, Katie and extremely hard. They just have so Goergens 5-0-13, Rileigh Stockwell 9-8many shooters, Fairview coach Kurt 26, Gabby Pimpas 2-2-7, Shelby Koenig Jasmine McDougall 3-0-6. Totals Nusbaum. My guys played hard as well. 0-0-0, 18-5-10/15-61. We are working hard every day in pracScore by Quarters: Van Wert 18 18 16 18 70 tice to get better. Jefferson 13 13 21 14 61 Fairview outrebounded the Wildcats Three-point goals: Van Wert, Jones 28-21 (8-5 offensive) as Bradley Ebaugh 4, Morrow 3, Handy 2, Moonshower; added seven. Thompson had five boards Jefferson, Goergens 3, Pimpas, Culp. and T. Smith four for the hosts. JUNIOR VARSITY Fairview was called for 17 fouls and VAN WERT (27) Jefferson 15. Ally Jackson 1-0-3, Cassidy Sinning Jefferson freshman Jace Stockwell 5-0-10, Phoebe Eutsler 2-2-7, Morgan 0-0-0, Kelsey Dotson 0-1-1, delivered seven assists, senior Austin Magowan Domonique Grothause 1-0-2, Emma Jettinghoff four and Smith and senior Kohn 2-0-4. Totals 9-2-3/10-27. JEFFERSON (37) Tyler Mox three each. Taylor Stroh 0-0-0, Kiya Wollenhaupt Jefferson is in the Parkway Chatt 0-0-0, Mackenzie Hammons 1-0-2, Kelsey Insurance Holiday Tournament Friday, Berelsman 0-1-1, Lindsey Jettinghoff 0-00, Tori Black 3-0-6, Jessica Pimpas 7-7-21, playing in the second game at 8 p.m.
Bengals
2009 Fiesta Bowl and now finds its Orange Bowl sales hurt by steep flight costs to Miami and a friendly secondary market. An OSU spokesman said the school has sold about 7,000 of its allotted 17,500 tickets, priced between $90 and $240. On the resale site Stubhub.com, tickets sold for as little as $40 this week. Hundreds are available for less than face value. Clemson, too, is searching for answers. The Tigers and West Virginia ate more than 15,000 tickets between them at the 2012 Orange Bowl, another instance of a skewed supply and demand.
them in a position to play the game the way they wanted to play. Its tough getting behind the 8-ball like we did. Dalton has thrown 31 touchdown passes this season, one shy of Carson Palmers club record from 2005. Dalton replaced Palmer in the 2011 season and has led the Bengals surge. His biggest shortcoming: 0-2 with two poor showings in the playoffs. The Bengals havent won a playoff game since the 1990 season, tied for the seventh-longest stretch of futility in NFL history.
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they responded, gaining confidence when the shots started falling. The Blue Jays will travel across the state to New Philadelphia for the Tuscarawas Shoot Out against Fremont St. Joe Friday morning. The next action for Ottoville will be Saturday at Lincolnview. The good news for Ottoville this year is that they have enough players to have both a varsity and junior varsity squads. The Ottoville JV went home with a 35-25 victory after pulling away in the final quarter. Eric Von Sossan led Ottoville with 12 points and Robby Saine had seven for the Blue Jays.
VARSITY OTTOVILLE (38) Colin Bendele 1-0-3, Tyler Roby 4-1-11, Austin Honigford 2-0-4, Brandt Landin 1-1-3, Luke Schimmoeller 5-2-13, Kyle Bendele 1-2-4. Totals 14-6-38. ST. JOHNS (54) Andy Grothouse 4-1-11, Evan Hays 3-0-7, Eric Clark 1-0-3, Aaron Hellman 2-0-6, Ryan Koester 6-3-15, Alex Odenweller 1-2-4, Tyler Conley 3-2-8. Totals 20-7-54. Score by Quarters: Ottoville 10 8 8 12 - 38 St. Johns 9 12 16 17 - 54 Three-point goals: Ottoville, Roby 2, C. Bendele, Schimmoeller; St. Johns, Grothouse 3, Hellman 2, Hays, Clark. JUNIOR VARSITY OTTOVILLE (35) Schnipke 0-7-7, Wenzlick 1-0-2, Krouskop 1-6-8, Von Sossan 4-1-12, Trenkamp 2-2-6. Totals 8-18-35. ST. JOHNS (25) Seffernick 3-0-6, Reindel 0-1-1, Hellman 0-0-0, Saine 3-0-7, Kreeger 3-0-6, Jackson 2-1-5. Totals 11-2-25. Score by Quarters: Ottoville 7 7 8 13 - 35 St. Johns 6 4 8 7 - 25 Three-point goals: Ottoville, Von Sossan; St. Johns, Saine.
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The Herald 9A
Before using lights outdoors, check labels to be sure they have been certified for outdoor use.
Check each set of lights, new or old, for broken or cracked sockets, frayed or bare wires, or loose connections, and throw out damaged sets.
Turn off all lights when you go to bed or leave the house. The lights could short out and start a fire.
Do not burn wrapping papers in the fireplace. A flash fire may result, as wrappings ignite suddenly and burn intensely.
Before lighting any fire, remove all greens, boughs, papers, and other decorations from fireplace area. Check to see that the flue is open.
Use no more than three standard-size sets of lights per single extension cord.
Watch for pull toys with strings that are more than 12 inches in length. They cold be a strangulation hazard for babies.
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Sledding on or into the roadway should be prohibited. Look for shallow slopes that are free of obstacles, such as trees and fences.
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