Lima Symphony announces new board members
From staff reports
LIMA – The Lima Symphony Orchestra has welcomed seven new members to its board of directors for the 2021-2022 season.
Incoming board members include:
• Manu B. Aggarwal, a practitioner of family medicine at the Vein Care Center Laser Specialists.
• Chad Hughes, an artist, designer and photographer who works as a production designer and graphic artist for Lima Memorial Health System.
• Jackie Martell, executive director of the Wapakoneta Area Chamber of Commerce.
• Robert McCurdy, who served as assistant dean for the College of Pharmacy at Ohio Northern University.
• Amy Nusbaum, senior manager of communications for Marathon Petroleum Corporation.
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Photo by Tim Nwachukwu/Getty Images
If March was a tough month for the New Jersey Devils, then April was an absolute nightmarish month. They began the month to turn their shootout loss at Boston on March 13 into a four-game winless streak. After winning a game, they lost ten in a row. The Devils went into the final week of their month of 16 games with just one win in April. One. And it was on the road in Western New York. At least the Devils picked up a second and third win in April before April ended. It does not take away much of the pain that comes with a 3-11-2 month. They earned eight points; only two teams in the league finished with fewer points in April. And one of those two teams was Vancouver, who only played seven games due to the Coronavirus. It was a horrible month for the Devils.
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Jim Krumel: Smithsonian Magazine tells Delphos woman’s story
Jim Krumel
Robert Holdgreve grew up in the 1930s and early ’40s listening to stories about how his great-aunt, Ida Holdgreve, worked alongside Orrville and Wilbur Wright when they were building airplanes.
The 91-year-old Delphos resident thought he had heard all of the stories until several weeks ago when he received a copy of the March 15 edition of the Smithsonian Magazine, which is the official journal of the prestigious Smithsonian Institution in Washington, D.C.
In it was the headline and story: “How Ida Holdgreve’s Stitches Helped the Wright Brothers Get Off the Ground.” It went on to recognize her as the first female worker in the American aviation industry.
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