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ONU Orchestra and University Singers perform December 7

The ONU Orchestra, directed by Dr. Sarah Waters, BM '87, along with the University Singers and Chamber Singers, directed by Shawn Stevens, BM '16, will perform a concert filled with holiday favorites at 7:30 p.m. on Thursday evening, December 7.

Bulldog girls basketball downs HN, wins 3rd straight

By Cort Reynolds

DOLA__The Ada High School girls basketball team used a big second quarter run to methodically defeat county rival Hardin Northern 42-28 Tuesday night, December 5.

The game was tied after the first period, but the Bulldogs fashioned a 15-0 run to open the second stanza and take control of the game.

Ada never trailed again and went on to win their third consecutive contest to improve to 3-1 overall. HN fell to 0-2 with the defeat.

     1     2    3    4    F
ADA    9   15   11    7   42
HN    9    6    7    6   28

 

Bulldog senior southpaw Mariah King led all scorers with a season-high 12 points.

Classmate Autumn Andreasen also returned from a two-game absence and netted a season-best 10 points. Senior point guard Olivia Burkhart tallied nine markers, while junior guard Lexi Poling added seven.

PUZZLE It's November news puzzle time!

Click HERE for the November 2023 Ada Icon news puzzle. November flew by. Did you catch all the news?

Allison C. Dye was a physical therapist

Allison C. Dye, age 45, of Ada, passed away on Monday, December 4, 2023, at her residence surrounded by her family. 

She was born on July 13, 1978 in Lima, Ohio to Corky and Cheryl (Quinn) Klausing, they survive in Ottawa. On September 27, 2009, Allison married Joshua S. Dye and he survives in Ada. 

Committee will recommend shelving cat nuisance legislation

By Paula Scott

While conversations about cat nuisances and the feral cat population in Ada will continue, the Ada Council is not expected to proceed with a proposed cat control ordinance that recently received a first reading. Feedback from animal welfare organizations convinced the Village Safety Committee that the village cannot legislate itself out of the problem.

Unlocking the potential of cover crops

By Jonah VanRoekel and Osler Ortez
OSU Department of Horticulture and Crop Science and edited by Mark Badertscher, OSU Extension-Hardin County

HARDIN COUNTY__A research and Extension team from The Ohio State University is inviting farmers in the Maumee River Watershed to participate in a USDA-funded project designed to help better understand the benefits and tradeoffs associated with integrating cover crops into corn-soybean rotations.

A total of 16 fields which meet the criteria of one of the following four treatment categories will be needed for this project. Treatment 1: Corn-soybean rotated fields with no cover crops or winter wheat in the last five years (4 fields: 2 corn, 2 soybean). Treatment 2: Corn-soybean-winter wheat rotated fields with no cover crops (4 fields: 2 corn, 2 with soybean). Treatment 3: Corn-soybean rotation with cereal rye cover crop for less than three years (4 fields: 2 corn, 2 soybean). Treatment 4: Corn-soybean rotation with cereal rye cover crop for over five years (4 fields: 2 corn, 2 soybean).

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