The truth is your friend
Dear editor,
Dear editor,
For what seems like forever, 113 S. Williams St. has been the home of the newspaper that today is the Paulding Progress. This week, that has changed as we moved into a new office on the square in Paulding.
Before I took this job, I worked a series of retail jobs. Over the years, I got pretty good at it, but when COVID-19 hit, things took a hit for me. Recently, my friend Herc, short for “Hercules” yet spelled in a more historically accurate way, confessed the same dilemma.
ARCHBOLD, Ohio – Northwest State Community College will host a series of hands-on summer STEM camps for learners of all ages, beginning on June 9 with Tinker Camp. The camp season will wrap up on July 16. This year’s summer camp subjects include many of Northwest State’s academic divisions, including Custom Training Solutions (CTS), Arts & Sciences and Nursing & Allied Health, and Business & Public Service. All camps will be hosted at the Archbold campus, and campers can expect fun, hands-on learning activities as part of their action-packed camps.
ARCHBOLD, Ohio – The Northwest State Community College FIRST Robotics high school team 6181 (Cryptic Cyborgs) competed at the 2025 Buckeye Regional tournament held at Cleveland State University – Wolstein Center, April 3 through April 5, 2025.
Have you ever thought about or ever wondered what exciting things take place in the STEAM Center Engineering Classroom? If you don’t know, below are just a few examples of some of the amazing work the students have accomplished. If you would like more examples or want to know more stop in and talk with Mr. Stuart about the CTE Engineering Design Class.
HAVILAND – The Wayne Trace Raiders swept the team championships at the 48th annual Wayne Trace Track Invitational Thursday night at Raider Field.
OAKWOOD - Alana Ruth Essex left this earth on Thursday, April 17, 2025, after several years of living with incurable cancer. She resided at home south of Oakwood until her final few days. She was 70, born in Defiance, Ohio on February 9, 1955 as the only child of C.Garwood and D.Lois (Kinner) Morris.
Now that Robert F. Kennedy Jr. has kicked off his Make America Healthy Again, or MAHA Commission, food system advocates are wondering which of his ideas will come to fruition. One promise was to revamp the food system with a plan to “reverse 80 years of farming policy.” But what exactly would it mean for the average American to eat like we did in the 1940s? Experts tell Sentient the reality was not as idyllic as Kennedy and his supporters might believe. It’s also not at all feasible, as it would require the U.S. to make drastic changes to the way we eat. To put it bluntly — Americans would have to eat much less meat.