Wednesday SPORTS
LOCAL
Humanitarian grants Troy falls to awarded by Miami Fairmont, County Foundation 60-46 PAGE 3
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January 16, 2013 It’s Where You Live! Volume 105, No. 13
INSIDE
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Trostle re-elected as BOE president Schools receive $20K donation from ConAgra BY MELANIE YINGST Staff Writer myingst@tdnpublishing.com
Check out this week’s iN75 “Shrek The Musical” is now playing in Dayton, and iN75 got the scoop on playing the role of Lord Farquaad. Also, find out how to celebrate Martin Luther King Jr. Day in Sidney, Piqua and Troy.
TROY
The Troy City Schools kicked off the school year with a generous donation and a new vice-president. The board nominated to re-elect Doug Trostle as president for another year and tapped Stephen
Lucas as vice-president. As part of its commitment to the Troy community, ConAgra donated $20,000 Troy City Schools. to Superintendent Eric Herman thanked ConAgra plant manager Scott Adkins for their support of
the schools and bringing more jobs to the city of Troy. Music department head and band director Kathy McIntosh and support staff presented a video on the high school band’s recent visit to Chicago during the Thanksgiving Parade where they performed in front of 400,000 parade goers and a television audi-
ence of 3.5 million. McIntosh also presented information on the band’s London trip to perform on the New Year’s parade in 2013 through Jan. 4, 2014. McIntosh said she expects at least 85 band members to go on the international trip out of 155 marching band students. McIntosh said the boosters will be selling donuts outside the
TROY
MLK events planned
Fitness experts sought by TDN Are you a gym owner or fitness trainer who has advice for people looking to keep their New Year’s fitness resolutions? If so, the Troy Daily News is looking to hear from you for an upcoming story. Please send an email to myingst@tdnpublishing.com or call (937) 4405254 if you would like to be included in this story.
House OKs superstorm aid More than 10 weeks after Superstorm Sandy brutalized parts of the heavily populated Northeast, the House approved $50.7 billion in emergency relief for the victims Tuesday night as Republican leaders struggled to close out an episode that exposed painful party divisions inside Congress and out. See page 9.
Armstrong admits doping Lance Armstrong has finally come clean. Armstrong confessed to doping during an interview with Oprah Winfrey taped Monday, just a couple of hours after a wrenching apology to staff at the Livestrong charity he founded and has now been forced to surrender. See page 14.
INSIDE TODAY Advice ............................7 Calendar.........................3 Classified......................10 Comics ...........................8 Deaths ............................5 Virginia A. Boling Margaret E. AultmanGorman Ethel Kay Hobson Larry L. Foureman Mark A. Cecil Sr. Ellen M. Garner Donald L. Fell Heidi Lynn Moyer Dorothy Maze Eddie C. Brock Kenneth L. Clark Horoscopes ....................8 Opinion ...........................4 Sports...........................13 TV...................................7
OUTLOOK Today Snow early High: 37° Low: 23° Thursday Partly cloudy High: 34° Low: 24°
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BY NATALIE KNOTH Staff Writer nknoth@tdnpublishing.com The life and legacy of civil rights leader Martin Luther King Jr. will be commemorated through two days of activities, organized by the Troy King Team. Events take place Jan. 19 and 21, with the federal holiday falling on the latter. The theme of “Living harmoniously with dignity, grace and honor” will be demonstrated during a celebration brunch Saturday, Jan. 19, as well as a symbolic march and memorial celebration Monday, Jan. 21. “What we’re trying to portray with the celebration is the community living together with respect STAFF PHOTOS/ANTHONY WEBER and really caring about Miami East Junior High School student Cerstin Gross reacts after winning the 2013 Miami County District each other. We are gearing Spelling Bee Tuesday at Miami East Junior High School. our activities and the
No longer ‘taboo’ It is no longer ‘taboo’ to spell this year’s Miami County Spelling Bee’s winning word in a whole new way. Cerstin Gross, 12, a sixth-grade student at Miami East Junior High correctly spelled the word “tabu” to be crowned as the best speller in the county Tuesday night in the Miami County District Spelling Bee hosted by Miami County Educational Service Center. Gross also managed to spell the word without the aid of a sentence or ask for
CASSTOWN its definition, baffling a few members of the audience who thought the traditional way of spelling the word would be announced. Tabu derives from the Polynesian cultural concept from which the word taboo derives, meaning to forbid associations with a particular person, place or thing. Tabu also was a name of a popular perfume line from the 1930s. Gross spelled down Bethel Junior High School’s seventh-grade student Garrett Wemmer, who misspelled the word “monetary.”
BY JOYELL NEVINS Staff Writer jnevins@tdnpublishing.com
Republican Party. Commissioners also were assigned to various boards and committees that they will serve on during 2013. Likewise, the board set the times and days of their meetings, which will remain unchanged from previous years. The board meets at 9 a.m. and 1:30 p.m. on Tuesdays and
A victim of an off-campus house fire on Jan. 1, 20-year-old Ellen Garner passed away Monday morning at the University Hospital in Cincinnati from injuries related to the fire. The fire appeared to have been started by a space heater too close to bedding, according to officials. It also ultim a t e l y claimed the GARNER life of housemate Chad Kohls, who passed away Jan. 8. Garner was a 2010 graduate of Tippecanoe High School. She is the daughter of Rodney and Ann Garner of Tipp City. She and Kohls were both University of Cincinnati students. Garner was in the College of Design, Architecture, Art and Planning, while Kohls was in the Carl H. Linder College of Business.
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Garrett Wemmer from Bethel Junior High School was runner-up during the Miami County District Spelling Bee Tuesday at Miami East Junior High School. “It was very exciting,” Gross said as friends and family congratulated her. Gross said she practiced for the spelling bee with friends, family and teachers to prepare for the county’s best spellers. “Spelling does come
pretty easy for me,” she added. Gross said she had a tough time beating classmates to get to the county level. Cerstin will advance to the Regional Spelling
• See BEE on Page 2
Cultice picked to lead county commissioners Jack Evans named vice president BY WILL E SANDERS Civitas Media wsanders@dailycall.com Just two weeks after authorizing one of the toughest county budgets in recent years, Miami County Commissioners held a reorganization meeting Monday morning and chose Commissioner Richard Cultice as board president. Cultice, who served as vice presi6
TIPP CITY
House fire claims life of Tipp graduate
Sixth-grader correctly spells ‘tabu’ for county spelling bee crown BY MELANIE YINGST Staff Writer myingst@tdnpublishing.com
• See MLK on Page 2
dent last year, succeeds fellow Commissioner John “Bud” O’Brien, who served as president in 2012. At the same m e e t i n g , Commissioner Jack Evans was named as vice CULTICE president. All three commissioners are Republicans, and O’Brien is the chairman of the Miami County
TROY
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LOCAL & NATION
Wednesday, January 16, 2013
TROY DAILY NEWS • WWW.TDN-NET.COM
Obama proposes gun limits, faces tough obstacles WASHINGTON (AP) President Barack Obama is launching the nation’s most sweeping effort to curb gun violence in nearly two decades, urging a reluctant Congress to ban military-style assault weapons and high-capacity ammunition magazines like those used in last month’s massacre of 20 elementary school children in Newtown, Conn. The broad package Obama will announce Wednesday is expected to include more than a dozen steps the president can take on his own through executive action. Those measures will provide a pathway for skirting opposing lawmakers, but they will be limited in scope, and in some cases, focused simply on enforcing existing laws. But Congress would have to approve the bans on assault weapons and ammunition maga-
zines holding more than 10 bullets, along with a requirement for universal background checks on gun buyers. Some gun control advocates worry that opposition from Republicans and conservative Democrats, as well as the National Rifle Association, will be too great to overcome. “We’re not going to get an outright ban,” Rep. Carolyn McCarthy, D-N.Y., said of limits on assault weapons. Still, McCarthy, a leading voice in Congress in favor of gun control, said she would keep pushing for a ban and hoped Obama would as well. White House officials, seeking to avoid setting the president up for failure, have emphasized that no single measure even an assault weapons ban would solve a scourge of gun violence across the country. But without such a ban, or other sweeping Congress-
approved measures, it’s unclear whether executive actions alone can make any noticeable difference. “It is a simple fact that there are limits to what can be done within existing law,” White House spokesman Jay Carney said Tuesday. “Congress has to act on the kinds of measures we’ve already mentioned because the power to do that is reserved by Congress.” New York’s Assembly on Tuesday easily passed the toughest gun control law in the nation it’s also the first since the Connecticut school shootings and Gov. Andrew Cuomo signed it into law less than an hour later. The law includes a tougher assaultweapons ban and provisions to try to keep guns out of the hands of mentally ill people who make threats. Obama will announce his pro-
posals in a midday event at the White House, flanked by children who wrote to him about gun violence following the massacre of 20 students and six adults at Sandy Hook Elementary School. Law enforcement officials, mayors from across the country and supportive congressional lawmakers are also expected to attend. Obama has pledged urgent action to prevent future mass shootings, and his plan coming just one month after the Newtown attacks is swift by Washington standards. The president’s framework is based on recommendations from Vice President Joe Biden, who led a wide-ranging task force on gun violence. Beyond the gun control measures, Biden also gave Obama suggestions for improving mental health care and addressing violent images in video
Fire
games, movies and television. The vice president’s proposals included 19 steps that could be achieved through executive action. Obama may order the Justice Department to crack down on people who lie on background checks; only a tiny number are now prosecuted. Such a step has support from the National Rifle Association, which has consistently argued that existing laws must be enforced before new ones are considered. He also could take steps ordering federal agencies to make more data on gun crimes available and conduct more research on the issue, something Republican congressional majorities have limited through language in budget bills. And he may order tougher penalties against gun trafficking and give schools flexibility to use grant money to improve safety.
Commissioners
• CONTINUED FROM A1 Greg Hand, spokesman for the University of Cincinnati, said both of their Greek houses and respective colleges are discussing “a variety of things” to honor the students’ memories and help the families. “It is a tragic situation, and has saddened the whole campus,” Hand said. In Troy, friends of Garner are hosting a benefit at Buffalo Wild Wings
today (Wednesday). Ten percent of all proceeds from 11 a.m. to midnight will go to the Garner family to help pay for medical expenses and honor her memory. An anonymous donor has stepped forward to match dollarfor-dollar the funds raised. “She was absolutely beautiful inside and out and (today) will be one of the many celebrations of her life,” co-coordinator Samm Farling said. Buffalo Wild Wings is located at 2313 W. Main St. Just bring in the
“Eat for Ellen” flier for your bill to count toward the final total. The flier can be dowloaded from the Tippecanoe High School website or from the Benefit: Eat for Ellen Facebook page. A fund also has been set up for the family through the Tipp City United Methodist Church, 8 W. Main St., Tipp City. Checks can be made out to the church and marked for Ellen Garner. For more information, call the church office at (937) 667-2318.
• CONTINUED FROM A1 Thursdays, respectively, and will hold weekly work sessions at 9 a.m. each Wednesday. Last month the commissioners approved the 2013 budget in the amount of $27.98 million, which represented a $2.5 million increase over the previous year.
General fund revenues in the amount of $22.92 million are projected this calendar year. Meanwhile, 2013 appropriations for all county funds including the general fund were set at $96.46 million while projected revenue for all county funds including the general fund has been estimated at $81.73 million.
BOE
LOTTERY
• CONTINUED FROM A1
• Pick 4 Evening: 9-8-7-8 • Pick 3 Evening: 7-6-6 • Pick 5 Evening: 2-5-8-6-1 • Rolling Cash 5: 08-12-16-28-33 Estimated jackpot: $100,000
Strawberry Festival to help defer costs of the trip which is expected to cost $1,000 per student. Director of curriculum Michael Moore updated the board on the Race to the Top goals. Moore said a pilot teacher’s evaluation will soon be ready for spring evaluations. He said he believes a state approved “Waiver Day” for teachers would be “time well spent” next fall to go over the questions and concerns of the mandated teacher eval-
BUSINESS ROUNDUP Values reflect closing prices from Tuesday. Symbol Price Change AA 8.92 0.00 CAG 31.07 +0.04 CSCO 20.98 +0.01 EMR 55.01 -0.31 F 14.30 +0.31 FITB 15.41 +0.06 FLS 153.55 -0.78 GM 30.60 +0.27 ITW 62.62 -0.26 18.71 +0.62 JCP KMB 85.70 +0.05 KO 37.32 +0.33 KR 26.11 +0.25 LLTC 35.55 -0.24 MCD 91.51 -0.02 MSFG 13.00 +0.18 PEP 71.60 +0.31 SYX 10.30 -0.07 TUP 65.71 +0.92 USB 33.28 -0.19 VZ 41.97 -0.62
WEN WMT
4.90 68.98
+0.05 +0.68
Herman also recognized the board as a whole and thanked them for their service during “School Board Appreciation month.” All regular board of education meetings will be held on the second Monday of the month beginning at 5:30 p.m. at the board office located at 500 N. Market St. The board adjourned in to executive session to discuss the use of property the district owns. The next board of education meeting will be conducted Feb. 11. For additional information, visit www.troy.k12.oh.us.
• The Troy Elevator The grain prices listed below are the closing prices of Tuesday. Corn Month Bid Change Dec 7.4550 + 0.0650 Mar 7.4950 + 0.0650 NC 13 5.4900 + 0.0525 Soybeans Month Bid Change Dec 14.1850 - 0.0450 Mar 14.1850 - 0.0450 NC 13 12.2800 - 0.0300 Wheat Month Bid Change Dec 7.5300 + 0.1575 NC 13 7.6900 + 0.1725 You can find more information online at www.troyelevator.com.
Bee
MLK
• CONTINUED FROM A1
Bee on Feb. 23 at Sinclair Community College. When asked what she was going to do to prepare for the next level of spelling aficionados, Cerstin said, “I think I’m going to practice one sheet of words a night.” Cerstin is the daughter of Todd and Dawn Gross of Troy. Garrett Wemmer said the experience of the spelling was “exciting” and — Staff and wire reports didn’t expect to finish a close second. “I was very, very nervous,” Wemmer said. Tax Preparation Service (over 20 years experience) Wemmer said it wasn’t standing on stage that EZ $40, Short $70, Long $90 per hour made him nervous. Includes Federal, State & School “I kept debating • Choose no out of pocket costs...ask your preparer • whether I would be the Hours 9-9 M-F, Sat 9-5 • Walk-ins welcome first one out or not — I’m OK with crowds,” he said. 937-778-0436 • 523 N. Main St., Piqua Wemmer said his father Scott Wemmer helped him study his spelling words to prepare for the competition Tuesday. Wemmer’s grandmother Gail 2356345
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Wemmer also attended the spelling bee to support his efforts. The following is a list of the 2012-2013 School Spelling Bee Champions and their respective schools: Bethel Elementary School — Natalie McRoberts; Covington Elementary School — Josie Schaurer; Covington Middle School — Kodie Taylor; Miami East Elementary School — Grace Slone; Milton-Union Elementary School — Rachel Thompson; MiltonUnion Middle School — Brianna Persinger; Newton Elementary School — Jaden Stine; Newton Junior High School — Tristen Benedict. The winner and runnerup received plaques donated by the Troy Sports Center. Tim Williams, gifted intervention specialist at Milton-Union Elementary School was the pronouncer for the spelling bee.
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• CONTINUED FROM A1 celebration toward the youth in our community,” said chairperson William M. Watts. “We want to be sure we use the holiday celebration as a way to make sure that our youth are aware of the legacy of Dr. Martin Luther King, and they grow with the principles inherent in that legacy — that we all live together with dignity and respect for each other.” Keynote speaker Judge W. McGregor Dixon, Jr. will discuss youth involvement in the community during the brunch at 10 a.m. Jan. 19 at Church of the Brethren, 1431 W. Main St. Led by Rev. Charles Carnes of the Apostolic Church of Jesus Christ, the holiday march will commence at 9 a.m. Jan. 21 at the southwest quadrant of the Troy public square and proceed to First Presbyterian Church, 20 S. Walnut St. At 10 a.m., keynote speaker State Representative Richard Adams will open the memorial celebration at the church. “I’m going to be speaking on a topic of what each of us might do to promote equality and fairness,”
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Adams said. “I’m coming up with questions like, ‘Who’s turn is it now?’ and ‘What role can we perform based upon what others have accomplished?’” Adams will reference a deceased Miami County resident — whose name will be revealed at the event — whom Adams called “a champion for equal opportunity.” He also will discuss how residents can build upon the principles established by previous civil rights leaders. “Certainly (King) was focusing on racial equality and fairness, but I think he probably would be standing on that same platform seeking to promote rights beyond one area of need to all areas of need. Anyone who is not treated fairly would qualify, in some cases individuals and in other cases groups,” Adams said. “If even one person is encountering lack of equal opportunity and fairness, that is deserving of our attention.” A fellowship luncheon will follow the memorial celebration service at First Presbyterian Church. All members of the community are welcome and encouraged to attend the events.
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uation process. Moore said Ohio has joined Massachusetts in sharing software called “Think Gate” to track data of each student to “show where they’ve been and where they need to go.” Herman said the district chose to use Data Map software which is similar to Think Gate. Herman said it took the states approximately three years to choose a software system, and the reason the district chose its own software. Moore said overall teachers and staff on the RttTcommittee has been positive.
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CLEVELAND (AP) — Here are the winning numbers drawn Tuesday by the Ohio Lottery: • Pick 3 Midday: 4-4-2 • Pick 5 Midday: 6-8-7-0-1 • Pick 4 Midday: 2-9-4-0
ALLIANCE
LOCAL
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January 16, 2013
TROY DAILY NEWS • WWW.TROYDAILYNEWS.COM
Post 586 will be available for purchase. For more information, contact Gordon • KIWANIS MEETING: Pittenger at (937) 667-3051 The Kiwanis Club of Troy or Susie Spitler at (937) 698will meet from noon to 1 C o m m u n i t y 6798. p.m. at the Troy Country • MARTIAL ARTS: Come Club. Dave Pinkerton will Calendar to the Troy-Miami County give a demonstration of Public Library at 2 p.m. for a hand bell ringing with CONTACT US free demonstration on Tae information on its history Ryu Do martial Arts. Masters and manufacturing. For Stephen McCall and Wayne more information, contact Riehle from Tae Ryu Do Donn Craig, vice presiCall Melody International will discuss the dent, at (937) 418-1888. fundamentals of Tae Ryu Do Vallieu at • FINANCIAL MANwhile reflecting on their own 440-5265 to AGEMENT: Jump start experiences. All ages are the new year by setting list your free invited to attend. Call (937) new goals to manage your 339-0502 to register in calendar money and prioritize your advance. items.You finances at 6:30 p.m. at • BEGINNING BEEthe Troy-Miami County can send KEEPING: Beginning beePublic Library, 419 W. your news by e-mail to keeping classes will be Main St., Troy. The provallieu@tdnpublishing.com. offered from 9 a.m. to 3:30 gram will be offered by p.m. at Brukner Nature Graceworks Lutheran Center. Tony Rimkus of the Services, Consumer Valley Beekeepers Miami Credit Counseling Association will lead the class, which is $45 Services. Learn about calculating your for both sessions, also including Jan. 26. income, setting realistic short-term and For more information, contact Rimkus at long-term goals, surviving financial set(937) 667-1420 or Brukner Nature Center backs, weighing your options with buying at (937) 698-6493 to register. Deadline for and saving and more. Call 339-0502 to registration is Friday. register in advance. • NIGHT HIKE: The great horned owls • NATURE CLUB: Brukner Nature will be a feature of a forest night hike at 7 Center’s Home school Nature Club will p.m. at Brukner Nature Center. Join staff feature “Remarkable Raptors” from 2-4 and volunteers for a guided hike in search p.m. at BNC. The fee for this innovative of this wild creature. Come dressed for a program is only $2.50 for BNC members and $5 for non-members. Registration and family-friendly adventure as participants hike the trails on a guided discovery of nocpayment are due the Monday before the turnal creatures, sounds of the night and program. wildlife signs. The event is free and open to the public. Following the hike, join the THURSDAY Stillwater Stargazers at 8 p.m. Members will have their telescopes set up to answer • CHILI DINNER: The American Legion questions. This program also is free and Post 586, Tipp City, will present chili with open to the public. toppings from 6-7:30 p.m. Euchre will start • SPAGHETTI SUPPER: The First at 7 p.m. for $5. United Church of Christ Relay for Life team • CHESS CLUB: Have you ever played will have a spaghetti supper from 4-7 p.m. chess or wanted to learn how to play the at the church, 120 S. Market St., Troy. The game of chess? Whether you are a chess menu will include spaghetti, marinara master or an amateur, the Troy-Miami sauce, meatballs, bread, salad bar, appleCounty Library’s Checkmate Chess Club sauce, desserts and drinks. Meals will be invites all types of players at 6:30 p.m. $7 for adults and $3 for children, and chilPlay against your friends and family or sit dren 4 and younger eat free. Carryouts will back and watch others capture the pieces. be available and the church is handicapped Learn new strategies to controlling the accessible. board and defeating your opponent. • KARAOKE: Karaoke with Papa D’s • LEPC MEETING: The quarterly meet- Pony Express will be presented from 7 p.m. ing of the Miami County LEPC will be at 4 to close at the American Legion Post 586, p.m. at the Miami County Communication Tipp City. The event is free. Center, 210 Marybill Drive, Troy. • PORK CHOPS: The Pleasant Hill • CLASS LUNCH: The Piqua Central VFW Post No. 6557, 7578 W. Fenner Road, High School class of 1961 will now meet Ludlow Falls, will offer a marinated (nonfor lunch at 12:30 p.m. at El Sombrero, marinated pork chops available upon 1700 N. County Road 25-A, Troy. request) pork chop dinner with baked potaParticipants will order from the menu. to and corn for $9 from 5-7 p.m. • THS PROGRAM: The Troy Historical • BUFFET BREAKFAST: The Sons of Society will have a Native American prothe American Legion Post No. 43, 622 S. gram at 7 p.m. at the Troy-Hayner Cultural Market St., Troy, will host an all-you-can-eat Center, 301 W. Main St., Troy. John De buffet-style breakfast from 7-10:30 a.m. Boer, author, musician and environmental Adult meals will be $7 and children’s meals educator will be performing “A Tribute to will be $3. The buffet will include scrambled the Native American Flute,” telling stories, eggs, homemade fried potatoes, sausage talking about legends and the history of gravy and biscuits, sausage and bacon, our land. The event is free and open to the waffles and omelets made-to-order, toast, public. For more information, call (937) coffee and juice. Takeout orders will be 339-5900 or email tths@frontier.com. available. • ANUUAL MEETING: The annual • FISH FRY: The Fletcher Volunteer Fire meeting of the Troy Rec Board will be at Department will be hosting the first of three 6:30 p.m. at the Troy Rec, 11 N. Market St., all-you-can-eat fish and chicken fry fundTroy. raising events of the season from 5-7:30 • BEEF HOTSHOT: American Legion p.m. at 6605 State Route 589, south of Post No. 43 will offer a beef hotshot openFletcher. The menu will includes deep-fried face dinner from 5-7:30 p.m. Included with fish and chicken, as well as french fries, the beef open-face will be mashed potaapplesauce, coleslaw, bread and butter and toes, and green beans or corn, for $8. a beverage. Adult meals are $8, children 5• DISCOVERY WALK: A morning dis12 are $5 and childen under 5 eat free. covery walk for adults will be from 8-9:30 Additional fish fry events will be Feb. 16 a.m. at Aullwood Audubon Center, 1000 and March 16. Aullwood Road, Dayton. Tom Hissong, education coordinator, will lead walkers as they SUNDAY experience the wonderful seasonal changes taking place. Bring binoculars. • VIEW FROM THE VISTA: Join members of the Brukner Bird Club for a relaxing FRIDAY afternoon in the treetop vista from 2-4 p.m. at Brukner Nature Center. Participants will • FRIDAY DINNERS: Dinner will be identify each species and get a count on offered from 5-8 p.m. at the Covington VFW the number of each seen at one time. All Post 4235, 173 N. High St., Covington. this data will be entered into Project Choices will include a $12 New York strip FeederWatch, a national bird population steak, broasted chicken, fish, shrimp and survey coordinated by the Cornell sandwiches, all made-to-order. Laboratory of Ornithology to track popula• BAKED TENDERLOIN: The American tion changes. This winter is promising to be Legion Auxiliary No. 586, 377 N. 3rd St., an exciting one, with lots of northern Tipp City, will offer baked tenderloin, two species predicted to move into the area. vegetables, salad, dessert, roll and butter • DOG SOCIAL: The Miami County Park for $7 from 6-8:30 p.m. District will have its monthly dog social from • FRIDAY SUPPER: The Pleasant Hill 1-3 p.m. at Hobart Urban Nature Preserve, VFW Post No. 6557, 7578 W. Fenner Road, 1400 Tyrone, off Dorset Road, Troy. If your Ludlow Falls, will offer dinner with two sides dogs are nice and play well with others, for $7 from 6-7:30 p.m. Call (937) 698-6727 bring them to the park. Participants can for more information. enter the “Catch the Snowball Contest,” “Hide the Treat in the Snow” and “Bury the SATURDAY Dog in the Snow Competition.” Remember, owners are responsible for their dogs and must clean up after their pet. Meet in the • MLK EVENTS: At 10 a.m., the public parking lot. Pre-register for the program is invited to a celebration brunch hosted by online at www.miamicountyparks, email to Church of the Brethren, 1431 W. Main St., register@miamicountyparks.com or call Troy. Judge W. McGregor Dixon Jr. will be (937) 335-6273, Ext. 104. the keynote speaker. Dixon serves on the • BASKET BINGO: The Miami East Miami Court of Common Pleas in the Probate/Juvenile Division. The emphasis of FFA Alumni Chapter will sponsor basket this event is youth involvement in the combingo at 2 p.m. in the Miami East High munity. More events are planned for Cafeteria. Longaberger Baskets will be the Monday. prize for the 20 games, with the grand • APPRAISAL FAIR: An appraisal fair prize being a retired basket feature. Doors will be offered at 12:30 p.m. at the Tipp City will open at 1:30 p.m. Tickets are $20 for American Legion Post No. 586, 377 N. the 20 games and a raffle entry. There will Third St., Tipp City, sponsored by the also be raffles, extra games and concesTippecanoe Historical Society. Robert sions sales offered. All winning tie-breakHoneyman, a Miami County auctioneer, will ing cards win a consolation prize of a provide information on items brought for Longaberger product. Tickets can be purhim to appraise. Admission is free and chased by calling the Miami East FFA there is a limit of two items. Food and Alumni Chapter at (937) 335-7070, Ext. refreshments by the Ladies Auxiliary of 3212, or by purchasing them at the door.
FYI
PROVIDED PHOTO
Health Partners of Miami County received a humanitarian grant from Miami County Foundation. The free clinic provides health care for the uninsured and underinsured in Miami County.
Humanitarian grants awarded Foundation supports organizations For the Troy Daily News
MIAMI COUNTY
The Miami County Foundation surprised 12 local organizations with humanitarian grants totaling $24,250. ongoing Seventeen humanitarian grants for food, utility, shelter and medical assistance programs were given to American Red Cross, Bethany Center’s soup kitchen, Covington Outreach Association, FISH Union Township, Family Abuse Shelter of Miami County, G.I.V.E., Health Partners of Miami County, New Path, Partners in Hope, Salvation Army in Piqua, St. James Episcopal Church food pantry and St. Patrick’s Soup Kitchen. “The Miami County Board of Foundation Directors is committed to supporting basic needs in the county. We have aligned ourselves with established agencies throughout the entire county who provide food, emergency shelter, utility
and medical assistance,” said Humanitarian Grant Committee ChairpersonLeesa Baker. “Many thousands of county residents will benefit from this financial gift.” Board president Donna Favorite explained, “The late Richard E. Hunt, who established the foundation, instituted the motto, ‘People Helping People’ and these grant dollars certainly help thousands of people.” More than $4 million has been distributed in grants and scholarships over the past 27 years. “I am proud to be a member of a Board that has such highly qualified representatives who take their responsibilities very serious and are such good stewards over the money in them,” entrusted Favorite said. “Good financial management has allowed the Miami County Foundation to award these extra humanitarian grants
at a time when they are most needed.” The deadline for spring grant distribution is the last day of February. Eligible organizations must provide services directly to the residents of Miami County, must be certified federally tax-exempt by the IRS as a 501c or equivalent organization, preferably a 501 (c)(3) and organizations are limited to one grant per 12-month period. You can request a grant application by calling the office at 773-9012 or download a copy from the foundation’s website at www.miamicountyfoundation.org. Individuals, businesses and organizations wishing to support the mission of the foundation may contribute to the unrestricted fund. Donations are accepted in any amount and can be mailed to the foundation office at P.O. Box 1526, Piqua, OH 45356-1526, or given securely on the foundation’s website www.miamicountyfoundation.org.
Homeschool lessons planned TROY — WACO Historical Society will offer four lessons developed by NASA education specialists to homeschool children in third through fifth grades. The lessons will be from 1-2:30 p.m. on Tuesdays, Feb. 5, 12, 19 and 26 at the WACO Air Museum, 1865 S. County Road 25-A, Troy. These lessons provide fun, hands-on activities that promote problem solving, communication skills and teamwork. Earth and space subjects include size and distances of planets, geometry, rockets, measurement
and Newton’s Third Law. The registration fee is $30 per student. To register online, go to www.wacoairmuseum.org and click on the events tab or send your check made out to WACO Historical
Society to 1865 S. County Road 25-A, Troy. Please include the child’s and parents’ names, address, phone and email. For more information, call 335-9226 or email lcdir@wacoairmuseum.org.
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OPINION
Contact us David Fong is the executive editor of the Troy Daily News. You can reach him at 440-5228 or send him e-mail at fong@tdn publishing.com.
XXXday, 2010 Wednesday, January 16,XX, 2013 •4
TROY DAILY NEWS • WWW.TROYDAILYNEWS.COM
In Our View Troy Daily News Editorial Board FRANK BEESON / Group Publisher DAVID FONG / Executive Editor
ONLINE POLL
(WWW.TROYDAILYNEWS.COM)
Question: Do you trust the federal government? Watch for final poll results in
Sunday’s Miami Valley Sunday News. Watch for a new poll question
in Sunday’s Miami Valley Sunday News.
PERSPECTIVE
“Congress shall make no law respecting an establishment of religion, or prohibiting the free exercise thereof; or abridging the freedom of speech, or of the press; or the right of people peaceably to assemble, and to petition the Government for a redress of grievances.” — First Amendment, U.S. Constitution
EDITORIAL ROUNDUP The Telegraph, London, on the U.S. government in denial: The fiscal cliff was concocted by President Barack Obama and Congress as a way of holding a gun to their own heads. The fixing of a deadline for the automatic imposition of ferocious tax rises and deep spending cuts was supposed to concentrate the minds of America’s political leaders and force them into taking the difficult decisions required to start reeling in the country’s truly terrifying levels of public debt. The stratagem has failed. There has been no “grand bargain” that addresses the root causes of the ballooning deficit — rocketing social security entitlements funded by a too-narrow tax base — just a stickingplaster settlement aimed at buying more time. Given that the United States has a $16 trillion burden of debt and an annual budget deficit of $1.1 trillion, this package does not even begin to address the fiscal crisis. Meanwhile, a new two-month deadline has been set for hammering out an agreement on spending cuts. Sounds familiar? We have been here many times already with the eurozone sovereign debt crisis when deadlines became infinitely elastic as politicians refused to take painful but necessary decisions and instead kept lobbing money at the problem. As I As the powerhouse of the world economy, America cannot continue to live in denial and expect to mainSee It tain its dominant role. Its current debt trajectory is ■ The Troy leading the country to ruination. … Many economists Daily News believe that such a crippling level of public debt can welcomes destroy any prospect of economic growth. The impact columns from on the global economy of such a slowdown would be our readers. To disastrous. submit an “As I Mitch McConnell, the Republican leader in the See It” send Senate, said: “This shouldn’t be the model for how to your type-writdo things around here.” The most depressing aspect ten column to: of this narrow escape is that if America’s political ■ “As I See It” leaders cannot display more maturity and a far c/o Troy Daily greater willingness to compromise, that is exactly News, 224 S. Market St., how things will continue to get done. Troy, OH 45373 The Globe and Mail, Toronto, on the year of rising up against impunity: ■ You can also e-mail us at A popular rebellion against impunity manifested editorial@tdnpu itself in 2012, after a series of grotesque crimes blishing.com. against the vulnerable. In other years, people rose up ■ Please against the impunity of the state and its officials — include your full a theme of the Arab Spring. name and teleIn the year just ended, tens of thousands of prophone number. testers against a Taliban shooting in Pakistan and a gang rape in India signaled a broad movement against the cultural norms and state policies that promote impunity for crimes against girls and women. In Canada, the norms of a free and open Internet that bullies hide behind came under sustained attack. Three girls and women victimized in brutal and callous ways provided touchstones of universal power. Just as more people understand the Holocaust through Anne Frank’s diary than perhaps any other source, the emergence in 2012 of three individuals whose lives of promise were cut short, in two cases, and nearly ended in a third, moved large numbers of people to action. Resisting impunity meant pushing government and less visible targets — the social foundations of impunity. In Canada, reaching those who join in ostracism is a complex task; laws holding bystanders to account are on the way. In India, all parties have fielded candidates charged with crimes against women, a measure of the crimes’ acceptance. In Pakistan, religious schools spread oppressive attitudes toward women and girls. As in the Arab Spring, victory is far from assured. And there is a battleground in its early days — a battle against the United States gun culture, and the laws (or lack thereof) that support it. The massacre of 20 children and six educators at a Connecticut elementary school, like the crimes against these two girls and woman, was so outrageous it made silence seem like complicity. But impunity was on the defensive, and our wish for the New Year is that the resistance to it makes concrete gains.
LETTERS
Thank you for your support To the Editor: I have been ill for several years and confined to the house. I want to thank my family, friends, Cornerstone Baptist Church and my pastor Matt Harbour for the phone calls, visits and get well cards. I also have a very special husband, Timothy Mosley, mother Donna McDaniel and my sister Debbie Smallenbarger. She has been my rock to lean on. I also have a very special
thank you to the Troy High School class of 1977. The people I am about to mention surprised me with a Christmas gift — a color television with a built-in DVD player. They even hooked me up with cable TV. This TV helps keep me company on sleepless nights. I am so thankful. Those people who bought my TV are: Carol Hennessey, Tana Bowen, Jean Todd, Linda Stafford, Gloria Greene, Bill and Lori Whitten, Chris and Terri Boehringer, David Grigsby, Marlene Hall, Julie McGillvary, Wendy James, Christina Young, Karen
Adkins, Lori Radamahir, David Stoltz, Vicki O’Neil, Stephany Deeter, Sandy Reynolds and Lisa Roone. The Troy High School class of 1977 is a very special group who cares about one another and I am very proud to be a part of this class. I love each and every one of them. Please pray for me. God has been so good to me. He is an awesome God. He helps me learn to walk again. It’s rough, but he will see me there. I thank God for my salvation!
DOONESBURY
Bidding a fond farewell to a true gentleman When my dad was badly weakened by the flu and my mom wanted to call an ambulance to take him to the emergency room, he wouldn't go unless he could shave first and change into a nice shirt and a pair of slacks. My mom told him they don't have a dress code at ER. He insisted. My dad, who didn't survive his illness, was thoroughly old school. He would no more wear a pair of jeans than rainbowstriped clown pants. Born in 1929, he never lost his belief in the standards of a bygone era or his passion for its literature, culture and history. He taught English for decades at what was then Trinity College in Washington, D.C., with an emphasis on American literature of the 1920s and 1930s. He was a teacher's teacher who devoted himself to transferring, as much as he could, his love for Hemingway and Faulkner to his students. He adored big-band music — Tommy Dorsey, Benny Goodman, Glenn Miller and the rest of them. He whistled and hummed their tunes constantly around
Rich Lowry Troy Daily News Guest Columnist the house. Later in life, he even tried to teach himself to play the trumpet, although I would put the emphasis on the word "tried." When we played recordings of the greats for him in the hospital, he hummed along through his oxygen mask. He was a committed World War II buff. Nothing would ever seem as momentous to him as the clash of great armies over the fate of civilization that was in the headlines every day of his youth. He might have missed his calling as a military historian. His bookshelves were a veritable research library on the armaments of World War II. He was a scale modeler, and his study is full of dozens of models of tanks, planes and ships from the war.
— Vickie (McDaniel) Mosely Troy
He had nearly completed his latest, a Heinkel He 115-1 (a German seaplane), when he passed away. He loved baseball and had New York Yankee pinstripes imprinted on his heart. Like any good Yankees fan, he believed that the universe is in proper order only when the Yanks are world champs. Since his norms were set in an era when it was a big deal when Joe DiMaggio once kicked the dirt near second base in frustration in the 1947 World Series, he had no use for the ostentation of contemporary sport. He was a private man and very self-contained. I never saw him cry and never heard him raise his voice. Swearing was out of the question. He didn't hug, if he could possibly avoid it. But he may have had the tenderest heart of anyone I have ever known. He spoiled the cats horribly, fed the birds lavishly and always endeavored to find a way to usher insects out of the house without doing them any harm. He was a devoted husband and father. I'm always a sucker for sentimental father-son base-
ball scenes in movies. It brings back the times my dad would throw batting practice or hit fly balls to me down at the local field on summer nights. On the walk back home — with the overused ball stained green from the grass — he would put his arm around me and tell me stories of the game. Whatever lessons I have learned in life in the importance of patience and diligence began when he assembled a model tank with me as a kid. He believed in excellence, in duty and in selfcontrol. He was a constant reader, beginning with the newspapers every morning (I told you he was old school), and an inveterate self-educator. He always had something next on his list that he wanted to learn more about, and in the spirit of a tinkerer he baked and had dabbled through the years in woodworking, gardening and bricklaying always another project. He had a trial at the very end, but was dignified to his last breath. RIP.
Troy Troy Daily News
Miami Valley Sunday News
FRANK BEESON Group Publisher
DAVID FONG Executive Editor
LEIANN STEWART Retail Advertising Manager
CHERYL HALL Circulation Manager
BETTY BROWNLEE Business Manager
SCARLETT SMITH Graphics Manager
AN OHIO COMMUNITY MEDIA NEWSPAPER 224 S. Market St. Troy, Ohio 45373
Rich Lowry can be reached via email: comments.lowry@nationalreview.com
www.TDN-NET.com 335-5634
LOCAL
TROY DAILY NEWS • WWW.TROYDAILYNEWS.COM
Wednesday, January 16, 2013
5
OBITUARIES
ELLEN MARIE GARNER TIPP CITY — Ellen Marie Garner passed away Monday, Jan. 14, 2013, with her family by her side, from injuries sustained during the New Year’s Day house fire in University Heights, Cincinnati. The fire also claimed the young life of Chad Kohls and we would like to express our sincerest sympathy to Chad’s family. Ellen was born March 19, 1992, in Troy, Ohio, to Rodney and Ann (Meyer) Garner of Tipp City. She is survived by her parGARNER ents; brother, 2nd Lt. Ben Garner, USAF; her dog, Gracie; grandparents, Al and Esther Meyer of Fairborn, Ohio, Bob and Marty Archer of Tipp City and Lib Garner of Kettering, Ohio; along with aunts and uncles, Ed and Susan Bailey of Springfield, Joe and Kim Meyer of Navarre, Fla., Tanda Garner and Russ Griffin, Port Clinton, Ohio, Tim and Melissa Wells of Vandalia and David Wells of Palm Springs, Calif. Also surviving are cousins, Elizabeth and Edward Bailey, Nick and Kaitie Meyer, Tiffany Zimmerman and Lindsey Hemelgarn, along with multiple second cousins, Sarah, Josh and Andrew Zimmerman and Parker Hemelgarn; and great aunts and uncles. Ellen was preceded in death by her grandfather, Ken Garner; and cousin, Chelsea Wells. Ellen learned to sew through the 4-H organization in St. Charles County, Mo. She continued her passion for sewing through her mentor, Sherri Flock of Tipp City. She was a third-year fashion design student at DAAP, part of the University of Cincinnati. She had just returned from New York City working as a co-op student for Garan Inc. Besides sewing and creative design,
ETHEL KAY HOBSON
Ellen’s loves were dogs, camping, rock climbing, hiking, parasailing, boating, traveling, hanging with all her friends and being a part of Kappa Kappa Gamma sorority. A 2010 graduate of Tippecanoe High School, Ellen was an exceptional student who participated in marching band and held several part-time jobs while continuing her schooling. Ellen’s zest for life was evident to all those who knew her. She had a bubbly nature and an infectious smile that illuminated any room she was in. Her passion will live on in the lives of other young people through her organ donation overseen by the UC Health Hospital. The family extends their sincerest gratitude to the Medical Center staff and firefighter/EMS for their heroic efforts; UC President Santa Ono for his generous support and prayers; The Kingsgate Marriott for their outstanding hospitality and care and to the entire Greek and DAAP UC community for their love and support and food. Funeral services will be at 2 p.m. Friday, Jan. 18, 2013, at Ginghamsburg Church, Main Campus, 6759 S. County Road 25-A, Tipp City, with Pastor Bonita Wood officiating. Burial will follow in Maple Hill Cemetery. Family will receive friends from 10 a.m. to 1:30 p.m. prior to the service on Friday at the church. Arrangements have been entrusted to Frings and Bayliff Funeral Home, 327 W. Main St., Tipp City. Contributions may be made the Tipp City United Methodist Church special fund in memory of Ellen. Online condolences may be made at www.fringsandbayliff.com.
MARK A. CECIL SR. PIQUA — Mark A. Cecil Sr., 57, of Piqua, died at 8:30 a.m. Monday, Jan. 14, 2013, at the Upper Valley Medical Center. He was born July 13, 1955, in Piqua, to the late Donald L. and Rose E. (Cole) Cecil. He married Tracy L. Preston on Nov. 20, 1988, in Piqua; and she survives. Other survivors include a son, Mark A. Cecil Jr. of Sidney; three grandchildren; and a sister, Linda (Doug) CECIL DeBrosse of Huber Heights. He was preceded in death by a brother, Dennis Cecil; and two sisters, Judy Cecil and Vicky Teets. Mr. Cecil was a 1975 graduate of Piqua Central High School and had worked at Ulbrich’s Supermarket, Grissom’s Supermarket, Cassano’s
Restaurant and ITW/FEG of Piqua. He enjoyed his grandchildren, fishing and camping. A service to honor his life will begin at 1 p.m. Thursday, Jan. 17, 2013, at the Jamieson & Yannucci Funeral Home with Pastor Donald R. Wells officiating. Burial will follow at Forest Hill Cemetery. Visitation will be from noon to 1 p.m. Thursday at the funeral home. Memorial contributions may be made to the Kidney Foundation, 1373 Grandview Ave., Suite 200, Columbus, OH 432122804. Guestbook condolences and expressions of sympathy, to be provided to the family, may be expressed through jamiesonandyannucci.com.
DONALD LOYD ‘DONNIE’ FELL Donnie was a 1965 graduate of Tippecanoe High School; worked as a maintenance supervisor for CATLOW Corp., Tipp City; was a member of the Troy Fish and Game; president and member of Dayton Motorcycle Club; member of Free Masons, Tipp City, Tall Tales Hunting Club, Society of Plastics Engineering Club and the American Legion Post No. 286, New Carlisle. Services will be at 11 a.m. Friday, Jan. 18, 2013, at Lake Avenue Christian Church, 1101 W. Lake Ave., New Carlisle, Ohio, Pastor Randy Warner officiating. Burial will follow in Maple Hill Cemetery, Tipp City. Visitation will be from 5-8 p.m. Thursday at the church. Arrangements have been entrusted to Frings and Bayliff Funeral Home, 327 W. Main St., Tipp City. Online condolences may be made to www.fringsandbayliff.com.
FUNERAL DIRECTORY • Heidi Lynn Moyer TIPP CITY — Heidi Lynn Moyer, 46, of Tipp City, passed away Sunday, Jan. 6, 2013, at Grandview Hospital. Memorial services were held Saturday, Jan. 12, 2013, at First Baptist Church of Vandalia. • Dorothy Maze BROOKVILLE — Dorothy Maze, 86, of Brookville, formerly of West Milton and Vandalia, passed away Saturday, Jan. 12, 2013,
at Brookhaven Nursing Home, Brookville. Arrangements are pending at the HaleSarver Family Funeral Home, West Milton. • Eddie Cecile Brock TROY — Eddie Cecile Brock, 56, of Troy, Ohio, died suddenly on Thursday, Jan. 10, 2013, at his residence. Services will be Friday, Jan. 18, 2013, at Riverside Cemetery Chapel, Troy Baird Funeral Home is assisting the family with
In respect for friends and family, the Troy Daily News prints a funeral directory free of charge. Families who would like photographs and more
detailed obituary information published in the Troy Daily News, should contact their local funeral home for pricing details.
CENTERVILLE — Margaret “Peg” E. Aultman-Gorman, 63, of Centerville, formerly of Bradford, died Sunday, Jan. 13, 2013, at Sycamore Medical Center, Dayton. Peg was born April 12, 1949, in Piqua, Ohio, to the late Rex and Wilma (DeRemer) Aultman; a graduate of Bradford High School, class of 1967; earned a bachelor’s of business from the University of Dayton; worked as a manager at Reynolds & Reynolds for more than 20 years; a member of the Daughters of the American Revolution; enjoyed knitting, sewing, singing, playing piano and watching black and white classic movies. Peg is survived by her loving husband of 14 years, Daniel Gorman; five children, Tim Jay of Satanta, Kansas, Ken and Missy Jay of Bradford, Amanda and Jeff Placke, Holly and Rich Kohlbacher and Matt Gorman, all of Dayton; seven grandchildren, Allison Jay, Kelli and Kyle Lloyd, Ben Placke, and Ethan, Aidan
and Chloe Kohlbacher; three brothers, Larry and Doris Aultman of Greenville, Tom and Carolyn Aultman of Bradford and Denny and Betty Aultman of Geneva, Ohio; sister, Anita Aultman of Troy; sister-in-law, Joan Aultman of Houston, Texa; and numerous nieces, nephews, relatives and friends. Peg loved her grandchildren and they were her No. 1 priority. She was preceded in death by her parents; and two brothers, Ron and Hugh Aultman. Funeral services will be held at 10:30 a.m. Thursday, Jan. 17, 2013, at Stocker-Fraley Funeral Home, Bradford, with Pastor Daryl Peeples Sr. officiating. Interment will follow in Miami Memorial Park Cemetery, Covington. The family will receive friends from 5-8 p.m. Wednesday at the funeral home. If desired, contributions may be made to the American Diabetes Association. Condolences may be left for the family at www.stockerfraley.com.
VIRGINIA A. BOLING ST. PARIS — Virginia A. Boling, 83, of St. Paris went to be with the Lord on Sunday, Jan. 13, 2013, in Hospice of Dayton. She was born Nov. 16, 1929, in Mt. Sterling, Ky., she was a daughter of the late Elzie and Lydia (Bowles) Jolly. She married John Boling on Aug. 3, 1948; and he preceded her in death Oct. 16, 1989. Together they raised four children. She is survived by three sons, Ronald and Melanie Boling of St. Paris, Danny and Diana Boling of West Liberty, Gregory and Carolyn Boling of Flemingsburg, Ky., and daughBOLING ter, Barbara Gambill of St. Paris. She was a loving grandmother to 11 grandchildren; and 14 great-grandchildren. Virginia also is survived by three sisters, Helen Steele of Boston, Mass., Mrs. Kenneth Ramey (Mae) of Flemingsburg, Ky., and Mrs Harold Lewis (Fay) of Carlisle, Ohio; and two
brothers, Mr. Herbert Jolly of Hillsboro, Ky., and Mr. Charles Jolly of Flemingsburg, Ky. In addition to her parents and husband, she was preceded in death by a granddaughter, Missy; two brothers, David and Raymond Jolly; and two sisters, Geneva Rammel and Juanita Jolly. She worked at LewisSystems of Urbana, Ohio, retiring in the 1980s. Funeral services will be at 1 p.m. Thursday, Jan. 17, 2013, in the Atkins-Shively Funeral Home, 216 S. Springfield St., St. Paris, OH 43072, with the Rev. Jerry Boling presiding. Burial will follow in Spring Grove Cemetery, North Heck Hill Road, St. Paris. Visitation for family and friends will be from 5-8 p.m. Wednesday, Jan. 16, 2013, in the Atkins-Shively Funeral Home. Condolences to the family may be sent to www.shivelyfuneralhomes.com.
LARRY L. FOUREMAN
ARCANUM — Larry L. Foureman, 77, parents; sisters, Thelma Fourman and Berdine Case; brother, Myron “Barney” of Arcanum, died Monday, Jan. 14, Foureman; and son-in-law, Gary 2013, at Miami Valley Hospital, Dayton. Reinoehl. Mr. Foureman was born in He is survived by his wife, Abbottsville on Aug. 7, 1935, Judith (Rogers) Foureman, the son of the late Wherly D. whom he married May 14, and Iva A. (Burns) Foureman. 1983; children, Mark David He was a member of Grace (Tammy) Foureman of Huber United Methodist Church, Heights, Lari Lynn Reinoehl Ithaca. of Arcanum, Michele (Brent) He was a former Darke Black of Piqua and Jack County commissioner, Van Matthew Louderback of Buren Township trustee, Sandyhook, Ky.; grandchilArcanum mayor and member of dren, John and David the village council, Darke FOUREMAN Foureman, Travis and Tyler County Township trustee past (Sarah) Reinoehl, Angie (Matt) Nichol, president, state of Ohio Township Kelly Manson and Natalie Louderback; Trustee director, past president of the and seven great-grandchildren. state of Ohio County Commissioners, Funeral services will be at 10 a.m. founder of the National Kiddie Tractor Pullers and the Hennipen Racing Ducks. Saturday, Jan. 19, 2013, at Grace United Methodist Church, Ithaca, with the Rev. Larry was the originator of the Tim Lehman officiating. Burial will follow Halloween bean supper, director of the in Abbottsville Cemetery. The family will former Arcanum National Bank, former receive relatives and friends from 4-8 Arcanum assistant fire chief and a arrangements. p.m. Friday at the Kreitzer Funeral founding member of the Arcanum Home, Arcanum. Community Rescue Squad. • Kenneth L. Clark The family suggests memorial contribuLarry was a member of the Arcanum TROY — Kenneth L. tions to Arcanum Community Rescue Area Business Association and the Clark, 74, of Troy, passed Service, P.O. Box 177, Arcanum, OH Greenville Moose, Eagles and Elks away at 10:50 p.m. 45304-0177, or Arcanum Fire lodges. Monday, Jan. 14, 2013, at He was on the board of directors of the Department., 208 S. Main St., Arcanum, Upper Valley Medical Eagles Lodge; president of the Ohio Colt OH 45304-0177; or Grace United Center, Troy. Racing Association; vice president of the Methodist Church, 750 Arcanum Ithaca Arrangements are pendDr. H M Parshall Memorial; and treasur- Road, Arcanum, OH 45304. ing at Fisher-Cheney Online cndolences may be sent at er of the Signature Series. Funeral Home, Troy. KreitzerFuneralHomeInc.com. Larry was preceded in death by his
FISHER - CHENEY
OBITUARY POLICY
Tipton, and Hyle and his wife, Carol Tipton. Kay was a graduate of Garden City High School in Kansas. She retired in 2012 from Troy Walmart and was a member of the Troy Eagles Auxiliary No. 971. Kay enjoyed cooking, crafts, sewing, gardening and reading. A funeral service will be conducted at 1 p.m. Friday, Jan. 18, 2013, at Fisher-Cheney Funeral Home in Troy, with Pastor Gary Boggs officiating. Interrment will be at Maple Hill Cemetery in Tipp City. Visitation will be from 5-7 p.m. Thursday at the funeral home, with an Eagles Auxiliary service at 7 p.m. Contributions may be made to the American Heart Association, 5455 North High St., Columbus, OH 43214. Condolences may be left for the family at www.fisher-cheneyfuneralhome.com.
MARGARET ‘PEG’ E. AULTMAN-GORMAN
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NEW CARLISLE — Donald Loyd “Donnie” Fell, 65, of New Carlisle, Ohio, passed away Monday, Jan. 14, 2013, at Miami Valley Hospital after a brief illness. He was born Jan. 19, 1947, in Troy, Ohio, to James Loyd and Treva Ailene (Furlong) Fell. He was preceded in death by his parents; sister, Catherine Willoughby; and grandson, Jonathon D. Trick. Donnie is survived by his loving wife, Della (Trueblood) Fell; children, Deanna and her husband John Lund of New Jersey, Donna Fell Bourelle of Tipp City, Jamie and his wife Robyn Fell of FELL New Carlisle and Doug and his wife Jennifer Fell of New Carlisle; along with grandchildren, Gwyn (Bryan) Ernst, Jordan Trick, Jessica Trick, Dylan Bourelle, Delaney Bourelle, Cheyenne Fell, Dakotah Fell and Raegan Fell; and great-grandchildren, Austin Ernst, Cayden Ernst and Branson Kimrey.
TROY — Ethel Kay Hobson, 66, of Troy, Ohio, passed away at 7:38 a.m. Sunday, Jan. 13, 2013, at her residence. Kay was born Jan. 13, 1947 in Garden City, Kan., to Vernon Edward and Ethel (Willis) Tipton. She was married to Donald R. Hobson Oct. 1, 1965, and he preceded her in death on Jan. 16, 2012. Kay is survived by one son, Donald Hobson II of West Milton; one daughter and son-in-law, Debby and Larry Brown of Tipp City; one brother and sister-in-law, Earl and Edith Tipton of Morehead, Ky.; four grandchilHOBSON dren, Autumn Hobson, Katie Brown, Chrissy and Ivan Salmeron, and Jenny Brown; and one great-grandchild, Sofia Salmeron. She was preceded in death by her parents and two brothers, Meade (Wood)
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Wednesday, January 16, 2013
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Chester F. Carlson Invents Xerography Have you heard the saying, “Necessity is the mother of invention?” Can you guess what it means? The life story of the determined physicist Chester F. Carlson provides an answer. Carlson was born in Seattle, Washington, in 1906. By age 14, he had to work to support his sick parents. Still, he managed to go to college; and in 1930, he earned a degree from the California Institute of Technology. Carlson soon went to work for an electronics firm in New York state, preparing patent applications for new inventions. Each application had to include multiple copies of the papers explaining how the invention worked. Back then, reproducing documents or drawings involved taking photographs, which was costly, or making copies by hand. Hand-copying was a problem for Carlson; he had arthritis. He needed a machine that made quick, clean copies. In 1934, he decided to invent it. After four long years of experimenting, he made a machine that worked. It used electrostatic energy, light, glass plates and a powder called toner—not liquid ink—to make copies. Carlson’s process was called Xerography, from the Greek word for dry writing. Neither the name nor the machine interested companies such as General Electric and IBM, who thought customers wouldn’t buy it. They said no to Carlson and his machine. Finally, in 1944, the inventor visited the Battelle Memorial Institute in Columbus, Ohio. The scientists there liked his idea and worked to improve it. In 1947, the Haloid Company took over Battelle’s research. Eleven years later, the company sold its first copy machine. In 1961, Haloid changed its name to Xerox Corporation. When Carlson died in 1968, his machine was a success, and he was a millionaire. Today, around the world, people use Xerox machines more than 3 billion times a day at work and at home, all because Chester Carlson needed a solution to his copying problem.
Xerography at the Battelle Memorial Institute (photograph courtesy of the Columbus Dispatch)
Words to Know: physicist patent arthritis electrostatic energy For Discussion: 1. Based on the article, what would you say is the meaning of the phrase, “Necessity is the mother of invention?” 2. What is the tone of the story, or the author’s point of view? 3. The story calls Chester Carlson determined. Give examples from the story to support this. 4.Why weren’t General Electric and IBM interested in Carlson’s machine? 5. The Battelle Memorial Institute in Columbus has helped make all kinds of inventions better or created new products to solve problems. Where could you find information on some of these?
Newspaper Activity: Look through your newspaper to find examples of people who are trying to overcome problems. What kinds of problems are they working on? Sort the problems by type. Can you predict which problems the people might be able to solve? What are your criteria for both your sort and your predictions? “Ohio: The Inside Story” is produced through a grant from The Ohio Newspapers Foundation, a nonprofit charitable and educational organization affiliated with The Ohio Newspaper Association. This is one of a series of 24 Ohio profiles.
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ANNIE’S MAILBOX
Married people should be honest with each other Dear Annie: I have been married for six months and am crazy for my hubby. He has back problems and some sexual issues that keep us from being intimate. At least, those are the excuses he uses for the fact that we don't touch like we used to. I recently came across some love notes to an ex-girlfriend, saying how they are going to be happy growing old together and how much he loves her. I pay his child support and love his kids like my own. He says he loves me, but I have doubts that he is being honest. He is constantly texting and emailing and never puts his phone down. He acts as if he is afraid I will look at it. I've been hurt before by lies and don't want to go through it again. What do I do? — Scared and Lonely in Kentucky Dear Scared: Were these recent love notes or old ones that you happened to find? If they are old, try to ignore them. He married you, not his ex-girlfriend. If they are recent, however, it could be serious, especially when combined with constant and secretive texting, calling and emailing. Married partners owe it to each other to be open and honest. Talk to your husband. If his answers don't reassure you, the next step is counseling. Dear Annie: I am a small woman with large breasts. I did not buy these. For years, I've tolerated leering men and boys, suggestive comments, questions about breast enhancement and assumptions that I am of easy virtue. Some people are unable to make eye contact because they are staring at my bosom — not to mention the idiots who cannot possibly take me seriously in the business world because of my cup size. I was once refused a job because the supervisor was worried what his wife would think. I have learned to deal with all that. But I have issues with the way other women treat me. Most take an immediate dislike to me. Men stare no matter how modestly I dress, and their wives and girlfriends glare at me, call me names they think I don't hear and generally treat me like dirt. Even walking in public past a group of women seems to bring on the negativity. We talk about bullying because of body type, but doesn't this qualify? Women don't seem to see the hurt they cause, the chance at friendship they miss or the chiropractic bills I have from hauling these things around. Breast reduction surgery is not an option for me right now. Please bring this to the attention of your readers. Some might recognize their behavior and make an effort to change. — Too Well Endowed in Kansas Dear Kansas: Women can sometimes ascribe negative traits to an object of jealousy. If your chest attracts their husbands and boyfriends, they need to find a reason to dislike you. We hope your letter serves as a plea for greater tolerance, but we also recommend you check to see whether your insurance covers breast reduction surgery since you have chronic back pain. You shouldn't suffer needlessly. Dear Annie: "Connecticut" complained that her ex-husband pressured their kids not to invite her current boyfriend to their family events. You said that unless the kids stood up to Dad, nothing would change. We have dealt with a controlling ex-spouse for 30 years. She has never changed. And the kids don't want to hurt her feelings, because she is still their mother. A long time ago, we made the decision to celebrate birthdays and holidays before or after the actual day. It lets us have a great time with the kids without the stress of dealing with the controlling parent. And we don't miss out on any celebration. — Lucky Grandparents Annie's Mailbox is written by Kathy Mitchell and Marcy Sugar, longtime editors of the Ann Landers column. Please email your questions to anniesmailbox@comcast.net, or write to: Annie's Mailbox, c/o Creators Syndicate, 737 3rd Street, Hermosa Beach, CA 90254.
TROY TV-5 Today: 5 p.m.: Miami Valley Community Calendar 6 p.m.: Ultimate Sports 8 p.m.: Legislative Update
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JANUARY 16, 2013 10
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BROADCAST STATIONS (:35) Tonight Show (:35) LateN 2 News News NBC News Inside Ed. Jeopardy! Whitney (R) GuysKids Law & Order: S.V.U. (R) Chicago Fire "Pilot" (R) 2 News (2) (WDTN) 2 News To Be Announced Army News Miami Valley Events Calendar (5) (TROY) Comm. Bulletin Board Around Troy Health (:35) David Letterman News News News Wheel ET NCIS "Recovery" (R) Criminal "Zugzwang" (N) CSI "Dead Air" (N) News LateShow (7) (WHIO) News News News Jeopardy! Wheel NCIS "Recovery" (R) Criminal "Zugzwang" (N) CSI "Dead Air" (N) News (:35) David Letterman LateShow (10) (WBNS) 10TV News HD at 5 Business S.Wine (R) Nature (R) Nova (R) Life on Fire (N) Globe Trekker Charlie Rose (16) (WPTD) Company Fetch! (R) PBS NewsHour Smiley (R) S.Wine (R) PBS NewsHour Pioneers "Funny Ladies" American Experience Frontline Choice: No Going PBS NewsHour (16.2) (THINK) Charlie Rose (R) Garden (R) S. Soup (R) B. Organic HomeT. (R) Steves' (R) Travel (R) Meals (R) Lidia's (R) Pepin (R) Garden (R) Organic (R) HomeT. (R) Irish (R) S. Soup (R) (16.3) (LIFE) Steves' (R) Travel (R) (:35) Jimmy Kimmel Live (:35) News World News ET Lawyers Middle (N) Neighbor Modern (N) Suburg. (N) Nashville (N) News (21) (WPTA) 21 Alive News at 5 p.m. News Modern (N) Suburg. (N) Nashville (N) ABC News (:35) Jimmy Kimmel Live (:35) News (22) (WKEF) Judge Judy Judge Judy ABC News World News Fam. Feud Fam. Feud Middle (N) Neighbor Queens (R) Mother (R) 2½Men (R) Mother (R) 2½Men (R) Arrow "Burned" (N) Supernatural (N) 2 NEWS Rules (R) FamilyG (R) FamilyG (R) Dish Nation TMZ (26) (WBDT) Ray (R) (:35) Tonight Show (:35) LateN News NBC News Wheel Jeopardy! Whitney (R) GuysKids Law & Order: S.V.U. (R) Chicago Fire "Pilot" (R) News (35) (WLIO) Inside Ed. ET Billy Graham Crusade BeScenes Turn. Point J. Prince End of Age Praise the Lord Good News J. Duplantis (43) (WKOI) Praise the Lord John Hagee J. Meyer Griffith (R) Flying Nun Life Today Bob Coy Greg Laurie Newswatch Wretched J. Prince Turning Point (44) (WTLW) Hazel (R) Father (R) The 700 Club BBang (R) 45 News BBang (R) Simps. (R) American Idol (SP) (N) Fox 45 News at 10 Office (R) (:35) Sein. The Steve Wilkos Show (45) (WRGT) Maury
Night Fighters ('60) Robert Mitchum. Numb3rs (R)
The Patriot ('00,Dra) Heath Ledger, Joely Richardson, Mel Gibson. Numb3rs (R) (45.2) (MNT) (4:00) Fort Bowie The Insider BBang (R) BBang (R) WFFT Local News TMZ KingH (R) Law & Order: C.I. (R) (55) (WFFT) Office (R) Office (R) Mother (R) Mother (R) 2½Men (R) 2½Men (R) Extra CABLE STATIONS Storage Storage Storage Storage Storage Storage Bounty Bounty To Be Announced To Be Announced Storage Storage (A&E) The First 48 CSI: Miami (R) CSI "Power Trip" (R)
The Karate Kid ('84,Dra) Pat Morita, Elisabeth Shue, Ralph Macchio.
The Karate Kid Part II ('86) Ralph Macchio. (AMC) CSI: Miami (R) Gator Boys (R) Swamp Wars (R) Wildman Wildman Gator Boys (R) Gator Boys (R) Wildman Wildman Gator Boys (R) (ANPL) Confessions (R) Tip Off Basketball NCAA Michigan State vs Penn St. (L) Basketball NCAA Purdue vs. Nebraska (L) Finale Journey (R) To Be Announced (B10) (4:30) Basketball NCAA (R) To Be Announced FamilyFi Don't Sleep Wendy Williams Show (BET) (4:00) To Be Announced 106 & Park: BET's Top 10 Live The First 48 (R) The First 48 The First 48 (R) Women Behind Bars (R) The First 48 (R) (BIO) Celebrity Ghost Stories Paranorm P. State (R) The First 48 (R) Housewives Atlanta (R) Top Chef (R) Top Chef (N) Watch (N) Top Chef (R) Chef (P) (R) (BRAVO) Vanderpump Rules (R) Vanderpump Rules (R) Beverly Hills (R) Reba (R) Reba (R) Reba (R) Reba (R) Reba (R) Ext. Makeover: Home Big Food (N) Ext. Makeover: Home Kitchen Nightmares (R) (CMT) Rose. (R) Rose. (R) Reba (R) Mad Money The Kudlow Report CNBC Special CNBC Special CNBC Special Mad Money CNBC Special (CNBC) Fast Money OutFront Anderson Cooper 360 Piers Morgan Tonight Anderson Cooper 360 OutFront Piers Morgan Tonight (CNN) (4:00) The Situation Room With Wolf Blitzer Tosh.O Colbert (R) Daily (R) Work (R) Work (R) SouthPk SouthPk Work (N) Kroll S. (N) Daily Show Colbert Work (R) Kroll S. (R) (COM) Futura (R) Sunny (R) SouthPk Key Capitol Hill Hearings Key Capitol (CSPAN) U.S. House of Representatives To Be Announced To Be Announced To Be Announced To Be Announced To Be Announced To Be Announced To Be Announced (DISC) To Be Announced Hercules: Legendary (R) Sliders "The Chasm" Transf. (R) G.I. Joe (R) (DISK) Superman Batman (R) Batman (R) Gsebump Animaniacs Animaniac
Monster House ('06) Mitchel Musso. Sweat E. Sweat E. Crashers Disaster Holmes on Homes (R) Holmes on Homes (R) I Want I Want (R) Alaska (R) R. House Holmes on Homes (R) (DIY) Pro Grade Sweat E. GoodLk (R) Austin (R) Jessie (R) Wizards (R) Wizards (R) (DSNY) GoodLk (R) GoodLk (R) GoodLk (R) Jessie (R) Good Luck Charlie (R) GoodLk (R) Lemonade Mouth ('11) Bridgit Mendler. Phineas (R) To Be Announced I'm Band SuiteL. (R) ZekeLut. SuiteL (R) (DSNYXD)
Motocrossed ('01) Alana Austin. (1:00) To Be Announced E! News To Be Announced The Soup C. Lately E! News (R) Chelsea (R) (E!) Interrupt SportsCenter SportsC. Countdown Basketball NBA Houston Rockets vs. Dallas Mavericks (L) Basketball NBA Miami Heat vs. Golden State Warriors (L) (ESPN) Horn (N) SportsNation Basketball NCAA N.C. State vs Maryland (L) Basketball NCAA West Virginia vs. Iowa State (L) Tennis ITF Australian Open (L) (ESPN2) NFL 32 (L) Bay City Blues (R) Long Way Down (R) The White Shadow (R) Bay City Blues (R) 30 for 30 (R) Top 5 R. Boxing (R) (ESPNC) (4:00) B. Clas. NCAA (R) 30 for 30 (R)
Remember the Titans ('00) Denzel Washington.
Remember the Titans ('00) Denzel Washington. The 700 Club '70s (R) Fresh P. (R) Fresh P. (R) (FAM) '70s (R) Special Report FOX Report The O'Reilly Factor Hannity On the Record The O'Reilly Factor Hannity (FNC) The Five Rest. "Dodge City" (R) Restaurant (N) Bobby's Battle (P) (N) Rest. "Michele's" (R) Restaurant (R) (FOOD) Paula (R) Pioneer (R) Diners (R) Diners (R) Restaurant (R) Shots (R) Ohio (R) Basketball NCAA Dayton vs. La Salle (L) Paint (R) Cavaliers Basketball NBA Cleveland vs Portland (L) Cavs Post (FOXSP) Poker WPT (R) Sexiest "Hip Hop Hits" (R) Warped (R) Warped Roadies "Toronto" (R) (FUSE) (12:00) Nicki Minaj Take Trending Movie 2½Men (R) 2½Men (R) 2½Men (R)
The A-Team (2010,Action) Bradley Cooper, Jessica Biel, Liam Neeson. A Horror: Asylum (N) A Horror: Asylum (R) A Horror "Spilt Milk" (R) (FX) Feherty "Bill Clinton" (R) On the Range (R) PGA Tour Golf C. (R) Feherty "Bill Clinton" (R) (GOLF) Feherty "Bill Clinton" (R) Golf Cent. European School (N) Academy On the Range (N) Fam. Feud Fam. Feud Fam. Feud Fam. Feud Fam. Feud Fam. Feud Fam. Feud Fam. Feud Fam. Feud Fam. Feud Fam. Feud Fam. Feud Baggage Baggage (GSN) Minute to Win It HappyD. HappyD. HappyD. Frasier (R) Frasier (R) Frasier (R) Frasier (R) G. Girls (R) G. Girls (R) (HALL) G. Girls (R) G. Girls (R) BradyB. (R) BradyB. (R) BradyB. (R) BradyB. (R) HappyD. Cousins Cousins (R) Property Brothers HouseH House Property Brothers (R) Property Brothers (R) (HGTV) Buying and Selling (R) Buying and Selling (R) Renovation (R) American Pickers (R) Guide to Presidents (R) Guide to Presidents (R) Pres. "Assume the Position 17-89-18-25" (R) Ax Men (R) Guide to Presidents (R) (HIST) (4:00) Alaska (R) Wife Swap Wife Swap Wife Swap Wife Swap Diva Diva Project Runway (R) Wife Swap (LIFE) Wife Swap (R) Nora Roberts' Angels Fall Heather Locklear.
Lies He Told ('97) Karen Sillas, Gary Cole. Nora Roberts' Angels... (LMN) 4:
Carolina Moon Secrets From Her Past ('11) Ashley Jones. The Conversation (R) CookThin Mom'sCook Airline (R) Airline (R) Among the Dead (R) psychic "Round 4" (R) Airline (R) Airline (R) Among the Dead (R) (LRW) (4:) Runway Road (R) PoliticsNation Hardball The Ed Show Rachel Maddow The Last Word The Ed Show Rachel Maddow (MSNBC) Hardball Snooki and JWoww Washington Heights Washington Heights Washington Heights Snooki and JWoww (MTV) Ridiculous Ridiculous Ridiculous Ridiculous Buckwild NBC Sports Talk To Be Announced To Be Announced NFL Turning Point NFL Turning Point Overtime (NBCSN) Pro Football Talk Hell on the Highway (R) Border Wars (R) Border Wars (R) Border Wars (N) Hell on the Highway (N) Border Wars (R) Hell on the Highway (R) (NGEO) Border Wars (R) Figure Out F.House (R) F.House (R) F.House (R) F.House (R) Nanny (R) Nanny (R) Friends (R) Friends Friends (:40) Friends (NICK) Sponge (R) Sponge (R) Sponge (R) Sponge (R) Drake
Last Holiday ('06) L.L. Cool J, Queen Latifah. Bad Girls Club (R) BadGirls (:45) 1stLk Law & Order: C.I. (R) Law & Order: C.I. (R) Law & Order: C.I. (R) (OXY) Next Top Model (:35)
Grumpy Old Men (:20)
Cagney and Lacey: The Return
Young Guns II Emilio Estevez. (:50)
McHale's Navy ('97) Tom Arnold. Movie (PLEX) Movie Veronica Mars (R) Young & Restless Days of Our Lives General Hospital Young & Restless Days of Our Lives General Hospital (SOAP) Veronica Mars (R)
Walking Tall Dwayne 'The Rock' Johnson. Bellator 360 Bellator 360 Bellator 360 Bellator 360 Bellator 360 (SPIKE) Bellator 360 Ghost Hunters (R) Ghost Hunters (R) Ghost Hunters (R) Ghost Hunters (N) Ghost Mine (N) Ghost Hunters (R) Ghost Mine (R) (SYFY) Ghost Hunters (R) Office (R) Office (R) (TBS) Friends (R) Queens (R) Queens (R) Seinf. (R) Seinf. (R) Seinf. (R) Family Guy BBang (R) BBang (R) BBang (R) BBang (R) BBang (R) Conan
Cromwell ('70) Alec Guinness, Richard Harris.
A Man's Castle (:15)
Suez ('38) Loretta Young, Leon Ames.
Kentucky ('38) Loretta Young. Movie (TCM) Movie Medium (R) Medium (R) Toddlers & Tiaras (R) Here Comes Honey (R) Toddlers & Tiaras (N) Cheer Perfection (N) Toddlers & Tiaras (R) Cheer Perfection (R) (TLC) Four Weddings (R) Ned (R) Water (R) Water (R) Dance Ac Dance Ac Ned (R) Ned (R) Dance Ac Dance Ac Dance Ac Dance Ac Drake (R) Drake (R) All That (R) K & Kel (R) (TNICK) Ned (R) Castle (R) Castle (R) Castle (R) Castle (R) Castle "Pretty Dead" CSI: NY (R) CSI: NY "Enough" (R) (TNT) Castle (R) AquaT. (TOON) Regular (R) Regular (R) Regular (R) NinjaGo (R) NinjaGo (R) Chima (N) Chima (N) Johnny (R) KingH (R) KingH (R) AmerD (R) AmerD (R) FamilyG (R) FamilyG (R) Robot Man/Fd Foods "Chile" (R) Man/Fd Man/Fd Baggage Baggage Baggage Baggage Fast Foods "USA" (N) Food Paradise (N) Baggage Baggage (TRAV) Man/Fd Repo (R) Cops (R) Cops (R) World's Dumbest... (R) Full Throttle Saloon (R) Full Throttle Saloon (N) Black Gold (N) Full Throttle Saloon (R) Full Throttle Saloon (R) (TRU) Repo (R) MASH (R) MASH (R) MASH (R) Cosby (R) Cosby (R) Cosby (R) Ray (R) Ray (R) Hot In (N) Divorced Queens (R) Queens (R) Queens (R) Queens (R) (TVL) Bonanza (R) NCIS "Identity Crisis" (R) NCIS "Leap of Faith" (R) NCIS "Dead Air" (R) NCIS "Baltimore" (R) NCIS "Swan Song" (R) NCIS "Pyramid" NCIS "Trojan Horse" (R) (USA) NCIS "Ex-File" (R)
Menace II Society ('93) Tyrin Turner.
48 Hours ('82) Nick Nolte. Black Ink Crew (R) (VH1) Love and Hip-Hop (R) Love and Hip-Hop (R) Black Ink Crew (R) Ghost Whisperer (R) Charmed (R) Charmed (R) Bridezillas (R) C.Lauper C.Lauper Fix My Family (P) (N) Fix My Family (R) C.Lauper C.Lauper (WE) Chris (R) Chris (R) Funniest Home Videos Rules (R) Rules (R) Rules (R) Rules (R) WGN News at Nine Home Videos (R) Rules (R) Rules (R) (WGN) Law & Order: C.I. (R) PREMIUM STATIONS
Hanna ('11) Saoirse Ronan. The Three Stooges Sean Hayes.
The Dilemma ('10) Vince Vaugn. Enlight (R) Movie (HBO) (4:30)
Big Miracle
Final Destination 5 (:35)
Kingpin ('96) Woody Harrelson. Sex Games (MAX) (:05) Asylum Blackout (2011,Horror) A Thousand Words Eddie Murphy. Banshee (R) Shameless (R) Inside the NFL Califor. (R) Lies (R) Inside the NFL Clay: Indestructible (R) (SHOW) 4:15
Source Code Clark "Ambiguous" (R) United States (R) (:35) Hurt ('09) Melora Walters. (:15) Burke and Hare ('10) Bill Bailey. I Don't Know How She Does It
Fright Night Anton Yelchin. (TMC) (:10) Heart of Stone ('09,Doc)
BRIDGE
SUDOKU PUZZLE
HOW TO PLAY: Complete the grid so that every row, column and 3x3 box contains every digit from 1 to 9 inclusively. Find answers to today’s puzzle in tomorrow’s Troy Daily News. MONDAY’S SOLUTION:
HINTS FROM HELOISE
Simple hint helps share a cup of warmth Dear Heloise: I use a drip coffee maker, and my coffee loses heat as it sits in the cup. So, with the first cup, I pour hot coffee into it to pre-warm the cup. I then pour that cup back into the carafe and pour a second hot cup of coffee. The coffee stays warmer longer in the preheated cup, and the first cup is reheated in the carafe. — R.K., Columbus, Ohio This is such a simple hint — I love it! Coffee and tea are so popular, and during the cold winter, a hot, delicious cup is the perfect treat, which is why I wrote my Heloise’s Flavored Coffees and Teas pamphlet. To
Hints from Heloise Columnist receive one, simply send $3 and a long, self-addressed, stamped (65 cents) envelope to: Heloise/Coffee, P.O. Box 795001, San Antonio, TX 78279-5001. Did you know that January is National Hot Tea Month? When you make a cup of your favorite tea, stir it with a cin-
namon stick for added spice flavor! — Heloise HALF-AND-HALF Dear Heloise: Recently, I used a recipe that called for 2 tablespoons of half-and-half. That left me with a nearly full carton. Since I’m not a coffee drinker, could you tell me some other uses for half-andhalf? — Christi A., via email You can use leftover halfand-half for several things. Add it to scrambled eggs, as a substitute for cream in recipes, for chocolate ganache (an icing, decoration or glaze on desserts), or in favorite cream sauces. You also can freeze it for up to two months. —
Heloise CORN BAGS Dear Heloise: We buy our deer corn in bags that are reinforced plastic. Very sturdy! Does anyone out there reuse these bags? We use them to store items in the workshop/garage, but I have so many and would like to do something with them. Any ideas would be appreciated. — A Reader, via email They can be used to cover plants in the winter or collect leaves in. They are great as a stronger garbage bag. Also, they can be used as a second bag around birdseed or other animal food bags! — Heloise
8
COMICS
Wednesday, January 16, 2013
MUTTS
BIG NATE
HAGAR THE HORRIBLE
DILBERT
BLONDIE
FOR BETTER OR FOR WORSE
HI AND LOIS ZITS
BEETLE BAILEY FAMILY CIRCUS
DENNIS the MENACE
ARLO & JANIS
HOROSCOPE
SNUFFY SMITH
BY FRANCES DRAKE For Thursday, Jan. 17, 2013 ARIES (March 21 to April 19) If others ask for your creative input, you will sound wise and knowledgeable. You will let this information flow from you in an orderly, disciplined fashion, like a great teacher. TAURUS (April 20 to May 20) This is the perfect day to make longrange plans about future travel, even travel for pleasure. You also can make future plans about publishing, higher education, medicine and the law. GEMINI (May 21 to June 20) Someone older might give you something today, perhaps because you deserve it or you have earned it. Others might develop a crush on someone older. CANCER (June 21 to July 22) Discussions with partners and close friends will be productive today. This is a good day to decide how to deal with shared expenses or the division of labor. LEO (July 23 to Aug. 22) A work-related romance with your boss or someone older is likely today. Others will work well with co-workers to create something that has a longterm benefit for everyone. VIRGO (Aug. 23 to Sept. 22) You have the discipline to practice piano, voice, dance, writing or a particular sport. You will practice again and again in order to improve your skill. LIBRA (Sept. 23 to Oct. 22) Practical improvements at home are attractive today. You’re pleased! An older family relative likely will endorse your plans as well. SCORPIO (Oct. 23 to Nov. 21) You can make money from writing or talking today. You also can do wonderful mental work requiring attention to detail, and enjoy doing so. SAGITTARIUS (Nov. 22 to Dec. 21) If shopping today, you will buy practical items that will last for a long time. It might be nice if they looked pretty, but function definitely comes first. CAPRICORN (Dec. 22 to Jan. 19) You’re happy to put duties and obligations first today, because it seems to be the thing to do. In fact, you will get a strong feeling of reward and gratification by offering your services. AQUARIUS (Jan. 20 to Feb. 18) Research behind the scenes will be productive today. You’re happy to plug away at routine work if it appears to be a worthwhile effort. You’ll also put your own needs second to those of others. PISCES (Feb. 19 to March 20) The advice of someone older, especially in a group situation, will prove to be valuable to you today. You’re grateful to listen to whatever this person has to say. YOU BORN TODAY You are powerfully direct and know how to forcefully state your case. You are independent. You have a commanding presence and easily can dominate any situation. You display discipline and self-control, and show concern about your achievements. Yet, you can be playful! You will enjoy your year ahead, which is social, fun-loving and beneficial for relationships. Birthdate of: Michelle Obama, U.S. first lady; Benjamin Franklin, statesman/inventor; Zooey Deschanel, actress. (c) 2013 King Features Syndicate, Inc.
Monday’s Answer
GARFIELD
BABY BLUES
FUNKY WINKERBEAN
CRANKSHAFT
Monday’s Cryptoquip:
TROY DAILY NEWS • WWW.TDN-NET.COM
WEATHER & NATION
TROY DAILY NEWS • WWW.TROYDAILYNEWS.COM
Today
Tonight
Chance of snow early High: 37°
Partly cloudy Low: 23°
SUN AND MOON
Thursday
Friday
Partly cloudy High: 34° Low: 24°
Saturday
Mostly sunny High: 40° Low: 18°
Sunday
Mostly sunny High: 45° Low: 25°
Chance of flurries High: 32° Low: 23°
First
Full
TODAY’S STATEWIDE FORECAST Wednesday, January 16, 2013 AccuWeather.com forecast for daytime conditions, low/high temperatures
MICH.
NATIONAL FORECAST
Cleveland 41° | 30°
Toledo 39° | 25°
Sunrise Thursday 7:56 a.m. ........................... Sunset tonight 5:38 p.m. ........................... Moonrise today 10:32 a.m. ........................... Moonset today 11:28 p.m. ........................... New
9
Wednesday, January 16, 2013
Youngstown 45° | 28°
Mansfield 41° | 28°
Last
TROY •
PA.
37° 23° Feb. 10 Jan. 18
Jan. 27
Feb. 3
ENVIRONMENT Today’s UV factor. 1
Fronts Cold
0 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10+ Minimal
Low
Moderate
High
Very High
Air Quality Index Good
Moderate
Harmful
Main Pollutant: Particulate
Pollen Summary 0
0
250
500
Peak group: No Pollen
Mold Summary 0
0
12,500
25,000
Top Mold: No mold Source: Regional Air Pollution Control Agency
GLOBAL City Athens Berlin Calgary Dublin Hong Kong Jerusalem London Montreal Moscow Paris Tokyo
Lo 37 17 10 33 52 44 31 32 12 71 33
-10s
-0s
0s
10s
20s 30s 40s
50s 60s
Yesterday’s Extremes: High: 84 at Brooksville, Fla.
26
Hi Otlk 59 sn 24 sn 37 sn 42 rn 66 clr 67 clr 39 sn 42 rn 21 rn 99 rn 50 sn
Columbus 39° | 30°
Dayton 36° | 23° Warm Stationary
70s
Pressure Low
High
80s 90s 100s 110s
Low: -32 at Craig, Colo.
Portsmouth 45° | 32°
W.VA.
KY.
NATIONAL CITIES Temperatures indicate Tuesday’s high and overnight low to 8 p.m. Eastern Time. Hi Lo Prc Otlk Albany,N.Y. 37 27 Snow Albuquerque 25 09 Clr Anchorage 32 24 Snow Atlanta 67 48 .49 Rain Atlantic City 39 38 .44 Rain Austin 39 35 .05 Clr Baltimore 40 39 .39 Rain 51 37 1.01 Rain Birmingham Boise 22 14 Snow Boston 41 37 Rain Buffalo 31 26 Cldy Casper 22 03 Clr Charleston,S.C. 79 58 PCldy Charleston,W.Va. 36 33 .38 Rain Charlotte,N.C. 51 50 .05 Rain Chicago 31 16 PCldy Cincinnati 32 24 Cldy Cleveland 31 27 Cldy Columbia,S.C. 78 60 Cldy Columbus,Ohio 33 25 Cldy 39 22 Snow Concord,N.H. Dallas-Ft Worth 39 30 .05PCldy Dayton 32 23 PCldy Denver 30 B08 Clr Des Moines 34 15 Cldy Detroit 31 16 PCldy
Cincinnati 45° | 28°
Greensboro,N.C. Honolulu Houston Indianapolis Jackson,Miss. Jacksonville Kansas City Key West Las Vegas Little Rock Los Angeles Louisville Memphis Miami Beach Milwaukee Nashville New Orleans New York City Oklahoma City Orlando Philadelphia Phoenix Pittsburgh St Louis Salt Lake City San Francisco Seattle Washington,D.C.
Hi Lo Prc Otlk 44 44 .58 Rain 78 64 PCldy 38 37 .07PCldy 30 19 Clr 39 35 .46 Rain 81 57 Cldy 33 16 PCldy 81 74 PCldy 45 23 Clr 32 25 .07 Clr 61 37 Clr 33 24 .01 Cldy 31 27 .20PCldy 81 66 Cldy 30 15 Cldy 34 30 .34 Cldy 52 43 .12 Rain 38 35 .18Snow 35 22 Clr 83 60 PCldy 41 39 .38 Rain 51 29 Clr 32 24 Snow 31 17 Clr 21 11 Cldy 53 37 Clr 44 34 Cldy 42 41 .48 Rain
© 2013 Wunderground.com
SOURCE: ASSOCIATED PRESS
REGIONAL ALMANAC Temperature High Yesterday .............................32 at 2:28 p.m. Low Yesterday..............................23 at 8:34 a.m. Normal High .....................................................34 Normal Low ......................................................20 Record High ........................................65 in 1932 Record Low........................................-12 in 1972
Precipitation 24 hours ending at 5 p.m................................0.0 Month to date ................................................1.43 Normal month to date ...................................1.41 Year to date ...................................................1.43 Normal year to date ......................................1.41 Snowfall yesterday ........................................0.00
TODAY IN HISTORY (AP) — Today is Wednesday, Jan. 16, the 16th day of 2013. There are 349 days left in the year. Today’s Highlight in History: On Jan. 16, 2003, the space shuttle Columbia blasted off under extremely tight security for what turned out to be its last flight; on board was Israel’s first astronaut, Ilan Ramon. (The mission ended in tragedy on Feb. 1, when the shuttle broke up during its return descent, killing all seven crew members.) On this date: • In 1547, Ivan IV of Russia (popularly known as “Ivan the Terrible”) was crowned Czar.
• In 1912, a day before reaching the South Pole, British explorer Robert Scott and his expedition found evidence that Roald Amundsen of Norway and his team had gotten there ahead of them. • In 1920, Prohibition began in the United States as the 18th Amendment to the U.S. Constitution took effect, one year to the day after its ratification. (It was later repealed by the 21st Amendment.) • In 1942, actress Carole Lombard, 33, her mother Elizabeth and 20 other people were killed when their plane crashed near Las Vegas, Nev., while en route to California from a war-bond
promotion tour. • In 1944, Gen. Dwight D. Eisenhower took command of the Allied Expeditionary Forces in London. • In 1978, NASA named 35 candidates to fly on the space shuttle, including Sally K. Ride, who became America’s first woman in space, and Guion S. Bluford Jr., who became America’s first black astronaut in space. • Today’s Birthdays: Hall of Fame auto racer A.J. Foyt is 78. Country singer Ronnie Milsap is 70. Movie director John Carpenter is 65. Actressdancer-choreographer Debbie Allen is 63. Singer Sade is 54.
House approves $50.7 billion in superstorm aid S.C., arguing for the reduction, said he wasn’t trying to torpedo the aid package, only to pay for it. “Are there no savings, are there no reductions we can put in place this year so these folks can get their money?” he asked plaintively. Critics said the proposed cuts would crimp Pentagon spending as well as domestic accounts and said the aid should be approved without reductions elsewhere. “There are times when a disaster simply goes beyond our ability to budget. Hurricane Sandy is one of those times,” said Rep. Hal Rogers of Kentucky, chairman of the House Appropriations Committee. Sandy roared through several states in late October and has been blamed for 140 deaths and billions of dollars in residential and business property damage, much of it in New York, New Jersey and Connecticut. It led to power outages and interruptions to public transportation that made life miserable for millions, and the clamor for federal relief began almost immediately. The emerging House measure includes about $16
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billion to repair transit systems in New York and New Jersey and a similar amount for housing and other needs in the affected area. An additional $5.4 billion would go to the Federal Emergency and Management Agency for disaster relief, and $2 billion is ticketed for restoration of highways damaged or destroyed in the storm. The governors of the three states most directly affected praised the congressional action. “We are grateful to those members of Congress who today pulled together in a unified, bipartisan coalition to assist millions of their fellow Americans in New York, New Jersey, and Connecticut at their greatest time of need,” said a joint statement issued by New York Governor Andrew M. Cuomo, New Jersey Governor Chris Christie and Connecticut Governor Dannel P. Malloy. “The tradition of Congress being there and providing support for Americans dur-
calm conservatives unhappy that the House had just approved a separate measure raising tax rates on the wealthy. The delay drew a torrent of criticism, much of it from other Republicans. “There’s only one group to blame for the continued suffering of these innocent victims, the House majority and their speaker, John Boehner,” New Jersey Gov. Chris Christie said on the day after the delay was announced. Rep. Pete King of New York added that campaign donors in the Northeast who give to Republicans “should have their head examined.” Less than two weeks later, the leadership brought legislation to the floor under ground rules designed to satisfy as many Republicans as possible while retaining support from Democrats eager to approve as much in disaster aid as possible.
ing times of crisis, no matter where they live across this great country, lives on in today’s vote in the House of Representatives.” The governors said they “anticipate smooth passage when this package moves back to the Senate for final approval and for this longawaited relief to finally make its way to our residents.” The Senate approved a $60 billion measure in the final days of the Congress that expired on Jan. 3, and a House vote had been expected quickly. It is highly unusual for a majority party to bring legislation to a vote that its own rank-and-file opposes, but in this case, Speaker John Boehner, R-Ohio, and the leadership had little or no choice. Boehner unexpectedly postponed the vote in the final hours of the expiring Congress as he struggled to
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Vicky L. Warner 81 Robin Hood Ln., Suite B Troy, OH 45373 Office 937-440-0400 • Fax 937-440-0494 Web: www.vicky.metlife.com Email: vwarner@metlife.com MetLife Auto & Home is a brand of Metropolitan Property and Casualty Insurance and it’s Affiliates, Warwick, RI. 0902-5228 ©2009 MetLife Auto & Home PEANUTS © United Feature Syndicate, Inc.
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set part of its cost through spending cuts elsewhere in the budget. “I just plead with my colleagues not to have a double standard,” said Rep. Carolyn Maloney of New York. “Not to vote tornado relief to Alabama, to Louisiana, to Mississippi, Missouri, to with Ike, Gustav, Katrina, Rita but when it comes to the Northeast, with the second worst storm in the history of our country, to delay, delay, delay.” One key vote came on an attempt by Rep. Rodney Freylinghuysen to add $33.7 billion to an original allotment of $17 billion in aid. That roll call was 228-192 and Democrats broke 190-2 in favor, while Republicans opposed it overwhelmingly, 190-38. Similarly, on final passage, 192 Democrats joined 49 Republicans in support. Opposed were 179 Republicans and one Democrat. Earlier, conservatives failed in an attempt to offset a part of the bill’s cost with across-the-board federal budget cuts. The vote was 258-162. Rep. Mark Mulvaney, R-
2351077
WASHINGTON (AP) — More than 10 weeks after Superstorm Sandy brutalized parts of the heavily populated Northeast, the House approved $50.7 billion in emergency relief for the victims Tuesday night as Republican leaders struggled to close out an episode that exposed painful party divisions inside Congress and out. The vote was 241-180, and officials said the Senate was likely to accept the measure early next week and send it to President Barack Obama for his signature. Democrats supported the aid in large numbers, while majority Republicans opposed it by a lopsided margin. “We are not crying wolf here,” said Rep. Chris Smith, R-N.J., one of a group of Northeastern lawmakers from both parties who sought House passage of legislation roughly in line with what the Obama administration and governors of the affected states have sought. Democrats were more politically pointed as they brushed back Southern conservatives who sought either to reduce the measure or off-
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10
Troy Daily News,
Wednesday, January 16, 2013
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PLACE YOUR CLASSIFIED AD ONLINE-24/7 www.tdnpublishing.com NOTICE 100 - Announcement
Investigate in full before sending money as an advance fee. For further information, call or write:
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235 General
2352651
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GENERAL INFORMATION
All Display Ads: 2 Days Prior Liners For: Mon - Fri @ 5pm Weds - Tues @ 5pm Thurs - Weds @ 5pm Fri - Thurs @ 5pm Sat - Thurs @ 5pm Miami Valley Sunday News liners- Fri @ Noon
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Interested in working in West Central OHIO’s AG EQUIPMENT INDUSTRY?
200 - Employment
125 Lost and Found LOST: female black lab/husky mix, 1 brown eye, 1 blue, family dog of 3 children. Cookson School area. Call Katie (937)570-6460, Steve (937)451-1532. LOST: Small brown male poodle with blue vest on. Last seen near Dollar store on Route 36 in Covington, 1-9-13 12:15pm. REWARD! (937)606-0675
EXPERIENCED
235 General WANTED: CABINET MAKERS Some experience needed. Interested parties apply MondayFriday between 3pm-5pm
LAWN & GARDEN EQUIPMENT SALES SERVICE MANAGER SERVICE OFFICE
Robertson Cabinets Inc 1090 S. Main St. West Milton, OH 45383
BUSINESS OFFICE WITH ACCOUNTING BACKGROUND
235 General
INDEPENDENT CONTRACTORS
WANTED WANTED
We are looking for drivers to deliver the Troy Daily News on Daily, Sundays, holidays and on a varied as needed basis.
Drivers must have: Valid drivers license Reliable transportation State minimum insurance
Please call 937-440-5263 or 937-440-5260 and leave a message with your name, address and phone number. Your phone call will be returned in the order in which it is received. 2352652
105 Announcements
AG EQUIPMENT SALES
105 Announcements
State your qualifications, experience, and which position you are applying for. We are an Equal Opportunity Employer, benefits available after probationary period.
Raymath Company, located in Troy, Ohio, is seeking Press Brake operators for an expanding 2nd and 3rd shifts. Must have relevant metal manufacturing experience. Competitive salary with benefits.
Call Jon Basye at: Piqua Transfer & Storage Co. (937)778-4535 or (800)278-0619
Apply in person or send resume to: HR 2323 W State Route 55 Troy, OH 45373
One child per photo only
FULL COLOR
STORAGE TRAILERS FOR RENT (800)278-0617 ❏❐❑❒❏❐❑❒❏❐❑❒❏❐
300 - Real Estate
For Rent
305 Apartment 1, 2 & 3 Bedroom, Houses & Apts. SEIPEL PROPERTIES Piqua Area Only Metro Approved (937)773-9941 9am-5pm Monday-Friday
1,2 & 3 BEDROOM APARTMENTS Troy ranches and townhomes. Different floor plans to choose from. Garages, fireplaces, appliances including washer and dryers. Corporate apartments available. Visit www.firsttroy.com Call us first! (937)335-5223 2 BEDROOM, 2.5 bath, 1200 sq ft. condo style apartment, upgraded, Metro approved, small pets, $25 fee, washer/ dryer hook-up, 570 Stony Ridge, available 1/15, (937)435-0512 2 BEDROOM in Troy, Move in special, Stove, refrigerator, W/D, A/C, very clean, no pets. $525. (937)573-7908 DODD RENTALS Tipp-Troy: 2 bedroom AC, appliances $575/$475 plus deposit No pets (937)667-4349 for appt. GREAT AREA, 1.5 baths, includes water/ washer/ dryer, private parking, Lovely 2 bedroom, $595, (937)335-5440 PIQUA, large 1 bedroom, upstairs, carpeted, appliances, utilities included, off-street parking, no pets, (937)552-7006. TIPP/ TROY: New everything! 2 bedroom, 1.5 bath, super clean. move in ready. no prior evictions, no dogs. $540 (937)545-4513. TROY, 2 bedroom townhouse, water and trash paid, all appliances, no pets, $525 plus deposit (937)845-8727 TROY, 2 Bedroom clean, W/D, water A/C, appliances, 1 lease, no pets, Trade Square West, (937)339-6736 (937)286-8203
very paid, year 1309 $550 or
with
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1, 2 & 3 bedrooms Call for availability attached garages Easy access to I-75 (937)335-6690
aMAZEing
TROY, 2 Bedroom Townhomes 1.5 bath, 1 car garage, $695 (937)216-5806 EversRealty.net
TROY, 1 & 2 Bedrooms, appliances, CA, water, trash paid, $425 & $525 monthly. $200 Deposit Special! (937)673-1821
FRESH & BRIGHT Piqua home with basement on double lot, quiet area, roomy, $550 month + deposit. 2 bedroom, (937)750-9800. IMMEDIATE OCCUPANCY-1400 Sq/Ft Duplex w/2-C ATT; REF, RNG & D/W included; In Troy behind Lowe's; No Pets; $700 P/M Rent; $40 CASH Non-Ref appl fee req'd; Call for info. 3 Bedroom, 2 Bath, ratermann@embarqmail.com. (937)492-8922.
________________________________________________________________ Closing: (for Example: Love, Mom) ________________________________ ________________________________________________________________ Submitted By: ___________________________________________________ Address: _________________________________________________________
PIQUA, 910 New Haven. 3 bedroom, 1.5 car, CA, fenced yard. $850, deposit. (937)778-9303, (937)604-5417.
State, City, Zip: __________________________________________________ Phone: __________________________________________________________ ! Check Enclosed ! Visa ! Mastercard ! Discover ! Am Express Credit Card #: ___________________________________________________
TROY, 1232 Keller, 3 bedroom, 2 bath, 2 car garage, appliances, no pets. $775 + deposit. Call (937)506-8319
Exp. Date: _______________________________________________________ Signature: _______________________________________________________
330 Office Space 2353594
Send along with payment to: My Funny Valentine The Sidney Daily News 1451 North Vandemark Rd. Sidney, Ohio 45365 Payment must accompany all orders.
405 Acreage and Lots FOR SALE (4) ESTATE LOTS 10.4 acres to 11.8 acres $105,900 - $129,900. NW corner of Greenlee & Fenner Road. (937)335-2325, (937)604-3103
500 - Merchandise
505 Antiques/Collectibles FRAMED LITHOGRAPH, 1950's print of Fredrick Remington's "The Smoke Signal," 24"x36" in antique frame, beautiful piece of art! $325, (937)214-2843 local.
510 Appliances APPLIANCES, Maytag, 30 inch Range, combination Refrigerator/freezer, bisque in color, $300 obo, (937)773-3054 REFRIGERATOR, Kitchen Aid side by side, very clean, almond colored $200; Maytag ceramic top range in almond $100 (937)339-0059
545 Firewood/Fuel FIREWOOD, $125 a cord pick up, $150 a cord delivered, $175 a cord delivered and stacked (937)308-6334 or (937)719-3237
BUY $ELL SEEK that work .com
FIREWOOD, split, seasoned, delivered (local) $140 cord; $75 half cord. (937)559-6623. Leave a message, and I will get back with you. Thank you.
HIDE-A-BED COUCH Sealy Hide-A-Bed gold couch. Excellent condition. $250. (937)773-9617 or (937)418-5880
320 Houses for Rent
One Line Greeting (10 words only): _______________________________
For Sale
560 Home Furnishings
WOODGATE APARTMENTS, 1433 Covington, 1 bedroom, very quiet. $406 monthly, Special $299 deposit if qualified, (937)773-3530, (937)418-9408
Child’s Name: ___________________________________________________
400 - Real Estate
FIREWOOD, All hardwood, $150 per cord delivered or $120 you pick up, (937)726-2780.
Get it
EVERS REALTY
$
Happy Valentine’s Day to my “lil lirl!” XOXO Love, Mommy
❏❐❑❒❏❐❑❒❏❐❑❒❏❐
877-844-8385 We Accept
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Deadline: Friday, February 1 at 5pm
Great Pay & Benefits!
No phone calls please
finds in
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OTR DRIVERS
Class A CDL required
Please contact Julie Atkins (937)778-8777 ext 222 or apply in person
12
280 Transportation
PRESS BRAKE OPERATORS
Aesthetic Finishers is now hiring experienced wet spray painters. Must have experience in mixing of paints and spray application in a production environment.
Valentine Ads will appear on Thursday, February 14.
Submit your resume, along with salary requirements, via email to resumes@repacorp.com.
CDL Grads may qualify
EXPERIENCED WET SPRAY PAINTERS
just
Repacorp is a stable company, offering 401K, health, paid sick and vacation days.
▼▼▼▼▼▼▼▼▼▼▼▼
245 Manufacturing/Trade
Show off your own Funny Little Valentine with a Valentine Greeting in the Sidney Daily News, Troy Daily News & Piqua Daily Call
Repacorp, Inc., a growing label company located in Tipp City, Ohio, is seeking full time experienced FLEXOGRAPHIC PRINTING AND FINISHING EQUIPMENT OPERATORS as well as secondary labor for all shifts. Wages based on experience.
Send your resume to: Sidney Daily News Dept. 995 1451 N. Vandemark Rd Sidney, OH 45365
Troy Daily News
POLICY: Please Check Your Ad The 1st Day. It Is The Advertiser’s Responsibility To Report Errors Immediately. Publisher Will Not Be Responsible for More Than One Incorrect Insertion. We Reserve The Right To Correctly Classify, Edit, Cancel Or Decline Any Advertisement Without Notice.
We are taking applications for:
235 General
105 Announcements
DEADLINES/CORRECTIONS:
OFFICE 150sq, Private entrance/ parking, kitchenette, extra storage, includes utilities, $350 monthly, call Dottie (937)335-5440
577 Miscellaneous CEMETERY PLOTS @ Forest Hill. 6 separate plots in old section, lot 52 front. $400 per plot. rswooj@aol.com. (703)250-5720 CHRISTMAS TREE, 9 foot, pre-lit. Bought 2006 from Lowe's. Paid over $400, asking $200. Excellent condition. (937)622-3941 LONGABERGER BASKETS, Boyd's Bears, purses, dresses, leather jackets, Bratz dolls, lamps, remote control car, clocks, (937)773-9025
583 Pets and Supplies BOSTON TERRIER, 3 male pups, utd on shots and worming, Ready January 13th, (937)693-2794 leave message GERMAN SHEPHERD puppies, 1 females, 3 males. Ready for new home. Parents on premises. $250. Up to date on shots and worming. (937)492-4059 WEIMARANER PUPPIES AKC, 14 weeks old, vet checked, tails, nails and have been wormed. First shots, ready for good homes. (1) Blue, (2) Silvers, (3) females, Parents on premises. $500. (937)658-0045
592 Wanted to Buy WANTED! Need money? I buy guns, gold and silver coins and jewelry. Fair prices. (937)698-6362
Troy Daily News,
If you have questions regarding scams like these or others, please contact the Ohio Attorney General’s office at (800)282-0515.
2352648
Whether posting or responding to an advertisement, watch out for offers to pay more than the advertised price for the item. Scammers will send a check and ask the seller to wire the excess through Western Union (possibly for courier fees). The scammer's check is and eventually fake bounces and the seller loses the wired amount. While banks and Western Union branches are trained at spotting fake checks, these types of scams are growing increasingly sophisticated and fake checks often aren't caught for weeks. Funds wired through Western Union or MoneyGram are irretrievable and virtually untraceable.
PUBLIC NOTICE
Notice of Dissolution to Creditors and Claimants pursuant to O.R.C. 1701.87
PUBLIC NOTICE
CAUTION
The Bethel Township Board of Zoning Appeals (BZA) will meet in regular session Thursday, January 24, 2013 at 6:30 p.m. in the Bethel Township Meeting Room, 8735 S. 2nd Street - Brandt, Tipp City, Ohio. The BZA will hear the following requests: CU-01-13: A request from Scott Earhart & Deany L Chaney, 4620 South Rudy, Tipp City, OH, 45371. The applicant requests conditional use approval for to allow for the construction of new single family residence located in an F-1 Flood Plain Zoning District. The property in question is located at 4620 South Rudy Road, Miami County, Bethel Township Ohio, Town 2, Range 9, Section 24.
The Bethel Township Zoning Commission will meet in regular session Thursday, March 22, 2012 at 7:30 p.m. in the Township Meeting Room, 8735 S. Second St., Brandt, Tipp City, Ohio.
Notice of Dissolution of World Class Medical Imaging LLC. All claims shall be presented in writing and be of sufficient substance to inform the company of the claim. The deadline by which the company must receive the claim is April 1, 2013. The mailing address to which claims must be submitted is 2525 North Limestone Street, Suite 103, Springfield, Ohio 45503. All claims will be barred if not received by April 1, 2013. The company may make distributions to other creditors, including members of the company, without further notice to the claimant.
The Bethel Township Zoning Commission will consider: Case ZA-01-13: A request from Teresa Wiley, 4290 Gibson Drive to rezone .72 acres located at 4290 Gibson Dr. Tipp City, Ohio 45371. from General Agricultural (A-2) to Light Industrial (I-1) on property to be used for commercial purposes. Bethel Township Zoning Commission Andy Ehrhart, Secretary
01/16/2013 2356858
V-01-13: A request from Gordon & Debbie West, 8263 US Route 40, Tipp City, OH, 45371. The applicant requests a variance to allow for the reduction of the required lot frontage from one hundred and seventy five feet (175’) to zero feet (0’) to allow for a lot split on property zoned A2 General agricultural. The property in question is located at 4620 South Rudy Road, Miami County, Bethel Township Ohio, Town 2, Range 9, Section 24. The above application and pertinent information are on file at the Township Administrative Offices located in the Firehouse, 8735 S. Second St., Brandt, Tipp City, Ohio, and available for public inspection weekdays from 8:30 a.m. to 4:30 p.m. Bethel Township BZA Andy Ehrhart, Secretary 01/16/2013 2356855
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Wednesday, January 16, 2013
01/16/2013 2356853
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DIRECTORY
Service Business To advertise in the Classifieds That Work Service & Business Directory please call: 877-844-8385 600 - Services
660 Home Services
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I am a debt relief agency. I help people file for bankruptcy relief under the United States Bankruptcy Code. 2355314
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Only 6 or 2/ 8 Your greeting will appear in the Thursday, February 14th issue of the Sidney Daily News, Troy Daily News and Piqua Daily Call
Gravel Hauled, Laid & Leveled Driveways & Parking Lots
2334539
937-974-0987
Tammy Welty (937)857-4222
Email: UncleAlyen@aol.com
AK Construction
COOPER’S GRAVEL
Commercial / Residential
2349447
Put into words how much your loved ones mean to you by writing a love letter to them this Valentine’s Day!
645 Hauling
• Painting • Drywall • Decks • Carpentry • Home Repair • Kitchen/Bath 2343375
Call 937-498-5125 422 Buckeye Ave., Sidney
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Mom, Happy Valentine’s Day to the best mom ever! Hugs & Kisses, Natalie
Blake, You’ll never know how much you mean to me! I love you! Annie
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Dearest Lynn, We love you sweetie! Keep that beautiful smile, always! We love you, Mom & Dad
SchulzeTax & Accounting Service
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937-573-4702
www.buckeyehomeservices.com
• Roofing • Windows • Kitchens • Sunrooms
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655 Home Repair & Remodel
• Spouting • Metal Roofing • Siding • Doors
• Baths • Awnings • Concrete • Additions
CALL TODAY FOR FREE ESTIMATE
2348585
2353590
Send your message with payment to: Sidney Daily News, Attn: Classifieds, 1451 North Vandemark Rd., Sidney, OH 45365
Roofing, Windows, Siding, Fire & Water Restoration
Cash/Check/Visa/Mastercard/Discover/American Express______________________Exp_______ Deadline for publication is 5 p.m. on Friday, February 1. All ads must be prepaid.
OME IMP ROVEM AL H EN T T TO
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Troy Daily News,
Wednesday, January 16, 2013
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The following applications and/or verified complaints were received, and the following draft, proposed and final actions were issued, by the Ohio Environmental Protection Agency (Ohio EPA) last week. The complete public notice including additional instructions for submitting comments, requesting information or a public hearing, or filing an appeal may be obtained at: http://www.epa.ohio.gov/actions.aspx or Hearing Clerk, Ohio EPA, 50 W. Town St. P.O. Box 1049, Columbus, Ohio 43216. Ph: 614-644-2129 email: HClerk@epa.state.oh.us
805 Auto 1999 TOYOTA Camery LE. Black, grey interior, 4door. 144,000 miles. Excellent condition. Reliable! $5000 firm. (937)622-3941
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SPINNAKER COATING 130 MARYBILL DRIVE TROY, OH ACTION DATE: 12/21/2012 FACILITY DESCRIPTION: AIR IDENTIFICATION NO.: A0045598 This application serves as a renewal to the existing Title V Permit #P0092379. Please note that there have been no changes to the equipment or processes of Plant 2 since the issuance of the existing permit and emissions units K003 and P001 remain insignificant sources of emissions. Spinnaker Coating does request a change to the Monitoring/Recordkeeping requirements for K001, K002, and K004. The existing permit requires monthly recordkeeping of "the number of gallons (excluding water and exempt solvents) of each coating employed." The requirement to track the coating usage rate excluding water and exempt solvents imposes an unnecessary burden on the company. Spinnaker believes that tracking the VOC content (excluding water and exempt solvents) of each coating along with the usage rate of the coating in its entirety is sufficient to prove compliance with the provisions set forth in OAC 3745-21-09(F) and (H) and outlined in the existing permit.
2001 DODGE Dakota, gold with tan interior, 176,000 miles. 4x4, V8, gas, auto, runs good, drives good, good winter truck, $2500. (937)216-9194 2005 FORD Explorer XLT, AWD, Tow Package, 17" alloy wheels, fully equipped, excellent condition. (937)492-8788.
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MIAMI COUNTY SOLID WASTE & RECYCLING FACILITY 2200 N COUNTY ROAD 25-A TROY, OH 45373 ACTION DATE: 12/20/2012 FACILITY DESCRIPTION: SOLID WASTE IDENTIFICATION NO.: 30867 A 2013 Transfer Facility license was issued to Miami County Solid Waste & Recycling Facility, 2200 N County Road 25-A, Troy, OH 45373.
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CONTACT US
SPORTS
■ Sports Editor Josh Brown (937) 440-5251, (937) 440-5232 jbrown@tdnpublishing.com
JOSH BROWN
TROY DAILY NEWS • WWW.TROYDAILYNEWS.COM
MONDAY’S RESULTS
■ Boys Basketball
• Girls Basketball Troy Christian 74, Emmanuel Christian 12 SPRINGFIELD — Troy Christian picked up an easy road Metro Buckeye Conference victory Monday night, allowing a mere four field goals in a 7412 victory over Emmanuel Christian. With the win, the Eagles improved to 12-3 overall — more wins than the team had in the last two seasons combined (10). And they’re doing it with team basketball. “Ten players scored tonight, and we are sharing the basketball — evidenced by our 21 assists for the game,” Troy Christian coach Dick Steineman said. “The girls continue to work hard and improve with each game. “Everyone contributed to this win.” Lydia Demmitt led Troy Christian with 12 points, Sarah Campbell and Jordane Varvel each had nine, Becca Lybarger and Amanda Slone both added eight and Meredith Haddad and Katie Poteet each chipped in seven. The Eagles travel to Miami Valley Saturday. Tippecanoe 54, Wayne 37 HUBER HEIGHTS — Tippecanoe took control early and never let go Monday night at Wayne, winning 54-37 — the Red Devils’ fourth win in a row and seventh in their last eight games. Carly Clodfelter led the Devils (9-6) with 21 points, while Halee Printz added 11. Tippecanoe hosts Central Buckeye Conference Kenton Trail Division rival Tecumseh tonight. National Trail 51, Newton 43 NEW PARIS — National Trail held off Cross County Conference foe Newton Monday night in a 51-43 Indians loss. Megan Rutledge scored 13 points for Newton (8-7, 4-4 CCC).
SPORTS CALENDAR TODAY Girls Basketball Sidney at Troy (7:30 p.m.) Tecumseh at Tippecanoe (7:30 p.m.) Miami East at Graham (7:30 p.m.) Trotwood at Piqua (7:30 p.m.) Wrestling Troy, Springfield at Urbana (6 p.m.) Bowling Troy at Sidney (3:30 p.m.) Tippecanoe at Tecumseh (4 p.m.) Swimming Tippecanoe at Trotwood tri (6:30 p.m.) THURSDAY Girls Basketball Dixie at Milton-Union (7:15 p.m.) Bethel at Tri-County North (7 p.m.) Newton at Bradford (7 p.m.) Covington at National Trail (7 p.m.) Jackson Center at Lehman (6 p.m.) Wrestling Tippecanoe at Mechanicsburg tri (5 p.m.) Covington quad (6 p.m.) Lehman at National Trail quad (6 p.m.) Bowling Tippecanoe at Stebbins (4 p.m.)
WHAT’S INSIDE National Football League .....14 Scoreboard ............................15 Television Schedule..............15 Local Sports..........................16 College Basketball................16
13 January 16, 2013
■ Boys Basketball
Patriots rally vs. Vikings Indians upset Bees, 60-57 Staff Reports NEW MADISON — Miami East took a halftime lead into Tuesday night’s Cross County Conference game against TriVillage — which was Division IV’s fifth-ranked team as of Monday. But that lead quickly vanished in the second half as the Patriots outscored the Vikings 41-10 to come away with a 65-35 victory.
MIAMI COUNTY “They were able to take advantage of our poor shooting and we had some turnovers, which kind of fueled their offense in the second half,” Miami East coach Allen Mack said. “We didn’t have an answer to a good, wellbalanced team in the second half.” The Vikings led by one after the first quarter and took a 25-24 advantage into half. But TriVillage (13-0, 7-0) outscored
■ See ROUNDUP on 16
■ Wrestling
PHOTOS COURTESY LEE WOOLERY/SPEEDSHOT PHOTO
Troy’s Dylan Cascaden drives into the paint against Fairmont Tuesday at the Trojan Activities Center.
A broken record
East sweeps tri-match Staff Reports In Miami East’s lone home meet of the season, Aaron Hubbard made sure everyone went home happy. Except for the visitors. Hubbard’s pin in the final match of the opening dual of a tri gave the Vikings a come-frombehind victory against Kenton Ridge, 37-35. The Vikings closed things out with a 53-21 victory over Tippecanoe, which Miami East also beat last Thursday at Troy. Tuesday night, though, belonged to Miami East’s seniors — Hubbard (170) in particular.
Trojans struggle on both ends in loss to Firebirds BY JOSH BROWN Sports Editor jbrown@tdnpublishing.com Maybe the Troy coaching staff is using the wrong medium to get its message through? “We talk about it, we talk about it, we talk about it — and then we always revert back to it,” Troy coach Tim Miller said. “To them, I’m sure it sounds like a broken record … actually, I don’t think they know what a record is.” The Trojans stayed relatively in the game for three quarters against Fairmont Tuesday night — even getting a few TROY chances to tie the game or take the lead. But each time, they’d miss on the offensive end and give up an easy one the other way, allowing the Firebirds to pull ahead for good in a 60-46 victory Tuesday at the Trojan Activities Center. “We did struggle shooting the ball tonight. And when we struggle to shoot, we don’t guard anybody,” Miller said. “That’s been our M.O. all year long. We can’t seem to find our way out of that.” The win snapped an eight-game losing streak for the Firebirds (4-10) and prevented the first consecutive wins for Troy (2-12) — which just snapped a seven-game slide with an overtime victory at Piqua Friday night. After Dylan Cascaden banked in a 3 early in
CASSTOWN “Our only home match of the year, Senior Night, we go into that last match needing at least five points to win — and Hubbard gets the pin,” Miami East coach Jason Sroufe said. “It was exciting. That pin was huge for us.” Hubbard ended up going 2-0 with two pins, as did Daniel Everett (182). Danny O’Malley (160) was 2-0 with a tech. fall, Allen Seagraves (120) was 2-0, Michael Morrow (126) and Matthew Amheiser (113) were Troy’s Tre Hudson hits a jumper Tuesday night
■ See TROJANS on 16 against Fairmont.
■ See VIKINGS on 16
■ Boys Basketball
Struggles continue Newton falls to National Trail, 57-40 BY COLIN FOSTER Associate Sports Editor cfoster@tdnpublishing.com
Armstrong admits cheating to Oprah Lance Armstrong has finally come clean. Armstrong confessed to doping during an interview with Oprah Winfrey taped Monday, just a couple of hours after a wrenching apology to staff at the Livestrong charity he founded and has now been forced to surrender. See Page 14.
Struggling teams can’t afford to turn the ball over or give up offensive rebounds. Newton had trouble in both of those categories Tuesday against National Trail. The Indians (2-10) were beaten badly on the glass, turned the ball over and struggled to get good shots on the offensive end, which led to a 57-40 loss in Cross County Conference play. “We got killed on the boards all night,” Newton coach Steve
PLEASANT HILL Fisher said. “Offensively, we got outrebounded 2 to 1. I thought we were really tentative on the boards. We didn’t really go after the ball. We got beat to a lot of loose balls. “I’m not sure of exactly why we are losing so many 50-50 balls. We didn’t have that problem in the early in the season, and now, in the last three or four games, that’s been our issue.” Daniel Vance scored the first five Newton points of the game
■ See INDIANS on 16
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Newton’s Daniel Vance drives to the basket Tuesday night against National Trail at Newton High School. STAFF PHOTO/ COLIN FOSTER
14
SPORTS
Wednesday, January 14, 2013
TROY DAILY NEWS • WWW.TROYDAILYNEWS.COM
■ Cycling
Oprah: Armstrong admitted doping AUSTIN, Texas (AP) — Lance Armstrong has finally come clean. Armstrong confessed to doping during an interview with Oprah Winfrey taped Monday, just a couple of hours after a wrenching apology to staff at the Livestrong charity he founded and has now been forced to surrender. The day ended with 2 1/2 hours of questions from Winfrey at a downtown Austin hotel, where she said the world’s most famous cyclist was “forthcoming” as she asked him in detail about doping allegations that followed him throughout his seven Tour de France victories. Speaking on “CBS This Morning,” Winfrey said Tuesday she had not planned to address Armstrong’s confession before the interview aired on her OWN network but, “by the time I left Austin and landed in Chicago, you all had already confirmed it.” “So I’m sitting here now because it’s already been confirmed,” she added.
The session was to be broadcast on Thursday but Winfrey said it will now run in two parts over two nights because there is so much material. Winfrey would not characterize whether Armstrong seemed contrite but said he seemed ready for the interview. “I would say that he met the moment,” she said. “I don’t think ‘emotional’ begins to describe the intensity or the difficulty he experienced in talking about some of these things.” The confession was a stunning reversal for a proud athlete and celebrity who sought lavish praise in the court of public opinion and used courtrooms to punish his critics. For more than a decade, Armstrong dared anybody who challenged his version of events to prove it. Finally, he told the tale himself after promising over the weekend to answer Winfrey’s questions “directly, honestly and candidly.” The cyclist was stripped
AP PHOTO
Talk-show host Oprah Winfrey interviews cyclist Lance Armstrong during taping for the show "Oprah and Lance Armstrong: The Worldwide Exclusive" Monday in Austin, Texas. The two-part episode of "Oprah's Next Chapter" will air nationally Thursday and Friday. of his Tour titles, lost most of his endorsements and was forced to leave Livestrong last year after the U.S. Anti-Doping Agency issued a damning, 1,000-page report that accused him of master-
minding a long-running doping scheme. The International Cycling Union, or UCI, issued a statement on Tuesday saying it was aware of the reports that Armstrong had confessed
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CLEVELAND (AP) — Cleveland Browns Stadium’s name will change, and a dome and artificial turf are still options, but don’t expect cheerleaders or jazzing up the team’s beloved orange helmets, team owner Jimmy Haslam said Tuesday. An electric utility, Akronbased FirstEnergy Corp., bought the naming rights to the stadium, which will be known as FirstEnergy Stadium. Financial terms of the long-term deal weren’t
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first-round draft pick will be under a microscope. So will fellow newcomers goalie Sergei Bobrovsky and winger Nick Foligno. They’ll undoubtedly play important roles in the young team’s reconstruction. “Sometimes change is good. I think Rick felt the same way, he needed change,” said coach Todd Richards, who had the interim tag taken off his job title after taking over for the fired Scott Arniel midway through a disastrous 2011-12 season. “Sometimes as an organization, whether you want it or you’re forced into it, you get change. I think that’s the exciting thing about going into this year is exactly that word: Change.” Dubinsky, Anisimov and Foligno figure to join the top two lines. They’ll be asked to make up for the 32 goals Nash averaged in his starstudded nine seasons in Columbus. “It’s not necessarily just about replacing, say, the 30 goals or 40 goals that Rick Nash scores every year,” veteran center Derek MacKenzie said. “It’s about creating some offense but doing it the right way.”
■ National Football League
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to Winfrey. The governing body for the sport urged Armstrong to tell his story to an independent commission it has set up to examine claims it covered up suspicious samples from the cyclist, accepted finan-
cial donations from him and helped him avoid detection in doping tests. Armstrong started Monday with a visit to the headquarters of Livestrong, the charity he founded in 1997 and turned into a global force on the strength of his athletic dominance and personal story of surviving testicular cancer that had spread to his lungs and brain. About 100 Livestrong staff members gathered in a conference room as Armstrong told them “I’m sorry.” He choked up during a 20-minute talk, expressing regret for the long-running controversy tied to performanceenhancers had caused, but stopped short of admitting he used them. Before he was done, several members were in tears when he urged them to continue the charity’s mission, helping cancer patients and their families. “Heartfelt and sincere,” is how Livestrong spokeswoman Katherine McLane described his speech.
Entered at the post office in Troy, Ohio 45373 as “Periodical,” postage paid at Troy, Ohio. The Troy Daily News is published Monday-Friday afternoons, and Saturday morning; and Sunday morning as the Miami Valley Sunday News, 224 S. Market St., Troy, OH. USPS 642-080. Postmaster, please send changes to: 224 S. Market St., Troy, OH 45373.
disclosed. “We believe that FirstEnergy and the Cleveland Browns share the same culture, the same desire to win,” Haslam said after a curtain was raised to show the name logo mounted over a stage decorated with fake grass. It will be the 23rd NFL venue with a naming rights deal. Former Browns owner Randy Lerner declined to sell naming rights to the stadium, which opened in 1999 when the team was reintroduced as an expansion franchise. Haslam bought the Browns from Lerner for around $1 billion last October. Art Modell had moved his team to Baltimore after the 1996 season. The naming deal includes provisions for stadium signs, event sponsorships and advertising. No ratepayer money will be used to pay for the name rights, the utility said. “Both FirstEnergy and the Browns share a rich tradition in this region and it makes good business sense,” said FirstEnergy President and CEO Tony Alexander.
TROY DAILY NEWS • WWW.TROYDAILYNEWS.COM
FOOTBALL
BASKETBALL
NFL Playoff Glance All Times EST Wild-card Playoffs Saturday, Jan. 5 Houston 19, Cincinnati 13 Green Bay 24, Minnesota 10 Sunday, Jan. 6 Baltimore 24, Indianapolis 9 Seattle 24, Washington 14 Divisional Playoffs Saturday, Jan. 12 Baltimore 38, Denver 35, 2OT San Francisco 45, Green Bay 31 Sunday, Jan. 13 Atlanta 30, Seattle 28 New England 41, Houston 28 Conference Championships Sunday, Jan. 20 San Francisco at Atlanta, 3 p.m. (FOX) Baltimore at New England, 6:30 p.m. (CBS) Pro Bowl Sunday, Jan. 27 At Honolulu AFC vs. NFC, 7 p.m. (NBC) Super Bowl Sunday, Feb. 3 At New Orleans AFC champion vs. NFC champion, 6 p.m. (CBS)
National Basketball Association EASTERN CONFERENCE Atlantic Division W L Pct GB 24 13 .649 — New York Brooklyn 23 15 .605 1½ 20 17 .541 4 Boston Philadelphia 16 23 .410 9 14 24 .368 10½ Toronto Southeast Division Pct GB W L 24 12 .667 — Miami Atlanta 21 16 .568 3½ 13 24 .351 11½ Orlando Charlotte 9 29 .237 16 7 28 .200 16½ Washington Central Division Pct GB W L Indiana 24 15 .615 — 21 15 .583 1½ Chicago Milwaukee 19 17 .528 3½ 14 24 .368 9½ Detroit Cleveland 9 31 .225 15½ WESTERN CONFERENCE Southwest Division Pct GB W L San Antonio 29 11 .725 — 24 12 .667 3 Memphis 21 18 .538 7½ Houston Dallas 16 23 .410 12½ 12 26 .316 16 New Orleans Northwest Division Pct GB W L Oklahoma City 30 8 .789 — 23 16 .590 7½ Denver Portland 20 17 .541 9½ 21 19 .525 10 Utah Minnesota 16 19 .457 12½ Pacific Division W L Pct GB 30 9 .769 — L.A. Clippers Golden State 23 13 .639 5½ 16 21 .432 13 L.A. Lakers Sacramento 14 24 .368 15½ 13 27 .325 17½ Phoenix Tuesday's Games Indiana 103, Charlotte 76 New Orleans 111, Philadelphia 99 Brooklyn 113, Toronto 106 L.A. Clippers 117, Houston 109 Portland at Denver, 9 p.m. Milwaukee at L.A. Lakers, 10:30 p.m. Wednesday's Games Chicago at Toronto, 7 p.m. Indiana at Orlando, 7 p.m. Brooklyn at Atlanta, 7:30 p.m. Houston at Dallas, 8 p.m. Denver at Oklahoma City, 8 p.m. New Orleans at Boston, 8 p.m. Memphis at San Antonio, 8:30 p.m. Cleveland at Portland, 10 p.m. Washington at Sacramento, 10 p.m. Miami at Golden State, 10:30 p.m.
College Football FBS Bowl Glance Subject to Change All Times EST Saturday, Dec. 15 New Mexico Bowl At Albuquerque Arizona 49, Nevada 48 Famous Idaho Potato Bowl At Boise, Idaho Utah State 41, Toledo 15 Thursday, Dec. 20 Poinsettia Bowl At San Diego BYU 23, San Diego State 6 Friday, Dec. 21 Beef 'O' Brady's Bowl At St. Petersburg, Fla. UCF 38, Ball State 17 Saturday, Dec. 22 New Orleans Bowl Louisiana-Lafayette 43, East Carolina 34 Las Vegas Bowl Boise State 28, Washington 26 Monday, Dec. 24 Hawaii Bowl At Honolulu SMU 43, Fresno State 10 Wednesday, Dec. 26 Little Caesars Pizza Bowl At Detroit Central Michigan 24, Western Kentucky 21 Thursday, Dec. 27 Military Bowl At Washington San Jose State 29, Bowling Green 20 Belk Bowl At Charlotte, N.C. Cincinnati 48, Duke 34 Holiday Bowl At San Diego Baylor 49, UCLA 26 Friday, Dec. 28 Independence Bowl At Shreveport, La. Ohio 45, Louisiana-Monroe 14 Russell Athletic Bowl At Orlando, Fla. Virginia Tech 13, Rutgers 10, OT Meineke Car Care Bowl At Houston Texas Tech 34, Minnesota 31 Saturday, Dec. 29 Armed Forces Bowl At Fort Worth, Texas Rice 33, Air Force 14 Fight Hunger Bowl At San Francisco Arizona State 62, Navy 28 Pinstripe Bowl At New York Syracuse 38, West Virginia 14 Alamo Bowl At San Antonio Texas 31, Oregon State 27 Buffalo Wild Wings Bowl At Tempe, Ariz. Michigan State 17, TCU 16 Monday, Dec. 31 Music City Bowl At Nashville, Tenn. Vanderbilt 38, N.C. State 24 Sun Bowl At El Paso, Texas Georgia Tech 21, Southern Cal 7 Liberty Bowl At Memphis, Tenn. Tulsa 31, Iowa State 17 Chick-fil-A Bowl At Atlanta Clemson 25, LSU 24 Tuesday, Jan. 1 Heart of Dallas Bowl At Dallas Oklahoma State 58, Purdue 14 Gator Bowl At Jacksonville, Fla. Northwestern 34, Mississippi State 20 Capital One Bowl At Orlando, Fla. Georgia 45, Nebraska 31 Outback Bowl At Tampa, Fla. South Carolina 33, Michigan 28 Rose Bowl At Pasadena, Calif. Stanford 20, Wisconsin 14 Orange Bowl At Miami Florida State 31, Northern Illinois 10 Wednesday, Jan. 2 Sugar Bowl At New Orleans Louisville 33, Florida 23 Thursday, Jan. 3 Fiesta Bowl At Glendale, Ariz. Oregon 35, Kansas State 17 Friday, Jan. 4 Cotton Bowl At Arlington, Texas Texas A&M 41, Oklahoma 13 Saturday, Jan. 5 BBVA Compass Bowl At Birmingham, Ala. Mississippi 38, Pittsburgh 17 Sunday, Jan. 6 GoDaddy.com Bowl At Mobile, Ala. Arkansas State 17, Kent State 13 Monday, Jan. 7 BCS National Championship At Miami Alabama 42, Notre Dame 14 Saturday, Jan. 19 East-West Shrine Classic At St. Petersburg, Fla. East vs. West, 4 p.m. (NFLN) Saturday, Jan. 26 Senior Bowl At Mobile, Ala. North vs. South, TBA (NFLN)
The Top Twenty Five The top 25 teams in The Associated Press' college basketball poll, with firstplace votes in parentheses, records through Jan. 13, total points based on 25 points for a first-place vote through one point for a 25th-place vote and last week's ranking: Pts Prv ...............................Record 1. Louisville (36) ......15-1 1,591 3 2. Indiana (13) .........15-1 1,527 5 3. Duke (14).............15-1 1,501 1 4. Kansas (1)...........14-1 1,416 6 5. Michigan (1) ........16-1 1,415 2 6. Syracuse .............16-1 1,284 7 7. Arizona ................15-1 1,205 4 8. Gonzaga..............16-1 1,141 9 9. Minnesota............15-2 1,041 8 10. Florida ...............12-2 1,019 11 11. Ohio St. .............13-3 939 15 12. Creighton...........16-1 896 13 13. Butler .................14-2 855 14 14. NC State............14-2 836 20 15. San Diego St.....14-2 704 16 16. Kansas St..........13-2 670 18 17. Missouri.............12-3 598 10 18. Michigan St. ......14-3 426 22 19. New Mexico.......15-2 368 25 20. Notre Dame.......14-2 295 17 21. Oregon ..............14-2 238 — 22. VCU ...................14-3 212 — 23. Illinois.................14-4 199 12 24. UCLA.................14-3 185 — 25. Marquette ..........12-3 177 — Others receiving votes: Cincinnati 121, UConn 70, Georgetown 56, Mississippi 55, UNLV 26, Wisconsin 25, Boise St. 9, Miami 9, Wichita St. 6, Temple 5, Pittsburgh 2, Baylor 1, Utah St. 1, Wyoming 1. The Women's Top Twenty Five The top 25 teams in the The Associated Press' women's college basketball poll, with first-place votes in parentheses, records through Jan. 6, total points based on 25 points for a first-place vote through one point for a 25th-place vote and last week's ranking: ...............................Record Pts Prv 1. Baylor (34)...........14-1 991 1 2. Notre Dame (1) ...14-1 948 2 3. UConn (2)............14-1 914 3 4. Duke (3)...............15-0 907 4 5. Kentucky..............15-1 817 6 6. Stanford...............14-2 787 5 7. California .............13-2 755 7 8. Penn St................13-2 724 8 9. Tennessee ...........13-3 670 9 10. Maryland ...........12-3 615 10 11. North Carolina...17-1 590 11 12. Purdue...............13-2 536 12 13. Georgia..............15-2 519 13 14. UCLA.................13-2 468 14 15. Louisville............14-3 422 15 16. Oklahoma..........14-2 410 16 17. Oklahoma St. ....12-2 324 21 18. Dayton ...............13-1 276 22 19. South Carolina ..14-3 256 18 20. Texas A&M ........13-5 233 20 21. Colorado............13-2 232 23 22. Florida St...........13-3 182 18 23. Kansas ..............11-4 124 17 24. Iowa St. .............12-2 88 25 25. Michigan............14-2 86 — Others receiving votes: Syracuse 39, Vanderbilt 23, Miami 12, Michigan St. 12, Nebraska 12, UTEP 8, Villanova 8, Iowa 5, Delaware 4, Arkansas 2, Creighton 1. Associated Press boys state basketball poll How a state panel of sports writers and broadcasters rates Ohio high school boys basketball teams in the second of seven weekly Associated Press polls, by OHSAA divisions, with won-lost record and total points (firstplace votes in parentheses): DIVISION I 1, Twinsburg (11)................13-0 161 1, Cols. Northland (17) ....10-0 223 2, Westerville N. (3) .........10-0 185 3, Tol. Whitmer .................10-2 141 4, Cin. Walnut Hills (2) .....12-1 138 5, Tol. Cent. Cath. (1) .........7-1 112 6, Reynoldsburg...............12-1 86 7, Cle. St. Ignatius..............8-2 79 8, Norwalk........................12-0 62 9, Tol. St. John's (1)..........10-3 44 10, Mentor........................10-2 41 Others receiving 12 or more points: 11, Shaker Hts. 39. 12, Cin. Withrow 38.
SCOREBOARD
Scores AND SCHEDULES
SPORTS ON TV TODAY AUTO RACING 2 a.m. NBCSN — Dakar Rally, stage 11, La Rioja to Fiambala, Argentina (delayed tape) GOLF 4 a.m. TGC — European PGA Tour, Abu Dhabi Championship, first round, at Abu Dhabi, United Arab Emirates MEN'S COLLEGE BASKETBALL 7 p.m. ESPN2 — NC State at Maryland 9 p.m. ESPN2 — West Virginia at Iowa St. NBA BASKETBALL 8 p.m. ESPN — Houston at Dallas 10:30 p.m. ESPN — Miami at Golden State TENNIS 2 p.m. ESPN2 — Australian Open, second round, at Melbourne, Australia (same-day tape) 11 p.m. ESPN2 — Australian Open, second round, at Melbourne, Australia 3 a.m. ESPN2 — Australian Open, second round, at Melbourne, Australia 13, Liberty Twp. Lakota E. 36. 14, Lakewood St. Edward 16. 15, Cin. Moeller 15. 16, N. Can. Hoover 14. DIVISION II 1, Day. Thurgood Marshall (21) 9-0 228 2, Day. Dunbar .................10-1 178 3, Kettering Alter (3) ........11-0 173 4, Cols. Watterson..............7-1 119 5, Can. S. .........................11-1 111 6, St. Clairsville ..................8-1 93 7, Cols. Brookhaven...........9-2 76 8, Granville.........................9-1 49 9, Cle. Cent. Cath...............7-3 48 10, Akr. Hoban ...................7-2 46 Others receiving 12 or more points: 11, Akr. SVSM 41. 12, Franklin 19. 12, Trotwood-Madison 19. 14, Lima Bath 15. 15, Tontogany Otsego 14. 16, Vincent Warren 13. 17, New Concord John Glenn 12. DIVISION III 1, Summit Country Day (19)11-0219 2, Lima Cent. Cath. (3).....11-1 194 3, Ottawa-Glandorf (1) .....10-1 172 4, Bloom-Carroll...............11-0 138 5, Roger Bacon................12-1 126 6, Oak Hill ........................10-1 78 7, Versailles........................9-1 77 8, Findlay Liberty-Benton...9-1 72 9, Beachwood ....................8-2 57 10, Ironton (1) ....................9-2 54 Others receiving 12 or more points: 11, Leavittsburg Labrae 33. 12, Cin. N. College Hill 14. DIVISION IV 1, Newark Cath. (6)..........10-0 195 2, St. Henry (8) ................12-1 187 3, Cle. VASJ (7)..................9-2 159 4, Cols. Africentric (1) ......11-1 153 5, Tri-Village .....................12-0 127 6, Bristol (1) .....................11-0 68 7, Old Fort........................12-1 58 8, Ft. Recovery.................10-2 53 9, Richmond Hts. ...............9-2 48 10, Convoy Crestview (1) 10-1 38 Others receiving 12 or more points: 11, Arlington 28. 11, Berlin Hiland 28. 13, Leipsic 23. 14, New Bremen 19. 15, Vanlue 18. 16, Tol. Christian 16. 17, Edgerton 14. 17, McDonald 14. 19, Portsmouth Notre Dame 13. 20, New Riegel 12. Tuesday's Scores Boys Basketball Akr. Buchtel 92, Akr. North 49 Akr. East 76, Akr. Kenmore 62 Akr. Springfield 62, Ravenna SE 53 Andover Pymatuning Valley 54, Hubbard 33 Athens 52, Jackson 22 Austintown Fitch 47, Jefferson Area 46 Avon Lake 43, Avon 35 Beaver Eastern 77, Latham Western 63 Beavercreek 75, Day. Dunbar 69 Bellaire St. John 36, Jefferson County Christian 28 Bellville Clear Fork 59, Ontario 44 Belmont Union Local 59, Barnesville 56 Berea 72, Parma Normandy 40 Berlin Hiland 55, Strasburg-Franklin 30 Brecksville-Broadview Hts. 58, Amherst Steele 42 Bristol 65, Garrettsville Garfield 63 Brookfield 66, Leavittsburg LaBrae 61 Brooklyn 48, Parma Hts. Holy Name 43 Burton Berkshire 57, Cuyahoga Hts. 53 Cadiz Harrison Cent. 82, Bellaire 38 Cambridge 41, Dover 40, OT Canfield 59, Alliance 57, OT Centerburg 56, Newark Licking Valley 55 Centerville 53, Kettering Alter 51, OT Chagrin Falls Kenston 51, Aurora 33 Chesterland W. Geauga 65, Orange 38 Cin. Country Day 57, Bethel-Tate 55 Cin. Glen Este 65, Morrow Little Miami 58 Cin. Hughes 62, Fairfield 58 Cin. Oyler 47, Cin. Deer Park 40 Cin. Summit Country Day 77, Hamilton Badin 39 Cin. Walnut Hills 67, Cin. La Salle 48 Cin.Winton Woods 69, Day. Ponitz Tech. 48 Cincinnati Trailblazers HomeSchool 87, Cin. Hillcrest 44 Circleville Logan Elm 42, Chillicothe 31 Clarksville Clinton-Massie 52, Greenfield McClain 44 Cle. Glenville 81, Cle. Collinwood 66 Cle. Horizon Science 56, Andrews Osborne Academy 47 Cle. JFK 79, Cle. Lincoln W. 36 Cle. John Adams 73, Cle. MLK 67 Cle. Max Hayes 62, Cle. Rhodes 55 Cols. Africentric 77, Cols. MarionFranklin 64 Cols. Briggs 79, Cols. West 65 Cols. Brookhaven 104, Cols. International 21 Cols. Centennial 95, Cols. Beechcroft 82 Cols. DeSales 58, Cols. Linden McKinley 44 Cols. East 64, Cols. Whetstone 31 Cols. Eastmoor 39, Cols. Walnut Ridge 36 Cols. Franklin Hts. 48, Grove City Cent. Crossing 39 Cols. Grandview Hts. 43, AmandaClearcreek 40 Cols. Hamilton Twp. 63, Shekinah Christian 44 Cols. Northland 81, Cols. Mifflin 48 Cols. Watterson 65, Hilliard Darby 41 Columbiana 47, Berlin Center Western Reserve 46, 2OT Corning Miller 63, Glouster Trimble 40
Cortland Lakeview 68, Orwell Grand Valley 51 Cortland Maplewood 41, Warren Champion 36 Covington 48, Ansonia 41 Crooksville 44, Philo 42 Cuyahoga Falls 55, Kent Roosevelt 45 Cuyahoga Falls CVCA 53, Akr. Hoban 50 Day. Thurgood Marshall 63, Day. Chaminade-Julienne 60 Edgerton 45, Hamler Patrick Henry 20 Elyria Cath. 54, Oberlin Firelands 42 Fairborn 43, Spring. Kenton Ridge 41 Fairport Harbor Harding 54, Wickliffe 49 Felicity-Franklin 65, St. Bernard 57 Fredericktown 53, Marion Pleasant 36 Gahanna Christian 80, Madison Christian 30 Galion Northmor 48, Howard E. Knox 42 Galloway Westland 71, Grove City 58 Gates Mills Gilmour 67, Rocky River Lutheran W. 46 Georgetown 72, Sardinia Eastern Brown 65 Germantown Valley View 82, Middletown Madison 49 Girard 52, Warren JFK 41 Grafton Midview 49, LaGrange Keystone 44 Grove City Christian 82, Gilead Christian 27 Hannibal River 54, Magnolia, W.Va. 52 Hanoverton United 49, Lisbon David Anderson 45 Heartland Christian 48, Warren Lordstown 33 Heath 61, Johnstown Northridge 50 Holland Springfield 50, Sylvania Northview 31 Huber Hts. Wayne 72, W. Carrollton 54 Ironton St. Joseph 57, Ironton Rock Hill 54 Kings Mills Kings 36, Mason 35 Kingsway Christian 63, Canton Heritage Christian 60 Kirtland 55, Gates Mills Hawken 43 Lees Creek E. Clinton 75, W. Union 61 Leetonia 56, Lowellville 51 Lore City Buckeye Trail 46, Byesville Meadowbrook 35 Lucasville Valley 74, Waverly 66 Madison 77, Ashtabula Lakeside 73 Magnolia Sandy Valley 55, E. Can. 53 Marion Elgin 65, Ridgeway Ridgemont 43 Martins Ferry 72, Richmond Edison 42 McDonald 74, Salineville Southern 53 Medina Buckeye 62, Lodi Cloverleaf 50 Mentor Lake Cath. 63, Willoughby S. 48 Miamisburg 59, Riverside Stebbins 42 Middlefield Cardinal 68, Independence 61 Milford 31, Cin. McNicholas 22 Milford Center Fairbanks 43, London 42 Millbury Lake 67, Fostoria 39 Mineral Ridge 59, Columbiana Crestview 53 Minford 48, Oak Hill 36 Mogadore 64, Mantua Crestwood 43 N. Can. Hoover 56, Uniontown Lake 43 N. Ridgeville 67, Wellington 62 Nelsonville-York 77, Bidwell River Valley 41 New Concord John Glenn 62, McConnelsville Morgan 25 New Lebanon Dixie 55, Day. Oakwood 45 New Lexington 52, Dresden Tri-Valley 45 New Madison Tri-Village 65, Casstown Miami E. 35 New Middletown Spring. 53, E. Palestine 42 New Paris National Trail 57, Newton Local 40 Newcomerstown 57, Beallsville 55 Oak Harbor 65, Kansas Lakota 42 Oregon Stritch 54, Tol. Maumee Valley 53 OVC 50, Calvary Baptist, W.Va. 42 Parma 55, Columbia Station Columbia 48 Pataskala Licking Hts. 66, Hebron Lakewood 61 Peebles 84, Southeastern 75, OT Peninsula Woodridge 66, Richfield Revere 58 Perry 52, Painesville Harvey 49 Piqua 60, Tipp City Bethel 57 Point Pleasant, W.Va. 68, Gallipolis Gallia 58 Poland Seminary 45, Niles McKinley 41 Portsmouth 63, Mowrystown Whiteoak 54 Portsmouth Clay 53, New Boston Glenwood 42 Racine Southern 57, Waterford 46 Reading 50, Norwood 27 Richwood N. Union 69, Worthington Christian 60 Rittman 52, Rootstown 45 Rossford 57, Pemberville Eastwood 47 S. Webster 76, Portsmouth W. 72 Salem 83, Youngs. Liberty 64 Shadyside 49, Bridgeport 46 Spring. NW 52, Spring. NE 48 St. Bernard Roger Bacon 62, Cin. Elder 59 St. Clairsville 66, Wintersville Indian Creek 55 Steubenville 54, Minerva 46 Stewart Federal Hocking 51, Belpre 41 Sullivan Black River 59, W. Salem NW 44 Sycamore Mohawk 77, Arcadia 55 Thornville Sheridan 76, Logan 69 Tol. Cent. Cath. 68, Lima Sr. 57 Tontogany Otsego 48, Bloomdale
Wednesday, January 14, 2013 Elmwood 31 Toronto 64, St. Clairsville E. Richland Christian 26 Trotwood-Madison 93, Clayton Northmont 82 Twinsburg 51, Cuyahoga Falls Walsh Jesuit 49 Uhrichsville Claymont 70, Zoarville Tuscarawas Valley 44 Utica 52, Pataskala Watkins Memorial 51 Vincent Warren 86, Marietta 56 W. Lafayette Ridgewood 44, Warsaw River View 37 Wahama, W.Va. 60, Crown City S. Gallia 58 Wapakoneta 48, New Knoxville 38 arren Harding 63, Youngs. East 60 Warren Howland 85, Struthers 54 Washington C.H. Miami Trace 56, Circleville 50 Wellston 80, Reedsville Eastern 47 Wellsville 91, Sebring McKinley 62 Westerville Cent. 65, Cols. Hartley 56 Associated Press girls state basketball poll How a state panel of sports writers and broadcasters rates Ohio high school girls basketball teams in the second of seven weekly Associated Press polls, by OHSAA divisions, with won-lost record and total points (firstplace votes in parentheses): DIVISION I 1, Twinsburg (18) .............14-0 197 2, Kettering Fairmont (1) .12-0 167 3, Mason..........................13-0 138 4, Reynoldsburg (1).........12-1 110 5, Perrysburg ...................12-0 103 6, Cle. St. Joseph ............14-0 95 7, Centerville ...................11-1 60 8, N. Can. Hoover ............10-2 56 9, Wadsworth...................12-1 53 10, Dublin Coffman..........12-1 18 Others receiving 12 or more points: 11, Hudson 17. 12, Solon 13. 13, Aurora 12. DIVISION II 1, W. Holmes (13) ............14-0 181 2, Clyde (2)......................15-0 166 3, Hathaway Brown (5) ....11-3 142 4, Tol. Rogers.....................9-2 114 5, Oxford Talawanda ........15-0 89 6, Jackson .......................15-0 75 7, Geneva ........................12-1 65 8, Kettering Alter..............11-2 55 9, Bellbrook .....................11-2 51 10, Akr. Hoban...................9-3 27 Others receiving 12 or more points: 11, Akr. SVSM 21. 12, Beloit W. Branch 16. 13, Bellevue 13. DIVISION III 1, Smithville (13)..............15-0 188 2, Cols. Africentric (2)......11-3 151 3, Gates Mills Gilmour (2)13-1 144 4, Archbold (1).................13-1 123 5, Orrville.........................10-1 98 6, Versailles .....................12-1 87 7, Richwood N. Union (1) 14-1 71 8, Anna ..............................8-2 70 9, Beachwood..................11-1 47 10, Proctorville Fairland...10-0 26 Others receiving 12 or more points: 11, Beverly Ft. Frye 20. 12, Cle. Cuyahoga Hts. 17. 13, Frankfort Adena (1) 13. 14, Can. Cent. Cath. 12. DIVISION IV 1, Ottoville (14) ................13-0 191 2, Newark Cath. (2) .........11-0 151 3, Berlin Hiland (2) ..........11-2 115 4, Hamler Patrick Henry (1)12-0 112 5, Tri-Village.....................12-1 107 6, Ft. Loramie ..................11-2 81 7, Mansfield St. Peter's....12-1 77 8, Bridgeport (1) ..............10-0 63 9, Ft. Recovery ................10-2 56 10, Reedsville Eastern ....11-1 44 Others receiving 12 or more points: 11, N. Ridgeville Lake Ridge 29. 12, Zanesville Rosecrans 17. 13, New Riegel 15. Tuesday’s Scores Girls Basketball Ashville Teays Valley 55, AmandaClearcreek 34 Bainbridge Paint Valley 49, Chillicothe Huntington 25 Baltimore Liberty Union 55, Lancaster Fisher Cath. 36 Hopewell-Loudon 64, Bascom Gibsonburg 32 Bellevue 56, Upper Sandusky 47 Brookville 45, W. Alexandria Twin Valley S. 34 Bryan 44, Defiance 22 Bucyrus 67, Ontario 55 Bucyrus Wynford 51, Galion 39 Castalia Margaretta 57, Attica Seneca E. 55 Celina 69, Maria Stein Marion Local 36 Chillicothe Unioto 69, Southeastern 45 Chillicothe Zane Trace 33, Frankfort Adena 30 Cin. Hughes 62, Cin. Woodward 38 Circleville 57, Cols. Hamilton Twp. 40 Circleville Logan Elm 56, Canal Winchester 52 Collins Western Reserve 53, Milan Edison 45 Cols. Africentric 83, Cols. MarionFranklin 33 Cols. Briggs 61, Cols. West 24 Cols. Brookhaven 105, Cols. International 13 Cols. Centennial 70, Cols. Beechcroft 29 Cols. DeSales 53, Hilliard Darby 37 Cols. Eastmoor 82, Cols. Walnut Ridge 18 Cols. Independence 50, Cols. South 23 Cols. Northland 74, Cols. Mifflin 16 Cols. Whetstone 32, Cols. East 29 Creston Norwayne 50, Ashland Crestview 41 Defiance Ayersville 75, Van Buren 51 Dublin Scioto 58, Thomas Worthington 37 Edgerton 45, Pioneer N. Central 31 Fayetteville-Perry 43, Mt. Orab Western Brown 31 Findlay Liberty-Benton 46, Carey 38 Fostoria St.Wendelin 44, Northwood 24 Fremont Ross 49, Maumee 35 Ft. Loramie 65, Ft. Recovery 58 Gorham Fayette 73, Hicksville 38 Goshen 52, Cin. Madeira 43 Harrod Allen E. 72, Lima Perry 44 Hilliard Bradley 38, Powell Olentangy Liberty 24 Hilliard Davidson 53, New Albany 43 Kalida 48, Defiance Tinora 41 Lancaster Fairfield Union 76, BloomCarroll 20 Lima Shawnee 61, Ft. Jennings 35 Mansfield St. Peter's 82, Plymouth 30 Marysville 48, Delaware Hayes 37 McComb 61, Miller City 39 Miami Valley Christian Academy 54, Cin. Riverview East 13 N. Robinson Col. Crawford 45, Mt. Blanchard Riverdale 31 Newark Cath. 53, Whitehall-Yearling 30 Newark Licking Valley 63, Gahanna Cols. Academy 22 Ottawa-Glandorf 80, Liberty Center 37 Ottoville 48, Pandora-Gilboa 32 Sandusky Perkins 48, Sandusky 36 Sandusky St. Mary 57, Lakeside Danbury 31 Spencerville 65, Rockford Parkway 60
15
Sugar Grove Berne Union 70, Madison Christian 37 Swanton 59, Pettisville 57, 2OT Sylvania Northview 51, Holland Springfield 46 Tol. Christian 51, Fremont St. Joseph 33
GOLF World Golf Ranking Through Jan. 13 1. Rory McIlroy .................NIr 2. Tiger Woods...............USA 3. Luke Donald ...............Eng 4. Louis Oosthuizen ........SAf 5. Justin Rose.................Eng 6. Adam Scott .................Aus 7. Lee Westwood............Eng 8. Brandt Snedeker .......USA 9. Bubba Watson ...........USA 10. Steve Stricker ..........USA
12.83 8.28 8.28 6.71 6.23 6.14 5.81 5.39 5.35 5.12
PGA Tour FedExCup Leaders Through Jan. 13 .................................PointsYTD Money 1. Russell Henley .........500 $1,008,000 1. Dustin Johnson........500 $1,140,000 3.Tim Clark ..................300 $604,800 3. Steve Stricker ...........300 $665,000 5. Brandt Snedeker......190 $432,000 6. Matt Kuchar..............178 $379,400 7. Charles Howell III.....163 $324,800 7. Scott Langley ...........163 $324,800 9. Keegan Bradley........143 $317,821 10.Tommy Gainey .......128 $238,876
TENNIS Australian Open Results Tuesday At Melbourne Park Melbourne, Australia Purse: $31.608 million (Grand Slam) Surface: Hard-Outdoor Singles Men First Round Andy Murray (3), Britain, def. Robin Haase, Netherlands, 6-3, 6-1, 6-3. Blaz Kavcic, Slovenia, def. Thomaz Bellucci (29), Brazil, 6-3, 6-1, 6-3. Joao Sousa, Portugal, def. John-Patrick Smith, Australia, 6-4, 6-1, 6-4. Ricardas Berankis, Lithuania, def. Sergiy Stakhovsky, Ukraine, 6-2, 7-6 (4), 7-5. Andreas Seppi (21), Italy, def. Horacio Zeballos, Argentina, 6-2, 6-4, 6-2. Denis Istomin, Uzbekistan, def. Igor Sijsling, Netherlands, 4-6, 6-3, 6-4, 6-2. Florian Mayer (25), Germany, def. Rhyne Williams, United States, 2-6, 3-6, 62, 7-6 (12), 6-1. Milos Raonic (13), Canada, def. Jan Hajek, Czech Republic, 3-6, 6-1, 6-2, 7-6 (0). Go Soeda, Japan, def. Luke Saville, Australia, 6-7 (4), 6-3, 6-2, 6-3. Alejandro Falla, Colombia, def. Josselin Ouanna, France, 6-4, 7-5, 6-4. Amir Weintraub, Israel, def. Guido Pella, Argentina, 7-6 (2), 7-5, 6-2. Roger Federer (2), Switzerland, def. Benoit Paire, France, 6-2, 6-4, 6-1. Philipp Kohlschreiber (17), Germany, def. Steve Darcis, Belgium, 6-2, 6-3, 6-4. James Duckworth, Australia, def. Benjamin Mitchell, Australia, 6-4, 7-6 (8), 4-6, 5-7, 8-6. Jeremy Chardy, France, def. Adrian Menendez-Maceiras, Spain, 7-6 (5), 6-7 (3), 6-2, 6-1. Jo-Wilfried Tsonga (7), France, def. Michael Llodra, France, 6-4, 7-5, 6-2. Juan Martin del Potro (6), Argentina, def.Adrian Mannarino, France, 6-1, 6-2, 62. Richard Gasquet (9), France, def.Albert Montanes, Spain, 7-5, 6-2, 6-1. Marcel Granollers (30), Spain, def. Grega Zemlja, Slovenia, 7-6 (6), 7-6 (5), 10 retired. Jesse Levine, Canada, def. Tommy Robredo, Spain, 7-6 (5), 6-7 (2), 6-4, 6-4. Lukas Rosol, Czech Republic, def. Jamie Baker, Britain, 7-6 (5), 7-5, 6-2. Marin Cilic (12), Croatia, def. Marinko Matosevic, Australia, 6-4, 7-5, 6-2. Gilles Simon (14), France, def. Filippo Volandri, Italy, 2-6, 6-3, 6-2, 6-2. Ivan Dodig, Croatia, def. Wu Di, China, 7-5, 4-6, 6-3, 6-3. Benjamin Becker, Germany, def. Aljaz Bedene, Slovenia, 4-6, 6-3, 7-5, 7-6 (1). Jarkko Nieminen, Finland, def. Tommy Haas (19), Germany, 7-6 (3), 4-6, 6-3, 4-6, 8-6. Daniel Brands, Germany, def. Martin Klizan (27), Slovakia, 6-3, 3-6, 6-3, 6-4. Nikolay Davydenko, Russia, def. Dudi Sela, Israel, 3-6, 6-1, 7-5, 6-3. Yen-hsun Lu, Taiwan, def. Ruben Ramirez Hidalgo, Spain, 6-2, 6-1, 4-6, 6-1. Rajeev Ram, United States, def. Guillermo Garcia-Lopez, Spain, 6-4, 6-4, 3-6, 6-2. Bernard Tomic, Australia, def. Leonardo Mayer, Argentina, 6-3, 6-2, 6-3. Gael Monfils, France, def. Alexandr Dolgopolov (18), Ukraine, 6-7 (7), 7-6 (4), 6-3, 6-3. Women First Round Caroline Wozniacki (10), Denmark, def. Sabine Lisicki, Germany, 2-6, 6-3, 6-3. Carla Suarez Navarro, Spain, def. Sara Errani (7), Italy, 6-4, 6-4. Maria Kirilenko (14), Russia, def. Vania King, United States, 6-4, 6-2. Svetlana Kuznetsova, Russia, def. Lourdes Dominguez Lino, Spain, 6-2, 6-1. Kimiko Date-Krumm, Japan, def. Nadia Petrova (12), Russia, 6-2, 6-0. Peng Shuai, China, def. Rebecca Marino, Canada, 6-3, 6-0. Elena Vesnina, Russia, def. Caroline Garcia, France, 3-6, 6-3, 6-1. Shahar Peer, Israel, def. Alexandra Panova, Russia, 6-4, 1-6, 6-3. Hsieh Su-wei (26), Taiwan, def. Lara Arruabarrena-Vecino, Spain, 7-6 (5), 62. Varvara Lepchenko (21), United States, def. Polona Hercog, Slovenia, 6-4, 6-1. Serena Williams (3), United States, def. Edina Gallovits-Hall, Romania, 6-0, 6-0. Victoria Azarenka (1), Belarus, def. Monica Niculescu, Romania, 6-1, 6-4. Roberta Vinci (16), Italy, def. Silvia Soler-Espinosa, Spain, 6-3, 7-5. Petra Kvitova (8), Czech Republic, def. Francesca Schiavone, Italy, 6-4, 2-6, 6-2. Yulia Putintseva, Kazakhstan, def. Christina McHale, United States, 6-1, 6-7 (0), 6-2. Bojana Jovanovski, Serbia, def. MariaTeresa Torro-Flor, Spain, 2-6, 6-4, 6-3. Annika Beck, Germany, def. Yaroslava Shvedova (28), Kazakhstan, 6-2, 6-7 (7), 6-3. Donna Vekic, Croatia, def. Andrea Hlavackova, Czech Republic, 6-1, 6-2. Lucie Safarova (17), Czech Republic, def. Mirjana Lucic-Baroni, Croatia, 7-6 (4), 6-4. Sloane Stephens (29), United States, def. Simona Halep, Romania, 6-1, 6-1. Laura Robson, Britain, def. Melanie Oudin, United States, 6-2, 6-3.
14
SPORTS
Wednesday, January 14, 2013
TROY DAILY NEWS • WWW.TROYDAILYNEWS.COM
■ Tennis
■ College Basketball
Williams wins despite ankle UC holds on M E L B O U R N E , Australia (AP) — Flat on her back, her sore right ankle raised and her hands covering her face, Serena Williams tried to block out thoughts that her bid for a third straight Grand Slam title might be ruined. After a dominating run the last six months, Williams was a big favorite to win the Australian Open. Suddenly, though, there seemed a way for her to be gone in the first round. “I almost panicked, and I thought, ‘I can’t do that,’” she said. “I just have to
really remain calm and think things through.” The stats showed this was nothing more than a stroll — a 6-0, 6-0 wipeout in 54 minutes of No. 110ranked Edina GallovitsHall at Melbourne Park on Tuesday. Williams conceded only six points in the second set. But this match took significantly longer to complete given the medical timeouts. And while the score may have been painful to her opponent, there was plenty of pain to go around.
■ Boys Basketball
The first set was 4-0 after 19 minutes at Hisense Arena when her tumble near the baseline diverted attention on Day Two from center court, where a day session featuring Roger Federer, Andy Murray and women’s champion Victoria Azarenka was under way. After some deep breaths, the 31-year-old Willlams pulled herself together, got to her hands and knees for a few minutes and gradually to her feet. Her already heavily taped ankle was assessed
and retaped. She went back on court and won the next four points to get herself to another changeover, and more attention from the doctor. She went back and held another service game to clinch the set, giving her time for more treatment. “A very similar thing happened to me last year, almost on the same side, the same shot,” Williams said, referring to a fall that forced her to pull out of the Brisbane International last year and contributed to her fourth-round exit at the Australian Open.
ROSEMONT, Ill. (AP) — Cashmere Wright scored 20 points before leaving with an injury, leading Cincinnati to a 75-70 victory over DePaul Tuesday night. Cincinnati (15-3, 3-2 Big East) won its second straight game after breaking a two-game losing streak at Rutgers. DePaul (10-7, 1-3) has lost four of its last five games. Wright went down with an apparent right knee injury with 15:12 remaining. Playing defense, he had leaned
toward a DePaul player when his leg gave out and he collapsed to the floor. Wright left the court and later returned to the Cincinnati bench but did not play again. Wright had been the dominant player Tuesday, scoring his 20 points on 8of-11 shooting and handing out seven assists. The Bearcats led by 13 points when he exited. Cleveland Melvin led DePaul with 32 points, 10 in the last 2:03 when the Blue Demons cut a 12point lead to three.
■ Bowling
Trojans cruise, sweep Butler
STAFF PHOTO/COLIN FOSTER
Staff Reports
VANDALIA
Everything came together for the Troy girls bowling team as the Trojans shot their best score of the season to easily outdistance Butler on Tuesday at Marian Lanes. The Trojan girls (6-5, 5-0 GWOC North) followed an excellent 956 team game with a season-best 1,032 en route to a 2,351-1,892 win over the Aviators. Meanwhile, the Troy boys (10-1, 5-0 GWOC North) had little problem in downing Butler by a 2,509-2,017 count.
Natalia Sainz stole the show in the girls match with games of 220-226 for a match-high 446 series. Rachel Darrow was right behind at 443 with solid games of 227-216. Allie Isner exploded for a 243 after an opening game of 180 to end with a 423 series. Courtney Metzger rolled a steady 205-191 to finish at 396. Michael Barkett provided the highlight in the boy’s match. Barkett began the match with the first 9 strikes before leaving a 10-
Newton’s Cole Adams posts up against a National Trail defender Tuesday night.
■ Boys Basketball
Indians
Trojans
■ CONTINUED FROM 13 to knot the score at 5-5 midway through the first quarter. But the Blazers countered with an 8-0 run to finish out the quarter. National Trail had its lead up to as much as 14 on two separate occasions in the second quarter before Newton found some life on offense in the form of David Brauer. Brauer scored four consecutive points, then Gavin Alexander hit a 3pointer at the buzzer as the Indians went into the locker room down 26-19. Newton’s Brady McBride cut the deficit to five on the Indians’ first offensive possession of the third quarter, but that would be short-lived. The Blazers went on a 9-0 run to make the score 35-21. That lead remained at 14 as Trail took a 39-25 advantage into the fourth. “We cut it to five at the beginning of the third quarter, then they run off nine in a row. We can’t have that happen in that situation,”
BOYS Troy 1,003-1,068-191-247— 2,509 887-786-176-168— Butler 2,017 Troy – Cameron Hughes 180243, A.J. Bigelow 215-193,
Fisher said. The Blazers largest lead in the fourth was 19, thanks to 10 points in the quarter by Devin Mize, who finished the game with 15. Bailey Stewart added 11 points for the Blazers. Bobby Gerodimos scored eight of his 10 points in the fourth quarter. Vance added nine in the loss. Newton returns to CCC action Friday, traveling to face Miami East. National Trail — 57 Niko Nakis 0-3-3, Corey Harmon 2-3-7, Garrett Griffin 1-35, Bailey Stewart 3-5-11, Devin Mize 7-1-15, Travis Williams 2-0-6, Brandon Hammer 1-0-2, Kyle Bachman 4-0-8. Totals: 20-15-57. Newton — 40 Daniel Vance 3-2-9, Brady McBride 1-0-2, Bobby Gerodimos 3-3-10, Gavin Alexander 2-0-5, Cole Adams 2-0-4, David Brauer 13-5, Vidol Lee-Schauer 0-0-0, Ryan Hines 0-0-0, Brandon Walters 2-15, Treyton Lavy 0-0-0, Levi Armentrout 0-0-0. Totals: 14-940. Score By Quarters NT.........................13 26 39 57 Newton...................5 19 25 40 3-point goals: National Trail — Williams 2. Newton — Vance, Alexander, Gerodimos. Records: Newton 2-10.
■ Wrestling
Vikings ■ CONTINUED FROM 13 both 1-1 with a pin and Ben Ferguson (285) won a 5-2 decision to start off the dual against Kenton Ridge. “Overall, we wrestled pretty well,” Sroufe said. “We gave up too may pins and didn’t get enough against Kenton Ridge. We
pin on a good shot in the tenth. Barkett finished with a 267 game and 446 series. Cameron Hughes shot a 243 in the second game to finish with a 423 series. Corey Shiltz came in the second game and rolled a 240 game. A.J. Bigelow contributed a 215 game and Andrew Spencer added a 213. Troy travels to Bel-Mar Lanes today to take on Sidney.
left a lot of points out there, and in a dual, that’s a killer.” Miami East travels to Brookville for a dual Saturday in preparation for the State Dual Tournament, which begins on Jan. 23 at Versailles against Troy Christian.
Friday night. But that’s not something you want to stake anything on.” Tre Hudson finished with 13 points and six rebounds to lead the Trojans — who host a Greater Western Ohio Conference North Division game against Greenville Friday. Cascaden added 12 points and hit three 3s, Nelson had nine points and Tyler Miller had eight points — but only two in the second half — six rebounds and four assists. All leaving Miller and his staff looking for a way to get through to the team. “We see glimmers of it out there — hints that they’re starting to understand what they’ve got to do,” Miller said. “We see signs of it, and then for some reason we have this tendency to revert back. “We’ve just got to keep hammering away.”
Troy’s Jalen Nelson pulls up for a shot Tuesday against Fairmont. ■ CONTINUED FROM 13 the third quarter, Troy was within two at 28-26. But the Firebirds closed the quarter on a 10-2 run and scored 11 straight at one point early in the fourth to take a 44-28 lead. Just like against Piqua — where the Trojans rallied from 14 down in the game’s final four minutes to send it to overtime and eventually win — Troy showed signs of life with four minutes left in the game. Down 46-42, Jalen Nelson stole the ball and converted, then Taren Kinnel did the same immediately following to make it a 10-point game and force a Fairmont timeout. But the Firebirds were
Spencer 191-213, Andrew Michael Barkett 267-179, Austin Eidemiller 150, Corey Shiltz 240. Butler – Dylan Clark 189-160, Ryan Hetico 192-182, Carson Hoke 123, Nick Manning 184-157, Langdon McDonald 128, Jeremy Mohler 199-159. GIRLS Troy 956-1,032-183-180— 2,351 Butler 850-729-134-179— 1,892 Troy – Rachel Darrow 227216, Courtney Metzger 205-191, Allie Isner 180-243, Natalia Sainz 220-227, Rachel Wagner 124, Rahney Schmitz 156. Butler – Melissa Crombie 171-138, Mallorie Hillard 134, Emily Hoffman 152, Jennifer Kaylor 192-182, Heidi Kazee 201163, Shelby Looper 112, Lauren Schmitz 134.
PHOTOS COURTESY LEE WOOLERY/SPEEDSHOT PHOTO
Troy’s Tyler Miller fades away with a shot Tuesday night against Fairmont. “We can’t go three and a careful with the ball on offense from there, forcing half quarters of playing Troy to foul. And Fairmont lackluster on the defensive put the game away on the end and think we’re going line, going 20 for 23 in the to turn it up in the last game — 18 for 21 in the four minutes,” Miller said. “We were fortunate on fourth quarter.
Fairmont — 60 Antonio Atria 2-0-6, Aaron Abbott 2-2-6, Chris Beatty 0-0-0, Greg Bergman 2-2-8, Garrett Sexton 0-2-2, Kei’Vante Tanner 56-16, Darius Dunson 0-1-1, Jacob Maloney 3-0-6, Ethan Westbeld 2-0-4, Ben Van Oss 3-5-11. Totals: 19-20-60. Troy — 46 Luke Manis 0-0-0, Jalen Nelson 3-2-9, T.J. Michael 0-0-0, Connor Super 0-0-0, Tre Hudson 6-0-13, Tyler Miller 3-2-8, Devin Blakely 1-0-2, Dylan Cascaden 41-12, Seth Perdziola 0-0-0, Taren Kinnel 1-0-2, Cameron Adkins 00-0. Totals: 18-5-46. Score By Quarters Fairmont ............10 23 38 60 Troy......................8 20 28 46 3-point goals: Fairmont — Atria 2, Bergman 2. Troy — Nelson, Hudson, Cascaden 3. Records: Fairmont 4-10. Troy 2-12.
■ Boys Basketball
Roundup ■ CONTINUED FROM 13 Miami East 18-6 in the third quarter to go up 4231. After a slow start, Kyle Pipenger got going for TriVillage, finishing the game with 18 points. Tyler Cook led the Pats with 20 points. Garrett Mitchell scored eight out of the 10 Miami East points in the final half. He led the Vikings with 12 points and seven rebounds. Luke House added seven points. “I’m pleased with how we competed to lead at the end of the first and at half,” Mack said. “We are still looking to put together a complete game against a good team on our schedule. Obviously we didn’t do that tonight.” The Vikings (7-4, 3-2)
fans — and more importantly, one that didn’t get away as the Indians pulled out a 60-57 win over 7-3 Bethel Tuesday night at the Miami East — 35 Bee Hive. Mitchell 4-4-12, House 3-0-7, And Piqua 6-foot-4 post Beard 2-2-6, Mack 2-0-6, Hellyer 1-0-2, Hickman 1-0-2. Totals: 13- Josh Holfinger — who missed four straight free 6-35. Tri-Village — 65 throws before making one Cook 10-0-20, Pipenger 6-6- with 16.6 seconds to go to 18, Linkous 6-0-13, Warner 2-2-7, give the Indians a 58-57 lead Brubaker 3-0-7, Wilcox 0-0-0. — knew exactly what was Totals: 27-8-65. coming and what was at Score By Quarters Miami East.........14 25 31 35 stake. Tri-Village ..........13 24 42 65 “This was huge for us to 3-point goals: Miami East — House, Mack (2). Tri-Village — get this win,” Holfinger said. And as Gus Linkous, Warner, Brubaker. Records: Miami East 7-4, 3- Schwieterman drove toward 2. Tri-Village 13-0, 7-0. the basket — and Holfinger Reserve score: Tri-Village — in the final 10 seconds, 32, Miami East 31. Holfinger knew exactly Piqua 60, Bethel 57 what to do. He swatted BRANDT — This one Schwieterman’s attempt to will be remembered as the guard Tate Honeycutt, who “swat” by Piqua basketball fired it to Luke Karn for a look to rebound in CCC play, hosting Newton on Friday. The JV game starts at 6 p.m. and the varsity game is slated for 7:30 p.m.
layup at the buzzer and the final margin. “He had made that move every time,” Holfinger said of Schwieterman. “I knew exactly what he was going to do. This just feels so good right now.” And on a second straight game where Piqua lost a 14point lead — although much earlier this time — the final results were exactly what the Indians needed. Piqua had led 26-12 after the opening quarter, only to see Bethel take a 44-43 lead early in the fourth quarter on a basket by Christian Pfedderer. Holfinger quickly hit a three to erase Bethel’s only lead of the game — and it was a 49-44 lead after Colton Bachman made a layup and Harrison added
Patrick Bain 7-5-21, Gus the free throw. Bachman led Piqua, scor- Schwieterman 5-2-13, Andrew Hurst 2-0-4, Christian Pfedderer 8ing 15 points and grabbing 2-19, Aaron Bozarth 0-0-0, Jason seven rebounds before his Clendening 0-0-0, Johnny Willis 0injury. Holfinger had a dou- 0-0, Brandon James 0-0-0. Totals: ble-double with 12 points 22-9-57. Score By Quarters and 10 rebounds, Harrison Piqua......................26 31 43 60 scored 10 points and Karn Bethel.....................12 26 40 53 added nine. Erik 3-point goals: Piqua — Karn Vondenhuevel grabbed eight 3, Harrison 2, Holfinger 2, Bachman. Bethel — Bain 2, rebounds. Schwieterman, Pfedderer. Patrick Bain scored a Records: Piqua 5-7. Bethel 7-3. game-high 21 points for Covington 48, Bethel. Pfedderer added 19 Ansonia 41 points points for Bethel, ANSONIA — Dylan Schwieterman scored 13 Owens scored a game-high and Bain grabbed six 15 points, Ryan Craft had 11 rebounds. and Cole Owens added nine Piqua — 60 as the Covington Buccs Tate Honeycutt 0-5-5, Luke Karn 3-0-9, Xavier Harrison 4-2-12, improved to 5-0 in Cross Josh Holfinger 4-2-12, Erik County Conference play Vondenhuevel 1-1-3, Colton with a 48-41 victory over Bachman 6-2-15, Daniel Monnin 2- Ansonia Tuesday. 0-4, Dorian Ashe 0-0-0. Totals: 20Covington hosts unbeat12-60. en Tri-Village on Friday. Bethel — 57