01/23/13

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Wednesday A MAGIC TRICK Eagles turn steals into points in win over Xenia Christian PAGE 13

January 23, 2013 It’s Where You Live! Volume 105, No. 19

INSIDE

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Fire department deal OK’d Sale of land parcels also approved BY NATALIE KNOTH Staff Writer nknoth@civitasmedia.com

Check out this week’s iN75 Find out how you can help the Miami County Humane Society in this week’s iN75. Also, the Southern Fried Chicks Comedy Tour comes to Hobart Arena, and learn the many benefits of spaying/neutering your pets from Troy Animal Hospital.

Following an executive session, city council added two pieces of legislation to the agenda regarding compensation for city employees. Both emergency measures were approved. The ordinance pertained to salaries and

$1,700 in each of the two years that follow. Upon returning from executive session, the legislation required no further discussion. In addition, council passed a three-year TROY agreement with Local 1638 of the International Association of Firefighters, to replace a prior agreement that expired at the wages of the fire department, with seven pay end of the year. The measure sets wages, benecategories ranging from platoon commander to fits and other terms for employment. Another piece of legislation passed involved third class firefighter, from the year 2013 to 2015. The highest paid is platoon commander at about $75,041, with an increase of about • See COUNCIL on Page 2

TROY

Gauldin trial to begin today

There’s nothing quite like a beach vacation A couple of weeks ago, my family embarked on our first vacation together since I was a senior in high school. I was expecting it to be the best of times and the worst of times. Turns out, I was a little cynical. It was actually fantastic. I’d known for a year that we would be going to Orlando, Fla., for my cousin’s wedding. Last Christmas Eve, her then-boyfriend proposed during a family dinner. Plans were set for a winter wedding, and boy, I was excited at the prospect of escaping the winter cold for warm-weather paradise. See Page 4.

Eastern states considering sea walls As Jersey shore towns spend millions to rebuild boardwalks wrecked by Superstorm Sandy, some are opting for an additional layer of protection in the form of steel sea walls placed between the boards and the shoreline. The idea is to protect the boardwalks and the homes and businesses nearby from the destructive power of storm surges in the next big one.

See Page 9.

INSIDE TODAY Advice ..........................7 Calendar ......................3 Classified ...................10 Comics.........................8 Deaths .........................5 Lillian Markley Helen Stump Brian Rush Wilma Daniels James W. Grove Charmaine Garey Donna Martin Horoscopes .................8 Opinion ........................4 Sports ........................13 TV ................................7

OUTLOOK Today Afternoon snow High: 18° Low: 15° Thursday Cloudy High: 20° Low: 10°

Complete weather information on Page 9. Home Delivery: 335-5634 Classified Advertising: (877) 844-8385

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BY WILL E SANDERS Civitas Media wsanders@civitasmedia.com

STAFF PHOTOS/ANTHONY WEBER

Sonia Holycross holds an original flier promoting a 1964 city-wide rally featuring Dr. Martin Luther King, Jr. during an MLK day march through downtown Troy Monday.

Protesters can’t drown out message of equality Marchers brave cold temperatures during event to honor Dr. Martin Luther King Jr. BY NATALIE KNOTH Staff Writer nknoth@civitasmedia.com iven the presence of National Socialist Movement protesters, the words sung Monday by marchers in the annual Martin Luther King Jr. celebration were especially appropriate: “We shall overcome someday/ Deep in my heart, I do believe/ We shall overcome someday.” By 9:30 a.m., about 50 members of the community met downtown outside Bakehouse Bread & Cookie Co. on a cold, blustery morning. Shortly before the march began, a handful of protesters congregated across the street,

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Hands are embraced during a prayer given by Pastor Dave Richey prior to a march celebrating the life of Dr. Martin Luther King Jr. on the Public Square Monday in Troy. resisters and instead focus on perpetuating King’s message. “We are here for the bearing signs. Marchers were urged to call of civil rights and harmony among all peoignore the shouting of

TROY

ple,” said Pastor Charles Carnes of Troy Apostolic Church of Jesus Christ. “We don’t have to pay

• See EQUALITY on Page 2

Just how cold was it out there? Tuesday’s cold snap breaks record that stood since 1946 BY MELANIE YINGST Staff Writer myingst@tdnpublishing.com While people out and about in the freezing temperatures Tuesday braved the cold with chattering teeth, Tuesday’s frigid temperatures took a bite out of a record for the lowest maximum temperature that held since 1946. According to Jeff Sites, meteorolo6

MIAMI COUNTY gist with the National Weather Service said Tuesday’s high temperature of 15 degrees narrowly broke the record of 16 degrees that was set in 1946. “We only got up to 15 degrees (Tuesday). It’s never been so cold for a high temperature,” Sites said. “The high temperature of just 15 degrees set a record for the lowest maximum

temperature in the Dayton area.” Sites, a meteorologist with 14 years of experience, said Tuesday’s morning’s low of 4 degrees felt more like negative 12 degrees with the wind chill before sunrise. The region registered wind chills of negative 12 degrees, which was achieved at 6:07 a.m. Tuesday morning.

• See COLD on Page 2

The three-day bench trial for Travis Lee Gauldin, who stands accused of murdering a 4-year-old Piqua girl he was babysitting in April, was expected to begin today in Miami County Common Pleas Court. Short of a last second plea deal or a court continuance, opening statements and testimony are expected to be heard in the case beginning at 9 a.m. today. Gauldin, who is allowing a judge, not a jury, to hear the case, has b e e n charged in GAULDIN the murder of Malisa DeLeSancha, 4, of Piqua. She died from injuries the child suffered on the night of April 12 as he babysat the child and her siblings for his then-girlfriend who was at work during the incident. Gauldin, 22, of Troy, entered a not guilty plea to the murder charge May 30 after a Miami County grand jury indicted him on the lone murder charge. A forensic psychological examination found Gauldin was competent to stand trial. Two of the other children the suspected murderer was watching on the night of the incident, an 8year-old girl and a 7-yearold boy, could be called to testify after undergoing similar competency tests. Also expected to give testimony are several Piqua Police Department detectives and officers and paramedics from the Piqua Fire Department who responded 1012 Caldwell St., which is where the victim, her siblings and their mother lived. DeLeSancha suffered injuries on the night of April 12 that reportedly appeared to be the result of serious trauma and later died at the hospital a few days later from those injuries. In a distressed 9-1-1 call on the night of the incident, Gauldin claimed the child fell down a flight of 16 wooden steps at the residence, which is where he was residing at the time. Gauldin also is awaiting trial for a misdemeanor charge of domestic violence and has been convicted on two counts of violating his probation/parole.

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LOCAL & NATION

Wednesday, January 23, 2013

LOTTERY

Equality

CLEVELAND (AP) — Here are the winning numbers drawn Tuesday by the Ohio Lottery: • Pick 4 Midday: 7-5-0-6 • Pick 5 Midday: 2-1-0-3-9 • Pick 3 Midday: 5-9-2 • Pick 3 Evening: 7-0-2 • Pick 4 Evening: 3-7-8-5 • Pick 5 Evening: 4-8-1-6-8 • Rolling Cash 5: 05-22-2931-36 Estimated jackpot: $130,000

• CONTINUED FROM 1

• The Troy Elevator The grain prices listed below are the closing prices of Tuesday. Corn Month Bid Change Dec 7.4350 + 0.0100 Mar 7.4750 + 0.0100 NC 13 5.5000 - 0.0050 Soybeans Bid Change Month Dec 14.5700 + 0.2250 Mar 14.5700 + 0.2250 NC 13 12.5750 + 0.2025 Wheat Month Bid Change 7.4900 - 0.1200 Dec NC 13 7.5800 - 0.1125 You can find more information online at www.troyelevator.com.

• Stocks of local interest Values reflect closing prices from Tuesday. Symbol Price Change 9.20 +0.20 AA CAG 31.94 +0.24 CSCO 20.87 -0.14 EMR 56.82 +0.93 F 14.17 +0.06 FITB 16.50 +0.12 FLS 157.08 -0.23 GM 28.63 -0.65 ITW 63.65 -0.07 JCP 18.73 -0.14 KMB 87.20 +0.38 KO 37.13 -0.57 KR 27.43 +0.35 LLTC 36.38 -0.10 MCD 92.95 +0.69 13.05 -0.11 MSFG PEP 72.20 -0.28 SYX 10.11 -0.31

Council

Cold

• CONTINUED FROM 1 selling surplus vacant parcels. The land includes about 1.6 acres at the intersection of Peters Road and Peters Avenue; over two acres at Hunters Ridge Drive and Lee Road; and roughly 0.3 acres west of Amelia Avenue, north of West Ross Road. Nearby property owners will be notified of the sale. In other council news: • Under another council resolution, the duty injury leave of city employee Jerry E. Carter was extended from 90 to 120 days. Director of Public Service and Safety Patrick Titterington noted that information related to his injury could not be disclosed under HIPPA privacy laws. • Also approved was an agreement with Hazen and Sawyer, P.C. for a sewer collection system model, with costs budgeted at $140,000. 2351077

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He praised King for his commitment to using nonviolent resistance to achieve integration, as a means to the greater goal of equal opportunity. Adams also traced the history of King’s efforts in the civil rights movement, while also noting the work of the late William McCulloch, a former congressman from Miami County who was instrumental in the passage of the Civil Rights Act of 1964 and the Voting Rights Act of 1965. Despite the improvements made since the 1950s and ’60s, Adams said King would not be satisfied with present society. “The task is never fully completed. As long as one does not have equal opportunity, the work must go forward,” he said. STAFF PHOTO/ANTHONY WEBER Rev. David Richey of Mark Martin and members of a western Ohio National Socialist Richards Chapel United Movement group display signs during a march Monday in Troy. Methodist echoed Adams’ sentievent didn’t garner more atten- Richard Adams, who is serving ments. “We still have work to do. his third term in the Ohio tion. But we’re not doing it alone,” “I feel like it should be a big- House of Representatives. “We gather together to repre- Richey said. “There are still ger deal and longer,” Smith sent the efforts of our founding struggles — those who are said, adding, “We’re marching homeless, those without food or fathers, Abraham Lincoln, and for what other people did for Martin Luther King Jr. — espe- education. The dream still us.” needs fulfilling.” Yet those present responded cially Martin Luther King Jr.,” Music during the celebration enthusiastically to the speakers, Adams said, later adding, “You see, Dr. Martin Luther King Jr. was provided by the St. Patrick at times proclaiming Contemporary Choir and Troy “Hallelujah!” Rev. Richard Culp is not only an American hero, but he’s a hero to me. A man of residents Ashton Kiplinger and of First Presbyterian Church courage, a man of vision, a man Angel White. A catered lunch and Mayor Michael Beamish followed the service. spoke prior to keynote speaker of faith.”

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• No comments were made during a public hearing for an ordinance regarding temporary signs. The legislation will have another reading. • Shirley Snyder was reappointed to the Economic Development Revolving Loan Fund Committee, which she has served on since 1996. • Based on the recommendation of foreman Jerry Mullins, the solid waste division will now pick up special trash everyday alongside regular trash, Titterington said. • Councilman Bobby Phillips noted that he had been contacted by a corporation in town that was concerned about a recent USA Today story in which Troy was depicted as having “an explosion of poverty in the past four years.” Phillips recommended city officials are proactive in confronting any misconceptions about Troy.

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• CONTINUED FROM 1 School children had a few more hours to search for hats, mittens and scarves as schools delayed class due to the subzero temperatures. School officials used the two-hour delays due to below zero with wind chill temperatures were deemed too cold for children to walk to school or wait for the bus in the frigid temperatures. Ohio Gov. John Kasich restored school district’s calamity days to five. Most local districts have only used one calamity day so far this school year. Troy City Schools have yet to close its doors due to weather so far this school year.

WASHINGTON (AP) — A Pentagon investigation has cleared Gen. John Allen, the top U.S. commander in Afghanistan, of professional misconduct in exchanging emails with a civilian woman linked to the sex scandal that led retired Gen. David

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nications with Kelley between 2010 and 2012 were in question. None of the emails have been made public. Shortly after being contacted by the FBI, Panetta referred the matter to the Pentagon’s inspector general, while expressing confidence in Allen and deciding that he would remain in Kabul as commander of all allied forces in Afghanistan. At the same time, Allen’s nomination to be the next U.S. commander of NATO forces in Europe was put on hold. The officials said Tuesday the White House had not decided whether to go forward with the nomination. Maj. David Nevers, a spokesman for Allen, said he had no immediate comment on reports of his being exonerated. Allen’s successor in Kabul, Marine Gen. Joseph Dunford, has been confirmed by the Senate and is scheduled to take over on Feb. 10.

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Petraeus to resign as CIA director. Pentagon press secretary George Little said Tuesday that Defense Secretary Leon Panetta was informed of the conclusion by the Pentagon’s inspector general. “The secretary was pleased to learn that allegations of professional misconduct were not substantiated by the investigation,” Little said, adding that Panetta has “complete confidence in the continued leadership” of Allen. The matter had been referred to the Pentagon in November by the FBI during the course of its investigation of emails between Petraeus and his biographer-turned-paramour, Paula Broadwell. The FBI turned up thousands of emails between Allen and Jill Kelley, who was said to have received threatening emails from Broadwell. At the time, officials said 20,000 to 30,000 pages of emails and other documents from Allen’s commu-

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Sites said a weak snow system will move through the area today with an inch or less of accumulation. Highs today are expected to reach into the 20s with temperatures still 5 to 10 degrees in the morning. Thursday’s weather should have afternoon highs in the 20s and lows in the 10degree range. A chance of snow is expected Thursday night into Friday morning. “There will be a better chance of accumulation on Thursday night,” Sites said, adding that snow accumulation likely will be more than today’s light snowfall. On Friday, high temperatures are expected to reach the upper 20s, Sites added.

U.S. Afghan commander cleared in Petraeus email investigation

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attention to the resisters. If we pay attention to them, we give them what they wanted.” Marchers walked down South Market and Franklin streets to Walnut Street, where they were met with heckling from NSM members around the corner from the First Presbyterian Church. Troy Police Department officers asked the group of protesters to step back after they shouted contemptuous remarks. “We had a couple derogatory comments that were made and they were asked to go to the other side of the sidewalk, and they complied,” said Officer Brandon Fellers, noting that the march went smoothly otherwise. After the church celebration began, protesters moved to the southwest corner of the square, he added. Evangelist Trina Collier, cochair of the Troy King Team that organized the event, thanked all those in attendance, particularly the young people who will be “planting the seeds” for further strides in civil rights, she said. Among those present were Zavaugnn Smith, 15, and Alynzia Hale, 13, who both attend Troy City Schools. Smith said she was pleased with the diversity of participants, but was surprised the

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&REGION

January 23, 2013

TROY DAILY NEWS • WWW.TROYDAILYNEWS.COM

the Miami County Junior 4-H camp. Pre-sale tickets can be purchased at the Miami • KIWANIS MEETING: County Farm Bureau, The The Kiwanis Club of Troy Ohio State University will meet from noon to 1 C o m m u n i t y Extension office at the Miami p.m. at the Troy Country County Courthouse, Troy Club. Lindsay Woodruff, Calendar Elevator or Heritage outreach coordinator of Cooperative’s Fletcher Big Brothers Big Sisters of CONTACT US branch. the Greater Miami Valley • MAPLE SYRUP: A will speak about her work Magic of Maple Syrup Time and the program in Miami farm walk will start at 2:30 County. For more informaCall Melody p.m. at Aullwood. Take a wintion, contact Donn Craig, ter walk through the Sugar Vallieu at vice president, at (937) bush and get an inside look 440-5265 to 418-1888. at how farmers prepare for • DINE TO DONATE: list your free maple syrup season. Help support Brukner Discover how trees are calendar Nature Center’s wildlife tapped, buckets are hung, items.You from 5-8 p.m. by dining at sap is collected and how the Marion’s Piazza, 1270 can send evaporator works its magic Experiment Farm Road, your news by e-mail to to turn sap into maple syrup. Troy. For diners who presvallieu@tdnpublishing.com. After a hike to the Sugar ent a flier, Marion’s will House, come inside for hot donate a percentage of the chocolate and taste some total food bill for pizza, maple syrup. scrumptious sandwiches and spaghetti, • CLEVER LETTERS: School-age chilto the center, dine-in or carry-out. Fliers dren and their families are invited to the can be found at the interpretive building or email Brukner Nature Center at (937) 698- Troy-Miami County Public Library between 1-3 p.m. to discover fun ways to design 6493 or info@bruknernaturecenter.com. stationery, create cards and write wonder• PAWS TO READ: Children in kinderful letters. No registration required. garten through third-grade students are • CHILI COOK OFF: Miami County invited to the Troy-Miami County Public Relay for Life teams will be making their Library between 7-7:40 p.m. to read to a favorite chili for the community to sample local certified therapy dog, Tina. Call the from 11 a.m. to 2 p.m. at the Miami Valley library at 339-0502 to sign up for a 10 Centre Mall, Piqua. The winner of the best minute reading time slot. chili will be the team who collects the most • ADULT LECTURE: A WACO Adult donations during the event. Proceeds will Lecture will feature World War II veterans benefit Relay for Life. Gailard Ketcham and Charlie Baker dis• STEAK FRY: The Pleasant Hill VFW cussing the Battle of Iwo Jima at 7 p.m. at Post No. 6557, 7578 W. Fenner Road, the WACO Air Museum, 1865 S. County Ludlow Falls, will offer a T-bone steak dinRoad 25-A, Troy. For more information, go ner with salad, baked potato and a roll for to www.wacoairmuseum.org or call (937) $11 from 5-8 p.m. 335-WACO. • POT PIE: A chicken pot pie dinner will • BLOOD DRIVE: A blood drive will be be offered from 4-6:30 p.m. at Troy View from noon to 6 p.m. at First Presbyterian Church of God, 1770 N. County Road 25Church, 20 S. Walnut St., Troy. Those who A, Troy. Dinner also will include mashed register will receive a free long-sleeve “I potatoes, green beans, corn, tossed salad Am a Blood Donor” T-shirt. Individuals with and dessert. Adults will be $7, children 4eligibility questions are invited to email 12 years $4 and those 3 years and under canidonate@cbccts.org or call (800) 388are free. GIVE. Make an appointment at • FULL MOON WALK: A full moon walk www.DonorTime.com. will be offer from 7-8:30 p.m. at Aullwood, 1000 Aullwood Road, Dayton. An Aullwood THURSDAY naturalist will lead this evening walk in the light of the beautiful Snow Moon. Dress • FRIED CHICKEN: American Legion warmly for the cold night air. Post No. 43, 622 S. Market St., is offering a four-piece southern fried chicken dinner SUNDAY from 5-7:30 p.m. Included with the chicken is potato salad and baked beans for $8. • FAMILY QUEST: The Miami County • TACO SALADS: The ladies of the Park District will have its Family Quest American Legion Auxiliary, Tipp City Post No. 586, will serve taco salads from 6-7:30 Sunday “Tracks in the Snow” program between 1-4 p.m. at Charleston Falls p.m. Euchre will start at 7 p.m. and is $5. Preserve, 2535 Ross Road, south of Tipp • PROJECT FEEDERWATCH: Come City. Come to the program and discover count birds, drink coffee, eat doughnuts the different types of tracks animals leave and share stories from 9:30-11:30 a.m. at behind. There will be animals and an aniAullwood. The bird counts help contribute mal track trail set in place. Dress for the to scientific studies at the Cornell Lab of weather and meet at the falls. Pre-register Ornithology. Admission is free. Check out for the program online at www.miamicounthe Cornell website at typarks, email to register@miamicountywww.bird.cornell.edu/pfw for more parks.com or call (937) 335-6273, Ext. information. 104. • DISCOVERY WALK: A morning dis• OPEN HOUSE: Troy Christian covery walk for adults will be from 8-9:30 Schools will hold its annual open house a.m. at Aullwood Audubon Center, 1000 from 1:30-3:30 p.m. at both school locaAullwood Road, Dayton. Tom Hissong, tions. The early childhood education ceneducation coordinator, will lead walkers as ter, preschool, pre-kindergarten and they experience the wonderful seasonal kindergarten through sixth grade school changes taking place. Bring binoculars. is located at 1586 McKaig Ave., Troy. The junior high/high school is located next FRIDAY door at 700 S. Dorset Road, Troy. Teachers and staff members will be on • FRIDAY DINNERS: Dinner will be hand to greet parents and students, offered from 5-8 p.m. at the Covington answer questions and give a tour of the VFW Post 4235, 173 N. High St., facility. Light refreshments will be offered. Covington. Choices will include a $12 New Enrollment for new students begins Jan. York strip steak, broasted chicken, fish, 25. Contact the school office at (937) shrimp and sandwiches, all made-to-order. 339-5692 or check out the website at • FISH AND FRIES: The American www.troychristianschools.org for more Legion Post No. 586, Tipp City, will offer information. fish and fries or sausage and kraut dinner • BREAKFAST OFFERED: Breakfast for $7 from 6-7:30 p.m. will be offered at the Pleasant Hill VFW • SEAFOOD DINNER: The Pleasant Post 6557, 7578 W. Fenner Road, Ludlow Hill VFW Post No. 6557, 7578 W. Fenner Falls, from 8-11 a.m. Made-to-order Road, Ludlow Falls, will offer a three-piece breakfasts will be offered and everything fried fish dinner, 21-piece fried shrimp or a is ala carte. fish/shrimp combo with french fries and • BASKET BINGO: The Miami East coleslaw for $6 from 6-7:30 p.m. Frog legs, FFA Alumni Chapter will sponsor basket when available, are $10. bingo at 2 p.m. in the Miami East High • SOCK HOP: The American Legion Cafeteria. Longaberger Baskets will be Post No. 586, Tipp City, will have a “sock the prize for the 20 games, with the hop wwith a twist.” Go back in time to the grand prize being a retired basket fea’50s, ’60s or ’70s with dancing, contests, ture. Doors will open at 1:30 p.m. Tickets games and prizes. Dress in any of the eras are $20 for the 20 games and a raffle attire if desired or come as you are. GJ the entry. There will also be raffles, extra DJ will provide music and a light show games and concessions sales offered. All starting at 7:30 p.m. right after the post fish winning tie-breaking cards win a consolafry/sausage dinner. Bring a snack to share tion prize of a Longaberger product. at the party. Admission is free. Tickets can be purchased by calling the • FISH DINNER: An all-you-can-eat fish Miami East FFA Alumni Chapter at (937) dinner will be offered from 5:30-8 p.m. The 335-7070, Ext. 3212, or by purchasing meal will include fries and coleslaw for $8. them at the door. • PROJECT FEEDERWATCH: Come • SPEAKER SERIES: “Coyotes in Your count birds, drink coffee, eat doughnuts Backyard” will be part of Aullwood’s and share stories from 9:30-11:30 a.m. at Winter Speaker Series starting at 2:30 Aullwood. The bird counts help contribute p.m. with speaker Dr. Stanley Gehrt, a to scientific studies at the Cornell Lab of certified wildlife biologist and associate Ornithology. Admission is free. Check out professor at The Ohio State University the Cornell website at and an expert in urban coyotes. Learn www.bird.cornell.edu/pfw for more about this fascinating study and more information. coyotes in our region, watch video of coyote behavior and gain a greater understanding of this elusive creature. SATURDAY

TODAY

FYI

• FLAPJACK FUNDRAISER: The Miami County Young Farmers present a “Flapjack Fundraiser” from 7:30 a.m. to 10 a.m. at Staunton Grange, located at 1530 N. Market St., Troy. Tickets are $5 pre-sale and $7 at the door. The all-you-can-eat pancakes are served by Chris Cakes. Proceeds benefit a local food pantry and

HONOR ROLL

St. Patrick Catholic School TROY — St. Patrick Catholic School has announced the following students earned honors during the second quarter of the 2012-2013 school year: • First honors, 3.5 GPA or higher Fourth grade — Lauren Adkins, Tag Bender, Rachel Bloom, Daniel Canavan, Noelle Dexter, Noah George, Aaron Johnson, Caden Lombardo, Lucas

Nguyen, Carianne Rindler, Natalie Rossy, Paola Vazquez and John Wesner. Fifth grade — MariCait Gillespie, Nathan Kleptz, Danny Lins, Tyler Owens, Jillian Peltier and Angie Rice. Sixth grade — Katie Castaneda, Ciena Miller and Ann Pannapara. Seventh grade — Grace Dexter, Mele Paikai, Leah Peoples, Natalie Rocke, Caitlin Swallow, Kelsey Weber and Michael Wesner. • Second honors, 3.03.49 GPA

Fourth grade — Kendall Brown, Genna Coleman, Ryan Dowling, Elsa Neidlinger, Ala’i Paikai and Lisa Senter. Fifth grade — Chloe Coleman, Tommy Hamlin, Sam Madigan, Jake Melton, Seth Peoples, Nathan Rocke and Julia Rose Williams. Sixth grade — Haley Bloom, Anya Coleman, Cole Gilardi, Ben Roller, Lauren Roy and Aidan Snyder. Seventh grade — Zach Bopp, Max Hamlin, Joe Melton and Connor Roy.

AREA BRIEFS

Card club winners named MIAMI COUNTY — TWIG 4 Card Club Marathon winners for the month of December as follows: Bridge winners Group 1: First — Jean Shaneyfelt and Arlene Ehlers; second — Mickey Fletcher and Barb Wilson; third — Nancy Yarger and Dottie Zimmerman. Group 2: First — Tom and Sue Gagnon; second — Jim and Susan Wilson; third — Dick and Sandy Adams. Group 3: First — Dolores Maloney and Sally Adams; second — Carla Lohrer and Joanne Disbrow; third — Lou Holter and Judy Logan. Group 4: First — Lou Holter; second — Susy Porter; third — Barb Wilson. Group 7: First — Bill and Mary Lynne Mouser; second — Mike and Cindy Wehrkamp; third — Tim and Sally Adams. Group 8: First — Bonnie Rashilla; second — Judy Logan; third — Nancy Nims. Group 9: First — Dottie Laufer and Anita Cain; second — Jan Wise and Joan Flory.

Grant application deadline is Feb. 28 CAR presents MIAMI COUNTY — program Not-for-profit organizations are reminded the next grant deadline for the Miami County Foundation is Feb. 28. Applicants must provide services directly to the residents of Miami County. All must be certified federally tax-exempt by the Internal Revenue Service and preferably be a 501(c)(3) organization. Historically, grants have been awarded to human and social service organizations, schools, health care providers, libraries, youth and senior groups, as well as the arts. Application forms are available online at www.miamicountyfoundation.org or by contacting the office at (937) 7739012. Guidelines restrict organizations to one grant annually. If you received a grant in the spring, you are not eligible to reapply until the next grant deadline. Schools and ongoing humanitarian grant recipients are exempt from this restriction. Successful applicants will receive notification of the fall distribution date.

TROY — The PiquaLewis Boyer Daughters of the American Revolution and The Fort Pickawillany Society of Children of the American Revolution met in January at the TroyHayner Cultural Center. The program conducted by the CAR was on Saratoga, the turning point, in the Revolutionary War. General Burgoyne surrendered to General Gateson Oct. 17, 1777. The Sword Surrender Site near Schuylerville, N.Y., is being developed by the Saratoga National Historical Park with plans to link related historical sites by trail. This also was the national project of the CAR to raise funds for the site. A guest attending was Stewart Seely, state president of Ohio Society Children of the American Revolution. Interested children and students with lineage to ancestors who fought in the Continental Army or provided services, contact the Fort Pickawillany Society or senior president Becky Miller. For more information, visit www.nscar.org and www.ohiocar.org.

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LOCAL

MONDAY • BOOK LOVERS: Join the Book Lovers Anonymous adult book discussion group at 6 p.m. at the Troy-Miami County Library. The group will be reading and discussing “The Beautiful Mystery,” by Louise Penny.

2354874


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 dfong@civitasmedia.com.

XXXday, 2010 Wednesday, January 23,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

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Question: Do you trust the state 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 Guardian, London, on former Sen. Hagel’s secretary of Defense nomination: The remarkable thing about President Barack Obama’s nomination of Sen. Chuck Hagel as his new defense secretary is not the fact that Hagel is a Republican. It is the fact that the Republican whom the president has chosen as defense secretary is Hagel. Many U.S. presidents like to have members of the other party somewhere in their cabinets — even George W. Bush followed that custom. And Democratic presidents, attracted to putting defense issues above party, have frequently put a Republican into the Pentagon, as John Kennedy did with Robert McNamara, and other successors including Bill Clinton have done since. Hagel, however, is not a typical modern Republican. He is a conservative on domestic policy but he is very independent on defense and security, and has long been out of line with mainstream Republican thinking, particularly since 9/11. In his 12 years in the U.S. Senate, from which he stepped down in 2008, Hagel was often out of step not just with his own party but with some Democrats too — his friend, fellow Vietnam veteran and Nebraska senator Bob Kerrey, was similarly iconoclastic. The unifying feature of Hagel’s security record is skepticism about assertive U.S. unilateralism and his advocacy of what he calls “principled realism”. This stance puts him at the opposite end of the Pentagon spectrum from Republicans such as Donald Rumsfeld. An opponent of the Vietnam war, Hagel had no time for the Bush-era “war on terror” either. He voted for the Iraq war but has subsequently dubbed Iraq and Afghanistan as 20th-century solutions to 21st-century problems. He thinks America cannot be the world’s policeman. He thinks that America should not be isolated, either. But it is why the rest of the world ought to see his arrival at the Pentagon as an appointment full of possibilities. Ottawa Citizen, Ontario, on the Keystone XL oil pipeline: U.S. President Barack Obama’s move last year to delay a decision on a permit for the Keystone XL oil pipeline extension was widely — and rightly — regarded as self-serving. He was up for re-election and needed to curry favor with the eco-electorate. This year, with his second term assured, Obama has the chance to restore reasoned and coherent governance to his administration, at least on this file. According to a new study by Nebraska’s state environmental regulators, TransCanada has complied with the U.S. government’s requirement that it find an alternative route that avoids Nebraska’s Sand Hills region and its crucial aquifer. In fact, the study indicates that the company has reworked its $5.3-billion U.S. project to bypass numerous ecologically sensitive areas in the state. Keystone XL, which is part of a more extensive 2,700kilometre system stretching from Alberta to Texas… will cross fewer areas of threatened or endangered species habitat and avoid many regions with fragile soil. The company has also addressed most every concern raised by environmental groups and citizen advocates, agreeing to dozens of special conditions… According to TransCanada, the physical and chemical properties of the crude oil to be carried in Keystone XL “will be similar to the light and heavy crude oils already being transported safely in pipelines across the United States.” That is no small thing considering that North America’s energy infrastructure with its hundreds of pipelines is like a tangled ball of wool in its interconnectedness. Finally, TransCanada has committed itself to taking responsibility, technical and financial, for any spills. Obama has to decide whether he’s going to continue to exploit Keystone XL for partisan purposes or do what’s in the national interest of the United States — less dependence on Middle East oil and respectful relations with Canada.

LETTERS

Take a close look at U.S. shootings

2) At Fort Hood, it was a registered Democrat and radical Muslim who supported AlQaeda and Hamas. To the Editor: 3) At Columbine, they were After doing some investigatoo yong to vote, but both famition on the Internet, some lies were registered Democrats interesting things were uncovered. All five of the mass shoot- and progressive liberals. 4) At Virginia Tech, he wrote ings in the United States were hate mail to President Bush committed by liberal and was a registered Democrats. 1) None of the shooters were Democrat. NRA members. 5) At the Colorado theater,

he was a registered Democrat, staff worker on the Obama campaign, Occupy Wall Street participant and a progressive liberal. 6) The Connecticut school shooter was a registered Democrat and hated Christans. This should give us some food for thought.

WRITETO US: The Troy Daily News welcomes signed letters to the editor. Letters must contain your home address and a telephone number where you can be reached during the day. Letters must be shorter than 500 words as a courtesy to other writers. We reserve the right to edit for length and clarity. MAIL: 224 S. Market, Troy, Ohio, 45373; E-MAIL: editorial@tdnpublishing.com; FAX (937) 440-5286; ONLINE: www.troydailynews.com (“Letters To The Editor” link on left side).

DOONESBURY

Nothing like a beach vacation and family wedding A couple of weeks ago, my family embarked on our first vacation together since I was a senior in high school. I was expecting it to be the best of times and the worst of times. Turns out, I was a little cynical. It was actually fantastic. I’d known for a year that we would be going to Orlando, Fla., for my cousin’s wedding. Last Christmas Eve, her thenboyfriend proposed during a family dinner. Plans were set for a winter wedding, and boy, I was excited at the prospect of escaping the winter cold for warmweather paradise. Once Christmas this year rolled around, I was counting down the days till I could trade the bone-chilling cold for 70degree sunshine and sandy beaches. In fact, when I got my new desk calendar here at work, I obnoxiously scribbled FLORIDA in pink highlighter across the second week of January. That became my motivation to get everything done. On a Saturday morning, I left with my parents and grandma for Cocoa Beach, where we were staying for a few days before driving an hour to Orlando for

Natalie Knoth Troy Daily News Columnist the site of the wedding festivities. On the agenda for Cocoa Beach was nothing but taking in some rays and melting my worries away. Naturally, the weather wasn’t quite up to par some days, when temperatures hovered in the low 60s and storm clouds threatened our vision of a picturesque vacation. But that made me only want to cherish my time on the beach even more. I would wake up early and, upon seeing the sun streaming through my window, would immediately throw on a sundress and walk the beach by myself for an hour. It was therapeutic in every sense imaginable. My foodie self also loved checking out local restaurants. There’s something about going

— Paul Huelskamp Troy

out to eat on vacation that makes me so happy, although I have to admit that often the experience, and not the food, is the real draw. Same goes for shopping at those outlet stores that always seem to crop up around major tourist hubs. The clothes aren’t that great, but foraging around for deals in a new city can be just dandy. Of course, my vision of vacation is always a little more blissful than what actually happens. While I adore my family, spending a few days in a tiny condo proved a bit much at times. Then I had one of the worst headaches ever for three days. Ugh. But I mean, really. This was Florida. How can you complain without sounding like a babbling, ungrateful fool? Anyway, after a few days on the beach, I was soon to find that the best was yet to come. We drove to Orlando for a barbecue at my relatives’ house, where we met the wedding party and the groom’s family. They couldn’t be any nicer or more fun. A couple days later was the wedding, which was an absolute blast — more fun than I could have ever anticipated. Every -

thing about the church ceremony was glorious, from the heartfelt vows to the adorable ring-bearers. I know this sounds cheesy, but love was emanating from everyone and everything. So many smiles, so much laughter, so many memories. The real fun was to be had at the wedding reception though, of course. I have to say, weddings are just awesome. After all, it’s a celebration of love. Throw in an open bar, ridiculous dancing and a free photo booth, and I’m on cloud nine. After the night ended, I was already counting down the days till my other cousin’s wedding and a couple friends’ weddings this year. There’s nothing quite like living vicariously through other people. Now that I’m back in (5degree) Ohio, I’m pretty wistful for the relaxation and revelry I had on vacation. But rather than feeling crushed that it’s over, I’m grateful that I had a week to get renewed and kick off the year right. Here’s to riding out the happiness wave for a least a couple more weeks. Natalie Knoth appears on Wednesdays in the Troy Daily News

Troy Troy Daily News

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Wednesday, January 23, 2013

5

OBITUARIES

BRIAN M. RUSH CASSTOWN — Brian M. Rush, 38, of Casstown, passed away at 10:30 a.m. Monday, Janu. 21, 2013. Born on Dec. 11, 1974, in Troy, Brian was a son of Lynn and Vickie (Schwartz) Rush. He is survived by his father, Lynn (Debbie) Rush of Christiansburg and his mother Vickie Haren of Iverness, Fla. RUSH He married Nicole Sue Henry on June 14, 1997, and she survives along with their son, Riley H. Rush. Brian also is survived by four brothers, Rick Rush of Casstown, Andrew (Jennifer) Rush of Conover, Scott (Kylie) Rush of Tipp City and Martin Rush of Piqua. He was a much loved uncle to 19 nieces and nephews, Morgan, Arleigh, Grace, Emma, and Tucker Rush, Mady and Mayson VanHoose, Layton and Hadley Rush, Austin, Trey and Sera Rush, Atreyu and Isabele Lansing, Kyle and Daniel Gross, Lyndsey Puchalski, Alex and Katie Henry. He also is survived by his maternal grandmother, Joyce Schwartz of Springfield; his step siblings, Angie Lansing of

Christiansburg, Toni Lansing of Troy and Brian (Tiffany) Lansing of Piqua; and many other extended family members. He was preceded in death by his paternal grandparents, Harry R. and Thelma Ruth Rush; and his maternal grandfather, James Schwartz. Brian was a 1993 graduate of Graham High School where he was a member of the FFA. He was a co-owner of Rush Concrete Construction. Brian enjoyed hunting and being outdoors. A celebration of his life will be at 5 p.m. Saturday, Jan. 26, 2013, in the home of Andy and Jenny Rush, 13000 State Route 29, Conover, OH 45317. Memorial contributions may be made to Miami County Hospice, P.O. Box 502, Troy, OH 45373. Envelopes will be available at the celebration of life. Condolences to the family may be sent to www.shivelyfuneralhomes.com. Suber-Shively Funeral Home, 201 W. Main St., Fletcher, is serving the family.

CHARMAINE M. GAREY COVINGTON — Charmaine M. Garey, 75, of Covington, passed away 5:05 a.m. Friday, Jan. 11, 2013, at her residence after a long and courageous battle with cancer. Charmaine was born July 20, 1937, in Nelsonville, Ohio, to the late Joseph and Darlie (Sweazy) Pritchard. She was married to Albert L. Garey on June 20, 1955; and he surGAREY vives.Charmaine also is survived by two sons, James Garey of Ft. Lauderdale, Fla., Scott Garey of Los Angeles, Calif.; one daughter and sonin-law, Traci and Keith Kropp of Troy; two grandchildren, Nikki (Brian) Francis and A.J. Kropp; and one brother, Theron Pritchard of Columbus, Ohio. She was

preceded in death by her brother, Benjamin Pritchard. She attended St. John’s Lutheran Church in Covington and was a lifelong animal lover, dog owner and an avid kayaker.There will be a memorial service 1:30 p.m. Saturday, Jan. 26, 2013, at Fisher-Cheney Funeral Home with the Rev. Steve Nierman officiating. Visitation will be from 1-1:30 p.m. prior to the service. Contributions may be made to the Miami County Animal Shelter, 205 W. Main St., Troy, OH 45373, or to Hospice of Miami County: P.O. Box 502, Troy, OH 45373. Condolences may be left for the family at www.fishercheneyfuneralhome.com.

JAMES W. GROVE

School and was a 1939 graduTROY — James Wm. ate of Troy High School. Grove, 91, formerly of Troy, He was a former member of Ohio, more recently of Ludlow Falls Christian Church Sidney, Ohio, passed away and was a current member of Jan. 22, 2013, at Dorothy St. John’s United Church of Love Retirement Community, Christ, Troy. Sidney. Mr. Grove farmed until he He was born March 2, retired in 1999. 1921, in Troy, to the late He was a substitute bus drivBenjamin and Ruth WILMA DARLENE PERKINS DANIELS er for Troy Schools from 1942(Brinkman) Grove. 1948 and was a full-time driver He married Susannah P. loved sitting around the table FERRON — Wilma Darlene GROVE from 1948-1987. He greeted (McBride) on March 29, 1952; visiting with family and friends Perkins Daniels, 82, passed and spending quality time with and she preceded him in death Feb. 24, students by name as they boarded away Jan. 19, 2013, in daily. The best part was later getting to 2001. them especially when they Ferron, Utah. He is survived by one son and daugh- transport the grandchildren of the origiwere kids. Her kids are going She was born May 6, 1930, nal students on his route. to miss her blackberry cobbler, ter-in-law, David James and Emma to Thomas F. Ross and Clora He also worked at Hobart Brothers Grove of Fallston, Md.; one daughter and chicken and dumplings. Crabtree in Pine Knot, Ky. Co. from 1965-1975. and son-in-law, Sara R. and John Wilma was a member of the She married Jack A. Services will be at 10:30 a.m. McNabb of Piqua; two brothers and Church of Jesus Christ of Perkins on July 25, 1947, in Saturday, Jan. 26, 2013, at St. John’s three sisters-in-law, Emory and Gwen Latter-Day Saints and worked Whitley City, Ky. Grove of Sidney, Ohio, and Harold and United Church of Christ, Troy, with the at the Manti LDS Temple for Jack passed away Oct. 29, Rev. Dr. Keith Wagner officiating. Roberta Grove of Brewer, Maine, and four years. 1991. She later married Grant DANIELS Phyllis Grove of Troy; six grandchildren, Interment will follow in Highland A tribute here has to be given P. Daniels on April 19, 2002, Cemetery, Covington. Robin (Darryl) Meyer, Michael (Jill) to her husband Grant Daniels. Without in Huntington, Utah. Friends may call from 2-4 and 6-8 Liles, Marcus (Jennifer) Liles, Joshua Grant’s loving and tender care, Wilma Wilma grew up during the hard times of the Depression, where early on in life would have lived in the nursing home for (Trista) McNabb, Timothy McNabb and p.m. Friday at the Baird Funeral Home, Troy. she learned the value of hard work and many of her last years. We appreciate all Christine (Stan) McClanahan; eight In lieu of flowers, memorial contribugreat-grandchildren, Alec and Emma the necessity of pulling her own weight. his hard work. tions may be made to the Troy She is survived by her husband, Grant Lee Meyer, Moira, Marion and James For several years her family would Foundation, 216 W. Franklin St., Troy, move between Kentucky and Florida fol- P. Daniels; children, Kirk (Kathy) Perkins Liles, Carter and Kaden McNabb and OH 45373, for the James and Susannah Jodin McClanahan. of Ferron, Utah, Thomas Perkins of lowing the fruit and vegetable harvests In addition to his parents and his wife, Grove Scholarship Fund. picking wherever they could. She carried Apache Junction, Ariz., and Chet Friends may express condolences to Mr. Grove was preceded in death by (Baina) Perkins of Piqua; 11 grandchilthis work ethic on into every aspect of the family through www.bairdfuneraltwo brothers, Glenn and Dale Grove. her life, whether it was keeping a home, dren; and three great-grandchildren. home.com. He attended Concord Township She was preceded in death by her parraising her children, as a beautician, ents; her first husband; children, Cathie driving a school bus, giving loving care Maynes and Susan Deeter; one1 brothto her mother and our father and two LILLIAN MARIE MARKLEY er; and four sisters. other ladies during their last days, The A viewing will be from 6-8 p.m. Manti Temple, at the Emery County Ky., Amber Markley of Georgetown, Ky., GREENTOWN, Ind. — Lillian Marie Wednesday, Jan. 23, 2013, at Fausett Care Center or the Museum of the San Evan and Ella Markley of Ann Arbor, Markley, 91, passed away on Sunday, Mortuary, 720 N. Center St., Castle Rafael, she always gave it her all. Mich., Lisa and husband, Brandon Jan. 20, 2013, at Century Villa. Wilma was a devoted wife, mother and Dale, Utah. Nelson, of Brighton, Mich., and Jerry She had been a resident of Century Family and friends may sign the guest Villa Health Care Center, Greentown, friend. She was easy to get along with Baker of Westland, Mich.; great-grandbook and share memories of Wilma at and made friends wherever she went. children, Madison and Kayla Kincaid of Ind. since September 2010. www.fausettmortuary.com. Mom was loved by all who knew her She was born Jan. 14, 1922, in Shelby San Antonio, Texas, Mason Sheets of Funeral services in Ohio will be at because she was honest and didn’t say Georgetown, Ky., Hannah and Wyatt County, Ohio, to the late Hugh B. and noon Monday, Jan. 28, 2013, in the a bad thing about anyone. She was Nelson of Brighton, Mich., and Christine Pearl (Van Tilburgh) Westfall. fiercely independent and had a stubborn Suber-Shively Funeral Home, 201 W. Lillian was a graduate of Bradford High Baker of Livonia, Michigan; and several streak. When she made up her mind she Main St., Fletcher, with Arthur Bowser School, class of 1939. She was a former nieces and nephews. officiating. Burial will follow in the Smith wasn’t going to change it. In addition to her parents, Lillian was member of Grace Baptist Church, Troy, Wilma was a very meticulous individual Cemetery in Christiansburg. A time of preceded in death by her husband, Ohio, and more recently a member of who always spoke her mind. She always visitation will be from 10 a.m. until the John; a son, William Markley; one brothGeorgetown Baptist Church, time of services at noon Monday in the looked on the bright side of things and er, Robert Westfall; and one sister, Georgetown, Ky. funeral home. took pleasure in reading Louis L’Amour Glenna Weekley. Lillian married John Allen Markley on Condolences may be sent to books. The funeral service will be at 7 p.m. June 6, 1942. Lillian and John estabwww.shivelyfuneralhomes.com. She truly enjoyed a good joke and Thursday, Jan. 24, 2013, at Baird lished their home and business, Funeral Home, Troy, Ohio, with the Rev. Markley’s Market, in Troy, Ohio, and raised four children. She worked side by Richard A. Weekley officiating. Friends FUNERAL DIRECTORY may call from 5-7 p.m. Thursday at the side with her husband, John, at their funeral home. business. During those years, she also Private interment will take place in was an active member of Grace Baptist 2013, at Covington Care Center. Services • Donna Martin Glen Haven Memorial Gardens, New Church, Troy. Lillian enjoyed music and are pending. Arrangements in care of COVINGTON — Donna Martin, 84, of Carlisle, Ohio. was an organist, a soloist and sang in Jackson-Sarver Funeral Home, Covington. Covington, passed away Tuesday, Jan. 22, The family wishes to acknowledge with the Grace Baptist Church choir for many love and gratitude the excellent care years. She is survived by her children, Robert provided to Lillian by the Century Villa Health Care Center staff. Markley and his wife, Carol, of Ann In lieu of flowers, the family encourArbor, Mich., Marilyn Buddenhagen and LONDON (AP) — documentaries. One of his He also was proud that her husband, Bruce, of Kokomo, Ind., ages memorial contributions be made to “Death Wish” director first films was a travelogue “Death Wish” featured the and Bruce Markley and his wife, Kathy, Century Villa, 705 N. Meridian St., Michael Winner, a British called “This is Belgium.” film debuts of two future of Georgetown, Ky.; grandchildren, Greentown, IN 46936. filmmaker, restaurant critic Winner said that because stars Jeff Goldblum and Angela and husband, Jason Kincaid, of Condolences may also be expressed and bon vivant, died Belgium proved too rainy, it Denzel Washington, who San Antonio, Texas, Ashley and husto the family through www.bairdfuneralMonday. He was 77. was shot largely in East played “Freak 1” and “Alley band, William Sheets, of Georgetown, home.com. Winner’s wife, Geraldine, Grinstead, southern Mugger,” respectively. said he died at his London England. A lover of the high life HELEN Y. STUMP home after an illness. His 1960s British films who collected antiques and Winner’s 30 movies included “West 11,” a gritty rare first editions, Winner SIDNEY — Helen Y. service. She was a mem- Kazy Blocher Hinds officiincluded three “Death Wish” thriller set in a shabby had a second career as Stump, 96, formerly of ating. Burial will follow at ber of Westminster films starring the late London neighborhood; “The restaurant critic with the Piqua, died at Forest Hill Cemetery. Presbyterian Charles Bronson. Many of System,” a tale of young men long-running “Winner’s 6:20 p.m. Visitation will be from Church, the his features sit at the on the prowl in a seaside Dinners” column in the Sunday, Jan. 20, 12:30-1:30 pm Thursday Washington schlockier end of the spec- town; and “I’ll Never Forget Sunday Times newspaper. 2013, at the at the funeral home. Township trum, but he also worked What’s’isname” starring His acerbic verdicts got him Dorothy Love Memorial contributions School Board, with Hollywood icons Oliver Reed as a fed-up barred from some eateries, Retirement may be made to Miami County including Marlon Brando, London adman and Orson and his highest praise was Community. Westminster Presbyterian YMCA, Burt Lancaster, Robert Welles as his boss. to declare a meal “historic.” Mother’s Clubs Church, 325 W. Ash St., She was born Mitchum and Faye Other notable pictures “He could be very witty Sept. 17, 1916, and the Piqua- Piqua, OH 45356 or the Dunaway. included “The Big Sleep” a but also uncompromising in in Dayton, to the Life Fund of Dorothy Love Lewis Chapter One of his earliest films remake of the 1940s film his demands for good serv- late H. Earl and of the National Retirement Community, W. was the 1962 nudist feature noir and “Hannibal Brooks,” ice, which resonated with Ida (Martin) 3003 Cisco Rd., Sidney, Society of the STUMP “Some Like It Cool”; later, he a comedy caper featuring readers,” said Martin Ivens, Emrick. She marDaughters of the OH 45365. specialized in thrillers and Reed as a prisoner of war acting editor of The Sunday ried Howard L. Stump Guestbook condolences American Revolution. action movies, including who makes a bid for freedom Times. and expressions of symA service to honor her June 19, 1941 in West “The Mechanic,” ”Scorpio” with an elephant from a “He was also not afraid to Milton, and he preceded pathy, to be provided to life will begin at 1:30 pm and the violent “Death German zoo. laugh at himself and her in death on Feb. 3, Thursday, Jan. 24, 2013 at the family, may be Wish” series. Winner was best known rejoiced in the huge postbag 2002. expressed through jamiesthe Jamieson & Yannucci Winner never took criti- for “Death Wish,” which of letters which poked gentle Survivors include two onandyannucci.com. Funeral Home with Rev. cism of his films too serious- stars Bronson as a law-abid- fun at him often he would sons, Tim (Terri) Stump of ly. ing citizen who turns vigi- forward particularly insult- Englewood, Philip (Janet) “If you want art, don’t lante when his wife and ing letters that had been Stump of Wilmington, mess about with movies,” he daughter are attacked. sent straight to him for North Carolina; two grandonce said. “Buy a Picasso.” The 1974 film was criti- inclusion alongside his col- children, Julie (Kevin) Born in London in 1935, cized for its violence, but umn.” Thompson and Jay (Beth) Winner was writing a show- was a commercial success in In later years he was Stump; and four great * Your 1st choice for complete Home biz column for a local news- an America fretting about famous for a series of insur- grandchildren. Medical Equipment paper by the time he was 14, urban violence and a fraying ance ads with the catch- Mrs. Stump was a graduand as a student edited the social fabric. phrase “Calm down, dear!” ate of West Milton High Funeral Home & Cremation Services Lift Chairs Cambridge University Winner declared it “a Prime Minister David School, the Miami Jacobs S. Howard Cheney, Owner-Director newspaper, Varsity. pleasant romp” with no Cameron once used the Business College, and 1990 W. Stanfield, Troy, OH • Pre-arranged funeral plans available After a stint as a film moralistic intent and went phrase to a female lawmak- retired from the Miami 45373 • 937-335-9199 1124 W. Main St • Call 335-6161 • Troy, Ohio critic, he started his movie- on to direct two more install- er in the House of Commons, County Recorders Office www.legacymedical.net www.fisher-cheneyfuneralhome.com making career on shorts and ments. prompting howls of outrage. following many years of 2353681 2353684

Filmmaker Winner dies at 77

FISHER - CHENEY


6

NIE

Wednesday, January 23, 2013

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Cincinnati’s Good, Clean Company William Proctor and James Gamble emigrated from different parts of Great Britain to the United States in the early 1800s. Both men were headed for the American West, but their travels ended in Cincinnati. In that city, they married sisters and, in 1837, established a new enterprise called The Procter & Gamble Company. It produced candles and soap, for Procter was a candle maker and Gamble a soap maker. During the Civil War, Procter & Gamble supplied soap and candles to Union armies. These orders kept the factory busy and built the company’s reputation. The company flourished, and it even pioneered one of the nation’s first profit-sharing programs. In 1879, Procter & Gamble introduced one of its most enduring products: Ivory® soap. James Norris Gamble, son of the founder and a trained chemist, developed Ivory as an inexpensive white soap equal to highquality, imported castile soap. The product’s name was inspired by the Biblical phrase “out of ivory palaces.” But when the company began to receive reorders for Ivory, the requests were for more “floating soap.” According to legend, an employee who was making Ivory forgot to shut off the soap-making machine when he went to lunch. He returned to find a puffed-up, frothy mixture. Because the longer mixing time had not changed the ingredients, the soap was shipped as usual. When customers used this batch of soap for washing, the bars floated in water. Recent evidence from inventor notes, however, suggests that the younger Gamble may have intended Ivory soap to be buoyant all along. Today, Ivory floats because a small amount of air is intentionally whipped into each bar. Ivory is also the preferred brand for soap carvers. The 2006 Guinness Book of World Records lists the world’s largest soap sculpture, a 7,000-pound, 5-foot-by-6foot winged pig, as being carved from a block of Ivory soap. Another famous first for Procter & Gamble came in 1961 with the invention of the disposable diaper. Pampers® made the messy, smelly task of soaking, washing, and drying cloth diapers a thing of the past for busy new parents. Today, the Procter & Gamble Company continues to be a world leader in innovation, cleanliness and convenience.

An 1880s illustration of Ivory® soap (courtesy of The Procter & Gamble Company)

Words to Know: emigrated flourished frothy enterprise castile soap buoyant innovation For Discussion: 1. William Proctor came to the U.S. from England. James Gamble came from Ireland. What events in their native lands may have prompted them to leave in the early 1800s? 2. Some people say disposable diapers are not good for the environment. Others say that using disposable diapers is less harmful than the process of cleaning cloth diapers. Research the use of disposable vs. cloth. What are the pros and cons of each method?

Newspaper Activity: Beginning in 1886, The Procter & Gamble Company featured drawings and photographs of babies in their advertising for Ivory® soap. What message was the company trying to convey? Look through today’s newspaper for ads that feature a photo or drawing. Why do you think the advertiser chose the image? “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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ENTERTAINMENT

TROY DAILY NEWS • WWW.TROYDAILYNEWS.COM

ANNIE’S MAILBOX

Cherish your experience: Adjustment depends on your attitude Dear Annie: I've been studying abroad in Rome for the past three months. I head back to America in a few weeks. I can honestly say I haven't missed being home. I've absolutely loved my stay in Europe. I feel safe and happy. The one thing I'm dreading is reverse culture shock. I'm afraid I'll resent my small-town college or that I'll become depressed when I get home. All of my friends will have left for their own studyabroad adventures. No one will be able to speak the Italian I've learned and help me maintain my fluency. The foods and pastimes that I've become fond of are nonexistent in America. My European friends say I should just enjoy the little time I have left abroad and keep positive thoughts when I'm back in America, but I don't expect my reimmersion process to be that easy. How can I learn to stop living like a dead man walking and not fall into a pit of despair once I board the plane "home"? — Pining for Rome Dear Rome: Please recognize how fortunate you are to have had the opportunity to spend time in Europe and the fact that you've enjoyed it so much. You will miss your Italian friends and Italian pasta, but try not to over-romanticize the experience. Accept it for the short-term fun it was, and know that you can certainly return whenever you can afford to do so. How well you adjust depends entirely on your attitude. Be determined to make it as positive as possible. Dear Annie: I have a problem with my parents' decorating habits. They insist on putting up artwork that I did when I was a child. The dining room, living room and bedrooms all have pictures that I drew or painted from the time I was 6 until I was 17. I have repeatedly asked that they remove them, but they say they can't bear to take them down. Mind you, they have no such pictures from my sister's childhood. In fact, they don't even display pictures their grandchildren have drawn. I know it's their house, but I'm a 35-year-old man, and I don't want people to see this stuff and think I still do such childish collages. It also feels creepy. It's like my parents aren't allowing me to grow up. My father insists on telling people I am an artist. At one time, I wanted to be, but now I am a high school teacher and proud of it. How can people take me seriously after talking to my parents? My father says being an artist is special and interesting, and he becomes unhappy if I ask him to describe me differently. I've gotten so fed up that I dread visiting their home, especially when they have guests. What do I do? — Not an Artist Dear Artist: So your parents think being an artist is ever so much more glamorous than other professions, and they prefer to fantasize about your job. Your attempts to force them to change will only make all of you miserable. Who cares what their friends think? As long as you conduct yourself appropriately and correct any misimpressions, no one will mistake you for a 9-year-old with fingerpaints. We know it's annoying, but please try to ignore this. Dear Annie: I read the letter from "Dreading Christmas," whose husband's two siblings take turns hosting Christmas Eve dinners in their homes, but they won't let her reciprocate because she doesn't want to have it in her house. I have two sisters who love hosting Thanksgiving dinner and alternate each year. They have lovely china and beautiful homes. I have always lived in a small house, but we have a beautiful yard and garden. We reciprocate by hosting a barbecue on Labor Day weekend. Maybe "Dreading Christmas" could do something like this. — Oregon 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

WEDNESDAY PRIME TIME 5

PM

5:30

6

PM

6:30

7

PM

Wednesday, January 23, 2013

TV TONIGHT

7:30

8

PM

8:30

9

PM

9:30

7

TROY TV-5 Thursday: 10:30 a.m.: Army Newswatch 11 a.m.: Sharing Miracles 11:30 a.m.: Health and Home Report

JANUARY 23, 2013 10

PM

10:30

11

PM

11:30

12

AM

12:30

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 (R) 2 News (2) (WDTN) 2 News To Be Announced Army News Miami Valley Events Calendar (5) (TROY) Comm. Bulletin Board Around Troy Health News News News Wheel ET Criminal Minds (R) Criminal Minds (N) CSI "Double Fault" (N) News (:35) David Letterman LateShow (7) (WHIO) News News News Jeopardy! Wheel Criminal Minds (R) Criminal Minds (N) CSI "Double Fault" (N) News (:35) David Letterman LateShow (10) (WBNS) 10TV News HD at 5 Business S.Wine (R) Nature Nova (N) Life on Fire (N) Globe Trekker (R) Charlie Rose (16) (WPTD) Company Fetch! (R) PBS NewsHour Smiley (R) S.Wine (R) PBS NewsHour Pioneers of Television American Experience Frontline Choice: Then and Now 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) World News ET Lawyers Middle (N) Neighbor Modern (N) Suburg. (N) Nashville (N) News (:35) Jimmy Kimmel Live (:35) News (21) (WPTA) 21 Alive News at 5 p.m. News 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 Modern (N) Suburg. (N) Nashville (N) Queens (R) Mother (R) 2½Men (R) Mother (R) 2½Men (R) Arrow (N) Supernatural (N) 2 NEWS Rules (R) FamilyG (R) FamilyG (R) Dish Nation TMZ (26) (WBDT) Ray (R) News NBC News Wheel Jeopardy! Whitney (R) GuysKids Law & Order: S.V.U. (R) Chicago Fire (R) News (:35) Tonight Show (:35) LateN (35) (WLIO) Inside Ed. ET Good News J. Duplantis Billy Graham Crusade BeScenes Turn. Point J. Prince End of Age Left Behind II: Tribulation Force (R) (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 "Auditions 3" (N) Fox 45 News at 10 Office (R) (:35) Sein. The Steve Wilkos Show (45) (WRGT) Maury Numb3rs (R) Numb3 "Dirty Bomb" (R) Ghost Rock ('04) Michael Worth, Gary Busey.

The Spikes Gang (45.2) (MNT) 4:

Kings Go Forth Man From Del Rio ('56) Anthony Quinn. 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 The First 48 (R) Duck Dy (R) Duck Dy (R) Duck Dy (R) Duck Dy (R) Ship War Ship War Barter Kings (N) Barter (R) Barter (R) Duck Dy (R) Duck Dy (R) (A&E) The First 48 (R) CSI "Tipping Point" (R) CSI "Head Case" (R)

The Fugitive ('93,Thril) Sela Ward, Tommy Lee Jones, Harrison Ford.

A Few Good Men ('92) Tom Cruise. (AMC) CSI: Miami (R) Rattlesnake Rep (R) Swamp Wars (R) Wildman Wildman Gator Boys (R) Gator Boys (R) Wildman Wildman Gator Boys (R) (ANPL) Confessions (R) Basketball NCAA Penn State vs. Indiana (L) Basketball NCAA Minnesota vs. Northwestern (L) Finale Journey (R) TBA (R) Basket. (B10) (4:00) Wrestling NCAA Journey (R) Tip Off 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) Beverly Hills (R) Housewives Atlanta (R) Top Chef (R) Top Chef (N) Watch (N) Top Chef (R) T. Chef (R) (BRAVO) Housewives Atlanta (R) Shahs of Sunset (R)

Deliverance ('72) Jon Voight, Burt Reynolds.

Any Given Sunday Al Pacino. (CMT) Rose. (R) Rose. (R) Reba (R) Reba (R) Reba (R) Reba (R) Reba (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 (R) Colbert (R) Daily (R) Kroll S. (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 Transf. (R) G.I. Joe (R) (DISK) Superman Batman (R) Batman (R) Gsebump Animaniac Animaniac

Zathura: A Space Adventure Jonah Bobo. Cabin (R) 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) Home (R) Sweat E. GoodLk (R) A.N.T. (R) Jessie (R) Wizards (R) Wizards (R) (DSNY) A.N.T. (R) A.N.T. (R) GoodLk (R) Jessie (R) A.N.T. (R) Austin (R) Shake (R) Hannah Montana: The Movie Miley Cyrus. Phineas (R) To Be Announced I'm Band SuiteL. (R) ZekeLut. SuiteL (R) (DSNYXD)

Johnny Tsunami ('99) Brandon Baker. (1:00) To Be Announced E! News To Be Announced The Soup C. Lately E! News (R) Chelsea (R) (E!) Interrupt SportsCenter Basketball NCAA Duke vs. Miami (L) Basketball NCAA Ga.T./UNC (L) SportsCenter SportsCenter (ESPN) Horn (N) SportsNation ProFILE (R) Basketball NCAA TCU vs. West Virginia (L) Tennis ITF Australian Open Women's Semifinal Site: Melbourne Park (L) (ESPN2) NFL 32 (L) Boxing Classics (R) Bay City Blues (R) Long Way Down (R) The White Shadow (R) Bay City Blues (R) AWA Wrestling (R) (ESPNC) Basketball NCAA Miami vs. Duke (R) '70s (R) Pretty Little Liars (R)

A Walk to Remember ('02) Mandy Moore.

Charlie St. Cloud ('10) Zac Efron. The 700 Club 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. "Scrimmages" (R) Restaurant (N) Bobby Dinner Battle (N) Restaurant (R) Restaurant (R) (FOOD) H.Cook (R) Pioneer (R) Diners (R) Diners (R) Rest. "Michele's" (R) Access (R) Paint (R) Live Basketball NCAA Xavier vs. Charlotte (L) Ohio (R) Shots (R) Paint (R) Road to the Octagon Basketball NCAA (R) (FOXSP) Poker WPT (R)

House Party 4: Down to the Last Minute Warped (R) Warped (R) House Party 4: Do... Trending Billy on Billy on Billy on Billy on Billy on (FUSE) (4:00) Sexiest (R) (4:00)

Taken Anger M. Anger M. 2½Men (R)

The Twilight Saga: Eclipse ('10) Kristen Stewart. (R) A Horror: Asylum (N) A Horror: Asylum (R) A Horror: Asylum (R) (FX) Feherty "Live!" (L) Feherty "Live!" (R) On the Range (R) Golf C. (R) Feherty (R) (GOLF) (4:00) Golf CHAMPS (R) Golf Cent. European 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. HouseH (R) HouseH (R) HouseH (R) Renovation (R) Cousins (R) Cousins Property Brothers HouseH House (R) Property Brothers (R) Property Brothers (R) (HGTV) HouseH (HIST) Restore (R) Counting Counting CountCars Counting Counting Counting Counting Counting Counting Counting Counting Counting Counting Counting Counting Wife Swap Wife Swap Wife Swap Diva Diva Wife Swap (LIFE) America's Supernanny America's Supernanny Wife Swap My Mother's Secret ('12) Nicole De Boer.

Her Only Child ('08) Nicholle Tom. My Mother's Secret (LMN) 4: Fatal Lessons: T... While the Children Sleep William R. Moses. CookThin Mom Cook Airline (R) Airline (R) Among the Dead (R) Psychic challenge (R) Airline (R) Airline (R) Among the Dead (R) (LRW) (4:) Runway Road (R) Love for Sail (R) PoliticsNation Hardball The Ed Show Rachel Maddow The Last Word The Ed Show Rachel Maddow (MSNBC) Hardball '70s (R) '70s (R) '70s (R) To Be Announced To Be Announced (MTV) '70s (R) 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) Snipers, Inc. (R) Lords of Lords of Highway Thru Hell (N) Lords of (R) Lords of (R) Highway Thru Hell (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

Guess Who? ('05) Bernie Mac. 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)

Duel Dennis Weaver. (:10)

Big Girls Don't Cry, They Get Even

Multiplicity ('96) Michael Keaton.

The Corsican Brothers 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)

Rambo: First Blood Part II

Rambo III ('88) Richard Crenna, Sylvester Stallone. Gangland (SPIKE) 4:

Conan the Dest...

Rambo: First Blood Sylvester Stallone. Ghost Mine (R) Ghost "Fort Mifflin" (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

The Doctor Takes a Wife (:45)

Bedtime Story (:15) Wife, Husband, Friend Movie (TCM) 4:45

The Body...

The Haunting ('63) Julie Harris. Cheer Perfection (N) Toddlers & Tiaras (R) Cheer Perfection (R) (TLC) Say Yes (R) Say Yes (R) Medium (R) Medium (R) Toddlers & Tiaras (R) Here Comes Honey (R) Toddlers & Tiaras 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 "Boom!" (R) Castle "Head Case" Castle Castle (R) CSI: NY "The Box" (R) CSI: NY (R) (TNT) Castle (R) Gumball Gumball NinjaGo (R) Dragons Johnny (R) KingH (R) KingH (R) AmerD (R) AmerD (R) FamilyG (R) FamilyG (R) Robot AquaT. (TOON) Advent. (R) Advent. (R) Gumball Man/Fd Bizarre Foods Man/Fd Man/Fd Baggage Baggage Baggage Baggage Eats "Latin America" (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 (R) NCIS "Cracked" (R) NCIS "Need to Know" NCIS "The Tell" Necessary Rough (N) White Collar (R) CSI "Play With Fire" (R) (USA) NCIS (R)

Go Sarah Polley. Behind "Usher" (R) Behind "Ne-Yo" (R) 40 Feuds "Hour 1" (R) 40 Feuds "Hour 2" (R) Mob Wives (R) (VH1) Love and Hip-Hop (R) Black Ink Crew (R) Ghost Whisperer (R) Charmed (R) Charmed (R) C.Lauper C.Lauper Fix My Family (R) Fix My Family (N) Fix My Family (R) Fix My Family (R) (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 The Making Of (R) (:15)

The Day After Tomorrow J. Edgar ('11) Josh Hamilton, Leonardo DiCaprio. Bill Maher (R) Enlight (R) Transit (HBO) (4:00) Joyful Noise Banshee "The Rave" (R)

Along Came Polly Ben Stiller.

Horrible Bosses SexGame SexGame (MAX) (3:50)

Tombstone

The Descendants ('11) George Clooney. Inside the NFL Califor. (R) Lies (R) Inside the NFL

The Black Dahlia (SHOW) 3:

Meet Joe Black

The Twilight Saga: Breaking Dawn Part 1 Shameless (R) (:20)

Since You've Been Gone Joey Slotnick. Jolene ('08) Dermot Mulroney, Jessica Chastain. (:05) Barb Wire Pamela Anderson. (:45)

The Italian Job (TMC) (4:45) Inside

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

What are your thoughts on cooking with peanut oil? Dear Heloise: I read your hints every day. I appreciated the column on oils; however, you did not name peanut oil, which we use in our turkey cooker. What are your thoughts on peanut oil? — Jim C., Spokane, Wash. In Texas, peanut is the oil of choice for frying turkeys. The United States Department of Agriculture actually recommends peanut oil for deep frying because of the high “smoke point” (how high a temperature the oil can be heated to before it breaks down). You can safely reuse

Hints from Heloise Columnist peanut oil three to four times, if it is free of spices and seasonings. Let the oil cool down, then strain it through cheesecloth. I tested this using a paper coffee filter with vegetable oil, and it worked just fine. Place the oil in an airtight, sealed container, and store it

in a cool, dark place for up to six months. Make sure to heat the oil to above 350 degrees Fahrenheit before putting food in it. — Heloise TOASTER LINERS Dear Heloise: To keep the tray in the toaster oven clean and looking good, I use aluminum foil. However, I came across some old foil that I had used for doing highlights in my hair. These are precut, pop out, and they fit the toaster-oven tray perfectly. No more guessing the size to be used. It saves time and is inexpensive. — Brenda E., via email

Brenda, most people do the same with aluminum foil. However, manufacturers say NO to doing this because of the possibility of overheating. — Heloise PIZZA CUTTER Dear Heloise: I’ve used tortillas in place of dumplings for several years. One day, as I reached for a knife, I noticed my pizza cutter and tried it. Much to my surprise, it did a better job and was much easier. If it begins to get dough on it, I just wipe a tiny bit of cooking oil on the blade and continue cutting. — Jim D. in Arkansas


8

COMICS

Wednesday, January 23, 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. 24, 2013 ARIES (March 21 to April 19) You’ll enjoy meeting unusual people today. In fact, all group situations, whether small classes or large conferences, will be stimulating and might inspire you to set new goals. TAURUS (April 20 to May 20) Parents, bosses or someone in authority will surprise you today by saying or doing something unusual. No doubt this will be entertaining, but it also might make you nervous. GEMINI (May 21 to June 20) Unexpected travel opportunities might fall in your lap today. However, travel plans can change or be delayed. Others will explore opportunities in publishing and higher education. CANCER (June 21 to July 22) You might be excited to get the support from others that you least expected. Someone could give you a gift or do you a favor. Just say, “Yes!” LEO (July 23 to Aug. 22) Your interactions with others, especially partners and close friends, will be interesting today. For starters, people are doing surprising things. (Or someone might introduce you to a real character.) VIRGO (Aug. 23 to Sept. 22) Explore technology and computer-related subjects at work, because you can learn a lot today. Some of you might start to figure out how to be self-employed. Yes! LIBRA (Sept. 23 to Oct. 22) This is a playful, flirtatious day! Sports events will hold surprises for some. Unexpected invitations will delight others. (Be mindful of children in your care today.) SCORPIO (Oct. 23 to Nov. 21) You might buy something modern or high-tech today, because something unusual will make your home routine a little different. Perhaps unexpected company will drop by? SAGITTARIUS (Nov. 22 to Dec. 21) Your mind is bubbling with new ideas today. In fact, your high energy will attract new and unusual people to you. (You can use all of this to your advantage.) CAPRICORN (Dec. 22 to Jan. 19) Be open to different jobs or new ways to boost your income, because they exist today. You might even find cash. However, keep an eye on your possessions so that they don’t walk away. AQUARIUS (Jan. 20 to Feb. 18) You feel restless and ready for adventure! Because your mind is stimulated, your enthusiasm for life will attract interesting people who are full of bright ideas to you. Make the most of this. PISCES (Feb. 19 to March 20) Hidden discoveries can benefit you today. Obviously, this is an excellent day for research and coming up with secrets for long-sought-after solutions. YOU BORN TODAY People are drawn to you, mostly because they admire you. (And you like their admiration.) Sometimes you appear withdrawn or aloof, but this is just a defense to maintain your privacy. You need courage to break down these walls and simply be who you are. In the year ahead, you will build or construct something that is valuable. Your rewards soon will follow. Birthdate of: Neil Diamond, singer/songwriter; Mischa Barton, actress; John Belushi, comic/film actor. (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 afternoon snow High: 18°

Partly cloudy Low: 15°

SUN AND MOON

Thursday

Increasing clouds High: 20° Low: 10°

Friday

Saturday

Snow likely High: 26° Low: 16°

Early snow possible High: 23° Low: 14°

Sunday

Wintry mix late High: 30° Low: 10°

TODAY’S STATEWIDE FORECAST Wednesday, January 23, 2013 AccuWeather.com forecast for daytime conditions, low/high temperatures

MICH.

NATIONAL FORECAST

First

Full

Cleveland 21° | 9°

Toledo 21° | 5°

Sunrise Thursday 7:51 a.m. ........................... Sunset tonight 5:46 p.m. ........................... Moonrise today 2:55 p.m. ........................... Moonset today 5:04 a.m. ........................... New

9

Wednesday, January 23, 2013

Last

TROY •

Youngstown 19° | 7°

Mansfield 19° | -2°

PA.

18° 5° Feb. 3

Today’s UV factor. 2

Fronts Cold

0 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10+ Minimal

Low

Moderate

Very High

High

Air Quality Index Moderate

Harmful

Main Pollutant: Particulate

Pollen Summary 0

0

250

500

Peak group: No Pollen

Mold Summary 149

0

12,500

25,000

Top Mold: Cladosporium Source: Regional Air Pollution Control Agency

GLOBAL City Athens Berlin Calgary Dublin Hong Kong Jerusalem London Montreal Moscow Paris Tokyo

Lo 46 19 3 28 66 46 26 -4 3 32 39

-10s

-0s

0s

10s

20s 30s 40s

50s 60s

Yesterday’s Extremes: High: 85 at San Pasqual Valley, Calif.

19

Good

Hi Otlk 64 pc 24 sn 27 pc 35 sn 76 clr 72 clr 35 pc 3 sn 12 sn 35 sn 48 rn

Columbus 21° | 7°

Dayton 23° | 0°

ENVIRONMENT

Pressure

Warm Stationary

70s

80s

Low

Cincinnati 28° | 10°

High

90s 100s 110s

Portsmouth 27° | 10°

Low: -38 at Babbitt, Minn.

KY.

NATIONAL CITIES Temperatures indicate Tuesday’s high and overnight low to 8 p.m. Eastern Time. Hi Lo Prc Otlk Albany,N.Y. 20 14 Cldy 57 25 Clr Albuquerque Anchorage 31 28 Cldy Atlanta 45 29 PCldy 22 18 .05PCldy Atlantic City Austin 73 37 Cldy Baltimore 24 18 PCldy Birmingham 47 27 Cldy Bismarck 14 B02 .01 Clr Boise 19 B03 Cldy Boston 25 21 .01PCldy Burlington,Vt. 12 06 .03 Clr 56 41 Clr Charleston,S.C. Charleston,W.Va. 22 11 Cldy Charlotte,N.C. 43 30 PCldy Chicago 11 B01 Cldy Cincinnati 19 08 Cldy Cleveland 11 07 .02 Cldy Columbia,S.C. 51 36 Clr Columbus,Ohio 17 07 Snow Concord,N.H. 22 16 .02 Clr Dallas-Ft Worth 66 36 PCldy 15 05 Snow Dayton Denver 64 34 Clr Des Moines 17 04 PCldy Detroit 12 B01 Snow

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 37 26 PCldy 81 70 Clr 71 44 PCldy 18 04 Snow 50 35 Cldy 63 42 Clr 27 13 Clr 73 68 Cldy 65 40 Cldy 43 26 Cldy 81 52 PCldy 23 11 Cldy 41 27 Cldy 78 64 Cldy 08 B05 Snow 31 19 PCldy 62 48 Clr 22 19 Cldy 59 21 PCldy 65 55 Clr 22 19 .05Snow 81 52 Clr 13 05 MM Cldy 18 13 .02PCldy 21 03 PCldy 57 42 Rain 38 29 Rain 27 20 PCldy

REGIONAL ALMANAC Temperature High Yesterday .............................15 at 4:12 p.m. Low Yesterday ................................4 at 8:03 p.m. Normal High .....................................................35 Normal Low ......................................................20 Record High ........................................67 in 1933 Record Low........................................-15 in 1936

Jon Miller, a professor of coastal engineering at New Jersey’s Stevens Institute of technology, said sea walls can help protect boardwalks but only when they themselves are protected by a constantly nourished and replenished beach between the walls and the surf. “If it’s done correctly, it can be part of the solution,” he said. “The key is to maintain the beach in front of it. Otherwise it just becomes a vertical wall and just accelerates erosion.” A case in point has been the severe erosion that has plagued beaches in Sea Bright and Monmouth Beach. Most of those two towns are protected by a giant rock-and-concrete sea wall. But the wall has functioned exactly as Miller described, forcing the pounding of the waves downward and washing away most of the sand in front of it., Consequently, those two com-

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(AP) — Today is Wednesday, Jan. 23, the 23rd day of 2013. There are 342 days left in the year. Today’s Highlight in History: On Jan. 23, 1973, President Richard Nixon announced an accord had been reached to end the Vietnam War, and would be formally signed four days later in Paris. On this date: • In 1789, Georgetown University was established in presentday Washington, D.C. • In 1845, Congress decided all national elections would be held on the first Tuesday after the first Monday in November.

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munities are among the most needy at the Jersey shore in terms of requiring constant beach replenishment projects. A Duke University study of shoreline protection in the Carolinas and New Jersey reached the same conclusion: that sea walls accelerate erosion, even as they protect property.

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Fla. In a rare defeat for law enforcement, the Supreme Court unanimously agreed to bar police from installing GPS technology to track suspects without first getting a judge’s approval. • Today’s Birthdays: Actress Chita Rivera is 80. Actor Gil Gerard is 70. Actor Rutger Hauer is 69. Singer Anita Pointer is 65. Actor Richard Dean Anderson is 63. Rock singer Robin Zander (Cheap Trick) is 60. Princess Caroline of Monaco is 56. Singer Anita Baker is 55. Actress Mariska Hargitay is 49. Actress Tiffani Thiessen is 39. Singer-actress Rachel Crow is 15.

Come Taste the Difference 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.

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• In 1932, New York Gov. Franklin D. Roosevelt announced his candidacy for the Democratic presidential nomination. • In 1937, 17 people went on trial in Moscow during Josef Stalin’s “Great Purge.” (All were convicted of conspiracy; all but four were executed.) • In 1977, the TV mini-series “Roots,” based on the Alex Haley novel, began airing on ABC. • One year ago: Republican presidential contenders Mitt Romney and Newt Gingrich clashed repeatedly in heated, personal terms in a crackling campaign debate in Tampa,

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Precipitation 24 hours ending at 5 p.m................................0.0 Month to date ................................................1.44 Normal month to date ...................................1.99 Year to date ...................................................1.44 Normal year to date ......................................1.99 Snowfall yesterday ........................................0.00

TODAY IN HISTORY

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by the sea wall.” But not everyone is convinced the costly add-ons will work. Some environmentalists and scientists say the hard barriers actually worsen erosion as waves scour sand at the base of the walls. Jeff Tittel, director of the New Jersey Sierra Club, likened sea walls to the Maginot Line, a line of fortifications the French erected after World War I, believing it would deter Germany from attacking. “The Germans just went around it, which is what the storm surge will do to sea walls,” he said. “They just don’t work; you’re going against the forces of nature. It’s a false sense of security.” He and other environmentalists say sea walls actually speed up erosion and sand loss because the energy of the waves smacks up against the steel, and is channeled upward and downward, washing away sand at the base of the wall.

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SOURCE: ASSOCIATED PRESS

Some shore towns eye sea walls to guard boardwalks BELMAR, N.J. (AP) — As Jersey shore towns spend millions to rebuild boardwalks wrecked by Superstorm Sandy, some are opting for an additional layer of protection in the form of steel sea walls placed between the boards and the shoreline. The idea is to protect the boardwalks and the homes and businesses nearby from the destructive power of storm surges in the next big one. “It has to be an engineered sea wall and dune system that will protect the boardwalk and mitigate against the storm surge going into the neighborhood,” said Belmar Mayor Matthew Doherty. His town was the first to begin rebuilding its boardwalk after Sandy, and was the first to decide it wanted to protect that new boardwalk with a sea wall. “This way, instead of washing away the boardwalk, the storm surge will be stopped

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10 • Troy Daily News • Classifieds That Work • Wednesday, January 23, 2013

To Advertise In The Classifieds That Work Call 877-844-8385

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PLACE YOUR CLASSIFIED AD ONLINE-24/7 www.tdnpublishing.com 100 - Announcement

CAUTION

If you have questions regarding scams like these or others, please contact the Ohio Attorney General’s office at (800)282-0515.

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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 fake and eventually bounces and the seller loses the wired amount. While banks and Western branches are Union 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.

235 General

125 Lost and Found

FOUND PUPPY, small white on Saturday 1/19 near Dow and Hyatt in Tipp (937)545-9522 to identify

LOST: in Fletcher area, neutered white male Jack Russell, answers to Skippy. Call (937)308-5534.

135 School/Instructions

AIRLINES ARE HIRINGTrain for hands on Aviation Career. FAA approved program. Financial aid if qualified - Job placement assistance. CALL Aviation Institute of Maintenance 877-676-3836

ATTEND COLLEGE ONLINE from home. *Medical, *Business, *Criminal Justice, *Hospitality. Job placement assistance. Computer available. Financial Aid if qualified. SCHEV authorized. Call 877-295-1667 www.CenturaOnline.com

200 - Employment

235 General

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Apartments

Miami Metropolitan Housing Authority 2357939

ARNOLD'S CANTEEN INC., is in need of a route driver ASAP. Job hours Monday-Friday 6:30am1:30pm. Must be able to add prices and make change. Females encouraged to apply. Must possess current valid drivers license. Call (937)335-8077 between 8am-3pm.

1695 Troy-Sidney Rd, Troy, OH 45373

First shift position responsible for repair and maintenance of injection molding machines, auxiliaries, and robotics. Includes mold/ machine set-up. 3-5 years experience required. or mail to: 316 Park Avenue Tipp City, Ohio 45371

We are taking applications for:

EXPERIENCED AG EQUIPMENT SALES

LAWN & GARDEN EQUIPMENT SALES

SERVICE MANAGER

BUSINESS OFFICE WITH ACCOUNTING BACKGROUND

State your qualifications, experience, and which position you are applying for. We are an Equal Opportunity Employer, benefits available after probationary period. Send your resume to:

Sidney Daily News Dept. 995 1451 N. Vandemark Rd Sidney, OH 45365

everybody’s talking about what’s in our

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Robertson Cabinets Inc 1090 S. Main St. West Milton, OH 45383

RN Supervisors Casual ~ 2nd shift

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LPN's Casual ~ All Shifts

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105 Announcements

Investigate in full before sending money as an advance fee. For further information, call or write:

Better Business Bureau 15 West Fourth St. Suite 300 Dayton, OH 45402 www.dayton.bbb.org 937.222.5825

A newspaper group of Ohio Community Media

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110 Card of Thanks

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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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 2353590

Send your message with payment to: Sidney Daily News, Attn: Classifieds, 1451 North Vandemark Rd., Sidney, OH 45365 Phone: State:

Zip:

New Vision Nursing and Home Care, one of the Elite Top 100 Home Health Agencies in the US are currently seeking qualified STNAʼs and Home health aides. Part Time and Full Time positions available. 1st shift and 2nd shift hours also available. Excellent starting wages and benefit package to include paid mileage. Reliable transportation and excellent attendance records are a MUST. Traveling is a MUST. We serve 9 counties in the region, and are currently hiring for the Sidney, Piqua, Troy area. Please apply in person at 310 Perry St. Wapakoneta or access our online application at newvisionnursing.com. NO phone calls please.

245 Manufacturing/Trade

FACTORY MAINTENANCE

Technician. Tipp City company has an opening for a third shift maintenance tech. The qualified candidate possesses troubleshooting skills in electrical, electronics and VFD's. Knowledge of OSHA and NFP 70 regulations is a must. We offer competitive pay and benefits. Please reply to glb.9325@yahoo.com or PO Box 176, New Carlisle, Ohio 45344 Concrete Sealants, Inc. (937)845-8776.

Troy Laminating and Coating

A full service coater/ laminator of roll based goods, has immediate opening for: Maintenance Technician Starting wage is $15.00

Successful candidates will have the following: -Read electrical prints -Knowledge of PLC's -Plumbing experience -Troubleshooting pneumatic/ hydraulic -Ability to weld

Must have own tools, be willing to work any shift, pass background check and drug test. Send resume to: Human Resources 421 S Union St Troy, OH 45373 or fax to: (877)757-7544

280 Transportation ▼▼▼▼▼▼▼▼▼▼▼▼

OTR DRIVERS CDL Grads may qualify Class A CDL required Great Pay & Benefits!

STORAGE TRAILERS FOR RENT (800)278-0617

We are looking for experienced people. Come in and fill out an application and speak with Beth Bayman, Staff Development.

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300 - Real Estate

Koester Pavilion 3232 North County Road 25A Troy, OH 45373 (I-75 at exit 78)

For Rent

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1, 2 & 3 Bedroom, Houses & Apts. SEIPEL PROPERTIES Piqua Area Only Metro Approved (937)773-9941 9am-5pm Monday-Friday

937.440.7663 Phone 937.335.0095 Fax Located on the Upper Valley Medical Center Campus EOE

110 Card of Thanks

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BIG Thank You!

would like to thank everyone for the successful benefit, support from co-workers, food, cards, friends, neighbors, family and prayers through this difficult time. Thanks to all the doctors & nurses at Upper Valley Family Care, Speech Occupational Therapists, Kettering hospital, James Hospital, Columbus, and Hospice of Dayton for their care. Thanks to those who made his celebration of life beautiful. Mike, you may rest in peace.

235 General

240 Healthcare

Maintenance Assistant FT ~ Days

The family of

Put into words how much your loved ones mean to you by writing a love letter to them this Valentine’s Day!

877-844-8385 We Accept

STNA's FT PT CA ~ All Shifts

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This notice is provided as a public service by

Troy Daily News

Call Jon Basye at: Piqua Transfer & Storage Co. (937)778-4535 or (800)278-0619

105 Announcements

105 Announcements

NOTICE

Name Address: City: Your Sweet Talkin’ Message: (25 words or less)

Interested in working in West Central OHIOʼs AG EQUIPMENT INDUSTRY?

WANTED: CABINET MAKERS Some experience needed. Interested parties apply MondayFriday between 3pm-5pm

Equal Opportunity Program

Dearest Lynn, We love you sweetie! Keep that beautiful smile, always! We love you, Mom & Dad

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.

SERVICE OFFICE

INJECTION MOLDING MAINTENANCE AND SET-UP

dgagnon@protoplastics.com

Federally funded program is seeking a maintenance person to service its housing apartments. The position includes a variety of tasks: painting, electrical, plumbing repair, dry walling, etc. Must be able to do apartment turnaround and general repairs. Qualifications include experience in related field, some reporting and computer skills, high school education or equivalent. Send resume to

105 Announcements

Office Hours: Monday-Friday 8-5

Send resume to:

235 General

Maintenance Position

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

235 General

205 Business Opportunities

NOW HIRING: Companies desperately need employees to assemble products at home. No selling, any hours. $500 weekly potential. Info: (985)646-1700, Dept. OH-6011.

DEADLINES/CORRECTIONS:

235 General

NAVY JOB OPPORTUNITIES Jobs, Scholarships, bonuses available. Paid training and benefits. Many positions available. HS Grad or GED with 15 college credits. 1-800-282-1384 or jobs_ohio@navy.mil

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.

Repacorp is a stable company, offering 401K, health, paid sick and vacation days.

Submit your resume, along with salary requirements, via email to resumes@repacorp.com.

that work .com 235 General

1, 2 & 3 bedrooms Call for availability attached garages Easy access to I-75 (937)335-6690

www.hawkapartments.net

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 in Troy, Move in special, Stove, refrigerator, W/D, A/C, very clean, no pets. $525. (937)573-7908

235 General

Center for Rehabilitation/Sports Medicine Highland District Hospital currently has a full-time position for a Physical Therapist. Must be a graduate of an accredited Physical Therapy program and have current Ohio Licensure. Minimum of one (1) year experience as a staff therapist preferred. Excellent wage benefits package. Ohio Public Employees Retirement System (OPERS).

Please direct inquiries to (937) 393-6479 or submit resumes via mail, faxed to (937) 840-6511 email to: dgermann@hdh.org HIGHLAND DISTRICT HOSPITAL 1275 NORTH HIGH STREET HILLSBORO, OH 45133 (937) 393-6100 Fax: (937) 840-6511 1-866-393-6100 EOE

Cash/Check/Visa/Mastercard/Discover/American Express______________________Exp_______ Deadline for publication is 5 p.m. on Friday, February 1. All ads must be prepaid. 2359106

Social Worker Highland District Hospital is seeking a part-time (40 hours per pay) Social Worker (LISW or MSW)(Primarily in the Home Health Department). Applicants must have a Bachelor’s Degree in Social Work or related health and human services and Ohio licensure. Two (2) years experience in a hospital setting preferred. We offer excellent wages and a generous benefits/ retirement package.

Please direct inquiries to (937) 393-6479 (Toll Free 1-866-393-6100) Fax resume to: (937) 840-6511 Or email to: dgermann@hdh.org

2359120

HIGHLAND DISTRICT HOSPITAL 1275 NORTH HIGH STREET HILLSBORO, OH 45133 (937) 393-6100 Fax: (937) 840-6511 1-866-393-6100 EOE


To Advertise In The Classifieds That Work Call 877-844-8385 320 Houses for Rent

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.

EVERS REALTY

TROY, 2 Bedroom Townhomes 1.5 bath, 1 car garage, $695 (937)216-5806 EversRealty.net

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.

PLEASANT HILL, 310 1/2 North Main, upstairs, 2 bedroom, $400 plus utilities (937)418-2953 evenings

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TROY, 424.5 North Madison. Furnished 1 bedroom upstairs non-smoking, w/d hook-up, refrigerator and stove included. $325 + deposit. No pets! Available Feb. 1st (937)339-3518

PIQUA 1 bedroom house, $325. 1 bedroom apartment, $375. 2 bedroom apartment, $400. (937)773-2829 after 2pm

PIQUA, 910 New Haven. 3 bedroom, 1.5 car, CA, fenced yard. $850, deposit. (937)778-9303, (937)604-5417.

TROY, 1232 Keller, 3 bedroom, 2 bath, 2 car garage, appliances, no pets. $775 + deposit. Call (937)506-8319

330 Office Space

OFFICE 150sq, Private entrance/ parking, kitchenette, extra storage, includes utilities, $350 monthly, call Dottie (937)335-5440

400 - Real Estate For Sale 405 Acreage and Lots

TROY, 1 & 2 Bedrooms, appliances, CA, water, trash paid, $425 & $525 monthly. $200 Deposit Special! (937)673-1821

TROY 2nd floor, 2 bedroom apartment, Private entry, washer, dryer, refrigerator, stove, $600 plus utilities, (937)418-2379

WOODGATE APARTMENTS, 1433 Covington, 1 bedroom, very quiet. $406 monthly, Special $299 deposit if qualified, ( 9 3 7 ) 7 7 3 - 3 5 3 0 , (937)418-9408

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

410 Commercial

TROY/TIPP ADDRESSES, Multi units! Private owner, info PO Box 181, Tipp City, Ohio 45371.

500 - Merchandise

510 Appliances

APPLIANCES, Maytag, 30 inch Range, combination Refrigerator/freezer, bisque in color, $300 obo, (937)773-3054

COUNTY: MIAMI 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 FINAL ISSUANCE OF PERMIT-TO-INSTALL AND OPERATE HARTZELL FAN, INC. 910 S. DOWNING ST PIQUA, OH ACTION DATE: 01/08/2013 FACILITY DESCRIPTION: AIR IDENTIFICATION NO.: P0110723 PTIO renewal permit for miscellaneous metal parts spray coating booth.

Show off your own Funny Little Valentine with a Valentine Greeting in the Sidney Daily News, Troy Daily News & Piqua Daily Call

HARTZELL PROPELLER, INC COMPOSITE 620 WASHINGTON AVE. PIQUA, OH ACTION DATE: 01/08/2013 FACILITY DESCRIPTION: AIR IDENTIFICATION NO.: P0110454 PTIO renewal permit for manual spray booth #1.

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12

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ADVERTISEMENT FOR BIDS City of Tipp City Tipp City Fire/EMS Facility Renovations Sealed Bids for the Tipp City Fire/EMS Facility Renovations will be received by the City of Tipp City at the Tipp City Government Center, 260 S. Garber Drive, Tipp City, OH 45371, until 10:00 AM on Thursday, February 7, 2013, at which time they will be publicly opened and read. In general, the Work consists of partial demolition of the existing fire/ems building, and construction of a new addition consisting of apparatus bays, offices and living areas. There will be some renovation of the existing building. The project will include associated utilities and site work, consisting of Excavation/ Removal of Existing Soils, Site Grading/Soil Compaction, Site Utilities, Site Paving and Landscaping. An on-site walk-through is scheduled for 10:00 AM, Wednesday, January 30, 2013 at 520 West Main Street, Tipp City, Ohio 45371. The Bidding Documents, which include drawings and specifications, may be purchased at ARC Document Solutions, 2863 East Sharon Road, Cincinnati, Ohio 45241 or 222 Saint Clair Street, Dayton, Ohio 45402 or 1159 Dublin Road, Columbus, Ohio 43215. Cost for the documents is non-refundable. Bids must be signed and submitted on the separate bidding forms included in the Bidding Documents, sealed in a properly identified envelope, and shall be accompanied by either a Bid Guaranty Bond in the amount of 100% of the Bid amount or by a certified check, cashier's check, or letter of credit on a solvent bank in the amount of not less than 10% of the amount of the Bid, subject to conditions provided in the Instructions to Bidders. The successful BIDDER will be required to furnish a satisfactory Performance Bond in the amount of 100% of the Bid. The Contractor shall be required to pay not less than the minimum wage rates established by the Department of Industrial Relations of the State of Ohio. No BIDDER shall withdraw his Bid within 60 days after the actual opening thereof. The Owner reserves the right to reject any or all Bids, waive irregularities in any Bid, and to accept any Bid which is deemed by Owner to be most favorable to the Owner.

Valentine Ads will appear on Thursday, February 14.

Krosbey King

Deadline: Friday, February 1 at 5pm

Happy Valentine’s Day to my “lil lirl!” XOXO Love, Mommy

One child per photo only

FULL COLOR

Child’s Name: ___________________________________________________ One Line Greeting (10 words only): _______________________________ ________________________________________________________________ Closing: (for Example: Love, Mom) ________________________________ ________________________________________________________________ Submitted By: ___________________________________________________ Address: _________________________________________________________ State, City, Zip: __________________________________________________ Phone: __________________________________________________________ ! Check Enclosed ! Visa ! Mastercard ! Discover ! Am Express Credit Card #: ___________________________________________________ Exp. Date: _______________________________________________________ Signature: _______________________________________________________

Send along with payment to: My Funny Valentine The Sidney Daily News 1451 North Vandemark Rd. Sidney, Ohio 45365 Payment must accompany all orders.

2353594

305 Apartment

Troy Daily News • Classifieds That Work • Wednesday, January 23, 2013• 11

Jon Crusey, City Manager 01/23, 01/30/-2013 2359710

Service&Business DIRECTORY

To advertise in the Classifieds That Work Service & Business Directory please call: 877-844-8385

937-620-4579 I am a debt relief agency. I help people file for bankruptcy relief under the United States Bankruptcy Code. 2355314

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WINDOWS SIDING

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everybody’s talking about what’s in our

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BU ILD ER SS E • Roofing • Windows RVI CE • Spouting • Kitchens S, INC • Metal Roofing • Sunrooms . • Baths • Awnings

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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 Franklin Monroe 55, Milton-Union 40 WEST MILTON — MiltonUnion kept pace with Franklin Monroe for three quarters Monday night, but in the end four Jets reached double figures in a 55-40 Bulldog loss. Brooke Falb hit three 3s and led Milton-Union (2-14) with 15 points and Kaylee Swartztrauber added 13 points as the Bulldogs trailed 35-33 after three quarters — but were outscored 20-7 in the final eight minutes. Northeastern 64, Bethel 20 SPRINGFIELD — Bethel struggled offensively Monday night at Northeastern, while the Jets outscored the Bees 26-5 in the second quarter and pulled away for a 64-20 victory. Tia Koewler led Bethel (1-15) with eight points, while Morgan Weinert added six. • Wrestling The Covington wrestling team got a tune-up on Monday before the first round of the OHSAA duals start this Wednesday. The Buccaneers defeated Milton-Union 63-9 and earn a 77-0 victory over Lehman to improve their overall record to 17-2. Fourteen of Covington’s sixteen competing wrestlers went undefeated at the meet, led by senior Brock Smith (138) who finished 3-0. Going 2-0 for the Buccs were Connor Ryan (106), Michael Cox (113), Ryan Ford (126), Daniel Jennings (145), Jake Sowers (152), Kyler Deeter (160), Ben Miller (170), A.J. Ouellette (182), Justin Daniel (195) and Ian Fries (220). Covington hosts the first round of the OHSAA dual meet tournament Wednesday. The Buccs, seeded No. 2, face Arcanum after No. 3 seed Mechanicsburg faces Northeastern.

SPORTS CALENDAR TODAY Girls Basketball Troy at Greenville (7:30 p.m.) Tippecanoe at Urbana (7:30 p.m.) Piqua at Butler (7:30 p.m.) Wrestling OHSAA Duals Troy vs. Piqua (at Beavercreek) (6 p.m.) Tippecanoe vs. Valley View (at Greenville) (6 p.m.) Milton-Union vs. Dunbar (at Greenville) (6 p.m.) Troy Christian vs. Miami East (at Versailles) (6 p.m.) Covington vs. Arcanum (at Covington) (TBA) Bowling West Carrollton at Tippecanoe (4 p.m.)

Buckeyes hang on

STAFF PHOTOS/ANTHONY WEBER

Troy Christian’s Grant Zawadzki pulls down a rebound as teammate Logan George (21) looks on Tuesday against Xenia Christian.

COLUMBUS (AP) — Almost no one for No. 14 Ohio State was thrilled with the way they played Tuesday night. Still, the Buckeyes will take the outcome. Deshaun Thomas, who missed part of the second half with a cut above his eye, scored 16 points and Ohio State built a 24-point lead and then hung on to beat Iowa 72-63. “We’re happy we got the win, but we’re not happy with the way we got the win,” post player Evan Ravenel said. Thomas, the Big Ten’s leading scorer at 21 points per game, sat out about 3 minutes while an

■ See BUCKEYES on 16

Bulldogs A magic trick rally late ■ Boys Basketball

Eagles turn steals into points in victory BY JOSH BROWN Sports Editor jbrown@civitasmedia.com

NEW LEBANON — Dixie was a little too comfortable in its own gym for Milton-Union coach Rusty Berner’s liking in the first half Tuesday. So in the second, he made sure his Bulldogs turned the heat up too far.

MIAMI COUNTY

TROY

■ Gymnast

Red Devils roll Staff Reports

Forget “the hand is quicker than the eye.” Troy Christian coach Ray Zawadzki teaches his magicians a different motto. “The ball is quicker than the defense,” he said. The Wizards … ahem, Eagles … polymorphed 24 Xenia Christian turnovers and every defensive rebound they got into countless fast-break buckets the

WHAT’S INSIDE

Troy Christian’s Nathanael Boone battles for the ball Tuesday

■ See EAGLES on 16 against Xenia Christian.

Milton-Union (8-5, 4-3 Southwestern Buckeye League Buckeye Division) rallied from a 12-point halftime deficit, outscoring the Greyhounds 23-10 in the fourth quarter to leave Dixie with a 59-54 victory. “Our defensive energy wasn’t where we wanted it in the first half,” Berner said. “They (Dixie) were a little too comfortable and getting too many open looks. So at halftime, we preached getting back to doing the little things on defense. “We turned up the heat defensively and made them uncomfortable — their shooting per-

■ See ROUNDUP on 16

Planning a return Troy’s Hanson aiming for state BY COLIN FOSTER Associate Sports Editor colinfoster@civitasmedia.com

Jim and John Harbaugh have exchanged a handful of text messages, and plan to leave it at that. No phone conversations necessary while the season’s still going. No time for pleasantries, even for the friendly siblings. See Page 14.

■ College Basketball

AP PHOTO

other way, turning a 20-2 second-quarter run into a 70-62 Metro Buckeye Conference victory Tuesday night at home — finishing off a 6-0 start in league play this season. After Xenia Christian got the first two points of the second quarter to make it 19-15, Troy Christian (11-2, 6-0) — the twotime defending MBC champion — literally ran off the next 13 straight, with 11 of those points

Harbaugh bros face off in Super Bowl

January 23, 2013

Ohio State’s Deshaun Thomas, right, drives to the basket against Iowa’s Aaron White during the second half Tuesday in Columbus.

THURSDAY Girls Basketball Milton-Union at Northridge (7:15 p.m.) National Trail at Miami East (7 p.m.) Twin Valley South at Bethel (7 p.m.) Franklin Monroe at Newton (7 p.m.) Covington at Tri-County North (7 p.m.) Troy Christian at Dayton Christian (7 p.m.) Tri-Village at Bradford (7 p.m.) Wrestling Dunbar, Ponitz at Lehman (6 p.m.) Bowling Greenville at Troy (4 p.m.) Tippecanoe at Springfield Shawnee (4 p.m.)

Tennis....................................14 Scoreboard ............................15 Television Schedule..............15 Local Sports..........................16

13

Troy gymnast Jennifer Hanson plans on making a return trip to state for her third year in a row. Only this time around, Hanson — who finished 12th last season in the state competition — thinks she could possibly have some company. “We want to make state as a team,” Hanson said. “We’ve gotten really, really good. We have a lot of really good freshmen.” Even Troy coach Larry McCoppin agrees with that assessment. “It is possible (making state),” McCoppin said. “There are two teams in our district that go to

TIPP CITY state. First place is pretty much Mason High School. They’re always strong. I think right now, second place is between seven teams — and Troy is one of them.” The Trojans may be well on their way after Monday’s performance at the Northmont Invitational. Hanson came through to win the all-around competition and helped Troy to a second-place team finish at Gem City Gymnastics in Tipp City. The Trojans narrowly missed out on first, placing runner-up and totaling a score of 129.30

■ See TROJANS on 16

For Home Delivery, call 335-5634 • For Classified Advertising, call (877) 844-8385

Troy’s Jennifer Hanson runs through her routine on the beam Monday during the Northmont Invitational at Gem City Gymnastics in Tipp City. Hanson — a junior and two-time state qualifier — won the allaround competition and led the Trojans to a second-place finish as a team. PHOTO COURTESY LEE WOOLERY/ SPEEDSHOT PHOTO


14

SPORTS

Wednesday, January 23, 2013

TROY DAILY NEWS • WWW.TROYDAILYNEWS.COM

■ Tennis

■ National Football League

Djokovic moves on at Aussie

Brother vs. brother

MELBOURNE, Australia (AP) — Novak Djokovic is really starting to get the hang of how to handle himself at the Australian Open. An expression often used Down Under “Keep your shirt on” is designed to discourage anyone from becoming unnecessarily overexcited. Djokovic took it literally after his 6-1, 4-6, 61, 6-4 win Tuesday night over fifth-seeded Tomas Berdych, advancing to the semifinals at an 11th consecutive Grand Slam tournament. The 2-hour, 31-minute victory took exactly half the time of his five-set, fourth-round win two previously nights against Stanislas Wawrinka. In the early hours of Monday morning, Djokovic ripped his sweat-drenched shirt off and flexed his muscles, mimicking his victory celebration after the 5:53 victory over Rafael Nadal in the 2012

Australian Open final. That was acceptable at the time to the Rod Laver Arena crowd, which was still abuzz at 1:40 a.m. following five sets of high-level tennis. After the Berdych match, however, he realized there was no need to raise the roof. Djokovic calmly pumped his fist once and walked to the net; he later joked about the ice baths he’d taken in between matches on the advice of local hero Lleyton Hewitt. “It was a great performance. I was hoping to have a shorter match … just not to go over 5 hours,” Djokovic said, in a comparatively subdued mood after a considerably more routine victory. “It’s always going to be tough against Tomas; he’s an established player. He has a big game, big serve. He can compete against anyone on any surface.” In the semifinals, Djokovic will meet No. 4seeded David Ferrer.

Harbaughs lead 49ers, Ravens to Super Bowl SANTA CLARA, Calif. (AP) — Jim and John Harbaugh have exchanged a handful of text messages, and plan to leave it at that. No phone conversations necessary while the season’s still going. No time for pleasantries, even for the friendly siblings. There is work to be done to prepare for the Super Bowl, prepare for each other, prepare for a history-making day already being widely hyped as “Harbowl” or “Superbaugh” depending which nickname you prefer. “It doesn’t matter who the coach is, what relationship you have with the person on the other side,” 49ers coach Jim Harbaugh said so matter-of-factly Monday afternoon. Their parents sure aren’t picking sides for the Feb. 3 matchup in New Orleans. These days, the Harbaughs’ longtime coaching father, Jack, stays away from game-planning chatter or strategy sessions with his Super Bowl-bound coaching

AP PHOTO

This combo image made of Sunday photos shows San Francisco 49ers head coach Jim Harbaugh, left, in Atlanta, and Baltimore Ravens head coach John Harbaugh in Foxborough, Mass. during their respective NFL conference championship games. sons. Baltimore’s John Harbaugh and little brother Jim have been doing this long enough now to no longer need dad’s input. Yet, they still regularly seek it. And, their father does offer one basic mantra: “Get ahead, stay ahead.” “Probably the greatest

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advice that I’ve ever been given and the only advice that I’ve ever found to be true in all of coaching, I think we mentioned it to both John and Jim … the coaching advice is, ‘Get ahead, stay ahead,’” Jack Harbaugh said. “If I’m called upon, I’ll repeat that same message.” His boys still call home regularly to check in with the man who turned both on to the coaching profession years ago, and the mother who has handled everything behind the scenes for decades in a highly competitive, sports-crazed family with all the routine sports clichs to show for it. The Harbaugh brothers will become the first siblings to square off from opposite sidelines when their teams play for the NFL championship at the Superdome. Not that they’re too keen on playing up the storyline that has no chance of going away as hard as they try. “Well, I think it’s a blessing and a curse,” Jim Harbaugh said Monday. “A blessing because that is my brother’s team. And, also, personally I played for the Ravens. Great respect for their organization. … The curse part would be the talk of two brothers playing in

the Super Bowl and what that takes away from the players that are in the game. Every moment that you’re talking about myself or John, that’s less time that the players are going to be talked about.” Both men love history, just not the kind with them making it. “I like reading a lot of history … I guess it’s pretty neat,” John Harbaugh offered Monday. “But is it really going to be written about? It’s not exactly like Churchill and Roosevelt or anything. It’s pretty cool, but that’s as far as it goes.” Nice try, guys. John watched the end of Jim’s game from the field in Foxborough, Mass., as Baltimore warmed up for the AFC championship game. Jim called his sister’s family from the team plane before takeoff after a win at Atlanta and asked how his big brother’s team was doing against New England. The improbable Super Bowl features a set of brothers known around the NFL as fierce competitors unafraid to make a bold move during the season. Unafraid to upset anyone who stands in their way. In fact, each one made a major change midseason to get this far John fired his offensive coordinator, while Jim boosted his offense with a quarterback switch from Alex Smith to Colin Kaepernick. Leading up to Sunday’s games, parents Jack and Jackie said they would wait to decide whether to travel to New Orleans if both teams advanced or stick to what has been working so well watching from the comfort of their couch in Mequon, Wis. “We enjoy it very much. We get down in our basement, turn on the television and just have a fantastic day watching outstanding football,” Jack said last week. “We share our misery with no one but ourselves.”

COLUMBUS (AP) — The lawyer for one of two high school football players charged with raping a 16year-old girl wants to delay the trial and also have it moved out of an eastern Ohio city that has received international attention. Attorney Brian Duncan filed the motion Friday on behalf of Trent Mays, who is scheduled for trial next month in juvenile court in Steubenville. Duncan expects to file another motion this week to move the trial. An attorney for the other defendant, Ma’Lik Richmond, filed similar motions earlier this month, as well as a request to close the trial to the public. The case has gained global attention through the work of bloggers and hackeractivists who allege other football players should be charged but are being protected by a cover-up. A video and photo posted online also have drawn attention to the case. In a statement earlier this month, Duncan urged the public not to let the case reflect on the Steubenville area in general. He also acknowledged the role of social media in in the case but again urged people not to draw conclusions. “We certainly recognize that the video, photograph, alleged facts, and surrounding circumstances set forth on the Internet and portrayed in the media would cause even the most optimistic of man to call into question the defendants’ presumption of innocence,” Duncan said in the Jan. 9

statement. “We must be careful in this age of social media to ensure that the words set forth do in fact portray the actual story,” he said. The 12-minute video shows a student who was not involved in the attack but apparently aware of it joking about it while others in the background chime in. In a photograph, the two defendants are apparently seen carrying the girl by her arms and legs, according to the transcript of an October hearing where a judge heard testimony before deciding whether the teens should be charged. At that hearing, three other high school students testified to seeing the attack on the girl from nearby Weirton, W.Va. Two of those students also recorded a video and photograph of the attacks on their phones, but deleted the images shortly afterward. Those students were told at the hearing that they would have been charged had investigators found the images. In letters to attorneys for each of the three students last fall, prosecutors said that while each student “may not have conducted himself in a responsible or appropriate manner, his behavior did not rise to the level of criminal conduct,” according to copies of the letters obtained by The Associated Press through a records request. Prosecutors added in each case that, “we will not prosecute your client for his actions” on the weekend of the alleged attack in August, the letters said.


TROY DAILY NEWS • WWW.TROYDAILYNEWS.COM

FOOTBALL 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 28, Atlanta 24 Baltimore 28, New England 13 Pro Bowl Sunday, Jan. 27 At Honolulu AFC vs. NFC, 7 p.m. (NBC) Super Bowl Sunday, Feb. 3 At New Orleans Baltimore vs. San Francisco, 6 p.m. (CBS) College Football FBS Bowl Glance Subject to Change All Times EST Monday, Jan. 7 BCS National Championship At Miami Alabama 42, Notre Dame 14 Saturday, Jan. 19 RAYCOM College Football All-Star Classic At Montgomery, Ala. Stripes 31, Stars 3 East-West Shrine Classic At St. Petersburg, Fla. West 28, East 13 Saturday, Jan. 26 Senior Bowl At Mobile, Ala. North vs. South, TBA (NFLN)

BASKETBALL National Basketball Association EASTERN CONFERENCE Atlantic Division Pct GB W L New York 25 14 .641 — Brooklyn 25 16 .610 1 20 21 .488 6 Boston 17 25 .405 9½ Philadelphia Toronto 15 26 .366 11 Southeast Division Pct GB W L 26 12 .684 — Miami 23 18 .561 4½ Atlanta 14 27 .341 13½ Orlando 10 31 .244 17½ Charlotte 9 30 .231 17½ Washington Central Division Pct GB W L 26 16 .619 — Indiana Chicago 24 16 .600 1 22 18 .550 3 Milwaukee 16 25 .390 9½ Detroit 11 32 .256 15½ Cleveland WESTERN CONFERENCE Southwest Division Pct GB W L San Antonio 33 11 .750 — 26 14 .650 5 Memphis Houston 22 21 .512 10½ 18 24 .429 14 Dallas 14 27 .341 17½ New Orleans Northwest Division Pct GB W L Oklahoma City 32 9 .780 — 25 18 .581 8 Denver Utah 22 19 .537 10 20 21 .488 12 Portland Minnesota 17 21 .447 13½ Pacific Division Pct GB W L 32 10 .762 — L.A. Clippers 25 15 .625 6 Golden State L.A. Lakers 17 24 .415 14½ 16 26 .381 16 Sacramento Phoenix 13 28 .317 18½ Monday's Games Indiana 82, Memphis 81 New Orleans 114, Sacramento 105 Atlanta 104, Minnesota 96 Houston 100, Charlotte 94 Brooklyn 88, New York 85 Golden State 106, L.A. Clippers 99 San Antonio 90, Philadelphia 85 Chicago 95, L.A. Lakers 83 Washington 98, Portland 95 Tuesday's Games Cleveland 95, Boston 90 Detroit 105, Orlando 90 Milwaukee 110, Philadelphia 102 Oklahoma City at L.A. Clippers, 10:30 p.m. Wednesday's Games Atlanta at Charlotte, 7 p.m. Toronto at Miami, 7:30 p.m. Detroit at Chicago, 8 p.m. Denver at Houston, 8 p.m. L.A. Lakers at Memphis, 8 p.m. Brooklyn at Minnesota, 8 p.m. New Orleans at San Antonio, 8:30 p.m. Washington at Utah, 9 p.m. Indiana at Portland, 10 p.m. Phoenix at Sacramento, 10 p.m. Oklahoma City at Golden State, 10:30 p.m. Thursday's Games Toronto at Orlando, 7 p.m. New York at Boston, 8 p.m. L.A. Clippers at Phoenix, 10:30 p.m. The Top Twenty Five The top 25 teams in The Associated Press' college basketball poll, with firstplace votes in parentheses, records through Jan. 20, 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. Duke (39).............16-1 1,578 3 2. Michigan (11) ......17-1 1,539 5 3. Kansas (7)...........16-1 1,486 4 3. Syracuse (8)........17-1 1,486 6 5. Louisville..............16-2 1,348 1 6. Arizona ................16-1 1,270 7 7. Indiana.................16-2 1,211 2 8. Florida..................14-2 1,181 10 9. Butler ...................16-2 1,146 13 10. Gonzaga............17-2 994 8 11. Kansas St..........15-2 927 16 12. Minnesota..........15-3 905 9 13. Michigan St. ......16-3 831 18 14. Ohio St. .............13-4 701 11 15. New Mexico.......16-2 659 19 16. Oregon ..............16-2 624 21 17. Creighton...........17-2 611 12 18. NC State............15-3 587 14 19. VCU ...................16-3 433 22 20. Wichita St. .........17-2 363 — 21. Cincinnati...........16-3 322 — 22. Missouri.............13-4 234 17 23. Mississippi.........15-2 172 — 24. Notre Dame.......15-3 123 20 25. Miami.................13-3 93 — Others receiving votes: Marquette 92, Wisconsin 55, UCLA 41, UNLV 32, Wyoming 28, San Diego St. 26,

Colorado St. 7, Memphis 6, Georgetown 4, Iowa St. 3, North Carolina 3, Louisiana Tech 2, Bucknell 1, Pittsburgh 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. 20, 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 (35)...........16-1 992 1 2. Notre Dame.........16-1 947 2 3. UConn (2)............16-1 914 3 4. Duke (3)...............16-0 907 4 5. Kentucky..............17-1 819 5 6. Stanford...............16-2 799 6 7. California .............15-2 756 7 8. Penn St................14-2 722 8 9. Tennessee ...........15-3 678 9 10. Maryland ...........14-3 634 10 11. North Carolina...18-1 614 11 12. Oklahoma St. ....13-2 442 17 13. Louisville............15-4 413 15 14. Georgia..............16-3 405 13 15. Purdue...............15-3 387 12 16. Texas A&M ........14-5 371 20 17. Dayton ...............15-1 343 18 18. South Carolina ..16-3 341 19 19. UCLA.................13-4 315 14 20. Colorado............15-2 279 21 20. Oklahoma..........15-3 279 16 22. Florida St...........15-3 227 22 23. Michigan............15-2 142 25 24. Iowa St. .............13-3 125 24 25. Michigan St. ......16-2 60 — Others receiving votes: Syracuse 25, Villanova 16, Kansas 14, UTEP 8, Delaware 7, Arkansas 5, Iowa 4, Texas Tech 3, Vanderbilt 3, Nebraska 2, Green Bay 1, Miami 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 third of seven weekly Associated Press polls, by OHSAA divisions, with wonlost record and total points (first-place votes in parentheses): DIVISION I 1, Cols. Northland (18) ....13-0 209 2, Westerville N. (2) .........12-0 180 3, Cin. Walnut Hills (2) .....14-1 152 4, Tol. Whitmer .................11-2 132 5, Norwalk........................14-0 121 6, Tol. St. John's ...............11-3 87 7, Mentor..........................12-2 81 8, Cle. St. Ignatius..............9-3 77 9, Tol. Cent. Cath................8-2 42 10, Reynoldsburg.............13-2 33 Others receiving 12 or more points: 11, Shaker Hts. 18. 12, Cin. Moeller 16. DIVISION II 1, Thurgood Marshall (17)12-1 213 2, Cols. Watterson (1) ......10-1 156 3, Day. Dunbar (1)............11-3 152 4, Kettering Alter (1) ........12-1 139 5, St. Clairsville ................10-1 120 6, Cols. Brookhaven (1) ...10-2 117 7, Granville.......................11-2 74 8, Can. S. .........................12-2 50 9, Cle. Cent. Cath...............8-3 47 10, Trotwood-Madison (1) 10-2 29 Others receiving 12 or more points: 11, Franklin 19. 12, Akr. SVSM 18. 12, Vincent Warren 18. 14, Akr. Hoban 13. DIVISION III 1, Summit Country Day (21)13-0219 2, Lima Cent. Cath...........13-1 175 3, Ottawa-Glandorf ..........12-1 162 4, Bloom-Carroll...............14-0 145 5, St. Bernard Roger Bacon14-1136 6, Findlay Liberty-Benton.11-1 96 7, Ironton (1) ....................10-2 72 8, Versailles......................10-2 51 9, Oak Hill ........................12-2 48 10, Beachwood ..................9-2 44 Others receiving 12 or more points: DIVISION IV 1, St. Henry (13) ..............14-1 188 2, Cle. VASJ (6)................11-2 169 3, Tri-Village (1)................15-0 148 4, Bristol (1) .....................12-0 126 5, Cols. Africentric............12-2 117 6, Newark Cath. (1)..........11-2 116 7, Old Fort........................15-1 94 8, Richmond Hts. .............11-2 76 9, Ft. Recovery.................10-2 67 10, Tol. Christian ..............11-1 26 Others receiving 12 or more points: 11, Convoy Crestview 21. 12, New Bremen 14. Tuesday's Scores Boys Basketball Akr. Buchtel 69, Akr. Ellet 50 Akr. Coventry 73, Canton Heritage Christian 46 Akr. Firestone 87, Akr. North 75 Akr. Kenmore 53, Akr. Garfield 41 Albany Alexander 76, Corning Miller 63 Alliance Marlington 70, Salem 41 Anna 61, Russia 59 Ashland 64, Millersburg W. Holmes 59 Ashville Teays Valley 49, AmandaClearcreek 43 Avon Lake 58, N. Olmsted 37 Beallsville 78, Valley Wetzel, W.Va. 72 Beaver Eastern 83, New Boston Glenwood 39 Bedford 57, Lorain 53 Bellbrook 54, Brookville 52 Bellevue 55, Upper Sandusky 43 Belmont Union Local 70, Bellaire 52 Belpre 49, Glouster Trimble 45 Berlin Hiland 42, Malvern 41 Beverly Ft. Frye 67, Sarahsville Shenandoah 48 Bidwell River Valley 56, Ironton Rock Hill 51 Bloom-Carroll 54, Lancaster Fairfield Union 34 Bluffton 52, Pandora-Gilboa 42 Bowerston Conotton Valley 74, Bellaire St. John 31 Bowling Green 75, Sylvania Southview 71, OT Brunswick 70, Stow-Munroe Falls 57 Cameron, W.Va. 83, Bridgeport 78 Can. South 57, Minerva 38 Canal Winchester 53, Circleville Logan Elm 51 Centerburg 39, Loudonville 36 Cin. Aiken 71, Day. Meadowdale 61 Cin. Christian 76, Hamilton New Miami 55 Cin. Clark Montessori 52, Cin. Hills Christian Academy 50 Cin. Gamble Montessori 67, Miami Valley Christian Academy 63 Cin. Glen Este 61, Mt. Orab Western Brown 43 Cin. Hughes 83, Norwood 43 Cin. McNicholas 44, Day. Chaminade-Julienne 29 Cin. Oyler 57, Bethel-Tate 39 Cin. Seven Hills 54, Cin. N. College Hill 43 Cin. Summit Country Day 87, Lockland 42 Cin. Walnut Hills 64, Cin. Princeton 43 Cols. Africentric 85, Cols. Briggs 57

SCOREBOARD

Scores AND SCHEDULES

SPORTS ON TV TODAY CYCLING 3:30 p.m. NBCSN — Tour Down Under, stage 2, Mount Barker to Rostrevor, Australia (same-day tape) GOLF 5 a.m. TGC — European PGA Tour, Qatar Masters, first round, at Doha, Qatar MEN'S COLLEGE BASKETBALL 7 p.m. ESPN — Duke at Miami 7:30 p.m. ESPN2 — TCU at West Virginia 9 p.m. ESPN — Georgia Tech at North Carolina NHL HOCKEY 7:30 p.m. NBCSN — Boston at N.Y. Rangers TENNIS 2 p.m. ESPN2 — Australian Open, quarterfinals, at Melbourne, Australia (same-day tape) 9:30 p.m. ESPN2 — Australian Open, women's semifinals, at Melbourne, Australia 3:30 a.m. ESPN2 — Australian Open, men's semifinal, at Melbourne, Australia Cols. Brookhaven 87, Cols. Mifflin 70 Cols. East 65, Cols. Centennial 38 Cols. Eastmoor 84, Cols. West 48 Cols. Grandview Hts. 61, Pataskala Licking Hts. 56 Cols. Hamilton Twp. 65, Circleville 63 Cols. Hartley 45, Pickerington N. 31 Cols. Linden McKinley 78, Cols. International 54 Cols. Marion-Franklin 61, Cols. South 58 Cols. Northland 91, Cols. Beechcroft 48 Cols. Upper Arlington 60, Hilliard Darby 55 Convoy Crestview 71, Lima Shawnee 53 Crooksville 56, Zanesville W. Muskingum 53 Cuyahoga Falls 67, Richfield Revere 44 Cuyahoga Falls CVCA 75, Zoarville Tuscarawas Valley 60 Day. Carroll 60, Cin. Purcell Marian 58 Day. Dunbar 87, Day. Ponitz Tech. 48 Day. Miami Valley 59, Day. Christian 49 Day. Oakwood 38, Monroe 28 Defiance 51, Archbold 45 Delaware Buckeye Valley 57, Worthington Christian 49 Dover 52, Smithville 32 Doylestown Chippewa 51, Hartville Lake Center Christian 40 Tri-Valley 70, Dresden McConnelsville Morgan 32 Dublin Coffman 54, Lewis Center Olentangy Orange 47 Dublin Scioto 72, Marysville 28 Fairfield Christian 76, Tree of Life 45 Fairview 71, Sullivan Black River 30 Fairview, Ky. 59, Ironton St. Joseph 38 Fayetteville-Perry 65, Ripley-UnionLewis-Huntington 50 Franklin 103, Eaton 55 Franklin Furnace Green 62, Latham Western 59 Fredericktown 58, Utica 40 Fremont Ross 56, Oregon Clay 48 Gahanna Cols. Academy 59, Newark Licking Valley 39 Gahanna Lincoln 72, Westerville Cent. 56 Georgetown 72, Batavia Amelia 63 Gibsonburg 54, Tol. Maumee Valley 45 Granville 62, Hebron Lakewood 40 Grove City 77, Grove City Cent. Crossing 45 Groveport Madison Christian 64, Cols. Whetstone 47 Heartland Christian 55, Leetonia 54 Heath 57, Cols. Bexley 51 High Street Christian 67, FCI 50 Hillsboro 55, Greenfield McClain 51 Holland Springfield 45, Perrysburg 42, OT Ironton 86, Portsmouth 52 Jackson Center 55, Botkins 49 Johnstown Northridge 61, Howard E. Knox 43 Johnstown-Monroe 66, Danville 56 Kings Mills Kings 56, Cin. Sycamore 46 Kingsway Christian 65, Gilead Christian 25 Lancaster Fisher Cath. 75, Baltimore Liberty Union 67 Lebanon 75, Trenton Edgewood 42 Leesburg Fairfield 61, Manchester 49 Lima Cent. Cath. 57, Elida 55 Lima Sr. 67, Tol. St. Francis 43 London Madison Plains 67, London 64 Loveland 54, Morrow Little Miami 41 Lucasville Valley 80, McDermott Scioto NW 36 Mansfield Christian 46, Galion Northmor 32 Mansfield St. Peter's 70, Lucas 24 Maple Hts. 63, Warren Harding 61, OT Marion Pleasant 54, Marion Elgin 36 Martins Ferry 54, Rayland Buckeye 44 Massillon Tuslaw 70, Gnadenhutten Indian Valley 50 McArthur Vinton County 66, Logan 45 Middletown Fenwick 47, Hamilton Badin 31 Milford Center Fairbanks 62, Mechanicsburg 53 Milton-Union 59, New Lebanon Dixie 54 Minford 68, Waverly 49 Mogadore Field 73, Rootstown 29 N. Royalton 57, Medina Highland 46 New Albany 64, Cols. DeSales 38 New Carlisle Tecumseh 65, St. Paris Graham 54 New Concord John Glenn 47, Zanesville Maysville 45, OT New Philadelphia 46, Can. Cent. Cath. 28 New Richmond 88, Felicity-Franklin 54 Newark Cath. 85, Whitehall-Yearling 65 Newcomerstown 40, Zanesville Rosecrans 37 Oberlin Firelands 61, Medina Buckeye 51 Olmsted Falls 81, Berea 77 Pataskala Watkins Memorial 55, Hilliard Bradley 51 Philo 63, Coshocton 41 Poland Seminary 74, Cortland Lakeview 62

Pomeroy Meigs 60, Jackson 46 Portsmouth Notre Dame 57, Portsmouth Sciotoville 52 Powell Village Academy 58, Fayette Christian 21 Racine Southern 60, Crown City S. Gallia 44 Reading 70, Williamsburg 67 Rocky River Lutheran W. 71, Sheffield Brookside 60 S. Webster 47, Oak Hill 42 Salineville Southern 54, Toronto 42 Sandusky Perkins 65, Bay Village Bay 41 Shekinah Christian 49, Northside Christian 35 Sidney Lehman 45, WaynesfieldGoshen 36 Spring. Cath. Cent. 69, Spring. Emmanuel Christian 49 Spring. Kenton Ridge 59, Spring. Greenon 47 Spring. Shawnee 77, Bellefontaine Benjamin Logan 44 St. Bernard 54, Cin. Country Day 51 St. Bernard Roger Bacon 81, Kettering Alter 64 St. Clairsville 86, Richmond Edison 26 Steubenville 66, Wheeling Park, W.Va. 61 Stewart Federal Hocking 40, Reedsville Eastern 39 Sugar Grove Berne Union 54, Canal Winchester Harvest Prep 49 Sugarcreek Garaway 54, StrasburgFranklin 21 Swanton 50, W. Unity Hilltop 37 Sylvania Northview 61, Maumee 55 Thomas Worthington 57, Dublin Jerome 47 Thornville Sheridan 56, New Lexington 46 Tipp City Bethel 75, Spring. NE 66 Tipp City Tippecanoe 85, Lewistown Indian Lake 58 Tol. Bowsher 93, Oregon Stritch 71 Tol. Cent. Cath. 63, Findlay 42 Tol. St. John's 52, Tol. Whitmer 51 Trotwood-Madison 95, Day. Jefferson 67 Troy Christian 70, Xenia Christian 62 Tuscarawas Cent. Cath. 63, Magnolia Sandy Valley 27 Uhrichsville Claymont 72, E. Liverpool 68, OT Van Wert 58, Kalida 45 W. Jefferson 62, Millersport 43 W. Liberty-Salem 51, DeGraff Riverside 37 Wahama, W.Va. 61, Waterford 54 Washington C.H. Miami Trace 60, Washington C.H. 58 Westlake 52, Middleburg Hts. Midpark 35 Wheelersburg 62, Portsmouth W. 55 Whitehouse Anthony Wayne 44, Napoleon 37 Willow Wood Symmes Valley 46, Portsmouth Clay 35 Wilmington 67, Harrison 44 Windham 76, Mantua Crestwood 62 Wintersville Indian Creek 46, Cadiz Harrison Cent. 42 Woodsfield Monroe Cent. 87, Barnesville 59 Wooster Triway 56, Navarre Fairless 37 Worthington Kilbourne 45, Cols. Franklin Hts. 39 Associated Press girls state basketball poll How a state panel of sports writers and broadcasters rates Ohio high school girls basketball teams in the third of seven weekly Associated Press polls, by OHSAA divisions, with wonlost record and total points (first-place votes in parentheses): DIVISION I 1, Twinsburg (17) .............15-0 197 2, Kettering Fairmont (2)..13-0 172 3, Mason..........................15-0 147 4, Reynoldsburg (2) .........15-1 138 5, Perrysburg ...................13-0 113 6, Centerville....................13-1 84 7, Wadsworth ...................13-2 61 8, Cle. St. Joseph.............15-1 51 9, Dublin Coffman............13-1 35 10, Hudson ......................13-2 23 Others receiving 12 or more points: 11, N. Can. Hoover 20. 12, Solon 15. 13, Uniontown Lake 12. 13, Lewis Center Olentangy Orange 12. DIVISION II 1, W. Holmes (14) ............16-0 196 2, Clyde (1) ......................17-0 172 3, Hathaway Brown (5) ....12-3 164 4, Oxford Talawanda ........17-0 112 5, Tol. Rogers ...................11-2 109 6, Jackson........................16-0 87 7, Kettering Alter..............14-2 79 8, Geneva (1)...................14-1 73 9, Bellbrook......................13-2 54 10, Akr. Hoban .................10-4 22 Others receiving 12 or more points: 11, Bellevue 20. 12, Celina 17. 13, Akr. SVSM 14. DIVISION III 1, Smithville (18)..............17-0 206 2, Archbold.......................14-1 136 3, Cols. Africentric (1) ......13-4 131 4, Versailles (1) ................14-1 127 5, Richwood N. Union ......16-1 99 6, Gates Mills Gilmour (1)14-2 85 7, Orrville .........................12-2 83 8, Proctorville Fairland.....13-0 76 9, Anna ..............................9-2 70 10, Beachwood ................14-1 57 Others receiving 12 or more points:

Wednesday, January 23, 2013 11, Beverly Ft. Frye 28. 12, Casstown Miami E. 16. 13, Can. Cent. Cath. 13. DIVISION IV 1, Ottoville (18) ................15-0 205 2, Newark Cath. (2)..........13-0 172 3, Berlin Hiland ................13-2 159 4, Ft. Loramie...................13-2 125 5, Tri-Village .....................12-1 112 6, Hamler Patrick Henry ..12-1 94 7, Mansfield St. Peter's ....13-2 68 8, Bridgeport....................12-1 50 9, Reedsville Eastern.......13-2 36 10, Lake Ridge (1) ...........14-2 28 Others receiving 12 or more points: 11, Zanesville Rosecrans 22. 12, New Riegel 20. 13, Ft. Recovery 16. Tuesday's Scores Girls Basketball Arlington 46, Mt. Blanchard Riverdale 37 Athens 51, Logan 32 Bascom Hopewell-Loudon 59, Castalia Margaretta 50 Batavia Clermont NE 43, Goshen 8 Bellevue 56, Galion 47 Bethel-Tate 69, Cin. Oyler 15 Bloomdale Elmwood 51, Millbury Lake 39 Bowling Green 72, Tol. Woodward 57 Chillicothe Unioto 57, Chillicothe Huntington 31 Chillicothe Zane Trace 51, Bainbridge Paint Valley 30 Cin. Anderson 79, Cin. Aiken 33 Cin. Mercy 56, Cin. Oak Hills 45 Cin. Western Hills 40, Cin. Woodward 38 Cin. Withrow 63, Cin. Shroder 28 Cols. Africentric 93, Cols. Briggs 27 Cols. Brookhaven 62, Cols. Mifflin 50 Cols. Centennial 69, Cols. East 48 Cols. Eastmoor 91, Cols. West 16 Cols. Franklin Hts. 37, Lancaster Fisher Cath. 34 Cols. Hartley 79, Cols. School for Girls 28 Cols. Independence 48, Cols. Walnut Ridge 25 Cols. Linden McKinley 39, Cols. International 26 Cols. Marion-Franklin 56, Cols. South 37 Cols. Northland 83, Cols. Beechcroft 19 Cols. Ready 66, Johnstown-Monroe 53 Continental 49, Antwerp 22 Day. Dunbar 55, Day. Stivers 52 Day. Ponitz Tech. 66, Day. Jefferson 22 Delaware Buckeye Valley 41, Worthington Christian 32 Delphos Jefferson 64, Haviland Wayne Trace 43 Delta 50, W. Unity Hilltop 49 Dublin Coffman 48, Dublin Jerome 36 Dublin Scioto 54, Marysville 47 Elmore Woodmore 57, Tontogany Otsego 45 Fairfield Christian 46, Madison Christian 14 Fostoria St. Wendelin 53, Van Buren 45 Frankfort Adena 65, Piketon 42 Gahanna Christian 30, Granville Christian 14 Gahanna Cols. Academy 46, Cols. Wellington 28 Galloway Westland 39, Cols. Whetstone 33 Germantown Valley View 59, New Paris National Trail 24 Grove City Cent. Crossing 38, Westerville Cent. 34 Hamilton 51, Huber Hts. Wayne 25 Hamler Patrick Henry 63, Miller City 41 Hannibal River 61, Caldwell 28 Howard E. Knox 32, Galion Northmor 29 Ironton St. Joseph 39, Fairview, Ky. 27 Kansas Lakota 57, Vanlue 52, OT Lakeside Danbury 59, Old Fort 29 Lisbon Beaver 40, Wellsville 29 Marion Harding 57, Tiffin Columbian 33 Miami Valley Christian Academy 57, Cin. Gamble Montessori 47 Mt. Notre Dame 43, Liberty Twp. Lakota E. 35 Mt. Vernon 44, Lexington 35 N. Robinson Col. Crawford 42, Morral Ridgedale 38 New Albany 40, Cols. Upper Arlington 32 New Knoxville 42, Wapakoneta 33 New Riegel 61, Bucyrus 39 Northside Christian 37, Wayside Christian 19 Norwalk 58, Milan Edison 36 Pickerington Cent. 57, Circleville Logan Elm 35 Point Pleasant, W.Va. 46, Gallipolis Gallia 44 Rossford 62, Fostoria 23 Sandusky Perkins 38, Willard 36, OT Seton 50, New Richmond 39 Shelby 69, Upper Sandusky 47 Sunbury Big Walnut 37, Cols. Bexley 30 Thomas Worthington 46, Hilliard Darby 40 Wauseon 67, Sherwood Fairview 34 Westerville N. 74, Granville 42 Williamsport Westfall 52, Southeastern 35 Yellow Springs 43, Day. Belmont 14

HOCKEY National Hockey League All Times EST EASTERN CONFERENCE Atlantic Division GP W L OT Pts GF GA New Jersey 2 2 0 0 4 5 1 Pittsburgh 2 2 0 0 4 9 4 N.Y. Islanders 2 1 1 0 2 5 5 N.Y. Rangers 2 0 2 0 0 4 9 Philadelphia 3 0 3 0 0 3 11 Northeast Division GP W L OT Pts GF GA Boston 2 2 0 0 4 5 2 Buffalo 2 2 0 0 4 7 3 Ottawa 2 2 0 0 4 8 1 Montreal 2 1 1 0 2 5 3 Toronto 2 1 1 0 2 3 3 Southeast Division GP W L OT Pts GF GA Tampa Bay 3 2 1 0 4 13 8 Winnipeg 3 1 1 1 3 6 8 Florida 3 1 2 0 2 6 9 Carolina 2 0 2 0 0 2 9 Washington 2 0 2 0 0 5 10 WESTERN CONFERENCE Central Division GP W L OT Pts GF GA Chicago 3 3 0 0 6 14 8 Nashville 3 1 0 2 4 8 8 St. Louis 3 2 1 0 4 12 6 Columbus 2 1 0 1 3 6 6 Detroit 3 1 2 0 2 5 11 Northwest Division GP W L OT Pts GF GA Minnesota 3 2 1 0 4 6 5 Edmonton 1 1 0 0 2 3 2 Vancouver 2 0 1 1 1 5 10 Calgary 2 0 2 0 0 5 9 Colorado 1 0 1 0 0 2 4

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Pacific Division GP W L OT Pts GF GA Anaheim 2 2 0 0 4 12 7 3 2 1 0 4 6 5 Dallas 1 1 0 0 2 4 1 San Jose Los Angeles 1 0 1 0 0 2 5 2 0 2 0 0 7 10 Phoenix NOTE: Two points for a win, one point for overtime loss. Monday's Games Boston 2, Winnipeg 1, SO St. Louis 4, Nashville 3, SO Detroit 4, Columbus 3, SO N.Y. Islanders 4, Tampa Bay 3 Buffalo 2, Toronto 1 Ottawa 4, Florida 0 Anaheim 5, Calgary 4 Tuesday's Games Winnipeg 4, Washington 2 Tampa Bay 4, Carolina 1 Montreal 4, Florida 1 New Jersey 3, Philadelphia 0 Dallas 2, Detroit 1 Nashville 3, Minnesota 1 Chicago 3, St. Louis 2 Los Angeles at Colorado, 9 p.m. San Jose at Edmonton, 10 p.m. Wednesday's Games Toronto at Pittsburgh, 7 p.m. Boston at N.Y. Rangers, 7:30 p.m. Calgary at Vancouver, 10 p.m. Columbus at Phoenix, 10 p.m. Thursday's Games N.Y. Islanders at Toronto, 7 p.m. N.Y. Rangers at Philadelphia, 7 p.m. Montreal at Washington, 7 p.m. Buffalo at Carolina, 7 p.m. Ottawa at Florida, 7:30 p.m. Nashville at St. Louis, 8 p.m. Chicago at Dallas, 8:30 p.m. Columbus at Colorado, 9 p.m. Los Angeles at Edmonton, 9:30 p.m. Phoenix at San Jose, 10:30 p.m.

TENNIS Australian Open Results Tuesday At Melbourne Park Melbourne, Australia Purse: $31.608 million (Grand Slam) Surface: Hard-Outdoor Singles Men Quarterfinals David Ferrer (4), Spain, def. Nicolas Almagro (10), Spain, 4-6, 4-6, 7-5, 7-6 (4), 6-2. Novak Djokovic (1), Serbia, def. Tomas Berdych (5), Czech Republic, 61, 4-6, 6-1, 6-4. Women Quarterfinals Li Na (6), China, def. Agnieszka Radwanska (4), Poland, 7-5, 6-3. Maria Sharapova (2), Russia, def. Ekaterina Makarova (19), Russia, 6-2, 6-2.

GOLF World Golf Ranking Through Jan. 20 1. Rory McIlroy .................NIr 2. Tiger Woods...............USA 3. Luke Donald ...............Eng 4. Justin Rose.................Eng 5. Louis Oosthuizen ........SAf 6. Adam Scott .................Aus 7. Lee Westwood............Eng 8. Brandt Snedeker .......USA 9. Bubba Watson ...........USA 10. Steve Stricker ..........USA 11. Jason Dufner ...........USA 12. Keegan Bradley.......USA 13. Ian Poulter ................Eng 14. Dustin Johnson .......USA 15. Webb Simpson ........USA 16. Charl Schwartzel.......SAf 17. Graeme McDowell .....NIr 18. Peter Hanson...........Swe 19. Sergio Garcia............Esp 20. Matt Kuchar .............USA 21. Nick Watney.............USA 22. Phil Mickelson..........USA 23. Ernie Els....................SAf 24. Bo Van Pelt ..............USA 25. Zach Johnson..........USA 26. Jim Furyk.................USA 27. Hunter Mahan .........USA 28. Martin Kaymer ..........Ger 29. Jamie Donaldson......Wal 30. Branden Grace..........SAf 31. Paul Lawrie ...............Sco 32. Carl Pettersson ........Swe 33. Francesco Molinari......Ita 34. Rickie Fowler ...........USA 35. Fernandez-Castano..Esp 36. Nicolas Colsaerts ......Bel 37. Bill Haas ..................USA 38. Robert Garrigus ......USA 39. Jason Day .................Aus 40. Scott Piercy .............USA 41. John Senden.............Aus 42. Thorbjorn Olesen .....Den 43. Matteo Manassero......Ita 44. Hiroyuki Fujita............Jpn 45. Ryan Moore.............USA 46. David Toms ..............USA 47. Thomas Bjorn...........Den 48. George Coetzee........SAf 49. David Lynn................Eng 50. Padraig Harrington.......Irl

12.37 8.16 8.11 6.65 6.64 6.19 5.69 5.35 5.25 5.15 5.12 4.99 4.95 4.93 4.78 4.69 4.62 4.54 4.50 4.42 4.37 4.36 4.25 4.25 4.06 3.73 3.66 3.62 3.42 3.40 3.38 3.35 3.34 3.28 3.23 3.03 2.99 2.79 2.78 2.75 2.71 2.66 2.63 2.56 2.55 2.43 2.38 2.28 2.25 2.24

PGA Tour FedExCup Leaders Through Jan. 20 .................................PointsYTD Money 1. Brian Gay .................538 $1,041,208 2. Russell Henley .........512 $1,020,432 3. Dustin Johnson........500 $1,140,000 4. Charles Howell III.....408 $817,600 5.Tim Clark ..................300 $604,800 5. Steve Stricker ...........300 $665,000 7. David Lingmerth.......283 $526,008 8. Brandt Snedeker......237 $483,520 9. Matt Kuchar..............230 $457,960 10. Scott Stallings ........179 $366,800 11. Brian Stuard...........164 $328,533 12. Scott Langley .........163 $324,800 13. Keegan Bradley .....143 $317,821 14.Tommy Gainey .......128 $238,876 15. James Hahn...........125 $257,712 16. Jeff Overton ...........125 $209,328 17. Bubba Watson........123 $304,000 18. Nicholas Thompson122 $213,668 19. Marc Leishman......120 $218,600 20. Webb Simpson.......116 $215,667 21. Carl Pettersson ......114 $216,158 22. Scott Piercy............110 $210,000 23. Kevin Streelman.....107 $165,573 24. Ricky Barnes..........101 $139,227 24. Matt Jones..............101 $141,120 24. John Rollins............101 $139,227 27. Chris Kirk................100 $204,400 27. Ryan Palmer ..........100 $206,248 29. Zach Johnson ..........98 $139,120 30. Rickie Fowler............95 $212,500 31. Jimmy Walker...........90 $92,960 32. John Huh..................89 $120,808 33. Johnson Wagner......86 $142,800 34. Justin Hicks ..............84 $112,000 35. Jason Kokrak............83 $178,976 36. Kevin Chappell .........83 $168,000 37. Billy Horschel ...........79 $136,957 38. Stephen Ames .........78 $83,067 39. Ian Poulter ................78 $175,000 40. Harris English...........76 $157,024 41. George McNeill........76 $89,376 42. Pat Perez..................73 $145,600 42. Dicky Pride ...............73 $145,600 44. Mark Wilson .............68 $155,000


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SPORTS

Wednesday, January 23, 2013

■ National Basketball Association

TROY DAILY NEWS • WWW.TROYDAILYNEWS.COM

■ Boys Basketball

Irving leads Cavs past Celtics “He has all the numbers to be an All-Star, for sure,” Rivers said. “Whether he makes it or not is another story. … He’s a tough kid, which I don’t think people give him enough credit for.” The reserves, who are picked by the respective coaches in each conference for the Feb. 17 game in Houston, will be announced Thursday. Irving, who made a strong final case to be on the team, has Rivers’ vote

CLEVELAND (AP) — Count Boston’s Doc Rivers as one coach who thinks Kyrie Irving should be on the Eastern Conference All-Star team. It’s easy to see why Rivers holds such an opinion after Irving scored scored 15 of his 40 points in the fourth quarter, including several key late baskets, to lead the Cleveland Cavaliers to a 95-90 victory over the Celtics on Tuesday night.

despite the fact the Cavaliers have struggled all season. “It’s a hard one for me to pick a guy from a team with 11 wins, but he’s just playing so well,” Rivers said. Cleveland coach Byron Scott also thinks Irving belongs in the game. “If you look at the point guards in the Eastern Conference, name one that’s having a better season,” he said. “I’ll wait.”

■ Gymnastics

Trojans STAFF PHOTOS/ANTHONY WEBER

Troy Christian’s Nathan Kirkpatrick and Xenia Christian’s Davis Weerheim battle for a loose ball Tuesday at Troy Christian High School.

Eagles Troy’s Kayla Coate competes on the vault Monday at Gem City Gymnastics. ■ CONTINUED FROM 13 compared to Beavercreek’s 130.50. Hanson had placed second in the all-around competition at Troy’s last two meets. On Monday, however, she was on the podium in every event — including a first-place finish on the bars. She also placed fifth on the vault, third on the beam and second on the floor. Her total score on the day was 35.325, which was plenty good enough to hold off Greenville’s Paige Keller (34.15). “We come to expect the fact that she’s very consistent,” McCoppin said. “There’s not one event that really stands out for her.

PHOTOS COURTESY LEE WOOLERY/SPEEDSHOT PHOTO

Troy’s Claire Buerger competes on the floor during Monday’s Northmont Invitational. She’s just very consistent all the way through.” Troy’s Claire Buerger just missed out on medaling in the all-around competition, placing 11th (32.150). She did earn a podium spot on the vault

with a 10th-place finish. Lauren Anderson was Troy’s third-highest finisher in the all-around contest, placing 17th (31.30). The Trojans’ next meet is Saturday at the Centerville Invitational.

■ College Basketball

No. 3 Kansas edges KSU Villanova to the upset. The Wildcats (12-7, 3-3 Big East) led by as many as 10 points in the first half and rallied late in the second to send the Cardinals to their second straight loss. No. 13 Mich. St. 49, Wisconsin 47 MADISON, Wis. — Keith Appling scored 19 points and Branden Dawson added 18 for Michigan State. Mike Bruesewitz led Wisconsin (13-6, 4-2 Big Ten) with 10 points. Wake Forest 86, No. 18 N.C. State 84 WINSTON-SALEM, N.C. — Freshman Devin Thomas had a season-high 25 points, 14 rebounds and four blocks for Wake Forest.

MANHATTAN, Kan. (AP) — Travis Releford scored 12 points and No. 3 Kansas held off No. 11 Kansas State down the stretch for a 59-55 victory Tuesday night that gave the Jayhawks sole possession of first place in the Big 12. Ben McLemore and Jeff Withey added 11 points each for the Jayhawks (17-1, 5-0 Big 12), who pushed their nation-leading winning streak to 16 games and ended the Wildcats’ 12-game home winning streak. Villanova 73, No. 5 Louisville 64 PHILADELPHIA — Achraf Yacoubou hit the tiebreaking 3-pointer late in the second half to help

Travis McKie added 16 points for the Demon Deacons (10-8, 3-3 Atlantic Coast Conference), including two free throws with 3.4 seconds left that helped Wake Forest hold on down the stretch in a wild final 4 minutes. No. 22 Missouri 71, S. Carolina 65 COLUMBIA, Mo. — Earnest Ross and Jabari Brown hit key 3-pointers in the final 1:11 and Missouri overcame 5-for-27 shooting from long range and a 13point second-half deficit. Ross had a career-best 21 points for Missouri, which is 11-0 at home this season and has won 12 straight at the Mizzou Arena.

■ CONTINUED FROM 13 coming from the Eagles’ high-energy transition game. “When you run hard and pass the ball ahead, you can get easy opportunities,” Zawadzki said. “The ball can move faster than the defense, so we try to push it hard, collapse the defense and find the open guy. “We’ve worked hard in the last 10 days on our transition game. We went into this one knowing that we wanted to play more up-tempo.” Even after the Ambassadors (6-8, 1-5) broke the run, the Eagles went right back to work. Grant Zawadzki drew a foul on the break and hit both free throws, then Holden Varvel stole the ball and hit Nathan Kirkpatrick for a transition jumper. Varvel then stole it again and threw an outlet pass to Logan George, who found Kirkpatrick open for 3 — and that 19-15 lead was 39-17 in the blink of an eye. Zawadzki — who scored 11 of his team-high 17 points in the first quarter — was the ringleader with four steals and eight assists in the game, Christian Salazar added 16 points, 10 rebounds and three blocked shots and Kirkpatrick finished with 14 points. Spencer Thomas added nine points and six rebounds and George chipped in six points. “We had 20 assists as a team,” Zawadzki said. “We’ve got a lot of people that can pass and see the floor well, and we have good finishers, too. Which, if you’re going to run, you want both of those things.” Justin Martin led all scorers with 21 points and

Troy Christian’s Christian Salazar puts up a shot Tuesday against Xenia Christian. five rebounds and Jordan games — and they go in Freeman added 18 points search of another Friday and 14 rebounds as Xenia at Dayton Christian. Xenia Christian — 62 Christian tried to do a Noah Larson 0-0-0, Jordan vanishing act of its own in Freeman 6-6-18, Justin Martin mop-up time. With Troy 6-7-21, Richard Kensinger 6-1Christian leading by 21 at 14, Gabe Woodard 0-0-0, Johnny 70-49 with two minutes Eustache 1-0-2, Davis Weerheim remaining — and the 0-0-0, Peter Wilson 0-0-0, Jason Eagles without any Holloway 3-1-7. Totals: 22-15starters on the floor — 62. Troy Christian — 70 Xenia Christian forced six Matthew Coots 1-0-2, Holden straight turnovers and Varvel 1-0-2, Aaron Horn 1-0-2, scored the last 13 points of Spencer Thomas 3-2-9, Logan George 3-0-6, Nathan the game. 5-2-14, Justin Lewis “We had it going (in the Kirkpatrick 0-0-0, Travis Sloan 0-0-0, second quarter),” Nathanael Boone 1-0-2, Zawadzki said. “That was Christian Salazar 6-4-16, Scotty some of our best basket- Scott 0-0-0, Grant Zawadzki 5-6ball. Unfortunately for us 17. Totals: 26-14-70. Score By Quarters as a group, we didn’t have XC .....................13 24 37 62 that for 32 minutes, just TC .....................19 39 59 70 that short window. 3-point goals: Xenia Luckily, we were able to Christian — Martin 2, squeeze through that win- Kensinger. Troy Christian — Thomas, Kirkpatrick 2, dow and get the win.” Zawadzki. The win was the 28th Records: Xenia Christian 6in the Eagles’ last 29 MBC 8, 1-5. Troy Christian 11-2, 6-0.

■ Boys Basketball

■ College Basketball

Roundup

Buckeyes

Milton-Union — 59 Poland 8-6-24, Stelzer 1-0-3, Klosterman 5-5-15, Dickison 0-1-1, Brumbaugh 2-0-4, Albaugh 4-0-8, Brady 2-0-4. Totals: 22-12-59. Dixie — 54 Fisher 0-1-1, Moore 3-2-8, Bowling 4-5-15, Watts 8-1-18, Leonard 6-0-12. Totals: 21-9-54. Score By Quarters M-U ........................12 23 36 59

Dixie .......................16 35 44 54 3-point goals: Milton-Union — Poland 2, Stelzer. Dixie — Bowling, Watts. Records: Milton-Union 8-5, 43. Dixie 9-6, 3-4.

Tippecanoe 85, Indian Lake 58 LEWISTOWN — Indian Lake did what it could to keep pace with Tippecanoe for a quarter, but the Red Devils never let up in an 8558 Central Buckeye Conference crossover victory Tuesday. Five Red Devils (12-3) were in double figures in the game. Nick Fischer led the way with 17 points, Ben Hughes and Michael Landwehr each had 15, Cameron Johnson scored 11

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■ CONTINUED FROM 13 open cut over his right eye was bandaged. He had to get what a team spokesman said was six or seven stitches to close it. His absence came at a time when the Buckeyes (14-4, 4-2 Big Ten) seemed to lose their focus. A majority of it was Iowa contesting every play and fighting back, but it was as if they were content to just ride out the final few minutes and hope for the best. “We didn’t do it the prettiest way. We didn’t finish it the way we wanted to,” said point guard Aaron Craft, who set Ohio State’s career mark for

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and Sean Ford added 10. Bethel 75, Tippecanoe returns Northeastern 66 home Friday for a crucial SPRINGFIELD — CBC Kenton Trail Division Bethel recovered from a matchup against rival sluggish first half Tuesday Tecumseh. night, outscoring Tippecanoe — 85 Northeastern 42-29 in the Fischer 7-2-17, Hughes 5-3-15, second half to rally for a 75Hadden 2-0-5, Ervin 2-0-4, Ford 42-10, Stucke 2-0-4, Johnson 5-0-11, 66 victory on the road in Landwehr 7-1-15, Donahey 2-0-4. non-league play. Totals: 36-8-85. Patrick Bain led the Indian Lake — 58 charge with 26 points and Tuttle 3-5-14, Hulbert 1-0-3, Christian Pfledderer added Grider 3-7-13, Lump 5-0-14, Wurster 1-0-3, Teague 4-2-10, 18 as the Bees (9-3) overDowning 0-1-1. Totals: 17-15-58. came a 37-33 halftime Score By Quarters deficit. Gus Schwieterman Tipp ........................28 45 62 85 scored 11 points and Jason IL ............................23 33 45 58 3-point goals: Tippecanoe — Clendening added nine. Fischer, Hughes 2, Hadden, Bethel hosts the stateJohnson. Indian Lake — Tuttle 3, ranked Cross County Hulbert, Lump 4, Wurster. leader, TriRecords: Tippecanoe 12-3. Conference Village, Friday. Indian Lake 2-11.

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■ CONTINUED FROM 13 centage dropped and we turned them over a lot.” And Caleb Poland led the way back on the offensive end, scoring 21 of his gamehigh 24 points in the second half, while Trevor Klosterman added 15 points. Milton-Union remains on the road Friday, traveling to Waynesville.

steals in the game. “But we got the win. We found a way to fight and get the win.” The Buckeyes led 53-29 after Ravenel hit a free throw with 12:48 left. Most in a crowd of 16,040 were itching to head for the exits and beat the rush. Slowly but surely, however, Iowa (13-6, 2-4) knifed into the lead. “A lot of times teams don’t have the maturity or the patience to try to chip away,” Iowa coach Fran McCaffery said. “That’s what we did. We got it under 20, then we got it under 15, we got it under 10, we got it under 5.”


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