01/28/13

Page 1

Monday SPORTS

Troy’s defense shines in 3-1 SWOHSHL win over the Alter Knights PAGE 13

January 28, 2013 It’s Where You Live! Volume 105, No. 24

INSIDE

www.troydailynews.com

$1.00

an award-winning Ohio Community Media newspaper

Sidewalk timeline shortened Project to start in winter/spring 2014 BY JOHN BADEN For the Troy Daily News tdneditorial@civitasmedia.com

Nightclub blaze kills 230 people in Brazil

The construction timeline of West Milton’s sidewalk project, which stems off of a Safe Routes to Schools grant, has been shortened. According to saferoutesinfo.org, the grant “examines conditions around schools and conducts projects and activities” that will pro-

vide students with a secure way to walk and bike to school. The grant was awarded in late spring of 2011 by the Ohio Department of Transportation, with part of the grant going toward new and widened sidewalks by the new school. Forest Road, the east side of Haskett, and the south side of Hamilton all will be getting new sidewalks. The asphalt walkway

WEST MILTON that runs behind the Lowry building also will be widened. The asphalt walkway already is in existence, however it is not wide enough for both pedestrian and bicycle traffic. With the grant money, the path will be widened to 5 feet, and lighting will be added. The path leads from Hasket Road up to the campus of the new school.

According to Municipal Manager Matt Kline, the grant application originally allowed for only putting in sidewalks on the east side of Hasket Road, because creating sidewalks on both sides put the engineer’s estimate above the grant monetary amount allowed. “The state came back and said, ‘We want sidewalks on both sides,’” Kline said.

• See SIDEWALK on Page 2

Israel warns of attack

Flames raced through a crowded nightclub in southern Brazil early Sunday, killing more than 230 people as panicked partygoers gasped for breath in the smoke-filled air, stampeding toward a single exit partially blocked by those already dead. It appeared to be the world’s deadliest nightclub fire in more than a decade. See Page 9.

Strike aimed at stopping Syria’s chemical weapons

War journalist Karnow dies Stanley Karnow, the awardwinning author and journalist who wrote a definitive book about the Vietnam War, worked on an accompanying documentary and later won a Pulitzer for a history of the Philippines, died Sunday morning. He was 87. See Page 6.

COMING WEDNESDAY

STAFF PHOTO/ANTHONY WEBER

Troy resident Lois Wright gets in a workout at the Troy Curves Thursday morning. Wright said she visits the gym six days a week.

No excuses Curves member inspires others with her dedication A new store is opening in Troy featuring craft beer and unique fine wines. Also, Piqua invites women to its Valentine’s Ladies Night Out, and a new bar opens at Brel Aire Bowling Alley in Piqua. Read about it all Wednesday in the new edition of iN75.

INSIDE TODAY Advice ..........................7 Calendar ......................3 Classified ...................10 Comics.........................8 Deaths .........................6 Lucille M. Gaier Rita D. Coffman Krysta Long Paul E. Crabtree Horoscopes .................8 Menus ..........................6 Opinion ........................5 Sports ........................13 TV ................................7

OUTLOOK Today Rain High: 48° Low: 32° Tuesday Chance of rain High: 59° Low: 48°

BY KATHY ORDING Staff Writer kording@civitasmedia.com It’s no wonder Lois Wright is an inspiration to the other members of the Troy Curves. She shows up at the fitness facility six days a week, rarely takTROY ing a day off. She completes the workout circuit twice, and is even known to drop to the floor to do a few pushups. Oh, and by the way, the Troy resident is 94 years old. “She does the circuit twice like every other member, at her own pace,” said Troy Curves owner Jennifer Perrault. “I think the amazing thing is, the inspiration is, she still comes in six days a week with no

Next Door If you know someone who should be profiled in our Next Door feature, contact City Editor Melody Vallieu at 440-5265. excuses. She could have more excuses than anybody else.” “I get things moving,” Wright said of her daily workout. “If I don’t come in, it’s a bad day. It just starts my day, and I usually get a good laugh here. It’s just a good way to start your day. “I had an aunt who used to take a shot of whiskey in the morning to loosen up her bones. I just come here,” said Wright, who worked in the Miami County Auditor’s Office

for 25 years, before retiring as chief deputy in 1984. “She comes six days a week to Curves, Monday through Saturday,” Perrault said. “We’re closed on Sunday, or otherwise she’d probably come on Sunday.” “I go to church on Sunday,” said Wright, who is a lifetime member of St. John’s United Church of Christ in Troy. She also volunteers at the free lunch program at Richards Chapel in Troy. She has been a member of Curves since the Troy location, 2309 W. Main St., opened 10 years ago. Wright said she was looking for activities to fill her days, because her husband, James, had died a couple of years earlier. “We were quite the travelers. We

• See DEDICATION on Page 2

JERUSALEM (AP) — Israel could launch a preemptive strike to stop Syria’s chemical weapons from reaching Lebanon’s Hezbollah or al-Qaida inspired groups, officials said Sunday. The warning came as the military moved a rocket defense system to a main northern city, and Israel’s premier warned of dangers from both Syria and Iran. Israel has long expressed concerns that Syrian President Bashar Assad, clinging to power during a 22-month civil war, could lose control over his chemical weapons. Vice Prime Minister Silvan Shalom said Sunday that Israel’s top security officials held a special meeting last week to discuss Syria’s chemical weapons arsenal. The fact of the meeting, held the morning after a national election, had not been made public before. Shalom told the Army Radio station that the transfer of weapons to violent groups, particularly the Iranian-backed Lebanese Hezbollah, would be a game changer. “It would be crossing a line that would demand a different approach, including even action,” he said. Asked whether this might mean a pre-emptive attack, he said: “We will have to make the decisions.” Israel has kept out of the civil war that has engulfed Syria and killed more than 60,000 people, but it is concerned that

• See ATTACK on Page 2

Barge carrying 80,000 gallons of oil hits bridge Light crude spilling into the Mississippi River

VICKSBURG, Miss. (AP) — A barge carrying 80,000 gallons of oil hit a railroad bridge in Vicksburg, Complete weather Miss., on Sunday, spilling light crude information on Page 9. into the Mississippi River and closing the waterway for eight miles in each Home Delivery: direction, the Coast Guard said. 335-5634 A second barge also was damaged Classified Advertising: during the incident. (877) 844-8385 Investigators did not know how much had spilled, but an oily sheen was reported as far as three miles downriver of Vicksburg after the 1:12 6 74825 22406 6 a.m. incident, said Lt. Ryan Gomez of

the Coast Guard’s office in Memphis, Tenn. Authorities were still trying to determine the source of the leak, but it appeared to be coming from one or two tanks located at the stern of the first barge, Gomez said. He said there was no indication that any oil was leaking from the second vessel, and said it was still unclear whether the second barge also hit the bridge or was damaged through a collision with the first. “Investigators are still trying to figure out what happened,” he said. United States Environmental Services, a response-and-remediation company, was working to contain the

• See BARGE on Page 2

AP

The towboat Nature Way Endeavor banks a barge against the western bank of the Mississippi River, Sunday. The river was closed to all traffic eight miles north and south of Vicksburg.

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


LOCAL & WORLD

Monday, January 28, 2013

LOTTERY CLEVELAND (AP) — Here are the winning numbers drawn Sunday by the Ohio Lottery: • Pick 4 Midday: 7-1-6-4 • Pick 5 Midday: 3-2-9-4-3 • Pick 3 Midday: 5-6-5 • Pick 3 Evening: 3-0-4 • Pick 5 Evening: 8-5-9-0-5 • Pick 4 Evening: 4-2-1-9 • Rolling Cash 5: 08-14-36-37-38 Estimated jackpot: $100,000

Holocaust victims mourned at Auschwitz WARSAW, Poland (AP) — Holocaust survivors, politicians, religious leaders and others marked International Holocaust Remembrance Day on Sunday with solemn prayers and the now oftrepeated warnings to never let such horrors happen again. Events took place at sites including Auschwitz-Birkenau, the former death camp where Hitler’s Germany killed at least 1.1 million people, mostly Jews, in southern Poland. In Warsaw, prayers were also held at a monument to the fighters of the Warsaw Ghetto Uprising of 1943. Pope Benedict XVI, speaking from his window at St. Peter’s Square at the Vatican, warned that humanity must always be on guard against a repeat of murderous racism. “The memory of this immense tragedy, which above all struck so harshly the Jewish people, must represent for everyone a constant warning so that the horrors of the past are not repeated, so that every form of

BUSINESS ROUNDUP AP

• The Troy Elevator The grain prices listed below are the closing prices of Friday.

Corn Month Bid 7.4100 Jan Mar 7.4500 NC 13 5.4400 Soybeans 14.4600 Jan Mar 14.4600 NC 13 12.4800 Wheat 7.4650 Jan NC 13 7.5350

Change -0.0350 -0.0350 -0.0125

Dedication

+0.0800 +0.0625

traveled the world,� Wright said. “We’d been to every continent but Antartica. “He loved to take cruises because we’d dance from 2 o’clock in the afternoon until 2 o’clock in the morning,� she said of her husband. “We had a good time.� Wright still is a frequent traveler. Her three daughters, Carol, Robin and Nancy, are scattered about the country, in Arizona, Oregon and Findlay. She is planning a trip to Oregon this summer, and is going on a Cincinnati Reds bus tour to Pittsburgh with a friend in May. The grandmother of six grandchildren and four

• Stocks of local interest Values reflect closing prices from Friday.

AA CAG CSCO EMR F FITB FLS GM ITW JCP KO KR LLTC MCD MSFG PEP SYX TUP USB VZ WEN WMT

9.03 32.33 21.15 57.47 13.68 16.37 154.47 29.07 64.99 19.35 37.05 27.84 36.70 93.72 13.07 72.49 9.38 69.88 33.17 42.67 5.17 69.00

Former prisoner Miroslaw Celka, 89, attends a ceremony at the Auschwitz concentration camp in Oswiecim, Poland, Sunday, marking the 68th anniversary of the liberation of Auschwitz by Soviet troops.

+0.0575 +0.0575 -0.0275

You can find more information online at www.troyelevator.com.

-0.01 -0.07 +0.13 +0.20 -0.19 -0.02 -0.03 +0.29 +0.16 +0.23 -0.06 +0.08 +0.32 +0.41 +0.09 +0.26 -0.12 +1.01 +0.06 +0.08 +0.04 -0.79

— Staff and wire reports

• CONTINUED FROM 1

Sidewalk they could talk and explain the situation. Following the Dec. 6 meeting, Adams set up a second meeting a week later for him and Kline to meet with Randy Chevalley, the deputy director of District 7 ODOT. “He was in agreement with us that the project was too far long, and he’s seeing that it gets moved up for actual construction for winter and spring of 2014,� Kline said. Since then, ODOT has

• CONTINUED FROM 1 He added that the state agreed to pay the full cost for the extra path of sidewalks, but that also meant a resubmission of the application. Then, in late November 2012, ODOT extended the timeframe to complete the work from 2013 to 2015. Upon hearing this, Mayor Michael Coate II contacted State Representative Richard Adams to meet with him and Kline so that

$&"#! ($'%

03 "3& 9063 &"34 +645 1-6((&% 8*5)

!06 "3& */7*5&% '03 "

&"3 */41&$5*0/ 64*/( 5)& -"5&45 7*%&0 5&$)/0-0(9

* ( "*'( %* '-

)" )" )() $$ %&, )& +&# , #)#%!

: : : : : / : : : : : 0.1-&5& -&$530/*$ &"3*/( &45

contracted with the consulting firm Kleingers and Associates and their subconsultants, WYCO Consulting and Resource International to design the improvements. A letter will be going out in the next few weeks to property owners in the area informing them of the details of the project and how they will be affected. Despite the changes in the project’s date, MiltonSchools Union Ginny Superintendent Rammel is happy that the project is progressing and continues to have confidence in Kline and the state. “Of course we had hoped that the work would have been done this past summer so our students would have had a safer route to school,� Rammel said. “Matt is working closely with ODOT and doing all he can to move to project along.� Kline concluded, “We are just grateful that the project is now moving forward and looking forward to its completion.� For more information, contact Ohio Department of Transportation’s project manager Justin Yoh at (937) 497-6897.

Yisrael Hasson, a lawmaker and former deputy head of Israel’s Shin Bet intelligence agency, said Israel was closely following developments in Syria to sure chemical make weapons don’t “fall into the wrong hands.� “Syria has a massive amount of chemical weapons, and if they fall into hands even more extreme than Syria like Hezbollah or global jihad groups it would completely transform the map of threats,� Hasson told Army Radio. “Global jihad� is the term Israel uses for forces influenced by al-Qaida. Syria’s rebels include alQaida-allied groups.

Barge • CONTINUED FROM 1 oil with booms before collecting it and transferring it to one of the barge’s undamaged tanks, then ultimately to a separate barge, Gomez said. He could not say how long the river would remain closed in the area of the spill. Five northbound and two

937-778-0436 • 523 N. Main St., Piqua

: : : : :

southbound vessels were waiting to pass, he said. “It’s still considered an active leak,� Gomez said. “We don’t have an estimate or accurate amount of what was released.� Railroad traffic was allowed to continue after the bridge was found safe for trains, Petty Officer Carlos Vega said. The barges are owned by Third Coast Towing LLC, Gomez said. According to a website listed under that name, the company is located in Corpus Christi, Texas. No one answered the telephone at the company Sunday night. Both vessels were being pushed by the tugboat Nature’s Way Endeavor. 2359696

)& 30(3".."#-&

' $# &% #' $ '. * #&)&% '& #!#) $

% " #% " % # #+ ! % ! $ % ! " # % * !% ! ( % !% # ! #$ ! $ !% "" * %! "# !# $ $ $ ' & % # )" # $

% " #% " % # #+ ! % ! $ % ! " # % * !% ! ( % !% # ! #$ ! $ !% "" * %! "# !# $ $ $ ' & % # )" # $

"9#& 906 8"/5 #&55&3 )&"3*/( 5)"5 /0 0/&

$"/ 4&& 0 ."/6"- 70-6.& $0/530-4 '03 906 50 "%+645 645 4-*1 *5 */50 9063 &"3 "/% *5 "%+6454 *54&-' "650."5*$"--9 "4 906 -*45&/ 5)& -*45 13*$& 163$)"4& 0' " 4&5 0' %*(*5"- )&"3*/( "*%4 0-65*0/4

*(*5"- &"3*/( *% 0' 5)& '6563& 08 906 %0/;5

1008 Grant St., Troy

2352950

' $# &% #' $ '. * #&)&% '& #!#) $

violence could spill over from its northern border into Israel. Israel deployed its Iron Dome rocket defense system in the northern city of Haifa on Sunday. The city was battered by Hezbollah rocket fire during a war in the summer of 2006. The military called the deployment “routine.� Iron Dome, an Israeldeveloped system that shoots down incoming short-range rockets, was used to defend Israeli cities during a round of hostilities with Hamas militants in the Gaza Strip, on Israel’s southern flank, last November.

Hours 9-9 M-F, Sat 9-5 • Walk-ins welcome

/ ''*$& &1"*34

• CONTINUED FROM 1

Includes Federal, State & School • Choose no out of pocket costs...ask your preparer •

Attack

EZ $40, Short $70, Long $90 per hour

"$,"(& 0' &"3*/( *% "55&3*&4

different life for her,� Perrault said. “I don’t feel old. I don’t know how I’m supposed to feel. I feel fine,� said Wright, who said she used to walk 3 miles a day for exercise. “A lot of members do talk about Lois and how she does inspire other members in here, whether it’s when she’s doing her pushups or whether it’s her consistency,� Perrault said. “When it’s cold outside, or it’s hot outside, she always comes in. I always ask her, ‘Where do you get it from?’ She said, ‘You just stop making excuses.’� “You have to push yourself a little bit,� Wright said. “Just enjoy your life. I enjoy my life.�

Tax Preparation Service (over 20 years experience)

:

the evil inflicted across the continent. “Those who experienced the horrors of the cattle cars, ghettos, and concentration camps have witnessed humanity at its very worst and know too well the pain of losing loved ones to senseless violence,� U.S. President Barack Obama said in a statement. Obama went on to say that like those who resisted the Nazis, “we must commit ourselves to resisting hate and persecution in all its forms. The United States, along with the international community, resolves to stand in the way of any tyrant or dictator who commits crimes against humanity, and stay true to the principle of ‘Never Again.’� As every year, Holocaust survivors gathered in the cold Polish winter at Auschwitz but they shrink in number each year. This year the key event in the ceremonies was the opening of an exhibition prepared by Russian experts that depicts Soviet suffering at the camp and the Soviet role in liberating it.

WYANDT & SILVERS

*%&0 504$01& "3 "/"- /41&$5*0/

: : : :

hatred and racism is overcome, and that respect for, and dignity of, every human person is encouraged,� the German-born pontiff said. Not all words spoken by dignitaries struck the right tone, however. On the sidelines of a ceremony in Milan, former Italian Premier Silvio Berlusconi sparked outrage when he praised Benito Mussolini for “having done good� despite the Fascist dictator’s anti-Jewish laws. Berlusconi also defended Mussolini for allying himself with Hitler, saying he likely reasoned that it would be better to be on the winning side. The United Nations in 2005 designated Jan. 27 as a yearly memorial day for the victims of the Holocaust 6 million Jews and millions of other victims of Nazi Germany during World War II. The day was chosen because it falls on the anniversary of the liberation in 1945 of Auschwitz, the Nazis’ most notorious death camp and a symbol of

great-grandchildren is considering taking the grandkids on a Reds cruise in November. “I’ve been on 27 Caribbean cruises,� said Wright, who concedes that at her age, she likes having someone travel with her. “Any more I don’t see that well, and I don’t hear that well, and I don’t walk that well,� she said with a laugh. She may be stretching the truth a bit. Perrault noted that Wright still maintains her Westbrook residence, does yard work and all of her own cooking, and is sure the exercise Wright gets each day plays a big part in her continued good health. “If she quit on exercise, I think it would be a

TROY DAILY NEWS • WWW.TDN-NET.COM

2356345

2

WE’VE MOVED!

PERSONAL SERVICE-you deserve it!

now available 850 S. Market St., Troy 339-9212

08 906 4&& *5

Heritage Event & Catering

0/5)4 '*/"/$*/( "7"*-"#-& 0/ "-- "/% 40-65*0/4

PROFESSIONAL WEDDING CATERERS

! *3"$-& "3 &"3*/( &/5&3 *".* "--&9 &/53& "- /4*%& *26" &"34

1714 Commerce Dr., Piqua 2359691

2361080 # $ ! !% # $%!# %&# # ' & )" # $ ' #* " ! $ ' # %* ! # !$$ &# * ! ' & % ! "#!" # % %* %! "% %! " % ! * *!&# # # + # "# $ % % ' % # ( ! !"% ! $ * # % !# *!& $%!# !# % $ &# # % $% ' ! !%!$ !" $" % ! ( *$ # # % $% & ! %# % $% %! % # "#!" # " % ! $ ! * $ # !% ) $ !# !$ $ !# # % * % %! # " " *$ -$ # *!& $&$" % "#! " $ $ %# % % #! *!&# ! %!# , # #' $

EdenPURE Heaters

937-778-1171 Find us at www.hecyes.com

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.


LOCAL

3

&REGION

January 28, 2013

TROY DAILY NEWS • WWW.TROYDAILYNEWS.COM

TODAY MONDAY

FYI

macaroni salad for $7 from 6-8 p.m. Chicken livers also will be available. • PORK LOIN: The AMVETS Ladies Auxiliary, 3449 LeFevre Road, Troy, will offer a pork loin dinner with mashed potatoes and gravy, green beans, sald and dessert for $8. Meals will be served from 5:30-8 p.m. • FRIED CHICKEN: The American Legion Post No. 586, Tipp City, will serve deep fried chicken with sides from 6-7:30 p.m. for $7.

• BOOK LOVERS: Join Community the Book Lovers Calendar Anonymous adult book discussion group at 6 p.m. at the Troy-Miami County CONTACT US Library. The group will be reading and discussing “The Beautiful Mystery,” by Call Melody Louise Penny. • MOVIE NIGHT: Vallieu at Children in grades kinder440-5265 to garten through fifth grade list your free and their families are invited to the Troy-Miami calendar County Public Library for a FEB. 2 items.You family friendly movie. The can send movie will start at 6 p.m. • SPAGHETTI DINNER: and will last about 90 minyour news by e-mail to Troy Post No. 43 baseThe utes. The movie title is vallieu@tdnpublishing.com. ball will offer an all-you-canposted in the children’s eat spaghetti dinner from department. Popcorn will 3:30-7 p.m. at 622 S. Market be served. Call the library St., Troy. The meal also will at 339-0502 to register. include salad bar, rolls, dessert and soft • ONE ROOM SCHOOLHOUSES: If drink or coffee. Meals will be $6.75 for you’ve ever been curious about one room adults and $4 for children under 12. schoolhouses, come to the Oakes• SPAGHETTI DINNER: The Miami Beitman Memorial Library at 6 p.m. Chuck East Alumni Association’s spaghetti dinner Martin of the Pleasant Hill History Center will be from 4-6 p.m. at Miami East High will give a presentation on one room School. Dinner will be served before the schoolhouses throughout the area. Light game against Graham and Troy Pop refreshments will be served. For more Rocks will perform the halftime show. information, call the library at (937) 676Freewill donations will be accepted. 2731. Proceeds will go toward scholarships for • TEXAS TENDERLOINS: Texas ten2013 Miami East graduates. derloin sandwiches and fries will be • OPEN HOUSE: An open house for served from 6-7:30 p.m. at the American potential students for kindergarten at Legion Post No. 586, Tipp City, for $5. Piqua Catholic School will be at 5 p.m. at Civic Agendas the Downing Street Campus, 218 S. • Tipp City Board of Education will Downing St., Piqua. For more information, meet at 7 p.m. at the board office, 90 S. call 773-3876. Tippecanoe Drive. Call 667-8444 for more • KARAOKE: The American Legion information. • Covington Village Council will meet at Post No. 586, Tipp City, will offer fun and snacks while participants sing and dance 7 p.m. at Town Hall. to Papa D’s Pony Express Karaoke. • The Covington Street Committee will Participants will be celebrating Papa D’s meet immediately following the regular birthday, so come and have some birthday council meeting. cake and bring a snack. • Brown Township Board of Trustees will meet at 8 p.m. in the Township Building in Conover. FEB. 3 • The Union Township Trustees will meet in the Township Building, 9497 • BREAKFAST OFFERED: Breakfast Markley Road, Laura. Call 698-4480 for will be offered at the Pleasant Hill VFW more information. Post 6557, 7578 W. Fenner Road, Ludlow Falls, from 8-11 a.m. Made-to-order breakTUESDAY fasts will be offered and everything is ala carte. • CREATURE FEATURE: The striped Civic Agendas • The village of West Milton Council will skunk will the the feature at Brukner have its workshop meeting at 7 p.m. in the Nature Center from 2-3 p.m. Being a malodorous nocturnal creature, the striped council chambers. skunk is one of the more unpopular and most misunderstood animals in Ohio, WEDNESDAY despite being found in all 88 counties. Learn more about why these animals • KIWANIS MEETING: The Kiwanis behave the way they do and even get an Club of Troy will meet from noon to 1 p.m. opportunity to meet one of our newest at the Troy Country Club. Steve Skinner, ambassadors up close. The event is free curator of the Miami Valley Veterans with BNC admission. Museum in Troy, will give an overview of • BREAKFAST SET: The AMVETS will the museum’s mission and offerings. For off an all-you-can-eat breakfast from 8:30more information, contact Donn Craig, 11 a.m. for $6. All proceeds will go toward vice president, at (937) 418-1888. Operation Care Package for the troops on the ground in Afghanistan. THURSDAY • OPEN HOUSE: An open house for potential students for kindergarten through eighth grade at Piqua Catholic School will • OPEN HOUSE: An open house and be at 11:30 a.m. at the Downing Street free community dinner will be offered at Campus, 218 S. Downing St., Piqua. For Liberty Life Church — a non-denominamore information, call 773-3876. For tional church — at 6:30 p.m. at 203 N. 4th fourth through eighth grade students the St., Tipp City. open house will be at 1 p.m. at the North • BLOOD DRIVE: A blood drive will be Street Campus, 503 W. North St., Piqua. from noon to 6 p.m. at First Lutheran For more information, call 773-1564. Church, 2899 W. Main St., Troy. Those who register will receive a free “You Can Be A Blood Donor” T-shirt. Individuals with FEB. 4 eligibility questions are invited to email canidonate@cbccts.org or call (800) 388• DOG BITES: A representative of the GIVE. Make an appointment at Miami County Animal Shelter will be at the www.DonorTime.com. Oakes-Beitman Memorial Library at 6 p.m. • HAMBURGERS: The Tipp City to talk about avoiding dog bites. They also American Legion Post No. 586 will serve will talk about their mission with animals hamburgers with toppings starting at 6 and how to adopt a dog. Light refreshp.m. Euchre for $5 will start at 7 p.m. ments will be served. Call the library at • JOINT MEETING: The village of West (937) 676-2731 for more information. Milton Council will have a joint special meeting with the Milton-Union School FEB. 5 Board to discuss issues of mutual interest beginning at 6 p.m. at the West Milton • LITERACY MEETING: The Troy Council Chambers, West Milton Municipal Building, 701 S. Main St., West Milton. The Literacy Council, an all-volunteer organimeeting will continue until the beginning of zation, will meet at the Troy-Hayner Cultural Center at 7 p.m. Adults seeking the monthly workshop session for the vilhelp with basic literacy or wish to learn lage, which has been rescheduled to English as a second language, and those begin at 7:30 p.m. interested in becoming tutors, are asked • DISCOVERY WALK: A morning disto contact the message center at (937) covery walk for adults will be from 8-9:30 660-3170 for more information. a.m. at Aullwood Audubon Center, 1000 Aullwood Road, Dayton. Tom Hissong, education coordinator, will lead walkers as FEB. 6 they experience the wonderful seasonal changes taking place. Bring binoculars. • COFFEE WITH VETERANS: The Miami Valley Veterans Museum will have free coffee and doughnuts for all veterans FRIDAY and guests from 9-11 a.m. at the museum, located in the Masonic Lodge, 107 W. • CHICKEN FRY: The Pleasant Hill Main St., Troy, on the second floor. VFW Post No. 6557, 7578 W. Fenner Road, Ludlow Falls, will offer a threepiece chicken dinner with french fries and FEB. 8 macaroni salad for $7 from 6-8 p.m. Chicken livers also will be available. • FRIDAY DINNERS: Dinner will be • FRIDAY DINNERS: Dinner will be offered from 5-8 p.m. at the Covington offered from 5-8 p.m. at the Covington VFW Post 4235, 173 N. High St., VFW Post 4235, 173 N. High St., Covington. Choices will include a $12 Covington. Choices will include a $12 New York strip steak, broasted chicken, New York strip steak, broasted chicken, fish, shrimp and sandwiches, all made-tofish, shrimp and sandwiches, all made-to- 0rder. 0rder. • FRIDAY SUPPER: The Pleasant Hill • CHICKEN FRY: The Pleasant Hill VFW Post No. 6557, 7578 W. Fenner VFW Post No. 6557, 7578 W. Fenner Road, Ludlow Falls, will offer dinner with Road, Ludlow Falls, will offer a threetwo sides for $7 from 6-7:30 p.m. Call piece chicken dinner with french fries and (937) 698-6727 for more information.

COLLEGE BRIEFS

Eastern Kentucky University RICHMOND, Ky. — Local students have been selected as student alumni ambassadors at Eastern Kentucky University. Members of Eastern’s SAA chapter, whose main objective is service to the university, often serve as hosts at various campus and alumni events. Ambassadors lead tours of campus and often meet with prospective students on campus and at recruitment events throughout Kentucky and beyond, and are involved with numerous other service and philanthropic events. Local students selected are:

• Taylor Hart, nursing, of New Carlisle. • Alyssa Waitzman, occupational science, of Tipp City.

University of Evansville EVANSVILLE, Ind. — The following local students earned a position on the University of Evansville dean’s list for academic achievements during the Fall Semester 2012: • Lujack McReynolds of Piqua, majoring in management. • Caitlin Smith of Troy, majoring in history. The students made the dean’s list by achieving at least a 3.5 grade point average on a 4.0 scale.

MIAMI COUNTY SHERIFF’S REPORTS Information provided by the Miami County Sheriff’s Office: Dec. 30 • CAR STOLEN: Officials responded to a report of a car stolen from an unlocked garage in the 6700 block of Ross Road, New Carlisle. The victim said he left the key in the vehicle. • ACCIDENT WITH ALCOHOL: At 4: 14 a.m., officials were dispatched to the area of 6135 Peters Road, Tipp City on a report of what appeared to be a two-vehicle crash. officers discovered two vehicles with minor damage and there were no drivers or occupants around. It was determined that the 2007 Pontiac Vibe that was involved in the accident had slid off of the road earlier in the night and was stuck in the snow. The registered owner was contacted and verified the story. It was further discovered that the second vehicle involved, a 2002 Honda Civic later was traveling northbound on Peters Road and the driver lost control of the vehicle and slid off the roadway and crashed into rear of the Pontiac Vibe. The Honda Civic was registered to 19 year-old Thomas Caughell. Since he was no longer on the scene, officers responded to the residence in Troy. Once at his residence, contact was made with Caughell.

When he was asked why he left the scene of the accident, he stated “I was scared and did not know what else to do.” As he was talking, officers could smell a strong odor of an alcoholic beverage coming from his breath. When he was asked about the odor of alcohol on his breath, he advised that he was at a friend’s house and had some beer there, then tried to drive home and that is when he hit the car that was stuck in the snow. At this point, officers took Caughell into custody for operating a vehicle while under the influence and for underage alcohol consumption. He was read the BMV 2255 form with a witness present and opted to give a breath sample. His sample revealed that his BAC was .096 percent. Caughell was cited for underage alcohol consumption, operating a vehicle while under the influence, and leaving the scene of an accident. Dec. 28 • OVI: At 10:25 p.m., officers stopped a vehicle for a moving violation. Officers made contact with the driver, who was identified as, Garland Canter, 46, of Piqua. After further investigation, Canter was found to be under the influence of alcohol and was placed under arrest for OVI.

L<<1 B3,/ O<@6-9>@/< S63.< -3 O35<

;1+-07*8416 <-= :01+919-0 36/504

M3.<19 J34-@4@/3' JVRV' I?AP(4' 9@. 7384<= C86.34 S@/<' N4>V' @4= -9< 1/@>-8>< 3; R/V K@//( O366@4=V N4 @==8-834 -3 3;;</84: @ ;,66 /@4:< 3; 3?.-<-/8>@6 @4= :(4<>363:8>@6 >@/<' R/V J34-@4@/3 . @/<@. 3; <)1</-8.< @4= .1<>8@6 84-</<.84>6,=<G

J8485@66( N4+@.8+< E,/:</( J<431@,.< J@4@:<5<4O<@+( 3/ N//<:,6@/ T6<<=84: D/3:(4 A N4>34-84<4>< C<66 C35@4 Q)@5. F3,-84< H/<4@-@6 S@/< W R<68+</(

A+4.+ ). 3.4/4/6 =41*./ H<+8 E/:J# G+J C./)</<+. ,+<:)4:89 4/ *.()58+/ B8& F<0,*54+8 7.+ .'8+ "K %8<+*# &58+8 54* ,+4'<)8 ,+<:)4:8 :./*4*)8/)1% 8<+/89 )58 54658*) I$,1(* +<)4/6J F8 8<+/89 54* 0894:<1 986+88 7+.0 @.** >/4'8+*4)% ?:5..1 .7 C894:4/8 </9 :.0,18)89 54* +8*498/:% )+<4/4/6 <) ?8)./ F<11 >/4'8+*4)%$?)J C4:5<81 * C894:<1 H8/)8+ 4/ B8&<+2# BD# &58+8 58 6+<9(<)89 <* < :5487 +8*498/)J G+J C./)</<+. 5<* 9814'8+89 0.+8 )5</ !#--- ;<;48* 4/ 54* :<+88+J

4%! 1-)+,"'(&* 2.#(+&#$

&$%!' %>#(/%/"

%2% K334<( F3@= H80,@' I983 #!&!$

&$%!' %>#(/%/" )43,0150,.4+93=802 " U;,68@-<= *8-9 C86.34 J<53/8@6 O3.18-@6 2359311


4

NIE

Monday, January 28, 2013

TROY DAILY NEWS • WWW.TDN-NET.COM

Newspapers In Education Visit NIE online at www.sidneydailynews.com, www.troydailynews.com or www.dailycall.com

Winter Snow Storms

Word of the Week stationary — standing still; not moving

Newspaper Knowledge Your newspaper will probably publish a summary of the previous week’s weather. What was the average high temperature: The average low temperature? If the temperature were given only in Fahrenheit, convert to Celsius. What was the high Celsius reading: The lowest Celsius reading? What was the precipitation in centimeters?

Winter Storm Safety Tips BEFORE A WINTER STORM: Have a disaster plan and prepare a disaster supplies kit for your home and car. Include a first aid kit, emergency food supply, bottled water, batteryoperated radio, flashlight, protective clothing and blankets. Don't forget, be aware of changing weather. DURING A WINTER STORM: Stay indoors and dress warmly. Eat regularly, because food provides the body with energy for producing its own heat. Also, drink lots of water. If you must go outside, wear layered clothing, mittens and a hat. Watch for signs of hypothermia and frostbite. Remember to keep dry. Always change wet clothing to prevent the loss of body heat. If you must drive, carry a cell phone. Always, keep the gas tank full. Don't forget, let someone know where you’re going, just in case your car gets stuck. If you’re car gets stuck, stay with it and wait for help unless help is visible within 100 yards. Use maps and car mats to stay warm. AFTER A WINTER STORM: Avoid driving until conditions have improved. Avoid overexertion! Heart attacks from shoveling snow are the leading cause of deaths during the winter. Also, check on neighbors to make sure they're OK.

NIE Coordinator: Dana Wolfe / Graphic Designer: Scarlett E. Smith

How do winter storms form? Winter storms derive their energy from the clash of two air masses of different temperatures and moisture levels. Winter storms usually form when an air mass of cold, dry, Canadian air moves south and interacts with a warm, moist air mass moving north from the Gulf of Mexico. The point where these two air masses meet is called a front. If cold air advances and pushes away the warm air, it forms a cold front. When warm air advances, it rides up over the denser, cold air mass to form a warm front. If neither air mass advances, it forms a stationary front. How is snow formed? Snow is commonly formed when water vapor undergoes deposition, which is when water vapor changes directly to ice without first becoming a liquid, high in the atmosphere at a temperature of less than 32°F and then falls to the ground. How do blizzards form? A blizzard is a long-lasting snowstorm with very strong winds and intense snowfall. You need three things to have a blizzard: cold air at the surface, lots of moisture and lift. Warm air must rise over cold air. What are snowflakes? Snowflakes are made of ice crystals. Each snowflake is six-sided and

made of as many as 200 ice crystals. Snowflakes form in clouds where the temperature is below freezing. The ice crystals form around tiny bits of dirt that has been carried up into the atmosphere by the wind. As the snow crystals grow, they become heavier and fall toward the ground.

Why is snow white? Bright snow blinds us with its gleaming white color because it reflects beams of white light. Instead of absorbing light, snow's complex structure prevents the light from shining through its lattice formation. A beam of white sunlight entering a snow bank is so quickly scattered by a zillion ice crystals and air pockets that most of the light comes bouncing right back out of the snow bank. What little sunlight is absorbed by snow is absorbed equally over the wavelengths of visible light, thus giving snow its white appearance. So while many natural objects get their blue, red and yellow colors from absorbing light, snow is stuck with its white color because it reflects light.

Know the Lingo WINTER WEATHER ADVISORIES – Issued for accumulations of snow, freezing rain, freezing drizzle and sleet, which will cause significant inconveniences and, if caution is not exercised, could lead to life-threatening situations. WINTER STORM WATCH – Alerts the public to the possibility of a blizzard, heavy snow, heavy freezing rain or heavy sleet. Winter Storm Watches are usually issued 12 to 48 hours before the beginning of a winter storm. WINTER STORM WARNING – Issued when hazardous winter weather in the

Word Search

form of heavy snow, heavy freezing rain or heavy sleet is occurring. Winter Storm Warnings are usually issued 12 to 24 hours before the event is expected. BLIZZARD WARNING – Issued for sustained or gusty winds of 35 mph or more, and falling or blowing snow creating visibilities at or below 1/4 mile. These conditions should persist for three hours. FROST/FREEZE WARNING – Issued when below freezing temperatures are expected.

LAKE EFFECT SNOW ADVISORY – Issued when accumulation of lake effect snow will cause significant inconvenience. LAKE EFFECT SNOW WARNING – Issued when heavy lake effect snow is occurring. WIND CHILL ADVISORY – Issued when the wind chill temperature is forecast to be between -15°F to -24°F. WIND CHILL WARNING – Issued when the wind chill temperature is forecast to be -25°F or lower.

Local Scouts from the Miami Valley Council, Boy Scouts of America, donated two pallets of popcorn to the Van Cleve Leadership Club’s “Support the Troops” program that sends hundreds of packages to our troops overseas. This wonderful donation took place Jan. 10th. Job well done Boy Scouts! The Miami Valley Council serves Scouts and Scouters in Miami, Darke, Preble, Shelby and Montgomery counties.

Proud Sponsors of Newspapers In Education

Nourishing Ideas. Nourishing People. notfr

sssmae

Unscramble the words and bring in your answers for One form per visit. Not valid with any other offer. No cash value.Valid

wnos

mtors

arlizzdb

A FREE ICE CREAM CONE

at all Scott Family McDonald’s®:

Tipp City, Troy, Piqua, Sidney, Greenville, Beavercreek and Fairborn. Expires Feb. 28, 2013. Answers — Ronald Wants To Know: air, front, masses, snow, storm, blizzard

ira


OPINION

Contact us David Fong is the executive editor of the Troy Daily News. You can reach him at 440-5228 or send him e-mail at fong@tdn publishing.com.

XXXday, 2010 Monday, January 28,XX, 2013 •5

TROY DAILY NEWS • WWW.TROYDAILYNEWS.COM

In Our View Troy Daily News Editorial Board FRANK BEESON / Group Publisher DAVID FONG / Executive Editor

ONLINE POLL

(WWW.TROYDAILYNEWS.COM)

Question: Do you trust the local 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 The Ironton (Ohio) Tribune on proposed federal anti-gun legislation: Far too often our government leaders and lawmakers try to “fix” all our perceived problems in a particular area in one fell swoop, an approach that is actually flawed and impedes progress…. Now here we go again with proposed anti-gun legislation. The president unveiled a $500 million package that includes 23 executive orders but will also require action by Congress. Some of the proposed changes make perfect sense — consistent background checks regardless of where a firearm is purchased and allowing schools to use federal grant funds for safety improvements. Others, including the ban on military-style assault rifles and magazine clips for them, need more review. But lumping everything into a one-plan-fits-all approach makes it more difficult to accomplish anything because opponents of the changes will have far more opportunities to criticize. A smarter approach would be incremental changes that can be addressed one at a time. The end result would be better for government As I efficiency and better for the American people. The Arab News, Jeddah, Saudi Arabia, on See It Syrian atrocities: ■ The Troy Time and again in the bloody Syrian conflict, as Daily News Bashar Assad seeks to crush his own people, it has welcomes seemed that the horrors could not increase. Yet columns from recently there’s news of further depravities, all too our readers. To often visited upon civilians who have been caught submit an “As I in the firing line. See It” send It is now clear that, as with Moammar Gadhafi your type-writin his own doomed attempt to hang on to power, ten column to: rape and sexual violence are being used as a tool ■ “As I See It” against the civilian population suspected of sympac/o Troy Daily thizing with, or actually assisting the fighters. This News, 224 S. Market St., despicable behavior is more than a loathsome crime Troy, OH 45373 which can traumatize victims for life; it also brings shame and dishonor upon them and their families. ■ You can also e-mail us at That is why both Gadhafi and now Assad see rape editorial@tdnpu as such a potent weapon. blishing.com. What neither leader appears to have recognized, ■ Please is the trail of white-hot fury these outrages leave in include your full their wake. The families targeted may have been name and teleambivalent about the insurgency, wishing, like phone number. many Syrians, simply for the violence to stop and for life to return to normal. However, once their family has fallen victim to this odious assault, there can be no doubt where their sympathies will lie. On top of this horror, it is now clear that Assad’s air force and artillery have been using cluster bombs and shells in increasing numbers. These iniquitous weapons, much favored by the Israelis in their failed 2006 assault on Lebanon, are now banned under an international treaty signed by 111 countries. But there is worse, even than this. Though the Americans seem oddly reluctant to confirm it, there now appears to be credible evidence that the regime has used some form of poison gas, on at least one occasion, in the original battle for Homs. This being the case, it seems clear that in the regime’s final death throes, Assad and his generals will have no hesitation whatsoever in ordering further deployment of their atrocious chemical weapons arsenal. With 60,000 of his people dead, Assad shows no sign of restraining his violence. What fresh perversity will he perpetrate next?

LETTERS

Thank you for your support To the Editor: I am writing this letter during Catholic Schools Week 2013, today through Saturday, in particular reference to St. Patrick Catholic School. St. Patrick Catholic School has been a part of the Troy community for 125 years. I want to take the time now to thank the City of Troy for their support. In my second year as principal, I am so grateful to this community for this school. We would not be the outstanding school that we are without the support of the organizations and residents of the City of Troy. There are several that I want to particularly point out that I work with to make this school the success that it is. First I want to thank the parishioners of St. Patrick Church, the support of the church is our foundation. Our Catholic faith is why we are here and without the support of the parishioners this would not be possible. Next I would like to thank the teachers and staff of our

school. The staff works so hard to make sure that every child is reaching his or her highest potential. Every student at St. Patrick School is welcomed and taught not only the basics, but their faith. The students of St. Patrick are the next on my list to thank. Every day I stand at the door and greet the children as they come in. The students come to school every day with a positive outlook on life and ready to learn. But most of all the students live their faith. They take their religion seriously and strive to live their lives in a compassionate, loving way. The students would not be at this school if it weren’t for their parents. The parents of St. Patrick support not only their children in their academic and faith life but they wholeheartedly support the staff and parish. We are a family here at St. Patrick Catholic School and we respect and support each other in the endeavor of forming the educational and religious life of the students. I would like to take the time to thank the City of Troy Police

Department and their D.A.R.E. program, especially Officer Wright, for being a great role model. The Troy Foundation and The Miami County Foundation have been wonderful in their support through grants that have enhanced the learning in our school. Eric Herman, superintendent of Troy City Schools and his staff and their support and help with our auxiliary services. And finally I would like to thank the Troy Daily News and its staff. There have been several wonderful articles written about St. Patrick Catholic School and its students and I truly am appreciative of this. If you would like to see firsthand the great place St. Patrick Catholic School is because of the citizens of Troy, parishioners of St. Patrick Church, parents, students and staff of St. Patrick Catholic School please call me and I can give you a tour. Thank you again and have a super Catholic Schools Week 2013! — Cyndi Cathcart Principal of St. Patrick Catholic School

DOONESBURY

WRITE TO 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).

Pinewood Derby sends my memories racing I had the opportunity to attend a Cub Scout Pinewood Derby last weekend. It brought back painful memories. Many years ago when my sons were young they participated in the Pinewood Derby. Here is how it is supposed to work. You get a block of wood, some tires and limited instructions. Then the boys, with help from their fathers, whittle and sand and paint and put things together until they have a car that hopefully will go down a track a few times without the wheels falling off. Here is how it often works: the father does lots of research and lots of the work and then lets his son put a few decals on the car. They put things together and the car goes down the track slightly faster than Dale Earnhardt at Daytona. My sons always were at a disadvantage because their father has absolutely no engineering skills. Even at the age of 8 they were better off if they kept me away from their cars. I did what I could to help, of course, and as things turned out they usually did OK, but not because of any

David Lindeman Troy Daily News Columnist contribution I made. We would take their cars to the meeting, run them down the homemade track a couple times then everyone would go eat cookies. Things are a little different these days. Instead of a homemade track, there is a long metal track with a starting gate. Each car is electronically timed and the times flash on a little scoreboard at the end of the track. The information is then immediately transmitted to a computer, which keeps track of all the times and displays the results of each race on a screen on the wall. Some things don’t change, though. Some of the cars look like the kinds of cars my boys

made: a little rough around the edges, but at least with four tires and a general idea of which end is the front and which end is the back. Others looks like they were designed in the wind tunnel at Wright-Patterson Air Force Base. They come within a fraction of an ounce of the weight limit. They look like they were painted at a body shop. It just so happens that because I am one of the adults there who doesn’t have a child involved I get drafted to be on the committee to select the car with the best design. This turns out to be a harrowing experience. As the races unfold, it becomes clear that one of a couple different Scouts is going to be the winner, so we eliminate them from the design competition. This goes under the theory of spreading the trophies around. Then we eliminate the cars where it appears that adults did most of the work. This is a subjective decision, to be sure – after all, one of those boys could be the reincarnation of DaVinci who can create advanced machinery at the age of 8. But somehow we

doubt it. We eventually get it down to two cars that meet the requirements of being creative while at the same time not coming from the design team at Ferrari. It helps that both of them are younger boys who didn’t win too many races. We select a winner and await the final tabulation of the race results. The computer crunches the numbers. Every boy participated in four races and it turns out that the combined time difference between the top three races over all those races is something like .2 of a second. The winner’s average speed was 208 mph. Take that, Earnhardt! I was relieved that everyone seemed to have a good time. I also was relieved that I was involved with my boys long before computers and electronic timing and that now all I have to do is watch. One last thing. Afterwards, we all sat around and ate cookies. It’s good that some things never change.

Troy Troy Daily News

Miami Valley Sunday News

FRANK BEESON Group Publisher

DAVID FONG Executive Editor

LEIANN STEWART Retail Advertising Manager

CHERYL HALL Circulation Manager

BETTY BROWNLEE Business Manager

SCARLETT SMITH Graphics Manager

AN OHIO COMMUNITY MEDIA NEWSPAPER 224 S. Market St. Troy, Ohio 45373 www.TDN-NET.com

David Lindeman appears every other Monday in the TDN

335-5634


6

LOCAL & NATION

Monday, January 28, 2013

TROY DAILY NEWS • WWW.TDN-NET.COM

Karnow, Vietnam reporter-historian, dies

AP

In this Thursday, Aug. 20, 2009 file photo, author and journalist Stanley Karnow opens the door to his home in Potomac, Md. reporter, Morley Safer, would describe Karnow as the embodiment of “the wise old Asian hand.” Karnow was known for his precision and research his Vietnam book reaches back to ancient times and his willingness to see past his own beliefs. He was a critic of the Vietnam War (and a name on President Nixon’s enemies list) who still found cruelty and incompetence among the North Vietnamese. His friendship with Philippines leader Corazon Aquino did not stop him from criticizing her presidency. A salesman’s son, Karnow was born in New York in 1925 and by high school was writing radio plays and editing the school’s paper, a job he also held at the Harvard

Crimson. He first lived in Asia during World War II when he served throughout the region in the Army Air Corps. Back in the U.S., he majored in European history and literature at Harvard, from which he graduated in 1947. Enchanted by French culture, and by the romance of Paris set down by Americans Ernest Hemingway and Henry Miller, Karnow set out for Europe after leaving school not for any particular purpose, but simply because it was there. “I went to Paris, planning to stay for the summer. I stayed for 10 years,” he wrote in “Paris in the Fifties.” He began sending dispatches to a Connecticut weekly, where the owner was

tions and thorough reporting, including interviews with top officials on both sides of the war. Decades later, it remained read and taught alongside such classics as David Halberstam’s “The Best and the Brightest” and Michael Herr’s “Dispatches.” “There are not many carefully delineated judgments in the book. But that is more a comment than the criticism it might be, for Mr. Karnow does not claim to have reached a sweeping verdict on the war,” Douglas Pike, a former U.S. government official in Vietnam who became a leading authority on the war, wrote for The New York Times in a 1983 review. “Because he has a sharp eye for the illustrative moment and a keen ear for the telling quote, his book is first-rate as a popular contribution to understanding the war. And that is what he meant it to be.” The PBS series won six Emmys, a Peabody and a Polk and was the highestrated documentary at the time for public television, with an average of 9.7 million viewers per episode. Along with much praise came criticism from the left and right. The liberal weekly The Nation faulted Karnow for “little analysis and much waffling.” Conservatives were so angered by the documentary that PBS agreed to let the right-wing Accuracy in Media air a rebuttal, “Television’s Vietnam: The Real Story,” which in turn was criticized as a show of weakness by PBS.

OBITUARIES

SCHOOL MENUS • BETHEL GRADES 1-5 Tuesday —Hamburger on a wheat bun, broccoli, fruit, milk. Wednesday — Vegetable beef soup, carrots and celery, fruit, milk. Thursday — Chicken or cheese quesadilla, corn and black beans, fruit, milk. • BETHEL GRADES 6-12 Tuesday —Dominos pizza, broccoli, fruit, milk. Wednesday — Vegetable beef soup, carrots and celery, fruit, milk. Thursday — Chicken or cheese quesadilla, corn and black beans, fruit, milk. • BRADFORD SCHOOLS Tuesday – Egg cheese omelet or yummy yogurt fruit salad, sausage patty, hash browns, applesauce, fruit cup, biscuit, milk. Wednesday – Chicken patty sandwich or peanut butter and jelly, french fries, banana, fruit cup, milk. Thursday – Salisbury steak or chef salad, mashed potatoes, carrots, fresh apples, fruit cup, whole wheat roll, milk. • COVINGTON ELEMENTARY/MIDDLE SCHOOL Tuesday – Grilled chicken sandwich, sweet fries, broccoli, fruit mix, (middle school: graham cracker), milk. Wednesday – Chicken and noodles, mashed potatoes, carrot sticks, applesauce, graham cracker, milk. Thursday – Stuffed crust pizza, romaine salad, mixed vegetables, pears, milk. Friday – Country steak sandwich, baked beans, celery, grapes, milk. • COVINGTON HIGH SCHOOL Tuesday – Grilled chicken sandwich, sweet fries, broccoli, fruit mix, orange, Goldfish, milk. Wednesday – Chicken and noodles, mashed potatoes, carrot sticks, applesauce, pineapple, roll, milk. Thursday – Stuffed crust pizza, romaine salad, mixed vegetables, pears, fruit mix, milk. Friday – Country steak sandwich, baked beans, celery, grapes, applesauce cup, milk. • MIAMI EAST SCHOOLS Tuesday – Chicken strips, mashed potatoes, applesauce, Teddy Grahams, milk. Wednesday – Taco salad with lettuce, cheese, tomatoes, Tostito chips and sour cream, peaches, graham cracker, milk. Thursday – Turkey and ham sub, carrot with dip, banana, milk. • NEWTON LOCAL SCHOOLS Tuesday – Beef ravioli, breadstick/cheese stick, carrots, green beans, diced peaches, oranges, (high school: juice), milk. Wednesday – Pita pocket with meat, cheese slice, lettuce and tomatoes, Fritos, diced pears, juice, milk. Thursday – Nachos and cheese with taco meat and refried beans, green beans, pineapple tidbits, apples, (high school: juice), milk. Friday – Stuffed crust pizza, broccoli, corn, applesauce, juice, pretzel twists, milk. • NEWTON HIGH SCHOOL Tuesday – Beef ravioli, breadstick/cheese stick, carrots, green beans, diced peaches, oranges, (high school: juice), milk. Wednesday – Pita pocket with meat, cheese slice, lettuce and tomatoes, Fritos,

a friend, and in 1950 was hired as a researcher at Time. Promoted to correspondent, he would cover strikes, race car driving and the beginning of the French conflict with Algeria, but also interviewed Audrey Hepburn (“a memorable if regrettably brief encounter”) fashion designer Christian Dior and director John Huston, who smoked cigars, knocked back Irish whiskies and rambled about the meaning of Humphrey Bogart. Friends and acquaintances included Norman Mailer, James Baldwin and John Kenneth Galbraith. Bernard Kalb, a journalist, former State Department spokesman and longtime friend who met Karnow when they were both work-

ing in Hong Kong in the 1950s, said Karnow described journalism as the only profession “in which you can be an adolescent all your life.” “You never lose your enthusiasm and the depths of curiosity to engage with the world. That’s what it means,” Kalb told The Associated Press on Sunday. “Stanley took those particular drives of adolescence all through his life.” Karnow’s first book was the text for “Southeast Asia,” an illustrated Life World Library release published in 1962, before the U.S. committed ground troops to Vietnam. It was partly a Cold War time capsule, preoccupied with Communist influence, but was also skeptical enough of official policy to anticipate the fall of a key American ally, South Vietnamese president Ngo Dihn Diem, an event that helped lead to greater American involvement. Like so many others, Karnow initially supported the war and believed in the “domino theory,” which asserted that if South Vietnam were to fall to communism its neighbors would too. But by war’s end, Karnow agreed with the soldier asked by a reporter in 1968 what he thought of the conflict: “It stinks,” was the reply. “Vietnam: A History” was published in 1983 and coincided with a 13-part PBS documentary series. Like much of his work, Karnow’s book combined historical research, firsthand observa-

diced pears, juice, milk. Thursday – Nachos and cheese with taco meat and refried beans, green beans, pineapple tidbits, apples, (high school: juice), milk. Friday – Stuffed crust pizza, broccoli, corn, applesauce, juice, pretzel twists, milk. • PIQUA CITY SCHOOLS K-8 Tuesday – Sweet and sour chicken with rice, corn, California blend, fruit, milk. Wednesday – Chicken alfredo, fruit, garlic broccoli, milk. Thursday – Tostada, fruit, tossed salad, cookie, milk. Friday — Chicken pot pie, fruit juice, carrots, roll, milk. • PIQUA HIGH SCHOOL Tuesday – Sweet and sour chicken with rice green beans, fruit, milk. Wednesday – Chicken alfredo, tossed salad, garlic broccoli, roll, fruit, milk. Thursday – Taco quesadilla, corn, tortilla scoops with salsa, milk. Friday – Grilled chicken sandwich, fresh veggies, sweet potato soufflé, fruit, milk. • PIQUA CATHOLIC Tuesday – Grilled cheese sandwich, tomato soup, crackers, choice of fruit, milk. Wednesday – Cavalier pizza sandwich, sliced carrots, choice of fruit, milk. Thursday – Chicken and noodles, mashed potatoes, dinner roll, choice of fruit, milk. Friday – Beef and cheese nachos, peas, choice of fruit, milk. • ST. PATRICK Tuesday — Hot dog, baked beans, fruit, milk. Wednesday — Chicken sandwich, scalloped potatoes, green beans, fruit, milk. Thursday — Little Caesar’s Pizza, salad, pretzel rod, fruit, milk. Friday — French toast sausage, hash browns, fruit, milk. • TROY CITY SCHOOLS Tuesday — Chicken nuggets, mashed potatoes with gravy, dinner roll, carrot snacks, milk. Wednesday — Cheese quesadilla, refried beans, celery sticks, fruit, milk. Thursday — Grilled chicken patty on a whole grain bun, steamed broccoli, carrot snacks, fruit, juice. • TIPP CITY HIGH SCHOOL Tuesday — Spaghetti, romain salad, fruit, breadstick, milk. Wednesday — Chili soup with a cracker, baked potato, fruit, milk. Thursday — Fusian a la carte, pizza, green beans, fruit, milk. • TIPP CITY MIDDLE SCHOOL Tuesday — Hamburger on a bun, cabbage slaw, fruit, milk. Wednesday — Ravioli, tomato salad, fruit, milk. Thursday — Beef chili, black beans, rice, fruit, milk. • UPPER VALLEY CAREER CENTER Tuesday – Nachos supreme or chicken fajitas refried beans, salsa, assorted fruit, milk. Wednesday – Pizza or quesadilla, side salad, assorted fruit, milk. Thursday – Swiss chicken breast or fish sandwich, whole grain rice, steamed broccoli, multigrain roll or bun, milk. Friday – Loaded wedges or chicken nuggets, potato wedges, assorted fruit, multigrain roll, milk.

LUCILLE M. GAIER PIQUA — Lucille M. Gaier, 90, of Piqua, died at 4:45 p.m. Saturday, Jan. 26, 2013, at Heartland of Piqua. She was born Sept. 7, 1922, in North Star, to the late Joseph and Pearl (Neargarder) Mangen. She married Clarence J. Gaier on May 28, 1941, in North Star, and he preceded her in death on June 2, 1996. Mrs. Gaier is survived by a brother, Elmer Mangen of Versailles; and numerous nieces and nephews. She was preceded in death by three brothers and four sisters. Lucille was a member of St. Mary Catholic Church and had worked for the former Val Decker

Packing Company. A Mass of Christian Burial will be conducted at 11 a.m. Tuesday, Jan. 29, at St. Mary Catholic Church with the Rev. Fr. Thomas L. Bolte officiating. Burial will follow in Forest Hill Cemetery. Visitation will be from 9:30-10:30 a.m. Tuesday at the Jamieson & Yannucci Funeral Home. Memorial contributions may be made to St. Mary Catholic Church, 528 Broadway, Piqua, OH 45356. Guestbook condolences and expressions of sympathy, to be provided to the family, may be expressed through jamiesonandyannucci.com.

FUNERAL DIRECTORY • Paul E. Crabtree PIQUA — Paul E. Crabtree, 63, of Piqua, died at 7:34 p.m. Saturday, Jan. 26, 2013, at Piqua Manor Nursing Home. Arrangements are pending at MelcherSowers Funeral Home, Piqua. • Rita D. Coffman SIDNEY — Rita D. Coffman, 89, Sidney, died on Sunday, Jan. 27, 2013. A Mass of Christian Burial will be held

Thursday, Jan. 31, 2013, at Holy Angels Catholic Church in Sidney. Salm-McGill and Tangeman Funeral Home in Sidney is handling the funeral arrangements.

• Krysta Long PIQUA — Krysta Long, 55, of Piqua, died at 1 p.m. Sunday, Jan. 27, 2013, at her residence. Her funeral arrangements are pending through the Jamieson & Yannucci Funeral Home.

DEATHS OF NATIONAL INTEREST • Sally Starr BERLIN, N.J. (AP) — Legendary Philadelphiaarea TV and radio host Sally Starr died Sunday at a nursing home in New Jersey. WPVI-TV, where Starr had worked in Philadelphia, said Starr died just days after celebrating her 90th birthday. Starr, whose real name was Sally E. Gray, had been in failing health in recent years. Affectionately known to fans as “Our Gal Sal,” she began her decades-long career as a disc jockey in 1948. She became host of “Popeye Theater” two years later on the former WFIL-TV, now WPVI. On the two-hour weekday variety show, Starr introduced cartoons,

Popeye, the Three Stooges, and celebrity guests to a generation of young people. She became recognized for her trademark spangled, fringed cowgirl costume. The program was canceled in 1972 and Starr retired to Florida. But she returned to the area a decade later. While residing in Atco, Starr earned a living from personal appearances and selling airtime on her “High Noon” radio show that aired on Sundays. She hosted the Vineland show on radio station WVLT into her 80s. In 1998, Starr filed for bankruptcy protection, saying she was “churchmouse poor.” She blamed her financial troubles on alleged

OBITUARY POLICY In respect for friends and family, the Troy Daily News prints a funeral directory free of charge. Families who would like photographs and more detailed obituary information published in the Troy Daily News, should contact their local funeral home for pricing details.

comments made by a Trenton radio talk show host on the air. She sued WKXW-FM in New Jersey saying that host Jeff Diminski slandered her when he allegedly twice called her a “lesbian cowgirl.” “I’ve lost thousands and thousands of dollars because of the idiotic statement made,” Starr told The Associated Press at the time, adding that her personal appearance bookings had dropped off from as many as six per week to about two since the alleged remark. A state appeals court in 2001 said Starr could go forward with her defamation lawsuit. Diminski later retracted the statements. 2353684

POTOMAC, Md. — (AP) — Stanley Karnow, the award-winning author and journalist who wrote a definitive book about the Vietnam War, worked on an accompanying documentary and later won a Pulitzer for a history of the Philippines, died Sunday morning. He was 87. Karnow, who had congestive heart failure, died in his sleep at his home in Potomac, Md., said son Michael Karnow. A Paris-based correspondent for Time magazine early in his career, Karnow was assigned in 1958 to Hong Kong as bureau chief for Southeast Asia and soon arrived in Vietnam, when the American presence was still confined to a small core of advisers. In 1959, Karnow reported on the first two American deaths in Vietnam, not suspecting that tens of thousands would follow. Into the 1970s, Karnow would cover the war off and on for Time, The Washington Post and other publications and then draw upon his experience for an epic PBS documentary and for the million-selling “Vietnam: A History,” published in 1983 and widely regarded as an essential, even-handed summation. Karnow’s “In Our Image,” a companion to a PBS documentary on the Philippines, won the Pulitzer in 1990. His other books included “Mao and China,” which in 1973 received a National Book Award nomination, and “Paris in The Fifties,” a memoir published in 1997. A fellow Vietnam

* Your 1st choice for complete Home Medical Equipment

Lift Chairs 1990 W. Stanfield, Troy, OH 45373 • 937-335-9199 www.legacymedical.net 2353681

FISHER - CHENEY Funeral Home & Cremation Services S. Howard Cheney, Owner-Director • Pre-arranged funeral plans available

1124 W. Main St • Call 335-6161 • Troy, Ohio www.fisher-cheneyfuneralhome.com


ENTERTAINMENT

TROY DAILY NEWS • WWW.TROYDAILYNEWS.COM

ANNIE’S MAILBOX

Discuss Susie’s behavior with your daughter Dear Annie: Normally I'm good at minding my own business, but when I see how my granddaughter, "Susie," manipulates her mother (my daughter), I feel the urge to say something. Susie is almost 12 and seems to be testing the limits in ways I would never have tolerated. She sasses her mother and dominates the conversation at the dinner table. When told to clear away her dirty dishes, she instead goes to the cupboard for a snack. Her discarded clothes are in every room of the house. When told to get ready for school, she turns on the TV. The bathroom floor is cluttered with whatever she tossed there. She even "forgets" to flush the toilet! My daughter, with incredible patience, sees this behavior as typical for her age. I see Susie as a brat testing her power. Her father says little and makes himself scarce. I'm concerned that a child who should be learning habits that will serve her well in adulthood seems to have no more discipline than a toddler. My daughter, a teacher, insists she knows what she's doing. So far I've kept my mouth shut. What do you advise? — Frustrated Granny Dear Frustrated: When Susie is in your home, you can instruct her to pick up her clothes, turn off the TV, flush the toilet (heavens!) and clear her plate. Her behavior is not "typical." It is excessive. While many 12year-olds will test the limits of what Mom and Dad will tolerate, it doesn't mean parents should shrug their shoulders and give up. The more the parents accept the more Susie will push. To Susie, if her parents don't demand anything, it means they don't care about her. The most you can do is suggest that your daughter discuss Susie's behavior with her pediatrician, school counselor or a child psychologist for reassurance that she's handling things in the best possible way. Dear Annie: My friend "George" has a neighbor who is always watching. This neighbor peeks out from her curtains, apparently thinking no one can see her. If she is sitting outside, she listens in on George's conversations. If George makes the slightest noise, she will instantly look to see what's going on. This neighbor also gossips with the surrounding neighbors. She is incredibly nosey and kind of bizarre. Any ideas about behavior like this? — Canada Dear Canada: Sure. The neighbor is lonely, curious, bored and gossipy. George is likely one of many neighbors who provide something potentially interesting for her to focus on. She may be annoying, but she also is the same neighbor who will notice if someone tries to break into George's house. She's harmless. If you are feeling expansive, the next time you visit George, the two of you could stop by her house and say hello. Bring her some cookies. You'll make her day. Dear Annie: "Can't Wait To Share New Home" said they are about to host their first housewarming party. They asked whether they should register for things they want and include the information on the invitations. You said they shouldn't register, but if people should ask, they can make suggestions. Seriously? Aren't other people supposed to host these parties for you? — Incredulous on Cape Cod Dear Incredulous: Actually, no. A housewarming is one type of party that you are supposed to host yourself to welcome your friends and family to your new abode and show it off. Registering is inappropriate, as is mentioning gifts on an invitation. But there is nothing wrong with making suggestions to those who ask and who are likely to bring you something anyway. 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.

TV

TROY TV-5 Today: 5 p.m.: Miami Valley Events Calendar 6 p.m.: Legislative Update 8 p.m.: Have History Will Travel

TONIGHT

MONDAY PRIME TIME 5

PM

5:30

6

PM

6:30

Monday, January 28, 2013

7

PM

7:30

8

PM

8:30

9

PM

9:30

7

TROY TV-5 Tuesday: 9 a.m.: Army Newswatch 11 a.m.: Troy City Council 2 p.m.: Miami County Showcase

JANUARY 28, 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! The Biggest Loser "Waist and Money" (N) Deception (N) 2 News (2) (WDTN) 2 News Health To Be Announced Main St. Miracles Serve Higgins-Madewell Miami Valley Events Calendar (5) (TROY) (3:30) TBA Miami Valley Events (:35) David Letterman News News News Wheel ET Mother (R) BBang (R) Girls (R) M&M (R) Hawaii Five-0 (R) News LateShow (7) (WHIO) News News News Jeopardy! Wheel Mother (R) BBang (R) Girls (R) M&M (R) Hawaii Five-0 (R) News (:35) David Letterman LateShow (10) (WBNS) 10TV News HD at 5 Business S.Wine (R) Antiques Roadshow (N) Market Warriors (R) Amer. Experience (R) Looking for Lincoln (R) Charlie Rose (16) (WPTD) Company Fetch! (R) PBS NewsHour State Ohio Religion (R) PBS NewsHour Masterpiece Classic (R) Masterpiece Classic Shakespeare "Macbeth" Shakespeare PBS NewsHour (16.2) (THINK) Charlie Rose (R) Steves' (R) Travels (R) One Plate Lidia's (R) Cook's (R) Garden (R) Bolder (R) O.House Hubert (R) Beads (R) (16.3) (LIFE) Steves' (R) Travels (R) Garden (R) Beads (R) Bolder (R) O.House (:35) Jimmy Kimmel Live (:35) News World News ET Sound Off The Bachelor (N) Castle (R) News (21) (WPTA) 21 Alive News at 5 p.m. News Castle (R) ABC News (:35) Jimmy Kimmel Live (:35) News (22) (WKEF) Judge Judy Judge Judy ABC News World News Fam. Feud Fam. Feud The Bachelor (N) Queens (R) Mother (R) 2½Men (R) Mother (R) 2½Men (R) The Carrie Diaries (N) 90210 (N) 2 NEWS Rules (R) FamilyG (R) FamilyG (R) Dish Nation TMZ (26) (WBDT) Ray (R) News NBC News Wheel Jeopardy! The Biggest Loser "Waist and Money" (N) Deception (N) News (:35) Tonight Show (:35) LateN (35) (WLIO) Inside Ed. ET MLucado Potter BeScenes Living Edge Kingdom Jesse D. Praise the Lord Joel Osteen MannaFest (43) (WKOI) TBN Highlights John Hagee J. Meyer Griffith (R) DonnaReed Love Worth Zola Levitt Perry Stone Newswatch Wretched J. Prince In Touch (44) (WTLW) Hazel (R) Father (R) The 700 Club BBang (R) 45 News BBang (R) Simps. (R) Bones (N) The Following (N) Fox 45 News at 10 Office (R) (:35) Sein. The Steve Wilkos Show (45) (WRGT) Maury (N) SVU "Ghost" (R) Law&O.:SVU "Rage" (R)

Married to the Mob ('88) Michelle Pfeiffer.

Death at a Fu... (45.2) (MNT) 3:30

The Landlord A Dog's Breakfast ('07) David Hewlett. 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 Hoarders (R) Hoarders (R) Hoarders (N) Intervention "Dana" (N) Inter. "Terry/ Alissa" (R) Hoarders (R) (A&E) First 48 "Caught Up" (R) The First 48 (R)

The Hulk (2003,Sci-Fi) Jennifer Connelly, Sam Elliott, Eric Bana.

The Hulk ('03) Jennifer Connelly, Eric Bana. (AMC)

A Knight's Tale ('01,Adv) Mark Addy, Paul Bettany, Heath Ledger. Gator Boys (R) Wild West Alaska Finding Bigfoot (R) Finding Bigfoot (R) Wild West Alaska Finding Bigfoot (R) (ANPL) Pit Bulls and Parolees "Saving Tia Torres" (R) Big Ten Basketball NCAA Indiana vs. Northwestern (L) Basketball NCAA Illinois vs. Minnesota (L) Big Ten Pulse (R) Journey (R) Basket. (B10) 1:30 Hockey Jorney (R) Pulse

Beauty Shop ('05) Queen Latifah.

Imagine That ('09) Thomas Haden Church, Eddie Murphy. Wendy Williams Show (BET) (3:00)

The Express 106 & Park: BET's Top 10 Live The First 48 (R) The First 48 (R) The First 48 The First 48 (R) Women Behind Bars (R) The First 48 (R) (BIO) Ghost "Loretta Lynn" (R) The First 48 (R) Vanderpump Rules (N) Watch (N) Beverly Hills (R) VanderR (BRAVO) Vanderpump Rules (R) Vanderpump Rules (R) Housewives Atlanta (R) Beverly Hills Social (N) Beverly Hills (N) Reba (R) Reba (R) Reba (R) Reba (R) Reba (R) Redneck Vacation (R)

Starsky and Hutch ('04) Ben Stiller. :15

Starsky & Hutch (CMT) Rose. (R) Rose. (R) Reba (R) Mad Money The Kudlow Report CNBC Special Super Rich Special CNBC Special Mad Money Super Rich 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 Futura (R) SouthPk SouthPk SouthPk Brickleb SouthPk Daily Show Colbert SouthPk Kroll S. (R) (COM) Futura (R) Sunny (R) Sunny (R) Tosh.O (R) Colbert (R) Daily (R) Politics & Public Policy Today Politics & Public (CSPAN) U.S. House of Representatives To Be Announced Smuggling "Drugs" (R) Smuggling "Wildlife" (N) Shipwreck Men (N) Bering Sea Gold (R) Shipwreck Men (R) Smuggling "Wildlife" (R) (DISC) To Be Announced Hercules "Twilight" (R) ALF (R) Transf. (R) G.I. Joe (R) (DISK) Superman Batman (R) Batman (R) Haunting Animaniac Animaniac

Batman and Robin ('97) George Clooney. Holmes on Homes (R) Kitchen (R) Kitchen (R) Kitchen Crashers Crashers Crashers Kitchen (R) Kitchen (R) (DIY) Crashers Crashers Crashers Crashers Crashers Disaster (DSNY) Dog Blog Dog Blog GoodLk (R) Jessie (R) Austin (R) Shake (R) GoodLk (R) Geek Charming ('11) Mat Prokop, Sarah Hyland. GoodLk (R) Austin (R) Jessie (R) Wizards (R) Wizards (R) Spider-Man Spider-Man Kickin' It Crash (N) To Be Announced I'm Band SuiteL. (R) ZekeLut. SuiteL (R) (DSNYXD) The Suite Life Movie ('11) Dylan Sprouse. (1:00) To Be Announced E! News To Be Announced C. Lately E! News (R) Chelsea (R) (E!) Interrupt SportsCenter Basketball NCAA Pittsburgh vs. Louisville (L) Basketball NCAA Kansas vs. West Virginia (L) SportsCenter SportsCenter (ESPN) Horn (N) SportsNation (N) Basketball NCAA Notre Dame vs. Tennessee (L) NBA Coast to Coast (L) NFL Live (N) Basketball NBA (ESPN2) NFL 32 (L) Tua Knockouts (R) Battle of the Network Stars (R) Wrestli. (R) AWA Wrestling (R) Bowling PBA (R) SportsCentury (R) (ESPNC) Tennis Classics ITF 2008 Australian Open (R) '70s (R) Bunheads (R) Switched at Birth Switched at Birth (N) Bunheads (N) Switched at Birth (R) 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 (FOOD) Paula (R) Pioneer (R) Diners (R) Diners (R) Diners (R) Diners (R) Diners (R) Diners (R) Diners (R) Diners (R) Diners (R) Diners (R) Diners (R) Diners (R) Diners (R) Diners (R) Slap Shots Pre-game Hockey NHL Dallas Stars vs. Columbus Blue Jackets (L) Post-game Shots (R) Access (R) Poker WPT (R) Hockey NHL (L) (FOXSP) Poker WPT (R) 100 Hottest Hook (R) 100 Hottest Hook (R)

The Bodyguard ('92) Kevin Costner, Whitney Houston. Ex-Wives Ex-Wives

The Bodyguard (FUSE) 100 Hottest Hook (R) Trending (4:)

Jennifer's Body Mother Mother (R) 2½Men (R) 2½Men (R)

Grown Ups ('10) Kevin James, Chris Rock, Adam Sandler.

Grown Ups ('10) Kevin James, Chris Rock, Adam Sandler. (FX) Golf Central The Golf Fix (N) PGA Merchandise (R) Haney/B Haney/B Feherty (R) Golf Central (R) Haney/B Haney/B (GOLF) (1:00) Golf PGA (R) 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. Love It or List It (R) Love It or List It HouseH House (R) Love It or List It (R) Love It or List It (HGTV) House (R) House (R) House (R) House (R) Love It or List It (R) PawnSt. (R) PawnSt. (R) Pickers "Big Bear" (R) PawnSt. (R) PawnSt. (R) (HIST) Pickers "Trading Up" (R) Pickers "Fast Eddie" (R) American Pickers (R) PawnSt. (R) PawnSt. (R) American Pickers To Be Announced To Be Announced To Be Announced (LIFE) (4:00) To Be Announced To Be Announced Pick-A-Flick Pick-A-Flick Pick-A-Flick (LMN) (4:)

Lost in the Dark

Not My Life ('06) Meredith Monroe. The Conversation (R) CookThin Mom Cook Airline (R) Airline (R) Project Runway (R) ModRun. Road (R) Airline (R) Airline (R) Project Runway (R) (LRW) (4:) Runway Road (R) PoliticsNation Hardball The Ed Show Rachel Maddow The Last Word The Ed Show Rachel Maddow (MSNBC) Hardball True Life Catfish Teen Mom 2 (R) Teen Mom "Breakdown" Catfish Teen Mom 2 (R) (MTV) Friendzone Friendzone Friendzone Clueless TBA TBA Basketball NCAA Drexel vs. Delaware (L) Fight Night 36 (R) Ski & Snowboard USSA Poker After Dark (NBCSN) Pro Football Talk Alaska Troopers (R) Drugs "Cocaine" (R) Alaska Troopers (R) Alaska Troopers (N) Lords of (R) Lords of (R) Alaska Troopers (R) Lords of (R) Lords of (R) (NGEO) Alaska Troopers (R) Figure Out News (N) 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 Law:CI "Shandeh" (R) Snapped (R) Snapped (R) Snapped (R) Law:CI "Con-Text" (R) Law:CI "Baggage" (R) (OXY) Law:CI "Baggage" (R) Law & Order: C.I. (R) Cagney and Lacey: True Convictions (:05)

Kindergarten Cop

The Beverly Hillbillies (:35)

Twins ('88) Arnold Schwarzenegger.

Krull (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)

A Bronx Tale Robert De Niro. (SPIKE) (3:30)

The Green Mile ('99) David Morse, Bonnie Hunt, Tom Hanks.

Goodfellas (1990,Crime Story) Joe Pesci, Robert De Niro, Ray Liotta.

Underworld: Rise of the Lycans Continuum (N) Being Human (N) Lost Girl "Confaegion" Continuum (R) Being Human (R) (SYFY) (3:30)

Blade II Office (R) Office (R) (TBS) Friends (R) Queens (R) Queens (R) Seinf. (R) Seinf. (R) Seinf. (R) FamilyG (R) FamilyG (R) FamilyG (R) FamilyG (R) FamilyG (R) FamilyG (R) Conan (:45) No Marriage Ties

No Other Woman

The Mark of Zorro ('40) Tyrone Power.

The Adventures of Don Juan

Cyrano de Ber... (TCM) Movie Next Great Baker (R) Next Great Baker (N) Pete Rose Pete Rose Next Great Baker (R) PeteRose PeteRose (TLC) Say Yes (R) Say Yes (R) Medium (R) Medium (R) Next Great Baker (R) Ned (R) Water (R) Water (R) Dance Ac Dance Ac Ned (R) Ned (R) Degrassi Degrassi Like You Like You Drake (R) Drake (R) All That (R) K & Kel (R) (TNICK) Ned (R) The Mentalist (R) The Mentalist (R) The Mentalist (R) Dallas "Battle Lines" (N) (:05) Dallas (N) (:05) Dallas (R) (:10) Dallas (R) (TNT) The Mentalist (R) Regular (R) Regular (R) Regular (R) Regular (R) Advent. (N) Regular (N) MAD KingH (R) KingH (R) AmerD (R) AmerD (R) FamilyG (R) FamilyG (R) Robot AquaT. (TOON) Gumball Man/Fd Foods "Mexico" (R) Man/Fd Man/Fd The Layover The Layover Hotel Impossible Hotel Impossible (R) The Layover (TRAV) Man/Fd Cops (R) World's Dumbest... (R) Lick.Tow Lick.Tow Lick.Tow Lick.Tow Lick.Tow Swamp (N) Work Up Work Up Lick.Tow Lick.Tow (TRU) Wild Police Videos (R) Cops (R) MASH (R) MASH (R) MASH (R) Cosby (R) Cosby (R) Cosby (R) Ray (R) Ray (R) Ray (R) Ray (R) Queens (R) Queens (R) Queens (R) Queens (R) (TVL) Bonanza (R) NCIS "Road Kill" (R) NCIS "Caged" (R) WWE Raw WWE Raw WWE Raw (:05) NCIS: LA (R) (:05) CSI: Crime (R) (USA) NCIS "Dagger" (R) Love and Hip-Hop (R) Black Ink Crew (R) Love and Hip-Hop (R) (VH1) Love and Hip-Hop (R) Love and Hip-Hop (R) Love and Hip-Hop (R) Love and Hip-Hop (N) Black Ink Crew (N) Ghost Whisperer (R) Charmed (R) Charmed (R) Rose. (R) Rose. (R) Rose. (R) Rose. (R) Rose. (R) Rose. (R) Rose. (R) Rose. (R) Rose. (R) Rose. (R) (WE) Chris (R) Chris (R) Funniest Home Videos Funniest Home Videos Funniest Home Videos WGN News at Nine Home Videos (R) Rules (R) Rules (R) (WGN) Law & Order: C.I. (R) PREMIUM STATIONS Bill Maher (R)

American Reunion ('12) Jason Biggs.

Red Tails (2012,Action) Cuba Gooding Jr.. (HBO) 3:15 Hemingway & Gel...

Rise of the Planet of the Apes (:35) The Revenant ('09) David Anders. (:35) The Sitter ('11) Jonah Hill.

Forrest Gump ('94) Sally Field, Tom Hanks. Banshee (MAX) (4:45)

Mars Attacks! Homeland (R) Califor. (R) Lies (R) Shameless (R) Lies (R) Califor. (R) Shameless (R) (SHOW) 3:45

The Pianist (:15)

The Iron Lady ('11) Meryl Streep.

I Am Number Four ('11) Alex Pettyfer. The Howling: Reborn (:35)

Die Another Day (TMC) 3:55

Primary Col... (:20) Square Grouper (2011,Documentary)

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. YESTERDAY’S SOLUTION:

HINTS FROM HELOISE

Sound off: Who decided it’s OK to move the eggs? Dear Readers: Here is this week’s sound off, about stores mixing and matching egg cartons: “The date on egg cartons must not mean very much. In a grocery store, I saw an employee adjusting the eggs according to the breakage. He would remove the broken or cracked eggs from one carton and fill it from another carton that had empty spaces. Of course, they all may have been the same date, but you can’t be sure of that. — B.J. in Tennessee” The date does mean something. According to the United States Department of Agriculture: “For best quality, use eggs within three to five weeks of the date you pur-

Hints from Heloise Columnist chase them. The ’sell-by’ date usually will expire during that length of time, but the eggs are perfectly safe to use.” So it seems to me that even with a “mix and match” carton of eggs, you are safe eating them. — Heloise FAST FACTS Dear Readers: Other uses for tennis-ball containers:

• Store knitting needles and yarn. • Workshop storage for nails, screws, etc. • Transport lemons or oranges in one. • Keep folded paper and pens in one for children. • Carry napkins and silverware to a picnic. — Heloise NOT-SO-INSTANT REMOVAL Dear Heloise: Can you please tell me how to remove instant glue from my countertops? — Lana E., Klondike, Texas A big factor is the type of countertops. If they are marble, gran-

ite or a specialty type, you should contact the manufacturer for its recommendation. Do not use nailpolish remover on these surfaces. If you have laminate countertops, here is a hint to try: Place a hot, wet cloth (like a washcloth) on the glue spots. Leave the cloth on a spot until it cools, then replace it with another hot, wet cloth. Repeat this process until the glue has softened and you can peel it off. If this method doesn’t work, they do make special products for instant-glue removal. Just be careful when using, as they can dull the finish. Test an out-of-the-way spot before using. — Heloise


8

COMICS

Monday, January 28, 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 BY FRANCES DRAKE For Tuesday, Jan. 29, 2013 ARIES (March 21 to April 19) This can be a productive day at work, especially if you’re introducing improvements and clearing away loose ends regarding financial matters. Stay focused. TAURUS (April 20 to May 20) Discussions about the care and education of children will go well today. This is also a good day to make arrangements for sharing costs of vacations or social events. GEMINI (May 21 to June 20) Don’t hesitate to act on plans to make repairs or improvements to where you live. Whatever you do will have a longlasting benefit in the future. CANCER (June 21 to July 22) This is a great day for any kind of mental work, because your powers of concentration are excellent. You have the patience for painstaking detail. LEO (July 23 to Aug. 22) Business and commerce are favored today. You want to solidify your finances, if possible. If shopping, you will buy practical, long-lasting items. VIRGO (Aug. 23 to Sept. 22) It’s easy to become obsessed today. You can’t get something out of your mind. Fortunately, your approach will be practical when it comes to making improvements. LIBRA (Sept. 23 to Oct. 22) This is an excellent day for research. You have the tenacity and focus to go after what you seek. You’re like a dog with a bone. SCORPIO (Oct. 23 to Nov. 21) All group discussions will be intense. You don’t intend to back down, even if someone (probably a female) raises some opposition to you. Be careful that you don’t increase this opposition by insisting on getting your own way. SAGITTARIUS (Nov. 22 to Dec. 21) People will notice that you are passionate about everything today. You might have ideas about building something or searching for answers to improve an existing structure. CAPRICORN (Dec. 22 to Jan. 19) This is a good day to make travel plans or future plans related to higher education, publishing and the media. You’re very excited about an idea, but you’re approaching it calmly. AQUARIUS (Jan. 20 to Feb. 18) Although you feel intensely about things today, you still will be fair and logical when discussing inheritances or shared property. (Just don’t let your feelings get the better of you.) PISCES (Feb. 19 to March 20) This is a good day to sit down with others (especially a partner) and discuss long-range future plans. Travel, higher education or ways to get the cooperation of others could be on the agenda. YOU BORN TODAY You are reasonable and fun-loving. People like you and trust you. Personally, you will defend your beliefs and take the high road because you are an idealist. You’re tolerant of many points of view, but you enjoy being provocative. In the year ahead, something you’ve been involved with for about nine years will end or diminish in order to make room for something new. Birthdate of: Oprah Winfrey, humanitarian/media mogul; Adam Lambert, singer; Tom Selleck, actor. (c) 2013 King Features Syndicate, Inc.

SNUFFY SMITH

GARFIELD

BABY BLUES

FUNKY WINKERBEAN

CRANKSHAFT

TROY DAILY NEWS • WWW.TDN-NET.COM


WEATHER & WORLD

TROY DAILY NEWS • WWW.TROYDAILYNEWS.COM

Today

Tonight

Rain High: 48°

Tuesday

Rain possible Low: 32°

Wednesday

Thursday

Rain High: 49° Low: 43°

Flurries High: 28° Low: 22°

Chance of rain High: 59° Low: 48°

Friday

Mostly sunny, cold High: 20° Low: 12°

First

Full

Monday, January 28, 2013 AccuWeather.com forecast for daytime conditions, low/high temperatures

Cleveland 43° | 28°

Toledo 48° | 32°

Sunrise Tuesday 7:47 a.m. ........................... Sunset tonight 5:53 p.m. ........................... Moonrise today 7:45 p.m. ........................... Moonset today 8:15 a.m. ........................... New

TODAY’S STATEWIDE FORECAST

MICH.

NATIONAL FORECAST

SUN AND MOON

9

Monday, January 28, 2013

Youngstown 50° | 25°

Mansfield 45° | 32°

Last

TROY •

PA.

48° 32° Feb. 10 Feb. 17 Feb. 25

Feb. 3

ENVIRONMENT Today’s UV factor. 1

Fronts Cold

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

Low

Moderate

High

Very High

-10s

Air Quality Index Moderate

Harmful

Pollen Summary

Albany,N.Y. Albuquerque Anchorage Atlanta Atlantic City Austin Baltimore Birmingham Bismarck Boise Boston Buffalo Burlington,Vt. Charleston,S.C. Charleston,W.Va. Charlotte,N.C. Chicago Cincinnati Cleveland Columbia,S.C. Columbus,Ohio Concord,N.H. Dallas-Ft Worth Dayton Denver Des Moines Detroit Greensboro, N.C.

0

250

500

Peak group: No pollen

Mold Summary 93

0

12,500

25,000

Top Mold: Undifferentiated Source: Regional Air Pollution Control Agency

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

Lo 24 8 11 35 62 57 35 -6 -4 26 33

0s

10s

20s 30s 40s

50s 60s

Warm Stationary

70s

80s

Pressure Low

High

Hi Otlk 34 sn 23 sn 31 clr 53 rn 72 rn 66 pc 46 rn 11 pc 15 sn 37 cldy 44 clr

Hi 21 57 07 60 28 70 34 58 26 39 25 25 15 61 31 47 28 33 24 59 29 20 54 27 53 37 27 39

Lo 04 40 02B 42 10 46 24 48 06 29 14 14 05 35 19 27 23 19 10 33 12 10 49 12 32 32 12 24

Prc Otlk Clr .11PCldy Clr Cldy Clr Cldy Clr Cldy Cldy .14 Cldy Clr PCldy Clr Clr PCldy PCldy Cldy Cldy Cldy Clr Cldy Clr Cldy Cldy .01PCldy .03 Cldy Cldy Cldy

Cincinnati 57° | 45°

90s 100s 110s

Portsmouth 55° | 37°

Low: -9 at Whitefield, N.H.

W.VA.

KY.

NATIONAL CITIES

Main Pollutant: Particulate

0

-0s

Yesterday’s Extremes: High: 87 at Laredo, Texas

63

Good

Columbus 45° | 32°

Dayton 50° | 36°

Honolulu Houston Indianapolis 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 Sacramento St Louis San Diego San Francisco San Juan,P.R. Seattle Washington,D.C.

Hi Lo Prc Otlk 78 74 .01 Cldy 78 56 Cldy 31 19 Rain 76 52 PCldy 48 38 .06 Cldy 75 70 Cldy 59 48 .08 Clr 49 45 Cldy 68 55 .02 Cldy 39 24 PCldy 57 47 Cldy 79 67 Cldy 27 22 Snow 49 28 Cldy 74 54 Cldy 27 19 Clr 48 43 Cldy 76 48 PCldy 29 17 Clr 59 58 1.18 Rain 26 07 Cldy 60 38 PCldy 38 28 Rain 62 56 .08 Cldy 56 47 PCldy 83 73 .04PCldy 47 40 .10 Rain 37 27 PCldy

© 2013 Wunderground.com

SOURCE: ASSOCIATED PRESS

REGIONAL ALMANAC Temperature High Yesterday .............................33 at 4:36 p.m. Low Yesterday............................12 at 12:16 a.m. Normal High .....................................................35 Normal Low ......................................................20 Record High ........................................66 in 1916 Record Low..........................................-9 in 1936

Precipitation 24 hours ending at 5 p.m................................0.0 Month to date ................................................1.77 Normal month to date ...................................2.39 Year to date ...................................................1.77 Normal year to date ......................................2.39 Snowfall yesterday ........................................0.00

TODAY IN HISTORY (AP) — Today is Monday, Jan. 28, the 28th day of 2013. There are 337 days left in the year. Today’s Highlight in History: On Jan. 28, 1813, the novel “Pride and Prejudice” by Jane Austen was first published anonymously in London. On this date: • In 1915, the United States Coast Guard was created as President Woodrow Wilson signed a bill merging the Life-Saving Service and Revenue Cutter Service. • In 1962, the last of Washington, D.C.’s streetcars made its final run. • In 1973, a cease-fire officially

went into effect in the Vietnam War. • In 1986, the space shuttle Challenger exploded 73 seconds after liftoff from Cape Canaveral, killing all seven crew members, including schoolteacher Christa McAuliffe. • Ten years ago: President George W. Bush, girding the nation for war, said in his State of the Union address that Saddam Hussein had shown “utter contempt” for the world community and had to be held to account; Bush also pledged to help the ailing economy with lower taxes and a stronger health care system. • One year ago: The Arab League halted its observer mission in Syria

because of escalating violence. • Today’s Birthdays: Actor Alan Alda is 77. Actress Susan Howard is 71. Actress Marthe (cq) Keller is 68. Sen. Jeanne Shaheen, D-N.H., is 66. Actress-singer Barbi Benton is 63. Former French President Nicolas Sarkozy is 58. Movie director Frank Darabont is 54. Singer Sarah McLachlan is 45. Rapper Rakim is 45. DJ Muggs (Cypress Hill) is 45. Actress Kathryn Morris (“Cold Case”) is 44. Singer Joey Fatone Jr. (‘N Sync) is 36. Rapper Rick Ross is 36. Actress Rosamund Pike is 34. Singer Nick Carter (Backstreet Boys) is 33. Actor Elijah Wood is 32.

More than 230 die in Brazilian nightclub fire PORTO ALEGRE, Brazil (AP) — Flames raced through a crowded nightclub in southern Brazil early Sunday, killing more than 230 people as panicked partygoers gasped for breath in the smoke-filled air, stampeding toward a single exit partially blocked by those already dead. It appeared to be the world’s deadliest nightclub fire in more than a decade. Witnesses said a flare or firework lit by band members started the blaze in Santa Maria, a university city of about 225,000 people, though officials said the cause was still under investigation. Television images showed smoke pouring out of the Kiss nightclub as shirtless young men who had attended a university party joined firefighters using axes and sledgehammers to pound at windows and walls to free those trapped inside. Guido Pedroso Melo, commander of the city’s fire department, told the O Globo newspaper that firefighters had a hard time getting inside the club because “there was a barrier of bodies blocking the entrance.” Teenagers sprinted from the scene desperately seeking help. Others carried injured and burned friends

AP

Relatives cry next to a coffin at a gymnasium where bodies were brought for identification in Santa Maria city, Rio Grande do Sul state, Brazil, Sunday. Flames raced through a crowded nightclub in southern Brazil early Sunday, killing more than 230 people as panicked partygoers gasped for breath in the smoke-filled air, stampeding toward a single exit partially blocked by those already dead. away in their arms. “There was so much smoke and fire, it was complete panic, and it took a long time for people to get out, there were so many dead,” survivor Luana Santos Silva told the Globo TV network. The fire spread so fast inside the packed club that firefighters and ambulances could do little to stop it, Silva said. Another survivor, Michele Pereira, told the

Varicose Veins More Than Just A Cosmetic Issue Pain Heaviness/Tiredness Burning/Tingling Swelling/Throbbing Tender Veins

$15.00 OFF FELINE OR CANINE SPAY OR NEUTER Offer Good Now Through January 31, 2013 Cannot be combined with any other coupon or discount. Troy Animal Hospital and Bird Clinic

Troy Animal Hospital & Bird Clinic

Midwest Dermatology, Laser & Vein Clinic Tel: 937-619-0222 Tel: 937-335-2075

Call Today For A Visit With a Vein Specialist Physician. No Referral Needed

that the band, Gurizada Fandangueira, started playing at 2:15 a.m. “and we had played around five songs when I looked up and noticed the roof was burning” “It might have happened because of the Sputnik, the machine we use to create a luminous effect with sparks. It’s harmless, we never had any trouble with it. “When the fire started, a guard passed us a fire

Spay Or Neuter January Special!

Phlebitis Blood Clots Ankle Sores /Ulcers Bleeding

If you have any of the above, there are effective treatment options, covered by insurances.

Springboro, OH Troy, OH

Folha de S. Paulo newspaper that she was near the stage when members of the band lit flares that started the conflagration. “The band that was onstage began to use flares and, suddenly, they stopped the show and pointed them upward,” she said. “At that point, the ceiling caught fire. It was really weak, but in a matter of seconds it spread.” Guitarist Rodrigo Martins told Radio Gaucha

extinguisher, the singer tried to use it but it wasn’t working” He confirmed that accordion player Danilo Jacques, 28, died, while the five other members made it out safely. Police Maj. Cleberson Braida Bastianello said by telephone that the toll had risen to 233 with the death of a hospitalized victim he said earlier that the death toll was likely made worse because the nightclub appeared to have just one exit through which patrons could exit. Officials counted 232 bodies that had been brought for identification to a gymnasium in Santa Maria, which is located at the southern tip of Brazil, near the borders with Argentina and Uruguay. Federal Health Minister Alexandre Padhilha told a news conference that most of the 117 people treated in hospitals had been poi-

INFORMATION Regional Group Publisher – Frank Beeson 440-5231 Executive Editor – David Fong 440-5228 Advertising Manager – Leiann Stewart 440-5252 Mailing Address: Troy Daily News, 224 S. Market St., Troy. Postmaster should send changes to the Troy Daily News, 224 S. Market St., Troy, Ohio 45373. Second class postage on the (USPS 642-080) is paid at Troy, Ohio. E-mail address: editorial@tdnpublishing.com Subscription Rates as of Sept. 1, 2011: Single Copy Newsstand rate $1.00 daily and $1.75 Sunday. EZ Pay $12.25 per month. Regular subscriptions are transferrable and/or refundable. Refund checks under $10 will not be issued. An administrative fee of $10 for all balances under $50 will be applied. Remaining balances of $50 or more will be charged a 20% administrative fee.

34 S. Weston Rd., Troy • 937-335-8387 2351246

2358600

www.troyanimalhospital.com

soned by gases they breathed during the fire. Only a few suffered serious burns, he said. Brazil President Dilma Rousseff arrived to visit the injured after cutting short her trip to a Latin American-European summit in Chile. “It is a tragedy for all of us,” Rousseff said. Most of the dead apparently were asphyxiated, according to Dr. Paulo Afonso Beltrame, a professor at the medical school of the Federal University of Santa Maria who went to the city’s Caridade Hospital to help victims. Beltrame said he was told the club had been filled far beyond its capacity during a party for students at the university’s agronomy department. Survivors, police and firefighters gave the same account of a band member setting the ceiling’s soundproofing ablaze, he said.

A division of Civitas Media

Editorial Department: (937) 440-5208 FAX: (937) 440-5286 E-mail: editorial@tdnpublishing.com Business Office Manager — Betty Brownlee 498-5935 Circulation Department — 335-5634 Circulation Director — Cheryl Hall 440-5237 NIE Coordinator — Dana Wolfe 440-5211 dwolfe@tdnpublishing.com Office hours 8 a.m. to 5 p.m. MON–FRI 8 a.m. to noon SAT & SUN at 335-5634 (select circulation) Advertising Department: Hours: 8 a.m. to 5 p.m. Monday-Friday To place a classified ad, email: classifiedsthatwork@tdnpublishing.com. To place a display ad, call (937) 335-5634 FAX: (937) 335-3552 Internet Sales — Jamie Mikolajewski 440-5221 jmikolajewski@tdnpublishing.com iN-75 Magazine – Lindy Wagner 440-5255 lwagner@civitasmedia.com VISA, MasterCard, Discover and American Express accepted.


10 • Troy Daily News • Classifieds That Work • Monday, January 28, 2013

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

that work .com JobSourceOhio.com

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

125 Lost and Found

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

135 School/Instructions

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

TITLE COMPANY POSITION

Long standing Troy Title Company seeks a motivated individual to work with all aspects of real estate closings and title insurance. Title experience preferred. Interested individuals should send resume to: PO Box 310 Troy, OH 45373

Here’s an idea...

Find it, Buy it or Sell it in that work .com

City of Sidney

UTILITIES EQUIPMENT OPERATOR I

To apply & see full time job description: www.sidneyoh.com or visit Municipal Building Receptionist 201 W Poplar Street Sidney, Ohio $18.61 - $24.01/hr EOE

Application Deadline: February 8, 2013

that work .com

CUSTOMER SERVICE REPRESENTATIVE Competitive pay and benefits. Please apply at:

careers.cashamerica.com

EOE

Interested in working in West Central OHIOʼs AG EQUIPMENT INDUSTRY?

We are taking applications for:

EXPERIENCED AG EQUIPMENT SALES

LAWN & GARDEN EQUIPMENT SALES

SERVICE MANAGER SERVICE OFFICE

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

LABORERS CDL TRUCK DRIVERS

Industrial contractor hiring for hard hat environment. Training provided. Apply at: 15 Industry Park Court Tipp City

Shop Help wanted. Cleaning & assembly. Weekdays, 9am-4pm. $8/hr & up. Apply at 8620 CasstownFletcher Rd., Fletcher, Wednesday or Thursday, January 30 & 31 from 9am to 12noon.

Office Hours: Monday-Friday 8-5

Raymath Company, located in Troy, Ohio, is seeking welders for our expanding 2nd and 3rd shifts. Need to be able to mig and tig weld. Must have relevant metal manufacturing experience. Competitive salary with benefits. Apply in person or send resume to: HR 2323 W State Route 55 Troy, OH 45373 No phone calls please

Opportunity Knocks...

240 Healthcare

SCHEDULER/ RECEPTIONIST Upper Valley Family Care is currently accepting applications for medical scheduler/receptionist for approximately 32 hours weekly. Requires excellent written and spoken command of English. Excellent typing, customer service skills, medical terminology, and attention to detail.

The Sterling House Clare Bridge of Troy is hiring

Send cover letter detailing interests and resume to UVFC 700 S Stanfield Rd Troy, OH 45373

Resident Care Associates,

Independently owned and operated.

Must be available all shifts. Experience and/ or STNA certification as well as dementia/ Alzheimer's experience is preferred, but we will train someone who shows the right heart for the job. Only those who are dependable and committed to giving the best care possible need apply. Preemployment drug screening and background checks are required. Please Apply in Person to: Sterling House and Clare Bridge of Troy 81 N Stanfield Rd Troy, OH 45373 EOE/M/F/D/V

245 Manufacturing/Trade

WELDERS

Immediate Openings for Full-time

Premier manufacturer of commercial food equipment is seeking qualified candidates with tig and mig welding skills. Responsibilities include performing a variety of welding operations or robotic welding while observing safety, housekeeping and quality management system procedures. Working from prints, be able to follow written and verbal instructions, organize and plan own work and work effective with other members in a team environment.

We offer a competitive salary and benefits package. Apply in person at:

The Job Center of Miami County 2040 N Co Rd 25A Troy, Ohio 45373 (937)440-3465 EOE

Hair Follicle Drug Test Required

235 General

JobSourceOhio.com 250 Office/Clerical ✦✧✦✧✦✧✦✧✦✧✦✧✦ REAL ESTATE OFFICE MANAGER NEEDED Full time position

Candidate must possess: • Active Real Estate Sales License • Managerial & leadership skills • Proficiency in MS Office software Compensation includes: • Salary & commission based on experience • Flex hours

Send resume & salary requirements to: mcaughell@brunsrealty.com

▼▼▼▼▼▼▼▼▼▼▼▼

Troy Daily News 877-844-8385

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.

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

WELDERS

200 - Employment

235 General

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

2 BEDROOM in Troy, Move in special, Stove, refrigerator, W/D, A/C, very clean, no pets. $525. (937)573-7908 DODD RENTALS Tipp-Troy: 2 bedroom AC, appliances $575/$475 plus deposit No pets (937)667-4349 for appt.

GREAT AREA, 1.5 baths, includes water/ washer/ dryer, private parking, Lovely 2 bedroom, $595, (937)335-5440 PIQUA, large 1 bedroom, upstairs, carpeted, appliances, utilities included, off-street parking, no pets, (937)552-7006.

OTR DRIVERS

We Accept

WOODGATE APARTMENTS, 1433 Covington, 1 bedroom, very quiet. $406 monthly, Special $299 deposit if qualified, (937)773-3530, (937)418-9408

310 Commercial/Industrial

RETAIL SPACE available, great Troy area! $995 month. Parking included. Call Dottie Brown, (937)335-5440.

320 Houses for Rent

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, 2483 Renwick, 2 story 3-4 bedrooms, 3.5 bath, 2 car garage, $1350 month (937)623-2103

400 - Real Estate For Sale 405 Acreage and Lots

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

TROY, 1 & 2 Bedrooms, appliances, CA, water, trash paid, $425 & $525 monthly.

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

$200 Deposit Special! (937)673-1821

❏❐❑❒❏❐❑❒❏❐❑❒❏❐ STORAGE TRAILERS FOR RENT (800)278-0617

105 Announcements

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.

105 Announcements

500 - Merchandise

545 Firewood/Fuel

FIREWOOD, $125 a cord pick up, $150 a cord delivered, $175 a cord delivered and stacked (937)308-6334 or (937)719-3237 FIREWOOD, All hardwood, $150 per cord delivered or $120 you pick up, (937)726-2780.

HARDWOODS: split, seasoned and delivered locally. $135 cord $70 half. Call (937)559-6623 or (937)418-5122. Thank you. SEASONED FIREWOOD $140 per cord. Stacking extra, $120 you pick up. Taylor Tree Service available, (937)753-1047

560 Home Furnishings

APPLIANCES, FURNITURE, freezer, refrigerator, stove, living room suite, and more. Call for details (937)451-0151

SOFA BED, Simmons, good condition, floral design with queen size mattress, $100. Call (937)773-9300.

577 Miscellaneous

BED Tall poster, queen size bed with mattress and box springs in A1 condition. MUST SEE! (937)638-5338 LIFT CHAIR Only used 2 months. Like new condition. Blue. Asking $500. (937)418-3162

105 Announcements

❏❐❑❒❏❐❑❒❏❐❑❒❏❐

300 - Real Estate

✦✧✦✧✦✧✦✧✦✧✦✧✦

280 Transportation

DRIVER HOME DAILY Driver needed for LOCAL tractor trailer driving position, home daily. Work hours may vary but primarily 2nd shift hours. Must have CDLA, at least 1 year recent experience and be extremely dependable. Call Dave during the week at 800-497-2100 or on the weekend/evenings at 937-726-3994 or apply in person at: Continental Express 10450 St Rt 47 Sidney, OH www.ceioh.com

that work .com 235 General

For Rent

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

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

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

www.hawkapartments.net

just

EVERS REALTY

12

$

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

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

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

INDEPENDENT CONTRACTORS

WANTED WANTED

We are looking for drivers to deliver the Troy Daily News on Daily, Sundays, holidays and on a varied as needed basis.

Drivers must have: Valid drivers license Reliable transportation State minimum insurance

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: _______________________________________________________

Please call 937-440-5263 or 937-440-5260 and leave a message with your name, address and phone number. Your phone call will be returned in the order in which it is received. 2352652

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

100 - Announcement

DEADLINES/CORRECTIONS:


To Advertise In The Classifieds That Work Call 877-844-8385 577 Miscellaneous

CRIB, changing table, pack-n-play, doorway swing, swing, high chair, booster chair, travel bassinet, tub, clothes, blankets, movies, dolls, more (937)339-4233.

FIREARMS FOR SALE, Marlin model 336W Rifle, .30-30 lever action, Capacity 6+1, like new, with camo soft case, 20 rounds of ammo, my cost $475 asking $425, Walther, PPK/S, 380 Pistol, stainless steel, upgraded walnut handle, 150 round ammo, like new in case, my cost $740 asking $700, Walther P22 Pistol with laser, well cared for, great first gun, my cost $350 asking $300. Call or text (937)418-5329.

NASCAR DIECAST collection. Over 225 1/24 diecast. Some autograph cars, Autograph picture cards. NASCAR card collection and lots more. 3 curio cabinets. (419)629-2041 WALKER, seated walker, tub, shower/ transfer benches, commode chair, toilet riser with or without arms, grab bars, canes, (937)339-4233.

583 Pets and Supplies

AUSSIE-POO PUPPIES Miniature Aussie Poo puppies. Males and female. Vet checked. Up to date on immunizations. $350. (567)204-5232 PUPPY, 6 week old female Shih-tzu mix, $75, (937)606-2345 or (937)710-4682.

that work .com

586 Sports and Recreation

CCW CLASS. March 2nd, 8am to 4pm and March 3rd, 8am to noon. Held at Piqua Fish and Game. $60 person. parthelynx@aol.com. (937)760-4210.

800 - Transportation

Troy Daily News • Classifieds That Work • Monday, January 28, 2013• 11

SPECIAL NOTICE

NOTICE IS HEREBY GIVEN pursuant to the Charter of the Municipality of Tipp City, Ohio, that the following legislation was adopted by the City Council of the Municipality of Tipp City, Ohio on January 22, 2013. The full texts of the following legislation is on file in the Government Center, 260 South Garber Drive, Tipp City, Ohio.

Resolution 3-13 By: Mr. McDermott A resolution restating the intent of the City of Tipp City, Ohio to continue to pick up the employee contributions to the Police and Fire Pension Fund. Dated at Tipp City, Miami County, Ohio this 23rd day of January, 2013.

805 Auto

1993 CADILLAC Fleetwood Brougham, excellent condition! 39,000 original miles. Asking $6000, (937)778-0217.

2003 VOLKSWAGEN JETTA. 5 speed manual transmission. Fair condition. 120k miles. $2000. (937)726-6504

2004 VOLVO C70, red with brown interior, 65,000 miles. 4 cyl, gas, 5 speed auto, PS PB PW PL AM/FM CD, cruise, keyless entry dual climate control, heated seats, turbo, great handling, great mileage, 65,000 miles, good condition, after 5PM $7900. (937)216-6720 jimbiller@frontier.com.

899 Wanted to Buy

CASH PAID for junk cars and trucks. Free removal. Get the most for your junker call us (937)269-9567.

Janice Bates Clerk of Council 01/28/2013 2360367

SPECIAL NOTICE NOTICE OF PUBLIC HEARING

NOTICE IS HEREBY GIVEN that public hearing, as required by the Charter of the Municipality of Tipp City, Ohio, will be held in the Council Room in the Government Center, 260 S. Garber Drive, Tipp City, Ohio, at 7:30 p.m. on Monday, February 4, 2013 on the following proposed ordinances, the first reading of which was given on January 22, 2013.

Ordinance No. ___-13 Sponsored by: Mayor Gillis An ordinance amending Sections §154.100(A) and §154.102 of the Tipp City, Ohio Code of Ordinances regarding signage for large-scale commercial and industrial buildings.

2001 CHEVY S10 EXTREME

Ordinance No. ___-13 Sponsored by: Mr. Gibson An ordinance amending Tipp City Code Section 39.50 Codifying the Tipp City Income Tax Ordinance.

Dated at Tipp City, Miami County, Ohio this 23rd day of January, 2013. 01/28/2013 2360370

2003 FORD F150 SUPER CAB

auto, cruise, air, deluxe radio, 4.3 liter V6, $5000

V6, 5-speed manual, AM/FM/CD, cruise control, cold AC. $7900.

2003 CHRYSLER 300 M SPECIAL Pearl black, premium leather black, 3-5 high output V6 24V, 35,000 miles, like new condition, non-smoking, $9600 OBO. (937)489-3426

2003 JEEP LIBERTY SPORT 4 door, 4WD, 6 cylinder, 3.7 liter 5 speed auto, AC, power windows locks and steering, roof rack, AM/FM/CD, great condition. $5290 (937)332-8676

(937)667-6608

Ordinance No. ___-13 Sponsored by: Mr. Budding An ordinance amending code Section §154.078 regarding the requirements for off-street parking for EMS Stations and/or Volunteer Fire Stations.

Janice Bates Clerk of Council

Classifieds that work

Government officials have to publish their intentions in the newspaper. That includes where they intend to build facilities you don’t want down the block. Ohio newspapers, including the Troy Daily News, upload thousands of public notices to a popular website, PublicNoticesOhio.com, at no additional cost. Notices pertaining to local, county and state meetings, organizations and entities are among those included. Log on today to view public notices printed in your local hometown 2360760 newspaper or visit www.troydailynews.com and click on the “Public Notices” link.

(937)638-1832

2004 TRITOON PONTOON ODYSSEY 20ft, new stereo, cover, decals, 04 Yamaha 150hp, trailer, runs Great! asking $15,500 email kgeise@electrocontrols.com

2007 CHEVY IMPALA LTZ

67,000 Miles, $11,499 obo, Must sell, (937)776-9270

Service&Business DIRECTORY

To advertise in the Classifieds That Work Service & Business Directory please call: 877-844-8385 655 Home Repair & Remodel

OME IMP ROVEM AL H EN T T TO INSURED

BONDED

Concentration on Chapter 7 Bankruptcy Law for over 15 years Free Consultation ~ Affordable Rates

937-620-4579

937-489-8558

Shredded Topsoil Fill Dirt

FREE ESTIMATES

PAINTING DECKS

WINDOWS SIDING

PORCHES GARAGES

2357105

• Concrete • Additions 339-7604 667-9501 17 Shoop Rd, Tipp City BetterBuilders21@yahoo.com

2357520

2354650

(See Us For Do-It-Yourself Products)

Since 1936

For 75 Years

800-737-8189

MINIMUM CHARGES APPLY

“All Our Patients Die”

655 Home Repair & Remodel

937-974-0987

660 Home Services

Commercial / Residential

All Types of Interior/Exterior Construction & Maintenance

2355863

• New Roof & Roof Repair • Painting • Concrete • Hauling • Demo Work • New Rubber Roofs

(937) 473-2847 Pat Kaiser (937) 216-9332

TERRY’S

J.T.’s Painting & Drywall

•Refrigerators •Stoves •Washers & Dryers •Dishwashers • Repair & Install Air Conditioning

20 YEARS IN BUSINESS

APPLIANCE REPAIR

937-773-4552

• Interior/Exterior • Drywall • Texturing • Kitchens • Baths • Decks • Doors • Room Additions

2358830

AK Construction

660 Home Services

2361104

655 Home Repair & Remodel

937-335-1040 937-335-1040

2356762

937-492-5150

TOTAL HOME REMODELING 937-694-2454

Senior Homecare Personal • Comfort

419.501.2323 or 888.313.9990

660 Home Services

www.visitingangels.com/midwestohio

Small #Basements #Siding #Doors #Barns

All signs lead to you finding or selling what you want...

(937) 339-1902 or (937) 238-HOME Free Estimates • Fully Insured • 17 Years of Home Excellence

everybody’s talking about what’s in our

classifieds

LICENSED • INSURED

Call Jim at

725 Eldercare

Ask about our Friends & Neighbors discounts 2357518

in Shelby County by Sidney Daily News Readers

765-857-2623 765-509-0069

~ Flexible Hourly Care ~ ~ Respite Care for Families ~

#Repairs Large and #Room Additions #Kitchens/Baths #Windows #Garages

2360799

FREE ES AT ESTIM

JobSourceOhio.com

that work .com

• Room Additions Quality is our workmanship, • Basements customer satisfaction is our business. • Siding We build custom homes! • Doors • Garages • Painting

Voted #1

Mobile Veterinary Service Treating Dogs, Cats & Exotics

“WE REPAIR METAL ROOFS”

2354666

C ON STR U C TION

Gutters • Doors • Remodel

• Metal Roofing • Sales & Service • Standing Seam Snap Lock Panels

Amy E. Walker, D.V.M. 937-418-5992

• Painting • Drywall • Decks • Carpentry • Home Repair • Kitchen/Bath

Continental Contractors Roofing • Siding • Windows

25% off if you mention this ad!

Email: UncleAlyen@aol.com

B.E.D. Program (Bed Bug Early Detection) System

HERITAGE GOODHEW

FREE ESTIMATES

Free Inspections

2358130

710 Roofing/Gutters/Siding

On-line job matching at

00

Place an ad in the Service Directory

675 Pet Care

For your home improvement needs

WE KILL BED BUGS! GET THE KNOCKDOWN SERVICES WORD OUT! starting at $ 159 !!

875-0153 698-6135

aandehomeservicesllc.com

937.492.8003 • 937.726.2868

• Doors • Siding

Roofing, Windows, Siding, Fire & Water Restoration

2354113

2355263

Gravel Hauled, Laid & Leveled Driveways & Parking Lots

that work .com

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

937-335-6080

COOPER’S GRAVEL

WINTER SPECIAL Mention this ad and get 10% OFF any remodel of $5000 or more. Expires 2/28/13

BE TT ER

937-492-ROOF

645 Hauling

Eric Jones, Owner

Insurance jobs welcome • FREE Estimates

Licensed Bonded-Insured

DRYWALL ADDITIONS

SchulzeTax & Accounting Service

422 Buckeye Ave., Sidney

Roofing • Drywall • Painting Plumbing • Remodels • Flooring

ROOFS • KITCHENS • BATHS • REMODELING

2355314

for appointment at

classifieds

937-606-1122

I am a debt relief agency. I help people file for bankruptcy relief under the United States Bankruptcy Code.

Call 937-498-5125

A simple, affordable, solution to all your home needs.

WE DELIVER

Call to find out what your options are today!

Electronic Filing 45 Years Experience

A&E Home Services LLC

2359221

www.thisidney.com • www.facebook.com/thi.sidney NO JOB TOO SMALL, WE DO IT ALL

660 Home Services

2354076

Bankruptcy Attorney Emily M. Greer, Esq.

GRAVEL & STONE Driveways •• Excavating Excavating Driveways Demolition •• Saw Saw Dust Dust Demolition

ALL YOUR NEEDS IN ONE

660 Home Services

everybody’s talking about what’s in our

2343376

615 Business Services

660 Home Services

2339390

655 Home Repair & Remodel

2348601

600 - Services

that work .com

937-573-4702

by using

www.buckeyehomeservices.com

• Roofing • Windows • Kitchens • Sunrooms

• Spouting • Metal Roofing • Siding • Doors

• Baths • Awnings • Concrete • Additions

CALL TODAY FOR FREE ESTIMATE

2358453

that work .com

Don’t delay... call TODAY!


12 • Troy Daily News • Classifieds That Work • Monday, January 28, 2013

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

New Year = NEW CAR and MORE CASH?!?!?! Just get a new car and need to sell your old one?

WE CAN HELP YOU!!!

½ PRICE $30

O N ON PICTURE IT SOLD L NTH O M 1 R O F Y AVAILABLE ONLY BY CALLING 877-844-8385 Limit of 1 vehicle per advertisement. Valid only on private party advertising. No coupons or other offers can apply.

OR VISITING ONE OF OUR OFFICES IN SIDNEY, PIQUA OR TROY

2355090

l a Daily Call al ily News, Piqu Da oy Tr s, w dney Daily Ne d associated websites r 4 weeks in Si * Publishes fo kly affiliated publications an wee

Offer valid through February 28 (ad must begin by this date)

MIAMI VALLEY

In The Market For A New Or Used Vehicle?

AUTO DEALER D

I

R

E

C

T

O

R

New Breman

Visit One Of These Area New Or Pre-Owned Auto Dealers Today!

Y

Richmond, Indiana

Minster

9

2

3

12

7 5

4

Come Let Us Take You For A Ride!

1

6

BROOKVILLE

13

14

11

10

8

BMW

DODGE

CHRYSLER

14

2

BMW of Dayton

INFINITI

4

10

ERWIN

Infiniti of Dayton

Chrysler Jeep Dodge

Chrysler Dodge Jeep

7124 Poe Ave. Exit 59 off I-75 Dayton, Ohio

8645 N. Co. Rd. 25-A Piqua, Ohio 45356 I-75 North to Exit 83

2775 S. County Rd 25-A Exit 69 off I-75 N. Troy, OH 45373

937-890-6200

1-800-678-4188

937-335-5696

www.evansmotorworks.com

www.paulsherry.com

FORD

1

8675 N. Co. Rd. 25-A Piqua, Ohio 45356 I-75 North to Exit 83

800-947-1413 www.boosechevrolet.com

Ford Lincoln

JEEP

Chrysler Dodge Jeep

2343 W. Michigan Ave. Sidney, Ohio 45365

2775 S. County Rd 25-A Exit 69 off I-75 N. Troy, OH 45373

1-800-866-3995

866-470-9610

www.carncredit.com

7

937-339-6000

2351204

www.erwinchrysler.com

www.QuickCreditOhio.com

PRE-OWNED

VOLKWAGEN

5

13

Evans

Auto Sales Volkswagen 1280 South Market St. (CR 25A) Troy, OH 45373

7124 Poe Ave. Exit 59 off I-75. Dayton, OH

www.erwinchrysler.com

937-890-6200

www.independentautosales.com

www.evansmotorworks.com

FORD

LINCOLN

PRE-OWNED

VOLVO

12

9

Quick Jim Taylor’s Chrysler Credit Troy Ford Dodge Jeep Auto Sales Troy,Exit 69OHOff45373I-75 937-335-5696

www.wagner.subaru.com

www.buckeyeford.com

ERWIN

1099 N. Co. Rd. 25-A Troy, Ohio 45373

937-878-2171

937-335-5696

8

2775 S. County Rd 25-A Exit 69 off I-75 N. Troy, OH 45373

217 N. Broad St. Fairborn, OH 45324

(866)816-7555 or (937)335-4878

CHRYSLER CREDIT RE-ESTABLISHMENT 4

Wagner Subaru

ERWIN Independent

Car N Chevrolet Credit 575 Arlington Rd. Brookville, OH 45309

Remember...Customer pick-up and delivery with FREE loaner. www.infinitiofdayton.com

4

9

3

11

866-504-0972

www.erwinchrysler.com

CHEVROLET CREDIT RE-ESTABLISHMENT

SUBARU

Ford Lincoln

339-2687

2343 W. Michigan Ave. Sidney, Ohio 45365

www.troyford.com www.fordaccessories.com

866-470-9610 www.buckeyeford.com

6

One Stop Volvo of Auto Sales Dayton 8750 N. Co. Rd. 25A Piqua, OH 45356

937-606-2400 www.1stopautonow.com

7124 Poe Ave. Exit 59 off I-75 Dayton, Ohio

937-890-6200 www.evansmotorworks.com


CONTACT US

SPORTS

■ Sports Editor Josh Brown (937) 440-5251, (937) 440-5232 jbrown@tdnpublishing.com

JOSH BROWN

TROY DAILY NEWS • WWW.TROYDAILYNEWS.COM

13 January 28, 2013

TODAY’S TIPS

■ Swimming

• POKER: The Troy Football Alumni Association will host a Texas Hold ’Em Tourament at 4 p.m. Feb. 23 at the St. Patrick's Parish Center, located at 409 E. Main St. in Troy. The tournament is limited to the first 100 registered players. Registration begins at 3:15 p.m. the day of the tourament. Participants may pre-register by sending an email request to brad8rohlfs@yahoo.com. Checks or money orders may be mailed to P.O. Box 824, Troy, OH, 45373. Entrants also may pay at the door. There is a $50 entry fee, with profits from the event going toward the Troy Football Alumni Association Scholarship Fund. The Troy Football Alumni Association is a non-profit organization. • HALL OF FAME: The Trojan Athletics Hall of Fame is still accepting nominations for its 2013 inaugural class. Induction will be held in the fall of 2013. Entrance to the selection process is through public nomination. The deadline for nominations is April 1. Nomination forms are available at all home events or at the athletics office at Troy High School. • COACHING SEARCH: Tippecanoe High School is seeking to fill its head coaching position in volleyball. A letter of interest, resume and support material may be submitted to Matt Shomper, Athletic Director, 615 E. Kessler-Cowlesville Road, Tipp City, Ohio 45371. Phone: (937) 669-6364, Fax: (937) 667-0912, email: mshomper@tippcity.k12.oh.us. The application deadline is noon on Thursday. • SOFTBALL: The Newton High School softball team will be hosting a chicken and noodle dinner from 4:30 to 7 p.m. Saturday at the Newton cafeteria. Presale tickets are $6 for adults or $3 for children under 6, with the cost going up by $1 at the door. Tickets may be purchased from any Newton softball player at the high school office or from coach Kirk Kadel. Proceeds to help with the spring trip. • COACHING SEARCH: MiltonUnion is accepting applications for the position of head varsity football coach. Applications will be accepted until Feb. 8. Candidates should include a cover letter and resume and send them to Athletic Director Tom Koogler at kooglert@milton-union.k12.oh.us.

Trojans finish strong at GWOC meet Zelnick named North Division’s top swimmer Staff Reports Dropping times was the theme of the day for the Troy swimming teams Sunday at the Greater Western Ohio Conference meet. “Almost every swimmer dropped time from (Saturday),” Troy coach Chris Morgan said. “I am very proud of all of them. We brought 16 swimmers to the finals, which is over half the team.” The boys placed sixth as a team and the girls finished seventh. Michelle Zelnick ended the day with two GWOC titles — winning the 200 freestyle (1:54.06)

and the 500 free in dominating fashion (5:03.59) — and was named GWOC North Division Swimmer of the Meet. For the boys, Tommy Jackson took fifth in the 100 backstroke (58.59 seconds), while he and Matthew Roetter finished sixth and ninth in the 100 butterfly. Jackson swam the event in a time of 57.57 seconds and Roetter clocked in at 59.36. Joel Evans finished fifth in the 100 breaststroke (1:03.37) and got seventh in the 100 freestyle (51.91 seconds), Roetter got 12th in the 50 free (24.29), Will Armstong was 12th in the 500

TROTWOOD free (5:34.56), while Tristan West placed 15th (5:46.96). Jared Liew took 13th in the 200 IM (2:18.77) and got 15th in the 100 back (1:04.89), Matt Hokky was 14th in the 100 breaststroke (1:08.75), In the relay events, the Trojans team of Jackson, Evans, Roetter and Armstrong placed fourth in the GWOC in the 200 medley relay (1:46.73). Troy’s 200 freestyle team of Evans, Jackson, Jared Liew and Roetter got sixth (1:37.60). Armstrong, Jon and Jared Liew and Will Metzger teamed up to place ninth in the 400 free relay (3:46.53).

■ NFL

■ Hockey

NFC wins Pro Bowl in rout HONOLULU (AP) — Sackhappy defensive end J.J. Watt went out for a pass as a wide receiver, retiring center Jeff Saturday snapped to two Mannings on opposite teams and the NFC blew past the AFC 6235 in a Pro Bowl that could be the could be the league’s last. Whether the NFL’s all-star game will return or not is a question league officials will ponder the next few months. And, the players gave plenty to consider on both sides of the argument Sunday. The NFC was unstoppable on offense, with nearly each player putting up fantasy-type lines in limited play. The AFC, meanwhile, had five turnovers and scored most of its points well after the game was no longer competitive. Minnesota tight end Kyle Rudolph was voted the game’s MVP with 122 yards and a touchdown. Watt, who had 20 1/2 sacks for Houston, lined up as a wide receiver on the AFC’s third play from scrimmage, but missed a pass from Denver quarterback Peyton Manning. Cincinnati Bengals’ A.J. Green had seven catches for 119 yards and three touchdowns in the loss.

SPORTS CALENDAR TODAY Girls Basketball Franklin at Milton-Union (7:15 p.m.) Miami East at Wayne (7:30 p.m.) Northwestern at Bethel (7 p.m.) Russia at Covington (7 p.m.) Troy Christian at Xenia Christian (7 p.m.) TUESDAY Boys Basketball Bethel at Northwestern (7:30 p.m.) Covington at Arcanum (7:30 p.m.) Troy Christian at Xenia Christian (7 p.m.) Fairborn at Piqua (7:30 p.m.) Girls Basketball Arcanum at Newton (7 p.m.) WEDNESDAY Girls Basketball Butler at Troy (7:30 p.m.) Sidney at Piqua (7:30 p.m.) Wrestling OHSAA Duals Troy vs. Beavercreek (at Sidney) (6 p.m.) Tippecanoe at Greenville (6 p.m.) Covington vs. Mechnicsburg (at Versailles) (6 p.m.) Troy Christian at Versailles (6 p.m.) Bowling Graham at Troy (10 a.m.) Kenton Ridge at Tippecanoe (4 p.m.)

WHAT’S INSIDE National Football League .... 14 Local Sports..........................14 Scoreboard ............................15 Television Schedule..............15 NBA..................................... 16 College Basketball................16

Djokovic tops Murray in Aussie Open finals Novak Djokovic became the first man in the Open era to win three consecutive Australian titles when he beat Andy Murray 6-7 (2), 7-6 (3), 6-3, 6-2 in Sunday’s final. Little wonder he loves Rod Laver Arena. See Page 14.

PHOTOS COURTESY OF LEE WOOLERY/SPEEDSHOT PHOTO

Troy’s Drew Morgan brings the puck up ice during a game against Alter Sunday at Hobart Arena in Troy.

Defending home Trojan’ defense strong in 3-1 victory Staff Reports The Troy Trojans finished off the weekend unbeaten, defeating Alter 3-1 in their last Southwest Ohio High School Hockey League game of the season. The Trojans finished conference play at 8-4 in SWOHSHL North Division play, which was good enough for a second-place finish. Springboro won the division title.

TROY Goalie Jake Eldridge was a brick wall in net — making 12 saves in the game — and the Troy defense was strong in front of him, not allowing the Knights to score until the latter stages of the game. Eli Walters kicked off the scoring for the Trojans in the

Troy goalie Jake Eldridge eyes the puck during a game ■ See TROJANS on 14 against Alter Sunday at Hobart Arena in Troy.

BUFFALO WILD WINGS PLAYER OF THE WEEK

MICHELLE ZELNICK 2313 W. Main St. Troy 440-9016

Meredith Orozco took 12th in the 50 free (28.56 seconds), Mackenzie Rice was 15th in the 100 free (1:04.82), Lindsey Orozco (1:10.46) and Courtney Carmack (1:10.72) went 14-15 in the 100 butterfly. Emma Brumfield placed 15th in the 200 IM (2:38.19). The relay teams had high finishes for the Trojans as the 200 free team of Zelnick, Mackenzie Rice, Cassie Rice and Meredith Orozco placed fourth (1:50.01) and the 400 freestyle team, which Zelnick, Meredith featured Orozco, Lindsey Orozco and Mackenzie Rice, took seventh (4:04.53).

with purchase of $25.00 or more

Named GWOC North Swimmer of the Year.

■ Golf

Woods in front at Farmers SAN DIEGO (AP) — The fog lifted Sunday and revealed a familiar sight: Tiger Woods in command at Torrey Pines. Despite finishing with a bogey on the easiest hole of the back nine, Woods began to pull away from the field with a 3-under 69 in the third round to build a fourshot lead in the Farmers Insurance Open. Woods has only lost twice on the PGA Tour in 40 previous times that he has held the outright lead through 54 holes. Because fog wiped out all of Saturday, players were going as long as daylight allowed before returning Monday to complete the tournament. Woods, who was at 14-under 202, was likely to get in about six holes before darkness, and he didn’t bother switching to a red shirt for the start of the final round. Brad Fritsch, a PGA Tour rookie from Canada, had a 70

■ See FARMERS on 16

Check out all the sports at www.troydailynews.com

Coupon not valid on Tue. or Thu. Dine-in only. Excludes alcohol. Expires 2-4-13.

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

2359304


14

SPORTS

Monday, January 28, 2013

TROY DAILY NEWS • WWW.TROYDAILYNEWS.COM

■ National Football League

Ravens, 49ers bring big-hitting ‘D’ to Super Bowl OWINGS MILLS, Md. (AP) — It was as if linebacker Ray Lewis, safety Bernard Pollard and the rest of the Baltimore Ravens’ defense set out to provide a quarter-byquarter demonstration of how they do business. About 11 minutes into the AFC championship game against Tom Brady and the New England Patriots, Lewis drew a 15yard unnecessary roughness penalty for a helmetto-helmet hit that pushed tight end Aaron Hernandez’s chin strap up near his nose. Then, in the second quarter, linebacker Dannell Ellerbe gave New England another free 15 yards by hitting an offensive lineman in the face mask in response to an after-theplay shove. Fast-forward to early in the third, and Pollard was

flagged for his team’s third personal foul of the day, thanks to a leaping hit against the helmet of receiver Wes Welker. Two plays later, Welker dropped a third-down pass. And finally, a couple of minutes into the fourth, Pollard struck again. No penalty was called this time, but his helmet-tohelmet hit on Stevan Ridley resulted in a fumble and left the running back on his back, looking limp and helpless. Ridley left the game with a head injury, while the Ravens recovered the football and were on their way to next Sunday’s Super Bowl against the equally aggressive San Francisco 49ers. In an age of high-powered offenses in the NFL this season’s games featured 45.5 points, the highest average since 1965 and increasingly safety-con-

scious officials, a pair of hard-hitting, oft-penalized defenses are meeting for the championship. Those second-half shutouts of the Patriots and Atlanta Falcons in the conference title games were only the latest reminder from the 49ers and Ravens that defense still matters. Sometimes it isn’t about some sort of newfangled, complicated Xs-and-Os defense, either. It’s about players pushing it to the limit and, sometimes, perhaps beyond in a league that has been taking steps to rein in certain kinds of hits. “Being physical? That’s vital, man. That’s what we live by,” Baltimore cornerback Cary Williams said. “That’s something that Ray Lewis established here back in ‘96, and we’re going to continue to do that. It’s been, I guess, in our blood-

line. It’s in our DNA. We don’t bring in guys that’s timid. We don’t bring in guys that’s not going to hit anybody.” What about San Francisco’s defense? “They’re just as physical as we are,” Williams replied, offering what in his mind is probably the highest compliment he could pay another team’s players. San Francisco defensive lineman Justin Smith deflected a question about whether his defense is as good as Baltimore’s, replying: “I mean, we’re just trying to win a ring.” Actually, that’s probably better asked about the Ravens: Are they as good as the 49ers? Opposing offenses scored 15.5 points per game against the 49ers, which ranked third in the 32-team NFL in the regular season. The Ravens gave up 20 per

game, 11th-best. The 49ers allowed only two touchdown passes of 20-plus yards, the lowest total in the league. Baltimore allowed six. During the regular season, the Ravens were whistled for an NFL-high 19 personal fouls. Their team also was penalized more yards overall than anyone else. The 49ers, for their part, tied for fourth with 15 personal fouls and ranked fifth in penalty yardage. “When you go against a team that has that kind of reputation, and you can watch it on film, it definitely gets in your mindset and you know you have to deal with it,” Ravens linebacker Paul Kruger said. “I’m not sitting here saying that we’re intimidating everybody or anything like that. But you know we’re coming to hit you, for sure.”

Pollard put things a little more starkly. This is a guy who has developed a knack for leaving injured opponents in his wake. It was his Week 1 hit on Brady in 2008, for example, that cost the star QB the rest of that season. “For everybody, for fans, people who don’t understand they want to say, well, I’m being a dirty player. Well, no, I’m not being a dirty player. I’m just playing defense,” said Pollard, a seventh-year veteran out of Purdue. “And I ask you the question: If I came into your house, with your door locked, and I just kicked it down, and came to try to steal stuff, you’re going to defend your house, am I correct? So that’s the stand I take. We’ve got grass behind us. We’ve got the end zone that we have to defend, we’ve got to protect.”

■ Tennis

■ Hockey

Hat trick for Djokovic Beats Murray for 3rd Aussie Open title in a row

PHOTO COURTESY OF LEE WOOLERY/SPEEDSHOT PHOTO

Troy’s Will Schober tries to escape an Alter defender during a game Sunday at Hobart Arena in Troy.

Trojans ■ CONTINUED FROM 13 first period, with Mason Hagan and Clay Terrill getting credited for assists on the play. The score remained 1-0 going into the third period. The Trojans opened the final period on a 5on-3 advantage and capitalized just 21 seconds in. Brandon Beaty scored on assists by Hagan and Logan Tiderington. Moments later, Tiderington netted a goal on a Terrill assist as the Trojans jumped out to a 3-0 advantage and never looked back. “We played a very

good defensive game,” Troy coach Larrell Walters said. “In the third, we came out strong. We scored two goals in that short span to open up a 3-0 lead. “Jake (Eldridge) had a very strong game in net. He faced 13 shots, so he had 12 saves. Some of those were very good shot attempts and he had to make some good saves.” The Trojans (17-13) will ride a five-game winning streak into Saturday’s matchup against Trinity at Hobart Arena. The game starts at 8 a.m.

■ Football

Obama: Tough call on son playing football WASHINGTON (AP) — President Barack Obama is a big football fan with two daughters, but if he had a son, he says he’d “have to think long and hard” before letting him play because of the physical toll the game takes. “I think that those of us who love the sport are going to have to wrestle with the fact that it will probably change gradually to try to reduce some of the violence,” Obama tells The New Republic. “In some cases, that may make it a little bit less exciting, but it will be a whole lot better for the players, and those of us who are fans maybe won’t have to examine our consciences quite as much.” In an interview in the magazine’s Feb. 11 issue,

Obama said he worries more about college players than he does about those in the NFL. “The NFL players have a union, they’re grown men, they can make some of these decisions on their own, and most of them are wellcompensated for the violence they do to their bodies,” Obama said. “You read some of these stories about college players who undergo some of these same problems with concussions and so forth and then have nothing to fall back on. That’s something that I’d like to see the NCAA think about.” NFL spokesman Greg Aiello responded Sunday, “We have no higher priority than player health and safety at all levels of the game.”

M E L B O U R N E , Australia (AP) — Novak Djokovic became the first man in the Open era to win three consecutive Australian titles when he beat Andy Murray 6-7 (2), 7-6 (3), 6-3, 6-2 in Sunday’s final. Little wonder he loves Rod Laver Arena. “It’s definitely my favorite Grand Slam,” he said. “It’s an incredible feeling winning this trophy once more. I love this court.” Djokovic has won four of his six major titles at Melbourne Park, where he is now unbeaten in 21 matches. Nine other men had won back-to-back titles in Australia over 45 years, but none were able to claim three in a row. Only two other men, American Jack Crawford (1931-33) and Australian Roy Emerson (1963-67), have won three or more consecutive Australian championships. Born a week apart in May 1987 and friends since their junior playing days, Djokovic and Murray played like they knew each other’s game very well in a rematch of last year’s U.S. Open final. There were no service breaks until the eighth game of the third set, when Djokovic finally broke through and then held at love to lead by two sets to one. Djokovic earned two more service breaks in the fourth set, including one to take a 4-1 lead when U.S. Open champion Murray double-faulted on break point. “It’s been an incredible match as we could have expected,” Djokovic said. “When we play each other, it’s always, we push each other to the limit and I think those two sets went over two hours, 15 minutes, physically I was just trying to hang in there. Play my game and focus on every point.” The 25-year-old Serb didn’t rip his shirt off this time, as he did to celebrate his epic 5-hour, 53-minute win over Rafael Nadal in last year’s final. He just did a little dance, looked up to the sky and then applauded the crowd after the 3-hour, 40minute match. Murray’s win over Djokovic in the U.S. Open final last year ended a 76year drought for British men at the majors, but he still is yet to make a breakthrough in Australia after losing a third final here in the last four years. Djokovic’s win went against the odds of recent finals at Melbourne Park. In four of the past five years, the player who won the second of the semifinals has finished on top in the championship match. But this year, Djokovic played his semifinal on Thursday an easy 89minute minute win over No. 4-seeded David Ferrer.

AP PHOTO

Novak Djokovic celebrates after defeating Andy Murray in the Australian Open finals Sunday in Melbourne, Australia. Murray needed five energy sapping sets to beat 17-time major winner Roger Federer on Friday night. “You don’t wake up the next day and feel perfect, obviously,” Murray said of the Federer match. “It’s the longest match I played in six months probably. It obviously wasn’t an issue today. I started the match well. I thought I moved pretty good throughout.” The win consolidated Djokovic’s position as the No. 1-ranked player in the world, while Federer and Murray will be second and third when the ATP rankings are released Monday. Their last two matches in Grand Slams Murray’s fiveset win at last year’s U.S. Open and Djokovic’s victory here last year in five in the semifinals had a total of 35 service breaks. It was a vastly different, more tactical battle on Sunday, with the first two tight sets decided in tiebreakers. “All our matches in last three years have been decided in a very few points, so it’s really hard to say if I’ve done anything different,” Djokovic said. “I tried to be more aggressive. So I went for my shots, especially in the third and fourth; came to the net quite often. I was quite successful in that percentage, so it worked well for me.” Murray, who called for a trainer to retape blisters on his right foot at the end of

the second set, was visibly annoyed by noise from the crowd during his service games in the third set, stopping his service motion twice until the crowd quieted down. After dropping the third set, he complained about the noise to chair umpire John Blom. “It’s just a bit sore when you’re running around,” Murray said. “It’s not like pulling a calf muscle or something. It just hurts when you run.” Djokovic came from 0-40 down in the second game of the second set to hold his serve, a situation he called “definitely one of the turning points.” “He missed an easy backhand and I think mentally I just relaxed after that,” Djokovic said. “I just felt I’m starting to get into the rhythm that I wanted to. I was little more aggressive and started to dictate the play.” Although Djokovic went into the match with a 10-7 lead in head-to-heads, Murray had beaten Djokovic five out of eight times in tiebreakers, and that improved to six of nine after four unforced errors by Djokovic to end the first set. Djokovic pegged back that edge in the second set, when Murray also didn’t help his cause by doublefaulting to give Djokovic a 32 lead, and the Serbian player didn’t trail again in the tiebreaker.

On the double-fault, Murray had to stop as he was about to serve to pick up up a feather that had fallen on the court. “I could have served, it just caught my eye before I served … I thought it was a good idea to move it,” he said. “Maybe it wasn’t because I obviously double faulted. At this level it can come down to just a few points here or there. My probably biggest chance was at the beginning of the second set; (I) didn’t quite get it. When Novak had his chance at the end of the third, he got his.” Djokovic will have little time to savor the win he’s playing Davis Cup for Serbia next weekend against Belgium. “It’s going to be a lot of fun … to see how I can adjust to clay court in indoor conditions, playing away Davis Cup, which is always tricky,” he said. Andre Agassi was among those in the capacity crowd the four-time Australian champion’s first trip Down Under in nearly 10 years and he later presented the trophy to Djokovic. Victoria Azarenka, who won Saturday’s women’s singles final over Li Na, was also there with her boyfriend rapper Redfoo. Actor Kevin Spacey met in the dressing room with both players ahead of the match and later tweeted a photo of himself with them.


SCOREBOARD

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 NFC 62, AFC 35 Super Bowl Sunday, Feb. 3 At New Orleans Baltimore vs. San Francisco, 6 p.m. (CBS)

BASKETBALL National Basketball Association EASTERN CONFERENCE Atlantic Division Pct GB W L New York 27 15 .643 — Brooklyn 26 18 .591 2 21 23 .477 7 Boston 18 25 .419 9½ Philadelphia Toronto 16 28 .364 12 Southeast Division Pct GB W L 28 13 .683 — Miami Atlanta 25 19 .568 4½ Orlando 14 29 .326 15 Washington 11 31 .262 17½ 11 32 .256 18 Charlotte Central Division W L Pct GB Chicago 26 17 .605 — 26 18 .591 ½ Indiana 23 19 .548 2½ Milwaukee Detroit 17 27 .386 9½ 13 32 .289 14 Cleveland WESTERN CONFERENCE Southwest Division Pct GB W L San Antonio 36 11 .766 — 28 15 .651 6 Memphis 24 22 .522 11½ Houston 19 25 .432 15½ Dallas 15 29 .341 19½ New Orleans Northwest Division Pct GB W L Oklahoma City 34 11 .756 — 27 18 .600 7 Denver 24 20 .545 9½ Utah 22 21 .512 11 Portland 17 24 .415 15 Minnesota Pacific Division Pct GB W L L.A. Clippers 32 13 .711 — 26 17 .605 5 Golden State L.A. Lakers 19 25 .432 12½ 16 29 .356 16 Sacramento Phoenix 15 30 .333 17 Saturday's Games Philadelphia 97, New York 80 Cleveland 99, Toronto 98 Washington 86, Chicago 73 Charlotte 102, Minnesota 101 Houston 119, Brooklyn 106 San Antonio 108, Phoenix 99 Milwaukee 109, Golden State 102 Denver 121, Sacramento 93 Utah 114, Indiana 110, OT Portland 101, L.A. Clippers 100 Sunday's Games Boston 100, Miami 98,2OT L.A. Lakers 105, Oklahoma City 96 New Orleans 91, Memphis 83 Detroit 104, Orlando 102 New York 106, Atlanta 104 Dallas 110, Phoenix 95 Portland at L.A. Clippers, 9:30 p.m. Monday's Games Memphis at Philadelphia, 7 p.m. Golden State at Toronto, 7 p.m. Sacramento at Washington, 7 p.m. Orlando at Brooklyn, 7:30 p.m. Charlotte at Chicago, 8 p.m. Indiana at Denver, 9 p.m. Houston at Utah, 9 p.m. Tuesday's Games Golden State at Cleveland, 7 p.m. Milwaukee at Detroit, 7:30 p.m. Dallas at Portland, 10 p.m. New Orleans at L.A. Lakers, 10:30 p.m. This Week's Top 25 Fared 1. Duke (17-2) lost to No. 25 Miami 90-63; beat Maryland 84-64. 2. Michigan (19-1) beat Purdue 6853; beat Illinois 74-60. 3. Kansas (18-1) beat No. 11 Kansas State 59-55; beat Oklahoma 67-54. 3. Syracuse (18-2) beat No. 21 Cincinnati 57-55; lost to Villanova 7571, OT. 5. Louisville (16-4) lost to Villanova 73-64; lost to Georgetown 53-51. 6. Arizona (17-2) lost to UCLA 84-73; beat Southern Cal 74-50. 7. Indiana (18-2) beat Penn State 7249; beat No. 13 Michigan State 75-70. 8. Florida (16-2) beat Georgia 64-47; beat Mississippi State 82-47. 9. Butler (17-3) lost to La Salle 54-53; beat Temple 83-71. 10. Gonzaga (19-2) beat BYU 83-63; beat San Francisco 66-52. 11. Kansas State (15-4) lost to No. 3 Kansas 59-55; lost to Iowa State 73-67. 12. Minnesota (15-5) lost to Northwestern 55-48; lost to Wisconsin 45-44. 13. Michigan State (17-4) beat Wisconsin 49-47; lost to No. 7 Indiana 75-70. 14. Ohio State (15-4) beat Iowa 7263; beat Penn State 65-51. 15. New Mexico (17-3) beat Colorado State 66-61; lost to San Diego State 55-34. 16. Oregon (18-2) beat Washington State 68-61; beat Washington 81-76. 17. Creighton (18-3) lost to Drake 7469; beat Southern Illinois 81-51. 18. N.C. State (16-4) lost to Wake Forest 86-84; beat North Carolina 9183. 19. VCU (16-5) lost to Richmond 8674, OT; lost to La Salle 69-61. 20. Wichita State (19-2) beat Missouri State 62-52; beat Bradley 7339. 21. Cincinnati (16-4) lost to No. 3 Syracuse 57-55. 22. Missouri (15-4) beat South Carolina 71-65; beat Vanderbilt 81-59. 23. Mississippi (17-2) beat Tennessee 62-56; beat Auburn 63-61. 24. Notre Dame (16-4) lost to Georgetown 63-47; beat South Florida 73-65. 25. Miami (14-3) beat No. 1 Duke 9063; beat Florida State 71-47.

College Basketball Scores Sunday SOUTH 68, Birmingham-Southern Oglethorpe 53 Centre 70, Rhodes 55 Clemson 77, Virginia Tech 70 Miami 71, Florida St. 47 Millsaps 72, Berry 53 Sewanee 68, Hendrix 56 South Alabama 60, FIU 58 UNC Greensboro 77, Chattanooga 69 MIDWEST Cent. Oklahoma 77, Emporia St. 71 Indiana 75, Michigan St. 70 Michigan 74, Illinois 60 Missouri St. 78, Drake 72 Purdue 65, Iowa 62, OT Washington (Mo.) 74, Case Reserve 69 SOUTHWEST Southwestern (Texas) 62, Dallas 61 FAR WEST Colorado 81, California 71 EAST Carnegie-Mellon 75, Chicago 74 Cazenovia 98, SUNY-ESF 57 Emory 80, NYU 61 Fairfield 61, St. Peter's 54 Iona 79, Loyola (Md.) 71 Keuka 89, Cobleskill 78 Lafayette 78, Lehigh 57 Manhattan 62, Rider 51 Niagara 66, Canisius 65 Penn St.-Abington 113, Penn streading 105 Princeton 71, College of NJ 33 Rochester 69, Brandeis 65 Siena 79, Marist 75 St. John's 71, Seton Hall 67 UConn 66, Rutgers 54 UMass 70, Richmond 65 Wells 87, SUNY-IT 77 Yeshiva 57, Mount St. Vincent 54 This Week's Women's Top 25 Fared 1. Baylor (18-1) beat No. 24 Iowa State 66-51; beat No. 20 Oklahoma 8265. 2. Notre Dame (18-1) beat Pittsburgh 73-47; beat Providence 89-44. 3. UConn (18-1) beat No. 4 Duke 7949; beat Cincinnati 67-31. 4. Duke (18-1) lost to No. 3 UConn 79-49; beat Clemson 60-46; beat Boston College 80-56. 5. Kentucky (19-2) lost to No. 18 South Carolina 55-50; beat LSU 73-60. 6. Stanford (18-2) beat Utah 65-44; beat No. 20 Colorado 69-56. 7. California (17-2) beat No. 20 Colorado 59-56; beat Utah 71-54. 8. Penn State (17-2) beat No. 23 Michigan 59-49; beat Minnesota 64-59; beat Ohio State 71-56. 9. Tennessee (16-3) beat Vanderbilt 83-75. 10. Maryland (17-3) beat No. 11 North Carolina 85-59; beat Clemson 80-40. 11. North Carolina (19-2) lost to No. 10 Maryland 85-59; beat Miami 64-62. 12. Oklahoma State (15-3) lost to Kansas State 76-70, OT; beat Kansas 65-52. 13. Louisville (17-4) beat Marquette 64-63; beat St. John's 57-54. 14. Georgia (17-3) beat Florida 6952. 15. Purdue (17-3) beat Northwestern 77-73; beat No. 25 Michigan State 6762. 16. Texas A&M (16-5) beat Mississippi State 81-33; beat Missouri 77-58. 17. Dayton (17-1) beat George Washington 80-52; beat UMass 83-44. 18. South Carolina (18-3) beat No. 5 Kentucky 55-50; beat Arkansas 43-40. 19. UCLA (15-4) beat Arizona 73-57; beat Arizona State 54-50. 20. Colorado (15-4) lost to No. 7 California 59-56; lost to No. 6 Stanford 69-56. 20. Oklahoma (15-4) lost to No. 1 Baylor 82-65. 22. Florida State (17-3) beat Georgia Tech 76-71; beat Virginia Tech 70-56. 23. Michigan (16-4) lost to No. 8 Penn State 59-49; beat Indiana 61-43; lost to Iowa 63-57. 24. Iowa State (14-4) lost to No. 1 Baylor 66-51; beat West Virginia 53-49. 25. Michigan State (16-4) lost to Nebraska 59-54; lost to No. 15 Purdue 67-62. Sunday's Women's Basketball Scores EAST Albany Pharmacy 86, Yeshiva 55 Carnegie-Mellon 76, Chicago 68 Delaware 65, Drexel 56 Duquesne 68, Fordham 50 Gallaudet 66, St. Elizabeth 52 George Washington 57, Rhode Island 43 Keuka 72, Cobleskill 56 La Salle 71, Temple 55 Loyola (Md.) 64, Iona 43 Maine Maritime 77, Maine-Presque Isle 41 Niagara 62, Canisius 49 Penn St.-Berks 78, Wilson 69 Pine Manor 69, New Rochelle 51 Rider 69, Fairfield 57 Rochester 72, Brandeis 58 SUNY-IT 77, Wells 59 Seton Hall 45, Rutgers 42 St. Peter's 60, Manhattan 49 Towson 55, UNC Wilmington 53 Penn st-reading 89, Penn St.Abington 72 MIDWEST Bowling Green 61, E. Michigan 47< Butler 65, VCU 45 Charlotte 71, Saint Louis 54 Creighton 79, Bradley 67 Dayton 83, UMass 44 Drake 63, N. Iowa 55 Emporia St. 89, Cent. Oklahoma 57 Iowa 63, Michigan 57 Miami (Ohio) 76, Kent St. 48 Missouri St. 79, S. Illinois 72 Penn St. 71, Ohio St. 56 Purdue 67, Michigan St. 62, OT Wichita St. 49, Evansville 45 SOUTH Christopher Newport 75, Meredith 54 Duke 80, Boston College 56 East Carolina 55, Tulane 52 Emory 73, NYU 49 FIU 50, South Alabama 46 Florida St. 70, Virginia Tech 56 Georgia 69, Florida 52 Georgia College 68, Young Harris 55 Georgia St. 64, George Mason 52 Hendrix 60, Sewanee 49 James Madison 85, Hofstra 62 Kentucky 73, LSU 60 LaGrange 94, Greensboro 73 Louisville 57, St. John's 54 Maryland 80, Clemson 40 Methodist 70, Piedmont 64 Middle Tennessee 79, W. Kentucky 57 Millsaps 70, Berry 56 Mississippi St. 72, Mississippi 57 NC State 78, Georgia Tech 66 NC Wesleyan 73, William Peace 58

Scores AND SCHEDULES

SPORTS ON TV TODAY MEN'S COLLEGE BASKETBALL 7 p.m. ESPN — Pittsburgh at Louisville NBCSN — Delaware at Drexel 9 p.m. ESPN — Kansas at West Virginia WOMEN'S COLLEGE BASKETBALL 7 p.m. ESPN2 — Notre Dame at Tennessee

TUESDAY MEN'S COLLEGE BASKETBALL 7 p.m. ESPN — Wisconsin at Ohio St. ESPN2 — NC State at Virginia 9 p.m. ESPN — Kentucky at Mississippi NHL HOCKEY 7:30 p.m. NBCSN — N.Y. Islanders at Pittsburgh SOCCER 9 p.m. ESPN2 — Men's national teams, exhibition, United States vs. Canada, at Houston

WEDNESDAY GOLF 4:30 a.m. TGC — European PGA Tour, Dubai Desert Classic, first round, at Dubai, United Arab Emirates MEN'S COLLEGE BASKETBALL 6 p.m. ESPN2 — Villanova at Notre Dame 8 p.m. ESPN2 — Texas at Kansas St. NBA BASKETBALL 8 p.m. ESPN — Miami at Brooklyn 10:30 p.m. ESPN — L.A. Lakers at Phoenix NHL HOCKEY 8 p.m. NBCSN — Chicago at Minnesota SOCCER 2:55 p.m. ESPN2 — Premier League, Southampton at Manchester United 10 p.m. ESPN2 — Teams TBA North Carolina 64, Miami 62 Rhodes 71, Centre 66 Richmond 73, Xavier 63, OT Southern Miss. 76, Rice 57 UAB 61, Marshall 45 UCF 70, Memphis 65 UNC Pembroke 65, Augusta St. 61 Vanderbilt 67, Alabama 58 Virginia 69, Wake Forest 64 William & Mary 73, Old Dominion 69 FAR WEST California 71, Utah 54 Fresno St. 69, Colorado St. 58 Southern Cal 74, Arizona 57 Stanford 69, Colorado 56 UCLA 54, Arizona St. 50 Washington 66, Oregon 53 Washington St. 76, Oregon St. 73, OT SOUTHWEST SMU 71, Tulsa 46 South Carolina 43, Arkansas 40 Southwestern (Texas) 90, Dallas 61 Texas A&M 77, Missouri 58 Texas Tech 53, TCU 42 UTEP 65, Houston 54

HOCKEY National Hockey League All Times EST EASTERN CONFERENCE Atlantic Division GP W L OT Pts GF GA New Jersey 4 3 0 1 7 11 7 5 3 2 0 6 15 14 Pittsburgh N.Y. Islanders 5 2 2 1 5 18 18 N.Y. Rangers 5 2 3 0 4 14 16 Philadelphia 6 2 4 0 4 13 18 Northeast Division GP W L OT Pts GF GA 4 3 0 1 7 12 8 Boston Ottawa 5 3 1 1 7 16 10 4 3 1 0 6 13 7 Montreal Buffalo 5 2 3 0 4 13 15 5 2 3 0 4 14 17 Toronto Southeast Division GP W L OT Pts GF GA Tampa Bay 5 4 1 0 8 24 13 5 3 1 1 7 15 14 Winnipeg Carolina 4 2 2 0 4 11 13 Washington 5 1 3 1 3 11 19 Florida 5 1 4 0 2 8 19 WESTERN CONFERENCE Central Division GP W L OT Pts GF GA Chicago 6 6 0 0 12 22 13 5 4 1 0 8 19 9 St. Louis Detroit 5 2 2 1 5 11 16 Nashville 5 1 1 3 5 10 14 Columbus 5 1 3 1 3 9 18 Northwest Division GP W L OT Pts GF GA Vancouver 4 2 1 1 5 13 12 Colorado 4 2 2 0 4 9 9 Edmonton 4 2 2 0 4 11 13 Minnesota 4 2 2 0 4 9 10 Calgary 4 1 2 1 3 11 15 Pacific Division GP W L OT Pts GF GA San Jose 4 4 0 0 8 19 7 Anaheim 4 3 1 0 6 15 14 Dallas 5 2 2 1 5 11 12 Los Angeles 4 1 2 1 3 8 12 Phoenix 5 1 4 0 2 17 20 NOTE: Two points for a win, one point for overtime loss. Saturday's Games Anaheim 3, Nashville 2, SO San Jose 4, Colorado 0 N.Y. Rangers 5, Toronto 2 Chicago 3, Columbus 2 Philadelphia 7, Florida 1 St. Louis 4, Dallas 3 Los Angeles 4, Phoenix 2 Calgary 4, Edmonton 3 Sunday's Games Pittsburgh 2, Ottawa 1, SO Washington 3, Buffalo 2 Montreal 4, New Jersey 3, OT Tampa Bay 5, Philadelphia 1 Chicago 2, Detroit 1, OT Winnipeg 5, N.Y. Islanders 4, OT Minnesota at St. Louis, 8 p.m. Vancouver at San Jose, 8 p.m. Monday's Games Boston at Carolina, 7 p.m. Dallas at Columbus, 7 p.m. Nashville at Phoenix, 9 p.m. Colorado at Edmonton, 9:30 p.m. Vancouver at Los Angeles, 10:30 p.m. Tuesday's Games New Jersey at Boston, 7 p.m. Toronto at Buffalo, 7 p.m. Philadelphia at N.Y. Rangers, 7 p.m. Winnipeg at Montreal, 7:30 p.m. Washington at Ottawa, 7:30 p.m. N.Y. Islanders at Pittsburgh, 7:30 p.m.

Florida at Tampa Bay, 7:30 p.m. Dallas at Detroit, 7:30 p.m. Columbus at Minnesota, 8 p.m. Anaheim at San Jose, 10:30 p.m.

TENNIS Australian Open Results Sunday At Melbourne Park Melbourne, Australia Purse: $31.608 million (Grand Slam) Surface: Hard-Outdoor Singles Men Championship Novak Djokovic (1), Serbia, def. Andy Murray (3), Britain, 6-7 (2), 7-6 (3), 6-3, 6-2. Doubles Mixed Championship Jarmila Gajdosova and Matthew Ebden, Australia, def. Lucie Hradecka and Frantisek Cermak, Czech Republic, 6-3, 7-5. 2013 Australian Open Champions Men's Singles — Novak Djokovic (1), Serbia Women's Singles — Victoria Azarenka (1), Belarus Men's Doubles — Bob and Mike Bryan (1), United States Women's Doubles — Sara Errani and Roberta Vinci (1), Italy Mixed Doubles — Jarmila Gajdosova and Matthew Ebden, Australia Legends Men's Doubles — Todd Woodbridge and Mark Woodforde, Australia Legends Women's Doubles — Martina Hingis, Switzerland, and Martina Navratilova, United States Boys' Singles — Nick Kyrgios (3), Australia Girls' Singles — Ana Konjuh (3), Croatia Boys' Doubles — Jay Andrijic and Bradley Mousley, Australia Girls' Doubles — Ana Konjuh, Croatia, and Carol Zhao (1), Canada Men's Wheelchair Singles — Shingo Kunieda (2), Japan Women's Wheelchair Singles — Aniek van Koot (1), Netherlands Quad Wheelchair Singles — David Wagner (1), United States Men's Wheelchair Doubles — Michael Jeremiasz, France, and Shingo Kunieda (2), Japan Women's Wheelchair Doubles — Jiske Griffioen and Aniek van Koot (1), Netherlands Quad Wheelchair Doubles — David Wagner and Nick Taylor (1), United States Australian Open Men's Champions 2013 — Novak Djokovic 2012 — Novak Djokovic 2011 — Novak Djokovic 2010 — Roger Federer 2009 — Rafael Nadal 2008 — Novak Djokovic 2007 — Roger Federer 2006 — Roger Federer 2005 — Marat Safin 2004 — Roger Federer 2003 — Andre Agassi 2002 — Thomas Johansson 2001 — Andre Agassi 2000 — Andre Agassi 1999 — Yevgeny Kafelnikov 1998 — Petr Korda 1997 — Pete Sampras 1996 — Boris Becker 1995 — Andre Agassi 1994 — Pete Sampras 1993 — Jim Courier 1992 — Jim Courier 1991 — Boris Becker 1990 — Ivan Lendl 1989 — Ivan Lendl 1988 — Mats Wilander 1987 — Stefan Edberg 1986 — Not held, moved to January 1987 1985 — Stefan Edberg 1984 — Mats Wilander 1983 — Mats Wilander 1982 — Johan Kriek 1981 — Johan Kriek 1980 — Brian Teacher 1979 — Guillermo Vilas 1978 — Guillermo Vilas 1977-Dec. — Vitas Gerulaitis 1977-Jan. — Roscoe Tanner 1976 — Mark Edmondson 1975 — John Newcombe

Monday, January 28, 2013 1974 — Jimmy Connors 1973 — John Newcombe 1972 — Ken Rosewall 1971 — Ken Rosewall 1970 — Arthur Ashe 1969 — Rod Laver 1968 — Bill Bowrey 1967 — Roy Emerson 1966 — Roy Emerson 1965 — Roy Emerson 1964 — Roy Emerson 1963 — Roy Emerson 1962 — Rod Laver 1961 — Roy Emerson Australian Open Women's Champions 2013 — Victoria Azarenka 2012 — Victoria Azarenka 2011 — Kim Clijsters 2010 — Serena Williams 2009 — Serena Williams 2008 — Maria Sharapova 2007 — Serena Williams 2006 — Amelie Mauresmo 2005 — Serena Williams 2004 — Justine Henin-Hardenne 2003 — Serena Williams 2002 — Jennifer Capriati 2001 — Jennifer Capriati 2000 — Lindsay Davenport 1999 — Martina Hingis 1998 — Martina Hingis 1997 — Martina Hingis 1996 — Monica Seles 1995 — Mary Pierce 1994 — Steffi Graf 1993 — Monica Seles 1992 — Monica Seles 1991 — Monica Seles 1990 — Steffi Graf 1989 — Steffi Graf 1988 — Steffi Graf 1987 — Hana Mandlikova 1986 — Not held, moved to January 1987 1985 — Martina Navratilova 1984 — Chris Evert Lloyd 1983 — Martina Navratilova 1982 — Chris Evert Lloyd 1981 — Martina Navratilova 1980 — Hana Mandlikova 1979 — Barbara Jordan 1978 — Chris O'Neil 1977-Dec. — Evonne Goolagong Cawley 1977-Jan. — Kerry Melville Reid 1976 — Evonne Goolagong 1975 — Evonne Goolagong 1974 — Evonne Goolagong 1973 — Margaret Smith Court 1972 — Virginia Wade 1971 — Margaret Smith Court 1970 — Margaret Smith Court 1969 — Margaret Smith Court 1968 — Billie Jean Moffitt King 1967 — Nancy Richey 1966 — Margaret Smith 1965 — Margaret Smith 1964 — Margaret Smith 1963 — Margaret Smith 1962 — Margaret Smith 1961 — Margaret Smith

GOLF Farmers Insurance Open Scores Sunday San Diego Purse: $6.1 million s-Torrey Pines (South Course); 7,698 yards, par 72 n-Torrey Pines (North Course); 7,053 yards; par 72 Third Round Tiger Woods............68s-65n-69s—202 Brad Fritsch.............69n-67s-70s—206 Erik Compton..........71s-65n-71s—207 Luke Guthrie ...........68s-69n-71s—208 Tag Ridings .............67s-70n-71s—208 Jimmy Walker..........67n-69s-72s—208 Nick Watney ............69s-68n-71s—208 Casey Wittenberg...69s-67n-72s—208 Adam Hadwin .........66n-74s-69s—209 Brandt Snedeker.....65n-75s-69s—209 Cameron Tringale ...68n-72s-69s—209 Pat Perez.................72s-67n-70s—209 Charles Howell III ...66n-72s-71s—209 K.J. Choi..................65s-73n-71s—209 Josh Teater..............66s-70n-73s—209 Steve Marino...........68s-68n-73s—209 Hunter Mahan.........69s-72n-69s—210 Gary Woodland.......72s-69n-69s—210 Bill Haas..................69s-69n-72s—210 Graham DeLaet......68n-70s-72s—210 Ross Fisher.............66n-71s-73s—210 Vijay Singh ..............68n-73s-70s—211 Brendan Steele.......67n-73s-71s—211 Nicholas Thompson69n-70s-72s—211 Bo Van Pelt..............67n-72s-72s—211 John Senden ..........69s-68n-74s—211 Aaron Baddeley......71n-72s-68s—211 Billy Horschel ..........66n-69s-76s—211 Rickie Fowler...........77s-65n-70s—212 Lucas Glover...........69s-73n-70s—212 Charlie Wi................71s-66n-75s—212 Robert Garrigus......72s-69n-72s—213 Brendon de Jonge..74s-66n-73s—213 Colt Knost................69n-71s-73s—213 Justin Bolli ...............72s-67n-74s—213 Greg Owen .............74s-68n-71s—213 Harris English .........68s-70n-75s—213 James Hahn............71s-72n-70s—213 Boo Weekley...........74s-67n-73s—214 Mike Weir.................66n-75s-73s—214 Brian Harman .........74s-68n-72s—214 Jonas Blixt...............70n-72s-72s—214 Roberto Castro.......71s-68n-75s—214 Martin Flores...........69s-69n-76s—214 Jim Herman ............69n-69s-76s—214 Trevor Immelman....72s-71n-71s—214 Chez Reavie ...........71s-70n-74s—215 Tom Gillis.................69s-73n-73s—215 J.J. Henry ................69n-71s-75s—215 Jeff Overton ............71n-69s-75s—215 David Lynn ..............67n-75s-73s—215 Brian Stuard............68n-74s-73s—215 Jeff Klauk ................71s-72n-72s—215 Jason Day ...............73n-70s-72s—215 Seung-Yul Noh........71s-72n-72s—215 Eric Meierdierks......69n-74s-72s—215 Michael Letzig.........68s-73n-75s—216 John Rollins ............70s-71n-75s—216 Dustin Johnson.......69n-72s-75s—216 Charley Hoffman ....70n-72s-74s—216 Patrick Reed ...........73s-69n-74s—216 Justin Leonard ........68n-71s-77s—216 Jerry Kelly ...............67n-71s-78s—216 Jin Park ...................72s-70n-74s—216 Neal Lancaster .......72n-71s-73s—216 Ben Curtis...............72s-71n-73s—216 Martin Laird.............72s-71n-73s—216 Matt Every...............69s-74n-73s—216 John Huh.................69s-71n-77s—217 Michael Thompson.71n-71s-75s—217 Peter Tomasulo .......67n-75s-75s—217 Will Claxton.............69n-69s-79s—217 Daniel Summerhays72n-71s-74s—217 Justin Hicks.............67s-70n-80s—217 Scott Gardiner.........70n-73s-74s—217 Steve LeBrun ..........68n-75s-74s—217 John Mallinger ........67n-74s-77s—218 Bryce Molder ..........68n-72s-78s—218 Sang-Moon Bae .....70s-72n-76s—218 Hank Kuehne..........68n-74s-76s—218 Nicolas Colsaerts ...69n-74s-75s—218 Phil Mickelson.........72n-71s-75s—218 Doug LaBelle II.......72s-71n-75s—218 Luke List..................66n-75s-78s—219 D.H. Lee...................68n-74s-78s—220 Robert Karlsson......69n-74s-77s—220 James Driscoll ........68n-75s-77s—220

15

TRANSACTIONS Sunday's Sports Transactions HOCKEY National Hockey League ANAHEIM DUCKS — Reassigned F Peter Holland and D Jordan Hendry to Norfolk (AHL). Recalled F Emerson Etem and D Sami Vatanen from Norfolk. DALLAS STARS — Recalled G Richard Bachman from Texas (AHL). Placed G Cristopher Nilstorp on injured reserve. FLORIDA PANTHERS — Returned F Quinton Howden and F Drew Shore to San Antonio (AHL). American Hockey League GRAND RAPIDS GRIFFINS — Returned D Mark Mitera to Reading (ECHL). HERSHEY BEARS — Loaned D Patrick Wellar to Reading (ECHL). ECHL ECHL — Suspended Trenton G Cal Heeter, Orlando F Ryan Cruthers and Utah F Tommy Maxwell, pending review, and fined them, and Evansville C Nathan Moon and Idaho coach Brad Ralph undisclosed amounts. SOCCER Major League Soccer MONTREAL IMPACT — Traded M Lamar Neagle to Seattle for an international roster spot.

BASEBALL Remaining Free Agents NEW YORK (AP) — The 71 remaining free agents (x-signing club, if different, would lose draft pick): AMERICAN LEAGUE BALTIMORE (5) — Bill Hall, of; Nick Johnson, dh; Joe Saunders, lhp; Jim Thome, dh; Randy Wolf, lhp. BOSTON (2) — Daisuke Matsuzaka, rhp; Scott Podsednik, of. CHICAGO (3) — Brian Bruney, rhp; Orlando Hudson, 2b; Francisco Liriano, lhp. CLEVELAND (3) — Travis Hafner, dh; Casey Kotchman, 1b; Grady Sizemore, of. DETROIT (1) — Jose Valverde, rhp. HOUSTON (1) — Chris Snyder, c. LOS ANGELES (2) — LaTroy Hawkins, rhp; Jason Isringhausen, rhp. MINNESOTA (2) — Matt Capps, rhp; Carl Pavano, rhp. NEW YORK (2) — Freddy Garcia, rhp; Derek Lowe, rhp. OAKLAND (1) — Brandon Inge, 3b. SEATTLE (2) — Kevin Millwood, rhp; Miguel Olivo, c. TAMPA BAY (2) — Kyle Farnsworth, rhp; Luke Scott, dh. TEXAS (2) — Mark Lowe, rhp; Roy Oswalt, rhp. TORONTO (3) — Kelly Johnson, 2b; Brandon Lyon, rhp; Omar Vizquel, 2b. NATIONAL LEAGUE ARIZONA (1) — Takashi Saito, rhp. ATLANTA (7) — Miguel Batista, rhp; x-Michael Bourn, of; Matt Diaz, of; Chad Durbin, rhp; Chipper Jones, 3b; Lyle Overbay, 1b; Ben Sheets, rhp. CINCINNATI (2) — Miguel Cairo, 1b; Scott Rolen, 3b. COLORADO (2) — Jason Giambi, 1b; Jonathan Sanchez, lhp. LOS ANGELES (5) — Bobby Abreu, of; Todd Coffey, rhp; Adam Kennedy, inf; Juan Rivera, of-1b; Matt Treanor, c. MIAMI (3) — Austin Kearns, of; Carlos Lee, 1b; Carlos Zambrano, rhp. MILWAUKEE (3) — Alex Gonzalez, ss; Shaun Marcum, rhp; Francisco Rodriguez, rhp. NEW YORK (6) — Ronny Cedeno, inf; Scott Hairston, of; Ramon Ramirez, rhp; Jon Rauch, rhp; Kelly Shoppach, c; Chris Young, rhp. PHILADELPHIA (2) — Jose Contreras, rhp; Brian Schneider, c. PITTSBURGH (2) — Rod Barajas, c; Chad Qualls, rhp. ST. LOUIS (2) — Brian Fuentes, lhp; x-Kyle Lohse, rhp. SAN FRANCISCO (5) — Aubrey Huff, 1b; Guillermo Mota, rhp; Brad Penny, rhp; Freddy Sanchez, 2b; Ryan Theriot, 2b. WASHINGTON (1) — Chien-Ming Wang, rhp. Baseball Calendar Feb. 4-21 — Salary arbitration hearings, Phoenix. Feb. 12 — Mandatory reporting date for players participating in the World Baseball Classic in Asia. Mandatory reporting date for all other pitchers and catchers participating in the WBC. Voluntary reporting date for pitchers and catchers not participating in the WBC. Feb. 15 — Mandatory reporting date for WBC players not participating in Asia. Voluntary reporting date for position players not participating in the WBC. Feb. 20 — Mandatory reporting date for players not participating in the WBC. March 2-11 — Teams may renew contracts of unsigned players. March 2-19 — World Baseball Classic. March 13 — Last day to place a player on unconditional release waivers and pay 30 days termination pay instead of 45 days. March 27 — Last day to request unconditional release waivers on a player without having to pay his full 2013 salary. March 31 — Opening day, Texas at Houston. Active rosters reduced to 25 players. June 6 — Amateur draft. July 12 — Deadline for amateur draft picks to sign. July 16 — All-Star game, Citi Field, New York. July 28 — Hall of Fame induction, Cooperstown, N.Y. July 31 — Last day to trade a player without securing waivers. Sept. 1 — Active rosters expand to 40 players. Oct. 23 — World Series begins. November TBA — Deadline for teams to make qualifying offers to their eligible former players who became free agents, fifth day after World Series. November TBA — Deadline for free agents to accept qualifying offers, 12th day after World Series. Dec. 2 — Last day for teams to offer 2014 contracts to unsigned players. Dec. 9-12 — Winter meetings, Lake Buena Vista, Fla. 2014 July 15 — All-Star game, Minneapolis. July 18 — Deadline for amateur draft picks to sign. Dec. 8-11 — Winter meetings, San Diego.


16

SPORTS

Monday, January 28, 2013

TROY DAILY NEWS • WWW.TROYDAILYNEWS.COM

■ National Basketball Association

Bryant propels Lakers past Thunder, 105-96 LOS ANGELES (AP) — Kobe Bryant had 21 points, 14 assists and nine rebounds, Steve Nash added seven of his 17 points in the final 5 minutes, and the Los Angeles Lakers held off the NBA-leading Oklahoma City Thunder 105-96 Sunday. Pau Gasol scored 16

points in a reserve role as the Lakers picked up the most impressive victory of their thoroughly unimpressive season, coolly maintaining a small lead down the stretch of their second straight win after a fourgame skid. Los Angeles had lost nine of its last 11 against the

powerful Thunder, including four of five in the clubs’ second-round playoff series last spring. Kevin Durant scored 35 points and Russell Westbrook had 17 points, 13 assists and nine rebounds for the road-weary Thunder, who finished their longest trip of the season at 3-3.

Bryant and Westbrook briefly tangled in the third quarter in an exchange that earned a technical foul for Kobe. Both All-Star guards entered the fourth quarter needing just one rebound for a triple-double, but neither got it. Westbrook also missed his first eight shots and 12 of

his first 13 before finding his shot, but the Lakers didn’t wilt down the stretch. Los Angeles took the lead with 6:15 to play on a jumper by Metta World Peace, who had 15 points and 10 rebounds. The Lakers nursed a small advantage in the final minutes, going up 101-95 on

■ National Basketball Association

■ Golf

Celtics top Heat in 2 OT

Golf

Win is bittersweet as Boston loses Rondo for year BOSTON (AP) — Paul Pierce sank the big basket in the Celtics double-overtime win over the NBA champions. Then he learned that star point guard Rajon Rondo would miss the rest of the season with a knee injury. “Everyone was really happy for the win,” Pierce said after Boston beat the Miami Heat 100-98 Sunday. “It brought a dark cloud in this room when you heard the news.” When coach Doc Rivers told his players after the game, the joy of ending their six-game losing streak stopped, even if they had just outlasted the team with the best record in the Eastern Conference. Now the Celtics must try to keep winning without their leader, who suffered a torn anterior cruciate ligament in his right knee late in Friday night’s 123-112 win, also in double overtime, in Atlanta. They won Sunday after Pierce’s 22-foot jumper with 31 seconds left gave them a 99-98 lead. But making the playoffs got harder as the Celtics try to hang on to the eighth and final postseason spot in the conference with a 2 1-2-game lead over the Philadelphia 76ers. “Obviously, the Rondo news is pretty tough. I knew it before the game,” Rivers said. “I just didn’t think it was any time to tell any of our guys.” This game was the first in Boston for Ray Allen since he left the Celtics after five seasons and signed as a free agent with Miami. He scored 21 points. Kevin Garnett had 24 points and 11 rebounds, and Pierce added 17 points, 13 rebounds and 10 assists for the Celtics. Rondo’s injury “puts this team and the rest of the guys in a position to be

AP PHOTO

Boston Celtics’ Paul Pierce reacts to getting fouled during a game against the Miami Heat Sunday in Boston. ready to step up,” Pierce said. Sunday’s win “was a perfect example. We showed we are capable.” LeBron James had 34 points for the Heat, whose winning streak stopped at four. “As much as I’ve been a rival with Boston over the years, I never want to see anyone go down,” James said. “It’s terrible, not only for their team but for the league.” After Pierce’s basket, James had a chance to put

Selling Old Coins?

SC

Collectibles

2359574

Miami Valley Centre Mall, Piqua Monday-Saturday 10-9, Sunday 12-6

937-773-0950

Is This Your Photo? Are you the Culver's Fan of the Game for this week?

Bring this photo and a photo i.d. to Culver's of Troy, 2100 W. Main St. Troy, OH to receive your free value basket.

the Heat ahead but missed a 12-foot jumper with 6.8 seconds to go from the left with defender Jeff Green jumping out at him. Pierce got the rebound and was fouled by Shane Battier. He sank the first shot. Then, as a fan shouted “This one’s for Rondo,” he missed the second. Miami had one last chance, but Battier missed a long jumper at the buzzer. “They defended that very well,” Heat coach Erik Spoelstra said. “There are about three different options to it, four different options to it. They defended each one of them.” The Heat could have won in the first overtime, but Dwyane Wade, who had 17 points, missed a long jumper as the buzzer sounded. They had led 9389 after consecutive baskets by James, but Garnett hit a layup with 1:45 remaining and a shot from the right baseline with 1:14 to go. Boston could have avoided the first overtime when Pierce inbounded from behind his backboard with 2 seconds left to Jason Terry. But Terry’s shot from the top of the key was short. The Heat had tied it on a 3-pointer by James with 7 seconds remaining in regulation after Allen missed a 3-

pointer from the left corner with 15 seconds to go. Rivers did not mention Rondo’s injury in his meeting with reporters about an hour before the game, but Courtney Lee started in his place. Doctors decided to keep Rondo out of the game after he went through his normal pregame routine but complained of pain that he thought was in his hamstring. An MRI was done and team physician Dr. Brian McKeon learned the results during the game. Allen was part of the Big Three with Pierce and Garnett starting in 200708. In their first season together, Boston won its 17th NBA championship. He played against the Celtics once before this season, a 120-107 Heat win in Miami in the opener. The crowd gave Allen a standing ovation when highlights of his career with the Celtics were shown on the video board above center court during a timeout with 5:33 left in the first quarter. At the Miami bench, he raised his left hand in recognition. “When I saw it, just all those emotions came streaming back from all the great things we did here,” Allen said. “I’ll always be a Celtic in my mind.”

The Vein Treatment & Medical Cosmetic Center Randall C. Orem, D.O., F.A.C.C., F.S.C.A.I.

though he was always on the attack because of his position in the fairway. He missed a downhill birdie putt from 4 feet on the par-5 ninth, and then came back with a wedge that landed near the hole at No. 10 and spun back next to the cup before it settled 4 feet away for a birdie putt that he made. He led by as many as six strokes until Fritsch birdied the last hole and Woods, playing in the group behind, ran into trouble. His tee shot rolled up near the lip of the bunker, and he advanced it 70 yards into deep rough. He swung hard through the thick, wet grass into a greenside bunker, and then missed his 8-foot par putt. Still, it was an ominous sign. One week after he missed the cut in Abu Dhabi thanks to a two-shot penalty he received after his ground for taking relief from an embedded lie on the fifth hole when the rules didn’t allow for it he looked good as ever. Woods has a 49-4 record on the PGA Tour when he has at least a share of the 54-hole lead, and it’s even more daunting when the lead is his alone. The only two players to come from behind to beat him over the final 18 holes were Ed Fiori in the Quad City Classic in 1996 when Woods was a 20year-old rookie, and Y.E. Yang in the 2009 PGA Championship a Hazeltine.

■ CONTINUED FROM 13 and was at 206. Erik Compton finished birdieeagle for a 71 and was alone in third, five shots behind. Asked about trying to chase Woods, Compton started laughing. “I’m trying to chase myself,” he said. Woods has won seven times at Torrey Pines as a pro, including a U.S. Open, and another win today would give him the most wins on any course. The tournament staff followed the final group along the back nine, ready to change the hole locations to get ready for the final round. Players had about 30 minutes to get something to eat and hit a few balls before going right back out. Woods had superb control of his tee shots and was rarely out of position on a day that began under a light drizzle and soon gave way to patchy clouds and clear views of the Pacific surf below the bluffs. Starting with a two-shot lead, he stretched that quickly with a tap-in birdie on the second hole and a beautiful tee shot to a left pin on the downhill par 3 to about 4 feet. The South Course played even longer with the soft conditions, and only seven players broke 70. Aaron Baddeley had the lowest score of the round with a 68. Woods managed to stretch his lead with pars,

■ College Basketball

No. 7 Hoosiers get by No. 13 Michigan State From that point, Indiana never led by more than six and the Spartans couldn’t tie the score or take the lead. No. 2 Michigan 74, Illinois 60 CHAMPAIGN, Ill. — Trey Burke scored 19 points and No. 2 Michigan never trailed after the opening minutes of a 7460 win Sunday over Illinois that could push the Wolverines to No. 1 in the nation for the first time since the 1992-93 season. Duke’s lopsided loss to Miami earlier in the week opened the door for a new No. 1 when the AP poll comes out Monday and Michigan put itself in position to take the top spot. Glenn Robinson III scored 14 points for the Wolverines (19-1, 6-1 Big Ten). Nik Stauskas and Tim Hardaway Jr. added 12 each. Brandon Paul led Illinois (15-6, 2-5) with 15 points but had five of Illinois’ 15 costly turnovers. Michigan forward Jordan Morgan did not return after leaving early with a sprained right ankle, but the Wolverines hardly missed him.

BLOOMINGTON, Ind. (AP) — Victor Oladipo took control for No. 7 Indiana in the opening minutes Sunday and never let go. The junior guard scored 21 points, grabbed seven rebounds and finished with six steals, leading the Hoosiers to a 75-70 victory over No. 13 Michigan State. Indiana (18-2, 6-1 Big Ten) has now won three straight and two in a row in this series. The latest win helped break up the three-team logjam that started the day with only one loss each in conference play. Michigan State (17-4, 6-2) was led by Gary Harris, Indiana’s 2012 Mr. Basketball, who had 21 points and made five 3pointers. Adreian Payne added 18 points and nine rebounds and doubled his season total by making three 3s. And it was every bit as entertaining as the Top 15 matchup was billed. Indiana jumped to a 50-43 lead early in the second half, but the Spartans answered with back-toback 3s from Harris to cut the deficit 50-49 with 15:36 to play.

“The Best Breakfast in Town” Served Daily 6:00am-10:30am See Page 1 of Fr

CALL FOR YOUR APPOINTMENT TODAY!

Gasol’s driving layup with 1:09 to play. Bryant then hit a tough 19-foot jumper with 37 seconds left, and Westbrook couldn’t answer. Durant didn’t have a field goal in the final 6:39, scoring just seven points in the fourth quarter of Oklahoma City’s third loss in 11 games.

iday’s Sidney Da

ily News

y Specials!

l for our Week

Member of American Academy of Cosmetic Physicians Board Certified in Cardiovascular Diseases, Internal Medicine, Interventional Cardiology

Culver's of Troy 2100 W. Main St. Troy, OH 332-7402

culvers.com

1103 Fairington Drive, Sidney, OH • 4960 S. Co. Rd. 25A, Tipp City, OH 130 Martz St., Suite A, Greenville, OH

937-497-1200 • 937-667-2100 Toll Free: 1-866-596-1200 www.acsorem.com

2352103

On Sidney’s Quiet Side Wapak Ave. • 937-492-8820

2354592

2360804

Fairington Cardiovascular and Wellness Center


Turn static files into dynamic content formats.

Create a flipbook
Issuu converts static files into: digital portfolios, online yearbooks, online catalogs, digital photo albums and more. Sign up and create your flipbook.