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April 26, 2013 It’s Where You Live! Volume 105, No. 99

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Police: New York was next his hospital bed that he and his older brother decided on the spot • Legal issues surround last Thursday questioning of Dzhokhar night to drive to New York Tsarnaev. See page 2 and launch an attack. In their stolen their list of targets,” Mayor SUV they had Michael Bloomberg said. TSARNAEV five pipe bombs New York Police Commissioner Raymond Kelly said Dzhokhar and a pressure-cooker explosive Tsarnaev told interrogators from like the ones that blew up at the

Boston Marathon bombing suspects reportedly planned to attack NYC NEW YORK (AP) The Boston Marathon bombers were headed for New York’s Times Square to blow up the rest of their explosives, authorities said Thursday, in what they portrayed as a chilling, spur-of-the-moment scheme that fell apart when the brothers realized the car they had hijacked was low on gas. “New York City was next on

Signs of Life coming to Troy Jon Stankorb has a deep appreciation for Pink Floyd’s ability to evoke an emotional response from listeners. He hopes fans who visit Hobart Arena May 4 leave with a similar response. Stankorb and Cincinnati-based Signs of Life: The Essence of Pink Floyd will bring a newly-designed stage setup and high-tech video-projection system and light show for their 8 p.m. performance May 4. See Page 7.

marathon, Kelly said. But when the Tsarnaev brothers stopped at a gas station on the outskirts of Boston, the carjacking victim they were holding hostage escaped and called police, Kelly said. Later that night, police intercepted the brothers in a blazing gunbattle that left 26-year-old Tamerlan Tsarnaev dead. “We don’t know if we would have been able to stop the terrorists had they arrived here from

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Politics on hold at dedication of Bush Library

Cleanup project helps fulfill community service requirement

George W. Bush shed a sentimental tear. Barack Obama mused about the burdens of the office. Bill Clinton dished out wisecracks. Jimmy Carter and George H.W. Bush chimed in, too, on a rare day of harmony at the dedication of the younger Bush’s presidential library that glossed over the hard edges and partisan divides of five presidencies spanning more than three tumultuous decades. See Page 4.

BY NATALIE KNOTH Staff Writer nknoth@civitasmedia.com

CORRECTION Thursday’s Troy Planning Commission story erroneously named Niall and Karen Foster as the applicants of a re-zoning request for 338 Grant St. The applicant was actually Jerry Wayne Chambliss. At Wednesday’s meeting, the commission approved the applicant’s request to withdraw the application. The issue was postponed indefinitely. STAFF PHOTO/MELANIE YINGST

Troy Junior High School history and government teacher Justin Crews recently was selected to participate in the national James Madison Memorial Fellowship. The James Madison Memorial Fellowship Foundation was established by Congress in 1986 for the purpose of improving teaching about the United States Constitution in secondary schools.

INSIDE TODAY Advice ........................xx Calendar.....................xx Classified....................xx Comics .......................xx Deaths........................xx Ned B. Etter Donald E. Trostle Jack E. Gheen Ernest Anthony Paul D. Greer Horoscopes................xx Opinion.......................xx Sports.........................xx TV...............................xx

Reading your rights TJHS teacher selected to study the Constitution through the James Madison Memorial Fellowship Foundation BY MELANIE YINGST Staff Writer myingst@civitasmedia.com

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will expand his love of history and knowledge of the nation’s Constitution next summer. Crews on the historical farm at the recently was named a James National Park.” Madison Memorial Fellowship scholrowing up in Lincoln “I loved it. I got to do a lot of cool ar, which is only awarded to one or City, Ind., where things like build a wagon and talk two teachers per state each year. Abraham Lincoln spent to groups of visitors about that periIt was the second year Crews had his boyhood years, Troy Junior od in time.” applied to become a James Madison High School history teacher Crews, the youngest of eight sib- Memorial Fellowship scholar, and he Justin Crews not only learned lings, said he watched his mother said the competition in Ohio was study and read every book she could tough. to love history – he also lived on Abraham Lincoln. Crews said he plans on using the it. “She knew so much,” Crews said. coursework of the fellowship as part Crews, a social studies “It was so fun to watch her interact of his master’s degree in history he teacher for more than 15 years with college professors and experts is pursuing through Ashland at the junior high, said his love and she would know more than University. of history was developed in his them and they’d be like ‘Can we get “It’s going to allow me to go deephometown, where Lincoln back with you and talk some more?’ er in to the Constitution and how it It was really neat.” spent 14 years of his life. relates to American History,” Crews Crews said his mother’s knowlsaid. “The more knowledge I get, the “My mother was an interpreter at edge of Lincoln made a great more I am able to share and give the (Lincoln Boyhood Home) impression on him. back to students.” National Park and it was a histori“She was probably the greatest Crews said he enjoys teaching cal working farm as well,” Crews teacher I ever had,” he said. said. “I’d go to work with her and Now a teacher himself, Crews • See TEACHER on Page 2 dress up as a pioneer kid who lived

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For the third year, youth of the David L. Brown Youth Center helped pick up roadside trash Thursday in Elizabeth Township as a means of keeping the community clean while helping members of the 24-hour community residential treatment program work toward their community service hours requirements. Township trustee Greg Dilts, who started the service effort, said the six participants enjoyed the opportunity to work alongside their peers for a good cause. If their smiles and laughter were any indications, the young men were enjoying themselves on the sunny Thursday morning. “This is a reward, they said, to go out and pick up trash, rather than stay at the center. It turned out to be such a nice day, too,” Dilts said. Justin Lande, shift coordinator at the David L. Brown Center, drove the kids along the 5-mile stretch. They kicked off the day at 8:45 a.m., with each participant wearing a neon yellow vest. The David L. Brown Center, which is operated under the Miami County Juvenile Court, serves adjudicated, unruly or delingquent males between the ages of 12 and 17, guiding them academially and behaviorally by means of positive reinforcement. “These are great kids. They just made some mistakes and now they’re doing their time for it, and hopefully things will turn around for them,” Dilts said. The hours of community service are a win-win for both the township and the young males. “It benefits the township because we do their roadside cleanup, and it

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Legal issues surround Boston suspect’s questioning

LOTTERY CLEVELAND (AP) — Here are the winning numbers drawn Thursday by the Ohio Lottery: • Pick 4 Midday: 2-4-7-2 • Pick 5 Midday: 4-7-4-6-5 • Pick 3 Midday: 5-6-1 • Pick 3 Evening: 3-2-6 • Pick 5 Evening: 4-2-6-1-9 • Pick 4 Evening: 0-1-5-7 • Rolling Cash 5: 07-12-15-26-28 Estimated jackpot: $145,000

BUSINESS ROUNDUP • The Troy Elevator The grain prices listed below are the closing prices of Thursday. Corn Month Bid Change April 6.4950 +0.0625 NC 13 5.0600 +0.0325 Jan 14 5.2200 +0.0325 Soybeans Month Bid April 14.1700 NC 13 11.6100 Jan 14 11.7900

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Wheat Bid Change Month April 6.6900 +0.1175 NC 13 6.7400 +0.1175 NC 14 7.0200 +0.1125 You can find more information online at www.troyelevator.com.

• Stocks of local interest Values reflect closing prices from Thursday. Symbol Price Change 8.39 -0.02 AA CAG 35.48 0.00 CSCO 20.64 +0.25 EMR 55.39 +0.11 F 13.47 +0.14 FITB 16.83 +0.11 FLS 157.55 +1.31 GM 30.71 +0.26 ITW 65.18 +0.98 JCP 15.24 +0.05 KMB 103.46 +0.06 KO 42.35 +0.20 KR 34.33 -0.26 LLTC 35.73 +0.16 MCD 100.94 -0.08 MSFG 13.27 -0.15 — Staff and wire reports

hatched to drive to New York and set off their remaining explosives there, New York City officials said Thursday. In Boston, federal agents invoked an exception to the Miranda warnings that allows for questioning when public safety may be threatened. But they knew their time with Tsarnaev in the absence of a lawyer would be limited. On Sunday, prosecutors filed a criminal complaint charging Tsarnaev with a role in the bombings. That action led directly to the improvised court hearing in the hospital the following morning at which U.S. Magistrate Judge Marianne Bowler told Tsarnaev he did not have to answer questions and could have a lawyer. And he apparently did stop, though other cases in recent years suggest that silence won’t necessarily last. Could that first hearing on Monday have been delayed? The hearing is supposed to take

Teacher • CONTINUED FROM 1 junior high school level students about the U.S. Constitution and how the historical document is a “living, breathing document.” “What I’m trying to convey to them every day that history isn’t dead – history comes alive when you apply to an individual. And I like teaching them how the Constitution affects their lives on a daily basis,” Crews said. Crews said he often gives examples of cases of U.S. Supreme Court cases when the Constitution is challenged, especially when with cases concerning junior high age kids. Crews said he enjoys connecting the interpretation of the Constitution with the teens so they can see how the document applies to them and their rights well before they come of age to vote. “We use real life cases that have happened to kids just like them and they see how something that was designed 200 years ago is still relevant, still active and still important today,” he said. Crews said his students’ favorite amendments are the first and the fourth amendments — freedom of speech and unreasonable searches and seizures. “They love the first amendment especially how it relates to them at school in terms of dress code,” Crews said. “They also really like the fourth

amendment about unreasonable search and seizure. They like those amendments and how it applies to them.” Crews said it’s the joy of seeing students connect themselves to history, including the Constitution, is the most rewarding part of his teaching career. “That’s why we do what we do,” he said. “When they are like, ‘Oh! I know what you’re talking about!’ it’s that light bulb moment — the big picture stuff that makes it worth it.” Crews said he is looking forward to the James Madison Memorial Fellowship where he’ll also spend one month in Georgetown with educators around the nation digging deeper in to the historical document and how to apply it to the classroom. “James Madison gets overlooked sometimes,” Crews said of the fourth and shortest U.S. President. Madison was a founding father who often gets ignored by the other famous Virginian presidents of Washington, Jefferson and Adams, Crews said. Crews said he is thankful for the opportunity to be part of an education experience that is very unique in the education world. “I’m looking forward to it, this is what I love to do,” he said. Crews lives in Darke County with his wife Heather and their two daughters.

Reward • CONTINUED FROM 1 benefits the David L. Brown Center kids because this works for volunteer hours,” Dilts said. “I brought this together, because I thought, as a trustee, what better idea

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than to have them do some community service in the township?” For more information on the David L. Brown Youth Center, visit w w w. m i a m i c o u n t y p r o batejuvenile.org/JUSite/dl byouth.shtml.

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• CONTINUED FROM 1 Boston,” the mayor said. “We’re just thankful that we didn’t have to find out that answer.” The news caused New Yorkers to shudder with the thought that the city have narrowly may escaped another terrorist attack, though whether the brothers could have made it to the city is an open question. They were two of the most-wanted men in the world, their faces splashed all over the Internet and TV in surveillance-camera images released by the FBI hours earlier. Dzhokhar, 19, is charged with carrying out the Boston Marathon bombing April 15 that killed three people and wounded more than 260, and he could get the death penalty. Christina DiIorioSterling, a spokeswoman for U.S. Attorney Carmen Ortiz in Boston, would not comment on whether authorities plan to add charges based on the alleged plot to attack New York. The Middlesex County district attorney’s office also is building a murder case against the surviving Tsarnaev for the death of MIT police officer Sean Collier three days after the bombings, office spokeswoman Stephanie Guyotte said. Investigators and lawmakers briefed by the FBI have said the Tsarnaev brothers ethnic Chechens from Russia who had lived in the U.S. for about a decade were motivated by anger over the U.S. wars in Iraq and Afghanistan. Based on the younger man’s interrogation and other evidence, authorities have said it appears so far that the brothers were radicalized via Islamic jihadi material on the Internet instead of any direct contact with terrorist organizations, but they warned that it is still not certain. Dzhokhar was interrogated in his hospital room Sunday and Monday over a period of 16 hours without being read his rights to remain silent and have an attorney present. He immediately stopped talking after a magistrate judge and a representative from the U.S. Attorney’s office entered the room and gave him his

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es law at the University of North Carolina. She predicted there would be a protracted legal battle over Tsarnaev’s statements, if his case comes to trial and prosecutors say they intend to use them. But other legal experts said any controversy over those early statements should not obscure the rest of the government’s case. “When you read the affidavit, it lays out the evidence the FBI gathered wholly apart from any statements he made to law enforcement. Based on my experience, that’s a pretty strong case, even without statements made by the defendant to law enforcement directly,” said former federal prosecutor Juliet Sorensen, a Northwestern University law professor. Tsarnaev apparently stopped talking to investigators once Bowler appointed the Federal Public Defender’s office in Boston to represent him, said a U.S. law enforcement official and three congressional officials representing both political parties.

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about. “I would have thought the public safety exception would have allowed more time for the questioning of the suspect prior to the arraignment and/or advising of rights,” Schiff said. A fellow Democrat, Sen. Carl Levin of Michigan, agreed that some questions remain about when the judge arrived and whether she interrupted questioning. But, Levin said, ” we do know there was 16 hours of questioning and that they got very detailed information.” Withholding a criminal suspect’s Miranda rights becomes a legal issue only if authorities try to use what they learned during the questioning. In fact, prosecutors probably will want to introduce Tsarnaev’s confession as evidence against him. “Prosecutors always prefer to have a confession,” said Tamar Birckhead, a former federal defender in Boston who now teach-

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place “without unnecessary delay,” according to the federal rules, sometimes within a matter of hours. The rules governing such hearings, known as an initial appearance, require the judge to tell a defendant of his rights, Justice Department spokesman Dean Boyd said. “The prosecutors and FBI agents in Boston were advised of the scheduled initial appearance in advance of its occurrence.” Civil liberties advocates have said a suspect should rarely be questioned without a lawyer and without being told he doesn’t have to respond. “Miranda rights are an incredibly important civil liberties safeguard,” said Hina Shamsi of the American Civil Liberties Union. “The public safety exception must be read narrowly, as it has been by the courts.” But California Democratic Rep. Adam Schiff, a former federal prosecutor, said he has questions about how the court proceeding came

Miranda warning, according to a U.S. law enforcement official and others briefed on the interrogation. Kelly and the mayor said they were briefed on the New York plot on Wednesday night by the task force investigating the Boston bombing. Rep. Peter King, RN.Y., said in a CNN interview that the city should have been told earlier. “Even though this may or may not have been spontaneous, for all we know there could be other conspirators out there, and the city should have been alerted so it could go into its defensive mode,” he said. Asked about the delay, Bloomberg said: “There’s no reason to think the FBI hides anything. The FBI does what they think is appropriate at the time, and you’ll have to ask them what they found and what the actual details of the interrogation were. We were not there.” Kelly, citing the interrogations, said that four days after the Boston bombing, the Tsarnaev brothers “planned to travel to Manhattan to detonate their remaining explosives in Times Square.” “They discussed this while driving around in a Mercedes SUV that they hijacked after they shot and killed the officer at MIT,” the police commissioner said. “That plan, however, fell apart when they realized that the vehicle they hijacked was low on gas and ordered the driver to stop at a nearby gas station.” A day earlier, Kelly said that Dzhokhar Tsarnaev had talked about coming to New York “to party” after the attack and that there wasn’t evidence of a plot against the city. But Kelly said a later interview with the suspect turned up the information. “He was a lot more lucid and gave more detail in the second interrogation,” Kelly said. Kelly said there was no evidence New York was still a target. But in a show of force, police cruisers with blinking red lights were lined up in the middle of Times Square on Thursday afternoon, and uniformed officers stood shoulder to shoulder. “Why are they standing like that? This is supposed to make me feel safer?” asked Elisabeth Bennecib, a tourist and

legal consultant from Toulouse, France. “It makes me feel more anxious, like something bad is about to happen.” Above the square, an electronic news ticker announced that the Boston Marathon suspects’ next target might have been Times Square. Outside Penn Station, Wayne Harris, a schoolteacher from Queens, said: “We don’t know when a terrorist attack will happen next in New York, but it will happen. It didn’t happen this time, by the grace of God. God protected us this time.” In 2010, Times Square was targeted with a car bomb that never went off. Pakistani immigrant Faisal Shahzad had planted a bomb in an SUV, but street vendors noticed smoke and it was disabled. Shahzad was arrested as he tried to leave the country and was sentenced to life in prison. With tens of millions of dollars in federal homeland security funding at stake, Bloomberg and Kelly have repeatedly sought to remind the public that New York remains at the top of terrorists’ wish list. They have said the city has been targeted in more than a dozen plots since 9/11. Kelly said Dzhokhar was photographed in Times Square with friends in April 2012 and was in the city again in November 2012, but “we don’t know if those visits were related in any way to what he described as the brothers’ spontaneous decision to hit Times Square.” He said the police intelligence division is trying to establish Dzhokhar’s movements in the city and determine who might have been with him. Meanwhile, the Tsarnaev brothers’ father said he is leaving Russia for the U.S. in the next day or two, but their mother said she was still thinking it over. Anzor Tsarnaev has expressed a desire to go to the U.S. to find out what happened with his sons, defend the hospitalized son and, if possible, bring the older son’s body back to Russia for burial. Their mother, Zubeidat Tsarnaeva, who was charged with shoplifting in the U.S. last summer, said she has been assured by lawyers that she would not be arrested, but was still deciding whether to go.

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WASHINGTON (AP) — The hospital-room questioning of the surviving suspect in the Boston Marathon bombings is generating concern about whether he should have been interrogated without first being told of his constitutional rights to silence and a lawyer and, conversely, whether federal agents actually should have had more time with him before he was read his rights. Dzhokhar Tsarnaev faced 16 hours of questioning before he was advised of his Miranda rights, and investigators say he told them of his role in the two bombings near the Boston Marathon finish line on April 15. He explained that he and his brother, Tamerlan, were angry about the U.S. wars in Afghanistan and Iraq and the killing of Muslims there, according to two U.S. officials who spoke on condition of anonymity because they weren’t authorized to discuss the case with reporters. He also described a spur-of-themoment plan that the brothers

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members. To register, call Aullwood at (937) 890-7360. • HUNGRY ANIMALS: A farm walk will be offered at 2:30 p.m. at Aullwood. Come along with a naturalist and meet and pet the animals and do chores on the farm by giving hay to the horses, water the rabbits, grain the pigs and more. Wear clothes that can get dirty.

• FRIDAY DINNERS: Dinner will be offered from 5-8 p.m. at the Covington Community VFW Post 4235, 173 N. High St., Covington. Calendar Choices will include a $12 New York strip steak, CONTACT US broasted chicken, fish, shrimp and sandwiches, all made-to-order. • SEAFOOD DINNER: Call Melody SUNDAY The Pleasant Hill VFW Vallieu at Post No. 6557, 7578 W. 440-5265 to Fenner Road, Ludlow • ADVENTURE SERIES: Falls, will offer a threeThe Miami County Park list your free piece fried fish dinner, 21District will have its calendar piece fried shrimp or a Naturalist Adventure Series items.You fish/shrimp combo with “Straight Arrow” program french fries and coleslaw between 1-4 p.m. at Hobart can send for $6 from 6-7:30 p.m. Urban Nature Preserve, your news by e-mail to Frog legs, when available, 1400 Tyrone Road, Troy. mvallieu@civitasmedia.com. Participants will learn how to will be $10. • WILDLIFE CONshoot a bow and arrow. The FLICT: A program, “The Ohio Department of Natural Good, The Bad & The Resources will have their Hungry: Dealing with Wildlife Conflict in archery trailer and trained instructors onYour Landscape” will be from 9 a.m. to 3 site to teach participants about this outp.m. at the Upper Valley Technology door activity. A roving naturalist will be on Center, Room 600, 8901 Looney Road, site. Pre-register for the program online at Piqua. The fee is $35 per person. To regis- www.miamicountyparks.com, email to regter, call (614) 688-3421 or email ister@miamicountyparks.com or call (937) ohiowoods@osu.edu. 335-6273, Ext. 104. • FISH AND SAUSAGE: The American • BREAKFAST SET: Breakfast: The Legion Post No. 586, Tipp City, will presPleasant Hill VFW Post 6557, 7578 W. ent fish, sausage, fries and kraut for $7 Fenner Road, Ludlow Falls, will offer from 6-7:30 p.m. made-to-order breakfast from 8- 11 a.m. • LUNCH ON THE LAWN: The Miami Everything is a la carte. County Cattlemen will be holding their first • WAITING TABLES: The Ladies For A Lunch on the Lawn from 11 a.m. to 1 p.m. Cure Relay for Life team will be waiting at the courthouse. Ribeye meals will be $6 tables for tips at A Fat Boyz Pizzeria, Troy. or sirloin will be $5 and will include the Proceeds will benefit Relay for Life. sandwich, drink, chips and cookie. • BREAKFAST BUFFET: The Sons of • JIMMY BUFFET NIGHT: The the American Legion Post No. 586, Tipp American Legion Post No. 586, Tipp City, City, will present an all-you-can-eat breakwill host a “Jimmy Buffet” Night from 8 fast for $6 from 8-11 a.m. Items available p.m. to close. There will be games and will be eggs, bacon, sausage, biscuits, prizes and entertainment by “RJ the DJ.” sausage gravy, hash browns, waffles, panAdmission is free and there will be pizza, cakes, French toast, whole wheat or white pineapple sliders and margaritas available toast, fruit, cinnamon rolls and juices. for purchase. • WILDFLOWER WALK: A spring wildflower walk, led by a naturalist, will be offered at 2:30 p.m. at Aullwood, 1000 SATURDAY-SUNDAY Aullwood Road, Dayton.

• MARKET ON THE MIAMI: Market on the Miami, a collaboration of local vendors who produce locally grown, homemade cottage foods and artisan items will be offered from 9 a.m. to noon at the Tin Roof Restaurant, 439 N. Elm St., Troy, at Treasure Island Park. For more information, visit www.MarketOnTheMiami.com; on Facebook at “Market On The Miami,” call (937) 216-0949; or email MarketOnTheMiami@gmail.com. • STEAK FRY: The Pleasant Hill VFW Post No. 6557, 7578 W. Fenner Road, Ludlow Falls, will offer a T-Bone steak dinner with salad, baked potato and a roll for $11 from 5-8 p.m. • PROMENADE PLANNED: Miami East High School will again this year have the “promenade” before its 2013 prom. Students will begin arriving at approximately 7 p.m. to promenade through the new Miami East High School gym while being announced by an emcee. • COUPLES DATE NIGHT: A free couples date night, for those dating or married, will be offered from 5:30-9:30 p.m. at the Troy Rec, 11 N. Market St., Troy. The dance will be from 7:30-9:30 p.m. with a professional disc jockey. Events also will include pizza, desserts and snacks, nonalcoholic drinks, three pool tables, two lounges, card games, comedy, foosball, ping pong, air hockey and more. Attire will be dress up or casual. Free child care will be offered until 9 p.m. for potty-trained children from 6-9 p.m., and children should bring a snack to share. Direct sales consultants will offer items during the evening. • DRINK ‘N DRAW: A Relay for Life fundraiser will be offered from 6-8 p.m. at the Tin Roof Restaurant, Troy. For $15 per person, the evening will include light refreshments, drawing materials and fountain beverages. Artwork produced during the evening will be auctioned for additional Relay funds. Seating is limited, contact Betsy Staley at (937) 608-0807. • ICE CREAM SOCIAL: Laura Christian Church is celebrating spring by hosting its first ice cream social of the season from 4-7 p.m. at 1 S. Main St. There will be six flavors of fresh homemade ice cream — vanilla, chocolate, strawberry, peanut butter, lemon and pineapple. Sloppy joes, hot dogs, coney dogs, pies and cakes also will be available. All items will be dine-in or carry-out. All proceeds will benefit the Laura Christian Deacons’ Fund to assist local people in need. • KARAOKE ENTERTAINMENT: The American Legion Post No. 586, Tipp City, will host karaoke from 7 p.m. to close. • NATURE PHOTOGRAPHY: A beginner nature photography workshop will be from 9 a.m. to 1 p.m. An experienced photographer will facilitate the program. Bring a Digital SRL camera capable of being set to manual mode. Class fee is $50 for non-

student life and athletics. Those attending the event are asked to bring the American Cancer their own bags or boxes for Society’s Relay for Life their books if possible, Event that will be May 3 although there will be at the Miami County some available at the door. Fairgrounds. There will be an opportuni“Cancer has touched so ty for those attending to many lives. You may have make a monetary donation had a family member, a that will be sent along close friend or you yourself with the proceeds from the may have been impacted book sale. directly by this horrific disThe student governease. We are making great ment is a club for students strides in finding a cure! to share ideas and interPlease consider contribut- ests. Students who particiing to our team and help pate often are involved in us defeat this disease,” fundraisers and help the said Chip Hare, director of community.

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Entering freshmen on the Wilmington campus WILMINGTON — that received an ACT score Wilmington College senior of 25 or higher, had at Abigael A. Knapp of West least a “B” average in high Milton is the recipient of school and graduate in the the Academic Excellence upper one-fifth of their Award in Economics. high school class are invitPresentation of the award ed to participate in this was made at the college’s program. Students must 32nd annual Student maintain a 3.3 cumulative Recognition Ceremony GPA to remain active in held April 21. the program during their Faculty in each academ- remaining years at ic major select a graduat- Wilmington College. ing senior who has Knapp, who is majoring excelled in his/her studies. in English and economics, The faculty establishes cri- is a 2009 Milton-Union teria for the award. High School graduate. MONDAY Knapp also was recognized for senior membership in the college’s honors Ganger receives • CRAFTY LISTENERS: The Crafty Listeners, a group of women who get program. endowed fund together on Mondays from 1-2:30 p.m. at This program is the Milton-Union Public Library to listen to designed to enrich the acaWILMINGTON — an audio book and work on projects, will demic experience of quali- Wilmington College sophomeet. It may be needlework, making greet- fied students with honors more Anthony J. Ganger of ing cards or another hobby. sections of the core cours- Troy received The Carl B. • BUDDY READING: Buddy reading at es, interdisciplinary semi- Barton Endowed Fund at the Milton-Union Public Library will be from nars, a senior project and the college’s 32nd annual 6:30-7:30 p.m. The program for elemenvarious non-credit enrich- Student Recognition tary-aged students is designed to help ment activities. Ceremony held April 21.

increase reading skills and comprehension. An adult or teenage volunteer will be available to aid students with their reading goals.

TUESDAY • BOOK DISCUSSION: The MiltonUnion Public Library book discussion group will meet at 3 p.m. to discuss “A Reliable Wife,” by Robert Coolrick. For more information, call (937) 698-5515.

WEDNESDAY • FARMERS MARKET: The Miami County Farmers Market will be offered from 9 a.m. to 2 p.m. behind Friendly’s restaurant. • STORY HOUR: Milton-Union Public Library story hours at 10:30 a.m. and 1:30 p.m. Story hour is open to children ages 35 and their caregiver. Programs include puppet shows, stories and crafts. Contact the library at (937) 698-5515 for details about the weekly themes. • COFFEE AND DOUGHNUTS: The Miami Valley Veterans Museum will be having free coffee and doughnuts for all veterans at the museum, 107 W. Main St., Troy, on the second floor of the Mason Lodge building, from 9-11 am. Come and meet these men and women that have fought for our freedoms and still protect our freedom.

AREA BRIEFS

Genealogy help offered

Duke Park. Doors will open at 5:30 p.m. Food and drink will be available for purchase, PLEASANT HILL — The Pleasant Hill History and proceeds will benefit Special Olympics. Paddles Center will be offering genealogy help on the first that are $25 put participants in for every item, Monday of the month. The first session will be other paddles are $1 and items will be bid on indiMay 6. Whether you are vidually. VIP seats are new to genealogy, or trying to find that elusive ances- available for $10. For more information, call Alicia tor, volunteers will be Love at (937) 694-5318. there to offer advice and help. The group also has Dinner set access to Ancestry.com. The history center is locatTROY — The Troy Post ed above the Oakes Beitman Library at 12 N. MTD APRIL SPECIAL Main St., Pleasant Hill, and is open from 3-7 p.m. every Monday.

Quarter auction upcoming TROY — Corinn’s Way will offer its second annual quarter auction from 6-9 p.m. May 9 in the Riverside gym, across from

WEDNESDAY • PRAYER SERVICE: The students and staff at Troy Christian Schools will hold a National Day of Prayer event from noon to 12:30 p.m. at the Miami County Courthouse. The event includes a free sack lunch for people coming on their lunch hour. For more information, contact the school office at 339-5692. • BLOOD DRIVE: A blood drive will be from 3-7 p.m. at Piqua Baptist Church, 1402 W. High St., Piqua. Everyone who registers will receive a free “Iron Donors” as superheroes shirt in honor of “Ironman 3” coming to theaters. Schedule an appointment at www.DonorTime.com or visit www.GivingBlood.org for more information. • FRIENDS MEETING: The New Friends of the Milton-Union Public Library meeting at 6:30 p.m. • SENIOR LUNCHEON: A senior luncheon will be offered at 11 a.m. at the A.B. Graham Memorial Center, 8025 W. U.S. Route 36, Conover. Pastor Travis Mowell of Piqua Christian Church will share on his trip to Israel. The program will begin at 11 a.m., with lunch at noon for $6 per person. For reservations, call (937) 368-3700.

As a Wilmington College student, Carl B. Barton served as editor of both the student newspaper and the yearbook. After graduation he served as director of information and alumni affairs for the college. Because of his passion for both Wilmington College and student publications, the use of his bequest to Wilmington is Carl B. Barton Endowed Fund. This permanently endowed fund provides an annual stipend for the editor of the college newspaper and/or the college yearbook, in order to encourage a student who is interested in journalism to take on the responsibility for ensuring the continuation of these publications. Ganger, who is majoring in communication arts, is a 2011 graduate of Miami East High School.

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No. 43 baseball will offer an all-you-can-eat spaghetti dinner from 3:30-7 p.m. May 4 at 622 S. Market St., Troy. The meal also will include salad bar, rolls, dessert and soft drink or coffee. Meals will be $6.75 for adults and $4 for children under 12.

Entered at the post office in Troy, Ohio 45373 as “Periodical,” postage paid at Troy, Ohio. The Troy Daily News is published Monday-Friday afternoons, and Saturday morning; and Sunday morning as the Miami Valley Sunday News, 224 S. Market St., Troy, OH. USPS 642-080. Postmaster, please send changes to: 224 S. Market St., Troy, OH 45373.

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The student government at Edison Community College will be sponsoring a book sale to benefit the American Cancer Society. The book sale is scheduled for 10 a.m. to 5 p.m. April 24 and 25 and will be in the student lounge located next to the art gallery. The organization will be selling a wide variety of books to select from including textbooks, fiction, nonfiction, children’s books and puzzles. The items will range in price from 50 cents to $5, and all proceeds will be donated to

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• GEM, MINERAL SHOW: The 30th annual Brukner Gem, Mineral, Fossil and Jewelry Show will be from 10 a.m. to 6 p.m. Saturday and 10 a.m. to 4 p.m. Sunday at the Miami County Fairgrounds, north end activity building. The event will include door prizes, a free rock for each child, children’s activities, demonstrations and displays. Admission is $1 for adults and children and parking are free.

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4

Friday, April 26, 2013

LOCAL & STATE

Politics on hold at library dedication

Viking royalty

AMANDA ULLERY/CIVITAS PHOTO

The Miami East prom court for 2013 includes, left to right, Jesse Minton, Meredith Wesco, Tucker Carrigan, Christine Bowling, Dakota Potts, Emily Johnson, Kevin Jackson, Sarah O’Neal, Chris Cron and Katrina Sutherly. The Miami East prom will be held this Saturday at the Fort Piqua Plaza Grand Ballroom. Miami East High School will again this year have the “promenade” before its 2013 prom. Students will begin arriving at approximately 7 p.m. to promenade through the new Miami East High School gym while being announced by an emcee.

5K deadline draws near For the Troy Daily News Troy Christian Schools, 700 S. Dorset Road, will hold its third annual family 5K run/walk at 9 a.m. May 11 beginning at the high school track. The course travels north on Dorset Road, then winds through the Hobart Nature Preserve around a pond and then ends back on the track. “This event has become a favorite with both serious runners and casual walkers because we offer a course with a scenic view and three surfaces: track, road and trail,” said Shelly Calvert, event coordinator. “Our 5K is professionally timed and measured by Byron Kimmell of Alliance Running, so it is an accurate trial for runners training for summer events.” This year, proceeds from the 5K will go to Mike and Holly Orange. Mike Orange is the Troy Christian high school principal, and Holly Orange used to work at TC’s Early Childhood Education Center before she

2485 W. MAIN ST. (RT. 41) • TROY

TROY had to leave due to health issues. The Oranges are Troy residents and active in the community. The family 5K run/walk features great prizes for the top three runners, both male and female, along with prizes for winners in a variety of age categories. Drawings for door prizes allow all participants a chance to win a prize. Registration deadline is Saturday (to receive a Tshirt). Race-day registration and T-shirt pick-up begins at 7:30 a.m. at the high school track. To register online, go to alliancerunning.com. To download a paper registration, go to troychristianschools.org. Cost is $10 per person. No dogs or bikes, please. For more information, contact the school office at 339-5692.

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DALLAS (AP) — George W. Bush shed a sentimental tear. Barack Obama mused about the burdens of the office. Bill Clinton dished out wisecracks. Jimmy Carter and George H.W. Bush chimed in, too, on a rare day of harmony at the dedication of the younger Bush’s presidential library that glossed over the hard edges and partisan divides of five presidencies spanning more than three tumultuous decades. “To know the man is to like the man,” Obama declared of his Republican predecessor, speaking Thursday before a crowd of 10,000 at an event that had the feel of a class reunion for the partisans who had powered the Bush administration from 2001 to 2009. Dick Cheney was there in a white cowboy hat. Condoleezza Rice gave shout-outs to visiting dignitaries. Colin Powell and Karl Rove were prominent faces in the crowd. On this day, there was no mention of Iraq or Afghanistan, the wars that dominated Bush’s presidency and so divided the nation. There were only gentle references to the aftermath of Hurricane Katrina. And praise aplenty for the resolve that Bush showed in responding to the 9/11 terror attacks. Clinton joked that the dedication of the George W. Bush Presidential Center was “the latest, grandest example of the eternal struggle of former presidents to rewrite history.” But he also praised Bush for including interactive exhibits at the center that invite visitors to make their own choices on major decisions that he faced.

Bush, 66, made indirect reference to the polarizing decision points of his presidency, drawing a knowing laugh as he told the crowd: “One of the benefits of freedom is that people can disagree. It’s fair to say I created plenty of opportunities to exercise that right.” It was a day for family and sentimentality, Bush choking up with emotion at the conclusion of his remarks. The 43rd president singled out his 88-year-old father, another ex-president, to tell him: “41, it is awesome that you are here today.” The elder Bush, wearing jaunty pink socks, spoke for less than a minute from his wheelchair, then turned to his son and quipped, “Too long?” He has a form of Parkinson’s disease and has been hospitalized recently for bronchitis. Just as the public tends to view presidents more kindly once they’ve left office, ex-presidents, too, tend to soften their judgments or at least their public comments with time. Obama once excoriated Bush for his “failed policies” and “disastrous” handling of the economy, for expanding budget deficits, and for drawing the nation into war in Iraq. On Thursday, he took a detour around those matters and instead praised Bush for his strength after 9/11, compassion in fighting HIV/AIDS in Africa, bipartisanship in pursuing education reforms and restarting “an important conversation by speaking with the American people about our history as a nation of laws and a nation of immigrants.”

Aspiring OH GOP chair using his own funds to pay taxes COLUMBUS (AP) — A contender for state Republican Party chairman said Thursday that his disagreement with the government over what taxes he owed, not a lack of money, led him to rack up years of back debt. GOP Executive Director Matthew Borges said he withheld years of tax payments to prevent the money from going toward a 2007 tax lien that he was disputing that related to how income from the sale of his $575,000 home was counted. Borges said once that disagreement was resolved he was able to pay more than $24,300 in state taxes from personal funds. He also was paying at least $124,200 in federal tax liens on Thursday. “We had to make sure that the issue with the home that was hundreds of thousands of dollars of a discrepancy was taken care of before I could come up with the money,” he said. He said he feared paying subsequent tax bills would result in those payments being applied to the disputed amount. “So you have to get those things worked out before you can pay what they agree that you owe,” Borges said. “Once that happened, I was able to do that with my personal funds.” Before the tax liens became public, Borges had all but wrapped up the chairmanship. He is vying to replace Chairman Bob Bennett, who returned to the party’s helm last year after allies of Gov. John Kasich forced out thenChairman Kevin DeWine. Kasich joined every Republican statewide elected official as well as U.S. Sen. Rob Portman and U.S. House Speaker John Boehner in signing a letter endorsing Borges for the job. Attorney General Mike DeWine, a second cousin of Kevin DeWine, and Secretary of State Jon Husted said, however, that they were disappointed not to

know of Borges’ tax liens before they signed. Husted said Borges pledged to address the debts before the Republican State Central Committee meets Friday to select Bennett’s replacement. Amid the flap, Ashtabula County GOP Chairman Charlie Frye sent an email to party leaders around the state earlier this week pushing an alternative candidate, Lake County Republican Chairman Dale Fellows. Frye told The Columbus Dispatch that Fellows was willing to run if Borges pulled out. Borges told the newspaper that he didn’t intend to do that and that Fellows had expressed his support for Borges as chairman. Borges will certainly face a challenge from Tom Zawistowski, a businessman and tea party leader from Portage County. Zawistowski is a leading figure in a conservative backlash against the party that has stemmed from a series of issues. He and a group of fellow conservatives have raised among their concerns with the party Kasich’s support for Medicaid expansion under the federal health care law; Portman’s recent decision to support same-sex marriage; and the fact that Borges was convicted in 2004 of misdemeanor misuse of public office, a charge later cleared from his record. Kasich says he stands by Borges, who helped manage his inauguration. Kasich’s spokesman indicated initially that the governor’s staff was aware of the liens before they became public, but Kasich said Wednesday he didn’t know about that. Kasich said the liens don’t bother him, nor does Borges’ expunged conviction. “People wanted to trash him, and I didn’t like that,” Kasich said. “Because I think everybody deserves a second chance, period. And I think he’s a good man.”

Investigation continues after white, powdery substance discovered at OU 2485 W. MAIN ST. (RT. 41) • TROY 937-440-1234

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ATHENS (AP) — Ohio University is investigating a white powdery substance in an envelope received by a university employee that forced the evacuation of a bank and campus office. The university says the employee who opened the envelope Thursday has been released from the hospital and the area where the envelope was received is barricaded. The university says the east end of the West Union Street Office Center

and Peoples Bank were evacuated as a precaution. Ohio University police chief Andrew Powers told the Athens Messenger the center’s heating and air conditioning system was shut down as a preventative measure. The university says the FBI is investigating with help from campus police and an Ohio National Guard weapons of mass destruction team from Rickenbacker Air Force Base in Columbus.


OPINION

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

2010 Friday,XXXday, April 26,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 feel safe living in the United States of America?

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

AS I SEE IT

NRA, some in Congress simply do not get it I find this debate on sensible gun regulation and background checks another example of one small group with some cash leading our elected officials by the nose. Sorry, I mean their campaign coffers. First, before you get the idea that “Another Democrat is trying to take our guns away!” I can tell you I have collected firearms and still own some to this day. I was never a big hunter but I would go to the range and enjoy shooting with friends. The Second Amendment is VERY IMPORTANT to me, so you can call me a “gun-toting Democrat.” I also own an AR-15 assault weapon. That firearm has one purpose, and that is to kill people. In the hands of someone who can just barely operate it and is mentally unstable, that weapon just made that individual almost unstoppable. Add large capacity magazines and you have just increased the killing opportunity ten-fold. Even in the best case scenario, law enforcement can hope they are close and can limit and stop the Dave Fisher carnage. Remember, there was an Troy Daily News Guest Columnist officer at Columbine and still the death toll was high. Now let’s talk about the mental health component in this debate. I, too, have some knowledge in this area. My mother, like so many around us, suffered from bipolar disorder. Her bipolar disorder at times was more manic than depressive. It was intensively manic and destructive. Like so many families that deal with bipolar disorder, we try to do our best to keep our loved ones on their meds and on the right path. But no matter how hard you try, they will have spells and you hope you can get them some help before they hurt themselves or somebody else. Unfortunately in a lot of cases, the families wash their hands of them and hope that none of the above happens. Some families step in and take over. My brother and I had that very hard decision to make and we decided to do the latter. Even with my mother’s very well-documented condition, she could have gone out and bought a firearm. Could I, my brother or her doctors assure you that she would not go on a rampage with a AR-15 if she had the opportunity? Not sure? Don’t think so? About 90 percent sure she wouldn’t? Ask yourself, “Would that response make you feel safe?” We asked ourselves that very question and removed an old shotgun. Were we even sure she knew it was in the back of the closet? My brother and I did not want to take that chance. The NRA and their lackeys in Congress continue to stick their heads in the sand and go against what the vast majority of the American people say about universal background checks. Even the chief executive officer of the NRA, Wayne LaPierre, is on the record testifying in front of Congress in the late 1990s supporting universal background checks. So this debate over background checks and the NRA’s flip-flop on this issue is beyond me. Any responsible family dealing with a loved one with a mental health issue would welcome and be supportive of a mental health component in a background check. Are universal background checks the end all, be all? No! But if it could stop one Aurora, Colo., or Sandy Hook Elementary School shooting, I would think and hope reasonable people would considera little paperwork and a check is well worth it.

EDITORIAL ROUNDUP Parkersburg (W.Va.) News and Sentinel on the cancellation of a reality television series about young adults in Appalachia: Even critics would have to admit that “Buckwild,” the “reality television” program that debuted this year, was a runaway hit. While not reaching the ratings zenith of “Jersey Shore,” the show “Buckwild” replaced, the network was convinced beyond any reasonable doubt the best was yet to come-in ratings, that is. However, there will be no second season of “Buckwild.” The MTV television network canceled plans to resume production on the series.

“Buckwild” followed the escapades of a group of young West Virginians in the Sissonville area. Once the show began airing, however, things turned sour for two cast members. One was arrested for driving under the influence. Another is charged with drug possession. Then tragedy struck. One of the show’s breakout stars and most-popular cast members, young Shain Gandee, died along with two other men in a tragic accident. Gandee’s death and charges against the two other cast members would have guaranteed a well-watched, and highly-rated second season for “Buckwild.” But MTV officials said no.

They said they did so out of respect for Gandee. They may also have wondered if stardom was having negative effects on the show’s cast — and how it might influence viewers. Or it could have been MTV network officials were concerned about the negative publicity the network would have received for seeming to exploit a tragedy had the series been allowed to continue. Whatever their reasons, MTV officials decided to forego a money-making television success. They did the right thing — something all too uncommon in the entertainment industry. For whatever reason the network used, MTV deserves praise.

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

DOONESBURY

Dave Fisher is chairman of the Miami County Democrats

I hope this column ... and my son ... pass the test This week, Evan, a third grade student, did something that all third graders must do in the state of Ohio. He took his first, real standardized test. Yes folks, my baby is growing up and learning how to fill in those bubble sheets like the robots we’ve become. Next year, he’ll take these Ohio Achievement Assessments (because government forbid we call them what the really are — tests) on a computer screen, because pencil and paper are just too old school these days. On Monday, Evan vehemently reminded me that he had to go to bed early and have a good breakfast in order to do well on his tests. I’m pretty sure we make this a goal on all 178 days of the school year, but heck, even the 9year-old knows that his education really hinges on just two days out of the 180. Smart kid. Evan was so wound up about these tests that he even was upset when I made his “healthy” breakfast of blueberry Eggo waffles a tad bit over-

Melanie Yingst Troy Daily News Columnist cooked. “Mom! How am I supposed to ace this test if my waffles are burnt?!” What’s strange about this situation is my kid cares about these tests because ... *gasp* ... I care how well he does on these tests. It’s the same reason I enjoy seeing my kid dressed well as he goes to school. I take pride in his appearance because I feel it reflects back on me as a parent. It may sound superficial, but when I see a kid in illfitting, dirty and torn-up clothes, my heart breaks. Yet, sadly, there are parents out there who don’t care. They don’t care if their kid eats that day, has clean clothes and has enough school supplies to get their work done.They don’t

even know what OAA means. I recently listened to a Podcast about a teacher who went from an inner-city school district to a suburban one and called the transition heaven. The urban district had a rule that they couldn’t even assign homework. Why? Because it never got done. Why? Because the parents were more worried about getting food on the table and the electric bill paid than little Johnny’s math worksheet. These are the same kids my kid is being compared to. There is a lot riding on these tests, especially for teachers as well. Half of the scores from these little tykes’ tests will count in their mandated evaluations starting next year. These third graders have 50 percent of their teacher’s livelihood in their tiny little hands. Terrifying isn’t it? How would you like it if 50 percent of your job’s security was tied to customer satisfaction every year and each customer were under the age of 18? If I were graded on how well

I performed as a mother, I’m not so sure how well I’d do. The best I could hope for is around above average. Some days the boy seems really happy, healthy and willing to cooperate. And there are the “Bad Mom” days when nothing goes right. I go through weeks where everything is clicking. I know there are Super Moms who could tap dance all over my mothering skills and there are others that barely can keep it together. And then there are the days I burn the last blueberry Eggo waffles on a major test day. And maybe I take a slight liberty in the fact that I know there are other parents out there doing a way worse job than I am. I’m just glad I wasn’t being evaluated as a mother by an angry, anxious 9 year-old on the one day I served burnt waffles.

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

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A CIVITAS MEDIA NEWSPAPER 224 S. Market St.

“Twin” Melanie Yingst appears on Fridays in the Troy Daily News. Testing, atttention please ...

Troy, Ohio 45373 www.TDN-NET.com 335-5634


LOCAL & WORLD

Friday, April 26, 2013

South African aviator dies JOHANNESBURG (AP) — Laurie Kay, a South African pilot best known for flying a Boeing 747 passenger jet low over a Johannesburg stadium before the final of the 1995 Rugby World Cup, has died at the age of 67. Kay had a suspected heart attack on Wednesday at the offices of the anti-rhinoceros poaching unit in Kruger National Park, South Africa’s showcase game reserve, according to the country’s parks service. Kay flew helicopters on patrols aimed at stopping poachers and was also doing technical work on a new anti-poaching surveillance aircraft, said Ike Phaahla, a parks spokesman. “He was a great aviator,” Phaahla said. “He was a gentleman. He had this outgoing personality. He made you feel very easy around him.” Kay was a South African Airways pilot when he swooped twice over Ellis Park stadium in a big jet at the start of the June 24, 1995, rugby final in which South Africa defeated New Zealand by a score of 15-12. The stenciled underside of the plane read “Good Luck Bokke” in a message of support for South Africa’s national team, the Springboks. One witness was Des Chetty, who was then a guard on the protective detail for F.W. de Klerk, the last president of the apartheid era that ended in 1994. “It was a surreal feeling,” Chetty wrote in an email. “One felt that if standing on the roof of the grandstands, you could have touched the belly of the plane. That’s how close it felt. It was absolutely loud.” The daring stunt, depicted in the Hollywood movie “Invictus,” electrified tens of thousands of fans who had no inkling that authorities had planned for a giant passenger jet to roar overhead. South Africa’s ensuing victory on the field was a euphoric, unifying occasion for a country that had recently emerged from white racist rule. Nelson Mandela, the anti-apartheid leader who became South Africa’s first black president in 1994 elections, attended the game in a South African team shirt. It was a powerful gesture of reconciliation

because rugby was a cultural bastion of white Afrikaners, who were guardians of the apartheid system. Kay’s flyover in a densely populated city flouted the most basic guidelines in international aviation, said John Carlin, author of “Playing the Enemy: Nelson Mandela and the Game That Made a Nation.” “The idea was to release maximum vibrations, noise and power into the stadium with a view to energizing the crowd and energizing the players,” Carlin said in a telephone interview from Spain. “He got the plane very near to stalling in order to get that maximum power effect when he was over the stadium. It was pretty outrageous.” According to South African Airways, Kay and his crew had spent the previous week plotting the course, flying it many times in a light plane, and spending hours in a flight simulator. Director Clint Eastwood included the flyover episode in “Invictus,” the 2009 film about South Africa’s rugby victory that starred Morgan Freeman as Mandela. The Boeing 747 was empty save for a small crew during the flyover, making it highly maneuverable despite its large size, noted Tony Smit, a longtime friend and pilot. “There was nothing daredevil about Laurie,” said Smit, who praised Kay for charity work and the mentoring of young pilots. “Everything that he did in aerobatics shows, everything is calculated to the finest degree.” Carlin said Kay, like many South African whites, initially had reservations about Mandela as the African National Congress leader negotiated an end to apartheid in the early 1990s. But that changed when the pair met on an international flight, according to the author. Mandela asked Kay, the captain, if he could upgrade members of his delegation from economy class, and Kay was charmed by Mandela’s gracious manner. “He was one more in a long, long line of people who succumbed to Mandela’s charisma and general seductive abilities,” Carlin said.

DEATHS OF NATIONAL INTEREST • Rick Camp RYDAL, Ga. (AP) — Former Atlanta Braves pitcher Rick Camp has died in northwest Georgia. Bartow County Coroner Joel Guyton says 60-yearold was found dead Thursday morning at his home in Rydal, about 55 miles northwest of downtown Atlanta. Camp’s cause of death wasn’t immediately known. Camp played with the Braves from 1976-85 and went 56-49 with a 3.37 ERA in 65 starts and 349 relief appearances. The Trion, Ga., native is perhaps best remembered for his tying 18th-inning homer off Tom Gorman on July 4, 1985, a game that ended with the New York Mets winning 16-13 in the 19th inning. The last out at 3:55 a.m. and was followed by fireworks. Camp became a lobbyist and was sentenced in 2005 to three years in prison for conspiring to steal more than $2 million from a mental health agency.

• Sam Williams DETROIT — Sam Williams, the former Detroit Lions defensive end who also played for the Rams and Falcons, has died. He was 82. Williams’ son said his father died Thursday following an illness at St. Mary Mercy Hospital in Livonia, a Detroit suburb. Williams played for Detroit from 1960 to 1965, after a year with the Los Angeles Rams. He spent his final two NFL seasons in Atlanta. He played on the Lions’ defensive line that included Alex Karras, Roger Brown and Darris McCord. Williams was a star player at Michigan State before heading to the NFL. He grew up in Dansville, outside Lansing. A funeral will be held Sunday. Williams is survived by his wife, Lois, two sons and two sisters.

OBITUARIES

NED B. ETTER PIQUA — Ned B. Etter, 84, of Piqua, Valley Community Church and enjoyed died at 2:25 p.m. Wednesday, April 24, his ministry, traveling and will be remembered for his sense of humor. 2013, at his residence. A service to honor his life will begin He was born May 11, 1928, in at 10 a.m. Monday April Covington, to the late P.R. and 29, 2013, at the Lilian (Boggs) Etter. Jamieson & Yannucci He married Ardith L. Werling on Funeral Home with the March 11, 1978, in Piqua; and Rev. Andy Monnin and she survives. Pastor Donald R. Wells Other survivors include a co-officiating. daughter, Janet L. Etter of Burial will follow at Covington; a step daughter, Highland Cemetery, Debra K. (Jim) ToomeyCovington, where full Bonacorsi of Greenville, N.C.; a military honors will be step son, Rodney (Terri) provided by the Veterans Shefbuch of Pinetta, Fla.; nine ETTER Elite Tribute Squad. grandchildren; and 11 great Visitation will be from 2-4 grandchildren. p.m. Sunday at the funeral He was preceded in death by a home. son, John Allen Etter; a daughter, Memorial contributions Sandra Sue Etter; three brothers; a may be made to the Piqua step brother; and a grandson. Baptist Church, 1402 W. Mr. Etter retired as the owner and High St., Piqua, OH 45356, manager of Etter Music & Gospel Upper Valley Community Church, Shop in Covington. 1400 Siedel Parkway, Piqua, OH He had previously worked for 20 45356, or Odyssey Hospice, 3085 years at General Films Inc. of Woodman Drive, Suite 200, Dayton, Covington and 10 years at General OH 45420. Motors in Dayton. Guestbook condolences and expresHe was a United States Navy veteran having served during World War II. sions of sympathy, to be provided to the family, may be expressed through Additionally, he was active with the jamiesonandyannucci.com. Piqua Baptist Church, the Upper

DONALD E. TROSTLE Donald was a member of First United SPRINGFIELD — Donald E. Trostle, 92, of Springfield and formerly of Troy, Church of Christ in Troy. He was a 1938 graduate of Piqua passed away 9:17 p.m. Wednesday, Central High School and was an Army April 24, 2013, at Springfield Medical veteran of World War II. He was a 70Center. year member of Franklin He was born May 7, 1920, in Lodge No. 14 F & AM. Piqua, to the late Jacob and He retired in 1986 from Effie (Nishwitz) Trostle. Hobart Corp., Troy, from the He was married to Peggie accounting department Lou Deweese on Sept. 7, after 40 years of service. 1946; and she preceded him in He was a member of the death Aug. 3, 2000. Hobart Quarter Century Donald is survived by one Club. son and daughter-in-law, He enjoyed bowling, fishDouglas D. and Eva R. Trostle ing and pitching horseof Troy; two daughters and shoes. son-in-law, Susan K. Kindt of TROSTLE Visitation hours will be from The Villages, Fla., and Tricia A. 2-4 p.m. Sunday, April 28, and Richard A. Huber of 2013, at Fisher-Cheney Granville, Ohio; seven grandchilFuneral Home with a Masonic dren, Justin (Melissa) York, service to follow at 4 p.m. and Tegan (York) (Tom) Carr, Heath a funeral service following with (Dawn) Trostle, Nicholas (Mandy) the Rev. Brian Farr officiating. Trostle, Blaine Huber, Bryce Interment will be in Riverside Huber, and Clayton Huber; and five great-grandchildren, Ethan York, Norah Cemetery, Troy, on Monday, April 29, York, Kelsey Carr, Addison Trostle and 2013, with a military service at graveside by the Veterans Memorial Honor Ryan Trostle. He also was preceded in death by his Guard of Troy. Condolences may be left for the famibrother, John “Jack” Trostle; and his ly at www.fisherson-in-law, Robert J. Kindt.

JACK E. GHEEN NEW CARLISLE — Jack E. Gheen, 68, of New Carlisle, died on Tuesday, April 23, 2013. He was born on April 21, 1945 in Troy, to the late Orville Ray and Erma A. (Zerkle) Gheen. He is survived by his life partner, Claudia Sloneker of New Carlisle; daughter and son-in-law, Amy Jo and Gary Donaldson, along with his two grandchildren, Ellie and Max Donaldson, all of Mountain, Wisc.; son, Bryan Gheen of Alaska; brother and sister-in-law, James A. and Diana Gheen of New Carlisle; GHEEN sister and brother-in-law, Sue Ann and Carl Skaggs of Grand Rapids, Mich.; nephew, Scott Gheen; and niece, Anita Tebbe. In addition to his parents, Jack was preceded in death by his infant son, Andy Jack Gheen. He was a 1963 graduate of Miami East High School and served in the Ohio National Guard from 1965 to 1971. Jack graduated from the Dayton Police Academy and began employment as a Troy Police Officer on June 16, 1966. He served in many capacities at the Troy Police Department, moving up through the ranks to include patrolman, Juvenile-School Safety Officer (1970), Sergeant (1971) and then retiring as Detective Lieutenant (1978) in charge of investigations. He was one of the founding members of the department’s SWAT team, he was an Evidence

Technician, and an instructor for the Ohio Peace Officer’s Training Commission. He retired from the Police Department on April 24, 1993 after 27 years of service, receiving the Distinguished Service Medal that year. He then served as the Miami County Prosecutor’s Investigator from 1993 until his second retirement in 2012. He was again sworn as a Miami County deputy sheriff in January of 2013. In addition to the work he loved, Jack was also an avid outdoorsman. He loved hunting and fishing, four-wheeling, restoring antiques, and finding a bargain. He loved to eat and snack, and his favorites were peanut butter, Miracle Whip and ketchup, sometimes all together. Most of all, he enjoyed having fun with loved ones, family and friends. A memorial service will be conducted at 4 p.m. on Sunday at the Baird Funeral Home, Troy. Friends may call from 1-4 p.m. on Sunday at the funeral home with FOP Honor Guard present. Memorial contributions may be made to the Miami County Park District, 2645 E. State Route 41, Troy, OH 45373. Friends may express condolences to the family through www.bairdfuneralhome.com.

FUNERAL DIRECTORY • Paul D. Greer TROY — Paul D. Greer, 64, of Troy, Ohio, passed away at 1:20 p.m. Wednesday, April 24, 2013, in Troy. Memorial services are

pending at Baird Funeral Home, Troy.

• Robert Lee Middlestetter PIQUA — Robert Lee Middlestetter went

home to be with his Lord and Savior on April, 22, 2013. Funeral services will be conducted Saturday, April 27, at Riverside Cemetery.

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Ernest Lee ‘Junior’ Anthony BRADFORD — Mr. Ernest Lee Anthony “Junior” died Wednesday, April 24, 2013, at Wayne Hospital, Greenville, after a month-long illness and treatment at The Arthur G. James Cancer Hospital in Columbus. He was a life-long resident of Darke and Miami counties. He was born May 27, 1929, in Darke County, at his maternal grandparents, Henry and Mattie Coates’ home to the late Ernest Anthony and Irene E. (Coates) Anthony Millet Dunn. He was preceded in death by his sisters, Betty and Mary; twin brothers, James and John; daughter, Barbara; son, Ernest C.; brothers, Charles Millet and Michael Dunn; step fathers, Arthur Millet and Virgil Dunn. He is survived by his devoted wife of 37 years, Ardith (Weaver) Anthony of Bradford; beloved children, daughters, Patricia Anthony (Richard) Jordan of Huber Heights, Stacy Anthony (Brian) Gossard of St. Marys, son, Michael Anthony of Piqua; precious grandchildren, Melissa Carter (Steve) Spatz, Heather Anthony Ford, Sherri Anthony Hall, Ricky Anthony, Brandon Anthony, Ashley Weaver, Ronnie (Michelle) Jordan, Bonnie Jordan, Sharon Jordan (Mitch) Kunkel; 22 great-grandchildren; five great-great-grandchildren. (They lovingly called him “Tough Old Bird.”); dedicated sister, Marcia (Fred) Gephart of Bradford; brothers, Arthur (Denise) Millet of Piqua, Robert (Frieda) Millet of Covington, Joseph Millet and David Millet of Bradford, Raymond Millet of Sidney. The siblings always called him Junior. Also surviving are brothers-in-law, Jack (Debbie) Weaver of Bradford, Chad Weaver and Scott (Jamie) Weaver, all of Piqua; great friends and neighbors, Gene, Doug, Jeff, Eddie Minnich, Dean Dill, Alan Randall, Ray Cole, Jim Canan, Carol Bolton Green, Dorothy Manker, Scott Nicodemus and Penny Hamm Arnold, who called him a gentle giant; numerous relatives and friends. He retired from Aerovent Fan, served on the Bradford Auxiliary Police force and enjoyed his post retirement job at the Miami County Fairgrounds for many years. He loved his family, the Bradford Pumpkin Show, sugar waffles, tinkering and building trailers, one of which is still used by UVMC in Troy. He was an avid fan of wrestling, NASCAR, Indy 500, Cincinnati Reds and OSU football/basketball and loved collecting his one dollar winnings from his brothers when OSU won. He was a gentle giant that believed in recycling and not wasting stuff! Five cookies and coffee, the morning newspaper and always Maid-Rites. We will miss you forever daddy. Funeral services will be held at 10:30 a.m. Saturday, at StockerFraley Funeral Home, Bradford with Pastor Dan Scalf officiating. Interment Forest Hill Cemetery, Piqua. The family will receive friends 5-8 p.m. Friday at the funeral home. Memorial contributions may be made to Bradford Fire and Rescue, 200 South Miami, Bradford, OH 45308 or The James Cancer Hospital at Ohio State, 410 W. 10th Ave., Columbus, OH 43210, or State of the Heart Hospice, Greenville. The family extends its gratitude and sincere appreciation to all those dedicated caregivers. Condolences may be left for the family at www.stockerfraley.com.


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AP MOVIE REVIEWS • “At Any Price” — The flowing Iowa cornfields of Ramin Bahrani’s sweeping Midwest drama of fathers and sons, farms and seed, have nothing on the amber waves of Zac Efron’s hair. As the race car-driving Dean, Efron attempts a classic American icon: the sweaty, sandy-haired, teenage trouble-maker. But the rebel role doesn’t suit Efron: He doesn’t have a lick of danger about him. In any case, this is Dennis Quaid’s movie. He stars as Dean’s father, Henry Whipple, a fake-smiling huckster trying to live up to the family business. His thousands of acres aren’t pastoral so much as the backdrop to the hulking modern machinery that drives his small empire, one fed by genetically modified seeds that he aggressively sells to other farmers. He’s cheating on his wife Irene (Kim Dickens) with a younger woman (Heather Graham). His older, more loved son has abandoned him to travel in South America. Dean has no interest in the family business, though his girlfriend (Maika Monroe) begins accompanying him on visits to his customers. There’s much to admire about the film, but Bahrani (“Man Push Cart”), in his largest scale film yet, seems to be wrestling with the balance of a more sizable production. Its metaphors of capitalism aren’t subtle, the score is heavy-handed and the film doesn’t quite earn the grim resonance it seeks. With an easy, excellent Clancy Brown as a rival salesman. R for sexual content, graphic nudity, violence, some grisly images, and language. 101 minutes. Two stars out of four. • “Pain & Gain” — Michael Bay’s true-crime caper lacks the visual-effects mayhem and sci-fi cacophony of his “Transformers” blockbusters, yet the movie uses all the shock and awe and noise and bluster the director has in his utterly unsubtle arsenal. Unlike Bay’s usual action nonsense, there’s a story, screenplay, characters and wry mix of suspense and pitiable comedy to be had in the tale of three Florida bodybuilders (Mark Wahlberg, Dwayne Johnson and Anthony Mackie) who blunder through kidnapping-extortion schemes like the Three Stooges on steroids. The dumbfounding farce of how these guys screw things up should be entertainment enough on its own. All but the faintest flashes of humanity and pathos are flattened by the cinematic cyclone that is Michael Bay. He drowns the movie in gimmick and style which, rather than gussying things up, dresses them down to make the movie even more ugly and sordid than it is on paper. Johnson manages some goofy hijinks, but Wahlberg’s just grubby and Mackie’s a bore. Tony Shalhoub is ferocious as the first kidnap victim, Ed Harris adds the movie’s only notes of grace as a detective on the case and Rebel Wilson has scene-stealing moments that feel wonderfully improvised as Mackie’s kooky wife. But those few highlights are incinerated in the bonfires Bay sets on-screen. R for bloody violence, crude sexual content, nudity, language throughout and drug use. 129 minutes. One and a half stars out of four.

■ Send your news to Natalie Knoth, (937) 440-5243, or e-mail nknoth@civitasmedia.com

7 April 26, 2012

In a Pink Floyd sort of mood … Tribute band Signs of Life to bring music of legendary group to Hobart Arena BY JIM DAVIS Staff Writer jdavis@civitasmedia.com Jon Stankorb has a deep appreciation for Pink Floyd’s ability to evoke an emotional response from listeners. He hopes fans who visit Hobart Arena May 4 leave with a similar response. Stankorb and Cincinnati-based Signs of Life: The Essence of Pink Floyd will bring a newlydesigned stage setup and high-tech video-projection system and light show for their 8 p.m. performance May 4. “The first thing people will notice when they come to the show — besides the dynamic laser light show and videos — is when we present the material, we present it in a very sophisticated, reverential way,” the Signs of Life bandleader said during a recent phone interview. “Pink Floyd was always a very reserved band on stage. They let the music speak for them. We’re not going to be jumping about on stage and calling attention to ourselves.” In addition to playing some of Pink Floyd’s biggest hits, Stankorb said the Hobart performance will commemorate the 40th anniversary of the band’s iconic album “Dark Side of the Moon.” “The first half will be selections from all eras of Pink Floyd, and then we will play “Dark Side of the Moon” in its entirety,” he explained. “I’m really not a big fan of dissecting the songs a la carte. It’s a perfect album in its entirety.” Stankorb said he and the rest of the band go to great lengths to present Pink Floyd’s material the

PHOTO BY STEVE ZIEGELMEYER

Signs of Life: The Essence of Pink Floyd will perform May 4 at Troy’s Hobart Arena. way David Gilmour, Roger Waters and the rest of Pink Floyd intended it to be. “It’s a very faithful show. We’re not doing stylistic reinterpretations. We’re not a jazz band,” he said. “There are moments within the tunes where we’re able to stretch out a bit, but we’re very faithful to the songs and their layered vocals. We’re trying to move people emotionally, and it’s very theatrical. “We think of it as a film from beginning to end,” he continued. “We also have music we selected as people are walking into the arena to get them into the spirit of things. We’re trying to play music that is very ‘Floyd-esque’ to create a vibe or feeling. Every show is different. We try to create an evening that is very memorable for each person that comes.” Stankorb — who teaches music classes to more than 50 students a week in Madeira at his 6 String Studios — said he was inspired to form a Pink Floyd tribute band while touring with a Steely Dan tribute group. “When I was in that group, it was apparent to me that I would really like to do a tribute to Pink Floyd. I felt there was a

special niche that was not scenes also are amazing. “It’s all about the being met that we could intent,” he continued. “All fill,” he said. Stankorb went through of us — the musicians, video technicians or sound a painstaking process of technicians — our No. 1 auditioning numerous musicians for Signs, which goal is to stir emotions. That’s what drew us to played its first show in this project. (And) it’s a 2009. He said the collecvery humbling experience tive effort of musicians, because the music is so technicians and support crew help make each show grand. It’s not unlike trying to recreate special. Shakespeare. Everybody “No one person could has a passion for this projever possibly put on a ect without peer, and I show of this magnitude, and that’s the thing that is couldn’t be more blessed and proud.” so exciting,” he said. • Tickets are $15 and “Everybody in the band $20 and can be obtained has some sort of music through the Hobart Arena degree … and it’s a band box office, online at of incredibly proficient musicians that have 25-30 www.hobartarena.com or by calling 339-2911. years of playing experiTo learn more about ence. The female vocalists are some of the best in the Signs of Life, visit the area and perform on a reg- band’s website at www.signsoffloyd.com. ular basis with other groups and do studio work … and the Sound guys City Music in Troy will behind host Jon Stankorb for a free the guitar clinic — “The David Gilmour Academy” — at 6 p.m. May 3. Stankorb will offer insight into the gear, techniques, solos and artistry of Pink Floyd’s legendary guitarist David Gilmour. Stankorb said participants will have a chance to win free tickets to Saturday’s show, while free items such as guitar picks will be given away at the clinic. For more information about Sound City Music, check out www.soundcitymusic.net.

ARTS BRIEFS at the school, 700 S. Dorset Road. As a special feature, the characters of Belle, Beast and others TROY — A day of music, from the castle will be present song, hikes and hot dogs is at a dinner before Saturday’s planned for the ninth annual “Tunes in the Trees” event from performance. The dinner begins at 5:30 p.m. with a menu of 10 a.m. to 4:30 p.m. May 4 at Brukner Nature Center, 5995 W. penne pasta, meat lasagna, meatballs, grilled chicken strips, Horseshoe Road. marinara and alfredo sauce, garWhile the event is free, donaden salad, breads, drinks and tions are encouraged for the desserts. wildlife rehabilitation unit. Belle, Beast and the other Musicians will perform bluecharacters will stay throughout grass, folk and American the dinner for professional photo acoustic music on two stages, sittings, including a themed and raffle tickets are on sale backdrop, for only $5. Pictures now for a 2013 “Tunes in the will be provided online for orderTrees” custom Inlay HD28 Vintage Series Martin Guitar — ing. Tickets for students through a $4,300 value. The drawing will take place at the end of the day. 12th grade are $5 for the performance only or $16 for the perThe event is supported by formance and dinner. For adults, Martin Guitar, Sound City Music, Piqua Guitar, Characters they’re $10 for the performance Printing and Rum River Blend. only or $21 for the performance and dinner on Saturday. For more information, call (937) 698-6493. To order tickets, visit www.troychristianschools.org or stop in at the high school office Home-schoolers’ or the elementary school office, artwork exhibited 1586 McKaig Ave. For questions, call the highTROY — The community is invited to view the third annual school office at (937) 339-5692. Home-school Art Exhibit now Vendors sought through April 30 at the TroyMiami County Public Library. Thirty-two students have cre- for festival ated more than 50 unique items, ENGLEWOOD — including paintings, sketches, Applications from artists and drawings, photographs, pottery, craftspeople for the 40th annual abstracts, collages, knitted Englewood Art Festival on items, clay creations and dolls. Aug.10-11 are being accepted by The public is invited to view the Englewood Festival and Arts these items in the MultiCommission. The festival will be Purpose Room of the library held under the trees at during normal library hours. Centennial Park off Union Boulevard in Englewood. TCS performing All work must be of original design and produced by hand. ‘Beauty and Beast’ Artists are invited to submit TROY — The Disney classic photos in their area of expertise for review by a committee. “Beauty and the Beast” will be enacted by Troy Christian High Applications are due June 1 and can be found on the city’s webSchool students at 7:30 p.m. site at www.englewood.oh.us April 26 and 7:30 p.m. April 27

under events or by calling Barb performed at the Barn in the at (937) 836-4175 or Kathleen at Park across from Hobart Arena. (937) 836-1258. The Victorian-era drama will be brought to life by Terressa Knoch as Ellen (the dedicated Paintings to maid), Niccole SueAnn Wallace be displayed as Lisa (Edwina’s companion), Caleb McGill as Gregory (the in exhibit widower) and Steve Dietrick as GREENVILLE — Watercolor Martin (the clever inspector). Co-directed by Derek Dunavent paintings by Tipp City artist and Betty Scisson, it promises to Roger Haas will be paired with be an evening of intrigue where contemporary pottery for an everyone has a motive and exhibit at Bear’s Mill in Greenville through May 26. This everyone is a suspect. Call (937) 339-7700 to edition of “Art At the Mill” will reserve tickets. open with an artists’ reception on Friday, April 26, which will include a presentation at 7 p.m. Great Flood book by Missy Duer of Staley Mill offered at library Farm outlining the connection between Roger Haas and her PIQUA — A new book titled family’s historic farm, the sub“1913 Flood Piqua, Ohio” is now ject of the paintings on display. available at the local history Additionally, potters Julie Clark, department of the Piqua Public Rita Wiley, Loretta Wray, and Library and at Mainstreet Dionne Fleming will discuss Piqua. their work at this gathering, The full-color publication is where light hors d’oeuvres and 28-pages and is not only a comwine will be served. Reception prehensive look at the 1913 hours are 6-9 p.m. flood, but is written in such a The art exhibit is on view way that it can be the basis of a during regular Mill store hours, self-guided walking or driving 11 a.m. to 5 p.m. daily. Historic tour. Bear’s Mill is operated by The publication puts the flood Friends of Bear’s Mill, a nonin its historical context and feaprofit organization, and is locat- tures photographs of the aftered at 6450 Arcanum-Bear’s Mill math of the flood in the downRoad, about 5 miles east of town area, Shawnee and Greenville. For more information Rossville. about the exhibit or to purchase The booklet was written by tickets for “Mills and Stills,” con- Gary Meek, the coordinator of tact Bear’s Mill at (937) 548the Local History Department of 5112 or www.bearsmill.com. the Piqua Public Library, and the layout and design was done TCT to perform by Robin Heintz. The printing of the book was made possible by a murder mystery grant from the Miami County Foundation. TROY — Troy Civic Theatre The local history department invites audiences to pay their of the Piqua Public Library is respects to “The Late Edwina located on the second floor of the Black,” a haunting tale of murLibrary on High Street, and der, scandal and mystery on Mainstreet Piqua is located at May 3-5 and 10-11, at 8 p.m. 326 N. Main St. The cost is $5 Fridays and Saturdays and 4 p.m. Sunday. The show will be per book.

For more information, contact the Piqua Public Library at 7736753.

Troy Civic Theatre holding auditions TROY — Troy Civic Theatre will host auditions for the cast of “Isms” at 7 p.m. May 6-7 at the Barn in the Park, on Adams Street across from Hobart Arena. “Isms” is a series of one acts by Derek Dunavent, a Troy native and lifetime member of Troy Civic Theatre. There are four one-acts and at least 20 different parts that need to be filled. In the first act, a group of three aging superheroes meets at a local bar to discuss how far they’ve fallen since a pair of younger superheroes came to town. The two show up and discover secrets are under wraps. The next setting is that of the waiting room of heaven, where young Alex insists he doesn’t belong. With the overtly evangelical Pious, a God who isn’t who they seem to be, and a host of others waiting to get in, who knows what will happen. In the following act, two trees provide a glimpse into their shady lives full of tree-bulations. In the final act, the audience is taken on a ride as three kids embark on a magical musical journey with a prince, princess, magical dragon and mystical fairy godfather. Director Derek Dunavent says those auditioning should prepare to cold-read from provided scripts, sing a taught song 4/26 ONLY and boogie SCHEDULE down FRIDAY in preparation PAIN AND GAIN (R) JURASSIC PARK 3-D for this12:45 fun and 4:00 7:00 10:10family-friendly ONLY (PG-13) 12:00 6:25 THE BIG WEDDING (R) GI JOE: RETALIATION set of shows. ages wel-10:00 12:05 2:25 4:50All 7:20 9:45 2-D are ONLY (PG-13) (PG-13) THE CROODS 3-D ONLY come. OBLIVION 11:55 1:10 2:55 4:15 6:10 (PG) 11:45 2:15 7:10 9:10 10:30 OLYMPUS HAS FALLEN The7:35 rehearsals for shows will 42 (PG-13) (R) 3:10 9:35 be only12:25 one night week until 3:30 6:35 9:55 a THE CROODS SCARY MOVIE 5 2-D ONLY (PG) 4:40 the last(PG-13) two weeks. LIMITED EDITION 12:15 2:40 5:10 7:45 10:20 IRON T-SHIRTS Performances dates forMAN “Isms” ON SALE NOW! will be June 21-23 and 28-29. 2387936

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Friday, April 26, 2013

ANNIE’S MAILBOX

Do your best to wish your friend well, then let it go Dear Annie: A close friend of mine is a successful professional woman who went through a painful divorce several years ago when her husband was unfaithful. "Diane" swore off dating for a long time. A year ago, Diane began seeing a man who is also a successful, well-known professional from our community. However, this man has a history of cheating on his wife and even left his marriage at one point to marry another woman, only to return to his wife and family when he realized he had made a mistake. But he continued to cheat. His marriage ended two years ago, and he soon moved in with someone else for several months. Two weeks after they split up, he began dating Diane. They are now engaged. Several people have warned Diane about this guy, his past and the destruction he seems to cause. His own grown children refuse to speak to him. I worry that this man has great potential to hurt Diane. How can I get through to her that marrying him would be a huge mistake? She says because of her successful practice she would have the means to take care of herself if anything were to happen with the marriage, but it is her heart I am worried about. This leopard isn't going to change his spots for her. — Concerned in the Heartland Dear Concerned: Diane is surely aware of her fiance's past and has heard all of the warnings about his cheating, but they have not dissuaded her. Some women think they are "the one," and the man will change for her. It rarely happens. Diane is determined to marry the guy and, as she says, has prepared herself for the consequences. She may feel this is her only chance to be married again. Or she may believe that all guys cheat, so what's the difference. Unless she is willing to address these issues, the wedding will go on despite your misgivings. Please do your best to wish her well. Dear Annie: My daughter and son are 32 and 28, and I am looking for a good answer when people ask me why I don't have any grandchildren. They have both been in long-term relationships in the past, although they aren't involved with anyone now, so it's not looking too promising. But I'm wondering how to respond when people bring this up. — Not a Grandma Yet Dear Not: People are nosy and often ask nunofyerbizness-type questions. You don't have to respond. But you are certainly welcome to hand them your children's phone numbers and suggest they call and ask. Be sure to smile when you do it. And then change the subject. We think that will keep them from asking again. Dear Annie: My youngest daughter, "Amy," who is now 17, was the ultimate picky eater as a young child. She would not eat meat and wouldn't touch any vegetables except corn. Her father would insist that she eat what was placed before her, which only led to tears, fights and vomiting. Her dad and I are now divorced. Amy is now healthy, and her weight is perfect for her height. Trips to the doctor confirmed what I suspected after reading an article in Scientific American -that Amy is a super-taster. That means she has many more taste buds on her tongue than the average person, making her more sensitive to subtle tastes the rest of us don't notice. Forcing Amy to eat foods that do not smell "right" to her is pointless. This is a physical condition, not disobedience. Punishing a child who suffers from this condition is simply cruel. — Mom of a SuperTaster 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.

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The Little Rascals ('94) Travis Tedford. (:05)

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The A-Team (2010,Action) Bradley Cooper, Jessica Biel, Liam Neeson.

The Fighter ('10) Christian Bale, Mark Wahlberg. (FX) Golf Cent. Golf LPGA North Texas Shootout Golf PGA Zurich Classic of New Orleans Round 2 Site: TPC Louisiana (R) Golf C. (R) G. Goose Golf (GOLF) (3:00) Golf PGA Baggage Baggage Baggage Baggage Minute to Win It Fam. Feud Fam. Feud Baggage Baggage (GSN) Fam. Feud Fam. Feud Fam. Feud Fam. Feud Minute to Win It Frasier (R) Frasier (R) Frasier (R) Frasier (R) G. Girls (R) G. Girls (R) (HALL) BradyB. (R) BradyB. (R)

Love Is a Four Letter Word ('07) Teri Polo. Dad's Home ('10) David James Elliot. FleaFlip (R) FleaFlip (R) Market Flip FleaFlip (R) HouseH House (R) FleaFlip (R) FleaFlip (R) FleaFlip (R) FleaFlip (R) (HGTV) Sell LA (R) Selling LA House (R) House (R) Yard Sales (R) American Pickers (R) American Pickers (R) American Pickers (R) American Pickers (R) American Pickers (R) American Pickers (R) (HIST) Marvels "Shovels" (R) Modern Marvels (R) Hoarders Hoarders Hoarders Hoarders Hoarders Runway "Finale" (R) Hoarders (LIFE) Hoarders

Locked Up: A Mother's Rage Cheryl Ladd.

Trapped ('02) Charlize Theron.

Locked Up: A ... (LMN) 4:

The House Next... Baby Snatcher ('92) Veronica Hamel. CookThin Mom Cook Intimate Portrait (R) VanishedHolloway (R) Coming Home (R) Intimate Portrait (R) VanishedHolloway (R) (LRW) (4:) Runway Road (R) The Conversation (R) PoliticsNation Hardball The Ed Show Rachel Maddow MSNBC Documentary MSNBC Documentary MSNBC Documentary (MSNBC) Hardball True Life (R)

American Teen ('08) Hannah Bailey. Awkward Awkward (MTV) Friendzone Awkward Awkward Awkward Girl Code Ke$ha (R) Teen Mom 2 Crossover Crossover The Grid F1 36 Hockey NHL Calgary Flames vs. Chicago Blackhawks (L) Crossover Pro FB Talk Overtime Poker Heads Up (R) (NBCSN) Pro Football Talk Chasing Ice (2012,Documentary) Secrets of Druids (R) Sex in Stone Age (R) Neanderthal Code (R) Truth/ Crystal Skull (R) Neanderthal Code (R) Truth/ Crystal Skull (R) (NGEO) Movie (:40) Friends Friends (NICK) Sponge (R) Sponge (R) Sponge (R) Sponge (R) Ninja (N) Ninja (R) Ninja (R) Ninja (R) F.House (R) F.House (R) Nanny (R) Nanny (R) Friends (R) Friends To Be Announced

Walk the Line ('05) Reese Witherspoon, Joaquin Phoenix. To Be Announced (OXY) Movie (:40)

Guarding Tess (:20)

Face The Music ('92) Patrick Dempsey.

The Fog ('05) Tom Welling. :40

The Trail of the Pink Panther :20

Guarding Tess (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) (SPIKE) Gangland

Lucky Number Slevin ('06) Josh Hartnett, Bruce Willis.

Gone in 60 Seconds ('00) Angelina Jolie, Nicolas Cage.

The Green Mile ('99) David Morse, Tom Hanks. Defiance (R) D.S. Paranormal (R) Merlin (R) (SYFY)

V for Vendetta ('06) Hugo Weaving, Stephen Rea, Natalie Portman. WWE Smackdown! (N) ThereYet ThereYet ThereYet (TBS) Friends (R) Queens (R) Queens (R) Seinf. (R) Seinf. (R) Seinf. (R) FamilyG (R) FamilyG (R) I Can Do Bad All by Myself ('09) Tyler Perry. (:45) While the Patient Slept

The Big Noise

The Great Lie ('41) Bette Davis.

Kitty Foyle ('40) Ginger Rogers.

The Palm Beac... (TCM) Movie Four Weddings (R) Say Yes (R) Say Yes (R) Weddings: Unveiled (N) Say Yes (N) Say Yes (R) I Found (N) I Found (N) Say Yes (R) Say Yes (R) I Found (R) I Found (R) (TLC) Four Weddings (R) Degrassi Degrassi Degrassi TeenNick Top 10 To Be Announced Rugrats (R) Beavers (TNICK) (4:00) To Be Announced K & Kel (R) K & Kel (R) Dance Ac Water (R) Degrassi The Mentalist (R) Mental. "Red Rum" (R)

The Bourne Ultimatum ('07) Matt Damon, Julia Stiles.

The Bourne Identity ('02) Franka Potente, Matt Damon. (TNT) The Mentalist (R) Advent. (R) Advent. (R) Regular (R) Regular (R) Regular (R) Cartoon Planet KingH (R) KingH (R) AmerD (R) AmerD (R) FamilyG (R) FamilyG (R) Robot AquaT. (TOON) Gumball Man/Fd Foods "Sardinia" (R) Man/Fd Man/Fd Ghost Adventures (R) Ghost Adventures (R) The Dead Files (N) The Dead Files (R) Ghost Adventures (R) (TRAV) Man/Fd Cops (R) Wipeout (R) Wipeout (R) Wipeout (R) World's Dumbest... (R) 20 Most Shocking (R) World's Dumbest... (R) (TRU) Guinness Gone Wild (R) Cops (R) Ray (R) Ray (R) Ray (R) Queens (R) Queens (R) Queens (R) Queens (R) (TVL) MASH (R) MASH (R) Cosby (R) Cosby (R) G. Girls (R) G. Girls (R) G. Girls (R) G. Girls (R) Ray (R) Law&O.:SVU "Uncle" (R) SVU "Confrontation" (R) SVU "Philadelphia" (R) SVU "Florida" (R) SVU "Pretend" (R) The Moment (R) CSI "Blood Lust" (R) (USA) SVU "Clocked" (R) I'm Married to a... (R)

Beavis and Butt-Head Do America B.Week (N) Jenny M. Love and Hip-Hop (R) B.Week (R) Jenny M. (VH1) TI Tiny (R) Pitch (R) Wicked Single (R) Ghost Whisperer (R) Charmed (R) Charmed (R) Bridezillas (R) Bridezillas (R) Bridezillas (R) Bridezillas (R) Bridezillas (R) (WE) Chris (R) Chris (R) Baseball MLB Chicago Cubs vs. Miami Marlins (L) (:45) 10th.. WGN News at Nine Funniest Home Videos Rules (R) Rules (R) (WGN) Law & Order: C.I. (R) PREMIUM STATIONS (:45) Prometheus ('12) Logan Marshall-Green, Noomi Rapace. Bill Maher (N) Vice (N) Bill Maher (R) Vice (R) (HBO) 3:45

We Bough...

Intolerable Cruelty (:50)

Dark Shadows ('12) Johnny Depp. (:45)

X-Men: First Class ('11) James McAvoy. Jump Off Sex Games Life Top "Ladies First" (MAX) (4:45)

Water for Elephants The Darkest Hour Emile Hirsch. Faster Dwayne 'The Rock' Johnson. :45 All Acce (:15) Hick ('11) Chloë Grace Moretz. Nurse J. (R) Gigolos (R) (SHOW) (4:15)

The Ninth Gate (:05)

The Woman in Black Daniel Radcliffe. Peace, Love & Misunderstanding (:35) Liberal Arts ('12) Josh Radnor. (:15) Detachment ('11) Adrien Brody. (TMC) (4:05)

Serenity

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

What is the best way to approach a guide dog? Dear Readers: Having printed hints for helping the blind before, it’s time to address how to approach a guide dog team. A team consists of a guide dog and its owner. When a dog is in harness, it is at “work” and is responsible for guiding its owner and should not be distracted. Here are some hints on what to do (and not do) when you come across a guide dog team: • Always greet the owner first. Whatever side the guide dog is on (most work on the left), approach from the other side. • Do not approach a team while in the middle of a task. Wait until the task is completed. • Do not pet a guide dog with-

Hints from Heloise Columnist out asking the owner’s permission. Some owners will allow you to pet the dog, and others will not. Do not get your feelings hurt if the owner says no. • Do not call out or whistle at a guide dog. The owner’s safety is dependent on the guide dog maintaining focus. So do not distract the guide dog.

• Do not feed or offer the guide dog food or treats. Guide dogs are fed on a schedule that is strictly maintained. Because they often visit restaurants and grocery stores, they are trained to ignore food. Offering them food not only distracts them, it negates their training and also can make them sick. — Heloise Here are two great hints from J.M., via tablet computer: TRAVEL HINT When packing for a trip, I realized my curling iron was too hot to pack, and I was rushed for time. The thought of my oven mitt came to mind. It worked perfectly, allowing the curling iron to remain in the open posi-

tion so it could cool off, but it was safe to handle and put in my tote bag. Even at home, I put the curling iron in an oven mitt before putting it in the drawer, which prevents the possibility of it melting other cords, etc. I also use the mitt on my countertop to rest the curling iron on as it warms up. (J.M., this is a great travel hint that has been printed many times before. Just be careful. Check what kind of material the inside of your oven mitt is. Sometimes the inside is a different material and may not be as heat-resistant as the outside. And don’t put the curling iron directly in the oven mitt after unplugging. — Heloise)


TROY DAILY NEWS • WWW.TROYDAILYNEWS.COM

MUTTS

COMICS 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 Saturday, April 27, 2013 ARIES (March 21 to April 19) Travel plans or something having to do with religion and politics might be confused today. Something is vague. Nevertheless, you feel sure about going after what you want. TAURUS (April 20 to May 20) This is not a good day to make important decisions about shared property or how to divide or share something. Fortunately, you feel independent enough to stand up for yourself. GEMINI (May 21 to June 20) Be prepared to go more than halfway when dealing with others today because the Moon is opposite your sign. It just means you have to compromise a little — no biggie. CANCER (June 21 to July 22) You might have innovative ideas at work, especially related to technology and computers. Be careful if dealing with foreign countries and political issues. LEO (July 23 to Aug. 22) This can be a creative day because you’re full of innovative ideas. Sudden opportunities to travel or explore avenues in publishing also might arise. VIRGO (Aug. 23 to Sept. 22) You might make some unusual changes at home today, or someone unusual might visit you at home. Something will change your home routine and cause a bit of confusion. LIBRA (Sept. 23 to Oct. 22) It’s easy to think outside of the box today, which is why you’re full of bright ideas. You also might meet a real character who likes your style! SCORPIO (Oct. 23 to Nov. 21) Although you have some fresh moneymaking ideas, there’s an element of confusion present today, so be careful with money and cash flow. Keep your receipts and count your change. SAGITTARIUS (Nov. 22 to Dec. 21) You feel excited about new possibilities and a fresh chance to do something. Just make sure you are clear about what you want, because something at home (or with your family) might confuse you. CAPRICORN (Dec. 22 to Jan. 19) You feel excited about something today. New changes at home are stimulating. Try to be clear in discussions with siblings and relatives in order to avoid confusion. AQUARIUS (Jan. 20 to Feb. 18) Be extra-clear in financial discussions with others today. New faces and new places might distract you. Be sure you know what you want to do. PISCES (Feb. 19 to March 20) Bosses and people in authority like your innovative ideas about money or how to earn more. But be clear in your expression with others, because you might be misunderstood. YOU BORN TODAY You prefer running things from behind the scenes. (It’s more your style.) You want to be useful, and you want to get things done. You are giving and hardworking, but you also protect your privacy. One of your strengths is that you know your limitations. You’re a realist. Your year ahead is the beginning of fresh new cycle. Open any door! Birthdate of: Walter Lantz, cartoonist; Dinara Safina, tennis player; Kate Pierson, singer. (c) 2013 King Features Syndicate, Inc.

SNUFFY SMITH

GARFIELD

BABY BLUES

FUNKY WINKERBEAN

CRANKSHAFT

Friday, April 26, 2013

9


10

WEATHER & WORLD

Friday, April 26, 2013

Today

Tonight

Saturday

Sunday

Monday

TROY DAILY NEWS • WWW.TDN-NET.COM

Tuesday

0, $0, &2817< 9L VL W 8V 2QO L QH $W W U R\GDL O \QHZV FRP ZZZ

3&-* "#-& "/% "$$63"5& 4&7&3& 4503. $07&3"(&

Morning frost, then mild temps High: 63°

Mostly clear Low: 34°

SUN AND MOON

Chance of rain High: 65° Low: 43°

Rain likely High: 64° Low: 50°

Mostly cloudy High: 70° Low: 52°

Partly cloudy High: 75° Low: 53°

TODAY’S STATEWIDE FORECAST Friday, April 26, 2013 AccuWeather.com forecast for daytime conditions, low/high temperatures

MICH.

NATIONAL FORECAST

Sunrise Saturday 6:40 a.m. ........................... Sunset tonight 8:27 p.m. ........................... Moonrise today 9:48 p.m. ........................... Moonset today 7:10 a.m. ........................... New

First

Full

TROY • May 18

Youngstown 59° | 37°

Last

63° 34° May 9

Cleveland 55° | 39°

Toledo 57° | 32°

May 25

May 2

ENVIRONMENT

Mansfield 63° | 30°

PA.

Today’s UV factor. Fronts

6

Cold

Warm Stationary

Pressure Low

High

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

Low

Moderate

High

Very High

Air Quality Index Moderate

Harmful

Main Pollutant: Particulate

Pollen Summary 215

0

250

500

Peak group: Trees

Mold Summary 1,322

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 48 46 26 44 73 54 47 41 39 46 59

-0s

0s

10s

20s 30s 40s

50s 60s

Yesterday’s Extremes: High: 100 at Death Valley, Calif.

38

Good

-10s

Hi Otlk 73 pc 66 pc 57 pc 57 rn 84 clr 82 clr 68 rn 70 rn 48 rn 73 clr 64 rn

70s

80s

90s 100s 110s

Low: 9 at Cando, N.D.

NATIONAL CITIES Temperatures indicate Thursday’s high and overnight low to 8 p.m. Eastern Time. Hi Lo Prc Otlk Albany,N.Y. 57 40 .05PCldy Albuquerque 78 52 PCldy Anchorage 41 33 Clr Atlanta 70 46 Clr Atlantic City 65 44 .01 Clr 71 55 Cldy Austin Baltimore 65 46 Clr Birmingham 69 42 Clr Bismarck 63 19 Clr Boise 71 41 Clr Boston 66 49 .03PCldy Burlington,Vt. 55 43 .06 Cldy Charleston,S.C. 84 63 .36 Clr Charleston,W.Va. 62 39 Clr Charlotte,N.C. 71 54 Clr Chicago 51 39 .07PCldy Cincinnati 60 29 PCldy Cleveland 52 32 .14 Clr Columbia,S.C. 80 64 Clr Columbus,Ohio 57 33 Clr Dallas-Ft Worth 74 50 Cldy Dayton 56 35 PCldy Denver 64 33 PCldy 63 32 PCldy Des Moines Detroit 53 31 .06PCldy Greensboro,N.C. 69 48 Clr

Honolulu Houston Indianapolis Jackson,Miss. 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 Salt Lake City San Diego San Francisco Seattle Washington,D.C.

Hi Lo Prc Otlk 85 73 Clr 76 55 Cldy 55 33 PCldy 72 46 Cldy 67 33 Rain 85 76 Clr 84 58 Clr 69 40 Cldy 71 57 Clr 63 35 PCldy 70 39 Cldy 84 71 Clr 53 39 PCldy 67 36 Cldy 73 58 Cldy 66 46 Clr 69 35 Rain 88 60 PCldy 65 46 .01 Clr 86 69 Clr 56 34 PCldy 73 50 Clr 64 42 Rain 65 38 Clr 70 60 PCldy 65 53 Cldy 71 46 PCldy 65 47 .01 Clr

Columbus 64° | 34°

Dayton 63° | 34° Cincinnati 64° | 37° Portsmouth 68° | 36°

W.VA.

KY.

© 2013 Wunderground.com

SOURCE: ASSOCIATED PRESS

TODAY IN HISTORY (AP) — Today is Friday, April 26, the 116th day of 2013. There are 249 days left in the year. Today’s Highlight in History: On April 26, 1865, John Wilkes Booth, the assassin of President Abraham Lincoln, was surrounded by federal troops near Port Royal, Va., and killed. (Just before dying, Booth looked at his hands and gasped, “Useless, useless.”) On this date: • In 1607, English colonists went ashore at present-day Cape Henry, Va., on an expedition to establish the first permanent English settlement in the Western Hemisphere.

• In 1923, Britain’s Prince Albert, Duke of York (the future King George VI), married Lady Elizabeth BowesLyon at Westminster Abbey. • In 1933, Nazi Germany’s infamous secret police, the Gestapo, was created. • In 1968, the United States exploded beneath the Nevada desert a 1.3 megaton nuclear device called “Boxcar.” • In 1986, a major nuclear accident occurred at the Chernobyl plant in Ukraine (then part of the Soviet Union). • In 1993, Conan O’Brien was named to succeed David Letterman

as host of NBC’s “Late Night” program. • Today’s Birthdays: Movie composer Francis Lai (“Love Story”) is 81. Actress-comedian Carol Burnett is 80. Rhythm-and-blues singer Maurice Williams is 75. Songwriter-musician Duane Eddy is 75. Singer Bobby Rydell is 71. Rock musician Gary Wright is 70. Actress Nancy Lenehan is 60. Actor Giancarlo Esposito is 55. Rock musician Roger Taylor (Duran Duran) is 53. Actress Joan Chen is 52. Rock musician Chris Mars is 52. Actorsinger Michael Damian is 51. Actor Jet Li (lee) is 50.

Toll in Bangladesh building collapse at 275 SAVAR, Bangladesh (AP) — “Save us, brother. I beg you, brother,” Mohammad Altab moaned to the rescuers who could not help him. He was pinned between slabs of concrete in the ruins of the garment factory building where he worked. “I want to live,” he pleaded, his eyes glistening with tears as he spoke of his two young children. “It’s so painful here.” Altab should not have been in the building when it collapsed Wednesday, killing at least 275 people. No one should have. After seeing deep cracks in the walls of the building on Tuesday, police had ordered it evacuated. But officials at the garment factories operating inside ignored the order and kept more than 2,000 people working, authorities said. The disaster in Savar, an industrial suburb of Dhaka, the capital city, is the worst ever for Bangladesh’s booming and powerful garment industry, surpassing a fire five months ago that killed 112 people and brought widespread pledges to improve the country’s worker-safety standards. Instead, very little has changed in Bangladesh, where wages, among the lowest in the world, have made it a magnet for numerous global brands. Companies operating in the collapsed building say their customers included retail giants such as Wal-Mart, Dress Barn and Britain’s Primark. On Friday, hundreds of rescuers, some crawling through the maze of rubble in search of survivors and corpses, spent a third day working amid the cries of the trapped and the wails of workers’ relatives gathered outside the Rana Plaza building, which housed numerous garment factories and a handful of other companies. Rescuers on Thursday evening found 40 survivors trapped in a room on the fourth floor. Twelve were soon freed, and crews worked to get the others out safely, said Brig. Gen. Mohammed Siddiqul Alam Shikder, who is overseeing rescue operations. Crowds at the scene burst into applause as survivors were brought out, although no other details were immediately available. An Associated Press camera-

AP

A Bangladeshi rescuer looks out from a hole cut in the concrete Thursday as he looks for survivors at the site of a building that collapsed Wednesday in Savar, near Dhaka, Bangladesh. man who went into the rubble Thursday morning with rescue workers spoke briefly to Atlab, the man who pleaded to be saved. But the team was unable to free Atlab, who was trapped next to two corpses. From deep inside the rubble, another survivor could be heard weeping as he called for help. “We want to live, brother! It’s hard to remain alive here. It would have been better to die than enduring such pain to live on. We want to live! Please save us,” the man cried. It was not immediately clear if he or Atlab were among those later rescued. After the cracks were reported, managers of a bank that had an office in the building evacuated their employees. The garment factories, though, kept working, ignoring the instructions of the local industrial police, said Mostafizur Rahman, a director of that police force. Abdur Rahim, who worked on the fifth floor, said he and his coworkers had gone inside Wednesday morning despite seeing the cracks. He said a factory manager had assured people it was safe.

About an hour later, the building collapsed, and the next thing Rahim remembered was regaining consciousness outside. Officials said they had made it very clear that the building needed to be evacuated. The Bangladesh Garment Manufacturers and Exporters Association had also asked the factories to suspend their work. “After we got the crack reports, we asked them to suspend work until further examination, but they did not pay heed,” said Atiqul Islam, the group’s president. As crews bored deeper into the wreckage, the odor of decaying bodies wafted through the building. Bangladesh’s junior minister for home affairs, Shamsul Haque, said 2,000 people had been rescued. Maj. Gen. Chowdhury Hasan Suhrawardy, a top military officer in the Savar area, told reporters that search and rescue operations would continue for at least three days after the collapse. “We know a human being can survive for up to 72 hours in this situation. So our efforts will continue non-stop,” he said. Meanwhile, thousands of work-

ers from the hundreds of garment factories across the Savar industrial zone took to the streets to protest the collapse and poor safety standards. Shikder said the death toll had reached 275 by Friday morning. The garment manufacturers’ group said the factories in the building employed 3,122 workers, but it was not clear how many were inside it when it collapsed. Dozens of bodies, their faces covered, were laid outside a school building so relatives could identify them. Thousands gathered outside the building, waiting for news. TV reports said hundreds of protesters clashed with police in Dhaka and the nearby industrial zone of Ashulia. It was not immediately clear if there were any injuries in those clashes. After the November fire at the Tazreen Fashions Ltd. factory, there were repeated calls for improved safety standards by labor activists, manufacturers, the government and major retailers, but little progress. The building collapse highlighted the dangers that workers still face. Bangladesh has about 4,000 garment factories and exports

clothes to leading Western retailers, and industry leaders hold great influence in the South Asian nation. Its garment industry was the third largest in the world in 2011, after China and Italy. It has grown rapidly in the past decade, a boom fueled by Bangladesh’s exceptionally low labor costs. The country’s minimum wage is now the equivalent of about $38 a month. Officials said soon after the collapse that numerous construction regulations had been violated. Abdul Halim, an official with Savar’s engineering department, said the owner of Rana Plaza was originally allowed to construct a five-story building but added another three stories illegally. On a visit to the site, Home Minister Muhiuddin Khan Alamgir told reporters the building had violated construction codes and that “the culprits would be punished.” Local police chief Mohammed Asaduzzaman said police and the government’s Capital Development Authority have filed separate cases of negligence against the building’s owner. But on the streets of Dhaka, many believe the owners of the building and the factories will ultimately walk free. “Was anyone punished earlier? Was the owner of Tazreen Fashions arrested? They are powerful people, they run the country,” said Farid Ahmed, an insurance company official. The Tazreen factory that burned in November lacked emergency exits, and its owner said only three floors of the eight-story building were legally built. Surviving employees said gates had been locked and managers had told them to go back to work after the fire alarm sounded. Habibur Rahman, police superintendent of the Dhaka district, identified the owner of the collapsed building as Mohammed Sohel Rana, a local leader of ruling Awami League’s youth front. Rahman said police were also looking for the owners of the garment factories. Among the garment makers in the building were Phantom Apparels, Phantom Tac, Ether Tex, New Wave Style and New Wave Bottoms. Altogether, they produced several million shirts, pants and other garments a year.


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

Troy Daily News • Classifieds That Work • Friday, April 26, 2013 • 11

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www.tdnpublishing.com

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

Office Hours: Monday-Friday 8-5

100 - Announcement ■●■●■●■●■●■●■●■●■

Garage Sale DIRECTORY

To advertise in the Garage Sale Directory Please call: 877-844-8385

Edison Community College 125 Lost and Found

LOST CAMERAS all in one bag on April 12th in parking lot between Steak-n-Steak and Walmart. Please call (937)670-0057 if you have found them.

invites qualified candidates to apply for the following positions: Vice President of Administration & Finance Controller Full Time Social Services Faculty Member

200 - Employment 555 Garage Sales/Yard Sales

ANNA COMMUNITY GARAGE SALE! Sales in and outside of Anna. Friday 9am-6pm, Saturday 8am-4pm. Antique library table, porcelain sinks, lawn mowers, snowblower, fishing gear, grills, band saw, patio table and chairs, full Sleep Number bed PIQUA, 1218 Madison Ave, Saturday 9am-5pm, Sunday 9am-3pm, HVAC & Electric Miscellaneous tools & Household goods

PIQUA, Ziegler Road, Thursday, Friday, Saturday, 9am-2pm. Barbie Power Wheels, love seat, computer desk, plus size clothes, crib, mattress, changing table, TV, antique table, girls clothes, clean toys, sit n stand stroller (like new), baby bike seat, golf clubs, dressers & MORE! TIPP CITY, 565 Pine Street, Friday, Saturday & Sunday, 9am-? Glassware, collectibles, new table saw - never used, lots of items too many to mention!

TIPP CITY, 789 Shirl Rd. Friday, April 26, 8am-5pm. Saturday, April 27, 8am-4pm. HUGE MOVING SALE! Furniture, households, clothing, movies, books, Southwest items, ping-pong table, pottery, tons of miscellaneous. Everything must be sold. Low prices on all!

TROY, 1026 Stonyridge Avenue, Thursday, Friday & Saturday, 9am-5pm. Woodworking tools, furniture, miscellaneous.

TROY 1205 Edison Street (at corner of Stonyridge), Saturday only, 9am-4pm. Assorted glassware (Stafford and Imari), furniture, high chair and baby bullet.

TROY, 1515 Greenlee Road (between Fenner and Horseshoe), Thursday & Friday, 9am-5pm, Saturday, 9am-Noon. Lots of glassware, antiques, collectibles, holiday, books, lamps, cradle, crib. GARAGE FULL! TROY, 2100 Shenandoah Drive. Saturday only 8am-2pm. Tan sleeper sofa, TV cabinets, ladder, furniture, toys, clothing, new paintball gun, jewelry, TV's and miscellaneous

TROY, 228 Green Oak Drive, Friday & Saturday, 9am-4pm. Jewelry, household items, tools, lots of miscellaneous.

TROY. 2510 West St. Rte 55, Thursday, Friday 9am-5pm, Saturday, 9amNoon. Large garage/ business sale. Furniture, used cars, treadmill, oak bunk bed, outdoor furniture, household/ business items, lots of miscellaneous gems/ crystals/ handcrafted wire wrap jewelry. Something for everyone!

555 Garage Sales/Yard Sales

TROY, 413 Lake Street, Thursday & Friday, 9am-5pm, Saturday, 9amNoon. Estate sale! Chairs, tables, bedroom set, benches, stands, 3 piece end table set, lamps, dryer, country decorations, kitchen ware, TVs.

TROY, 684 Barnhart Road (one minute from I-75 at Exit 73), Friday & Saturday, 7am-? HUGE BENEFIT YARD SALE! 100% of proceeds go to overseas missions trip. Hot dogs, bake sale, drinks, face painting! Tools, Hot Wheels, CocaCola, handmade dolls, maternity clothing, baby items, furniture, 3 desks, books, shoes, scarves, purses, jewelry, home decor, toys, 7' Christmas tree & seasonal items, 2 sets of dishes & small kitchen appliances, brand new crafting supplies, vintage suitcase & hat boxes, Jr. pool/foosball table & much more! Also accepting yard sale donations before. Schedule a pickup: (937)479-6884. No early birds please.

TROY, 731 Market St, the old Hollywood Video Building, Thursday & Friday, 9am-5pm, Saturday 8am-12pm Team Honda Garage Sale, all proceeds donated to American Cancer Society. Clothes, furniture, kitchen items, baby items.

TROY, 735 North Dorset Road, Friday, 8am-4:30pm, Saturday 8am-2pm. HUGE SALE, girls bikes, toys, romance and kids books, lamps, decor, furniture, girls clothes, suitcases, Christmas, household, small appliances, lots of miscellaneous. TROY 829 Cobblestone Drive (behind Meijers off Stanfield) Friday 9am-6pm, Saturday 8am-2pm Downsizing, lots of household items, children's books and videos, collectible's, shelving units, men's and women's clothing good condition. No early birds please.

TROY, MERRIMONTBROKENWOODS, Saturday, April 27th, 9am-? Annual neighborhood garage sale. Over 30 families participating with everything for sale from antiques, clothes, furniture, toys, baby items, and lots of misc. Directions: Entrances to the subdivisions are off of Monroe-Concord, Peters Road, and Swailes Road. Look for the red, white, and blue balloons. For a complete listing of the addresses and items for sale please visit www. actionteamhomes.com and click on community. This Ad is compliments of the garage sale sponsor: Marlene Wagner RE/MAX Professionals.

Here’s an idea...

Find it, Buy it or Sell it in

Full Time Math Faculty Member

205 Business Opportunities

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

235 General

$14+ TO START

Full Time Chemistry Faculty Member Adjunct Faculty for Hydraulics & Pneumatics

Full time position, 2nd Shift, Monday thru Friday, Troy area.

Basic computer knowledge Clean background / drug test

Call (937)454-9035 between 9am-3pm, Monday - Friday only All calls outside these hours will not be considered

• • • •

Basic computer Knowledge Clean background Pass a drug test Uniforms provided

Call (937) 454-9035 between 9 am-3pm, Monday-Friday Only All calls outside these hours will not be considered.

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

Better Business Bureau 15 West Fourth St. Suite 300 Dayton, OH 45402 www.dayton.bbb.org 937.222.5825 This notice is provided as a public service by A newspaper group of Ohio Community Media

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

Adjunct Faculty for Photography Adjunct Faculty for the Arts & Sciences Disciplines

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

Please call 937-440-5263 or 937-440-5260

EOE/AA Employer

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.

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2382373

105 Announcements

105 Announcements

105 Announcements

Only $21.75

For immediate consideration email your resume with "Quality" in subject line to tarnold@freshwayfoods.com

2013 Ads

Or complete an application at: Freshway Foods 601 North Stolle Sidney, Ohio 45365

Celebrate Your Special Graduate in our newspapers on May 23, 2013

Customer Service

Position available which includes but not limited to sales, accounting, parts process & data entry. Must have computer experience. Automotive background a plus. Mail resume to Office Help, P.O. Box 613, Piqua, Ohio (937)773-1334.

DEADLINE IS 5:00 P.M., MAY 10, 2013 Please submit information along with a payment of $21.75 to: Troy Daily News or Piqua Daily Call Attn: Grad Ads Attn: Grad Ads 224 S. Market St. 110 Fox Dr. Suite B Troy, OH 45373 Piqua, OH 45356

GROUNDS KEEPER Full and part time opening for person to mow, maintain flowerbeds, plow snow and miscellaneous property maintenance. Apply in person: 15 Industry Park Court Tipp City, OH

If you would like your photo returned, please include a SASE along with your payment. Please contact us at 877-844-8385 with questions.

LABORERS CDL TRUCK DRIVERS

Matthew Lyons

Industrial contractor hiring for hard hat environment. Training provided.

Piqua High School

2012 We are proud of you!

Apply at: 15 Industry Park Court Tipp City

Your Family

Graduate’s Information Graduate’s Name: ______________________________________________ Graduate’s High School: _________________________________________ Greeting: _____________________________________________________ From (to be listed in ad): ________________________________________

235 General 0%' 1C+JI& 2'DHBE)'

'%) )%*$( /1 ":7;8,&43 5 '9 "-)<?9# 6&. %*4&&4 ;2-D 7+C'DC 4G'I$I&D F9IA'ICHE? >HICEH" F3EH)'DD 0')% F3EH(B)KHI F.'"('ED F3+$IC'E F2')'GKHI$DC F@DD'!*"? F0HH" 8 =$' F<+*E$)+CHE F1%$GG$I&,2')'$A$I& F<HE#"$L F6+)%$I' 4G'E+CHE

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2376021

2386679

Full time positions, Covington & Tipp City Areas. $10.00 and up.

NOTICE

www.edisonohio.edu/employment

Freshway Foods of Sidney, Ohio, has immediate openings within our Quality Department. Previous experience or education required.

SECURITY OFFICER

WANTED WANTED

Adjunct Faculty for Mechanical Engineering

For a complete listing of employment and application requirements please visit

QUALITY ASSURANCE TECHNICIANS

We Accept

INDEPENDENT CONTRACTORS

Adjunct Faculty for Mobile Powered Equipment

@GG"? 4I"$I' : ...$!4'73$)8:

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SECURITY OFFICER

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.

PAINTER HANDYMAN Person should have experience in painting and minor home repair. Apply in person 15 Industry Park Court Tipp City, OH

Troy Daily News

2382371

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DEADLINES/CORRECTIONS:

Submitted By Name: _______________________________________________________ Address: _____________________________________________________ City, State, Zip: ________________________________________________ Phone Number: ________________________________________________ Visa, MC, Discover, American Express: ______________________________ Expiration Date: ________________________________________________


12 • Troy Daily News • Classifieds That Work • Friday, April 26, 2013

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

In Loving Memory

235 General

We remember those who have passed away and are especially dear to us. On Monday, May 27, 2013, we will publish a special section devoted to those who are gone, but not forgotten.

SERVICE DEPARTMENT RV Wholesalers is hiring for full time service workers in the Service Department. Job duties include detailed inspection of trailers and walk through explanation of the trailers to customers.

Verse Selections:

2.

3.

4.

5.

6.

7.

8.

9. 10. 11. 12. 13. 14. 15.

In our hearts your memory lingers, sweetly tender, fond and true. There is not a day, dear Mother/Father, that we do not think of you. Thank you for loving and sharing, for giving and for caring. God bless you and keep you, until we meet again. Your life was a blessing, your memory a treasure. You are loved beyond words and missed beyond measure. Those we love we never lose, for always they will be, loved remembered, treasured, always in our memory. It broke our hearts to lose you, but you did not go alone. For part of us went with you, the day God called you home. My heart still aches in sadness, my silent tears still flow. For what it meant to lose you, no one will ever know. Memory is a lovely lane, where hearts are ever true. A lane I so often travel down, because it leads to you. Oh how we wish he/she was here today, to see all the blessings we have. Yet somehow you know that he/she is guiding us on our paths. Tenderly we treasure the past with memories that will always last. Remembering you on this day, comforted by so many memories. In the hearts of those who loved you, you will always be there. If love could have saved you, you would have lived forever. . Loved always, sadly missed. Forever remembered, forever missed. Suffer little children to come unto me.

Name of Deceased:____________________ Date of Birth:_________________________ Date of Passing:_______________________

If interested please forward your resume and/ or information to jobs@rvwholesalers.com

Number of verse selected :______________ Or write your own (20 words or less):______ ____________________________________ ____________________________________ ____________________________________ Closing Message: (Example: Always in our

Ready for a career change?

hearts, Sue & Family):__________________ ____________________________________

JobSourceOhio.com

Name of person submitting form:__________ ____________________________________

TREE TRIMMER/ GROUNDSMAN/ CLIMBER, Must have experience in rope/ saddle, good driving record. Wages depend on experience. Good pay/ benefits, (937)492-8486(937)492-8 486

Phone Number:________________________ Address:_____________________________ City, State and Zip Code:________________ ____________________________________ Visa, Mastercard, Discover, Am. Ex. Number: ____________________________________ Expiration Date:_______________________ Signature:____________________________

255 Professional

Only 16.50

John Doe

Submit resume and salary requirements in confidence to: WELDER/ FABRICATOR P.O. Box 920 Piqua, Ohio 45356

• FT, PT, PRN RNs • PT, PRN LPNs • FT, PT, PRN STNAs • PT Housekeeping & Laundry Apply in person at: Covington Care Center 75 Mote Dr Covington, OH

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255 Professional

255 Professional

Ideal candidate is adaptable and enjoys working in a fast-paced, challenging, professional office environment. Associate degree required. Ability to work efficiently, accurately and quickly with minimal supervision, good written and verbal communication abilities, organization skills, good basic math ability and familiarity with Microsoft Office products is also required. P&C insurance knowledge a plus.

Piqua Daily Call Attn: In Loving Memory 100 Fox Drive, Suite B Piqua, OH 45356

Coordinator – Research & Development This position will be responsible for generating data reports and providing analytical support for all of our product lines, as well as assisting the R&D staff with developing and preparing filings for regulatory approval. This position will also ensure regulatory compliance by researching and maintaining a database of current state insurance regulations. This position will utilize Microsoft Excel and SQL on a daily basis. Successful candidates will have an Associate degree, advanced knowledge of Microsoft Excel, strong prioritization, multi-tasking and organization skills. Knowledge of SQL and P&C insurance experience a plus.

Please call (937) 498-5925 with any questions.

The memory of you will always be in our hearts!

Excellent pay and benefit package including 25% 401k match, medical, and dental coverage.

FRONT DESK ASSISTANT, Family practice office, looking for part time front desk assistant, medical knowledge, excellent computer skills and communication skills required, Fax resume to: (937)698-6675

Position involves providing customer service to our independent agents, along with data entry and utilizing Microsoft Office products. Individual hired will receive thorough training on our products and systems.

Publishes in both Troy Daily News and Piqua Daily Call for $16.50. Deadline for this special tribute is May 10,2013.

September 19, 1917 thru March 7, 2006

We have an immediate, first shift opening for an experienced Welder/ Fabricator. Must have 5 years experience in mig, tig, and stick welding. Must be skilled in layout, welding, and assembling structured metal forms from working drawings; as well as, being familiar with hand grinding and repairing fabricated, cast, and forged components. Hardcoat or hardfacing experience is a plus.

DENTAL ASSISTANT Desire neat, energetic individual with pleasant personality who enjoys working with people. 3-4 days per week. Prefer experience but will train. Please send resume to: Regency Professional Building, Suite 1, 550 Mote Drive, Covington, OH 45318 or stop in to fill out application

Support Specialist – Underwriting

To remember your loved one in this special way, submit a photo, this form and payment to:

or Attn: In Loving Memory 224 S. Market St. Troy, OH 45313

WELDER/ FABRICATOR

Buckeye Insurance Group has two positions available in our home office in Piqua, Ohio.

$

Troy Daily News

240 Healthcare

* Limit one individual per 1x3 space

Please indicate the position to which you are applying and send resume and cover letter to:

Love always, Wife, Children, Family and Friends

send.resumes@buckeye-ins.com 2387680

1.

235 General

NO PHONE CALLS PLEASE

2381632

Service&Business DIRECTORY

To advertise in the Classifieds That Work Service & Business Directory please call: 877-844-8385 665 Lawn, Garden, Landscaping

MATT & SHAWN’S

Need new kitchen cabinets, new bathroom fixtures, basement turned into a rec room? Give me a call for any of your home remodeling & repair needs, even if it’s just hanging some curtains or blinds. Call Bill Niswonger

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Gravel Hauled, Laid & Leveled Driveways & Parking Lots

875-0153 698-6135

335-6321

J.T.’s Painting & Drywall

• Baths • Awnings • Concrete • Additions

CALL TODAY FOR FREE ESTIMATE

Call Matt 937-477-5260

INERRANT CONTRACTORS: Why over pay general contractors to renovate your home? Self performing our own work allows for the best prices on skilled labor. Kitchens, baths, decks, roofs, doors, windows, siding, floors, drywall, paint. 5 year to Lifetime warranty in every contract! Licensed and insured. InerrantContractors @ g m a i l . c o m . (937)573-7357.

10 Year Warranty on Labor FREE Estimates 2385789

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937-339-6646

RICK WITHROW WITHROW RICK (937) 726-9625 726-9625 (937)

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

937-974-0987

937-773-4552

Email: UncleAlyen@aol.com

BED BUG DETECTORS

“Peace of Mind” knowing your Free from BED BUGS

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

• Devices installed in all rooms • Easy Early find if Bed Bugs enter As low as

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installed

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

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TERRY’S

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HERITAGE GOODHEW • Metal Sales & Service • Standing Seam Metal Roofing • New Installation & Repairs • Standing Seam Snap Lock $110SQ • Pole Barn Metal $2.06LF

700 Painting

765-857-2623 765-509-0069

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Shredded Topsoil Fill Dirt

Cr eative Vissiocn L and ap e

$700.00 off $6k or more on a roof & $150.00 roof tune up

New Roofs Repairs Re-roofs Tear-offs Chimney Flashing

FULLY INSURED FREE ESTIMATES

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SPRING SPECIAL

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GRAVEL & STONE

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Eric Jones, Owner

Insurance jobs welcome • FREE Estimates

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Call Jim at

Appliances, Brush, Rental Clean-outs, Furniture & Tires

28 Years Experience Free Estimates

Roofing • Drywall • Painting Plumbing • Remodels • Flooring

PAVING, REPAIR & SEALCOATING DRIVEWAYS PARKING LOTS

• Lawn care • Landscaping • Gardens Tilled • Mulching

2385457

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

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COOPER’S BLACKTOP

Painting - Interior - Exterior Pressure Washing Homes and Decks Cleaning Gutters Commercial, Industrial, Residential

710 Roofing/Gutters/Siding

A&E Home Services LLC

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

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To Advertise In The Classifieds That Work Call 877-844-8385 240 Healthcare

STNA The Pavilion is looking for a caring, highly motivated STNA for full time day shift. If interested please contact Linda at (937)492-9591 You must be state certified.

STNA's ~ FT PT CA All Shifts We are looking for experienced people. Come in and fill out an application and speak with Beth Bayman, Staff Development. Koester Pavilion 3232 N Co Rd 25A Troy, OH 45373 (I-75 at exit 78) 937.440.7663 Phone 937.335.0095 Fax Located on the Upper Valley Medical Center Campus EOE

245 Manufacturing/Trade JOURNEYMAN ELECTRICIAN

Residential/ light commercial. Must be knowledgeable, dependable, and have reliable transportation. Top pay and benefits. Ace Electric & Service (937)335-3041

PIPE WELDERS/ FABRICATION

Skills/Qualifications:

• • •

• •

2+yrs exp. Welding Mig, Tig, Stick and Fabrication Pipe welding carbon steel pipe, stainless steel pipe, schedule pipe and 10&40 stainless sanitary tubing Rigging exp. Welding Cert. D1-1 & B31-1

Requirements:

• • •

Willing to travel, work overtime, weekends and holidays if needed. HS diploma or GED Drug testing & background check

Please email resumes to: amyj@wellsbrothers.com

Fax to: (937)394-2375

Or mail to:

Wells Brothers Inc. Attn: Human Resources 105 Shue Dr. Anna OH 45302 NO PHONE CALLS PLEASE EOE

250 Office/Clerical

AM FRONT DESK RECEPTIONIST Needed: Tuesday - Friday, 8:30am-1pm and every Saturday, 7:30amNoon. Approximately 22.5 hours/ week. If you are friendly, outgoing and efficient, please fax your resume to (937)773-0828 attn: Sara.

280 Transportation

Class-A Flatbed

Drivers, Express Delivery Services of Lebanon is growing! 3 years good driving required.. Can earn $.45 per mile/ $1K per week. Call Mike or Darryl at Express Delivery Services. mgliatti@go-concepts.com. (513)934-4078.

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WHERE

BUYERS

&

SELLERS MEET

280 Transportation

MECHANIC EXPERIENCED Nationwide Truck Brokers Inc is a growing family oriented company with room for advancement. We are now taking applications for an experience mechanic and wash bay attendants for our tractor trailer repair facility at our Tipp City, OH location. This position is full time with newly enhanced benefit package that includes competitive wages, health, dental, life, card, 401k, paid uniforms, paid vacation and more! If interested apply in person at 3355 South County Road 25A, Tipp City, OH, I-75 exit 69.

300 - Real Estate

For Rent

305 Apartment 1, 2 & 3 Bedroom, Houses & Apts. SEIPEL PROPERTIES Piqua Area Only Metro Approved (937)773-9941 9am-5pm Monday-Friday 1, 2 & 3 bedrooms Call for availability attached garages Easy access to I-75 (937)335-6690

www.hawkapartments.net

1,2 & 3 BEDROOM APARTMENTS Troy ranches and townhomes. Different floor plans to choose from. Garages, fireplaces, appliances including washer and dryers. Corporate apartments available. Visit www.firsttroy.com Call us first! (937)335-5223 EVERS REALTY

TROY, 2 Bedroom Townhomes 1.5 bath, 1 car garage, $725 3 Bedroom, 1 bath, $675 (937)216-5806 EversRealty.net

DODD RENTALS Tipp-Troy: 2 bedroom AC, appliances $550/$450 plus deposit No pets (937)667-4349 for appt.

TROY, 2 bedroom, 1.5 bath, C/A, kitchen appliances, water and trash paid, no pets (937)845-8727

TROY, 2 Bedroom, $550 plus utilities, stove, refrigerator, washer & dryer included, 2nd floor, River view, (937)418-2379

TROY, 525 Stonyridge, 2 bedroom,1.5 bath, stove, refrigerator, NO PETS. $450 month, $450 deposit. Credit check required, Metro approved, (937)418-8912.

320 Houses for Rent

3 BEDROOM, 2 full baths, screened porch, all appliances, AC, new carpet, Country Living! $975 monthly, (937)335-3207. PIQUA, 4 bedroom, outside city limits, no Metro, $700 (937)478-1376

PIQUA AREA, Candlewood, New Haven. 3 bedroom, $750 + deposit. Call (937)778-9303 days, (937)604-5417 evenings. TROY, Kensington, 4 bedroom, 2.5 bath, fireplace, family room, 2 car, 2500 sqft, available 5/1, $1775, (937)477-4664. TROY, large double, 3 bedroom, living, utility, family room, A/C, appliances, basement, garage $695 (937)572-5302.

TROY, updated 2 bedroom ranch in Westbrook, 1 year lease, possible land contract, $795 (937)308-0679

400 - Real Estate For Sale

Troy Daily News • Classifieds That Work • Friday, April 26, 2013 • 13 577 Miscellaneous

583 Pets and Supplies

FILING CABINET, Hon like new locking 4 drawer, putty color. 8'x30" heavy duty grey folding table. (937)498-1117 daily 10am-6pm.

CHIHUAHUAS, Relocating out of state and we need a very loving patient home for our two indoor Chihuahuas. Female (Gigi) is 5 years old, gold in color, kind and loving, but likes to bark at any disturbance outside. She is the protector. She has a great attitude. She has not been spayed but is housebroken. Male (Mercedes) is a 7 year old Blue Chihuahua who can have a bit of temperment - does not do well with kids but he is loving and great companion for the right person. He is housebroken but likes to mark his territory so he always wears belly bands which will be supplied. $100 for the pair (negotiable). We would love to keep them together as they love each other very much! (937)451-2335 after 3pm.

BABY ITEMS & furniture, toddler bed, play yard for kids or puppies, HANDICAP ITEMS, collectible dolls & bears, good condition and more! (937)339-4233

FURNITURE, Moving, nice items for sale, Couch's, beds, matching chair sets, big screen tv, stereo system with surround sound, (937)726-8029

SNOW BLOWER 22" 2 stage Yardman, only used 3 times, like new, cost over $500, will sell for $350 OBO (937)332-0919

580 Musical Instruments

UPRIGHT PIANO, Lester, $500. Frigidaire chest freezer, $100, diverson80@yahoo.com. (937)552-9368.

583 Pets and Supplies

410 Commercial

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

BOXERS 2 females, 6 years old, would like to keep together, need fenced yard, free, (937)875-0701

425 Houses for Sale

925 Public Notices

TROY, 1016 Fairfield, 3 bedroom, 2 car garage, central air, $93,000, Financing available, LESS THAN RENTING! www.miamicountyproperties.com, (937)239-0320, (937)239-1864,

500 - Merchandise

525 Computer/Electric/Office

DRAFTING TABLE, adjustable, approximately 42X30. Great for drawing or crafts, $25, (937)339-7071.

535 Farm Supplies/Equipment

WOOD CHIPPER, 16.5hp, electric start, limbs up to 4-1/2 inch diameter, good shape, new knife, $1600, (937)216-0202

545 Firewood/Fuel

FIREWOOD, half cord for $49. 5 cords available. (937)216-8012.

560 Home Furnishings

LIFT CHAIR, lift/ recline chair (Best Home furnishings), controls for full recline/ lifting, used 3 months, perfect condition, $800, (937)492-2201

577 Miscellaneous

TROY TOWNHOUSE, 2 Bedroom 1.5 bath. Bunkerhill $495 monthly, (937)216-5611

NORDIC TRACK Treadmill E3200, like new. Paid $1400, asking $325 OBO (937)332-0919 after 4pm

925 Public Notices

925 Public Notices

583 Pets and Supplies

CHOCOLATE LAB, 4 year old male, outside dog, free to good home, (937)448-6120. KITTENS: Free, 8 weeks old, Orange, Black & Tiger, litter box trained. Very friendly, well socialized. (937)875-5432

925 Public Notices

SHERIFFʼS SALE MIAMI COUNTY COMMON PLEAS Case No.: 12-464 U S Bank, NA vs. Rodney Maxson, et al Pursuant to the command of an Order of Sale in the above name cause to me directed by the Court of Common Pleas of Miami County, Ohio, I will offer at Public Sale in the lobby of the Sheriff on May 29, 2013 at 10:00 oʼclock in the a.m. the following described premises, to-wit: Situated in the Township of Monroe, in the County of Miami, and in the State of Ohio Parcel Number: G12-048300 Prior Deed Reference: Volume 785, Page 241 Also known as: 2945 North Montgomery County Line, Tipp City, Ohio 45371 A full legal description may be obtained in the Office of the Recorder of Miami County, Ohio. Appraised at Thirty Eight Thousand and 00/100 ($38,000.00) Dollars and cannot be sold for less than two-thirds of the appraisement. TERMS OF SALE: 10% of appraised value down time of sale and .5% of appraised value for conveyance and recording, balance within 30 days of confirmation. Pamela A. Fehring, Attorney 04/26, 05/03, 05/10-2013 2387158

SHERIFFʼS SALE MIAMI COUNTY COMMON PLEAS Case No.: 12-764 Wells Fargo Bank, NA vs. Julie K. Wintrow, et al Pursuant to the command of an Order of Sale in the above name cause to me directed by the Court of Common Pleas of Miami County, Ohio, I will offer at Public Sale in the lobby of the Sheriff on May 29, 2013 at 10:00 oʼclock in the a.m. the following described premises, to-wit: Situated in the Village of Casstown, in the County of Miami, and in the State of Ohio Parcel Number: F11-000600 & F11-000610 Also known as: 105 Washington Street, Casstown, Ohio 45312 A full legal description may be obtained in the Office of the Recorder of Miami County, Ohio. Appraised at Seventy One Thousand Five Hundred and 00/100 ($71,500.00) Dollars and cannot be sold for less than two-thirds of the appraisement. TERMS OF SALE: 10% of appraised value down time of sale and .5% of appraised value for conveyance and recording, balance within 30 days of confirmation. Kevin L. Williams, Attorney 04/26, 05/03, 05/10-2013 2387164

SHERIFFʼS SALE MIAMI COUNTY COMMON PLEAS Case No.: 12-739 JPMorgan Chase Bank, NA vs. John H. DeBrosse, et al Pursuant to the command of an Order of Sale in the above name cause to me directed by the Court of Common Pleas of Miami County, Ohio, I will offer at Public Sale in the lobby of the Sheriff on May 29, 2013 at 10:00 oʼclock in the a.m. the following described premises, to-wit: Situated in the Township of Union, in the County of Miami, and in the State of Ohio Parcel Number: L32-000840 Also known as: 11365 West State Route 571, Laura, Ohio 45337 A full legal description may be obtained in the Office of the Recorder of Miami County, Ohio. Appraised at Fifty Thousand and 00/100 ($50,000.00) Dollars and cannot be sold for less than two-thirds of the appraisement. TERMS OF SALE: 10% of appraised value down time of sale and .5% of appraised value for conveyance and recording, balance within 30 days of confirmation. Kevin L Williams, Attorney 04/26, 05/03, 05/10-2013 2387168

SHERIFFʼS SALE MIAMI COUNTY COMMON PLEAS Case No.: 05-463 U S Bank, NA vs. William M. Hill, et al Pursuant to the command of an Order of Sale in the above name cause to me directed by the Court of Common Pleas of Miami County, Ohio, I will offer at Public Sale in the lobby of the Sheriff on May 29, 2013 at 10:00 oʼclock in the a.m. the following described premises, to-wit: Situated in the Township of Concord, in the County of Miami, and in the State of Ohio Parcel Number: C06-081287 Prior Deed Reference: Volume 672, Page 535 Also known as: 1501 Waco Street, Troy, Ohio 45373 A full legal description may be obtained in the Office of the Recorder of Miami County, Ohio. Appraised at Forty Five Thousand and 00/100 ($45,000.00) Dollars and cannot be sold for less than two-thirds of the appraisement. TERMS OF SALE: 10% of appraised value down time of sale and .5% of appraised value for conveyance and recording, balance within 30 days of confirmation. Sara M. Petersmann, Attorney 04/26, 05/03, 05/10-2013

SHERIFFʼS SALE MIAMI COUNTY COMMON PLEAS Case No.: 12-835 New Day Financial, LLC vs. Randy Scott Robinson, et al Pursuant to the command of an Order of Sale in the above name cause to me directed by the Court of Common Pleas of Miami County, Ohio, I will offer at Public Sale in the lobby of the Sheriff on May 29, 2013 at 10:00 oʼclock in the a.m. the following described premises, to-wit: Situated in the Village of Pleasant Hill, in the County of Miami, and in the State of Ohio Parcel Number: I26-002200 Prior Deed Reference: Book 951, Page 241 Also known as: 118 West High Street, Pleasant Hill, Ohio 45359 A full legal description may be obtained in the Office of the Recorder of Miami County, Ohio. Appraised at Eighty Five Thousand and 00/100 ($85,000.00) Dollars and cannot be sold for less than two-thirds of the appraisement. TERMS OF SALE: 10% of appraised value down time of sale and .5% of appraised value for conveyance and recording, balance within 30 days of confirmation. Wayne E. Ulbrich, Attorney 04/26, 05/03, 05/10-2013

SHERIFFʼS SALE MIAMI COUNTY COMMON PLEAS Case No.: 13-006 JPMorgan Chase Bank, NA vs. Richard P. Rosen, et al Pursuant to the command of an Order of Sale in the above name cause to me directed by the Court of Common Pleas of Miami County, Ohio, I will offer at Public Sale in the lobby of the Sheriff on May 29, 2013 at 10:00 oʼclock in the a.m. the following described premises, to-wit: Situated in the City of Huber Heights, in the County of Miami, and in the State of Ohio Parcel Number: P48-000171 Also known as: 4578 Olde Park Drive, Tipp City, Ohio 45371 A full legal description may be obtained in the Office of the Recorder of Miami County, Ohio. Appraised at One Hundred Sixty Two Thousand and 00/100 ($162,000.00) Dollars and cannot be sold for less than two-thirds of the appraisement. TERMS OF SALE: 10% of appraised value down time of sale and .5% of appraised value for conveyance and recording, balance within 30 days of confirmation. Kevin L.Williams, Attorney 04/26, 05/03, 05/10-2013

2387156

2387160

2387162

LABRADOR RETRIEVER Puppies. AKC, born 2/28. Chocolate & Yellow. Ready to leave mother on 4/27. Born and raised in our home. Parents on site. Males $300. Females $400 (513)393-0623. PERSIAN CAT. Male. Silver Shaded. Neutered. 3 years old. Cat carrier and litter box included. $50 (937)903-7710.

800 - Transportation

835 Campers/Motor Homes

2000 ROCKWOOD Popup camper, air, heat, sink, indoor/outdoor cook top, 3 way frig, front queen, new tires, very good condition little use, $2500 (937)478-0726

2003 TRAIL-LITE 22' hybrid trailer, 3 burner stove with oven, refrigerator with freezer, microwave, AC/furnace, sleeps 6, great condition! $8250, (937)676-2590.

850 Motorcycles/Mopeds

805 Auto

2003 MERCURY, Grand Marquis LE, 1 owner, non smoker, 103k miles, asking $4800obo, (937)658-0690

MINI BIKE, 2 cycle, looks like small Harley, $250, (937)216-0202

860 Recreation Vehicles

2009 HONDA Rancher, TRX420, automatic, Green, excellent condition, (937)596-6861

830 Boats/Motor/Equipment

PONTOON, 50 Mercury outboard, power anchor, trolling motor, big live well, depth finder. Life jackets/ trailer, accessories included, $4200, (937)214-4413.

925 Public Notices

Classifieds that work 925 Public Notices

SHERIFFʼS SALE MIAMI COUNTY COMMON PLEAS Case No.: 07-1009 Thomas Winemiller & Assoc., Inc. vs. JGR Properties, Inc., et al Pursuant to the command of an Order of Sale in the above named cause to me directed by the Court of Common Pleas of Miami County, Ohio, I will offer at Public Sale in the lobby of the Sheriff on May 29, 2013 at 10:00 oʼclock in the a.m. the following described premises, to-wit: Situated in the Township of Bethel, in the County of Miami, and in the State of Ohio Parcel Number: A01-045700 & A01-045900 Also known as: 6205 and 6254 East U S Route 40, Tipp City, Ohio 45371 A full legal description may be obtained in the Office of the Recorder of Miami County, Ohio. Appraised at Eight Hundred Twenty Five Thousand and 00/100 ($825,000.00) Dollars and cannot be sold for less than two-thirds of the appraisement. TERMS OF SALE: 10% of appraised value down at time of sale and .5% of appraised value for conveyance and recording, balance within 30 days of confirmation. Jonathan S. Hawkins, Attorney 04/26, 05/03, 05/10-2013 2387169

SHERIFFʼS SALE MIAMI COUNTY COMMON PLEAS Case No.: 12-057 CitiMortgage, Inc. vs. Jessica A. Grice, et al Pursuant to the command of an Order of Sale in the above name cause to me directed by the Court of Common Pleas of Miami County, Ohio, I will offer at Public Sale in the lobby of the Sheriff on May 22, 2013 at 10:00 oʼclock in the a.m. the following described premises, to-wit: Situated in the Village of West Milton, in the County of Miami, and in the State of Ohio Parcel Number: L39-020260 Prior Deed Reference: Volume 785, Page 696 Also known as: 147 West Market Street, West Milton, Ohio 45383 A full legal description may be obtained in the Office of the Recorder of Miami County, Ohio. Appraised at Forty Five Thousand and 00/100 ($45,000.00) Dollars and cannot be sold for less than two-thirds of the appraisement. TERMS OF SALE: 10% of appraised value down time of sale and .5% of appraised value for conveyance and recording, balance within 30 days of confirmation. Channing L. Ulbrich, Attorney 04/19, 04/26, 05/03-2013 2385531

SHERIFFʼS SALE MIAMI COUNTY COMMON PLEAS Case No.: 12-604 Monroe Federal Savings & Loan vs. William D. Adams, et al Pursuant to the command of an Order of Sale in the above name cause to me directed by the Court of Common Pleas of Miami County, Ohio, I will offer at Public Sale in the lobby of the Sheriff on May 29, 2013 at 10:00 oʼclock in the a.m. the following described premises, to-wit: Situated in the Village of Potsdam, in the County of Miami, and in the State of Ohio Parcel Number: L38-001070 Prior Deed Reference: Volume 712, Page 4 Also known as: 16 West Cross Street, Potsdam, Ohio 45361 A full legal description may be obtained in the Office of the Recorder of Miami County, Ohio. Appraised at Twenty One Thousand and 00/100 ($21,000.00) Dollars and cannot be sold for less than two-thirds of the appraisement. TERMS OF SALE: 10% of appraised value down time of sale and .5% of appraised value for conveyance and recording, balance within 30 days of confirmation. Jennifer A. Baughman, Attorney 04/26, 05/03, 05/10-2013 2387152

SHERIFFʼS SALE MIAMI COUNTY COMMON PLEAS Case No.: 12-596 United States of America vs. Rolando Mederos, et al Pursuant to the command of an Order of Sale in the above name cause to me directed by the Court of Common Pleas of Miami County, Ohio, I will offer at Public Sale in the lobby of the Sheriff on May 29, 2013 at 10:00 oʼclock in the a.m. the following described premises, to-wit: Situated in the Village of West Milton, in the County of Miami, and in the State of Ohio Parcel Number: L39-011950 Also known as: 427 Park Avenue, West Milton, Ohio 45383 All taxes and assessments that appear on the Tax Duplicate filed with the Miami County Treasurer will be deducted from proceeds from the sale. This includes taxes and assessments for all prior years yet unpaid and delinquent tax amounts. The successful bidder will be responsible for any subsequent taxes or assessments that appear on said tax duplicate after the date of the sale of property. A full legal description may be obtained in the Office of the Recorder of Miami County, Ohio. Appraised at Sixty Five Thousand and 00/100 ($65,000.00) Dollars and cannot be sold for less than two-thirds of the appraisement. TERMS OF SALE: 10% of appraised value down time of sale and .5% of appraised value for conveyance and recording, balance within 30 days of confirmation. Stephen D. Miles, Attorney 04/26, 05/03, 05/10-2013 2387172


14 • Troy Daily News • Classifieds That Work • Friday, April 26, 2013 925 Public Notices

925 Public Notices

925 Public Notices

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

925 Public Notices

925 Public Notices

925 Public Notices

SHERIFFʼS SALE MIAMI COUNTY COMMON PLEAS Case No.: 12-252 U S Bank, NA vs. Eric D. Kitzmiller, et al Pursuant to the command of an Order of Sale in the above name cause to me directed by the Court of Common Pleas of Miami County, Ohio, I will offer at Public Sale in the lobby of the Sheriff on May 22, 2013 at 10:00 oʼclock in the a.m. the following described premises, to-wit: Situated in the City of Troy, in the County of Miami, and in the State of Ohio Parcel Number: D08-104560 Also known as: 2285 East Patterson Lane, Troy, Ohio 45373 A full legal description may be obtained in the Office of the Recorder of Miami County, Ohio. Appraised at One Hundred Fifty Five Thousand and 00/100 ($155,000.00) Dollars and cannot be sold for less than two-thirds of the appraisement. TERMS OF SALE: 10% of appraised value down time of sale and .5% of appraised value for conveyance and recording, balance within 30 days of confirmation. Joshua J. Epling, Attorney 04/19, 04/26, 05/03-2013 2385536

SHERIFFʼS SALE MIAMI COUNTY COMMON PLEAS Case No.: 12-846 Bank of America, NA vs. Virginia L. Howard, et al Pursuant to the command of an Order of Sale in the above name cause to me directed by the Court of Common Pleas of Miami County, Ohio, I will offer at Public Sale in the lobby of the Sheriff on May 15, 2013 at 10:00 oʼclock in the a.m. the following described premises, to-wit: Situated in the Township of Monroe, in the County of Miami, and in the State of Ohio Parcel Number: G14-002326 Also known as: 3390 Redbud Drive, Troy, Ohio 45373 A full legal description may be obtained in the Office of the Recorder of Miami County, Ohio. Appraised at One Hundred Twenty Five Thousand and 00/100 ($125,000.00) Dollars and cannot be sold for less than two-thirds of the appraisement. TERMS OF SALE: 10% of appraised value down time of sale and .5% of appraised value for conveyance and recording, balance within 30 days of confirmation. George J. Annos, Attorney 04/19, 04/26, 05/03-2013 2385487

SHERIFFʼS SALE MIAMI COUNTY COMMON PLEAS Case No.: 12-418 Wells Fargo Bank, NA vs. Brian M. Joseph, et al Pursuant to the command of an Order of Sale in the above name cause to me directed by the Court of Common Pleas of Miami County, Ohio, I will offer at Public Sale in the lobby of the Sheriff on May 15, 2013 at 10:00 oʼclock in the a.m. the following described premises, to-wit: Situated in the City of Troy, in the County of Miami, and in the State of Ohio Parcel Number: D08-017430 Also known as: 1004 East Race Drive, Troy, Ohio 45373 A full legal description may be obtained in the Office of the Recorder of Miami County, Ohio. Appraised at Sixty Five Thousand and 00/100 ($65,000.00) Dollars and cannot be sold for less than two-thirds of the appraisement. TERMS OF SALE: 10% of appraised value down time of sale and .5% of appraised value for conveyance and recording, balance within 30 days of confirmation. Brian Duffy, Attorney 04/19, 04/26, 05/03-2013

SHERIFFʼS SALE MIAMI COUNTY COMMON PLEAS Case No.: 12-695 CitiMortgage, Inc. vs. F. Lee Barnes, et al Pursuant to the command of an Order of Sale in the above name cause to me directed by the Court of Common Pleas of Miami County, Ohio, I will offer at Public Sale in the lobby of the Sheriff on May 22, 2013 at 10:00 oʼclock in the a.m. the following described premises, to-wit: Situated in the Village of West Milton, in the County of Miami, and in the State of Ohio Parcel Number: L39-020500 Also known as: 467 North Miami Street, West Milton, Ohio 45383 A full legal description may be obtained in the Office of the Recorder of Miami County, Ohio. Appraised at Sixty Nine Thousand and 00/100 ($69,000.00) Dollars and cannot be sold for less than two-thirds of the appraisement. TERMS OF SALE: 10% of appraised value down time of sale and .5% of appraised value for conveyance and recording, balance within 30 days of confirmation. Joshua J. Epling, Attorney 04/19, 04/26, 05/03-2013

SHERIFFʼS SALE MIAMI COUNTY COMMON PLEAS Case No.: 13-043 JPMorgan Chase Bank, NA vs. Matthew S. Johnson, et al Pursuant to the command of an Order of Sale in the above name cause to me directed by the Court of Common Pleas of Miami County, Ohio, I will offer at Public Sale in the lobby of the Sheriff on May 22, 2013 at 10:00 oʼclock in the a.m. the following described premises, to-wit: Situated in the Township of Staunton, in the County of Miami, and in the State of Ohio Parcel Number: K30-048506 Prior Deed Reference: Volume 782, Page 216 Also known as: 2825 Piqua Troy Road, Troy, Ohio 45373 A full legal description may be obtained in the Office of the Recorder of Miami County, Ohio. Appraised at One Hundred Twenty Five Thousand and 00/100 ($125,000.00) Dollars and cannot be sold for less than two-thirds of the appraisement. TERMS OF SALE: 10% of appraised value down time of sale and .5% of appraised value for conveyance and recording, balance within 30 days of confirmation. Ellen L. Fornash, Attorney 04/19, 04/26, 05/03-2013

SHERIFFʼS SALE MIAMI COUNTY COMMON PLEAS Case No.: 12-772 Union Savings Bank vs. Heirs of Belinda A. Dye, et al Pursuant to the command of an Order of Sale in the above name cause to me directed by the Court of Common Pleas of Miami County, Ohio, I will offer at Public Sale in the lobby of the Sheriff on May 15, 2013 at 10:00 oʼclock in the a.m. the following described premises, to-wit: Situated in the Township of Monroe, in the County of Miami, and in the State of Ohio Parcel Number: G12-082744 Prior Deed Reference: Volume 785, Page 449 Also known as: 7755 Winding Way North, Tipp City, Ohio 45371 A full legal description may be obtained in the Office of the Recorder of Miami County, Ohio. Appraised at One Hundred Ninety Eight Thousand and 00/100 ($198,000.00) Dollars and cannot be sold for less than two-thirds of the appraisement. TERMS OF SALE: 10% of appraised value down time of sale and .5% of appraised value for conveyance and recording, balance within 30 days of confirmation. Matthew I. McKelvey, Attorney 04/19, 04/26, 05/03-2013

2385540

2385532

1975 CHEVY CAPRICE CLASSIC

Convertible, A1 condition! 350 V8 engine, 125k miles, $12,000 OBO. Call (419)628-4183

2385493

2003 DODGE RAM 1500 6Cyl, 2wd, automatic, steering, air, power cruise, 71,600 miles, excellent condition, asking $8000,obo, (937)726-7109 (937)492-5785

2007 HONDA VTX 1300C 7,500 miles, saddle bags, new tires, 2 helmets, runs great! $6800 obo (937)541-3525

2385489

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CONTACT US

SPORTS

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

15

JOSH BROWN

TROY DAILY NEWS • WWW.TROYDAILYNEWS.COM

April 26, 2013

TODAY’S TIPS

■ Trapshooting

• SOFTBALL: The Troy Recreation Department is currently accepting registrations for the 2013 Summer Adult Softball Leagues at Duke Park. Registration is by team only. To register your team, call Carrie Slater at the Troy Recreation Department. The deadline to register is April 30. • GOLF: Anyone interested in joining the Miami Shores Nine-hole Ladies Golf League should come to the organizational meeting at 10 a.m. April 30. The meeting will be held at the Miami Shores Clubhouse in Troy. League play begins May 7. For more information, call Gail Florence at 332-7467. • GOLF: Troy Post 43 American Legion baseball is hosting a golf scramble May 19 at Cliffside Golf Course. Check-in is at noon with a 1 p.m. shotgun start. The cost is $65 per person, with teams of four. Registration is limited to the first 30 teams. For more information, call Frosty Brown at (937) 3394383 or 474-9093. • BASEBALL: Spots are still available for the Locos Express Super Power Slam 13U, 14U, 15U baseball tournament June 14-16 in Lima. There is a four-game guarantee. Contact locosexpress@gmail.com for additional information. • COACHING SEARCH: MiltonUnion High School is accepting e-mails of interest regarding the position of head varsity girls basketball coach. Please send a letter of interest and resume to kooglert@miltonunion.k12.oh.us.oh by May 3. • COACHING SEARCH: Lehman High School has the following coaching vacanies: head boys basketball, head girls basketball and head cross country. Candidates should send a resume and cover letter to Athletic Director Richard Roll or email them to r.roll@lehmancatholic.com.

Work speaks for itself Begley wins honors at competition BY JOSH BROWN Sports Editor jbrown@civitasmedia.com Put up or shut up. When it comes to his work, Matthew Begley does more than just stand behind it. He demonstrates how to use it, too. “I advertise for my business. It’s hard to say ‘let me work on CONTRIBUTED PHOTO your gun’ if I don’t know how to Matthew Begley, a Tippecanoe High School graduate, competes in shoot,” Begley said. the Amateur Trapshooting Association’s 33rd annual Southern The 2010 Tippecanoe High Grand American competition in Odessa, Fla. in March. School and Miami Valley CTC

■ Baseball/Softball

Staff Reports Troy kept rolling Thursday, winning its third Greater Western Ohio Conference North Division match in a row in a 4-1 victory over Sidney at Troy High School. At first singles, Luke Oaks defeated Dan Temple 6-3, 6-0. At second singles, Chris Schmitt defeated Jacob Colley 6-0, 6-0.

TROY At first doubles, Matt Alexander and Ian Stutz defeated Oakk Wynn and Neal Dev 6-1, 6-2. At second doubles, Hidekazu Asami and Matt Schmitt defeated Connor Bowers and Trevor Thompson 6-2, 6-0. Sidney’s only win came at third singles, where Frank EnYart defeated Jessie Wright 16, 6-0, 6-3. Troy improved to 9-3 overall and 3-1 in the GWOC North with the win. “It was a good team victory — and our third GWOC North win in as many days,” Troy coach Mark Goldner said. The Trojans host Miamisburg today.

■ NFL

Where’s the beef? Lineman go big in NFL Draft PHOTOS COURTESY LEE WOOLERY/SPEEDSHOT PHOTO

Tippecanoe starting pitcher Reid Ferrell threw a complete game Thursday in a Red Devil win over the Graham Falcons.

Tipp sweeps Graham Baseball, softball both sit atop CBC standings Staff Reports TIPP CITY — Tippecanoe knew better than to write Graham off, even with the Falcons’ 4-10 record entering Thursday’s Central Buckeye Conference crossover game. “They tend to play us well — and we started off pretty slow today, too,” Tippecanoe coach Bruce Cahill said.

MIAMI COUNTY

WHAT’S INSIDE National Football League .....16 Scoreboard ............................17 Television Schedule..............17 Local Sports..........................18

Reds manage one hit in 8-1 defeat Gio Gonzalez allowed just one hit in eight innings, and Denard Span and Danny Espinosa drove in three runs each to lead the Washington Nationals to a 8-1 win over the Cincinnati Reds on Thursday night. See Page 18.

■ See BEGLEY on 16

Trojans take down Jackets

TODAY Baseball Springfield at Troy (5 p.m.) Milton-Union at Northridge (5 p.m.) Miami East at Twin Valley South (5 p.m.) Troy Christian at Cinci Trailblazers (DH) (5 p.m.) Arcanum at Covington (5 p.m.) Piqua at Lebanon (5 p.m.) Bradford at Bethel (5 p.m.) Softball Springfield at Troy (5 p.m.) Milton-Union at Northridge (5 p.m.) Miami East at Twin Valley South (5 p.m.) Newton vs. Loudonville (at Loudonville Champions Challenge) (7:30 p.m.) Troy Christian a Tecumseh (5 p.m.) Arcanum at Covington (5 p.m.) Piqua at Lebanon (5 p.m.) Bethel at Bradford (5 p.m.) Anna at Lehman (5 p.m.) Tennis Butler at Milton-Union (4:30 p.m.) Carroll at Lehman (4:30 p.m.) Track Troy at Edwin C. Moses Relays (3:30 p.m.) Tippecanoe at Easter Relays (6 p.m.) Covington, Bradford at Ansonia Relays (4:30 p.m.)

SUNDAY No events scheduled

graduate who now works as a gunsmith at Heritage Gunsmiths in Centerburg took part in the Amateur Trapshooting Association’s 33rd annual Southern Grand American competition, held in March at the Silver Dollars Shooters Club in Odessa, Fla. And Begley raked in the honors, too. He was the High Overall

■ Tennis

SPORTS CALENDAR

SATURDAY Baseball Troy at Fairmont (DH) (noon) Tippecanoe, Olentangy and Olentangy Liberty (1 p.m.) Milton-Union, Miami Trace at Urbana (1 p.m.) Piqua at Northmont (DH) (11 a.m.) Newton, Lehman at Houston Invite (TBA) Softball Milton-Union at Indian Lake (noon) Newton at Loudonville Champions Challenge (TBA) Troy Christian at Mississinawa Valley (DH) (10 a.m.) Lehman at Fort Loramie Invite (TBA) Tennis Milton-Union at CJ Doubles Tourney (4 p.m.) Track Milton-Union Bulldog Classic (10 a.m.) Newton, Troy Christian at Southeastern Invite (10 a.m.) Lehman at Piqua Invite (10 a.m.)

ODESSA, FLA.

But the Red Devils got things going the right direction on offense and Reid Ferrell took care of the rest as Tippecanoe (15-2, 9-1 CBC) put away a 7-1 victory, its fourth in a row. “They got up 1-0 in the third on us,” Cahill said. “But we scored two in the third and fourth and opened things up in the fifth.” With the score 2-1, Austin Clack hit a key two-run single in the bottom of the fourth that made it a 4-1 game. Carter

NEW YORK (AP) — NFL teams bought in bulk in Thursday night’s draft. Unlike the last few glam-andglitter years when bumper crops of quarterbacks reigned, this was pure brawn: more than 600 pounds at the outset with offensive tackles Eric Fisher of Central Michigan and Luke Joeckel of Texas A&M. The first seven picks were all linemen: four on offense, three on defense. Not until Florida State’s EJ Manuel went to Buffalo at No. 16 was a quarterback taken — the lowest since 2000, when C h a d Pe n n i n g t o n went 18th to the Jets. F i s h e r FISHER became the first Mid-American Conference player selected at the top when Kansas City’s new regime led by coach Andy Reid chose the 6-foot7, 306-pound offensive tackle. “This is so surreal,” Fisher said. “I’m ready to get to work right now. I’m ready to start playing some football. I can’t process what’s going on right now.” Fisher was followed by AllAmerican Joeckel going to Jacksonville, defensive end Dion Jordan of Oregon to Miami, which traded up with Oakland, and Oklahoma tackle Lane

Tippecanoe left fielder Megan Rittenhouse makes a catch

■ See ROUNDUP on 18 Thursday against Graham.

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■ See DRAFT on 16


16

Friday, April 26, 2013

■ Trapshooting

them.” Begley took precision machinery at the Miami Valley CTC, which led him to go to Trinidad State Junior College in Colorado to study gunsmithing. After getting his degree in May of 2012, he moved back to Ohio, began attending Ohio State University and found work at Heritage Gunsmiths — putting both his education and his skill with guns to work for him. “Trapshooting started as a hobby for me, but then it kind of turned into my sport,” Begley said. “Some people played football and baseball. I shot guns. I started winning competitions. “For me, it was never necessarily about shooting against other people. It’s always about shooting against myself. I know what my average score is, and I always try to shoot better than that. And as my average score keeps going up, the winning just comes with that.” And so does the work. “I can custom build, repair, refinish — basically, anything you can do with a gun,” Begley said. “I work with them about 30 hours a week now, and I wouldn’t trade it for anything.”

■ National Football League

Mingo adds bark to Browns’ ‘D’ BEREA (AP) — With their first pick under new owner Jimmy Haslam, the Cleveland Browns put a little more “Bark” into their defense. That should make the Dawg Pound howl. Hanging onto the No. 6 overall pick, a selection they considered trading up until the last minute, the Browns selected LSU’s Barkevious Mingo, who played defensive end in college but will be used as an outside pass rusher by the Browns. “They needed a pass rusher and somebody to get to the quarterback,” Mingo said on a conference call. The 6-foot-4, 241pound Mingo has the distinction of being the first player taken since Haslam bought the franchise from Randy Lerner in October. Mingo is also the first pick by new coach Rob Chudzinski, CEO Joe Banner and general manager Mike Lombardi, who have orders from Haslam to turn around a franchise that has made the playoffs just once since 1999. By coincidence, Mingo wore a brown striped tie and orange pocket square in his suit jacket to the draft at Radio City Music Hall in New York. He’s aware his name will be a big hit with fans in Cleveland’s notorious bleacher section, known for years as the “Dawg Pound.” “It is very fitting,” he said when asked about his unique name. “My mom just made it up.” Mingo recorded 4.5 sacks last season as a jun-

TROY DAILY NEWS • WWW.TROYDAILYNEWS.COM

■ National Football League

Begley ■ CONTINUED FROM 15 Junior Gold champion, breaking 920 out of 1,000 targets. He won the individual junior gold championship in the Preliminary Handicap and Frank Pascoe Handicap events, and he was junior gold runnerup in the Harlan Campbell Doubles and Antonio Lobo Doubles events. “I enjoy it,” Begley said of competitions. “Trapshooting kind of became something I never thought it would for me.” Begley took an interest in guns relatively early in life, and it quickly became clear to him that they’d play a major role in it from that point on. “I started in the seventh grade through a 4-H group, the Montgomery/Preble County 4-H Shooting Sports Club,” Begley said. “I started shooting there, and I got hooked on it. I also shot for the Greene County Fish and Game team, but I kind of laid off competitive shooting for a while when I moved to Colorado. “I knew in seventh grade, about the time I started shooting, that I wanted guns to be part of my life. I just needed to find a way to stay around

SPORTS

ior down from eight as a with the sophomore Tigers and was named second-team All-SEC. The Browns are switching from a 4-3 alignment to an aggressive, 3-4 multifront scheme under new coordinator Ray Horton, who must be salivating at the thought of turning Mingo loose off the edge. He’ll likely play on the opposite side of Paul Kruger, who signed a five-year, $40 million free agent contract with the Browns in March. Chudzinski said Horton was “very involved” in the process to pick Mingo. The Browns discussed several trades, Banner said, but chose to stay at No. 6 to snag Mingo. “This is the outcome we were hoping for,” Banner said. “We just felt too strong about the fit.” If Mingo wasn’t available, Banner said the Browns had a trade lined up. Mingo skipped his senior season at LSU to jump to the NFL. He raised his profile with a strong performance at the scouting combine, and said his goal “is to start in Week 1.” Mingo, who didn’t start playing football until his junior year in high school, started 10 games last season. About an hour before the draft began, Haslam, who is under federal investigation for fraud at his truck-stop chain, spoke briefly to some of the team’s season-ticket holders and sponsors at a party.

Bengals take ND’s Eifert at 21 CINCINNATI (AP) — The Bengals think they’ve found someone who can take attention away from Pro Bowl receiver A.J. Green a tight end who lines up anywhere and catches the ball in a crowd. Cincinnati took Tyler Eifert from Notre Dame with the 21st overall pick in the NFL draft on Thursday, the second time in four years that they’ve gone for a tight end in the first round.

They got Jermaine Gresham also with the 21st overall pick in 2010. Finding someone to complement Green has been a challenge for the Bengals the past two seasons. Now Andy Dalton will have another sure-handed option in the offense, this one in the form of a 6-foot-5, 250-pound tight end. “I’m sure Andy’s happy right now,” offensive coordinator Jay Gruden said.

“We’re trying to make sure Andy is happy. Obviously we’ve got to take the pressure off A.J. Green, and this is one step in doing that.” Tight end wasn’t a major area of concern. The Bengals are uncertain about their right tackle situation, with Andre Smith an unrestricted free agent. They’re also trying to solidify the safety spot. With a run on linemen and the top-rated safeties earlier in the first round,

they decided to help an offense that struggled down the stretch. The Bengals have reached the playoffs each of the last two seasons as a wild card, losing to Houston in the first round both times. Gresham dropped a pass on Cincinnati’s opening series in a 19-13 loss at Houston on Jan. 5. Dalton completed only 14 of 30 passes in that game for 127 yards with an interception.

■ National Basketball Association

3s wild for Heat Allen breaks career playoff 3-pointer record, Miami up 3-0 MILWAUKEE (AP) — The Miami Heat’s latest spurt might have run the Milwaukee Bucks right out of the playoffs. LeBron James scored seven of his 22 points at the end of the third quarter as the Heat pulled away from the Bucks. Their 10491 victory gave them a 3-0 lead in the best-of-seven series, and the defending champs can close it out Sunday at the Bradley Center. No NBA team has overcome a 3-0 deficit to win a best-of-seven series. Ray Allen led the Heat with 23 points, and his five 3-pointers gave him the NBA career playoff record with 322. Chris Bosh added 16 points and 14 rebounds for the Heat, who have won 11 straight dating to the regular season. Dwyane Wade scored only four points, but he had 11 assists. Larry Sanders and Brandon Jennings led the Bucks with 16 points each. The defending champions still haven’t played their best game. But it doesn’t matter, not when they can make one of their patented runs. After leading for much of the game, Milwaukee was trying to pull away early in the third. Jennings was fouled on a 3-point attempt and made all three free throws, then followed with a one-hand slam after Ersan Ilyasova’s steal. Luc Mbah a Moute made two sets of free throws, and the Bucks were back up 61-55 with 7:14 left in the third. But the Heat have made a habit of putting the Bucks away with runs, and this game was no different. Udonis Haslem made a layup and a pair of free throws, Mario Chalmers followed with a layup and the Heat were off on what would be a 23-7 run to close out the quarter. The Bucks got to 67-66 on a layup by Mbah a Moute, but James answered with a monster 3. After a pair of free throws by Mbah a Moute, Chalmers stripped Monta Ellis and fed James, who sprinted to the other end for the layup as the Bucks watched helplessly. Chris Andersen scored on a layup, James made another field goal and Andersen closed out the quarter with another layup to give Miami a 78-68 lead going into the fourth quarter. The Bucks never got within single digits again.

AP PHOTO

Miami Heat’s LeBron James, top, shoots over Milwaukee Bucks’ Monta Ellis (11) during the second half of Game 3 in their first-round playoff series on Thursday in Milwaukee. Not that the Bucks had much hope of a comeback, but Allen put a stop to any of those ideas with his fourth 3-pointer of the night with 8:35 to play. That broke the record of 320 set by Reggie Miller, and Allen added one more a few minutes later. “I think about when I first stepped on this floor for the very first time, I thought about what I was going to be able to contribute to this game,” said Allen, who spent his first six-plus seasons in Milwaukee. “It’s ironic that I’m on this floor right now, because this is where it all started.” And this could be where the playoffs end for the Bucks. With no team ever rally-

ing from a 3-0 deficit, Thursday night’s game was a must-win for the Bucks. Miami coach Erik Spoelstra said his team expected a “desperate, competitive response” from the Bucks, and the Milwaukee players were hoping for a boost by being back home the first playoff game at the Bradley Center in three years. Milwaukee certainly looked sharper early on. After struggling to get their entire offense going at the same time in the first two games, the Bucks finally had everything clicking in the first quarter. Sanders set the tone from the first possession, scoring on a layup and converting the three-point play after he drew a foul.

Bulls 79, Nets 76 CHICAGO — Carlos Boozer had 22 points and 16 rebounds, Luol Deng added 21 points and 10 boards, and the Chicago Bulls held off the Brooklyn Nets 79-76 in Game 3 of their first-round playoff series Thursday night. The Bulls had no field goals and two foul shots in the final 5:46 of the game, but still managed to beat the Nets for the second time in the postseason. They will try to grab a 3-1 lead when the series resumes in a quick turnaround Saturday afternoon. Brooklyn shot 35 percent for the second straight game. Brook Lopez had 22 points and nine rebounds, and Deron Williams finished with 18 points on 5-for-14 shooting.

ing the podium and screaming: “New York; Super Bowl 48.” The crowd didn’t seem to care that early on the picks were all heffers, not hoofers. No Andrew Lucks or RG3s at the top of this crop. “What you’re getting is a very athletic player, a great kid, smart kid, engineering major,” Reid said of Fisher, who really began to draw attention with a strong Senior Bowl, showing he could handle the highest level of competition. “He can play any position along the line, and loves to play the game.”

Joeckel didn’t seem any less thrilled to go No. 2. “I don’t have words for all the emotions I feel,” he said. “It’s the best feeling of my entire life.” Miami, envisioning Jordan as the next Jason Taylor, sent its first-rounder (12th overall) and this year’s second-rounder to Oakland. “Tackle is not a very sexy position,” Johnson said. “But it’s a position of dire need.” The next big trade saw the Rams move up eight spots — and send four picks to Buffalo to do so. St. Louis ended the pursuit of heft by grabbing West Virginia wide

receiver Tavon Austin, who at 5-8, 174 pounds, could probably fit in the hip pocket of any of the guys picked ahead of him. The New York Jets may have found a replacement for star cornerback Darrelle Revis — traded to Tampa Bay — when they picked Alabama All-American Dee Milliner. That was the first of three straight selections from two-time national champion Alabama: Tennessee took guard Chance Warmack and San Diego got offensive tackle D.J. Fluker. Roll Tide, indeed.

■ National Football League

Draft ■ CONTINUED FROM 15 Johnson to Philadelphia. Not a skill position player yet in sight — a stark change from the last four drafts, when quarterbacks went first. The procession of linemen continued with BYU defensive end Ziggy Ansah, born in Ghana, going to Detroit; LSU defensive end Barkevious Mingo to Cleveland; and North Carolina guard Jonathan Cooper to Arizona. “That’s a lot of love for the big boys up front, which we usually don’t get,” Fisher said.

That made for a ton of beef after the first seven picks. And they wore it well, with their designer suits that barely were ruffled when they each engulfed Roger Goodell in the now traditional bear hugs between draftee and commissioner. “It’s called a three-piece, right?” asked Joeckel, who sported blue checks with the vested suit, along with a striped tie. Fisher was only the third offensive tackle picked No. 1, joining Orlando Pace (1997) and Jake Long (2008) since

the 1970 merger of the NFL and AFL. It’s also the first time since ‘70 that offensive tackles went 1-2. Even without a high-profile passer, runner or tackler going at the outset, the fans in the home of the Rockettes were pumped. They chanted “U-S-A, U-S-A” when Goodell paid tribute to the first responders at the Boston Marathon bombings and to the victims of the West, Texas explosion. They roared when Hall of Fame quarterback Joe Namath began the countdown to the first outdoor Super Bowl in a cold-weather site by tak-


SCOREBOARD

TROY DAILY NEWS • WWW.TROYDAILYNEWS.COM

Scores

BASEBALL Baseball Expanded Standings All Times EDT AMERICAN LEAGUE East Division W L Pct GB WCGB Boston 15 7 .682 — — 12 9 .571 2½ — Baltimore 12 9 .571 2½ — New York 10 12 .455 5 2½ Tampa Bay 9 14 .391 6½ 4 Toronto Central Division W L Pct GB WCGB Kansas City 11 8 .579 — — Detroit 10 10 .500 1½ 1½ 9 9 .500 1½ 1½ Minnesota 9 12 .429 3 3 Chicago 8 11 .421 3 3 Cleveland West Division W L Pct GB WCGB Texas 15 7 .682 — — Oakland 13 9 .591 2 — 8 12 .400 6 3½ Los Angeles 8 15 .348 7½ 5 Seattle 7 15 .318 8 5½ Houston NATIONAL LEAGUE East Division W L Pct GB WCGB Atlanta 15 6 .714 — — Washington 11 11 .500 4½ 2 10 10 .500 4½ 2 New York 9 14 .391 7 4½ Philadelphia 5 17 .227 10½ 8 Miami Central Division W L Pct GB WCGB St. Louis 13 8 .619 — — Pittsburgh 13 9 .591 ½ — 13 10 .565 1 ½ Cincinnati 11 9 .550 1½ 1 Milwaukee 7 14 .333 6 5½ Chicago West Division W L Pct GB WCGB Colorado 14 7 .667 — — San Francisco 13 9 .591 1½ — Arizona 12 9 .571 2 ½ 10 11 .476 4 2½ Los Angeles 6 15 .286 8 6½ San Diego AMERICAN LEAGUE Wednesday's Games Toronto 6, Baltimore 5, 11 innings Chicago White Sox 3, Cleveland 2 Houston 10, Seattle 3 Boston 6, Oakland 5 Detroit 7, Kansas City 5 Tampa Bay 3, N.Y.Yankees 0 Texas 11, L.A. Angels 3 Thursday's Games Kansas City 8, Detroit 3, 10 innings Boston 7, Houston 2 N.Y.Yankees 5, Toronto 3 Chicago White Sox 5, Tampa Bay 2 Texas 2, Minnesota 1 Baltimore at Oakland, 10:05 p.m. L.A. Angels at Seattle, 10:10 p.m. Friday's Games Atlanta (Maholm 3-1) at Detroit (Ani.Sanchez 2-1), 7:05 p.m. Toronto (Jo.Johnson 0-1) at N.Y. Yankees (Nova 1-1), 7:05 p.m. Houston (Bedard 0-1) at Boston (Dempster 0-2), 7:10 p.m. Cleveland (Kazmir 0-0) at Kansas City (E.Santana 2-1), 8:10 p.m. Tampa Bay (Ro.Hernandez 1-3) at Chicago White Sox (Peavy 2-1), 8:10 p.m. Texas (Grimm 1-0) at Minnesota (Diamond 1-1), 8:10 p.m. Baltimore (W.Chen 1-2) at Oakland (Milone 3-1), 10:05 p.m. L.A. Angels (C.Wilson 1-0) at Seattle (Harang 0-2), 10:10 p.m. Saturday's Games Atlanta at Detroit, 1:05 p.m. Baltimore at Oakland, 4:05 p.m. Toronto at N.Y.Yankees, 4:05 p.m. Texas at Minnesota, 4:10 p.m. Cleveland at Kansas City, 7:10 p.m. Houston at Boston, 7:10 p.m. Tampa Bay at Chicago White Sox, 7:10 p.m. L.A. Angels at Seattle, 9:10 p.m. Sunday's Games Toronto at N.Y.Yankees, 1:05 p.m. Houston at Boston, 1:35 p.m. Cleveland at Kansas City, 2:10 p.m. Tampa Bay at Chicago White Sox, 2:10 p.m. Texas at Minnesota, 2:10 p.m. Baltimore at Oakland, 4:05 p.m. L.A. Angels at Seattle, 4:10 p.m. Atlanta at Detroit, 8:05 p.m. NATIONAL LEAGUE Wednesday's Games Cincinnati 1, Chicago Cubs 0 St. Louis 4, Washington 2 Colorado 6, Atlanta 5, 12 innings Arizona 3, San Francisco 2, 10 innings Pittsburgh 5, Philadelphia 3 N.Y. Mets 7, L.A. Dodgers 3, 10 innings San Diego 2, Milwaukee 1 Thursday's Games Pittsburgh 6, Philadelphia 4 L.A. Dodgers 3, N.Y. Mets 2 Washington 8, Cincinnati 1 Chicago Cubs 4, Miami 3 Colorado at Arizona, 9:40 p.m. Friday's Games Atlanta (Maholm 3-1) at Detroit (Ani.Sanchez 2-1), 7:05 p.m. Cincinnati (H.Bailey 1-1) at Washington (Zimmermann 3-1), 7:05 p.m. Chicago Cubs (Feldman 0-3) at Miami (LeBlanc 0-3), 7:10 p.m. Philadelphia (K.Kendrick 1-1) at N.Y. Mets (Gee 1-3), 7:10 p.m. Pittsburgh (J.Sanchez 0-2) at St. Louis (Lynn 3-0), 8:15 p.m. Colorado (Nicasio 2-0) at Arizona (McCarthy 0-2), 9:40 p.m. Milwaukee (Burgos 1-0) at L.A. Dodgers (Beckett 0-3), 10:10 p.m. San Francisco (Lincecum 2-0) at San Diego (Cashner 0-1), 10:10 p.m. Saturday's Games Atlanta at Detroit, 1:05 p.m. Cincinnati at Washington, 1:05 p.m. Philadelphia at N.Y. Mets, 1:05 p.m. Pittsburgh at St. Louis, 4:15 p.m. Chicago Cubs at Miami, 7:10 p.m. Colorado at Arizona, 8:10 p.m. San Francisco at San Diego, 8:40 p.m. Milwaukee at L.A. Dodgers, 9:10 p.m. Sunday's Games Chicago Cubs at Miami, 1:10 p.m. Philadelphia at N.Y. Mets, 1:10 p.m. Cincinnati at Washington, 1:35 p.m. Pittsburgh at St. Louis, 2:15 p.m. Colorado at Arizona, 4:10 p.m. Milwaukee at L.A. Dodgers, 4:10 p.m. San Francisco at San Diego, 4:10 p.m. Atlanta at Detroit, 8:05 p.m. Nationals 8, Reds 1 Cincinnati Washington ab r h bi ab r h bi Choo cf 3 0 0 0 Span cf 5 0 3 3 Cozart ss 4 0 0 0 Lmrdzz 3b 5 0 0 0 Votto 1b 4 1 1 1 Harper lf 3 1 2 1 Phillips 2b 3 0 0 0 Werth rf 4 1 1 0 Bruce rf 3 0 0 0 LaRoch 1b 4 1 0 0 Frazier 3b 3 0 0 0 Dsmnd ss 4 1 2 1 Heisey lf 3 0 0 0 Espinos 2b 4 2 2 3 Mesorc c 1 0 0 0 KSuzuk c 3 1 1 0 Arroyo p 2 0 0 0 GGnzlz p 2 0 0 0 Hoover p 0 0 0 0 Berndn ph 1 1 1 0 Paul ph 1 0 0 0 RSorin p 0 0 0 0 Ondrsk p 0 0 0 0 Totals 27 1 1 1 Totals 35 812 8 Cincinnati .................000 100 000—1

L10 7-3 6-4 6-4 6-4 3-7

Str Home Away W-2 8-5 7-2 L-1 7-5 5-4 W-1 6-4 6-5 L-1 8-4 2-8 L-1 5-8 4-6

L10 5-5 5-5 5-5 5-5 4-6

Str Home Away W-1 4-2 7-6 L-1 5-3 5-7 L-2 5-5 4-4 W-2 6-5 3-7 L-1 2-6 6-5

L10 7-3 4-6 6-4 3-7 3-7

Str Home Away W-2 7-2 8-5 L-1 6-4 7-5 L-1 6-6 2-6 L-2 4-6 4-9 L-1 4-8 3-7

L10 5-5 4-6 4-6 3-7 3-7

Str Home Away L-1 6-2 9-4 W-1 7-6 4-5 L-1 7-5 3-5 L-3 6-8 3-6 L-1 2-8 3-9

L10 6-4 7-3 7-3 9-1 3-7

Str Home Away W-3 4-2 9-6 W-3 8-4 5-5 L-1 12-4 1-6 L-1 7-5 4-4 W-1 3-5 4-9

L10 7-3 5-5 5-5 3-7 4-6

Str Home Away W-1 9-3 5-4 L-2 8-4 5-5 W-2 5-4 7-5 W-1 4-5 6-6 W-1 2-7 4-8

Washington ..............024 000 02x—8 E_Votto (2), Mesoraco (2). DP_Washington 1. LOB_Cincinnati 2, Washington 6. 2B_Harper (5), Espinosa (6). 3B_Span (1). HR_Votto (4), Harper (8), Espinosa (2). SB_Span (3). CS_Desmond (1). S_G.Gonzalez. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .IP H R ER BB SO Cincinnati Arroyo L,2-2 . . . . . . . .6 9 6 5 1 2 Hoover . . . . . . . . . . . .1 0 0 0 0 0 Ondrusek . . . . . . . . . .1 3 2 2 1 0 Washington G.Gonzalez W,2-1 . . .8 1 1 1 2 7 R.Soriano . . . . . . . . . .1 0 0 0 1 0 Umpires_Home, Paul Nauert; First, Andy Fletcher; Second, Rob Drake; Third, Sam Holbrook. T_2:23. A_24,748 (41,418). Thursday's Major League Linescores AMERICAN LEAGUE Kansas City .001100010 5—8 14 0 Detroit . . . . . .100110000 0—3 5 1 (10 innings) Shields, Collins (9), G.Holland (10) and S.Perez, Kottaras; Verlander, B.Rondon (8), Coke (9), D.Downs (10) and Avila. W_Collins 1-0. L_Coke 0-3. HRs_Kansas City, Gordon (2). Houston . . . .011 000 000—2 7 1 Boston . . . . .401 020 00x—7 11 0 Humber, Blackley (5), Cisnero (7) and J.Castro; Buchholz, A.Miller (8), Bard (9) and Saltalamacchia. W_Buchholz 5-0. L_Humber 0-5. HRs_Boston, D.Ortiz (1). Toronto . . . . .210 000 000—3 7 0 NewYork . . . .013 100 00x—5 9 1 Buehrle, Lincoln (6), Cecil (7) and Arencibia; Kuroda, Chamberlain (7), D.Robertson (8), Rivera (9) and Cervelli. W_Kuroda 3-1. L_Buehrle 1-1. Sv_Rivera (7). HRs_Toronto, Encarnacion (5), Lawrie (1). New York, V.Wells (6), Cano (7), Cervelli (3). Tampa Bay . .100 100 000—2 5 0 Chicago . . . .300 002 00x—5 7 0 Hellickson, J.Wright (7), B.Gomes (8) and Lobaton; Sale, Lindstrom (8), A.Reed (9) and Flowers. W_Sale 2-2. L_Hellickson 1-2. Sv_A.Reed (7). HRs_Tampa Bay, Lobaton (1). Chicago, A.Dunn (4). Texas . . . . . . .010 010 000—2 10 0 Minnesota . . .000 000 100—1 8 0 Tepesch, R.Ross (7), Scheppers (8), Nathan (9) and Pierzynski; Worley, Roenicke (6), Duensing (8), Fien (9) and Mauer. W_Tepesch 2-1. L_Worley 0-3. Sv_Nathan (7). HRs_Minnesota, Willingham (3). NATIONAL LEAGUE Pittsburgh . . .000 001 230—6 14 1 Philadelphia .000 102 010—4 7 1 Ja.McDonald, Ju.Wilson (6), Watson (8) and McKenry; Lee, Aumont (8), Durbin (8), Valdes (9) and Kratz. W_Ju.Wilson 2-0. L_Aumont 1-3. Sv_Watson (1). HRs_Pittsburgh, G.Sanchez (3). Los Angeles .100 000 002—3 6 1 NewYork . . . .000 001 001—2 5 0 Ryu, Jansen (8), League (9) and Ra.Hernandez; Hefner, Lyon (8), Rice (8), Parnell (9) and Recker. W_Jansen 1-0. L_Rice 1-1. Sv_League (6). HRs_New York, I.Davis (4). Chicago . . . .100 101 001—4 6 0 Miami . . . . . . .120 000 000—3 6 1 E.Jackson, H.Rondon (7), Camp (8), Marmol (9) and Castillo; Slowey, Qualls (7), M.Dunn (8), Cishek (9) and Brantly. W_Camp 1-1. L_Cishek 1-3. Sv_Marmol (2). HRs_Chicago, Schierholtz (3), Valbuena (4). Midwest League At A Glance Eastern Division Bowling Green (Rays) South Bend (D’Backs) Fort Wayne (Padres) Great Lakes (Dodgers) West Michigan (Tigers) Lansing (Blue Jays) Dayton (Reds) Lake County (Indians) Western Division

W 15 11 11 10 8 7 7 6

L 5 5 8 8 10 10 13 14

Pct. GB .750 — .688 2 .579 3½ .556 4 .444 6 .412 6½ .350 8 .300 9

W L Pct. GB Cedar Rapids (Twins) 12 5 .706 — Quad Cities (Astros) 11 7 .611 1½ Beloit (Athletics) 8 8 .500 3½ Peoria (Cardinals) 8 9 .471 4 Clinton (Mariners) 8 10 .444 4½ Wisconsin (Brewers) 7 9 .438 4½ Kane County (Cubs) 7 10 .412 5 Burlington (Angels) 6 11 .353 6 Wednesday's Games West Michigan 10, Lake County 1 Great Lakes 13, South Bend 7, 1st game Lansing 3, Dayton 1 Fort Wayne at Bowling Green, 8:05 p.m. Great Lakes at South Bend, 8:30 p.m., 2nd game Thursday's Games Clinton 3, Lake County 2 Dayton 11, Peoria 5

AND SCHEDULES

SPORTS ON TV TODAY AUTO RACING Noon SPEED — NASCAR, Sprint Cup, practice for Toyota Owners 400, at Richmond, Va. 2:30 p.m. SPEED — NASCAR, Sprint Cup, "Happy Hour Series," final practice for Toyota Owners 400, at Richmond, Va. 4 p.m. ESPN2 — NASCAR, Nationwide Series, pole qualifying for ToyotaCare 250, at Richmond, Va. 5:30 p.m. SPEED — NASCAR, Sprint Cup, pole qualifying for Toyota Owners 400, at Richmond, Va. COLLEGE BASEBALL 7:30 p.m. FSN — Texas at Baylor GOLF 9 a.m. TGC — European PGA Tour, Ballantine's Championship, second round, at Seoul, South Korea (same-day tape) 12:30 p.m. TGC — Champions Tour, Legends of Golf, first round, at Savannah, Ga. 3 p.m. TGC — PGA Tour, Zurich Classic, second round, at New Orleans 6:30 p.m. TGC — LPGA, North Texas Shootout, second round, at Irving, Texas (same-day tape) MAJOR LEAGUE BASEBALL 7 p.m. FSN — Cincinnati at Washington MLB — Regional coverage, Atlanta at Detroit or Toronto at N.Y. Yankees WGN — Chicago Cubs at Miami NBA BASKETBALL 8 p.m. ESPN — Playoffs, first round, game 3, New York at Boston 10:30 p.m. ESPN — Playoffs, first round, game 3, San Antonio at L.A. Lakers ESPN2 — Playoffs, first round, game 3, Denver at Golden State NFL FOOTBALL 6:30 p.m. ESPN — Draft, rounds 2-3, at New York 8 p.m. ESPN2 — Draft, rounds 2-3, at New York NHL HOCKEY 8 p.m. NBCSN — Calgary at Chicago Fort Wayne 6, Kane County 4 South Bend at Beloit, 7:30 p.m. Wisconsin 7, West Michigan 4 Great Lakes at Cedar Rapids, 7:35 p.m. Lansing 6, Quad Cities 2 Bowling Green 4, Burlington 2 Friday's Games Clinton at Lake County, 6:30 p.m. Peoria at Dayton, 7 p.m. Kane County at Fort Wayne, 7:05 p.m. South Bend at Beloit, 7:30 p.m. Great Lakes at Cedar Rapids, 7:35 p.m. West Michigan at Wisconsin, 7:35 p.m. Lansing at Quad Cities, 8 p.m. Burlington at Bowling Green, 8:05 p.m. Saturday's Games Clinton at Lake County, 1 p.m. West Michigan at Wisconsin, 2:05 p.m. South Bend at Beloit, 3 p.m. Kane County at Fort Wayne, 5:05 p.m. Great Lakes at Cedar Rapids, 6:05 p.m. Peoria at Dayton, 7 p.m. Lansing at Quad Cities, 8 p.m. Burlington at Bowling Green, 8:05 p.m. Sunday's Games Burlington at Dayton, 2 p.m. South Bend at Wisconsin, 2:05 p.m. Great Lakes at Quad Cities, 3 p.m. West Michigan at Beloit, 3 p.m. Lansing at Cedar Rapids, 3:05 p.m. Clinton at Fort Wayne, 3:05 p.m. Kane County at Lake County, 4 p.m. Peoria at Bowling Green, 6:05 p.m.

AUTO RACING NASCAR Sprint Cup Top 12 in Points 1. J.Johnson.....................................311 2. K.Kahne .......................................274 3. Bra.Keselowski.............................273 4. G.Biffle..........................................264 5. D.Earnhardt Jr..............................263 6. C.Edwards....................................262 7. Ky.Busch.......................................257 8. M.Kenseth....................................252 9. C.Bowyer......................................247 10. P.Menard ....................................240 11. J.McMurray ................................227 12. K.Harvick....................................224

HOCKEY National Hockey League All Times EST EASTERN CONFERENCE Atlantic Division GP W L OT Pts GF GA z-Pittsburgh 47 35 12 0 70157116 x-N.Y. Rangers47 25 18 4 54126112 x-N.Y. Islanders4724 17 6 54138137 New Jersey 47 19 18 10 48112125 Philadelphia 47 22 22 3 47131140 Northeast Division GP W L OT Pts GF GA x-Boston 46 28 13 5 61127102 x-Montreal 47 28 14 5 61145125 x-Toronto 47 26 16 5 57144129 x-Ottawa 46 24 16 6 54111100 Buffalo 47 20 21 6 46123142 Southeast Division GP W L OT Pts GF GA y-Washington 47 26 18 3 55146128 Winnipeg 48 24 21 3 51128144 Carolina 47 19 24 4 42125152 Tampa Bay 47 18 25 4 40145145 Florida 47 14 27 6 34107168 WESTERN CONFERENCE Central Division GP W L OT Pts GF GA z-Chicago 46 35 6 5 75151 98 x-St. Louis 47 28 17 2 58126114 Detroit 47 23 16 8 54121115 Columbus 47 23 17 7 53117118 Nashville 47 16 22 9 41110136 Northwest Division GP W L OT Pts GF GA y-Vancouver 46 26 13 7 59124111 Minnesota 46 25 18 3 53118120 Calgary 47 19 24 4 42127157 Edmonton 46 17 22 7 41112131 Colorado 46 15 24 7 37110145 Pacific Division GP W L OT Pts GF GA y-Anaheim 46 29 11 6 64134112 x-Los Angeles47 26 16 5 57130116 x-San Jose 47 25 15 7 57122113 Phoenix 46 20 18 8 48116123 Dallas 47 22 21 4 48130139 NOTE: Two points for a win, one point for overtime loss. x-clinched playoff spot y-clinched division z-clinched conference Wednesday's Games Tampa Bay 5, Toronto 2 Detroit 3, Los Angeles 1 Chicago 4, Edmonton 1 Phoenix 2, San Jose 1 Thursday's Games Philadelphia 2, N.Y. Islanders 1

Ottawa 2, Washington 1, OT N.Y. Rangers 4, Carolina 3, OT New Jersey 3, Pittsburgh 2 Toronto 4, Florida 0 Detroit 5, Nashville 2 Boston 2, Tampa Bay 0 Montreal 4, Winnipeg 2 St. Louis 4, Calgary 1 Columbus 3, Dallas 1 Anaheim at Vancouver, 10 p.m. Friday's Games N.Y. Islanders at Buffalo, 7 p.m. Edmonton at Minnesota, 8 p.m. Calgary at Chicago, 8:30 p.m. Colorado at Phoenix, 10 p.m. Saturday's Games New Jersey at N.Y. Rangers, 3 p.m. Detroit at Dallas, 7 p.m. Nashville at Columbus, 7 p.m. Florida at Tampa Bay, 7 p.m. Boston at Washington, 7 p.m. Philadelphia at Ottawa, 7 p.m. Montreal at Toronto, 7 p.m. Minnesota at Colorado, 7:30 p.m. Carolina at Pittsburgh, 7:30 p.m. Chicago at St. Louis, 8 p.m. Phoenix at Anaheim, 10 p.m. Vancouver at Edmonton, 10 p.m. San Jose at Los Angeles, 10:30 p.m.

BASKETBALL NBA Playoff Glance All Times EDT FIRST ROUND (x-if necessary) (Best-of-7) EASTERN CONFERENCE Miami vs. Milwaukee Sunday, April 21: Miami 110, Milwaukee 87 Tuesday, April 23: Miami 98, Milwaukee 86 Thursday, April 25: Miami 104, Milwaukee 91, Miami leads series 3-0 Sunday, April 28: Miami at Milwaukee, 3:30 p.m. x-Tuesday, April 30: Milwaukee at Miami, TBA x-Thursday, May 2:Miami at Milwaukee, TBA x-Saturday, May 4: Milwaukee at Miami, TBA NewYork vs. Boston Saturday, April 20: NewYork 85, Boston 78 Tuesday, April 23: New York 87, Boston 71, New York leads series 2-0 Friday, April 26: New York at Boston, 8 p.m. Sunday, April 28: New York at Boston, 1 p.m. x-Wednesday, May 1: Boston at New York, TBA x-Friday, May 3: New York at Boston, TBA x-Sunday, May 5: Boston at New York, TBA Indiana vs. Atlanta Sunday, April 21: Indiana 107, Atlanta 90 Wednesday, April 24: Indiana 113, Atlanta 98, Indiana leads series 2-0 Saturday, April 27: Indiana at Atlanta, 7 p.m. Monday, April 29: Indiana at Atlanta, 7:30 p.m. x-Wednesday, May 1: Atlanta at Indiana, TBA x-Friday, May 3: Indiana at Atlanta, TBA x-Sunday, May 5: Atlanta at Indiana, TBA Brooklyn vs. Chicago Saturday, April 20: Brooklyn 106, Chicago 89 Monday, April 22: Chicago 90, Brooklyn 82 Thursday, April 25: Chicago 79, Brooklyn 76, Chicago leads series 2-1 Saturday, April 27: Brooklyn at Chicago, 2 p.m. Monday, April 29: Chicago at Brooklyn, 7 p.m. x-Thursday, May 2: Brooklyn at Chicago, TBA x-Saturday, May 4:Chicago at Brooklyn, TBA WESTERN CONFERENCE Oklahoma City vs. Houston Sunday, April 21: Oklahoma City 120, Houston 91 Wednesday, April 24: Oklahoma City 105, Houston 102, Oklahoma City leads series 2-0 Saturday, April 27: Oklahoma City at Houston, 9:30 p.m. Monday, April 29: Oklahoma City at Houston, 9:30 p.m. x-Wednesday, May 1: Houston at Oklahoma City, TBA x-Friday, May 3: Oklahoma City at Houston, TBA

Friday, April 26, 2013 x-Sunday, May 5: Houston at Oklahoma City, TBA San Antonio vs. L.A. Lakers Sunday, April 21: San Antonio 91, L.A. Lakers 79 Wednesday, April 24: San Antonio 102, L.A. Lakers 91, San Antonio leads series 2-0 Friday, April 26: San Antonio at L.A. Lakers, 10:30 p.m. Sunday, April 28: San Antonio at L.A. Lakers, 7 p.m. x-Tuesday, April 30: L.A. Lakers at San Antonio, TBA x-Thursday, May 2: San Antonio at L.A. Lakers, TBA x-Saturday, May 4: L.A. Lakers at San Antonio, TBA Denver vs. Golden State Saturday, April 20: Denver 97, Golden State 95 Tuesday, April 23: Golden State 131, Denver 117, series tied 1-1 Friday, April 26: Denver at Golden State, 10:30 p.m. Sunday, April 28: Denver at Golden State, 9:30 p.m. x-Tuesday, April 30: Golden State at Denver, TBA x-Thursday, May 2: Denver at Golden State, TBA x-Saturday, May 4: Golden State at Denver, TBA L.A. Clippers vs. Memphis Saturday, April 20: L.A. Clippers 112, Memphia 91 Monday, April 22: L.A. Clippers 93, Memphis 91, L.A. Clippers leads series 20 Thursday, April 25: L.A. Clippers at Memphis, 9:30 p.m. Saturday, April 27: L.A. Clippers at Memphis, 4:30 p.m. x-Tuesday, April 30: Memphis at L.A. Clippers, TBA x-Friday, May 3: L.A. Clippers at Memphis, TBA x-Sunday, May 5: Memphis at L.A. Clippers, TBA

GOLF PGA-Zurich Classic Scores Thursday At TPC Louisiana Avondale, La. Purse: $6.6 million Yardage: 7,425; Par: 72 (36-36) First Round a-denotes amateur Ricky Barnes........................34-30—64 Boo Weekley ........................32-33—65 Lucas Glover ........................31-34—65 D.A. Points ............................33-33—66 Morgan Hoffmann................31-35—66 Charlie Beljan.......................32-35—67 Matt Jones............................31-36—67 Luke Guthrie.........................34-33—67 Ernie Els ...............................34-33—67 Rickie Fowler........................32-35—67 Billy Horschel........................32-35—67 Chris Kirk..............................33-34—67 Stephen Ames .....................31-36—67 Jimmy Walker.......................34-33—67 Bobby Gates.........................32-35—67 Matt Every ............................34-34—68 Harris English.......................36-32—68 Graham DeLaet ...................36-32—68 Jason Kokrak........................33-35—68 Kevin Stadler ........................34-34—68 Jason Bohn ..........................33-35—68 Brian Davis ...........................33-35—68 Justin Rose...........................33-35—68 Gary Woodland ....................32-36—68 Tommy Gainey .....................33-35—68 J.J. Henry..............................34-34—68 Trevor Immelman .................33-35—68 Chad Campbell ....................34-34—68 Chris DiMarco ......................35-33—68 James Driscoll......................34-34—68 Nick Watney..........................34-35—69 Bob Estes.............................33-36—69 Keegan Bradley....................33-36—69 Scott Brown..........................35-34—69 Justin Bolli.............................36-33—69 Tag Ridings...........................35-35—70 Jason Dufner........................35-35—70 Stuart Appleby......................35-35—70 Sean O'Hair..........................34-36—70 Brandt Jobe..........................38-32—70 Greg Chalmers.....................36-34—70 Doug LaBelle II.....................37-33—70 Alistair Presnell.....................36-34—70 D.H. Lee................................35-35—70 Andrew Svoboda..................33-37—70 Jin Park.................................34-36—70 Jerry Kelly.............................35-35—70 Brendan Steele ....................36-34—70 Nicolas Colsaerts.................33-37—70 Ryan Palmer.........................34-36—70 Ken Duke..............................35-35—70 Richard H. Lee .....................34-36—70 Jeff Maggert .........................36-34—70 Chris Stroud .........................33-37—70 Steve LeBrun........................35-35—70 Lee Williams .........................34-36—70 Brad Fritsch ..........................38-32—70 D.J.Trahan ............................37-34—71 Fabian Gomez......................38-33—71 Chez Reavie.........................35-36—71 Nicholas Thompson.............34-37—71 Jonas Blixt ............................37-34—71 Rory Sabbatini......................35-36—71 Retief Goosen ......................36-35—71 David Lynn............................35-36—71 Jeff Gove ..............................35-36—71 Brian Stuard .........................35-36—71 Charley Hoffman..................36-35—71 Rod Pampling.......................35-36—71 Billy Mayfair...........................35-36—71 Aaron Watkins ......................36-35—71 Jim Herman..........................35-36—71 Shawn Stefani ......................36-35—71 Cameron Percy ....................35-36—71 Luke List ...............................35-36—71 John Senden........................34-37—71 Cameron Tringale.................35-36—71 Scott Stallings.......................35-36—71 James Hahn.........................38-33—71 Roberto Castro.....................35-36—71 David Hearn .........................34-37—71 Henrik Norlander..................37-34—71 John Peterson ......................37-34—71 Zack Fischer.........................35-36—71 John Merrick.........................36-36—72 David Toms...........................35-37—72 Kyle Stanley..........................37-35—72 Michael Bradley....................36-36—72 Mike Weir..............................37-35—72 Joey Snyder III .....................36-36—72 Brendon de Jonge ...............33-39—72 Martin Flores ........................34-38—72 Patrick Reed.........................36-36—72 Matt Fast...............................37-35—72 Michael Letzig ......................37-35—72 Hunter Haas.........................37-35—72 Erik Compton .......................38-34—72 Charlie Wi .............................37-35—72 Jesper Parnevik....................36-36—72 Justin Hicks...........................36-36—72 Josh Teater ...........................36-36—72 Colt Knost.............................36-36—72 Scott Langley........................39-33—72 a-Guan Tianlang ..................37-35—72 Eric Meierdierks ...................37-35—72 Camilo Villegas.....................36-37—73 Lee Janzen...........................38-35—73 Jeff Overton..........................36-37—73 Aaron Baddeley ...................39-34—73 Bubba Watson......................36-37—73 Justin Leonard......................36-37—73 Joe Ogilvie............................38-35—73

17

Charles Howell III.................38-35—73 Steven Bowditch...................34-39—73 Marcel Siem .........................36-37—73 Peter Tomasulo.....................36-37—73 Ken Looper...........................37-36—73 Ross Fisher ..........................37-36—73 Kevin Sutherland..................37-36—73 David Lingmerth...................37-36—73 Robert Streb.........................35-38—73 Seung-Yul Noh .....................38-35—73 Thorbjorn Olesen.................37-36—73 Derek Ernst ..........................37-36—73 Tim Herron ...........................38-36—74 Gary Christian ......................39-35—74 Scott Piercy ..........................36-38—74 Robert Allenby......................38-36—74 Johnson Wagner..................38-36—74 Ben Crane ............................36-38—74 Brian Harman.......................37-37—74 Darron Stiles.........................39-35—74 George McNeill ....................40-34—74 LPGA-North Texas Shootout Scores Thursday At Las Colinas Country Club Irving, Texas Purse: $1.3 million Yardage: 6,410; Par: 71 (36-35) (a-amateur) First Round Caroline Masson..................32-32—64 Carlota Ciganda...................34-32—66 Mi Jung Hur..........................35-32—67 Felicity Johnson....................34-33—67 Mo Martin .............................36-31—67 Kristy McPherson.................36-31—67 Inbee Park ............................33-34—67 a-Taylor Coleman.................37-31—68 Christina Kim........................34-34—68 Hee Young Park....................34-34—68 Moira Dunn...........................34-35—69 Haeji Kang............................34-35—69 Jessica Korda.......................34-35—69 Azahara Munoz....................35-34—69 Angela Stanford ...................35-34—69 Yani Tseng ............................33-36—69 Karlin Beck ...........................37-33—70 Na Yeon Choi........................36-34—70 Kathleen Ekey ......................36-34—70 Veronica Felibert ..................34-36—70 Julieta Granada....................35-35—70 Marcy Hart............................34-36—70 Vicky Hurst ...........................35-35—70 Sara Maude Juneau ............36-34—70 Cristie Kerr............................37-33—70 I.K. Kim..................................33-37—70 Brittany Lincicome................35-35—70 Kayla Mortellaro ...................35-35—70 Suzann Pettersen.................37-33—70 Hee Kyung Seo....................35-35—70 Jiyai Shin ..............................34-36—70 Amanda Blumenherst..........35-36—71 Christel Boeljon....................35-36—71 Silvia Cavalleri......................36-35—71 Chella Choi...........................36-35—71 Shanshan Feng....................36-35—71 Meaghan Francella ..............37-34—71 Caroline Hedwall..................36-35—71 Daniela Iacobelli...................36-35—71 Karine Icher..........................34-37—71 Jennifer Johnson..................36-35—71 Moriya Jutanugarn...............35-36—71 Sarah Kemp .........................35-36—71 Ryann O'Toole......................39-32—71 So Yeon Ryu.........................37-34—71 Lizette Salas.........................35-36—71 Nicole Smith .........................32-39—71 Kris Tamulis ..........................36-35—71 Lexi Thompson.....................36-35—71 Michelle Wie .........................35-36—71 Nicole Castrale.....................37-35—72 Austin Ernst ..........................36-36—72 Jodi Ewart Shadoff ..............36-36—72 Maria Hjorth..........................37-35—72 Pat Hurst...............................35-37—72 Eun-Hee Ji............................38-34—72 Mindy Kim.............................37-35—72 Victoria Elizabeth .................37-35—72 Candie Kung.........................37-35—72 Brittany Lang ........................36-36—72 Ilhee Lee...............................35-37—72 Jee Young Lee......................37-35—72 Rebecca Lee-Bentham .......35-37—72 Stacy Lewis ..........................39-33—72 Lisa McCloskey....................34-38—72 Sydnee Michaels..................38-34—72 Jane Park..............................36-36—72 Thidapa Suwannapura ........40-32—72 Wendy Ward.........................37-35—72 Julia Boland..........................36-37—73 Esther Choe .........................37-36—73 Paula Creamer.....................37-36—73 Laura Davies ........................37-36—73 Natalie Gulbis.......................39-34—73 Hee-Won Han ......................36-37—73 Nicole Jeray..........................38-35—73 Lorie Kane............................37-36—73 Maude-Aimee Leblanc ........37-36—73 Paige Mackenzie..................38-35—73 a-Haley Mills.........................37-36—73 Paola Moreno.......................36-37—73 Becky Morgan ......................37-36—73 Anna Nordqvist.....................35-38—73 Ji Young Oh...........................37-36—73 Jin Young Pak .......................37-36—73 Pornanong Phatlum.............39-34—73 Beatriz Recari.......................38-35—73

FOOTBALL 2013 NFL Draft Selections At New York Thursday First Round 1. Kansas City, Eric Fisher, ot, Central Michigan. 2. Jacksonville, Luke Joeckel, ot, Texas A&M. 3. Miami (from Oakland), Dion Jordan, de, Oregon. 4. Philadelphia, Lane Johnson, ot, Oklahoma. 5. Detroit, Ziggy Ansah, de, BYU. 6. Cleveland, Barkevious Mingo, de, LSU. 7. Arizona, Jonathan Cooper, g, North Carolina. 8. St. Louis (from Buffalo), Tavon Austin, wr, West Virginia. 9. New York Jets, Dee Milliner, db, Alabama. 10. Tennessee, Chance Warmack, g, Alabama. 11. San Diego, D.J. Fluker, ot, Alabama. 12. Oakland (from Miami), D.J. Hayden, db, Houston. 13. New York Jets (from Tampa Bay), Sheldon Richardson, dt, Missouri. 14. Carolina, Star Lotulelei, dt, Utah. 15. New Orleans, Kenny Vaccaro, db, Texas. 16. Buffalo (from St. Louis), EJ Manuel, qb, Florida State. 17. Pittsburgh, Jarvis Jones, lb, Georgia. 18. San Francisco (from Dallas), Eric Reid, db, LSU. 19. New York Giants, Justin Pugh, ot, Syracuse. 20. Chicago, Tyler Long, g, Oregon. 21. Cincinnati, Tyler Eifert, te, Notre Dame. 22. Atlanta (from Washington through St. Louis), Desmond Trufant, db, Washington. 23. Minnesota, Sharrif Floyd, dt, Florida. 24. Indianapolis, Bjoern Werner, de, Floida State. 25. Minnesota (from Seattle), Xavier Rhodes, db, Florida State.


18

SPORTS

Friday, April 26, 2013

■ Baseball/Softball

TROY DAILY NEWS • WWW.TROYDAILYNEWS.COM

■ Major League Baseball

Roundup

AP PHOTO

Washington Nationals’ Ian Desmond (20) is tagged out by Cincinnati Reds first baseman Joey Votto (19) on the throw from catcher Devin Mesoraco (39) during the eighth inning at Nationals Park Thursday in Washington.

Tippecanoe’s B.J. Donathan makes contact Friday against Graham.

BUCKEYE SPRINGFIELD

GUN SHOW BUY • SELL • TRADE • BUY • SELL • TRADE

2386720

SPRINGFIELD

■ CONTINUED FROM 15 Langdon added his fifth home run of the season, a two-run shot, and Ben Hughes was 2 for 3 with two doubles and three RBIs. PHOTOS COURTESY LEE WOOLERY/SPEEDSHOT PHOTO Zack Blair was also 2 for 2 and Cameron Tippecanoe’s Kristin Mace swings away at a pitch Thursday against Graham. Johnson doubled. WEST LIBERTY — Ferrell went the disThe Miami East Vikings tance, striking out four put away Thursday’s game and scattering six hits for at West Liberty-Salem the win. with one big inning, scor“Reid pitched well. He ing eight in the top of the gave us some much-needfifth to finish off an 11-0 ed innings,” Cahill said. victory. “He stepped up and gave a Paige Kiesewetter was good effort.” 2 for 3 with a double and Tippecanoe travels to three RBIs, while Lindsey Olentangy High School on Brookhart and Kris Saturday for doubleheader Bigelow were each 2 for 3 against Olentangy and for the Vikings. Olentangy Liberty. “We weren’t swinging Grah.....001 000 0 — 1 6 0 the bats well in the first Tipp .....002 230 x — 7 9 0 Ferrell and Gilliam. WP — few innings,” Miami East Ferrell. 2B — Hughes 2 (T), coach Brian Kadel said. Johnson (T). HR — Langdon (T). “But we made some good Records: Graham 4-11, 3-5, adjustments, and we really Tippecanoe 15-2, 9-1. opened it up in the fifth.” Miami East 7, Kiesewetter also got WL-Salem 4 the win, scattering seven WEST LIBERTY — hits over five innings. Barry Coomes loves it “She did a good job of when a plan comes togethworking out of some situaer. tions,” Kadel said. “She The Miami East coach had no walks, and the watched as Brandon Kirk defense had no errors, so laid down a perfect suicide we didn’t give them any squeeze bunt in the top of extra opportunities. Plus the eighth inning we doubled some people up Thursday at West Libertyand made some plays on Salem, bringing home the Tippecanoe’s Bri Eichbaum pitches during a victory defense.” go-ahead runs in a comeagainst Graham Thursday. Miami East (11-4) travfrom-behind 7-4 Viking els to Twin Valley South victory. after Middletown offense early — and added “When you practice Christian was forced to some insurance with a today for a Cross County something like that and it cancel their originally- four-run sixth inning — Conference matchup. ME ...........003 08 — 11 9 0 works in a game, it feels scheduled trip to Troy. and Bri Eichbaum and the WL-S..........000 00 — 0 7 1 good,” Coomes said. Troy Christian (5-5) defense kept Graham from Kiesewetter and O’Neal. Garrett Mitchell, who managed only two hits and breaking through in a 7-2 Loffing and Kendall. WP — was 3 for 4 in the game, led committed all three of its crossover victory Kiesewetter. LP — Loffing. 2B — off the inning with a single errors in a six-run third Thursday that kept the Kiesewetter (M). Records: Miami East 11-4. and stole second, and Alex inning for Lehman. Red Devils perfect in CBC Newton 9, MV 1 Brewer (2 for 3) intention“We had three errors play. PLEASANT HILL — ally walked behind him. A that turned into four Eichbaum walked five After falling behind 1-0 in double steal put runners unearned runs, but other and gave up six hits, and the second, Newton’s bats at second and third, and than that one inning our the defense did commit woke up and did plenty of Kirk dropped down a bunt defense played pretty two errors. But Eichbaum work, while Kirsten to put pressure on West well,” Troy Christian coach also struck out six, and Burden and the young Liberty to make a play — Bill Campbell said. “And Graham (5-12, 2-6) could- Indian defense worked but the throw home our offense has really suf- n’t get anything in clutch their way out of trouble in attempting to get Mitchell fered in these last five moments. a 9-1 Cross County was bad, bringing in both games, too. “They had the bases Conference victory over runners and starting a “We’ve had a lot of kids loaded a couple of times Mississinawa Valley three-run inning. out right now, but we’re and we got out of it with Thursday. Kirk was also 2 for 3 not going to make excuses. minimal damage,” Tackett Burden struck out 14 and Dylan Kinnison, who We’re just trying to get it said. “One of Bri’s two runs and gave up 10 hits, and got the win in relief on the all back together. We’re was earned. And they the defense committed mound, was 2 for 4 as the working hard to fix it.” actually had more people zero errors behind her in Vikings scored two in the Troy Christian will on base than we did in the the win. sixth to tie the game and take on the Cincinnati game — but they stranded “We got some good force extra innings. Trail Blazers today at the 10. Our defense stepped defense today, and Kirsten “What really helps is Athletes in Action complex up.” got some big strikeouts when you’ve got everyone in Xenia. Stef Kraska tripled, when we needed them,” contributing and they’re Leh ..........026 02 — 10 6 0 drove in a run and scored Newton coach Kirk Kadel TC ..............000 00 — 0 2 3 all staying and playing twice for the Devils, said. “We’re getting better. Profitt and Schutt. Sims and together,” Coomes said. Kolker. WP — Profitt. LP — Sims. Ashley Bruce had a hit We’re still learning and “Guys are cheering for Records: Troy Christian 5-5. and two RBIs and Cassie trying to get over the each other, picking each Gingerich, Megan hump.” • Softball other up. When everyone Rittenhouse and Kristin Tippecanoe 7, Burden was also 2 for 2 says ‘I’ve got your back,’ Mace each had a hit and a with a double, Laura Oaks Graham 2 that really helps.” TIPP CITY — run. was 2 for 3 with a triple Miami East (8-3) trav- Tippecanoe coach Charles Tippecanoe travels to and Megan Rutledge and els to Twin Valley South Tackett knows that games Springfield Shawnee Kasey Thompson were today. like Thursday’s will only Monday to start a key both 2 for 4 in the win. ME......010 102 03 — 7 9 4 CBC stretch. strengthen his team. Newton travels to WL-S ..102 100 00 — 4 7 1 “We’re in the driver’s Loudonville tonight for the “We didn’t hit the ball WP — Kinnison. Records: like we’ve been hitting seat right now, but our last first Miami East 8-3. round of the recently,” he said. “But six league games are Champions’ Lehman 10, Challenge, sometimes you’re going to huge,” Tackett said. Troy Christian 0 facing host Loudonville. Grah.....000 001 1 — 2 6 5 TROY — The Troy have to win games like MV......010 000 0 — 1 10 2 Tipp .....021 004 0 — 7 8 2 New....004 212 x — 9 11 0 Christian Eagles strug- this. Not all of them can be WP — Eichbaum. 3B — Dirkson and Scholl. Burden gled through their fifth blowouts.” Kraska (T). Records: Graham 5- and Studebaker. WP — Burden. Tippecanoe (16-4, 10-0 12, 2-6, Tippecanoe 16-4, 10-0. straight loss Thursday, LP — Dirkson. 2B — Burden (N). Buckeye Miami East 11, falling to Lehman 10-0 in Central 3B — Oaks (N). Records: Newton 7-7, 3-3. WL-Salem 0 an impromptu matchup Conference) got enough

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Gonzalez 1-hits Reds in 8-1 win WASHINGTON (AP) — Gio Gonzalez allowed just one hit in eight innings, and Denard Span and Danny Espinosa drove in three runs each to lead the Washington Nationals to a 8-1 win over the Reds on Cincinnati Thursday night. Gonzalez, who allowed 12 runs in his previous nine innings, retired the first 11 Reds batters before Joey Votto homered with two outs in the fourth. He struck out seven and walked two. By the time Votto homered, Gonzalez (2-1) had a 6-0 lead. Washington had lost nine of 12 and their previous six home games. Cincinnati has lost six of its seven road games. The Nationals scored two runs in the bottom of the second against Bronson Arroyo (2-2). With one out, Ian Desmond singled. He scored on Espinosa’s double. Kurt Suzuki singled.

Gonzalez moved Suzuki to second with a bunt, and Espinosa scored on an infield single by Span. Washington took a 6-0 lead in the third. Bryce Harper led off with his eighth home run of the year, the most any National has hit in April. Harper also doubled. He has 11 multi-hit games in the 22 Washington has played. Following Harper’s home run, Jayson Werth singled. Adam LaRoche, who had struck out six consecutive times, reached on a two-base throwing error by Votto at first. Werth scored on an infield out by Desmond. Espinosa hit his second home run of the year, a two-run shot, and Washington led by six. Arroyo allowed six runs five earned in six innings. He walked one and struck out two. Span’s two-run triple in the eighth made it 8-1. Votto’s home run was his fourth of the year.

■ Cycling

USADA head wants Armstrong’s info PARIS (AP) — The head of the U.S. Anti-Doping Agency wants Lance Armstrong to come forward with information detailing the alleged complicity of cycling’s governing body in his doping. Travis Tygart appeared at a French government hearing in Paris on Thursday to discuss ways to improve the fight against doping. After the USADA’S scathing report on systematic doping by Armstrong and his teams, he was stripped of his seven Tour de France titles and banned from elite sport for life. Cycling body UCI has been accused of covering up suspicious samples from Armstrong, accepting financial donations from him and helping him avoid detection in doping tests. It denied those accusations in a statement Thursday. During the French Senate hearing, Tygart said he had “evidence of the UCI’s involvement in this affair,” and Armstrong could hold the key to revealing the extent of that involvement. “Armstrong led us to believe during the course of our interaction with him that he had evidence of their complicity in this situation, and of course we’ve developed additional infor-

mation that will come out through our process, that I can’t comment on right now,” Tygart said in an interview with The Associated Press. Tygart, who said he last spoke with Armstrong about a month ago, hopes the rider changes his mind and details what happened during his reign as cycling’s undisputed superstar. “We’re hopeful at some point he’ll come in and be truthful. I think he could provide a lot of information,” Tygart told the AP after speaking before the Senate for about 1 hours. “We certainly are under the impression based on our conversations around our meeting back in December that he has information and evidence that would be extremely helpful and powerful in trying to set cycling on a new path.” Armstrong declined comment to the AP about Tygart’s statement. The UCI said in a statement that it “categorically rejects allegations of collusion.” “The fact is that Mr. Tygart has no evidence of any wrongdoing and has chosen to make headlines on a convenient interpretation of a conversation he had with Lance Armstrong,” cycling’s governing body said.

■ Golf

Barnes leads Zurich Classic by 1 AVONDALE, La. (AP) — Ricky Barnes birdied six of the last eight holes Thursday at rain-softened TPC Louisiana to take a one-stroke lead in the Zurich Classic. Barnes finished the opening round with an eagle, seven birdies and a bogey for an 8-under 64. Boo Weekley and Lucas Glover were a stroke back, and D.A. Points and Morgan Hoffmann shot 66.

Guan Tianlang, the 14year-old Chinese amateur playing on a sponsor exemption, opened with an even-par 72, highlighted by a 5-wood that he hit to a foot on the par-3 17th. He tied for 58th in the Masters after becoming the youngest player to make the cut at Augusta National, and said Thursday that he will play in a U.S. Open qualifier in two weeks in Dallas.

Defending champion Jason Dufner shot 70, and 2011 winner Bubba Watson had a 73. • North Texas LPGA Shootout IRVING, Texas — LPGA Tour rookie Caroline Masson shot a bogey-free 7under 64 to take a twostroke lead over Carlota Ciganda after the first round of the inaugural North Texas LPGA Shootout.

Inbee Park, the No. 1 women’s player in the world, was in a group at 67. While Masson has made only one of five cuts in her first LPGA season, the 23year-old German played on the Ladies European Tour the last three years and won the 2012 South African Women’s Open. She closed with a curling putt from about 18 feet on the ninth hole, her longest birdie putt of the day.


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