Monday OPINION
SPORTS
Homeowner’s insurance: Re/de-coded
Browns sloppy in loss to Titans
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October 3, 2011 It’s Where You Live! Volume 103, No. 237
INSIDE
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Protesters: We’re in for the long haul
Filipinos still trapped on roofs Rescuers scrambled Sunday to deliver food and water to hundreds of villagers stuck on rooftops for days because of flooding in the northern Philippines, where back-to-back typhoons have left at least 59 people dead. Typhoon Nalgae slammed ashore in northeastern Isabela province Saturday, then barreled across the main island of Luzon’s mountainous north and agricultural plains, which were still sodden from fierce rain and winds unleashed by a howler just days earlier.
See Page 10.
CORRECTION The editors reviewed the city of Troy sign ordinance following the Letter to the Editor regarding political signs, which was printed in the Troy Daily News on Sept. 28. The City of Troy amended the sign ordinance on Feb. 2, 2009, and eliminated the restriction concerning when political signs may be placed in yards. That amendment complied with recent Ohio Supreme Court decisions regarding free speech. There was nothing illegal or unethical about the placement of political signs last weekend as alleged in that particular Letter to the Editor. The Troy Daily News apologizes for the error.
Family finds missing father A 67-year-old man who survived for five or six days on leaves and creek water after his car plunged 200 feet off a remote mountain road was found by his children, who tracked him down like television detectives. Chardonnay, Sean and Lisa Lavau appeared on NBC’s “Today” show Friday, describing how they found their father’s car and his makeshift camp in a ravine Thursday off Lake Hughes Road in the Angeles National Forest, a rugged landscape lying between metropolitan Los Angeles and the Mojave Desert.
See Page 6.
INSIDE TODAY Advice ............................8 Calendar.........................3 Classified......................14 Comics ...........................9 Deaths ............................5 Norman T. Counts Horoscopes ....................9 Opinion ...........................4 Sports...........................11 TV...................................8
OUTLOOK Today Pleasantly cool High: 65° Low: 40° Tuesday Nice High: 70° Low: 46°
NEW YORK (AP) — Protesters who have been camping out in Financial Manhattan’s District say their movement has grown and become more organized, and they have no intention of stopping as they move into their third week, following the second weekend in a row of mass arrests. The Occupy Wall Street demonstration started out AP PHOTO Nikki Angelo of Dobbs Ferry, N.Y., greets inquisitive small last month, with less pedestrians at the Occupy Wall Street protest’s wel- than a dozen college stucoming table. dents spending days and
nights in Zuccotti Park, a private plaza off Broadway. It has grown sizably, however, both in New York City and elsewhere as people in other communities across the country display their solidarity in similar protests. The event has drawn protesters of diverse ages and occupations who are speaking out against corporate greed, social inequality, global climate change and other concerns. Kira Moyer-Sims, 19, of
• See WALL on Page 2
Al-Qaida bomb maker not killed
Trails over trials Mendez doesn’t let blindness stop her from reaching goals BY COLIN FOSTER Sports Writer cfoster@tdnpublishing.com There are obstacles in life that people are forced to overcome. And when faced with these obstacles, it’s how people respond that defines who they are. Troy Christian 14-yearold freshman Cassandra Mendez has dealt with obstacles all of her life. With a 22/50 visual acuity, she is legally blind, although she can see very limited. “It’s kind of hard to get around and see things,” Mendez explained. “I mean, I can function totally normally, but I’ve just had to adapt to certain things like using different equipment to see things on the board during school. I don’t let it get to me. It hasn’t always been easy, but I’ve adapted the best I can. I can’t let it get to me. I can’t just sit around and mope about how I can’t see things. It’s not a big limitation for me anymore.” Mendez was born this way. And apparently, born to run. Mendez went out for the cross country team in seventh grade and she has stuck with it ever since. But what started on a whim, grew into an understanding of, and a passion for the sport of cross country. “I only did it (ran cross country) to please a friend,” Mendez said. “That was pretty much
Portland, Ore., said things have changed a lot since the protest started, with the group much more organized. “We have a protocol for most things,” she said, including what to do when people are arrested in terms of getting legal help. She said the protest would only continue. “They thought we were going to leave and we haven’t left,” she said of city officials.
STAFF PHOTO/COLIN FOSTER
Cassandra Mendez, center, competes in the Miami County Invitational at Lowry Complex in West Milton Saturday.
TROY
Next Door
my whole purpose. But I’ve realized that it takes so much to run. What you have to do is just so … It characterizes you. I praise God for all the things that I am able to do and that I am fully functional. I’m just so blessed to have such great coaches that have pushed me through tons of hard days. It’s been a journey, but it’s been a great experience.” Most people who run have to battle fatigue, dehydration and injuries, but imagine trying to run a 3.1 mile race on a course with trails, hills and trees all around, without any depth perception — and going a moderately fast pace, at that. The race process is much different for Mendez than a typical runner, as she needs a guide to run along side her to help direct and navigate her through the course. “Typically I have a
If you know someone who should be featured in our Next Door profile, contact City Editor Melody Vallieu at 440-5265. visual guide, but there are some races that none of the guys we found can make it,” Mendez said. “The guides volunteer for this themselves, it’s not like something we asked them for. They saw a need and just came to help me, and that’s a big blessing. But usually the guide helps narrate me through turns and lets me know when there are big roots or divots in the ground, just so I know what is coming up and know how to prepare for it.” Junior high coach Jared Mitchell has been there since Mendez’s running career began three years ago. And he was the first to admit, it was a scary process when she first began running. “Her seventh grade year was kind of scary
because we had to have someone with her all the time, with her being legally blind,” Mitchell said. “It was just kind of terrifying with cross country because you are having to run on a lot trails and on the street. So that was hard. We had to keep someone with her during the meets, and we had to get OHSAA (Ohio High School Athletic Association) to give us a little lee-away. She had to have a visual guide run with her during the meets, and I think that was really hard for Cassandra. You know, she’s legally blind — but she can see. And as long as she had someone running beside her, she was able to run.” • See TRAILS on Page 2
WASHINGTON (AP) — Al-Qaida’s top bomb maker in Yemen did not die in a drone strike on a convoy, a top Yemeni official said Sunday, a report that dashed the hopes of U.S. officials who thought the attack might have killed a trio of top al-Qaida personnel. The U.S. drone strike Friday killed U.S.-born cleric Anwar al-Awlaki and an American propagandist, Samir Khan, who published a slick English-language web magazine that spouted al-Qaida’s antiWestern ideology. U.S. intelligence officials had said it appeared that bomb maker Ibrahim al-Asiri was among the dead. However, on Sunday the Yemeni official released a list of two others whose bodies had been identified and noted that al-Asiri was not one of them. The Yemeni official spoke on condition of anonymity to discuss intelligence matters. The Saudi-born al-Asiri, 29, who is of Pakistani descent, was tied to the socalled underwear bomb that was used in an attempt to bring down a Detroit-bound jetliner on Christmas Day in 2009. A Nigerian man has been charged in that attack. AlAsiri was also believed to have been behind an intercepted pair of explosivesladen printers that were mailed from Yemen to the U.S. in 2010. There was no immediate official word from the U.S. regarding the identities of the bodies. Al-Asiri has been described as a critical component of al-Qaida’s activities in Yemen and his death would be a significant blow to the organization.
• See BOMB on Page 2
U.S. women face trial Accused of funneling money to terrorists
MINNEAPOLIS (AP) — One of two Minnesota women accused of funnelComplete weather ing money to a terrorist information on Page 10. group in Somalia allegedly told potential donors to Home Delivery: ignore charities and focus 335-5634 on “the jihad” and helped Classified Advertising: finance local Somali men’s (877) 844-8385 travel to their war-torn homeland to fight, prosecutors alleged in court filings. The details hint at evidence the government 6 74825 22406 6
claims it has against Amina Farah Ali, who is scheduled to stand trial Monday on multiple terror charges. Prosecutors said Ali, 35, and her co-defendant, 64-year-old Hawo Mohamed Hassan, were part of a “deadly pipeline” that routed money and fighters from the U.S. to Somalia. The women, both U.S. citizens of Somali descent,
were among 20 people charged in Minnesota’s long-running federal investigations into recruiting and financing for alShabab, which the U.S. considers a terrorist group with ties to al-Qaida. Investigators believe at least 21 men left AP PHOTO Minnesota — home to the In this Aug. 5, 2010, file photo, Hawo Mohamed Hassan, country’s largest Somali left, and Amina Farah Ali, both of Rochester, Minn., leave the U.S. District Court after appearing at a hear• See MONEY on Page 2 ing in St. Paul, Minn.
For Home Delivery, call 335-5634 • For Classified Advertising, call (877) 844-8385
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Monday, October 3, 2011
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LOTTERY
Trials
CLEVELAND (AP) — These Ohio lotteries were drawn Sunday: Mega Millions Estimated jackpot: $12 million Pick 3 Evening 2-3-5 Pick 3 Midday 6-4-9 Pick 4 Evening 2-9-8-0 Pick 4 Midday 6-0-5-8 Powerball Estimated jackpot: $58 million Rolling Cash 5 12-15-18-26-32 Ten OH Evening 01-16-21-25-27-33-40-50-51-52-53-56-5758-64-66-71-72-77-80 Ten OH Midday 02-04-09-17-20-24-29-33-34-41-47-50-5152-54-61-70-74-76-79
kept moving on and how she was able to adapt to But watching Mendez running on the trails. transform has been the “I’m just really most rewarding part of impressed by the way she Mitchell’s coaching experi- has improved since her ence, for she has made seventh grade year,” strides of improvement. Mitchell said. “I mean just “She went with us to seeing her running style cross country camp down from then to now, it’s in southeastern Ohio over became much smoother the summer,” Mitchell and she’s become a better said. “It’s all trails, uprunner. There have been a and-down mountains, and couple times this year she ran without a guide. where we didn’t have a There was a few times she guide to run with her and tripped, but for someone she’s been fine. I think the to do that with no depth problem we’re having now perception at all — and is that she’s becoming to the fact that she wanted fast for the guides.” to do the camp — I just And now, as Mendez’s could not believe how she current coach Jeff
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• The Troy Elevator
“We’re going to stay as long as we can,” she added. NYPD spokesman Paul Browne said the department wouldn’t be changing its approach to handling the protest, that it would continue regular patrols and monitoring but not assign additional officers. Police officers have been a regular sight at the plaza. “As always, if it is a lawful demonstration, we help facilitate and if they break the law we arrest them,” Browne said. The Fire Department said it had gone to the site several times over the past week to check for any fire safety hazards arising from people living in the plaza, but there have been no major issues. On Sunday, a group of New York public school teachers sat in the plaza, including Denise Martinez. The 47-year-old Brooklyn resident works at a school where most students are at poverty level. “The bottom line is the feeling that the financial industries here on Wall Street have caused the economic problems, and they’re not contributing their fair share to solving them,” she said of her reasons for camping out Sunday. She said funding for education has shrunk to the point where her classes are as large as about 50. “These are America’s
Even before officials determined al-Asiri had not died in the strike, antiterrorism experts noted
The grain prices listed below are the closing prices of Friday.
Corn Month Price Oct 5.9250 O/N 11 5.7250 Jan 12 5.9100 O/N 12 5.2100 Beans Oct 11.3400 New Crop11.1400 Jan 12 11.4950 S/O/N 12 11.2450 Wheat Oct 5.690 Jan 12 5.9650 J/A 12 6.1200
Change - 40.00 - 40.00 - 40.00 - 17.75 - 51.00 - 51.00 - 51.75 - 45.00 - 45.00 - 39.25 - 28.25
You can find more information online at www.troyelevator.com.
• Stocks of local interest Values reflect closing prices from Friday.
AA CAG CSCO DPL EMR F FITB FLS GM GR ITW JCP KMB KO KR LLTC MCD MSFG
9.57 24.22 15.50 30.14 41.31 9.67 10.10 74.00 20.18 120.68 41.60 26.78 71.01 67.56 21.96 27.65 87.82 8.72
-0.49 -0.14 -0.35 -0.08 -2.48 -0.33 -0.36 -4.60 -0.58 -0.40 -1.60 -0.80 -0.22 -1.49 -0.26 -0.87 -0.96 -0.48
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McDaniel explains, her presence and determination have become widely appreciated by the crowds at cross country meets. McDaniel got a first-hand look at how Mendez’s story has inspired people when he ran as her guide at the Eaton Invitational. “I had to watch out for the other girls,” McDaniel explained. “Being a coach, I didn’t want to interfere with the competition in the race. But as were running, Cassandra’s picking up the pace, then I start to realize that she needs a guide to be able to run faster because you’ve got
to talk to her the whole time. If you want to run beside her, you need someone who can keep up. It was cool because your looking at the spectators, and all of a sudden, you know, more and more people started cheering for Cassandra. And as they were announcing, you could just see that people’s attitude’s started to change.” Saturday’s Miami County Invitational in West Milton was Mendez’s coming out party. She ran with a guide, which was left in the dust by the midway point of the race. Mendez ran a 23:23 — the
best time of her high school career — running through the trails at Lowry Complex. She doesn’t plan on stopping there, however, as her goal is to reach the 22-minute mark one day. Mendez has worked out her trials on the trails and in doing so has won the respect of her teammates and became an inspiration to people who watch her. And with three more years of high school left, along left with a clear eyes, full heart, can’t lose attitude, anything is possible for Cassandra Mendez.
that al-Qaida remained a powerful threat in Yemen. Months of political turmoil in the Mideast nation has helped the group grow stronger.
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AP PHOTO
Demonstrators talk near their tents in the Occupy Boston encampment on the Rose Kennedy Greenway across the street from the Federal Reserve building in Boston, Sunday. future workers, and what’s trickling down to them are the problems - the unemployment, the crime.” Another voice on Sunday belonged to Jackie Fellner, a 32-year-old marketing manager from Westchester County. “We’re not here to take down Wall Street. It’s not poor against rich. It’s about big money dictating which politicians get elected and what programs get funded,” she said. Gatherings elsewhere included one in Providence, R.I., that attracted about 60 people to a public park. The participants called it a “planning meeting” and initially debated whether to allow reporters to cover it. In Boston, protesters set up an encampment across the street from the Federal Reserve Building.
The New York City protesters have spent most of their time in the plaza, sleeping on air mattresses, holding assemblies at which they discuss their goals and listening to speakers including celebrity activist Michael Moore and Princeton University professor Cornel West. On the past two Saturdays, though, they marched to other parts of the city, which led to tense standoffs with police. On Sept. 24, about 100 people were arrested and the group put out video which showed some women being hit with pepper spray by a police official. On Oct. 1, more than 700 people were arrested as the group attempted to cross to the Brooklyn Bridge. Some of the protesters said they were lured onto the roadway by police, or they didn’t hear the calls from authorities to head to the pedestrian walkway. Police said no one was tricked into being arrested,
community — to join alShabab. Though others have pleaded guilty to related charges, the women are the first to go on trial. Ali and Hassan maintain their innocence and claim they were collecting money and clothing for refugees. But prosecutors allege the women went door-to-door and held teleconferences to solicit donations for the fighters. In one of those recorded calls, investigators allege, Ali said to “forget about the other charities” and focus on “the jihad.” In others, both women speak with the leader of a militia allied with al-Shabab, and Ali gets updates on the fighting. Both women, of Rochester, Minnesota, are charged with conspiracy to provide material support to a foreign terrorist organization. Ali also faces 12 counts of providing such support for allegedly sending more than $8,600 to the group from September 2008 through July 2009. Hassan faces three counts of lying to the FBI. Each terrorism count carries a 15-year maximum prison sentence. The trial is expected to last about two weeks. Investigators said they ran a wiretap on Ali’s home and cellular phones for 10 months, intercepting roughly
30,000 calls, some of which were between the two women and others, and searched the trash outside Ali’s apartment about 90 times, according to court documents and hearings in recent months. Defense attorneys have tried to keep some of that evidence out of trial. Dan Scott, Ali’s lawyer, argued that some evidence would simply confuse the jury and pointed to prosecutors’ allegations that Ali communicated with terrorists who weren’t members of al-Shabab. The Islamist al-Shabab militia is fighting to overthrow the U.N.-backed Somali government. “In essence, the government wants to offer evidence that the defendants legally had contact with bad men to show that the defendants had illegal contact with other bad men,” he wrote in a recent court filing. Scott also sought to limit evidence alleging Ali gave money and clothes to alShabab before it was designated a foreign terrorist organization in early 2008, saying such activity wouldn’t have been illegal at the time under the charges his client faces. Hassan’s attorney, Tom Kelly, has repeatedly asked that his client be tried separately, saying most of the government’s evidence is against Ali and would affect how jurors view Hassan. That request was denied Friday.
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TROY DAILY NEWS • WWW.TROYDAILYNEWS.COM
sell 400 boxes of Krispy Kreme doughnuts following the Troy-Piqua football • DINNER MEETING: game. Proceeds will help The Altrusa Club of Troy players pay for new uniwill meet at 6:30 p.m. at C o m m u n i t y forms. Doughnuts, which the Troy-Hayner Cultural will be sold by the dozen, Center, 301 W. Main St., Calendar will be $5 per box, and will for the monthly dinner be for sale at various exits business meeting. For CONTACT US as fans leave Troy Memorial more information, contact Stadium. Tamara Baynard-Ganger, • CLASS REUNION: vice president, at 440The Troy High School class 0320. Call Melody of 1961 will have its 50th Civic agendas reunion beginning with the Vallieu at • Monroe Township Troy-Piqua football game. 440-5265 to Board of Trustees will Classmates also will be dinmeet at 7 p.m. at the list your free ing in The Concord Room at Township Building. Club 55 on Saturday. calendar • The Tipp City Council Sunday, there will be a items.You will meet at 7:30 p.m. at brunch at NightSky. There is the Government Center. can send a Football Hall of Fame • The Piqua City your news by e-mail to exhibit at Hayner beginning Commission will meet at vallieu@tdnpublishing.com. that weekend, which 7:30 p.m. at City Hall. includes some local football • The Troy City Council players, including some will meet at 7 p.m. in the classmates. For more informeeting room in Council mation, call Rosemary at 339-7926. Chambers. Civic agendas • The Staunton Township Trustees will The Miami County Public Defender meet at 7:30 p.m. in the Staunton Association meets at 10 a.m. in the office Township building. on the second floor of the courthouse, • Covington Board of Public Affairs will 201 W. Main St., Troy. meet at 4 p.m. in the Water Department • The Lostcreek Township Board of office located at 123 W. Wright St., Trustees meet at 7 p.m. at Lostcreek Covington. • The Potsdam Village Council will meet Township Building, Casstown.
FYI
TUESDAY • HEALTH SEMINAR: A free health seminar will be at 7 p.m. at the Piqua Public Library, 116 W. High St., Piqua. Participants will learn how to live healthier, with emphasis on how to improve your blood pressure, lower cholesterol levels and lose weight. The presentation will be given by trained facilitators, Leroy and Ann De Mange. • COUNCIL MEETING: The Troy Literacy Council, serving all of Miami County, will meet at 7:00 p.m. at the Hayner Cultural Center, Troy. Adults seeking help with basic literacy or wish to learn English as a second language, and those interested in becoming tutors can contact our message center at (937) 660-3170. Your call will be returned. • EXPLORATION WALK: The Miami County Park District will have an adult exploration walk at 9 a.m. at the Maple Ridge entrance at Stillwater Prairie Reserve, 10440 State Route 185, west of main park entrance. Join John Virgint as he shares the history of Maple Ridge and the maple sugaring process. For more information, visit the park district’s website at www.miamicountyparks.com. Civic agendas • The Concord Township Trustees will meet at 10 a.m. at the Concord Township Memorial Building, 1150 Horizon West Court, Troy.
WEDNESDAY • PERI LUNCH: The Miami County chapter of Ohio Public Employee Retirees will meet at 11:30 a.m. at St. John’s Lutheran Church, 248 Wood St., Piqua. Lunch will be $10, payable at the door. Reservations are needed by Wednesday by calling Beth at 335-2771. The speaker will be Anthony Tedesco-Nichols, OPERS assistant government relations officer. Any area OPERS member or public employee is invited to attend. • ART OF RECOVERY: The Tri-County Board of Recovery and Mental Health Services will be the fourth annual Art of Recovery event at Edison Community College. The reception and art showcase will be from 5:30-7 p.m. • SUPPORT GROUP: The MiamiShelby Ostomy Support Group will meet at 7 p.m. at the UVMC Cancer Care Center in the lower level of the Upper Valley Medical Center, 3130 N. County Road 25A, Troy. The Ostomy Support Group’s meetings are held the first Wednesday of each month except January and July. Programs provide information and support to ostomates and their families, and are beneficial to health care professionals as well. For more information, call 440-4706. Civic agendas • The Elizabeth Township Trustees will meet at 8 p.m. in the township building, 5710 Walnut Grove Road, Troy. • The village of West Milton Planning Board will meet at 7:30 p.m. in council chambers.
THURSDAY • SENIORS LUNCHEON: The AB Graham Memorial Center, 8025 E. U.S. Route 36, Conover, will offer its senior citizens luncheon. The speaker will be Joe Besecker, director of the Johnny Appleseed Museum in Urbana. The program will be at 11 a.m. and lunch will be at noon for $5 per person. All ages are invited, and can call for reservations at 368-3700.
FRIDAY • CHICKEN FRY: The Pleasant Hill VFW Post No. 6557, 7578 W. Fenner Road, Ludlow Falls, will offer a three-piece chicken dinner with french fries and coleslaw for $7 from 6-8 p.m. Chicken livers also will be available. • DOUGHNUT SALE: The Troy High School boys and girls soccer teams will
SATURDAY-SUNDAY
The Month of October 1861.” • Oct. 18 at the TroyThe New Friends of the Milton-Union Public Hayner Cultural Center, 301 W. Main St., Troy, at Library and the 7 p.m. — Mark Stillwater Civil Holbrook will War Roundtable discuss “Ohio’s are sponsoring a Unknown speaker series at Generals.” the library and Participants the Troy-Hayner will learn about Cultural Center. some of the 200 All programs lesser known are free and Ohioan generals open to the pubwho served in lic. This year the Union begins the 150th HOLBROOK Army. anniversary of • Oct. 27 at the “War the library at 7 p.m. — Between the States.” • Oct. 6 at the library Jeanette Dohner of the library and also a roundat 6:30 p.m. — Mark table member, will talk Holbrook of the Ohio about a few well-known Historical Society will Civil War battles and present “Ohio in the read some ghost stories Civil War.” This program will look that correspond to those at how Ohio and its citi- sites. Holbrook is the marzens impacted and were changed by the American keting manager for the Ohio Historical Society, Civil War. hails from Ohio, graduat• Oct. 13 at the ed from The Ohio State library at 7 p.m. — University and is an avid Richard Metzger of the student of history. He Stillwater Civil War Roundtable will present has been a re-enactor for many years and portrays “The Battle of Ball’s various historical figures Bluff and Other Stuff: For the Troy Daily News
• FARM FEST: The Miami County Park District will have its third annual Fall Farm Fest program from 10 a.m. to 6 p.m. Saturday and noon to 5 p.m. Sunday at Lost Creek Reserve, 2645 E. State Route 41, east of Troy. There will be hayrides, games, farm animals, kiddie tractor pulls and demonstrations. New this year is a Bluegrass and American Acoustic music tent with bands playing all day both days. Special guest NewFound Road will play at AREA BRIEF 3:45 p.m. Saturday and Joe Mullins and the Radio Ramblers will play at 3:45 p.m. Sunday. Concert participants should bring Heffelfinger to lawnchairs. Admission to the concerts and festival is free. There will be food, pumpshow sheep kins, pony rides and merchandise for sale. CASSTOWN — Sara Heffelfinger of For more information, visit the park disCasstown has entered eight head of trict’s website at southdown in the sheep division of the www.miamicountyparks.com.
SATURDAY • GARDEN SHOW: The Lost Creek Garden and Antique Show will be offered from 10 a.m. to 4 p.m. at 1058 Knoop Road, Troy. The event will include local vendors, vintage garden accessories, plants, landscape design, antiques, artisans and food. Admission will be $5. • FISH FRY: The Pleasant Hill VFW Post No. 6557, 7578 W. Fenner Road, Ludlow Falls, will offer an all-you-can-eat fish fry and smelt dinner with french fries, baked beans and applesauce for $8 from 5-7 p.m. • POT PIE SUPPER: The First United Church of Christ, corner of Market and Canal streets, Troy, will offer its annual pot pie supper from 4:30-6:30 p.m. The supper will include chicken and pot pie, mashed potatoes, coleslaw, green beans or corn for $7.50 and $3 for those 10 and younger. Proceeds will benefit local non profit agencies. Use the Canal Street entrance, where the church is handicapped. • HOBBY SHOW: People who have a hobby and would enjoy the opportunity to display their work/collection as well as talk to folks about it will be offered from 9 a.m. to 7 p.m. in the Hoffman Church activity center, 201 S. Main St., West Milton. Set up will begin at noon Friday. There is no charge to enter and admittance to the show will be free. Tables will be assigned on a first come, first served basis. To reserve a table, or for more information, contact Mike Circle at (937) 6986690 or mjab4ci@woh.rr.com. • EXPLORATION WALK: The Miami County Park District will have an adult exploration walk at 9 a.m. at the Maple Ridge entrance at Stillwater Prairie Reserve, 10440 State Route 185, west of main park entrance. Join John Virgint as he shares the history of Maple Ridge and the maple sugaring process. For more information, visit the park district’s website at www.miamicountyparks.com. • LIBRARY ADVENTURE: Learn about the story of Handel’s Water Music during “My Name is Handel,” offered from 11 a.m. to noon at the Troy-Miami County Public Library. With professional narration and music by the London Philharmonic Orchestra, the musical experience is designed to expand listening horizons, develop listening skills, accumulate musical memories and encourage adults and children to listen to music together. The event is for school-age children and their families. Call the library at 339-0502 to register.
38th annual North American International Livestock
Rental Center • Tools • lawn • party
for society events. He also writes articles on the Civil War and acts in the “Echoes of Time” Theatre at the Society in Columbus. Metzger is a graduate of Capitol University and lives with his wife, Susanna, in Dayton. He studies Civil War and military history for fun and has given talks on the subject at meetings of the Stillwater Civil War Roundtable, of which he is a member. He authored a book on his great-grandfather who served with the Army of the Cumberland. Dohner is the public relations specialist for the library and a member of the roundtable. Her background is a lifetime of reading on many different subjects, including military history. Her passion for the Civil War began after a visit many years ago to the site of the Battle of Gettysburg, Pa.
Exposition. The NAILE is recognized as the world’s largest purebred livestock show with more than 21,000 entries and nearly $700,000 in prizes and awards. Scheduled for Nov. 5-18, the event takes place at the Kentucky Exposition Center, Louisville, Ky.
PERSONAL SERVICE-you deserve it!
850 S. Market St., Troy 339-9212 2221494
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SUNDAY • BREAKFAST OFFERED: The Pleasant Hill VFW Post No. 6557, 7578 W. Fenner Road, Ludlow Falls, will offer made-to-order breakfast from 8-10 a.m. All items are a la carte. • EUCHRE TOURNEY: A Euchre tournament will be offered at the Pleasant Hill VFW Post No. 6557, 7578 W. Fenner Road, Ludlow Falls. Sign ups will begin at noon and play will begin at 1 p.m. Entry is $3 per person.
WEST MILTON
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at 7 p.m. in the village offices.
Civil War Speaker Series set to begin
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OPINION
Contact us David Fong is the executive editor of the Troy Daily News. You can reach him at 440-5228 or send him e-mail at fong@tdn publishing.com.
XXXday,3,XX, 2010 Monday, October 2011 •4
TROY DAILY NEWS • WWW.TROYDAILYNEWS.COM
In Our View Troy Daily News Editorial Board FRANK BEESON / Group Publisher DAVID FONG / Executive Editor
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can easliy spot those that don’t pass school levies. The town looks tired and boarded up. When schools start a “slowing down” process, so do the towns that surround them. Please join me in full support
of the replacement levy on the November ballot. Please vote “yes” for the Tipp schools. You’ll be glad you did.
PERSPECTIVE
“Congress shall make no law respecting an establishment of religion, or prohibiting the free exercise thereof; or abridging the freedom of speech, or of the press; or the right of people peaceably to assemble, and to petition the Government for a redress of grievances.” — First Amendment, U.S. Constitution
EDITORIAL ROUNDUP St. Petersburg (Fla.) Times on underwater mortgage refinancing: Soon there may be good news for homeowners who are underwater and cannot refinance at the record-low mortgage interest rates. President Barack Obama is seeking changes that would give these homeowners a chance to refinance despite their predicament. If such a plan succeeds, it could put billions of dollars back into homeowners’ pockets and help stabilize the housing market. The housing meltdown left an estimated 16 million borrowers owing more on their mortgages than their homes are currently worth. Most responsibly keep up with their payments, yet they are stuck with mortgages that carry interest rates of 6, 7 or 8 percent. They would love to refinance at current rates with interest on a 30-year fixed-rate mortgage as low as 4 percent. If that were made possible, despite borrowers having little or no equity in their home or a low credit score, it could unlock hundreds of dollars in savings As I every month that could then be spent to stimulate the economy. Lower mortgage costs would See It also make staying in the home more affordable, ■ The Troy leading to fewer defaults and foreclosures. Daily News The plan’s details are still vague, but they welcomes would allow borrowers to essentially switch out columns from of a higher-interest mortgage and into a lowerour readers. To interest one for any loan backed by Fannie Mae submit an “As I or Freddie Mac, the government-controlled See It” send housing giants. your type-written column to: The biggest downside in all this is for ■ “As I See It” investors who stand to lose when mortgages at c/o Troy Daily higher interest rates are paid off early. But News, 224 S. investors lose even more when a homeowner Market St., defaults, a scenario more likely to be avoided Troy, OH 45373 when mortgage payments are lowered. Working ■ You can also families who are current on their mortgage but e-mail us at can’t refinance because their home’s value editorial@tdnpu plunged through no fault of their own deserve blishing.com. this break. Now it needs to get done. ■ Please Anderson Independent-Mail include your full on mistaken Social Security payments: name and teleFor several years, we’ve seen stories about phone number. people declared dead by the Social Security Administration. Many went through a lot of hoops to officially resurrect themselves. In the interim, they didn’t get the proper payments due. And for some people, this created a real hardship. But now we hear about $600 million in benefit payments that, over the past five years, were mailed to the deceased. The payments were meant for retired or disabled federal workers. But because former employers were not informed of the deaths (or maybe nobody reads the obituaries in Washington), the checks just kept going out. In one case, according to The Associated Press, the decedent’s son received and negotiated his father’s checks for 37 years after the retiree’s death. The mistaken payments were only discovered by authorities when the son died in 2008. It’s not a new problem, according to the Office of Personnel Management’s inspector general, Patrick McFarland, who said that the government has been aware of the problem since 2005. Here’s an idea: Take the millions of Americans who need jobs and put them to work simply calling all these folks and verifying that they’re still alive and kicking. At least for a while (probably years, frankly, with all the red tape that is likely involved in the task), our unemployment rate will take a turn for the better.
LETTERS
Vote yes on Tipp levy To the Editor: Lots of towns don’t pass school levies. Lots of towns do. Drive through a town. You
— Gordon Honeyman Tipp City
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
Homeowner’s insurance: Re/de-coded Troy Troy Daily News Let me preface this by saying we have the nicest insurance agents. Helpful and kind, willing to answer any question, they truly do give great service. And, almost unheard of today, they actually return phone calls when they say they will. This alone is almost worth the cost of the premiums. So imagine my surprise/disgust/astonishment when one of the agents called to say we did not have “Up to Code” coverage on our homeowners insurance and would we like to add it. Naturally, everyone wants to be up to code or up to snuff or up to something, so I called her back to ask what, exactly, in an insurance context, “up to code” referred to. My call was answered by a real live person. On the second ring. Again … almost worth the cost of the premiums. A very nice lady explained to me that, while we had full-replacement coverage, we did not, in fact, have the rider that paid for the persons rebuilding our hypothetically destroyed house to bring it up to the current building codes. Well. Insurance, she pointed out, replaced what you had. It does not improve upon that. Any new changes in the building code since our house was built in the late
Marla Boone Troy Daily News Columnist 1960s would not be covered. Obviously, this was not good news. I asked, hypothetically of course, if that meant the replacement house would be built with fifty year old bricks and framed with fifty year old two by fours and covered with a fifty year old roof. I could just see the big red dot indicating “difficult client” being stuck to my folder. “Let me transfer you to another agent who can explain it better,” the lady said very politely. This is business code for “I’m one second away from telling you what a jerk I think you’re being.” The new agent was also very courteous. She reexplained the whole deal, right up to the part where the insurance company will not pay for incorporating upgraded code provisions
into the replacement structure. I pointed out that perhaps the building inspectors would take a dim view of contractors building my new house somewhere shy of being up to code. Right after that she said, “Let me transfer you to another agent who can explain it better.” Uh-oh. Strike two. The owner of the agency came on the line. This man is so nice and so personable I almost hated to be the jerk I had convinced the first two people I was. He, like the first agents, pleasantly explained the need for the additional coverage and started to describe the program. I’m afraid I did confirm their opinion of me by interrupting him. I felt compelled to interject that I understood the concept perfectly. My difficulty, I went on, was in believing I had to pay an extra premium to get my identical-replacement house built to code. Wasn’t that, you know, understood? Apparently not. If I need a new roof, to use their example, and the roof code has changed (and guess what…it has), my old insurance will pay only for replacing the old roof as it lies. Bringing it up to 2011 code would be on my dime. It’s not very often ol’ Marla is rendered speechless, but I came awful
close right then. Being an optimist at heart, I asked that if I purchased the additional coverage, would my new hypothetical, identical-replacement, up-to-code, goodas-new house then be completely covered. Again, apparently not. The limit of the insurance company’s additional up-to-code liability is only ten per cent of the insured value of the house. This whole thing sounds like something Bernie Madoff came up with. By this time my head was spinning, not unlike Linda Blair in “The Exorcist” and the agent, for all his niceness, was speaking in an increasingly strained voice like people do when they have their teeth clenched. He probably was guessing I was possessed by the demanding/dumb client demon. From my end, it sounded as though he dropped the phone once, probably when he was busy plastering more red dots on my file folder, but I could have imagined that. And speaking of the devil, he is indeed in the details. And especially the small print.
Daily News
Miami Valley Sunday News
FRANK BEESON Group Publisher
DAVID FONG Executive Editor
LEIANN STEWART Retail Advertising Manager
CHERYL HALL Circulation Manager
BETTY BROWNLEE Business Manager
SCARLETT SMITH Graphics Manager
AN OHIO COMMUNITY MEDIA NEWSPAPER 224 S. Market St. Troy, Ohio 45373 www.TDN-NET.com
Marla Boone appears every other Monday in the Troy Daily News
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LOCAL, STATE AND WORLD
Monday, October 3, 2011
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FUNERAL DIRECTORY • Norman T. Counts SIDNEY — Norman T. Counts, 77, of 611 S. Walnut St., Sidney, Ohio, died at his residence. Arrangements are being handled by Adams Funeral Home, 1401 Fair Road, Sidney.
Pa. gas drilling waste pumped under Ohio
AP PHOTO
In this Sept. 19, photo, Bryan Wentzel and his father Bill Wentzel, pose for a photo outside R&R sports in Columbus. Downtown Columbus holds a rarity among major metropolitan areas: a small, family-owned bait shop in the middle of an active, urban area. R&R Sports Headquarters has been in the city since 1913, and despite a difficult economy and competition from major chain stores, owner Bill Wentzel has no plans of changing that.
Shop takes the bait Downtown Columbus shop still snags shoppers COLUMBUS (AP) — As Zach Griffith prepared to leave for a recent Lake Erie fishing excursion, a friend asked him where he bought his bait. “Down on Front Street,” said Griffith, 24, of Columbus. The answer stunned his friend. “He was like, ‘There’s a bait store in downtown Columbus?’??” Such reactions grate on Bill Wentzel, 73, owner of R&R Sports Headquarters. The bait shop, after all, has been around for 98 years. R&R was founded on E. Rich Street in 1913 by two Roberts brothers (hence the store name). Thirty-four years later, Wentzel’s father (also named Bill) bought the business. In 1976, the younger Bill Wentzel moved it to the current location, a 2,000-squarefoot building at 781 S. Front St. in the Brewery District. In those days, the neighborhood was working-class and gritty just as it had been since the late 19th century, when the area’s namesake breweries were going strong. The bait shop suited its surroundings, serving Columbus residents who wanted to fish the Scioto River, which flows just a few hundred yards west of it. In recent years, though, the Brewery District has been made over as a historic area and much like German Village, its neighbor to the east now features renovated brick houses and a number of new condominium and apartment buildings. “The bottom line,” Wentzel said, “is we were there before all this other stuff happened.” Don Plank, a lawyer who has worked for Bill Wentzel and whose family has ties to the enduring Plank’s Bier Garten on S. High Street, sees a bittersweet side to the transformation. “The area is more upscale,” Plank said. “That was pretty close to a slum area (in the ’70s), so (redevelopment) is a good deal for Columbus.
In this Sept. 19, photo, Bill Wentzel, store owner of R&R Sports, poses for a photo with a crawdad. But, at the same time, it can push out the flavor of a neighborhood.” R&R certainly is flavorful, with a mural of a deer and a leaping bass adorning the double-wide storefront and a smell indoors that only an outdoor-sports enthusiast could love. Taped to walls are fishing maps of area lakes and photos of customers posing with fish caught using R&R bait. Above gurgling tanks of water behind the counter is a sign listing the prices of an array of live bait: night crawlers, red worms, crappie minnows, bass minnows, chub minnows, soft crawdads, hellgrammites, leeches (water or jumbo mud), waxworms, mealworms, hard crawfish, shiners, goldfish and skipjacks. The gear, too, seems impressive: Fishing poles, line, hooks, sinkers, bobbers and lures fill several aisles. “This place has a certain charm to it,” said customer Larry Harding, of Columbus. “I could go to Dick’s (Sporting Goods) zip-zip, get what I want and be done. But, here, I like to hang out.” Large retail stores might sell a greater quantity or variety of gear, but they can seem sterile compared with family-owned shops such as R&R, where Wentzel and son Bryan, 50, deliver a folksy mix of advice, expertise and small talk. “There is a social aspect,” said Tim Parrett, of the Ohio Division of Wildlife. “Some people like going into a place like that and
meeting people. “Plus,” he added, “they have more localized information. They may be stocked up with locally popular lures that can be hard to find elsewhere.” Griffith stopped by on a recent rainy weekday afternoon to have his crossbow fine-tuned for the start of Ohio’s deer archery season, which opened Sept. 24. At a more generic retail store, such services might not be offered. “These guys, it’s their passion,” Griffith said of the Wentzels. “It’s their whole life.” Korey Brown, license manager for the wildlife division, said about half of the 900 retail outlets that sell Ohio fishing licenses are, like R&R, privately owned. Very few, though, can be found in a big city. “To have a place like R&R in an urban setting is very, very unique,” said Brown, who could think of one or two in Cleveland and none in Cincinnati. Although R&R retains a core of loyal customers, Bill Wentzel said that making a living off the business is becoming increasingly difficult. The shop is suffering its toughest year yet, he said, in part because of the sluggish national economy. “People have to go to the grocery store, but they don’t have to come into a bait store or go fishing. I’ve hired two (fewer) people the last two years, and me and Bryan are working more hours to keep us afloat.”
Although he doesn’t fish, area resident C. Sweeney said he hopes R&R doesn’t close anytime soon. “I’ve seen it before with other local businesses,” Sweeney said. “The owner gets old and tired, a corporation comes in and buys it, and puts in another condo. “I think family-owned places like that should be protected somehow as a local landmark.” Through the years, Wentzel has faced his share of obstacles, including a 1989 Columbus ordinance severely restricting the sale of firearms. Shortly afterward, he stopped selling guns. Three years ago, when he sought to obtain a zoning variance to convert part of his property to a small restaurant/bar and patio area, area residents citing concerns about parking availability persuaded the city Board of Zoning Adjustment to deny the request. Perhaps the thorniest problem, though, might simply be a changing society. The shifting demographics of the location probably don’t help, but bait shops in general might have become an anachronism. “Everyone now wants their kids to play Little League baseball or football or soccer,” Wentzel said. “When I was growing up, we didn’t have those things. What did we do for recreation? Dad took you fishing or squirrel hunting.”
AKRON (AP) — Millions of gallons of drilling waste have been injected underground in Ohio, leading some to worry about possible ties to earthquakes. The drilling practice known as hydraulic fracturing uses chemicallylaced water to free oil and gas from underground shale formations. Ohio has 181 wells to inject waste fluid underground. The Akron Beacon Journal reported that nearly 50 percent of the drilling waste comes from Pennsylvania, which last year banned shipment of the liquid to state water treatment plants. In contrast to Ohio, Pennsylvania only has eight injection wells, due to its underground geology. In Pennsylvania, a drilling boom into the Marcellus shale is under way. Ohio drillers worry that the flood of waste fluid from Pennsylvania will crowd out space for Ohio waste as drilling into the potentially-lucrative Marcellus and Utica shale spreads, Tom Stewart,
Beatles photog dead at age 71 LONDON (AP) — Robert Photographer Whitaker, who shot some of the most famous and infamous images of The Beatles, has died at the age of 71. Whitaker’s friend, photo archivist Dave Brolan, said he died of cancer Sept. 20 in Sussex, southern England. Whitaker took scores of well-known pictures of The Beatles, including the controversial “butcher” cover of the 1966 American album “Yesterday and Today.” The image of the Fab Four in white coats surrounded by decapitated dolls and slabs of raw meat proved too strong for record company Capitol, which ordered the cover withdrawn soon after the album’s release. The record was rereleased with an inoffensive picture of the band sitting on a steamer trunk. Originals are coveted by collectors and can sell for thousands of dollars. Whitaker a fan of surrealism later said the image was a meditation on fame and an attempt to shake up the band’s image, inspired by a dream “about The Beatles being ripped to shreds by all these young girls when they came out of a stadium.” Born in Harpenden, southern England in 1939, Whitaker emigrated to Australia in his early 20s and was working as a photographer in Melbourne when The Beatles visited the country in 1964. He was assigned to photograph manager Brian Epstein for the Jewish News; Epstein was so impressed with the
resulting image of himself adorned with peacock feathers that he offered Whitaker a job as staff photographer for his company, NEMS. The job involved photographing “Merseybeat” acts including Cilla Black and Gerry & The Pacemakers, as well as capturing The Beatles onstage, backstage, in planes and hotel rooms and all manner of locations over more than two years. He covered the band’s final world tour in 1966 and took the pictures used on the collage-style cover of the “Revolver” album. After parting company with The Beatles, Whitaker photographed Mick Jagger on the sets of the films “Performance ” and “Ned Kelly,” helped create the psychedelic cover for Cream’s “Disraeli Gears” album and worked on the influential underground magazine Oz. Increasingly wary of being pigeonholed as a “pop” photographer, Whitaker moved into news, covering the Vietnam War and other conflicts for publications including Time and Life. He also spent time photographing his artistic hero, Salvador Dali. In the 1970s he moved to the English countryside, where he farmed and raised cattle. Whitaker compiled several books of his Beatles photographs, including “The Unseen Beatles” and “Eight Days a Week.” He is survived by his wife, Sue, and three children. Funeral details were not immediately available.
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executive director of the 1,500-member Ohio Oil & Gas Association, told the newspaper. Ohio cannot ban shipments from other states, as they are protected under the U.S. Constitution. Between 2007 and 2010, Ohio injected nearly 1.2 billion gallons of waste underground. The liquids spread out in the rock layers, making it impossible to predict how much more can be stored. However, it is unlikely the ground can store an extensive amount, as the drilling industry in Ohio has been using injection wells since the 1930s. Geologists suspect that the drilling fluid can trigger earthquakes along geological fault lines by allowing rocks to flow more easily past one another. Injection wells for drilling waste were banned in an earthquake-prone area of central Arkansas after more than 1,000 small earthquakes hit the area over the last year. Arkansas has about 500 injection wells, compared with Ohio’s 181.
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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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Family finds missing father Man rescued after car crashes over Calif. cliff CASTAIC, Calif. (AP) — A 67-year-old man who survived for five or six days on AP PHOTO leaves and creek water This image provided by the Lavau family shows David Lavau, in bed, celebrating after his car plunged 200 with unidentified family members at Henry Mayo Newhall Memorial Hospital in feet off a remote mountain road was found by his chilValencia, Calif., Friday. dren, who tracked him down like television detectives. Chardonnay, Sean and Lisa Lavau appeared on NBC’s “Today” show Friday, describing how they found their father’s car and his makeshift camp in a ravine Thursday off Lake Hughes Road in the Angeles National Forest, a rugged landscape lying between metropolitan Los Angeles and the Mojave Desert. Another vehicle was found nearby, but its driver did not survive the crash and authorities don’t know if they are dealing with one crash or two, said Los Angeles County Fire Department Capt. Mark Savage. The accident investigation was turned over to the California Highway Patrol. The survivor, David Lavau, was listed in serious condition Friday morning, said Adrienne Thompson, spokeswoman at Henry Mayo Newhall Memorial Hospital in Valencia. Family members apparently did not immediately realize their father was missing, and then contacted Follow us on Facebook at https://www.facebook.com/#!/reospeedwagon a missing persons detective 2217511 in Los Angeles who helped them figure out that he had at been gone for some time. The detective narrowed the search area using cell phone towers, text messages and debit card purat www.hobartarena.com or by phone at 937-339-2911 chases, Chardonnay Lavau
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told NBC and other organizations. Lisa Lavau told KCALTV her family had not heard from her father for several days. After narrowing the search area, “We stopped at every ravine, and looked over every hill and then my brother got out of the car and we kept screaming and the next thing we heard Dad saying ‘help, help,’ and there he was,” Lisa Lavau said. Chardonnay Lavau told NBC one of the first things her father asked for after he was found was a chocolate malt. Officials at the scene were told he might have been stranded for up to six days, Savage said. “It’s unconfirmed, the duration, but it’s possibly a significant amount of time,” Savage said. Fire officials responded at around 6:10 p.m. Thursday and a paramedic was lowered to David Lavau from a helicopter. He was evaluated and taken to Henry Mayo Newhall Memorial Hospital for treatment. David Lavau suffered multiple rib fractures, a dislocated shoulder, a broken arm and multiple fractures in his back, but none
”
of the injuries was lifethreatening, said hospital spokeswoman Bhavna Mistery. He was expected to undergo surgery and it was not clear how long he would be hospitalized, she said. He was doing well and in good spirits surrounded by his family, she added. The three family members who hiked down to him had to be assisted out of the area on foot by firefighters. The crash occurred in a sparsely populated area about 50 miles north of downtown Los Angeles. Savage said roads in the area have sharp curves and in many areas go down to two lanes, with some steep cliffs and drops over the side. Savage said firefighters remained on the scene late Thursday to do a thorough search of the area to make sure there were no other victims in the accident. The identity of the deceased driver has not been released. The recovery of the body was delayed until daylight Friday, said Craig Harvey, spokesman for the Los Angeles County coroner’s office. It was being brought up the ravine by a sheriff’s team.
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Total (Sum of 15f and 15g); average number of copies each issue during preceding 12-months: 8,349, number copies of single issue nearest to filing date: 9,714. Percent Paid and/or Requested Circulation (15c divided by 15f x 100): average numbers of copies each issue during preceding 12-months: 84.20%, number copies of single issue nearest to filing date: 82.93 %. Publication of Statement of Ownership. Publication required. Will be printed in the 10/03/2011 issue of this publication. I certify that all information furnished on this form is true and complete. I understand that anyone who furnished false or misleading information on this form or who omits material or information requested in this form may be subject to criminal sanctions (Including fines and imprisonment) and/or civil sanctions (Including civil penalties). Frank L. Beeson, I-75 Group Publisher
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2775 SOUTH COUNTY RD 25A WE’RE JUST NORTH OF DAYTON ON I-75 EXIT #69 TROY
937-335-5696
www.erwinchrysler.com
I-75 Exit 82 • Piqua • 937-773-1225
Tipp City
Sidney
4960 S. County Road 25A Tipp City, OH 45371
1103 Fairington Drive Sidney, OH 45365
937-667-2100
937-497-1200
24 Hour Answering Service: 1-800-589-9641
8
ENTERTAINMENT
Monday, October 3, 2011
ANNIE’S MAILBOX
TROY TV-5
Tell your son counseling is a must if he wants to live at home
Today: 5 p.m.: Community Bulletin Board 7:30 p.m.: INN News 9 p.m.: Around Troy
Dear Annie: My 26-year-old son graduated two years ago from a terrific university. During college, he lived on his own and had a girlfriend, but just before graduation, they broke up. My son had a hard time coping, and when he graduated, he came back to live at home. In those two years, he hasn't applied for any jobs. When I arranged a few interviews for him, he didn't do well. I believe he suffers from severe anxiety and gets nervous when meeting people, especially older men who tend to be the ones interviewing him. I have begged him to get counseling, but he insists there is nothing wrong. He stays in his room all day and only comes out for dinner. His friends have moved on with their lives, and he barely speaks to any of them. I have talked to him and even threatened to kick him out, but I can't follow through. Where would he go? Please help me find a way to get him to face the world. — Worried Mom Dear Worried: Your son seems depressed and lethargic. Tell him counseling is a condition for remaining in the house. You will have to do a little enabling to start. Ask your physician for a counseling referral, call to explain the problem and make an appointment, and then be sure your son keeps it, even if that means driving him there and escorting him inside. Beyond that, however, he must take responsibility for his own recovery, which may include medication. Also look into help for yourself. You may need to follow through on your threat to toss him out, and you might need some support to do it. Dear Annie: My husband and I have been married for slightly more than a year. How do I handle the constant stream of questions from family and friends wondering when we're going to have a baby? I have had two miscarriages and simply don't know how to respond. Do I tell them the truth, which is very painful? How can I get them to stop asking every time they see me? I know they mean well, but this seems like a rather personal question. Just because a couple has no children doesn't mean they aren't trying. — New Bride in the Midwest Dear Bride: We are continually amazed that nosy people think someone else's fertility is their business. You are not obligated to respond to these questions. You can politely ask, "Why do you need to know?" But a reader once wrote that she used to be that kind of nosy person until a friend replied that she was trying desperately to get pregnant and it was too painful to discuss. That was the response that finally made her stop asking. Dear Annie: This is for "Hurting for My Daughter," who was being verbally bullied at school. I, too, am a rural town mom. I have watched both of my daughters endure the harassing phone calls, text messages and snide remarks, simply because they didn't fit into the "in" crowd. I spent many late nights wiping tears, some of them my own. I always told my daughters that someday these Barbie dolls would no longer be the top dogs. I also told them that high school is only a small passage through the journey of life, and that after they graduated, they would look back in amazement at the drama that encompassed them. I am happy to say that high school is behind us now, and my girls are well-adjusted, respectful adults who would never treat anyone this way. Tell "Hurting" to give her daughter love, encouragement, the belief that this is just a bump in the long journey of life and the wisdom to take the high road. — A Former Hurting Small-Town Mom Dear Former: When you're living it, high school torments seem as if they will last forever. But those who can get through the experience will be stronger for it. Annie's Mailbox is written by Kathy Mitchell and Marcy Sugar, longtime editors of the Ann Landers column. Please e-mail your questions to anniesmailbox@comcast.net, or write to: Annie's Mailbox, c/o Creators Syndicate, 5777 W. Century Blvd., Ste. 700, Los Angeles, CA 90045.
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TROY TV-5 Tuesday: 11 a.m.: Troy Mayor & City Council Report 2:30 p.m.: Community Bulletin Board 3 p.m.: Wild Ohio
OCTOBER 3, 2011 10
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BROADCAST STATIONS News NBC News Inside Ed. Jeopardy! The Sing-Off "Radio Hits 7 60's Classics" 1/2 (N) The Playboy Club (N) News 2 News (:35) Tonight Show (:35) LateN (2) (WDTN) 2 News Bull. Board INN News Army News Main St. Around Troy Serve Higgins-Madewell INN News Planet X Ultimate Experience (5) (TROY) Comm. Bulletin Board Health and Home News News CBSNews Wheel ET Mother (N) Girls (N) 2½Men (N) M&M (N) Hawaii Five-0 (N) News (:35) David Letterman (:35) LateL (7) (WHIO) News CBSNews Jeopardy! Wheel Mother (N) Girls (N) 2½Men (N) M&M (N) Hawaii Five-0 (N) News (:35) David Letterman (:35) LateL (10) (WBNS) 10TV News HD @ Noon News Business As Time (R) Prohibition "A Nation of Scofflaws" 2/3 (N) Prohibition "A Nation of Scofflaws" (R) Charlie Rose (16) (WPTD) E.Company Fetch! (R) News Journal T. Smiley PBS NewsHour Prohibition "A Nation of Drunkards" Prohibition "A Nation of Drunkards" (R) PBS NewsHour (16.2) (THINK) Charlie Rose Beads (R) Bolder (R) Old House Steves' (R) Travels (R) Mexican Lidia's (R) Cook's (R) Garden (R) Bolder (R) Old House Place (R) Beads (R) (16.3) (LIFE) Steves' (R) Travels (R) Place (R) News World News ET Ray (R) Dancing With the Stars (N) Castle "Head Case" (N) News (:35) News (:05) Jimmy Kimmel Live (21) (WPTA) INC News at 5:00 News World News Judge Judy Fam. Feud Dancing With the Stars (N) Castle "Head Case" (N) News (:35) News Jimmy Kimmel Live (22) (WKEF) Maury 30 Rock Mother (R) Mother (R) 2½Men (R) 2½Men (R) Gossip Girl (N) Hart of Dixie (N) 2 NEWS 30 Rock FamilyG (R) FamilyG (R) AmerD (R) Friends (R) (26) (WBDT) Ray (R) News NBC News Wheel Jeopardy! The Sing-Off "Radio Hits 7 60's Classics" 1/2 (N) The Playboy Club (N) News (:35) Tonight Show (:35) LateN (35) (WLIO) Inside Ed. ET W-Master Potter BeScenes Your World Kingdom Jesse D. Night of Hope "From Chicago" Joel Osteen MannaFest (43) (WKOI) Praise the Lord John Hagee J. Meyer A. Griffith Donna Reed Love Worth Zola Levitt Perry Stone News Wretched J. Prince In Touch (44) (WTLW) Hazel (R) Father (R) The 700 Club BBang (R) Simps. (R) Terra Nova "Instinct" (N) House "Vicodin" (N) Fox 45 News Office (R) Excused The Steve Wilkos Show (45) (WRGT) BBang (R) Simps. (R) Judge Judy News SVU "Wanderlust" (R) Law & Order: S.V.U. (R)
Bus Stop ('56) Marilyn Monroe.
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Love Me Tender ('56) Elvis Presley. The Insider BigBang BigBang WFFT Local News TMZ Gossip Q King of Hill Accord.Jim (55) (WFFT) The Office The Office M-Mother M-Mother Two 1/2... Two 1/2... Extra CABLE STATIONS The First 48 (R) Hoarders (R) Hoarders (R) Hoarders (R) Inter. "Anthony" (R) Inter. "Sandy" (R) Hoarders (R) (A&E) The First 48 (R)
Top Gun ('86) Kelly McGillis, Val Kilmer, Tom Cruise.
Billy Madison ('95) Adam Sandler.
Billy Madison ('95) Adam Sandler.
Top Gun (AMC) Movie (ANPL) Untamed and Uncut (R) Untamed and Uncut (R) Untamed and Uncut (R) Animal C. "Fragile" (R) I Shouldn't Be Alive (R) I Shouldn't Be Alive (R) Animal C. "Fragile" (R) I Shouldn't Be Alive (R) Pulse Breakdown Pulse Breakdown S.Report To Be Announced Breakdown Pulse Breakdown TBA (B10) (4:00) To Be Announced Best
The Five Heartbeats ('91) Robert Townsend.
Cadillac Records ('08) Emmanuelle Chriqui. Wendy Williams Show (BET) WifeKid (R) WifeKid (R) 106 & Park: BET's Top 10 Live I Survived... (R) Biography (R) Bio. "Ozzy Osbourne" (R) Biography (R) Paranormal Paranormal Bio. "Black Sabbath" (R) (BIO) Ntorious ""Framed"" (R) American Gangster Housewives NJ (R) Beverly Hills (R) Beverly Hills (R) Beverly Hills (N) Most Eligible Dallas (N) Watch (N) Beverly Hills (R) Beverly (R) (BRAVO) Housewives NJ (R) Makeover: Home (R) Makeover: Home (R) Blue Collar Comedy Tour: One for the Road (R) Blue Collar Comedy Tour: One for the Road (R) (CMT) Angels Among Us (R) Mad Money The Kudlow Report Dreamliner Philanthropy Inc. American Greed: Scam Mad Money Philanthropy Inc. (CNBC) Fast Money John King, USA OutFront Anderson Cooper 360 Piers Morgan Tonight Anderson Cooper 360 OutFront Piers Morgan Tonight (CNN) (4:00) The Situation Colbert (R) 30 Rock 30 Rock South Park South Park Sunny (R) Sunny (R) Sunny (R) Sunny (R) Daily Show Colbert South Park South Park (COM) Sunny (R) Sunny (R) Daily (R) Politics & Public Policy Today Politics & Public (CSPAN) U.S. House of Representatives American Chopper: (R) American Chopper: To Be Announced American Chopper: To Be Announced (DISC) Cash Cab Cash Cab To Be Announced Hologram Batman (R) Transfor Smarter (R) Smarter (R) Wond. Year Family Ties Happy Days Laverne (R) Doogie (R) Batman (R) Transf. (R) G.I. Joe (R) (DISK) Batman (R) Gsebump Pony (R) Crashers Crashers Crashers Crashers Crashers Mega Dens Mega Dens Bathroom Bathroom Crashers Crashers (DIY) The Ultimate Crash (R) Mega Dens RenoReal K.Impos. SoRandom Shake Up GoodLuck Babysitter Babysitter GoodLuck Halloweentown 2: Kalabar's Re... Shake Up GoodLuck Babysitter Babysitter Wizards Wizards (DSNY) Phineas E! News To Be Announced Chelsea (N) E! News (R) Chelsea (R) (1:00) To Be Announced (E!) Interrupt SportsCenter Monday Night Countdown (L) Football NFL Indianapolis Colts vs. Tampa Bay Buccaneers (L) SportsCenter (ESPN) Horn (N) NFL 32 (L) SportsCenter Poker (R) Poker World Series (R) Poker World Series (R) SportsC. Football (R) Baseball T. Football (R) (ESPN2) SportsNation Boxing Classics (R) Boxing Classics (R) Boxing Classics (R) One on One One on One AWA Wrestling (R) (ESPNC) (4:00) Football Classics NCAA Mich./N.West. (R) Boxing Classics (R) '70s (R) The Lying Game (R) The Lying Game (R) The Lying Game (N)
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What Happens in Vegas ('08) Cameron Diaz.
What Happens in Vegas ('08) Cameron Diaz. (FX) Golf Cent. BestM.D. The Golf Fix (N) Big Break Ireland (R) GolfNow Top 10 (R) The Golf Fix (R) Golf C. (R) Learn (N) GolfNow Top 10 (R) (GOLF) Madrid H/L (R) Lingo Baggage Newlywed Baggage Deal or No Deal Deal or No Deal Fam. Feud Fam. Feud Newlywed Baggage Improv Fam. Feud (GSN) Deal or No Deal Little House Prairie (R) Little House Prairie (R) Little House Prairie (R) Frasier (R) Frasier (R) Frasier (R) Frasier (R) Frasier (R) Frasier (R) G. Girls (R) G. Girls (R) (HALL) The Waltons (R) HouseH (R) House (R) HouseH (R) House (R) Showhouse (R) (HGTV) Property Brothers (R) Property Brothers (R) House (R) HouseH (R) HouseH (R) House (R) Showhouse (N) Modern Marvels (R) Pawn Stars Pawn Stars PawnSt. (R) PawnSt. (R) American Pickers (R) PawnSt. (R) PawnSt. (R) Around the World (R) PawnSt. (R) PawnSt. (R) (HIST) Modern Marvels (R) Unsolved Mysteries (R) Unsolved Mysteries (R) Unsolved Mysteries (R) Girl Fight ('11) James Tupper, Anne Heche. Against the Wall Unsolved Mysteries (R) (LIFE) Cold Case Files (R) To Be Announced To Be Announced To Be Announced (LMN) (4:00) To Be Announced To Be Announced Naked "Vicki Brace" (R) Cook Thin Mom Cook Airline (R) Airline (R) Runway "Sew 70's" Paid Road (R) Airline (R) Airline (R) Runway "Sew 70's" (R) (LRW) ModRun. Road (R) PoliticsNation Hardball The Last Word Rachel Maddow The Ed Show The Last Word Rachel Maddow (MSNBC) Hardball '70s (R) Dyrdek (R) Dyrdek (R) Dyrdek (R) Dyrdek (R) Dyrdek (R) Ridicu. (R) Ridicu. (N) DeathVal Cuff'd (N) Ridicu. (R) DeathVal Cuff'd (R) (MTV) TheSub (R) TheSub (R) '70s (R) Border Wars (R) Border Wars (R) Bomb Hunters (N) Border Wars (R) Border Wars (R) Bomb Hunters (R) Border Wars (R) (NGEO) Border Wars (R) Victorious Big Time R. SpongeBob Brainsurge WifeKid (R) Lopez (R) Lopez (R) Friends (R) Friends (R) '70s (R) '70s (R) Lopez (R) Lopez (R) (NICK) SpongeBob SpongeBob iCarly 10TV News Chef Tami Sports Sports (R) Ohio's 9 O'clock News Primetime Ohio Sports (R) Sports (R) Revenue Revenue (ONN) (4:00) Ohio News Bad Girls Club (R) Bad Girls Club (R) Bad Girls Club (R) Bad Girls Club (N) Hair Battle (N) Bad Girls Club (R) Bad Girls Club (R) (OXY) Bad Girls Club (R)
Problem Child ('90) John Ritter.
If Looks Could Kill
White Water Summer (PLEX) :20
Perry Mason: Case of the Fatal Fram...
Rollercoaster ('77) George Segal. Days of Our Lives One Life to Live General Hospital Young & Restless (R) Days of Our Lives (R) (SOAP) Brothers & Sisters (R) Brothers & Sisters (R) Young & Restless Queens (R) Queens (R) (SPIKE) WaysD (R) WaysD (R) WaysD (R) WaysD (R) WaysD (R) WaysD (R) Queens (R) Queens (R) WaysD (R) WaysD (R) WaysD (R) WaysD (R) UFC Countdown (N) Warehouse 13 (R) Warehouse 13 (R) Warehouse 13 (R) Warehouse 13 (N) Warehouse 13 "Stand" Warehouse 13 (R) Warehous "Stand" (R) (SYFY) Warehouse 13 (R) Baseball MLB American League Division Series (L) (TBS) Friends (R) MLB-Deck Baseball MLB American League Division Series (L) April (R) Classic Horror
Frankenstein (:15)
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The Vanish...
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Igor ('08) John Cleese, John Cusack. (TRAV) Anthony Bourdain (R) Anthony Bourdain (R) Anthony Bourdain (R) Anthony Bourdain (R) Anthony Bourdain (R) Bourdain "Boston" (R) Anthony Bourdain (R) Anthony Bourdain (R) Cops (R) World's Dumbest (R) World's Dumbest (R) Lizard Lick Lizard Lick Swamp (N) Swamp (R) Worked Up Worked Up World's Dumbest (R) (TRU) Wild Police Videos (R) Cops (R) Ray (R) Ray (R) Ray (R) Nanny (R) Nanny (R) Rose. (R) Rose. (R) (TVL) GoodT. (R) Jeffers. (R) Sanford (R) Sanford (R) Sanford (R) Sanford (R) MASH (R) MASH (R) Ray (R) NCIS (R) NCIS "Skeletons" (R) NCIS "Heartland" (R) WWE Raw WWE Raw
Fast & Furious ('09) Paul Walker, Vin Diesel. (USA) NCIS "Blowback" (R) Bball Wives LA (R) Bball Wives LA (N) Bball Wives LA (R) Greatest Songs (N) Pop-Up (R) Greatest Songs (R) Wives LA (VH1) T.O. Show T.O. Show Tough Love (R) AdvSprt AdvSprt WEC WrekCage (R) Mixed Martial Arts UFC CollegeFootballWrap NBC Sports Talk College Football Talk Mike Florio (L) (VS.) Charmed (R) G. Girls (R) G. Girls (R) G. Girls (R) G. Girls (R) G. Girls (R) G. Girls (R) G. Girls (R) G. Girls (R) G. Girls (R) G. Girls (R) Ghost "Stranglehold" (R) Charmed (R) (WE) Chris (R) Home Videos (R) 30 Rock 30 Rock 30 Rock 30 Rock WGN News at Nine 30 Rock Scrubs (R) Scrubs (R) Sunny (R) (WGN) Mad About Mad About Chris (R) PREMIUM STATIONS
Liar Liar ('97) Jim Carrey. Bill Maher (R)
Scott Pilgrim vs. the World Michael Cera. Boxing HBO After Dark (R) (HBO) (4:15)
Waterworld (:40)
The Lovely Bones ('09) Rachel Weisz,
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Terminal Velocity
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. SATURDAY’S SOLUTION:
HINTS FROM HELOISE
More helpful hints about your medications Dear Readers: A recently featured column included hints about medications. Here are a few more to share: • Gina Cavarretta of Boynton Beach, Fla., says: “My grandma was having trouble restocking her daily sectioned pillboxes. I made a chart and placed on it the correct number of real pills — with the names next to the pills — that she would take in one day. With the names written by the pills, I took a photo of it, then printed it in 8-by-10-inch size. She can sit down and see what should be in each day’s box. I keep a copy for her to take to the doctor and one for me in case she has an emergency.”
Hints from Heloise Columnist • Bill from San Antonio says: “My computer prints out no wider than a credit card when using a No. 9 font. Folded to credit-card height, the paper fits in my billfold. It includes name, age, allergies and that I have a pacemaker. It lists prescription drugs, vitamins, overthe-counter drugs, dosage, fre-
quency and my physici-ans.” • A Reader, via email, says: “I keep my prescription bottles in a gallon-size zipper-top bag. When I go to my doctor, he wants me to bring all my prescriptions. I keep an updated medical history in my computer and email updates, highlighting any changes to my providers. I also keep a copy on a key-ring flash drive.” Thanks to all who took the time to drop a line. — Heloise FAST FACTS Dear Readers: There are so many ways to recycle and reuse empty prescription pill bottles. Here are some suggestions: • Keep dental floss/picks in one when away from home.
• Use to store quarters for laundry or vending machines. • Put small jewelry in one when traveling. • Keep pins or needles in one for sewing. — Heloise EASY HINT Dear Heloise: If you use round cotton pads for makeup or your manicure, you know how hard it is to get them out of the plastic bag they come in. I use a two-part hair roller and roll the end of the bag around the roller, then clip the roller clip over the bag. As I use the pads, I continue rolling up the roller, therefore always keeping the pads at the top of the bag. — T.H. in Monument, Colo.
TROY DAILY NEWS • WWW.TROYDAILYNEWS.COM
MUTTS
COMICS BIG NATE
DILBERT
HAGAR THE HORRIBLE
FOR BETTER OR FOR WORSE BLONDIE
ZITS HI AND LOIS
DENNIS THE MENACE
FAMILY CIRCUS BEETLE BAILEY
ARLO AND JANIS
HOROSCOPE Monday, Oct. 3, 2011 There are strong indications that the year ahead could be an extremely rewarding one for you both materially and socially. However, strive to lead a balanced life so that each area can develop in ways that complement one another. LIBRA (Sept. 23-Oct. 23) — Check your sources once again if there is something for which you’ve long been searching but haven’t yet found. Your persistent quest might finally reach a satisfactory end. SCORPIO (Oct. 24-Nov. 22) — Your views and opinions will have a greater impact on those whom you counsel than you may realistically expect. Don’t hesitate to give advice when asked. SAGITTARIUS (Nov. 23-Dec. 21) — Although you may have thought those financial seeds you recently planted had gone to the winds, you might be pleasantly surprised by signs of sprouting. CAPRICORN (Dec. 22-Jan. 19) — New challenges can be conquered if you draw upon what you’ve learned from similar experiences in the past. Don’t hesitate to put this new knowledge to work. AQUARIUS (Jan. 20-Feb. 19) — If you have something good to contribute, there is no reason why you shouldn’t make your presence felt. However, do so in ways that won’t make others view you as a right boor. PISCES (Feb. 20-March 20) — Because hopeful, new conditions are stirring on the horizon, it is important for you to stay in close touch with valuable contacts. You never know who might throw something your way. ARIES (March 21-April 19) — If you take it upon yourself to utilize all the assets at your disposal, you can get past any problems that might arise. It’s going to be up to you to capitalize on your advantages. TAURUS (April 20-May 20) — You have a gift of knowing instinctively how to put everyone at ease. Even though you won’t play favorites, each person will go away feeling he or she received special attention. GEMINI (May 21-June 20) — Instinctively you’ll know how to improve your material circumstances without expecting any miracles. You’ll understand that all it takes is dedication and perseverance. CANCER (June 21-July 22) — At this juncture, it’s safer to put more stock in your own judgment than in the views of others. Your ability to evaluate developments and draw conclusions is remarkably accurate. LEO (July 23-Aug. 22) — Financial prospects look exceptionally good for you, not because of luck, but because of your own ability to derive gains from multiple sources and endeavors. VIRGO (Aug. 23-Sept. 22) — The answer to whether or not someone to whom you’re attracted is just as interested in you may finally come. You’ll quickly find the answer by simply spending time in each other’s company. COPYRIGHT 2011 UNITED FEATURE SYNDICATE, INC.
CROSSWORD
SNUFFY SMITH
GARFIELD
BABY BLUES
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CRYPTOQUIP
CRANKSHAFT
Monday, October 3, 2011
9
10
WEATHER & NATION
Monday, October 3, 2011
Today
Tonight
Pleasantly cool High: 65°
Tuesday
Mostly clear Low: 40°
Wednesday
Thursday
Nice
Pleasant
Pleasant
High: 70° Low: 46°
High: 75° Low: 49°
High: 75° Low: 52°
Friday
Great fall weather continues High: 75° Low: 53°
Sunset tonight 6:27 p.m. ........................... Moonrise today 1:50 p.m. ........................... Moonset today 11:20 p.m. ........................... First
Full
Monday, October 3, 2011 AccuWeather.com forecast for daytime conditions, low/high temperatures
40° 65° Today
Oct. 11
2
Fronts Cold
0 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10+ Moderate
High
Very High
-10s
Air Quality Index Moderate
Harmful
0
500
Peak group: Absent
Mold Summary 0
0
12,500
25,000
Top Mold: Absent Source: Regional Air Pollution Control Agency
GLOBAL City Athens Basra Calgary Jerusalem Kabul Kuwait City Mexico City Montreal Moscow Sydney Tokyo
10s
20s 30s 40s
50s 60s
70s
80s
Pressure Low
High
Lo Hi Otlk 64 73 Clr 75104 Clr 39 49 Rn 71 85 Pc 51 82 Clr 78107 Clr 57 75 Pc 44 50 Rn 44 53 Rn 50 66 Rn 68 75 Rn
Cincinnati 43° | 67°
90s 100s 110s
Portsmouth 43° | 63°
Low: 19 at Embarrass, Minn.
Temperatures indicate Sunday’s high and overnight low to 8 p.m. Eastern Time. Hi Lo Prc Otlk Albany,N.Y. 64 46 .09 Cldy Albuquerque 79 57 Cldy Amarillo 90 50 Clr Anchorage 47 41 .11 Cldy Baltimore 51 46 .33Rain Billings 83 58 PCldy 82 56 PCldy Boise Boston 65 57 Rain Charleston,W.Va. 57 40 .01Rain Charlotte,N.C. 65 42 Clr Chicago 66 41 Clr Cincinnati 63 36 PCldy Cleveland 55 45 .21Rain Columbia,S.C. 71 48 Clr Columbus,Ohio 60 40 Cldy Dayton 61 36 PCldy Denver 85 55 PCldy Des Moines 76 41 Clr Detroit 63 40 Cldy Evansville 68 38 Clr Helena 75 46 PCldy Honolulu 90 77 Clr Houston 87 55 Clr Indianapolis 67 37 Clr 95 73 Cldy Las Vegas Little Rock 76 46 Clr
Pollen Summary 250
0s
Warm Stationary
W.VA.
KY.
NATIONAL CITIES
Main Pollutant: Particulate
0
-0s
Yesterday’s Extremes: High: 102 at Needles, Calif.
47
Good
Columbus 43° | 61°
Dayton 43° | 63°
Today’s UV factor.
Low
PA.
Oct. 19
ENVIRONMENT
Minimal
Youngstown 45° | 58°
Mansfield 43° | 58°
Last
TROY • Oct. 26
Cleveland 50° | 59°
Toledo 45° | 65°
Sunrise Tuesday 6:48 a.m. ...........................
New
TODAY’S STATEWIDE FORECAST
MICH.
NATIONAL FORECAST
SUN AND MOON
TROY DAILY NEWS • WWW.TROYDAILYNEWS.COM
Los Angeles Louisville Memphis Miami Beach Nashville New Orleans New York City Oklahoma City Omaha Philadelphia Pittsburgh Providence Raleigh-Durham Reno Richmond St Louis St Petersburg San Diego San Francisco Shreveport Sioux Falls Spokane Syracuse Tampa Topeka Tucson Tulsa Washington,D.C.
Hi Lo Prc Otlk 82 64 PCldy 68 41 Clr 73 46 Clr 87 75 Cldy 67 40 Clr 74 62 Clr 64 50 .07Rain 83 49 Clr 78 47 Clr 56 51 .50Rain 45 41 .56Rain 70 58 .02Rain 62 46 PCldy 78 52 Cldy 58 49 Cldy 71 42 Clr 80 66 Clr 79 64 PCldy 72 58 Rain 81 51 Clr 81 50 Clr 69 51 .13 Cldy 63 43 .30 Cldy 80 60 Clr 79 40 Clr 93 67 .01PCldy 78 45 Clr 52 45 .27Rain
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REGIONAL ALMANAC Temperature High Yesterday .............................60 at 3:31 p.m. Low Yesterday..............................36 at 6:47 a.m. Normal High .....................................................69 Normal Low ......................................................48 Record High ........................................90 in 1900 Record Low.........................................28 in 1908
Precipitation 24 hours ending at 5 p.m..............................0.00 Month to date ................................................0.01 Normal month to date ...................................0.19 Year to date .................................................42.58 Normal year to date ....................................31.80 Snowfall yesterday ........................................0.00
TODAY IN HISTORY (AP) — Today is Monday, Oct. 3, the 276th day of 2011. There are 89 days left in the year. Today’s Highlight in History: On Oct. 3, 1951, the New York Giants captured the National League pennant by a score of 54 as Bobby Thomson hit a threerun homer off the Brooklyn Dodgers’ Ralph Branca in the “shot heard ‘round the world.” On this date: • In 1789, President George Washington declared Nov. 26,
1789, a day of Thanksgiving to express gratitude for the creation of the United States of America. • In 1863, President Abraham Lincoln proclaimed the last Thursday in November Thanksgiving Day. • In 1929, the Kingdom of Serbs, Croats and Slovenes formally changed its name to the Kingdom of Yugoslavia. • In 1941, Adolf Hitler declared in a speech in Berlin that Russia had been “broken” and would “never rise again.” ”The
Maltese Falcon” the version starring Humphrey Bogart and directed by John Huston opened in New York. • In 1961, “The Dick Van Dyke Show,” also starring Mary Tyler Moore, made its debut on CBS. • Today’s Birthdays: Author Gore Vidal is 86. Basketball player Marques Haynes is 85. Composer Steve Reich is 75. Singer Alan O’Day is 71. Rock and roll star Chubby Checker is 70. Actor Alan Rachins is 69.
Filipinos still trapped on roofs; typhoons kill 59 missing in the same region before blowing out Friday. Nalgae was whirling over the South China Sea and heading toward southern China late Sunday afternoon, 230 miles (370 kilometers) from the Philippines’ northeast coast, with sustained winds of 75 miles (120 kilometers) per hour and gusts of 93 mph (150 kph), according to the Philippine government weather agency. China’s National Meteorological Center urged people in areas expected to be lashed by rainstorms in the next three days, including on southernmost Hainan island and in eastern Taiwan, to stay indoors and cancel large
MANILA, Philippines (AP) — Rescuers scrambled Sunday to deliver food and water to hundreds of villagers stuck on rooftops for days because of flooding in the northern Philippines, where back-to-back typhoons have left at least 59 people dead. Typhoon Nalgae slammed ashore in northeastern Isabela province Saturday, then barreled across the main island of Luzon’s mountainous north and agricultural plains, which were still sodden from fierce rain and winds unleashed by a howler just days earlier. Nalgae left at least three people dead Saturday. Typhoon Nesat killed 56 others and left 28
assemblies, China’s official Xinhua News Agency reported Sunday. Nalgae’s ferocious winds set off a rock slide in the northern mountain province of Bontoc in the Philippines on Saturday, causing boulders to roll down a mountainside and smash a passing van, where a passenger was pinned to death and another was injured, police said. In northern Tarlac province’s Camiling town, a man sought safety with his two young nephews as flooding rose in their village Saturday. But one of the children was swept away by rampaging waters and drowned, while his uncle and his brother remained
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A Filipino girl cries as she is carried by her mother at a long cue for relief goods in suburban Malabon, north of Manila, Philippines on Sunday. missing. A drunken man disaster officer Marvin drowned in flooding in a Guiang said. Nalgae roared through nearby village, provincial parts of Luzon that had been saturated by Typhoon Nesat, which trapped thousands on rooftops and sent huge waves that breached a seawall in Manila Bay. Nesat then pummeled southern China and was downgraded to a tropical storm just before churning into northern Vietnam on Friday, where 20,000 people 172 South Ridge Avenue, Troy were evacuated. Seven towns north of Manila were still flooded Sunday, including Calumpit in rice-growing Bulacan FREE Admission! Pony Rides, Live Music, Games, province, where hundreds of Delicious Fall Foods, And 100’s Of Raffle Prizes residents remained trapped on rooftops in four villages 339-5111 for the fourth day, many 2222238 desperately waving for help. Rescuers aboard rubber boats could not reach them because of narrow alleys. Two air force helicopters were ordered deployed to drop water and food packs • It Hurts To Walk Even Short Distances
to the marooned villagers, officials said. Calumpit Mayor James de Jesus said floodwaters were receding later Sunday, sparking hope the crisis would end sooner. Local leaders have been asked to help distribute relief supplies to residents in areas in the four villages that could now be accessed, he said. “It’s still critical. There are still houses which could not be reached,” de Jesus told DZBB radio. Benito Ramos, who heads the Office of Civil Defense, said he was concerned that freshly dumped rains by Nalgae may flow down from the mountainous north to the central Luzon provinces of Bulacan and Pampanga, which act like a catch basin, especially during high tide in nearby Manila Bay. Some officials said water released from nearby dams had exacerbated the floods. Ramos criticized those villagers who refused to leave their flooded homes despite orders to evacuate. During a nationally televised meeting with disaster response agencies, President Benigno Aquino III ordered authorities to study how villagers and fishermen can be forced to follow storm warnings to prevent casualties in the future. In the last four months, prolonged monsoon flooding, typhoons and storms across Southeast Asia, China, Japan and South Asia have left more than 600 people dead or missing.
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TROY DAILY NEWS • WWW.TROYDAILYNEWS.COM
TODAY’S TIPS
■ National Football League
• HOLE-IN-ONE: Tim Ampleford made a hole-in-one on the par-3 175yard sixth hole at Troy Country Club Sept. 24. Amplefod used an 8 iron to record his first ace, which was witnessed by Randy Oyster. • FOOTBALL: The annual TroyPiqua community pep rally will be held at 7 p.m. Thursday night downtown at Prouty Plaza. • SENIOR BUS: As in years past, there is a bus service to away football games for Troy football fans ages 55 and older. For more information, call 335-7742. • SOCCER: The Troy High School boys and girls soccer teams are planning a Krispy Kreme Doughnuts fundraiser event at the Troy-Piqua football game this year. Players will be helping to sell 400 dozen glazed doughnuts for $5 per box at various exits as fans leave Troy Memorial Stadium after the Troy-Piqua game Friday. The proceeds will help pay for new soccer uniforms. • FOOTBALL: The Big Four Browns Backers of Sidney/Shelby County will hold their annual dinner dance on Oct. 8, and highlighting the evening will be the appearance of former Browns greats Greg Pruitt and Tom Cousineau. The event will be at the Eagles Lodge in Sidney, at 433 E. Court St., from 5-11 p.m. The cost is $25 per person and $40 per couple. The facility will have a big screen TV so those in attendance can watch the Ohio State-Nebraska game. Music will be provided by Dark Horse, and the Inn Between will cater the event. There will also be a cash bar, door prizes, raffles, and a 50-50. For tickets, call (937) 492-9131 from noon to 4 p.m., or (937) 492-8189 from 4-8 p.m.
Brown and out
October 3, 2011
Cleveland sloppy in loss to Tennessee CLEVELAND (AP) — Matt Hasselbeck’s free agent contract with Tennessee included a few perks. One of them wasn’t a rocking chair. The 13-year veteran quarterback, who left Seattle after a playoff-filled decade, threw three touchdown passes in the first half and safety Jordan Babineaux returned an interception 97 yards for a TD as the Titans thumped the Cleveland Browns 31-13 on Sunday for their third straight win under
first-year coach Mike Munchak. Hasselbeck picked apart Cleveland’s secondary in the opening half, throwing for 194 yards on several big plays while helping the Titans (3-1) build a 21-6 lead. The 36-year-old finished 10 of 20 for 220 yards 26 on just two completions after halftime. When the Titans signed Hasselbeck to a three-year deal in late July, the decision caused AP PHOTO some head scratching around the Cleveland Browns quarterback Colt McCoy, back, passes in league. Now, other teams may be front of Tennessee Titans defensive back Anthony Smith
■ See BROWNS on 12 Sunday in Cleveland.
■ Auto Racing
■ National Football League
AP PHOTO
Kurt Busch (22) takes the checkered flag to win the NASCAR Sprint Cup Series auto race at Dover International Speedway Sunday in Dover, Del.
SPORTS CALENDAR TODAY Boys Golf Tippecanoe at Greenville (4 p.m.) Boys Soccer Tecumseh at Tippecanoe (7:15 p.m.) Girls Soccer Tippecanoe at Tecumseh (7:15 p.m.) Bethel at Butler (7 p.m.) Volleyball Versailles at Covington (5:30 p.m.) Troy Christian at Bradford (6:45 p.m.) Piqua at GWOC (TBA) TUESDAY Girls Golf Division I Sectional Troy, Tippecanoe (at Beavercreek) (8:30 a.m.) Division II District Covington (at Pipestone) (TBA) Tennis Division II Troy Sectional Tippecanoe, Milton-Union, Lehman (9 a.m.) Boys Soccer Butler at Troy (7:30 p.m.) Botkins at Newton (7 p.m.) Sidney at Piqua (TBA) Lehman at Franklin Monroe (7 p.m.) Girls Soccer Middletown Christian at Troy Christian (5 p.m.) Lehman at Franklin Monroe (5 p.m.) Volleyball Troy at GWOC Tourney (TBA) Graham at Tippecanoe (7 p.m.) Bethel at Miami East (5:30 p.m.) Middletown Christian at Troy Christian (6:15 p.m.) Piqua at GWOC (TBA) Lehman at New Bremen (5:30 p.m.) Franklin Monroe at Bradford (5:30 p.m.)
WHAT’S INSIDE National Football League .....12 Major League Baseball.........12 Golf.......................................12 Scoreboard ............................13 Television Schedule..............13
11
Busch wins at Dover AP PHOTO
Cincinnati Bengals quarterback Andy Dalton (14) scores a touchdown on a 3-yard run past Buffalo Bills safety Jairus Byrd (31) in the second half Sunday in Cincinnati.
Dalton delivers QB leads clutch drive, Nugent FG sinks Bills CINCINNATI (AP) — The Bills’ stretch of amazing comebacks ended when they couldn’t stop a rookie quarterback from pulling off one of his own. Andy Dalton shook off a horrid first half and led his first game-winning drive in the NFL on Sunday. Mike Nugent’s 43-yard field goal as time ran out gave the Cincinnati Bengals a 23-20 victory over the previously unbeaten Bills in front of the smallest crowd in Paul Brown Stadium’s history. “I think we needed it a lot, especially at home,” Nugent said. “We’ve got to do a better job of putting fans in the
stands.” Many of the 41,142 fans had left when Dalton ran 3 yards for a tying touchdown with 4:09 to go. He got Cincinnati (2-2) in position to pull it out by scrambling for a pivotal first down on the winning drive, helped by a replay overturn that went in his favor. The youngster’s strong finish ended Cincinnati’s streak of 10 straight losses against Buffalo (3-1) since the 1988 AFC championship game. It was Cincinnati’s biggest comeback since Carson Palmer’s team overcame a 17-point deficit to beat Baltimore 27-26 in 2004. “He’s a young quarterback,”
said rookie receiver A.J. Green, who had four catches for 118 yards. “It’s all about how you finish. The great ones finish, and he’s going to be a great one.” The Bills arrived as the AFC’s last perfect team after pulling off historic comebacks, rallying from deficits of 18 against Oakland and 21 points against New England in the past two games. No team in NFL history had such back-toback comebacks. This time, it came down to holding a lead. They couldn’t do it. “I don’t know if it had any-
■ See BENGALS on 12
DOVER, DEL. (AP) — Kurt Busch stormed into contention for a second Cup championship, holding off fellow Chase drivers Jimmie Johnson and Carl Edwards to win Sunday at Dover International Speedway. Edwards and Kevin Harvick share the points lead in the Chase for the Sprint Cup championship standings after three rounds. Harvick is seeded first because of a tiebreaker. Round 4 of the Chase is at Kansas Speedway. Busch pulled away from Johnson after a late restart to win his second race of the season. Johnson, the five-time defending champion, was second and Edwards was third. Busch moved from ninth to fourth in the standings, only nine points out of first. “To win a Sprint Cup race in the Chase, this is what it’s all about,” Busch said. Chase drivers Matt Kenseth and Kyle Busch were fifth and sixth. Harvick was 10th. Tony Stewart lost the points lead he built after winning the first two Chase races and finished 25th.
■ College Football
With run stopped, Buckeyes couldn’t pass Tigers even series with Yankees Detroit closer Jose Valverde held off a furious New York ninth-inning rally and the Tigers avoided a major slip-up, beating the Yankees 5-3 on a rainy Sunday and evening their best-of-five AL playoff series at one game apiece. See Page 12.
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COLUMBUS (AP) — An opposing coach would have to be blind to not see how to disrupt Ohio State’s stagnant offense. Michigan State’s top-ranked defense stuffed players on the line, daring the Buckeyes to pass in a 10-7 victory at chilly and wet Ohio Stadium on Saturday. In addition to limiting the Buckeyes to a woeful 35 net yards rushing on 39 attempts (after sub-
tracting 43 yards in losses from nine sacks), the Spartans dared Ohio State to go to the air. And the Buckeyes could not sustain a passing attack. Braxton Miller was 5 for 10 for 56 yards with one interception, Joe Bauserman was 7 of 14 for 87 yards and a touchdown. Bauserman’s passing yardage included 82 yards on the last two possessions, with the game all but
over. Ohio State didn’t crack triple digits in total offense until midway through the fourth quarter, finishing with 178 yards. “Sometimes they were bringing more guys than we could block,” Ohio State interim coach Luke Fickell said. “There’s a lot of things that you’ve got to check out of, and sometimes that’s being able to see the field, whether it’s from the center spot or the quar-
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terback spot. You don’t give your quarterback much of a chance if he’s getting sacked nine times. But if you can’t run the football really well, then you put your quarterback in a situation where he is a sitting (duck) back there.” The Buckeyes have just a week to make some sense of it all before traveling to Nebraska for the Cornhuskers’ first Big Ten home game.
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Monday, October 3, 2011
■ Golf
TROY DAILY NEWS • WWW.TROYDAILYNEWS.COM
■ National Football League
Rivers, Tolbert help Chargers win Johnson’s late TD catch gives Lions win over Cowboys
AP PHOTO
Kevin Na watches his putt for birdie approach the 17th hole during the final round of the Justin Timberlake Shriners Hospitals for Children Open golf tournament Sunday in Las Vegas.
Na wins in Vegas LAS VEGAS (AP) — Kevin Na won the Justin Timberlake Shriners Hospitals for Children Open on Sunday for his first PGA Tour title, birdieing Nos. 15-17 to pull away for a two-stroke victory over Nick Watney. Na closed with a 6-under 65 for a 23-under 261 total at TPC Summlerin in the Fall Series opener. His family moved from South Korea to the United States when he was eight and he started playing golf a year later. Watney, a two-time winner this year, shot a 67. Na, tied for the lead with Watney entering the round, sealed his victory with a 42foot birdie putt on the par-3 17th. Na and Watney both parred the par-4 18th.
SAN DIEGO (AP) — The San Diego Chargers are 3-1 for the first time in five seasons under Norv Turner, and they’ve done it with workmanlike performances rather than a lot of flash and dash. Philip Rivers was 21 of 31 for 307 yards and one touchdown, Mike Tolbert ran for another score and the Chargers knocked out Miami quarterback Chad Henne on the way to beating the winless Dolphins 2616 on Sunday. The Chargers have a one-game lead in the AFC West over Oakland, which lost to New England. “Everybody seems to think we can’t start fast,” Tolbert said. “But no matter how we win, how ugly it is, we’re 3-1. We’re on a good pace right now. We’re trying to keep momentum going.” Troy graduate Kris Dielman plays for the Chargers. Packers 49, Broncos 23
GREEN BAY, Wis. — Aaron Rodgers threw for a career-high 408 yards, tied a personal best with four touchdown passes and ran for two more scores and Bay remained Green unbeaten. Charles Woodson ran an interception back for a touchdown for the Packers (4-0), who join resurgent NFC North rivals Detroit as the only undefeated teams left in the NFL.
Washington held off a late rally by winless St. Louis. The Redskins (3-1) dominated on defense and got two of their seven sacks late by Stephen Bowen and Brian Orakpo to knock the Rams (0-4) out of scoring position. James Laurinaitis’ interception and 15-yard return of an underthrown pass from Rex Grossman had given St. Louis the ball at the Washington 19 with about five minutes remaining. Saints 23, Jaguars 10
AP PHOTO
San Diego Chargers quarterback Philip Rivers (17) tries to get off a pass under pressure, while Kris Dielman (68) and two other offensive linemenblock in the background during the first half Sunday in San Diego. 24-point deficit with interceptions returned for touchdowns midway through the third quarter, then he and Calvin Johnson took over from there, leading the Detroit Lions to a stunning 34-30 victory over the Dallas Cowboys on Sunday. A week after turning a 20-point halftime deficit into an overtime win, the Lions provided further proof they’re a legitimate contender this season. 49ers 24, Eagles 23
PHILADELPHIA — When Alex Smith began to air it out, he outdid Michael Vick and Philadelphia. Chucking its conservative approach in the second half, the 49ers surged back from a 20-point hole for the victoLions 34, Cowboys 30 ARLINGTON, Texas — ry. Vick wasn’t hampered by Matthew Stafford saw his defense start wiping out a his bruised right hand,
■ Major League Baseball
throwing for a career-high 416 yards and two touchdowns and rushing for 75 yards. But Philly’s defense fell apart in the final 30 minutes, and Frank Gore capped a 77-yard drive with a 12-yard TD run. Texans 17, Steelers 10
behind an offensive line missing two regular starters. The quarterback injured his left leg late in the game and left the stadium wearing a walking boot. Patriots 31, Raiders 19
OAKLAND, Calif. — Tom Brady bounced back from a four-interception performance by throwing for 226 yards, two touchdowns and committing no turnovers. Wes Welker caught nine passes for 158 yards and a score, BenJarvus GreenEllis and Stevan Ridley adding rushing touchdowns and the Patriots (3-1) played a mostly mistakefree game after last week’s surprising loss in Buffalo.
HOUSTON — Arian Foster rushed for 155 yards and the go-ahead touchdown in the fourth quarter as Houston overcame an injury to All-Pro Andre Johnson for the win., Johnson left in the second quarter with a right hamstring injury and did not return though he was back on the sideline late to watch Houston (3-1) finish off the injury-plagued Redskins 17, Rams 10 Steelers (2-2). ST. LOUIS — Ryan Ben Roethlisberger was under pressure all day and Torain ran for 135 yards was sacked five times and a 20-yard score, and
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eighth. Pretty soon, the rain and all the drama filled Yankee Stadium. Game 3 is Monday at Detroit. In an ace rematch, of sorts, CC Sabathia is scheduled to start for the Yankees against Justin Verlander. The two AllStars faced each other in the series opener Friday night, but the game was suspended after only 1 innings because of rain. The Yankees lost three of four this year at Detroit and are 22-25 at Comerica Park since it opened in 2000. It’s one of only two AL stadiums where New York has a losing record. Playing on the scheduled travel day, the Tigers now fly home with a chance to take command of the series, just as they did in 2006, when they lost the opener in New York before sweeping three straight. Brewers 9, Diamondbacks 4 MILWAUKEE — Jonathan Lucroy drove in the go-ahead run with a squeeze and the Milwaukee Brewers showed they could bunt as well as bash, breaking away from the Arizona Diamondbacks 9-4 Sunday to take a 2-0 lead in their NL division series. Ryan Braun hit a tworun homer and fellow slugger Prince Fielder added an RBI single for Milwaukee. But the brawny Brewers also excel at the little things, especially Lucroy. Lucroy’s safety squeeze keyed a five-run sixth inning, and came right after Diamondbacks reliever Brad Ziegler became angry about a balk call. That’s when rookie Milwaukee manager Ron Roenicke put on a play he’d already seen Lucroy successfully bunt a few times this season. With the score 4-all and runners at the corners with one out, Jerry Hairston Jr. took a couple of half-steps and sprinted home as Lucroy bunted toward first base. Ziegler’s awkward flip went wide of catcher Miguel Montero and the Diamondbacks imploded from there, with Milwaukee taking a 9-4 lead.
Bears 34, Panthers 29
CHICAGO — Devin Hester set an NFL record with his 11th punt return for a touchdown, Matt Forte ran for a career-high 205 yards for Chicago (2-2). Hester had earlier set up a TD run by Forte with a 73yard kickoff return before he ran back a punt 69 yards in the second quarter to move ahead of Eric Metcalf on the all-time list. He performed three somersaults in the end zone with the lead at 24-10, but the celebration was a little early.
■ NFL
■ National Football League
Browns
Tigers stop Yanks in ninth, tie ALDS NEW YORK (AP) — Detroit closer Jose Valverde held off a furious New York ninth-inning rally and the Tigers avoided a major slipup, beating the Yankees 5-3 on a rainy Sunday and evening their best-of-five AL playoff series at one game apiece. Down 5-1, the Yankees scored twice in the ninth. Helped when Detroit catcher Alex Avila lost his footing on the slick on-deck circle while chasing a foul pop that would’ve been the final out, New York got a chance to win it. “It’s a little hard. That’s what happens sometimes,” Valverde said. After his popup landed untouched, Curtis Granderson drew a walk. With two outs and two on, Robinson Cano came to the plate. Cano, who hit a grand slam and had six RBIs as the Yankees won the opener, wiped away raindrops from his helmet and then hit a routine groundball to end it. “All of a sudden, against anybody but particularly against a team like them with the short porch in right field it was not a good feeling,” Tigers manager Jim Leyland said. “But it worked out OK.” Tigers starter Max Scherzer pitched no-hit ball into the sixth before Cano blooped an opposite-field single to left. Miguel Cabrera’s tworun homer in the first off Freddy Garcia gave Scherzer an early edge, and the Tigers took a 4-0 lead into the eighth. Granderson hit a solo homer off Tigers reliever Joaquin Benoit in the
JACKSONVILLE, Fla. — Drew Brees threw for 351 yards and a touchdown, Darren Sproles added 188 all-purpose yards and New Orleans improved to 3-1. The Saints scored TDs on their first two possessions and looked well on their way to reaching 30 points for the fourth consecutive week. But Brees threw two interceptions, and the Saints were forced to settle for three field goals in the second half.
AP PHOTO
Cincinnati Bengals’ Mike Nugent (2) watches his game-winning 43-yard field goal with holder Kevin Huber in the closing seconds during a game against the Buffalo Bills Sunday in Cincinnati.
Bengals ■ CONTINUED FROM B1 thing to do with all the emotion from last week’s game,” quarterback Ryan Fitzpatrick said. “It had more to do with us flat-out not showing up in the second half.” Buffalo went up 17-3 during Dalton’s poor first half. The secondround draft pick was only 7 of 20 for 116 yards with two sacks and an interception that safety Bryan Scott returned 43 yards for a touchdown. His passer rating was a minuscule 15.8 in the opening half. The rough time didn’t leave him down. “I’ve been through a lot,” Dalton said. “You can’t get too high, you can’t get too low. If you’re too high, it can hurt you. If you’re too low, it can hurt you. I try
to stay even-keel.” The rookie finally got going with a 17-yard touchdown pass to Jermaine Gresham, the Bengals’ first touchdown in seven quarters. He went 3 yards on the quarterback draw to tie it, then scrambled to set up the winning kick the next time Cincinnati got the ball. On third-and-3 from the Cincinnati 43, he scrambled away from the rush and dived out of bounds, stretching the ball as far ahead as he could. It was marked a few inches short of the first down. After a review, the ball was moved about a foot forward, giving the Bengals a first down with 45 seconds left. Brian Leonard caught a 15-yard pass and ran 14 yards to the
Buffalo 25, setting up the winning kick. Nugent, coming off knee surgery last year, is perfect in 10 field goal chances. Dalton finished 18 of 36 for 298 yards. Cedric Benson ran 19 times for 104 yards, taking some of the pressure off the quarterback. Coming off an emotional win over New England, the Bills were flat on offense and never got moving. They’d scored at least 30 points in each of the first three games, but managed only Scott’s touchdown return, Fred Jackson’s 2-yard run and a pair of field goals. “It’s the worst way to lose it,” Jackson said. “We had an opportunity to put away the game, but we didn’t make the plays when we had to.”
■ CONTINUED FROM B1 kicking themselves. “We thought he had a lot left in the tank from watching him in the playoffs last year,” Munchak said. “We didn’t bring him here to retire quietly. We brought him here to do exactly what he’s been doing.” The Titans were playing with heavy hearts. On Saturday, they learned that Mike Heimerdinger, their beloved former offensive known as coordinator “Dinger” died of cancer at 58. Heimerdinger died while in Mexico to receive experimental treatments for a rare form of the disease. Heimerdinger and Munchak spent several seasons on former Titans coach Jeff Fisher’s staff. “I was a young coach, and we grew together,” Munchak said. “He was great. It’s a big, big loss to the organization.” Tennessee’s Chris Johnson finally broke out of his early season funk, rushing 23 times for 101 yards, three more than his total in three games. Johnson was glad to finally contribute to an offense Hasselbeck has humming. “Of all the quarterbacks I’ve played with, he’s most like a coach on the field,” Johnson said. Hasselbeck said the transition has been easier than expected, and credited offensive coordinator Chris Palmer for making it smooth and seamless. “I’m the new guy, but our five guys up front have been together for so long,” he said. “And when the defense scores points, you love it. Chris is really running the show on the passing game. He’s patient with me. What we are doing is very different from my past and I make rookie mistakes. He gets me through it.” The Browns (2-2) didn’t build momentum following a comeback win last week over Miami, and Cleveland enters its bye with renewed problems the club hopes don’t worsen. Cornerback Joe Haden, arguably Cleveland’s best player, sprained his left knee and will undergo further examination on Monday. Also, wide receiver Mohamed Massaquoi hurt his shoulder.
SPORTS
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BASEBALL Postseason Baseball Glance All Times EDT DIVISION SERIES (Best-of-5; x-if necessary) All games televised by TBS American League NewYork vs. Detroit Friday, Sept. 30: Detroit 1, New York 1, 1½ innings, suspended, rain Saturday, Oct.1:Detroit (Fister 11-13) at NewYork (Nova 16-4), 8:37 p.m., comp. of susp. game Sunday, Oct. 2: Detroit 5, New York 3 Monday, Oct. 3: New York (Sabathia 198) at Detroit (Verlander 24-5), 8:37 p.m. x-Tuesday, Oct. 4: New York (TBA) at Detroit (Porcello 14-9), TBA x-Thursday, Oct. 6: Detroit at New York, TBA Texas vs.Tampa Bay Friday, Sept. 30: Tampa Bay 9, Texas 0 Saturday, Oct. 1: Texas 8, Tampa Bay 6 Monday, Oct. 3: Texas (Lewis 14-10) at Tampa Bay (Price 12-13), 5:07 p.m. x-Tuesday, Oct. 4: Texas at Tampa Bay, TBA x-Thursday, Oct. 6:Tampa Bay at Texas, TBA National League Philadelphia vs. St. Louis Saturday, Oct. 1: Philadelphia 11, St. Louis 6. Sunday, Oct. 2: St. Louis (J.Garcia 13-7) at Philadelphia (Cl.Lee 17-8), 8:07 p.m. Tuesday, Oct. 4: Philadelphia at St. Louis, TBA x-Wednesday, Oct. 5: Philadelphia at St. Louis, TBA x-Friday, Oct. 7: St. Louis at Philadelphia, TBA Arizona vs. Milwaukee Saturday, Oct. 1: Milwaukee 4, Arizona 1 Sunday, Oct. 2: Milwaukee 9, Arizona 4 Tuesday, Oct. 4: Milwaukee at Arizona, TBA x-Wednesday, Oct. 5: Milwaukee at Arizona, TBA x-Friday, Oct. 7: Arizona at Milwaukee, TBA LEAGUE CHAMPIONSHIP SERIES (Best-of-7; x-if necessary) American League All games televised by Fox Saturday, Oct. 8:Tampa Bay-Texas winner at New York OR Detroit at Texas OR Tampa Bay at Detroit Sunday, Oct. 9: Tampa Bay-Texas winner at New York OR Detroit at Texas OR Tampa Bay at Detroit Tuesday, Oct. 11: New York at Tampa Bay-Texas winner OR Texas at Detroit OR Detroit at Tampa Bay Wednesday, Oct.12:NewYork atTampa Bay-Texas winner OR Texas at Detroit OR Detroit at Tampa Bay x-Thursday, Oct. 13: NewYork at Tampa Bay-Texas winner OR Texas at Detroit OR Detroit at Tampa Bay x-Saturday, Oct. 15: Tampa Bay-Texas winner at New York OR Detroit at Texas OR Tampa Bay at Detroit x-Sunday, Oct. 16: Tampa Bay-Texas winner at New York OR Detroit at Texas OR Tampa Bay at Detroit National League All games televised by TBS Sunday, Oct. 9: Arizona-Milwaukee winner at Philadelphia OR St. Louis at Arizona-Milwaukee winner Monday, Oct. 10: Arizona-Milwaukee winner at Philadelphia OR St. Louis Arizona-Milwaukee winner Wednesday, Oct. 12: Philadelphia at Arizona-Milwaukee winner OR ArizonaMilwaukee winner at St. Louis Thursday, Oct. 13: Philadelphia at Arizona-Milwaukee winner OR ArizonaMilwaukee winner at St. Louis x-Friday, Oct. 14: Philadelphia at Arizona-Milwaukee winner OR ArizonaMilwaukee winner at St. Louis x-Sunday, Oct. 16: Arizona-Milwaukee winner at Philadelphia OR St. Louis at Arizona-Milwaukee winner x-Monday, Oct. 17: Arizona-Milwaukee winner at Philadelphia OR St. Louis at Arizona-Milwaukee winner WORLD SERIES (Best-of-7; x-if necessary) All games televised by Fox Wednesday, Oct. 19 at National League Thursday, Oct. 20 at National League Saturday, Oct. 22 at American League Sunday, Oct. 23 at American League x-Monday, Oct. 24 at American League x-Wednesday, Oct. 26 at National League x-Thursday, Oct. 27 at National League Sunday's Major League Linescores AMERICAN LEAGUE Detroit . . . . . .200 002 001—5 9 0 NewYork . . . .000 000 012—3 5 1 Scherzer, Benoit (7), Valverde (9) and Avila; F.Garcia, Logan (6), Wade (7), Ayala (9) and R.Martin. W_Scherzer 1-0. L_F.Garcia 0-1. HRs_Detroit, Mi.Cabrera (1). New York, Granderson (1), Swisher (1). NATIONAL LEAGUE Arizona . . . . .010 120 000—4 10 1 Milwaukee . .202 005 00x—9 12 1 D.Hudson, Ziegler (6), Paterson (6), Shaw (6), Owings (7), Da.Hernandez (8) and M.Montero; Greinke, Saito (6), Hawkins (7), Fr.Rodriguez (8), Axford (9) and Lucroy. W_Saito 1-0. L_D.Hudson 0-1. HRs_Arizona, Goldschmidt (1), C.Young (1), J.Upton (1). Milwaukee, Braun (1).
FOOTBALL National Football League All Times EDT AMERICAN CONFERENCE East W L T Pct Buffalo 3 1 0 .750 New England 3 1 0 .750 N.Y. Jets 2 1 0 .667 Miami 0 4 0 .000 South W L T Pct Houston 3 1 0 .750 Tennessee 3 1 0 .750 Jacksonville 1 3 0 .250 Indianapolis 0 3 0 .000 North W L T Pct Baltimore 2 1 0 .667 Cincinnati 2 2 0 .500 Cleveland 2 2 0 .500 Pittsburgh 2 2 0 .500 West W L T Pct San Diego 3 1 0 .750 Oakland 2 2 0 .500 Denver 1 3 0 .250 Kansas City 1 3 0 .250 NATIONAL CONFERENCE East W L T Pct Washington 3 1 0 .750 N.Y. Giants 3 1 0 .750 Dallas 2 2 0 .500 Philadelphia 1 3 0 .250 South
New Orleans Tampa Bay Atlanta Carolina North Green Bay Detroit Chicago Minnesota West
W 3 2 2 1
L 1 1 2 3
T 0 0 0 0
Pct .750 .667 .500 .250
PF 127 60 90 89
PA 98 60 105 102
W 4 4 2 0
L 0 0 2 4
T Pct 0 1.000 0 1.000 0 .500 0 .000
PF 148 135 94 77
PA 97 76 98 96
W L T Pct PF PA San Francisco 3 1 0 .750 94 75 1 3 0 .250 58 97 Seattle Arizona 1 3 0 .250 86 87 0 4 0 .000 46 113 St. Louis Sunday's Games Detroit 34, Dallas 30 Washington 17, St. Louis 10 Kansas City 22, Minnesota 17 Chicago 34, Carolina 29 Houston 17, Pittsburgh 10 New Orleans 23, Jacksonville 10 San Francisco 24, Philadelphia 23 Tennessee 31, Cleveland 13 Cincinnati 23, Buffalo 20 N.Y. Giants 31, Arizona 27 Atlanta 30, Seattle 28 San Diego 26, Miami 16 New England 31, Oakland 19 Green Bay 49, Denver 23 N.Y. Jets at Baltimore, 8:20 p.m. Monday's Game Indianapolis at Tampa Bay, 8:30 p.m. Sunday, Oct. 9 Arizona at Minnesota, 1 p.m. Oakland at Houston, 1 p.m. Kansas City at Indianapolis, 1 p.m. Philadelphia at Buffalo, 1 p.m. New Orleans at Carolina, 1 p.m. Cincinnati at Jacksonville, 1 p.m. Tennessee at Pittsburgh, 1 p.m. Seattle at N.Y. Giants, 1 p.m. Tampa Bay at San Francisco, 4:05 p.m. San Diego at Denver, 4:15 p.m. N.Y. Jets at New England, 4:15 p.m. Green Bay at Atlanta, 8:20 p.m. Bye Week: Baltimore, Cleveland, Dallas, Miami, St. Louis, Washington Monday, Oct. 10 Chicago at Detroit, 8:30 p.m.
SOCCER Major League Soccer At A Glance All Times EDT EASTERN CONFERENCE W L T Pts GF GA Sporting KC 11 9 12 45 47 40 Philadelphia 10 7 14 44 41 34 12 12 8 44 38 41 Columbus 10 9 13 43 40 40 Houston 8 7 16 40 47 42 New York 9 10 11 38 46 46 D.C. 7 8 16 37 40 40 Chicago 6 13 13 31 33 56 Toronto FC New England 5 14 12 27 35 51 WESTERN CONFERENCE W L T Pts GF GA x-Los Angeles 18 3 10 64 46 23 16 6 9 57 51 33 x-Seattle x-Real Salt Lake1510 6 51 43 32 13 11 7 46 36 34 FC Dallas 11 9 12 45 42 40 Colorado 11 13 7 40 38 44 Portland Chivas USA 8 12 12 36 40 39 6 11 14 32 33 40 San Jose 4 16 10 22 29 50 Vancouver NOTE: Three points for victory, one point for tie. x- clinched playoff berth Wednesday's Games Sporting Kansas City 2, Columbus 1 Chicago 3, Real Salt Lake 0 Thursday's Games Philadelphia 3, D.C. United 2 Saturday's Games Houston 1, Chicago 1, tie Toronto FC 1, New York 1, tie Seattle FC 2, New England 1 Colorado 1, FC Dallas 0 Los Angeles 2, Real Salt Lake 1 San Jose 1, Sporting Kansas City 1, tie Sunday's Games Columbus 2, D.C. United 1 Portland 1, Vancouver 0 Chivas USA 1, Philadelphia 1, tie Tuesday, Oct. 4 Los Angeles at New York, 8 p.m. Thursday, Oct. 6 Real Salt Lake at Vancouver, 9:30 p.m. Saturday, Oct. 8 San Jose at New England, 7:30 p.m. Philadelphia at Seattle FC, 10 p.m. Wednesday, Oct. 12 FC Dallas at Chicago, 8:30 p.m. D.C. United at Vancouver, 10 p.m. Friday, Oct. 14 Real Salt Lake at Colorado, 10:30 p.m. Houston at Portland, 10:30 p.m. Saturday, Oct. 15 New York at Sporting Kansas City, 4 p.m. Toronto FC at Philadelphia, 4 p.m. Chicago at D.C. United, 7:30 p.m. Columbus at New England, 7:30 p.m. Vancouver at FC Dallas, 8:30 p.m. San Jose at Seattle FC, 10:30 p.m. Sunday, Oct. 16 Chivas USA at Los Angeles, 9 p.m.
BASKETBALL WNBA Playoff Glance All Times EDT CHAMPIONSHIP Sunday, Oct. 2: Minnesota 88, Atlanta 74 Wednesday, Oct.5: Indiana-Atlanta winner at Minnesota, 8 p.m. Friday, Oct. 7: Minnesota at IndianaAtlanta winner, 8 p.m. x-Sunday, Oct. 9: Minnesota at IndianaAtlanta winner, 4 p.m. x-Wednesday, Oct. 12: Indiana-Atlanta winner at Minnesota, 8 p.m.
AUTO RACING PF 133 135 83 69
PA 96 98 61 104
PF 107 88 39 46
PA 70 56 85 84
PF 85 80 74 64
PA 40 74 93 72
PF 91 111 81 49
PA 85 113 111 126
PF 83 102 99 101
PA 63 87 101 101
Sprint Cup - AAA 400 Results Sunday At Dover International Speedway Dover, Del. Lap length: 1 miles (Start position in parentheses) 1. (2) Kurt Busch, Dodge, 400 laps, 133.8 rating, 47 points, $223,625. 2. (6) Jimmie Johnson, Chevrolet, 400, 133.5, 44, $220,786. 3. (4) Carl Edwards, Ford, 400, 127.2, 42, $180,566. 4. (9) Kasey Kahne, Toyota, 400, 111.3, 40, $142,158. 5. (18) Matt Kenseth, Ford, 400, 109.8, 40, $148,311. 6. (5) Kyle Busch, Toyota, 400, 111, 39, $142,266. 7. (7) A J Allmendinger, Ford, 400, 103.1, 38, $127,836. 8. (27) Clint Bowyer, Chevrolet, 400, 91.1, 36, $140,558. 9. (12) Marcos Ambrose, Ford, 400, 98, 35, $114,741. 10. (22) Kevin Harvick, Chevrolet, 400, 98.2, 35, $129,861. 11. (13) Jeff Burton, Chevrolet, 400, 84.5, 34, $89,500. 12. (34) Jeff Gordon, Chevrolet, 400, 86.3, 32, $116,786.
Scores AND SCHEDULES
SPORTS ON TV TODAY MAJOR LEAGUE BASEBALL 5 p.m. TBS — Playoffs, American League Division Series, game 3, Texas at Tampa Bay 8:30 p.m. TBS — Playoffs, American League Division Series, game 3, N.Y. Yankees at Detroit NFL FOOTBALL 8:30 p.m. ESPN — Indianapolis at Tampa Bay
TUESDAY MAJOR LEAGUE BASEBALL Noon TBS — Playoffs, American League Division Series, game 4, teams TBD (if necessary) 3:30 p.m. TBS — Playoffs, American League Division Series, game 4, teams TBD (if necessary) 7 p.m. TBS — Playoffs, National League Division Series, game 3, teams TBD 10:30 p.m. TBS — Playoffs, National League Division Series, game 3, teams TBD SOCCER 8 p.m. ESPN2 — MLS, Los Angeles at New York
WEDNESDAY MAJOR LEAGUE BASEBALL 6 p.m. TBS — Playoffs, National League Division Series, game 4, teams TBD (if necessary) 9:30 p.m. TBS — Playoffs, National League Division Series, game 4, teams TBD (if necessary) WNBA BASKETBALL 8 p.m. ESPN2 — Playoffs, finals, game 2, Atlanta at Minnesota WOMEN'S COLLEGE VOLLEYBALL 7:30 p.m. FSN — Texas A&M at Texas
THURSDAY AUTO RACING 1 a.m. SPEED — Formula One, practice for Japanese Grand Prix, at Suzuka, Japan COLLEGE FOOTBALL 9 p.m. ESPN — California at Oregon GOLF 9 a.m. TGC — European PGA Tour, Madrid Masters, first round, at Alcala de Henares, Spain 5 p.m. TGC — PGA Tour, Frys.com Open, first round, at San Martin, Calif. MAJOR LEAGUE BASEBALL 5 p.m. TBS — Playoffs, American League Division Series, game 5, teams TBD (if necessary) 8:30 p.m. TBS — Playoffs, American League Division Series, game 5, teams TBD (if necessary) NHL HOCKEY 7 p.m. VERSUS — Philadelphia at Boston 10 p.m. VERSUS — Pittsburgh at Vancouver PREP FOOTBALL 8 p.m. ESPN2 — Allen (Texas) at Plano East (Texas) 10:30 p.m. FSN — Oaks Christian (Calif.) at Westlake Village (Calif.)
FRIDAY AUTO RACING 12:30 p.m. ESPN2 — NASCAR, Sprint Cup, practice for Hollywood Casino 400, at Kansas City, Kan. 2 p.m. ESPN2 — NASCAR, Nationwide Series, practice for Kansas Lottery 300, at Kansas City, Kan. 4 p.m. ESPN2 — NASCAR, Nationwide Series, practice for Kansas Lottery 300, at Kansas City, Kan. 5 p.m. ESPN2 — NASCAR, Sprint Cup, pole qualifying for Hollywood Casino 400, at Kansas City, Kan. 8:30 p.m. SPEED — ARCA, Kansas Lottery 98.9, at Kansas City, Kan. 1 a.m. SPEED — Formula One, qualifying for Japanese Grand Prix, at Suzuka, Japan BOXING 11 p.m. SHO — Junior middleweights, Jermell Charlo (150-0) vs. Francisco Santana (12-2-1); lightweights, Sharif Bogere (20-0-0) vs. Francisco Contreras (16-0-0), at Las Vegas COLLEGE FOOTBALL 9 p.m. ESPN — Boise St. at Fresno St. GOLF 9 a.m. TGC — European PGA Tour, Madrid Masters, second round, at Alcala de Henares, Spain 2:30 p.m. TGC — LPGA, Hana Bank Championship, first round, at Incheon, South Korea (same-day tape) 5 p.m. TGC — PGA Tour, Frys.com Open, second round, at San Martin, Calif. 8:30 p.m. TGC — Champions Tour, Insperity Championship, first round, at The Woodlands, Texas (same-day tape) HORSE RACING 5 p.m. VERSUS — NTRA, Alcibiades Stakes and Phoenix Stakes, at Lexington, Ky. MAJOR LEAGUE BASEBALL 5 p.m. TBS — Playoffs, National League Division Series, game 5, teams TBD (if necessary) 8:30 p.m. TBS — Playoffs, National League Division Series, game 5, teams TBD (if necessary) NHL HOCKEY 1 p.m. VERSUS — N.Y. Rangers vs. Los Angeles, at Stockholm WNBA BASKETBALL 8 p.m. ESPN2 — Playoffs, finals, game 3, Minnesota at Atlanta 13. (14) David Reutimann, Toyota, 400, 86.9, 31, $107,058. 14. (30) Brian Vickers, Toyota, 400, 74.8, 30, $103,964. 15. (23) Jamie McMurray, Chevrolet, 400, 75.9, 29, $111,539. 16. (3) Paul Menard, Chevrolet, 400, 78.6, 28, $83,250. 17. (16) Regan Smith, Chevrolet, 400, 67.5, 27, $101,195. 18. (11) Denny Hamlin, Toyota, 400, 72.2, 26, $118,950. 19. (17) Mark Martin, Chevrolet, 400, 74.7, 25, $82,350. 20. (15) Brad Keselowski, Dodge, 400, 84.6, 25, $98,808. 21. (19) David Ragan, Ford, 399, 60.8, 23, $83,350. 22. (24) Juan Pablo Montoya, Chevrolet, 398, 60.1, 22, $111,258. 23. (20) Ryan Newman, Chevrolet, 398, 59.8, 21, $113,100. 24. (21) Dale Earnhardt Jr., Chevrolet, 398, 68.7, 20, $81,225. 25. (28) Tony Stewart, Chevrolet, 398, 59.4, 19, $115,683. 26. (8) Bobby Labonte, Toyota, 398, 65.5, 18, $99,145.
27. (10) Greg Biffle, Ford, 397, 86.5, 17, $87,800. 28. (36) David Gilliland, Ford, 397, 46.7, 16, $87,558. 29. (33) Joey Logano, Toyota, 397, 52, 15, $80,150. 30. (1) Martin Truex Jr., Toyota, 396, 70.9, 15, $93,100. 31. (25) Landon Cassill, Chevrolet, 395, 42.5, 0, $83,983. 32. (41) Dave Blaney, Chevrolet, 395, 39.6, 12, $78,172. 33. (37) Andy Lally, Ford, 394, 38.1, 11, $78,925. 34. (43) J.J. Yeley, Ford, 390, 34.2, 10, $68,300. 35. (39) Casey Mears, Toyota, 366, 41.9, 9, $68,075. 36. (40) Mike Bliss, Ford, accident, 346, 39.1, 0, $67,925. 37. (26) Josh Wise, Ford, brakes, 56, 39.5, 0, $67,800. 38. (38) Reed Sorenson, Dodge, electrical, 52, 36.4, 0, $67,650. 39. (42) Joe Nemechek, Toyota, clutch, 49, 31.9, 0, $67,500. 40. (35) Michael McDowell, Toyota, fuel pump, 44, 34.2, 5, $67,325.
Monday, October 3, 2011 41. (31) David Stremme, Chevrolet, vibration, 31, 30.8, 3, $67,125. 42. (29) Scott Speed, Ford, brakes, 24, 31.7, 0, $66,995. 43. (32) Travis Kvapil, Ford, ignition, 12, 28.3, 0, $67,329. Race Statistics Average Speed of Race Winner: 119.413 mph. Time of Race: 3 hours, 30 minutes, 59 seconds. Margin of Victory: 0.908 seconds. Caution Flags: 10 for 44 laps. Lead Changes: 24 among 13 drivers. Lap Leaders: M.Truex Jr. 1-2; 3-41; M.Bliss 42; Ku.Busch M.McDowell 43; R.Sorenson 44; Ku.Busch 45-51; C.Edwards 52-110; Ky.Busch 111; J.Johnson 112-113; B.Keselowski 114-115; C.Edwards 116138; J.Burton 139-142; C.Edwards 143-176; A.Allmendinger 177-184; K.Harvick 185-194; J.Johnson 195247; M.Kenseth 248; J.Burton 249-252; M.Kenseth 253-254; J.Johnson 255300; Ku.Busch 301; J.Johnson 302353; Ku.Busch 354; J.Johnson 355358; Ku.Busch 359-400. Leaders Summary (Driver, Times Led, Laps Led): J.Johnson, 5 times for 157 laps; C.Edwards, 3 times for 116 laps; Ku.Busch, 5 times for 90 laps; K.Harvick, 1 time for 10 laps; A.Allmendinger, 1 time for 8 laps; J.Burton, 2 times for 8 laps; M.Kenseth, 2 times for 3 laps; B.Keselowski, 1 time for 2 laps; M.Truex Jr., 1 time for 2 laps; Ky.Busch, 1 time for 1 lap; M.Bliss, 1 time for 1 lap; R.Sorenson, 1 time for 1 lap; M.McDowell, 1 time for 1 lap. Top 12 in Points: 1. K.Harvick, 2,122; 2. C.Edwards, 2,122; 3. T.Stewart, 2,113; 4. Ku.Busch, 2,113; 5. J.Johnson, 2,109; 6. Bra.Keselowski, 2,108; 7. M.Kenseth, 2,108; 8. Ky.Busch, 2,107; 9. J.Gordon, 2,103; 10. D.Earnhardt Jr., 2,088; 11. R.Newman, 2,081; 12. D.Hamlin, 2,054.
GOLF PGA-Justin Timberlake Shriners Hospitals for Children Open Scores Sunday at TPC Summerlin Las Vegas Purse: $4.4 million Yardage: 7,243; Par: 71 Final Kevin Na, $792,000.................67-63-66-65—261 Nick Watney, $475,200 ...........65-67-64-67—263 Tommy Gainey, $255,200.......67-67-64-68—266 Paul Goydos, $255,200 ..........66-66-66-68—266 David Hearn, $149,160...........69-67-66-65—267 Tim Herron, $149,160.............65-66-67-69—267 Spencer Levin, $149,160........68-67-64-68—267 Carl Pettersson, $149,160......66-67-66-68—267 Jhonattan Vegas, $149,160....63-67-69-68—267 Ben Crane, $97,533................67-67-68-66—268 Scott Piercy, $97,533..............67-65-70-66—268 Kris Blanks, $97,533...............66-65-66-71—268 Hunter Haas, $97,533.............71-61-72-64—268 Bryce Molder, $97,533............68-66-67-67—268 Kyle Stanley, $97,533..............69-64-69-66—268 Billy Horschel, $61,726...........66-66-70-67—269 Kevin Streelman, $61,726 ......66-66-69-68—269 Charlie Wi, $61,726 ................64-66-72-67—269 Robert Garrigus, $61,726.......66-68-63-72—269 William McGirt, $61,726 .........63-69-68-69—269 Brendan Steele, $61,726........66-65-69-69—269 Roland Thatcher, $61,726 ......68-68-63-70—269 Stephen Ames, $38,060.........71-67-65-67—270 Steven Bowditch, $38,060......67-69-66-68—270 Chad Campbell, $38,060........71-67-66-66—270 David Duval, $38,060..............66-71-64-69—270 Nick O'Hern, $38,060 .............71-67-63-69—270 Kevin Stadler, $38,060............68-70-65-67—270 Kevin Kisner, $28,600.............70-66-67-68—271 Bill Lunde, $28,600 .................70-66-66-69—271 Billy Mayfair, $28,600..............67-70-68-66—271 Alex Prugh, $28,600 ...............67-68-67-69—271 Boo Weekley, $28,600 ............67-65-71-68—271 Woody Austin, $22,220...........68-69-66-69—272 Harrison Frazar, $22,220........65-69-67-71—272 Nathan Green, $22,220..........64-72-67-69—272 Trevor Immelman, $22,220.....67-67-69-69—272 Rod Pampling, $22,220..........65-70-66-71—272 Garrett Willis, $22,220.............65-68-68-71—272 Jonathan Byrd, $15,420 .........71-66-67-69—273 Bob Estes, $15,420.................66-70-68-69—273 Brian Gay, $15,420 .................67-67-69-70—273 Martin Laird, $15,420..............70-66-66-71—273 Tag Ridings, $15,420..............69-68-67-69—273 Briny Baird, $15,420 ...............68-69-69-67—273 Kevin Chappell, $15,420.........69-67-70-67—273 Bobby Gates, $15,420............68-67-67-71—273 Charley Hoffman, $15,420 .....71-66-70-66—273 Jason Bohn, $11,117..............70-66-67-71—274 Steve Flesch, $11,117............65-70-71-68—274 Champions Tour-SAS Championship Scores Sunday At Prestonwood Country Club Cary, N.C. Purse: $2.1 million Yardage: 7,212; Par 72 Final Kenny Perry (315), $315,000.......66-69-70—205 John Huston (168), $168,000......69-66-71—206 Jeff Sluman (168), $168,000.......67-69-70—206 Russ Cochran (126), $126,000...66-71-71—208 Fred Couples (101), $100,800.....68-71-70—209 Jay Don Blake (71), $71,400.......68-72-70—210 J.L. Lewis (71), $71,400 ...............67-73-70—210 Chien Soon Lu (71), $71,400......72-68-70—210 Nick Price (71), $71,400...............66-69-75—210 Mark Calcavecchia (53), $52,50073-70-68—211 Bob Gilder (53), $52,500..............69-70-72—211 Tommy Armour III (0), $44,100....71-68-73—212 Tom Lehman (0), $44,100............69-71-72—212 Dan Forsman (0), $36,750...........70-73-70—213 Eduardo Romero (0), $36,750.....73-68-72—213 Scott Simpson (0), $36,750.........69-76-68—213 Rod Spittle (0), $36,750...............67-72-74—213 Chip Beck (0), $27,846 ................69-73-72—214 Tom Kite (0), $27,846...................72-69-73—214 Corey Pavin (0), $27,846 .............65-74-75—214 Joey Sindelar (0), $27,846...........70-75-69—214 Hal Sutton (0), $27,846................68-73-73—214 Mark Brooks (0), $20,580............71-74-70—215 Olin Browne (0), $20,580.............68-70-77—215 Gary Hallberg (0), $20,580..........66-78-71—215 Morris Hatalsky (0), $20,580........69-77-69—215 Steve Jones (0), $20,580.............68-72-75—215 Craig Stadler (0), $20,580............70-72-73—215 Ronnie Black (0), $16,590 ...........69-73-74—216 Phil Blackmar (0), $16,590...........75-69-72—216 Joe Ozaki (0), $16,590.................72-72-72—216 David Frost (0), $13,860...............70-72-75—217 Bill Glasson (0), $13,860..............75-72-70—217 Lonnie Nielsen (0), $13,860.........73-71-73—217 D.A.Weibring (0), $13,860...........72-70-75—217 Mark Wiebe (0), $13,860 .............71-76-70—217 Brad Faxon (0), $10,290..............72-69-77—218 Gary Koch (0), $10,290................72-75-71—218 Larry Mize (0), $10,290................72-73-73—218 Larry Nelson (0), $10,290............72-71-75—218 David Peoples (0), $10,290 .........76-71-71—218 Loren Roberts (0), $10,290 .........74-70-74—218 Ted Schulz (0), $10,290...............70-73-75—218 Peter Senior (0), $10,290.............67-73-78—218 Bob Tway (0), $10,290..................78-69-71—218 Bobby Clampett (0), $7,770.........69-69-81—219 Vicente Fernandez (0), $7,770....72-75-72—219 Tom Purtzer (0), $7,770 ...............71-74-74—219 Bruce Fleisher (0), $5,483 ...........74-73-73—220 Scott Hoch (0), $5,483.................70-75-75—220 Dana Quigley (0), $5,483.............70-75-75—220 Keith Fergus (0), $5,483...............74-73-73—220 Mike Goodes (0), $5,483 .............77-73-70—220 Bernhard Langer (0), $5,483.......73-77-70—220
13
Mark McNulty (0), $5,483 ............77-72-71—220 Jim Rutledge (0), $5,483..............72-76-72—220 Jim Thorpe (0), $5,483.................73-76-71—220 Jim Gallagher, Jr. (0), $3,780.......73-76-72—221 Wayne Levi (0), $3,780 ................71-76-74—221 Dave Rummells (0), $3,780.........74-75-72—221 Tim Simpson (0), $3,780 .............70-76-75—221 Bobby Wadkins (0), $3,780..........69-75-77—221 Fulton Allem (0), $2,835...............70-77-75—222 John Harris (0), $2,835 ................72-72-78—222 Tom Jenkins (0), $2,835...............72-76-74—222 Curtis Strange (0), $2,835 ...........76-70-76—222 John Cook (0), $2,128 .................75-73-75—223 Peter Jacobsen (0), $2,128..........74-76-73—223 Mike Reid (0), $2,128...................73-80-70—223 Steve Lowery (0), $1,848.............71-76-78—225 Fuzzy Zoeller (0), $1,722.............74-75-77—226 Steve Pate (0), $1,596..................76-76-75—227 Hale Irwin (0), $1,470...................72-76-80—228 Joe Daley (0), $1,386...................72-80-77—229 David Eger (0), $1,302.................71-84-76—231 Gil Morgan (0), $1,218.................78-75-79—232 Doug Tewell (0), $1,134................75-78-80—233 Ben Crenshaw (0), $1,050...........78-76-81—235 WNB Classic Scores Sunday At Midland Country Club Course Midland, Texas Purse: $525,000 Yardage: 7,380; Par: 72 (x-won on first hole of playoff) Final x-Danny Lee, $94,500 ............64-72-68-66—270 Harris English, $56,700 ..........69-70-62-69—270 Garth Mulroy, $35,700 ............67-74-67-64—272 Bob Heintz, $21,700 ...............65-73-69-66—273 Craig Bowden, $21,700..........65-71-66-71—273 Gavin Coles, $21,700 .............66-69-65-73—273 Dicky Pride, $16,363...............68-70-69-67—274 David Lingmerth, $16,363......69-69-68-68—274 MiguelCarballo, $16,363.........67-66-71-70—274 Darron Stiles, $12,600............67-69-71-68—275 Brendon Todd, $12,600 ..........67-70-68-70—275 Roger Tambellini, $12,600......68-73-64-70—275 B.J. Staten, $12,600................63-68-67-77—275 Doug LaBelle II, $9,188..........68-70-71-67—276 David Lutterus, $9,188............68-69-71-68—276 Gary Christian, $9,188............70-66-72-68—276 Bubba Dickerson, $9,188.......64-72-69-71—276 Dan Woltman, $7,350.............69-70-71-67—277 Brad Elder, $7,350 ..................68-67-72-70—277 JakeYounan-Wise, $7,350 .....66-65-75-71—277 Nicholas Thompson, $4,988...68-73-67-70—278 Robert Damron, $4,988..........67-71-69-71—278 James Nitties, $4,988 .............67-74-66-71—278 Roberto Castro, $4,988..........72-66-69-71—278 James Hahn, $4,988...............70-66-70-72—278 Ron Whittaker, $4,988 ............71-68-67-72—278 Daniel Chopra, $4,988............67-72-66-73—278 Cliff Kresge, $4,988.................68-66-70-74—278 Alistair Presnell, $3,544..........70-71-71-67—279 Brian Stuard, $3,544...............69-69-71-70—279 David Branshaw, $3,544.........67-72-70-70—279 Marco Dawson, $3,544...........67-71-68-73—279 Richard H. Lee, $3,150...........68-71-73-68—280 Tim Wilkinson, $3,150.............68-66-72-74—280 Jerod Turner, $3,150...............67-73-66-74—280 Stephen Gangluff, $2,783.......69-70-73-69—281 Russell Knox, $2,783..............71-69-72-69—281 Clayton Rask, $2,783 .............68-69-72-72—281 Richard T. Lee, $2,783............69-70-67-75—281 Matt Weibring, $2,363.............67-72-73-70—282 Rahil Gangjee, $2,363............70-70-71-71—282 Casey Wittenberg, $2,363......68-70-70-74—282 Guy Boros, $2,363..................69-71-66-76—282 Brent Delahoussaye, $1,919..68-72-73-70—283 Miami County Team Championships Results Sunday at the Piqua Country Club Senior • Johnston/ Allen .............73-73 — 146 Poettinger/ Adkins ...........75-71 — 146 Terry/ Eisenzimmer .........74-72 — 146 Auzenne/ Stickrod ...........74-74 — 148 Butsch/ Barnhart .............74-75 — 149 York/ Shrewbury ..............72-78 — 150 Ashman/ Stammen ........72-78 — 150 Fullmer/ Shank ................75-78 — 153 Hoops/ Aldrich ................75-78 — 153 Henley/ Penrod ............... 81-80 — 161 Willoughby/ Willoughby ..82-84 — 166 • Won on first playoff hole Open Brading/ McGillvary ........63-71 — 134 Garwick/ Walker ..........67-69 — 136 Christy/ Burt ....................68-75 — 143 Larger/ Eakin ...................72-72 — 144 Arp/ Sherril ......................71-74 — 145 Bollinger/ Wardley ...........74-72 — 146 Allen/ Zimmerman ..........72-75 — 147 Manuel/ Francis ..............76-78 — 154 Chen/ Massie ..................76-80 — 156 Luring/ Luring ..................78-82 — 160 Jennings/ Stump .............77-83 — 160 Sutherly/ Elleman ........... 80-81 — 161 Nimer/ Hoover .................80-85 — 165 Tubbs/ Tubbs ................... 86-80 — 166 Debrosse/ Hill .................80-NC — NC Troy Country Club Nimer Invitational Sept. 24 Open Division Low Gross 1. Ken Burns ......................................71 2. Jeff Goodall....................................75 3. Liebert Danielson...........................76 4. Zach Allen ......................................76 Open Division Low Net Bankers’ Handicap 1. Robb Howell...................................58 2. Ron Stenger...................................59 Senior Division Low Gross 1. Jim Hoover.....................................81 1. Bob Graves ....................................81 Senior Division Low Net Bankers’ Handicap 1. Alan Boerger..................................59 1. Gary Bryant....................................59 Ladies Division Low Gross 1. Jan Wilkins .....................................83 Ladies Division Low Net Bankers’ Handicap 1. Susan Jackson...............................66 2. Cam Armstrong .............................66
TRANSACTIONS HOCKEY National Hockey League BOSTON BRUINS_Assigned LW Lane MacDermid and C Max Sauve to Providence (AHL). C A R O L I N A HURRICANES_Reassigned F Drayson Bowman to Charlotte (AHL). CHICAGO BLACKHAWKS_Recalled F Jimmy Hayes and F Peter LeBlanc from Rockford (AHL). DETROIT RED WINGS_Recalled F Brent Raedeke from Grand Rapids (AHL). Reassigned D Brendan Smith, F Tomas Tatar, F Gustav Nyquist, F Landon Ferraro, F Joakim Andersson, F Brent Raedeke, D Travis Ehrhardt, D Brian Lashoff and G Jordan Pearce to Grand Rapids. NASHVILLE PREDATORS_Assigned F Gabriel Bourque, F Chris Mueller and D Tyler Sloan to Milwaukee (AHL). NEW YORK ISLANDERS_Assigned LW Michael Haley, F Sean Backman, F Casey Cizikas, F Justin DiBenedetto, F Brett Gallant, F Tomas Marcinko, F Tyler McNeely, F Tony Romano, F David Ullstrom, F Tim Wallace, D Calvin de Haan, D Matt Donovan, D Anton Klementyev, D Aaron Ness, D Benn Olson, G Mikko Koskinen, G Anders Nilsson and G Kevin Poulin to Bridgeport (AHL).
14
Troy Daily News,
Monday, October 3, 2011
that work .com JobSourceOhio.com
PLACE YOUR CLASSIFIED AD ONLINE-24/7 www.tdnpublishing.com
280 Transportation
CERTIFIED AIDS Seeking certified aides for home care in Piqua. Call (937)276-3099
DEADLINES/CORRECTIONS:
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
FIRST MONTH FREE! 1, 2 & 3 bedrooms Call for availability attached garages Easy access to I-75 (937)335-6690 www.hawkapartments.net
DRIVERS
RECRUITING FOR:
555 Garage Sales/Yard Sales
PIQUA, 1024 Washington, October 7 & 8, Friday noon-?, Saturday, 9am-? Guns, tools, lawnmower, bicycle, kids weight set, old toys from 60's and 70's, modern toys, books, video tapes, Win98 computer, software, negative scanner, telescope, street signs, beer can collection, computer desk, recliners, old office supplies, rocking chair, book shelves, long dresser with mirror, TV, DVD player, and lots more. All items priced to sell.
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Electric Assembly
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Press Operators
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Tool and Die Operators
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CNC Machinist
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Welders
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Turret Operators
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Mechanical Assembly
Immediate positions for full time drivers. Dedicated routes home daily. Full benefits including 401K, dental and vision. Paid vacations and holidays. CDL Class A Required. 2 years experience. Good MVR. Call (419)305-9897
Drivers
HOME WEEKENDS •
Electrical Maintenance
Ohio Drivers needed!
Regional Runs! .40¢ - .45¢/Mile - ALL MILES Class A CDL + 1 year OTR experience Landair Transport 866-879-6592 www.landair.com
CALL TODAY! (937)335-5485 or Stop in: 1810 West Main St. TROY
240 Healthcare
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100 - Announcement
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~DEPENDABLE~ Home Health Aides 125 Lost and Found FOUND, on East State Route 41 near Shaggy Bark, garage door opener - Overhead Door Company. Call (937)339-3643
that work .com 135 School/Instructions AIRLINES ARE HIRINGTrain for high paying Aviation Career. FAA approved program. Financial aid if qualified - Job placement assistance. CALL Aviation Institute of Maintenance 877-676-3836 ATTEND COLLEGE ONLINE from Home. *Medical, *Business, *Paralegal, *Accounting, *Criminal Justice. Job placement assistance. Computer available. Financial Aid if qualified. Call 877-295-1667 www.CenturaOnline.com
GET THE WORD OUT! Place an ad in the Service Directory
200 - Employment
Needed in Miami County. Must have High school diploma or GED, have 2 good job references, and be career oriented. STNA or 1 year experience a must. Every other weekend required. Previous applicants need not apply.
SERIOUS INQUIRIES CALL BRANDI:
(937)339-8200 245 Manufacturing/Trade
TROY LAMINATING and COATING, a full service coater/ laminator of roll based goods, has 2 openings for: Experienced COATING OPERATORS Must be willing to work any shift and pass a background check and drug test. Send resume to: Human Resources 421 S. Union St. Troy, OH 45373 or fax to: (877)757-7544
255 Professional
PART TIME ACCOUNTANT ✮ ✮ ✮ ✮ ✮ ✮ ✮ 235 General 2011 Postal Positions $13.00-$32.50+/hr Federal hire/full benefits No Experience, Call Today 1-866-477-4953 Ext. 201
Bruns General Contracting, Inc. seeking dynamic person for position of Part Time Accountant. Experience with payroll, payroll taxes, general auditing and accounting required. * Degreed candidate a plus.
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LABOR
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TECHNICIANS
Mail, fax or e-mail resume to: HR Manager Bruns General Contracting, Inc. 3050 TippCowlesville Rd. Tipp City, OH 45371
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CDL DRIVERS
Fax: (937)339-8051
•
EQUIPMENT OPERATORS
Email:
IMMEDIATE OPENINGS
kblakeley@brunsgc.com ✮
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Hard hat plant. Training provided. Competitive wage, 401(k), insurance.
275 Situation Wanted
Apply: 15 Industry Park Ct., Tipp City, (937)667-1772
RETIRED RN will stay with elderly or disabled adults 16 daytime hours per week. (937)875-1242
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REGIONAL TRUCKLOAD DRIVERS GET A RAISE! 42.5 cpm Starting Pay (1 yr exp) Get home every week Nice truck & great benefits CDL-A w/ 4 mo T/T exp. req. (Refresher course available) 888-WORK-4-US
AVERITTcareers.com Equal Opportunity Employer
300 - Real Estate
For Rent
MCGOVERN RENTALS TROY 2 BR duplexes & 2 BR townhouses. 1.5 baths, 1 car garage, fireplace, Great Location! Starting at $625-$675. (937)335-1443 PIQUA, 2140 Navajo Trail, 3 bedroom townhouse, 2.5 baths, 2 car garage, 1850 square feet, $975 month, one month's deposit. Available Sept. 15. (937)335-9096. PIQUA, 313.5 Broadway, 2 bedroom, upstairs, includes stove, no pets, $365, (937)418-8912. PIQUA, 523 W. High, Large 3 bedroom, 2 bath, garage, $550, no pets! (937)418-8912 PIQUA. Pets welcomed, on Jill Ct. 2 bedroom, CA/ heat, washer/ dryer hook-up, appliances including dishwasher. $495/ month plus deposit. (937)418-1060. SEEKING mature individual to share lovely home in Huber. $495. Utilities, cable, internet. Penny (937)671-4518 TIPP CITY. Luxury 2 bedroom, 1 car garage, C/A dishwasher, refrigerator, range, W/D hookup, cathedral ceiling. No pets. $650 monthly. (937)216-6408 TROY, Westbrook, 1/2 double, 3 bedroom. $700 month plus deposit. ALSO 1/2 double, 2 bedroom, $600 month + deposit. Non-smoking. No pets! Call for appointment, (513)478-9913
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.
Troy Daily News 877-844-8385 We Accept
513 LAKE, shady yard, attached garage, no pets 3 bedroom, 2 bath, brick ranch. $650. (937)269-5666. TROY, 1 & 2 Bedrooms, appliances, CA, water, trash paid, $425 & $525 month. $200 Deposit Special! (937)673-1821 TROY, 529 Stonyridge, 2 bedroom, stove, refrigerator, NO PETS. $450 month, $450 deposit. (937)418-8912. TROY area, 2 bedroom townhouses, 1-1/2 bath, furnished appliances, W/D hookup, A/C, No dogs $475. (937)339-6776. TROY TOWNHOUSE, 2 Bedroom 1.5 bath. Stephenson Drive. $475 month, Lease by 10-1, FREE GIFT, (937)216-4233. TROY/TIPP: 2 bed, 1.5 bath. New: carpet, tile, paint, stove, refrig, ceiling fans. SUPER CLEAN! $510-$525. NO dogs, (937)545-4513.
310 Commercial/Industrial RETAIL Store for rent, 16 North Market, Troy, $650+ deposit, references. ( 9 3 7 ) 7 7 8 - 8 4 2 7 (937)214-3200 Available 10/1/2011
320 Houses for Rent
BRADFORD & PIQUA, 1 Bedroom houses, and apartment for rent, (937)773-2829 after 2pm OUTSIDE PIQUA, 2 bedroom, 1 bath, all appliances, fireplace. Electric, cable, trash included. Must pay for propane. $700 month, $700 deposit. (937)657-8023 PIQUA, 612 Robinson, 2 bedroom. Washer/ dryer hookup, air conditioning, Nicklin school. $530 month. (419)394-8509 TROY - nice, newer 1/2 duplex home. 3 bedroom, 2 bath, 2 car garage, no pets, (937)875-0595. TROY For rent 2506 Inverness. 3 bedroom 1 bath, fenced yard, AC, Rent $715 monthly. For sale $88,900. Payment $700 per month. Owner financing. Will Co-Op. (937)239-1864 Visit Miamicountyproperties.com TROY, House for rent in King's Chapel. 3 bedroom, 1 bath, 1 car garage, fenced yard, all appliances, available immediately. $690 month. (937)335-1825 TROY, Terrific Area! Lovely 2 Bedroom duplex. 2 car garage, 2 bath, appliances, laundry. $785 (937)335-5440
500 - Merchandise
1604 BROOKPARK, 2 bedroom, 2 bath, 2 car garage, gas heat, AC, small patio, no pets, (937)506-8319.
525 Computer/Electric/Office
3 BEDROOM, 112 South Main Street, Large house, 1 bath, stove, refrigerator, $525, Piqua, (937)418-8912
COMPUTER SET, Windows XP, loaded, CDROM, DSL Internet, USB. 90 day warranty on parts, $100. (937)339-2347.
535 Farm Supplies/Equipment WANTED: Used motor oil for farm shop furnace. (937)295-2899
545 Firewood/Fuel SEASONED FIREWOOD, $150 cord, $80 half cord, stacking extra. Miami County deliveries only. (937)339-2012 SEASONED FIREWOOD $160 per cord. Stacking extra, $125 you pick up. Taylor Tree Service (937)753-1047 SEASONED FIREWOOD for sale. $135 delivered. (937)638-6950
560 Home Furnishings BED, Craftmatic type, paid (no mattress) $1100 in 2008, asking $300. Excellent condition. (937)418-1562 QUEEN ANNE TABLE, Solid wood, drop leaf, claw legs with chairs. Traditional buffet, wood and glass doors, halogen lights. $699 (937)339-2716
577 Miscellaneous BIG SCREEN TV, 45" MITSUBISHI. Good condition, great picture. $500 OBO (937)216-0106 CLOTHING, nice men's (L-XL), women's (size 9-10). (937)773-7504 REWARD for the return of iron kettle with stand from 614 West High Street. (937)778-8427 or (937)214-0884
583 Pets and Supplies DOG, mixed breed. Free to adult home. 14 months old. (937)524-2661
305 Apartment 1, 2 & 3 Bedroom, Houses & Apts. SEIPEL PROPERTIES Piqua Area Only Metro Approved (937)773-9941 9am-5pm Monday-Friday 1,2 & 3 BEDROOM APARTMENTS Troy and Piqua ranches and townhomes. Different floor plans to choose from. Garages, fireplaces, appliances including washer and dryers. Corporate apartments available. Visit www.1troy.com Call us first! (937)335-5223 1 BEDROOM, upstairs, 1 Bedroom downstairs, 431 W. Ash, stove, refrigerator, no pets, $325 monthly (937)418-8912 MOVE IN SPECIALS TROY, 2 bedroom townhomes, 1.5 baths, 1 car garage, ca, w/d hook up, all appliances, $685 1 Bedroom $400 2 Bedroom, 1 bath, $495 2 Bedroom, 2 bath, 2 car garage, House, $850
(937)216-5806 EversRealty.net 2 CAR garage, 2.5 baths, 2 bedroom. Kitchen appliances, dining room, laundry. Great area! $885. (937)335-5440 3 BEDROOM townhouse with garage, fenced yard, $695 (877)272-8179 COUNTRY, Newly decorated 2 - 3 bedroom apartment. Rent based on some property maintenance. (937)339-4006 DODD RENTALS Tipp-Troy: 2 bedroom AC, appliances $500/$450 plus deposit No pets (937)667-4349 for appt. PIQUA, 521 West High, upstairs, 2 Bedroom, utility room. NO PETS. $385 month. (937)418-8912
JobSourceOhio.com
Troy Daily News,
Monday, October 3, 2011
925 Legal Notices
15
925 Legal Notices
NOTICE OF PUBLIC SALE OF PERSONAL PROPERTY Notice is hereby given that the undersigned will sell, to the satisfy lien of the owner, at public sale by competitive bidding on 10-12-2011 at On or after 9:30 am at the Extra Space Storage facility located at: EXTRA SPACE STORAGE, 21 Kings Chapel Drive North Troy, Ohio 45373 The personal goods stored therein by the following may include, but are not limited to general household, furniture, boxes, clothes and appliances. Unit 1416:Theresa M Randall 7080 North Rangeline Rd. Covington OH 45318 ; Unit 1214: Conrad U Brumbaugh 274 Bellaire Drive Fairborn OH 45324; Unit 2126: Matthew F Furrow 1342 McKaig Ave. Troy OH 45373; Unit 1411: Joshua T Brown 1508 Brookfield Lane Troy OH 45373; Unit 5110: Wagner R Couch 106 Kings Chapel Drive Troy OH 45373; Unit 1409: Amanda Seidel 45 Tonywood Circle West Carrollton OH 45449; Unit 4406: Charles Gump 216 South Union St Troy OH 45373; Unit 1326: Jonathan T Howard 226 North 7th St. Tipp City OH 45371 Purchases must be made with cash only and paid at the time of sale. All goods are sold as is and must be removed at the time of purchase. Extra Space Storage reserves the right to refuse any bid. Sale is subject to adjournment. Auctioneer Joseph C. Tate as executive administrator. 9/26, 10/3-2011 2221255
Service&Business DIRECTORY
To advertise in the Classifieds That Work Service & Business Directory please call: 877-844-8385 600 - Services
620 Childcare
655 Home Repair & Remodel
655 Home Repair & Remodel
660 Home Services
660 Home Services
680 Snow Removal
B&T SERVICES that work .com
2216962
• New Roof & Roof Repair • Painting • Concrete • Hauling • Windows & Doors • New Rubber Roofs All Types of Interior/Exterior Construction & Maintenance
DO YOU HAVE MISSING SHINGLES OR STORM DAMAGE?
CHORE BUSTER
OFFICE 937-773-3669
(937) 339-7222
937-620-4579 • Specializing in Chapter 7 • Affordable rates • Free Initial Consultation
635 Farm Services
875-0153 698-6135
that work .com
MINIMUM CHARGES APPLY
F IND & POS T J OBS 2 4 /7
2216965
2216951
Gravel Hauled, Laid & Leveled Driveways & Parking Lots
(937)339-7333
Cr eat ive Vi ssioc n L an d ape
Sparkle Clean Cleaning Service
Residential Commercial New Construction Bonded & Insured
classifieds that work .com
Tammy Welty (937)857-4222
2222218
DC SEAMLESS Gutter & Service
APPLIANCE REPAIR
1002 N. Main St. Sidney, Ohio 45365
•Refrigerators •Stoves •Washers & Dryers •Dishwashers • Repair & Install Air Conditioning
Call today for FREE estimate Fully Insured Repairs • Cleaning • Gutter Guard
$10 OFF Service Call
until September 30, 2011 with this coupon
937-773-4552
1-937-492-8897 1-866-700-8897 TOLL FREE
715 Blacktop/Cement
675 Pet Care
COUNTRY SIDE
COOPER’S BLACKTOP
BOARDING KENNEL
PAVING, REPAIR & SEALCOATING DRIVEWAYS PARKING LOTS
Open Year Around
17400 Fort LoramieSwanders Rd. Sidney, OH 45365
• Shrub Planting & Removal • Shrub Trimming • Lawn Maintenance and Mowing • Tree & Stump Removal • Tree Trimming • Pavers & Wall Stone, Hardscapes
or (937) 238-HOME Free Estimates • Fully Insured • 17 Years of Home Excellence
everybody’s talking about what’s in our
COOPER’S GRAVEL 2214884
• No equipment or experience required. • Adults & Children ages 5 & up • Gift Certificates Available • Indoor and outdoor arena. • Major Credit Cards Accepted Flexible Schedule Nights & Weekends 937-778-1660 www.sullenbergerstables.com
645 Hauling
2220732
“A CUT ABOVE THE REST”
(937) 339-1902
710 Roofing/Gutters/Siding
TERRY’S
• Pruning • Cabling & • Stump Bracing Removal • Lot Cleaning • Trimming • Storm Damage • Dead Wooding FREE Estimates • Fully Insured
Ask about our Friends & Neighbors discounts
I am a debt relief agency. I help people file for bankruptcy relief under the Bankruptcy Code. 2214301
Horseback Riding Lessons
Small #Basements #Siding #Doors #Barns
937-335-4425 937-287-0517
2222971
655 Home Repair & Remodel
#Repairs Large and #Room Additions #Kitchens/Baths #Windows #Garages
Emily Greer
(419) 203-9409
Hours are 9-5 Saturday & Sunday
665 Lawn, Garden, Landscaping
Complete Projects or Helper
2212049
Roofing, remodeling, siding, add-ons, interior remodeling and cabintets, re-do old barns, new home construction, etc.
VENDORS WELCOME
Call Walt for a FREE Estimate Today
Handyman Services
Bankruptcy Attorney
Any type of Construction:
in the Sidney Plaza next to Save-A-Lot
We will work with your insurance.
that work .com
•30x40x12 with 2 doors, $9,900 •40x64x14 with 2 doors, $16,000 ANY SIZE AVAILABLE!
1684 Michigan Ave.
Call for a free damage inspection.
Amish Crew Pole BarnsErected Prices:
Flea Market
LOCALLY OWNED AND OPERATED
Free Estimates / Insured
Decks, Drywall, Cement, Paint, Fences, Repairs, Cleanup, Hauling, Roofing, Siding, Etc. Insured/References
Interior/Exterior Painting Commercial/Residential Svc. Vinyl Siding & Soffet Drywall/ Plaster Repair Carpentry, and Basement Remodeling Services Available Fully Insured 21 Years Experience
Sidney
BBB Accredted
335-6321
2216930
(937) 473-2847 Pat Kaiser (937) 216-9332
30 YEARS EXPERIENCE in the collection field. Available on as-needed basis. Fees based on receivables collected.
CURTIS PAINTING & HOME REPAIR
670 Miscellaneous
2220750
Commercial / Residential
$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$ DO YOUR $$ ACCOUNTS RECEIVABLE $ NEED ATTENTION? $ $ DELINQUENCY $$$ RATE TOO HIGH? $ $ $$ $$$ $$ $$ $ CALL (937) 492-9302 $ $$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$ $
700 Painting
2216738
Since 1977
2219877
AK Construction
660 Home Services
2221065
640 Financial
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Troy Daily News,
Monday, October 3, 2011
1963 CHEVROLET CORVAIR Candy apple red, excellent condition! Good tires, AM/ FM radio. Local owner. $5200. (937)492-4410
1982 FOURWINNS BOAT
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583 Pets and Supplies
597 Storage Buildings
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800 - Transportation
805 Auto
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2006 FORD Five Hundred SEL, 94,000 miles, black with grey interior, power leather seats, multi CD disc player, $9,000. (937)335-3014
Time to sell your old stuff...
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1994 FORD E150 Handicap Van. 118K miles, good condition. Asking $3000. (937)473-2388
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PUPPIES, Shihtzu, 5 weeks old, male multi color, female light brown, black. $200 each. Adorable & playful. Call Michelle at (937)830-0963
1995 FORD F150, dark green. V6 standard, 160K 4 extra used tires with rims. Free GPS! $1999. (937)524-5099
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1989 RANGER 362V
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Bassmaster Classic, $5000. 2008 FORD F-350 SUPERDUTY
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1990 JAGUAR XJ6
1994 FORD EXPLORER XLT
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BMW 10 7124 Poe Ave. Exit 59 off I-75 Dayton, Ohio 937-890-6200 www.evansmotorworks.com
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4.3 Vortex, V-6, 121,775 miles, excellent condition, original owner. $5000 OBO (937)335-2845
2775 S. County Rd 25-A Exit 69 off I-75 N. Troy, OH 45373 937-335-5696 www.erwinchrysler.com
Boose Chevrolet
Independent Auto Sales
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575 Arlington Road, I-70W to Exit 21, 3/10ths of mi. south Brookville, OH 45309 1-800-947-1413 www.boosechevrolet.com
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Infiniti of Dayton 866-504-0972 Remember...Customer pick-up and delivery with FREE loaner. www.infinitiofdayton.com 5
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TROY DAILY NEWS • WWW.TROYDAILYNEWS.COM
Monday, October 3, 2011
17
Visit NIE online at www.sidneydailynews.com, www.troydailynews.com or www.dailycall.com NIE Coordinator: Dana Wolfe
Graphic Designer: Scarlett Smith
Separate Colors in a Green Leaf using Chromatography What you need: • leaves, small jars (baby food jars work well) • covers for jars or aluminum foil or plastic wrap • rubbing alcohol, paper coffee filters • shallow pan, hot tap water, tape, pen • plastic knife or spoon, clock or timer What you do: 1. Collect 2-3 large leaves from several different trees. Tear or
chop the leaves into very small pieces and put them into small jars labeled with the name or location of the tree. 2. Add enough rubbing alcohol to each jar to cover the leaves. Using a plastic knife or spoon, carefully chop and grind the leaves in the alcohol. SAFETY NOTE: Isopropyl rubbing alcohol can be harmful if mishandled or misused. Read and carefully follow all warnings on the alcohol bottle.
tortillas across the table. “You know about the curse of our family.” Felix was always interested in Grandma’s stories. He was even willing to put up with helping her cook, because cooking time usually meant story time. “Yes,” Felix answered, adding beans and rice to the tortillas and rolling them into burritos. “But Grandma, why does the curse always have to fall on me? Nobody else in our family has bad luck.” “Felix, have I told you the story about where that cursed thing came from?” she asked, reaching out and touching the small brass bell Felix wore on a string. “Tell me again!” Felix begged. “Many years ago, my great-great-grandparents went through some rough times. They had no money or food, just a skinny goat. One evening, a mysterious old woman came to their home and tied that brass bell around the neck of their goat. She said the bell must stay on the goat, or bad things would come to the family. Afterward, the goat produced enough milk that they were able to feed themselves and sell the extra. “But late one night, my greedy uncle snuck into the barn and took the bell from the goat. He tied it around the neck of the goose, hoping to get more eggs,” Grandma continued.
The Brass Bell Written by Cathy Sewell and illustrated by Blaise Sewell of The Curriculum Closet Chapter 1: Rotten Luck The score was tied and Felix and his friends were looking to claim the winning goal. “Open!” Hector gasped, making a breakaway. “Pass it to me!” Felix planted his foot in the grass and kicked the green and blue sphere toward his teammate. The ball went airborne and all the players stood still, holding their breaths. Felix could only watch as the ball seemed to grow wings and fly through the air. It sailed right over Hector, over the goal and even over the tall fence that towered behind the soccer field. “Great shot,” his teammates growled sarcastically. Everyone headed off the field. They all knew the wall rule: Anything hit, kicked or thrown over the 6-foot wooden wall is lost forever. Felix found himself all alone, still kneeling in the same spot where he had launched the ball. “It’s not fair, abuelita,” Felix later told his grandmother. “Why do I always have such rotten luck?” “Now, nieto,” she began, sliding a plate of fresh corn
3. Cover the jars very loosely with lids or plastic wrap or aluminum foil. Place the jars carefully into a shallow tray containing 1 inch of hot tap water. SAFETY NOTE: Hot water above 150 F can quickly cause severe burns. Experts recommend setting your water heater thermostat no higher than 125 F. 4. Keep the jars in the water for at least a half-hour, longer if needed, until the alcohol has become colored (the darker the better).
“When he went out to check on the goose the next morning, he found the goat had died. He told his parents what he had done and begged their forgiveness. Ever since, our family has had to pay for his mistake!” Felix had heard the goat story for years, but had a hard time believing that this little trinket had cursed their family for generations. “Felix! You’ve only rolled one burrito! No more stories for you,” Grandma teased. “Sorry,” Felix said. “I just haven’t had such a great day. I’m going to the attic until dinner.” The attic was Felix’s quiet place. In a house full of brothers, sisters and cousins, he had very little privacy. He spotted an old, dusty box of books in the corner and selected a leather-bound one called “Coronado and the Golden Cities.” Felix loved books about conquistadors. He immediately cracked open the cover to start reading. The next day at school, Felix was still thinking about what he had read. “One of these days, I’m going exploring!” he told his friend, Karol. Karol usually kept quiet in class, but Felix didn’t have anyone else to talk to because most of the soccer team was still mad at him.
Twirl each jar gently about every five minutes. Replace the hot water if it cools off. 5. Cut a long thin strip of coffee filter paper for each of the jars and label it. 6. Remove jars from water and uncover. Place a strip of filter paper into each jar so that one end is in the alcohol. Bend the other end over the top of the jar and secure it with tape. 7. The alcohol will travel up the paper, bringing the colors with it. After 30-90 minutes (or longer), the colors will travel different distances up the paper as the alcohol evaporates. You should be able to see different shades of green, and possibly some yellow, orange or red, depending on the type of leaf. 8. Remove the strips of paper, let them dry and then tape them to a piece of plain paper.
“Where would you go?” Karol asked. “I’ve been reading a story about an explorer named Coronado,” Felix said. “Did you know that Coronado explored the land right around here?” “Hey, that’s freaky!” Hector joined the conversation, uninvited as usual. “I wonder if our town, Corona, is named after him?” “Anyway,” Felix continued, “Coronado was looking for the seven lost cities of gold.” “I know of a mysterious golden city not too far away,” Hector said, trying to sound serious. “Not many know of its secret treasure, but this knowledge has been passed down for generations in my family. I suppose I could be persuaded to share this information, with two fellow explorers.” Hector glanced over to see if Karol and Felix were listening. They both just looked at each other. “All right, then, it’s settled!” Hector announced, after the pair continued to stand in silence. “We’ll meet here at 9 o’clock tomorrow morning!”
Fun Fact What do autumn leaves and ripening bananas have in common? The green color in unripe bananas comes from chlorophyll, the same pigment that gives green leaves their color. As bananas ripen, the chlorophyll breaks down and disappears, revealing the yellow color which has been there all along. The yellows and oranges of autumn leaves are also revealed as their chlorophyll breaks down. Of course, other changes also occur as bananas ripen: the starches change to sugar and the flesh softens as pectin (a carbohydrate) breaks down. Answers from the color NIE page Publisher Scramble: Autumn Ronald Wants To Know: pigments
The Newspapers In Education Mission – Our mission is to provide Miami, Shelby and neighboring county school districts with a weekly newspaper learning project that promotes reading and community journalism as a foundation for communication skills, utilizing the Piqua Daily Call, the Sidney Daily News, the Record Herald and the Troy Daily News as quality educational resource tools.
Thank you to our sponsors! The generous contributions of our sponsors and I-75 Group Newspapers vacation donors help us provide free newspapers to community classrooms as well as support NIE activities.To sponsor NIE or donate your newspaper while on vacation, contact NIE Coordinator Dana Wolfe at dwolfe@tdnpublishing.com or (937) 440-5211
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18
NIE
Monday, October 3, 2011
TROY DAILY NEWS • WWW.TDN-NET.COM
Visit NIE online at www.sidneydailynews.com, www.troydailynews.com or www.dailycall.com NIE Coordinator: Dana Wolfe
Why Do Leaves Change Color? While you were playing in the hot sun during summer vacation the trees on the streets, in the parks, and in the forests were working hard to keep you cool. To feed the shiny green leaves that make shade, trees use sunlight to convert water and carbon dioxide into sugar. This is called photosynthesis. Now it's autumn, and you're back in school. Those hardworking trees, on the other hand, need to take a break from all that photosynthesizing. When leaves change color from green to yellow, bright orange, or red, you'll know that trees are beginning their long winter's rest. Where do leaf colors come from? Leaf color comes from pigments. Pigments are natural substances produced by leaf cells. The three pigments that color leaves are: • chlorophyll (green) • carotenoid (yellow, orange, and brown) • anthocyanin (red) Chlorophyll is the most important of the three. Without the chlorophyll in leaves, trees wouldn't be able to use sunlight to produce food. Carotenoids create bright yellows and oranges in familiar fruits and vegetables. Corn, carrots, and bananas are just a few of the many plants colored by carotenoid. Anthocyanins add the color red to plants, including cranberries, red apples, cherries, strawberries and others. Chlorophyll and carotenoid are in leaf cells all the time during the
growing season. But the chlorophyll covers the carotenoid — that's why summer leaves are green, not yellow or orange. Most anthocyanins are produced only in autumn, and only under certain conditions. Not all trees can make anthocyanin. How do leaves change color? As the Earth makes its 365-day journey around the sun, some parts of the planet will get fewer hours of sunlight at certain times of the year. In those regions, the days become shorter and the nights get longer. The temperature slowly drops. Autumn comes, and then winter. Trees respond to the decreasing amount of sunlight by producing less and less chlorophyll. Eventually, a tree stops producing chlorophyll. When that happens, the carotenoid already in the leaves can finally show through. The leaves become a bright rainbow of glowing yellows, sparkling oranges and warm browns. What about red leaves? Read on. Do leaves change because of weather? Perhaps you've noticed that in some years, the red fall colors seem brighter and more spectacular than in other years. The temperature and cloud cover can make a big difference in a tree's red colors from year to year. When a number of warm, sunny autumn days and cool but not freezing nights come one after the other, it's going to be a good year for reds. In the daytime, the leaves can produce lots of sugar, but the cool night temperatures prevent the sugar sap from flowing through the leaf veins and down
pigment — a coloring matter or substance
TANUUM Sun Prints & Leaf Mobiles SUN PRINTS with paper taped to window... MAKE LEAF PRINT ART... Materials: Colored construction paper (make sure you use paper that will fade), leaves gathered from yard, glue stick, masking tape Optional: picture frames 1. Dab a bit of glue onto the back of a leaf, and attach to a piece of construction paper (If you are going to frame--you can pre-trim the paper to fit a 5"x7" frame--frames can be made from foam, cardboard or card-stock). 2. Tape the paper to a sunny window, with the leaf facing out. Leave up for THREE TO FOUR days, or UNTIL YOU NOTICE that the paper's color has faded. (Some directions say a week or longer. This time estimate would be more accurate. You'll know by the fading.) 3. Remove from the window and gently peel the leaf off to reveal the print. Frame and hang.
this. Tie a string on each leaf. Suspend the leaves from a small branch. Hang them where they might catch a breeze. You can also make the mobile with leaves cut out of construction paper or found outdoors.
into the branches and trunk. Anthocyanins to the rescue! Researchers have found out that anthocyanins are produced as a form of protection. They allow the plant to recover nutrients in the leaves before they fall off. This helps make sure that the tree will be ready for the next growing season. Anthocyanins give leaves their bright, brilliant shades of red, purple and crimson. The yellow, gold and orange colors created by carotenoid remain fairly constant from year to year. That's because carotenoids are always present in leaves and the amount does not change in response to weather. The amount of rain in a year also affects autumn leaf color. A severe drought can delay the arrival of fall colors by a few weeks. A warm, wet period during fall will lower the intensity, or brightness, of autumn colors. A severe frost will kill the leaves, turning them brown and causing them to drop early. The best autumn colors come when there's been: • a warm, wet spring • a summer that's not too hot or dry, and • a fall with plenty of warm sunny days and cool nights.
Graphic Designer: Scarlett E. Smith
Did You Know?
You can use fall leaf color to help identify different tree species. Look for these leaf colors on the trees in your neighborhood. • Oaks: red, brown or russet • Hickories: golden bronze • Dogwood: purple-red • Birch: bright yellow • paper birch • yellow birch • Poplar: golden yellow • Maple trees show a whole range of colors: • Sugar Maple: orange-red • Black Maple: glowing yellow • Red Maple: bright scarlet Why do leaves fall? A tree's roots, branches and twigs can endure freezing temperatures, but most leaves are not so tough. On a broadleaf tree — say a maple or a birch — the tender thin leaves, made up of cells filled with water sap, will freeze in winter. Any plant tissue unable to live through the winter must be sealed off and shed to ensure the tree's survival. As sunlight decreases in autumn, the veins that carry sap into and out of a leaf gradually close. A layer of cells, called the separation layer, forms at the base of the leaf stem. When this layer is complete, the leaf is separated from the tissue that connected it to the branch, and it falls. Oak leaves are the exception. The separation layer never fully detaches the dead oak leaves, and they remain on the tree through winter. Evergreen trees — pines, spruces, cedars and firs — don't lose their leaves, or needles, in winter. The needles are covered with a heavy wax coating and the fluids inside the cells contain substances that resist freezing. Evergreen leaves can live for several years before they fall and are replaced by new growth. On the ground, fallen leaves are broken down by bacteria, fungi, earthworms and other organisms. The decomposed leaves restock the soil with nutrients, and become part of the spongy humus layer on the forest floor that absorbs and holds rainfall. In nature, nothing goes to waste.
Find the land-for-sale column in the classified advertising section. What is the cost for a single acre of land, such as rural lots or farm acreage?
Fall Tab-a-pull-ooza for Miami & Shelby County Schools
In observance of America Recycles Day on November 15th, the Green Gals are having a fall Taba-pull-ooza Contest. All monies raised will be given to the Dayton Ronald McDonald House. Any school can participate in this contest in either Miami or Shelby County. A drop-off location will be given to the contact person. Tabs will be collected on November 15th. Prizes will be awarded to the school with the most collected tabs by weight. Registration form for Tab-a-pull-ooza Please Print Contact Name:___________________________________________ School/County/:___________________________________________ Phone Number:___________________________ Email:___________________________________ Please Send Registration to: Cindy Bach Miami County Sanitary Engineering 2200 N. County Rd. 25-A, Troy Fax: 937-335-4208 Phone: 937-440-3488 Email: cbach@miamicountysed.com
LEAF MOBILE IDEAS... Glue colorful and different fabrics to both sides of several pieces of heavy paper. Cut out leaves from
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Nourishing Ideas. Nourishing People. Ronald wants to know... Where do leaf colors come from?
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