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November 14, 2011 Volume 103, No. 272
OPINION
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Obama caps summit in home state
Police move in on park
KAPOLEI, Hawaii (AP) — President Barack Obama on Sunday tied the hopes of a faster American economic recovery to the booming Pacific Rim region, saying “we’re not going to be able to put our folks back to work” unless the Asia-Pacific region is successful as an engine for the world. “We consider it a top priority,” Obama said of the region where his administration is pouring in time and political capital to expand exports and business ties. The president spoke as he dove into a day of summit diplomacy, proudly using
his home state of Hawaii as the American foothold to the Pacific. The meeting brought together leaders of 21 nations of the Asia-Pacific Economic Cooperation forum, whose members span from Chile to China and account for roughly half the world’s trade and economic output. In the midst of a tough re-election bid, Obama kept his message on jobs, even as he privately lobbied for help on containing the Iranian nuclear threat. He was to cap the summit with a solo
U.S. President Barack Obama talks with Russian President Dmitry Medvedev Sunday during the summit. AP PHOTO
• See SUMMIT on Page 2
Libyan militias clash near base
In a tense escalation of the Occupy Portland protest, police in riot gear Sunday surrounded demonstrators in a downtown park area after hundreds of people defied the mayor’s order to leave the park by midnight. By early afternoon, officers had mostly surrounded the camp where the protesters were holding a “general assembly” meeting to discuss their next moves following the eviction order.
See Page 7.
Flooding damages Thailand capital Water fowl, monitor lizards and stray dogs have replaced the throngs of tourists at one of Thailand’s greatest historical sites. Record flooding has turned Ayutthaya’s ancient temples into islands, and a giant statue of the reclining Buddha appears to float miraculously on the lapping water. Experts fear that at least half of the more than 200 waterlogged monasteries, fortresses and other monuments in the one-time royal capital have been damaged. “Imagine a thousand tons of brick and stone resting on soft foundations, with no modernstyle pilings. We are very worried,” said Chaiyanand Busayarat, director of the Ayutthaya Historic Park.
See Page 8.
INSIDE TODAY Advice ..........................10 Calendar.........................3 Classified......................13 Comics .........................11 Deaths............................6 Kenneth E. Earick Sr. Harriet M. Mahan Eugene H. Kimmel Horoscopes ..................11 Menus.............................8 Opinion...........................5 Sports...........................18 TV.................................10
OUTLOOK Today Rain High: 63° Low: 55°
STAFF PHOTO/ANTHONY WEBER
Newton High School senior Josiah Duncan practices playing the trumpet at least an hour everyday. Duncan who has been playing the trumpet since the fifth grade will perform for the U.S. Army’s All-American Marching Band Jan. 7 in San Antonio.
Being all he can be Newton senior joins U.S. Army marching band BY MELANIE YINGST Staff Writer myingst@tdnpublishing.com
PLEASANT HILL
Next Door
Guard located in Indiana. “I signed up before I even knew I he U.S. Army’s motto is “Be All You Can Be,” which is fit- was going to play for the football ting for Josiah Duncan, 17, game,” Duncan said. “After graduation, I’ll leave for basic training, get senior at Newton High School. my assignment and go from there.” Duncan, a trumpet player, was Yet, before he graduates, selected to the U.S. Army Duncan joins an elite group All-American Marching of only 125 high school band Band on Nov. 7. members among the milThe All-American lions in the United States Marching Band performs who are selected each year at halftime of the nationto perform in the U.S. ally broadcasted U.S. Army’s All-American Army All-American Bowl Marching Band. in San Antonio, Texas. “It’s very exciting. I’m The 2012 U.S. Army Alljust going to practice and do American Bowl will be my best and ‘Be all that I televised live on NBC, DUNCAN can be’ just like their motto,” from the Alamodome at Duncan said with a laugh. noon (CST) on Saturday, Duncan said he is both honored Jan. 7. and excited about the opportunity to Yet, the nomination to play for travel to San Antonio for an allthe U.S. Army is even more fitting expenses paid trip to meet other for this high school senior. Duncan music-minded high school students recently enlisted in the U.S. Army like himself. National Guard and also plays in “I’ve only flown once in my life the brass section of the 38th diviand I don’t remember it so I’m excitsion band of the Army National ed to go down there to play in front
T
If you know someone who should be profiled in our Next Door feature, contact City Editor Melody Vallieu at 440-5265.
of a stadium full of people,” Duncan said. “I’ve played the trumpet since fifth grade. As I got older, playing got easier and I practice a few hours a day. It doesn’t feel like practice anymore because I really enjoy it.” Duncan was one of only two musicians from the state of Ohio that made the Army All-American Band. To be chosen, the students are nominated by their area band director and from that pool of nationwide candidates students then go through a rigorous audition and interview process. Duncan was honored in a schoolwide ceremony Nov. 7 that included speeches from U.S. Representative Richard Adams and Ohio State Senator Bill Beagle, his music
• See BAND on Page 2
WARSHEFANA, Libya (AP) — Rival militias clashed on the outskirts of the Libyan capital for a fourth day Sunday in the deadliest and most sustained violence since the capture and killing of Moammar Gadhafi last month. Fighters attacked each other with rockets, mortars and machine guns, witnesses said. The fighting, which has killed at least 13 people since late last week, raised new concerns about the ability of Libya’s transitional government to disarm thousands of gunmen and restore order after an eight-month civil war. Libya’s interim leader, Mustafa Abdul-Jalil, said his National Transitional Council brought together elders from the feuding areas — the coastal city of Zawiya and the nearby tribal lands of Warshefana — over the weekend and that the dispute has been resolved. “I want to assure the Libyan people that everything is under control,” he said Sunday. However, as he spoke, fighting continued. Heavy gunfire and explosions of rocket-propelled grenades were heard over hours Sunday in the area between the Warshefana lands, about 18 miles (30 kilometers) west of Tripoli, and Zawiya, another 10 miles (15 kilometers) to the west. White smoke rose into the air. At one point, the two sides were battling for control of a major military camp of the ousted regime, said a fighter from Tripoli. The camp, once a base of elite forces commanded by one of Gadhafi’s sons, Khamis, is located on a highway midway between Tripoli and Zawiya. In all, at least 13 people were killed in the fighting, including four from Zawiya • See LIBYAN on Page 2
GOP co-chair: Debt talks a ‘roller coaster ride’
WASHINGTON (AP) — The Republican co-chair of a commitTuesday tee in charge of slashing the Showers nation’s deficit on Sunday called High: 60° deliberations a “roller coaster ride” Low: 48° and gave no indication that a deal could be struck before the panel’s Complete weather Thanksgiving deadline. information on Page 12. Texas Rep. Jeb Hensarling said the panel will fail unless Home Delivery: 335-5634 Democrats agree to significant “structural” changes to entitleClassified Advertising: ment programs like Medicare and (877) 844-8385 Social Security. When asked whether that could be done in a matter of days, he said “we haven’t given up hope.” “But if this were easy, the pres6 74825 22406 6
ident of the United States (Barack Obama) and the speaker of the House (John Boehner) would have gotten it done themselves,” Hensarling said. The supercommittee has until Nov. 23 to agree on how to reduce the deficit by at least $1.2 trillion in the next decade. Any amount less than that would be made up in automatic across-the-board cuts divided evenly between defense and domestic programs. The panel has been stymied for weeks over taxes. Democrats want to raise revenue by making tax code changes that directly add money to government coffers.
“
We haven’t given up hope, but if this were easy, the president of the United States and the speaker of the House would have gotten it done themselves. — Jeb Hensarling
Republicans have agreed to increase government revenue, but are demanding large cuts to benefit programs, which they say are bleeding Americans dry. Both sides have blamed the other for failing to move forward. Last week, White House Press Secretary Jay Carney said that
”
Obama has told panel members that their finished product must contain both sources of new revenue, or taxes, as well as spending cuts. Hensarling offered no new talking points Sunday, indicating that
• See DEBT on Page 2
For Home Delivery, call 335-5634 • For Classified Advertising, call (877) 844-8385
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LOCAL & WORLD
Monday, November 14, 2011
LOTTERY The Ohio Lottery numbers for Sunday were as follows: Pick 3: Midday: 7,0,2 Evening: 7,5,7 Pick 4: Middday: 2,0,9,4 Evening: 7,1,7,8 Rolling Cash 5: 13,16,19,20,37 Ten-OH!: 1, 10, 12, 16, 18, 22, 23, 29, 30, 33, 39, 43, 60, 61, 63, 66, 68, 71, 73, 80
Band • CONTINUED FROM A1 teacher Jason Graham and also Nancy Ditmer, president-elect for the National Association for Music Education (NAfME). “That was pretty special to have that many people come because of this honor to play for the U.S. Army’s All-American Bowl,” Duncan said. “They had some really nice things to say.”
Summit
• The Troy Elevator
news conference in which topics on and off his scripted agenda were likely to emerge. Born in Hawaii, Obama reveled in having the world stage on his home turf, while back east the Republicans seeking to oust him from the White House assailed his foreign policy record. used his Obama moment to signal to business executives and Asian leaders that the United States has shifted from a post-Sept. 11 war focus to re-engagement all across the Pacific. “We represent close to 3 billion people, from different continents and cultures,” Obama told his APEC partners on Saturday, ahead of some Hawaiian luau entertainment. “Our citizens have sent us here with a common task: to bring our economies closer together, to cooperate, to create jobs and prosperity that our people deserve so that they can provide for their families.” The president is on a 9day venture away from Washington’s daily political gridlock. He will visit Australia and Indonesia before returning to the White House on Nov. 20. Obama met Sunday
• CONTINUED FROM A1
• Stocks of local interest Values reflect closing prices from Friday. AA 10.60 +0.35 CAG 24.77 -0.56 CSCO 19.02 +0.41 DPL 30.19 +0.05 EMR 51.36 +0.80 11.14 +0.15 F FITB 12.18 +0.17 FLS 99.37 +3.59 GM 22.51 -0.19 GR 122.80 +0.30 ITW 46.93 +0.74 JCP 33.92 +1.02 KMB 71.10 +0.65 KO 68.12 +0.73 KR 23.43 +0.51 LLTC 32.44 +0.72 MCD 94.76 +1.50 MSFG 9.07 +0.24 PEP 63.28 +0.32 PMI 0.31 0.00
“It’s going to be pretty cool to perform with other kids that enjoy music as much as I do.” Duncan’s father, Ron, also is a member of the 38th division band of the Army National Guard. Ron Duncan also performed “Taps”for the 100th running of the Indy 500 race this past Memorial Day. “My wife and I are so proud of our son and it has been a great day for our school, community and the Duncan family,” Ron
Duncan said of his son’s opportunity. Duncan said he will soon start practicing for the performance and must submit video footage of his progress. Submitting video isn’t a problem since Duncan said he enjoys making videos and may pursue a career in the medium. “I really like making films and being the director, so it feels different being in front of the cam-
era,” Duncan said. Yet, Duncan will be on camera once again in January, not only performing, but representing Newton High School, his community of Pleasant Hill and his country. To view pictures of Duncan receiving his Army jacket with members of the U.S. Army, visit www.usarmyallamericanbowl.com /selection_tour_individual.php?id= 346.
Libyan
BUSINESS ROUNDUP
The grain prices listed below are the closing prices of Friday. Corn Month Price Change Nov 6.4350 - 7.00 Dec 6.3850 - 7.00 Jan 12 6.5300 - 7.00 O/N 12 5.3900 - 8.50 Beans Nov 11.4050 + 8.00 Jan 12 11.4550 + 8.00 S/O/N 12 11.3250 + 6.75 Wheat Oct 6.0200 - 3.25 Jan 12 6.3100 - 1.00 J/A 12 6.5100 + .75 You can find more information online at www.troyelevator.com.
TROY DAILY NEWS • WWW.TDN-NET.COM
with Canadian Prime Minister Stephen Harper after a joint meeting of those two leaders and Mexican President Felipe Calderon had to be canceled because of a helicopter crash that killed Mexico’s top cabinet secretary. Handlers for Obama and Harper tried to make the most of the moment for the cameras, staging not one but two photo ops of Obama and Harper, first laughing while seated at a patio table, then strolling with their suit coats slung over their shoulders. On Saturday, largely a day of sideline meetings here, Obama prodded the skeptical leaders of Russia and China for support in dialing back Iran’s nuclear ambitions, but without winning endorsement from either man. Neither Russian President Dmitry Medvedev nor Chinese President Hu Jintao publicly echoed Obama’s push for solidarity over Iran. Obama did announce the broad outlines of an agreement to create a trans-Pacific trade zone encompassing the United States and eight other nations before going into meetings with Hu and Medvedev where he raised a new report from the U.N. International Atomic Energy Agency. The report asserted in the strongest
• CONTINUED FROM A1 and nine from Warshefana, according to gunmen and a hospital doctor in Warshefana. More than 100 people from Warshefana were wounded since Saturday, said Dr. Mohammed Sawan, adding that casualties stemmed from gunshots as well as shrapnel from rockets and mortar shells. On Sunday evening, a Warshefana field commander, Ashraf Borwais, deliv-
ered a severely burned fighter to the local hospital. He said the man was wounded when his vehicle was struck by artillery and exploded. Borwais said fighting had stopped in the evening. “The dogs have retreated,” he said, referring to the Zawiya militiamen. Zawiya fighters, meanwhile, manned roadblocks on the outskirts of their city at intervals of about 200 yards (meters). Groups of jumpy armed men, some brandishing RPGs, crowded
GOP contenders argue on Afghanistan, Iran, torture SPARTANBURG, S.C. (AP) — Republicans vying to challenge President Barack Obama for his job tangled over waterboarding, Iran and what to do about the decade-long war in Afghanistan. One thing they all agreed on is that Obama needs to go. Herman Cain and Rep. Michele Bachmann both said in Saturday’s GOP primary debate on foreign policy that they would reinstate waterboarding, an interrogation technique designed to simulate drowning and widely considered torture. Cain said he would leave it up to military leaders, not their civilian superiors, to decide what forms of interrogation amount to torture, which he said he opposes. As for the war in Afghanistan, former Utah Gov. Jon Huntsman and Rep. Ron Paul of Texas both said it was time for
U.S. troops to come home. While the Republicans were talking about foreign policy, Obama was on the world stage as America’s diplomat in chief. After meeting with Russian President Dmitry Medvedev in Hawaii, he said the two men intend to “shape a common response” to new allegations that Iran has been covertly trying to build a nuclear bomb. The issue is fraught because the regime in Tehran is harshly anti-Israel, a nation the United States has pledged to defend. If the presidential trip gave the Republicans pause, they didn’t show it in their 90-minute debate. “There are a number of ways to be smart about Iran, and a few ways to be stupid. The administration skipped all the ways to be smart,” said former House Speaker Newt Gingrich.
Debt
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around the checkpoints. Fighters searched trunks of cars and checked IDs. The reason for the initial clash remains unclear, though accusations have been flying, including that some of the Warshefana had links to the old regime. At one point last week, fighters from Zawiya entered Warshefana and seized weapons. In retaliation, Warshefana fighters set up random checkpoints and fired at the main highway.
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the two sides remain far from reaching consensus. “We want more revenues. We just want to raise it by growing the economy,” he said. Likewise, Democratic panel member Rep. James Clyburn offered no hint that a real compromise was in the works. “We’ve got 10 days to do this, and I really believe that all of the ingredients for a good resolution are there. We just need to build the will,” said Clyburn, DS.C. At the same time, Clyburn accused Republicans of wanting to cut a billionaire’s tax bill by $300,000 while eliminating Medicare for people on a fixed income. “That is just not fair,” he said. Pennsylvania Sen. Pat Toomey, a Republican member of the committee, defended his latest proposal as one that would get the economy moving again. Toomey and other Republicans want to generate at least $250 billion in new revenue by limiting tax deductions but only if Democrats agree to drop the top tax rate from 35 percent to 28 percent. “You absolutely can do this in a way that will be pro-growth, that will generate more revenue, (and) that would avoid this huge tax increase that’s coming otherwise,” Toomey said. Democrats have rejected the idea as something that will ultimately cost more than it would save, and called for a mix of $1 trillion in spending cuts and $1 trillion in higher tax revenue over the next decade. Virginia Sen. Mark Warner, a Democrat who supports entitlement and tax reform, suggested that politics was the biggest culprit in preventing a deal. “You’ll know this supercommittee is getting close when folks on both ends of the political extreme scream the loudest, because that will show that there’s actually movement being made,” he said.
LOCAL
3
&REGION
November 14, 2011
TROY DAILY NEWS • WWW.TROYDAILYNEWS.COM
• WILD JOURNEYS: Join Brukner Nature Center member and Community Stillwater Stargazer Mike Feinstein and his companCalendar ion, Jim Solomon, as they share their recent 10-day CONTACT US adventure to the Patagonia region of Argentina at 7 p.m. at the center. Come on a multiCall Melody media excursion as particVallieu at ipants enjoy a short DVD 440-5265 to of the cities and surrounding areas of Buenos Aires, list your free El Calafate, Chalten and calendar Ushuaia with additional items.You footage of the national parks and glaciers nearby can send in Chile. A photo essay of your news by e-mail to birds and other fauna of vallieu@tdnpublishing.com. the area also will be included. The program is free for BNC members and non-member admission is $2 per person. WEDNESDAY • BOOK DISCUSSION: The book “Out of the Deep I Cry,” by Julia Spencer Fleming will be discussed at 7 p.m. at the • HEALTH FAIR: A Miami County Milton-Union Public Library, 560 S. Main Health Fair will be offered from 11 a.m. to St., West Milton. For more information, call 3 p.m. at First Place Christian Center and (937) 698-5515 or visit www.mupublicliFood Pantry, 16 W. Franklin St., Troy. The brary.org. event will include free screenings and • SHOEBOX GIFTS: Collection for evaluations, information from businesses Operation Christmas Child shoe boxes will and non profit organizations, samples and be from 5-8 p.m. at Grace Baptist Church. door prizes. The event is free and open to For more information on shoebox projects, the public and the food pantry will be open call www.findinggrace.net or www.samarito visitors. The Miami County Health tanspurse.org. District will offer flu vaccines for $25, with • TWISTED STITCHERS: Teens who most insurances accepted. enjoy knitting are invited to attend the • TEAM MEETING: The American Twisted Stitchers group for grades sixth Cancer Society’s Relay For Life of Miami and older at 4 p.m. at the Tipp City Public County will have a team meeting at 6:15 Library, 11 E. Main St. Knitters should p.m. at Hobart Corp., 701 S. Ridge Ave., bring their own needles. Yarn can be proTroy. Teams can pick up and turn in forms vided. For more information, call (937) from 5:45-6:15 p.m. Plans for upcoming 667-3826. fundraisers such as the chili cook-off in • BLOOD DRIVE: The Covington January and the February Outback lunchEagles will offer a blood drive from 3-7 eon will be discussed. For more informap.m. at 715 E. Broadway, Covington. tion about registering a team, contact Individuals with eligibility questions are Dawn.Vanover@hobartcorp.com or invited to email canidonate@cbccts.org or Debbie Weikert at 332-7116. call 800) 388-GIVE. Those interested can • STORY TIME: Story time for children make an appointment at 3-5 years old, which will include a puppet www.DonorTime.com. play and simple craft, will be at 10:30 a.m. • SOCIETY TO MEET: The Covington at the Milton-Union Public Library, 560 S. Nweberry Historical Society will meet at Main St., West Milton. The theme will be 7:30 p.m. at the Covington Village Hall. “Being Thankful.” For information more, call (937) 473-2270. • TRIVIA TIME: Home school student The public is invited to attend. trivia time, “USA Trivia,” will begin at 2 p.m. Civic agendas for students in first through 12th grade at • Troy City Schools will meet at 5:30 the Troy-Miami County Public Library. Find p.m. in the board offices. out how much you know about the USA by • The Bethel Board of Education will answering questions about states, capimeet at 7 p.m. in the school auditorium. tals, mottos, birds, flowers, famous landCall 845-9414 for more information. marks and unusual facts. Review sheets • The Pleasant Hill Village Council will will be available at the circulation desk. To meet at 7 p.m. at 200 W. Walnut St., register, call 339-0502. Pleasant Hill • KIWANIS MEETING: The Kiwanis • The Tipp City Parks Advisory Club of Troy will meet from noon to 1 p.m. Committee will meet at 7 p.m. at the Tipp at the Troy Country Club, 1830 Peters City Government Center. Road, Troy. Lunch is $10. Dennis Baker • Covington Village Council will meet at with the Engage Speakers Board will be 7 p.m. at Town Hall. the guest speaker. For more information, • The Police and Fire Committee of contact Kim Riber, vice president, at (937) Village Council will meet at 6 p.m. prior to 974-0410. the council meeting. • SHOEBOX GIFTS: Collection for • Laura Village Council will meet at 7 Operation Christmas Child shoe boxes will p.m. in the Municipal building. be from 5-8 p.m. at Grace Baptist Church. • Brown Township Board of Trustees For more information on shoebox projects, will meet at 8 p.m. in the Township call www.findinggrace.net or www.samariBuilding in Conover. tanspurse.org. • The Union Township Trustees will • CHILDREN’S PROGRAM: meet at 1:30 p.m. in the Township Debunking the old adage that feeling bad Building, 9497 Markley Road, P.O. Box E, is no fun, the next Tipp City Public Library Laura. Call 698-4480 for more information. program for grades kindergarten through third illustrates how it might not be so terrible to have to admit “I feel sick.” It is set TUESDAY for 4:30 p.m. Children will enjoy the story book “A Bad Case of Stripes,” by David • RALLY SET: The Not For Profit Shannon, make a germy looking craft, Council is celebrating National have fun with “bad hospital” relay races Philanthropic Day from 1-1:30 p.m. on the and enjoy a comfort food snack. Miami County Courthouse steps. Free hot Registration is required by calling (937) chocolate and cookies will be offered. 667-3826. • MILTON MEMORIES: The last taping • NATURE CLUB: The Home School session until spring of “Milton Memories” Nature Club will meet from 2-4 p.m. at will begin at 1 p.m. at the West Milton Brukner Nature Center to explore the Municipal Building on South Main St. The changes in the land through the process session will last approximately one hour. known as succession. Participants will Audience participation is encouraged. The explore prairie, thicket and forest habitats topic will be “Frederick” and the panel will to discover how one type of environment consist of: John Wheelock, Allen Werts, transforms to the next. The fee is $5 for Don Anderson, Richard Smith, Dorothy nonmembers and registration is due by Jean Moore Smith and Steve Boyd. For today. more information, call Barb at (937) 6986559 or Susie at (937) 698-6798. • SHOEBOX GIFTS: Collection for Operation Christmas Child shoe boxes will be from 5-8 p.m. at Grace Baptist Church. For more information on shoebox projects, call www.findinggrace.net or www.samaritanspurse.org. • BOARD MEETING: The Miami County Park District will hold its board meeting at 9 a.m. at the Lost Creek Reserve Cabin located at 2645 E. State Route 41, east of Troy. For more information, contact the Miami County Park District at 335-6273. • ANNUAL MEETING: Sue Cook will discuss “The Genealogy of Santa Claus,” at th annual November meeting of the Miami County Historical and Genealogical Society at 6 p.m. at Buffalo Jacks, 137 S. High St., Covington. Presentations also will include new Lineage Society members, as well as the Heritage Award, given to the person who has made notable contributions to the cause of history/genealogy in Miam County. For more information, call (937) 307-7142 or visit www.rootsweb.ancestory.com/~ohmchgs. • ROUNDTABLE TO MEET: The Stillwater Civil War Roundtable will meet at 7 p.m. at the Troy-Hayner Cultural
’Tis the start of the season
ABOVE: Carolers stop in front of a store to spread the Christmas cheer during Tipp City’s 2011 Yuletide Winter’s Gathering on Saturday and Sunday in downtown. Visitors also were entertained with carriage rides, pictures with Santa for children and the shopkeepers welcomed the holiday season.
AT RIGHT: Mitchell Finkes tells Santa what he wants for Christmas as other children wait eagerly in line. JOSH MCDARRIS/ OCM PHOTOS
BRIEF
Matthew W. Gearhardt
Movie set Students in kindergarten through fifth grade and their families can come to the Troy-Miami County Public Library at 6:30 p.m. Nov. 28 for a family holiday movie. To register, call 3390502.
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.
Miami County Auditor LEGAL NOTICE TO TAXPAYER NOTICE IS HEREBY GIVEN that the schedule of assessments on real property in Miami County, Ohio, as made under the laws of Ohio, has been filed with the Board of Revision of said County and that said Board of Revision has completed its work and has transferred its statement and returns to the County Auditor, and in compliance with said laws, notice is hereby given that the valuations are open for public inspection in the office of the County Auditor, and that any complaints may be filed with the County Auditor on or before March 31, 2012, or on or before the last day to pay the first half installments of taxes, whichever is the later, for tax duplicate year 2011 (December 2011). All complaints will be heard by the Board of Revision after March 31, 2012, in the Miami County Auditor's Office. Respectfully submitted, 2234127
FYI
Center. Harold George of Lakewood, a Civil War reenactor with the 9th Ohio Light Artillery, will speak about Andrews Raiders 24 men from Ohio on a secret raid into the south. • OPEN MEETING: The Elizabeth Township Historic Society will meet for an open meeting at 7 p.m. at the Elizabeth Township Community Center on Walnut Grove Road. The program will be Sue Vickroy portrayiing Elvira Kincaide Thompson as a pioneer. Civic agendas • The Concord Township Trustees will meet at 10 a.m. at the Concord Township Memorial Building, 1150 Horizon West Court, Troy. • Pleasant Hill Township Trustees will meet at 8 p.m. in the township building, 210 W. Walnut St., Pleasant Hill.
11/10, 11, 12, 13, 14, 16, 17, 18, 19, 20-2011
Matthew W. Gearhardt, Miami County Auditor Secretary, Miami County Board of Revision
WEDNESDAY Civic agendas • The Elizabeth Township Trustees will meet at 7 p.m. in the township building, 5710 Walnut Grove Road, Troy. • The Covington Board of Education will meet at 7 p.m. in the Covington Middle School for a regular board meeting.
S p r i n g r e g i st r at i o n i s n ow o p e n !
THURSDAY • LUNCH BUDDIES: The Future Begins Today, in cooperation with the Troy City Schools, will hold a Lunch Buddy orientation and training for new or current Lunch Buddies from noon to 1 p.m. at it office, 104 E. Main St., Troy. If you are not a Lunch Buddy, but may be interested in learning more about the program so you can become one, call and plan to attend. A complimentary box lunch and information packet will be provided to all attendees. To make a reservation, call 3320467 or email ccotner@TheFutureBeginsToday.org. Give your name, as well as the school where you are a Lunch Buddy.
RETURNING STUDENTS:
NEW STUDENTS:
Just go online to www.edisonohio.edu/schedule, log in to WebAdvisor and start searching for available classes with the most up-to-date information.
Students new to Edison should call the Edison Welcome Center at 937-778-7920 to schedule a personal admissions advising appointment today.
A PERSONAL EXPERIENCE. A REWARDING EDUCATION.
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TODAY
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LOCAL
Monday, November 14, 2011
TROY DAILY NEWS • WWW.TDN-NET.COM
HONOR ROLL
Troy High School
Alec DeMore, Cristina Dennison, Caroline ElsassTROY — The following Smith, Megan Falknor, Troy High School students Abigail Flamm, Abigail have been named honor stu- Gohrband, Cody dents for the first grading Hemmelgarn, Jared Hill, period of the 2011-12 school Mary Huffman, Isaiah year. Johnson, Grant Kasler, • Principal’s list, 3.75 Cameron Kauflin, Madeline or better Kleptz, Kirsten Langenkamp, Freshman — Lauren Madison Lemmon, Jonathan Anderson, Mackenzie Liew, Ashley Littrell, Angel Armstrong, Amanda Luis, Dylan Magoto, Bowman, Andrew Bricker, Courtney Mazzulla, Bridget Raymond Burton, Macen McCormick, Allyson Miller, Cancino, Evonne Chien, Collin Moeller, Drew Morgan, Rebecca Cole, Gillianne Olivia Mullins, Rachel Coleman, Olivia Dankworth, Murray, Jason Myers, Akari Mudra Dave, Madeline Davis, Nagata, Tianna Newton,
Luke Oaks, Dylan Oakes, Lindsey Orozco, Kiersten Owens, Shiv Patel, Daniel Powell, Aleksander Prus, Kira Rench, Colleen Rhea, Stephen Rozsnaki, Nathan Salm, Emily Savard, William Schober, Troy Schultz, Katherine Sebring, Kinari Sekito, Katelyn Shiverdecker, Katelyn Snee, Shelby Snider, Whitney Snider, Joshua Spayde, Desmond Sprowl, Celia Stanley, Brittney Sullivan, Jayden Svajda, Savannah Thiery, Sayaka Toyoshima, MacKenzie Vernon, Ian Ward, Marina Wehrkamp, Shaina Weyher,
Kids, Beginning Friday, November 25th, a form will be available on www.troydailynews.com to email your letter to Me! Your letter also will be published by my helpers at the Troy Daily News in the newspaper on Friday, December 23rd. Be ready! To reach me in time, you must send your letters by Monday, December 12th. Look for the Letters to Santa tile on www.troydailynews.com after Monday, November 14th and click for details!
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Welcome to the neighborhood
Alexandra Wilt, Abby Witt, Leslie Wynkoop, Michelle Zelnick, Zihan Zhang and Michael Zweidinger. Sophomores — Abigial Adkins, Matthew Alexander, Shelby Arnett, Taylor Barney, Joseph Benson, Madelyn Bollinger, Abby Brinkman, Austin Brown, Cameron Brown, Courtney Burgasser, Noelle Culp, Alex Dalton, Melissa DeGroat, KristenAnne Denlinger, Elisabeth Dodd, Erin Dodd, Briana Draving, Cynthia England, Jostlyne Erbaugh, Joel Evans, Nathan Fleischer, Jennifer Hanson, Jacob Henson, Joseph Henson, Devan Huggins, Alexis Hull, Nicholas Kleptz, Stephen Kolber, Andrew Kostecka, Benjamin Langdon, Samuel Larson, Kassandra Lehman, Jessica Lehmann, Alex Magoteaux, Luke Manis, Erik Matthews, Magan McClurg, Shelby Meadows, Alexander Meier, William Metzger, Kathryn Miller, Emily Moser, Emily Mothmiller, Taylor Mumpower, Takashi Ohkura, Seth Overla, Courtney Owens, Brian Pennington, Ryan Priest, Alexander Prouty, Andrew Randazzo, Katie-Grace Sawka, Leah Selby, Jessica Shelton, Daijah Smith, Leah Soutar, Brittney Sowers, Jena Stewart, Connor Super, Katherine Swank, Dustin Taro, Ngoc Tu, Kelton Webb, Taylor Welch, Robert West, Eric Wright, Makayla Wyan and Rachel Zelnick. Juniors — Alyson Adams, Malik Al-Jarani, Jodie Anderson, William Armstrong, Kennedy Atkins, Audrey Banning, Madyson Bender, Amanda Blakley, Jessica Bornhorst, Madison Burchfield, Tiasha Butcher, Sarah Butler, Courtney Caldwell, Gabrielle Castaldo, Joshua Clark, Kasey Copas, Alexandra Covault, Erianna Covington, Austin Deaton, Katelyn Delwiche, Brett DeMore, Angela Dennison, Christian Detrick, Rachel Dippold, Jacob Eldridge, Kelly Fischer, Alexander Flamm, Fiona Foster, Maeghan Heckman, Sarah Helke, Kristin Hoglund, Mao Iizuka, Brianna Jumper, Alison Kolber, Jennifer Monnier, Kara Moore, Mayu Ohtsuka, Meredith Orozco, Emma Pence, Zachary Peugh, Adam Priest, Cassandra Rice, Mackenzie Rice, Catelyn
Schmiedebusch, Jenna Selby, Jeremy Sierra, Amber Smith, Ivy Smith, Bradley Stapleton, Brandon Stradling, Isha Tyagi and Duncan Wills. Seniors — Christian Blair, Taylor Breisch, Eric Burgasser, Adriana Cancino, Hang Chen, Ayano Chiba, Sean Clawson, Abigail Coon, Caitlin Culp, Kyle Deal, Kelsey Dornbusch, Reagan Dutton, Omega Dziko, William Evans, Victoria Fenter, Marcus Foster, Cody Fox, Takaki Furuichi, Isaac Galli, Caitlin Grote, Jordan Harlow, Thomas Harvey, Niccole Hicks, Taylor Hinkle, Courtney Hittepole, Brian Holland, Abby Huston, Riley Isely, Nicholas Kovar, Alaina Lamme, Karissa Lee, Jennifer Lehmann, Daniel Longendelpher, William Matthews, Peter Mengos, Kaysee Morgan, Moe Ohtsuka, Jinesh Patel, Hailey Pierce, Colleen Powers, Jordi Price, Marie Rank, Logan Rathmann, Mason Riemer, Robert Rohr, Chelsey Sakal, Andrew Sanders, Jessica Schaeffer, Shelby Schultz, Erika Schwartz, Kailyn Scott, Shutaro Sekito, Nathaniel Shigley, Laura Smith, Jessica Soutar, Craig Timms, Isaac Wiegman, Zachary Wille, Danielle Wright, Alexander Yonk, Kaitlyn Youtz and Jenee Zweidinger. • Honor roll, 3.5 and 3.74 Freshman — Haley Anderson, Rachel Bailey, Gina Barth, Zechariah Bond, Abigail Bopp, Jared Bowen, Margaret Caughell, Aleecia Christian, Joshua Climer, Chloe Donnan, Marcus Downey, Brittany Etherington, Mykel Ferguson, Eduardo Fitch, Meredith Flory, Darby Funderburgh, Ryan Geer, Mariah HatemNorthrup, Christian Heffner, Drew Henn, Brandon Hess, Amanda Hokky, Connor Huth, Dylan Kavalauskas, Michael Keenan, Benjamin Kersey, Danielle Lade, Matthew Larson, Breanna Logan, Brandon Lucier. Melissa Mengos, Amanda Mikel, Luke Miller, Kyle Minton, Peyton Mowery, Austin Naas, Larissa O’Connor, Madison Olberding, Emma Pascale, Emily Phares, Allison Pierce, Elias Pierce, Isaiah Purves, Alexandre Rizkallah, Andrew Robinson, Matthew Roetter, Raiann
Rohlfs, Taylor Rupert, John Scordia, Eleftherios Seitis, Colin Smith, Lindsay Smith, Sabrina Smith, Julie Sumiya, Clayton Terrill, Takumi To, Taryn Vest, Jael Via, Maygan Ward and Autumn Weatherhead. Sophomores — Jack Alexander, Chad Baker, Michael Barkett, Allison Berry, Brenden Besecker, Morgan Brown, Nathan Cavanaugh, Kayla Crabtree, David Driver, Rachel Good, Blake Guillozet, Maria Hickman, Megan Holland, Taylor Joins, Elizabeth Joseph, Crystal Kolstad, Caleb LaCombe, Natasha Lucas, Vy Hoang Mai, Jacob May, Morgan McKinney, Alexis Mills, Stephen Orban, Austin Roese, Kandace Sheafer, Shelby Simpson, Paige Sowers, Andrew Spencer, John Taylor, Benjamin Trotter, Steven Williams and Hannah Wilson. Juniors — Sarah Adkins, Iesha Alspaugh, Shannon Andrews, Nicole Archie, Kaitlin Baker, Zachary Barker, Jessica Blakes, Brittany Blier, Allison Brown, DeVante Bush, Kyle Croft, Kayle Dellinger, Brooke Duncan, Lauren Dunfee, Shai Emerick, Brooke Evans, Tyler Flannery, Christopher Harrison, Kaitlyn Hayworth, Michaela Humphrey, Blake Jarvis, Madeline Kaup, Ravyn Kirtz, Jaclyn Kranenburg, Micayla Lewis, Trung-Thanh Mai, Austin Martin, Caitlyn McMinn, Kyle Nelson, Jonathan Osman, Seth Perdziola, Marissa Powell, Ashley Rector, Zachary Roetter, Emily Royer, Thomas Rozsnaki, Mariah Sano, Jordyn Savage, William Scarborough, Cara Shelley, Nhan Tu, Riley Turner, Taylor Walker, Yuki Watanabe, Lauren Wendel, Jenteal West, Cassie Williams and Carly Willis. Seniors — Jacqueline Brown, Kevin Bruggeman, Taylor Bush, Zachary Butcher, Sean Cothran, Matthew Davis, Emily DeBella, Joshua Enke, Kaitlyn Flory, Ethan Hargrove, Kaitlynn Harrison, Bradley Johnson, Erin Kaup, Jacob Kimrey, David Richey, Kleigh Smith, Rachel Stump, Tyler Thompson, Jennifer Winert, Reid Wynkoop, Ladona Young and Kyle Zimmerman.
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Non-Subscribers, don’t miss the Yes, please have the carrier deliver my pre-paid copy(s) of the Troy Daily News Thanksgiving edition to my home located at the address below.
BLACK FRIDAY SALE ADS Reserve your copy(s) of the Thanksgiving Edition of the Troy Daily News to catch all the “Black Friday Sale Ads” and so much more!
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Fill in the form and mail it in with $1.75 per copy (up to 3), or stop in the office located at 224 S. Market St., Troy, 45373. Deadline for order/payment is November 18, 2011. All orders must be prepaid. You may order up to 3 copies to be delivered. Copies may also be purchased at our many newsstand and store locations throughout Tipp City, Troy and surrounding communities. Happy Thanksgiving to you and your family from the Troy Daily News.
OPINION
Contact us David Fong is the executive editor of the Troy Daily News. You can reach him at 440-5228 or send him e-mail at fong@tdn publishing.com.
XXXday, 2010 Monday, November 14,XX, 2011 •5
TROY DAILY NEWS • WWW.TROYDAILYNEWS.COM
In Our View Troy Daily News Editorial Board FRANK BEESON / Group Publisher DAVID FONG / Executive Editor
ONLINE POLL
(WWW.TROYDAILYNEWS.COM)
Question: Should Penn State football coach Joe Paterno have been fired?
Watch for final poll results in Sunday’s Miami Valley Sunday News.
Watch for a new poll question in Sunday’s Miami Valley Sunday News.
PERSPECTIVE
“Congress shall make no law respecting an establishment of religion, or prohibiting the free exercise thereof; or abridging the freedom of speech, or of the press; or the right of people peaceably to assemble, and to petition the Government for a redress of grievances.” — First Amendment, U.S. Constitution
EDITORIAL ROUNDUP The Asahi Shimbun, Tokyo, on world population growth: Sakyo Komatsu, a Japanese writer who recently died, wrote a short story titled “Gogo no burijji (Playing bridge in the afternoon)” about a global food crisis. The story is set in a future world where most species of animals have become extinct as an exploding global population has led to explosive growth in meat consumption. As a result, people around the world have to live mostly on artificial foods. The world’s population recently hit 7 billion. Five decades ago, the number of people living on this planet was slightly over 3 billion. It more than doubled in just a half century. Warnings about a food crisis due to the population explosion have been issued many times. But humankind has so far managed to prevent a global food crisis through species improvement and output expansion. While obesity is spreading in industrial nations where food is abundantly available, eastern parts of Africa are suffering from famine. Criticism of the concentration of wealth in the hands of a small number of people is gaining tracAs I tion in the United States and Europe, but there are even greater income disparities between rich See It nations and poor ones. ■ The Troy The natural environment around us is deterioDaily News rating rapidly. Global emissions of carbon dioxide, welcomes which push up the Earth’s temperature with columns from potentially dire consequences, keep growing, while our readers. To the total number of species, excluding human submit an “As I beings, is decreasing fast. See It” send The pace of global population growth is slowing. your type-writStill, nearly 80 million are added to the global comten column to: munity every year. ■ “As I See It” This precious planet is crowded with 7 billion c/o Troy Daily people. We all have the obligation to make this News, 224 S. world a better place to live for new members of the Market St., human community who will arrive in the coming Troy, OH 45373 years. ■ You can also The Telegraph, London, e-mail us at on Italy’s euro crisis: editorial@tdnpu At the G20 summit in Cannes last week, such blishing.com. was Silvio Berlusconi’s lack of interest in talks on ■ Please how to stop Italy becoming the next victim of the include your full eurozone crisis that he fell asleep and had to be name and telenudged back to consciousness by his officials. phone number. The episode was somehow symbolic of the absence of political leadership at the helm of the eurozone’s third largest economy as it heads, apparently helplessly, toward calamitous shipwreck. Among other eurozone leaders, there is a widespread assumption, shared to some extent by the financial markets, that Berlusconi is the very personification of the Italian problem — that the sooner he is gone, the sooner the necessary fiscal and structural reform can be delivered, and the threat of Italian default removed. Unfortunately, this is wishful thinking. Berlusconi, who over the years has survived almost as many coups as he has had mistresses, will stand down shortly. The scale of the economic challenge facing his country, and the pressure applied by a Franco-German axis that is fast taking control of the eurozone’s democracies, has finally dislodged his grip on the Italian political system. Yet while Berlusconi may preside over an economy that is essentially corrupt, it is not clear that his removal will bring anything more than short-term relief. There is no reason to believe that whoever succeeds him will be any more capable of delivering the demanded reforms. For all its faults, Berlusconi’s government has been among the more stable postwar Italian administrations. It has also been philosophically in favor of free-market reform. His fall is likely to mean a return to the political turbulence of the past. It is certainly possible for economies to regain competitiveness through the painful corrective measures the eurozone prescribes — wage and spending cuts included — but the political and social damage of such an adjustment is going to be extreme.
LETTERS
Thank you for your support
These are tough times for everyone, and we’re sure every voter carefully considered the pros and cons of a “yes” vote. It To the Editor: makes us very proud to see On behalf of everyone in that the majority of Tipp City Tipp City Schools, thank you voters chose to support the for approving our Renewal schools even in the current ecoLevy on Nov. 8! nomic climate. We are so grateful for your It shows how much this support, and we are excited community values education. that we can continue to proWe will continue to be good vide high quality programs stewards of your money and and services for the students of keep looking for as many new Tipp City and Monroe and additional ways to conTownship. serve our resources.
I want to send a special thank you to the levy campaign workers, led by chairman Carli Amlin Dean, and all of the other volunteers who rallied around our need and took our message to the community. It was an awesome committee and we can't thank them enough for the countless hours they gave for the children of our community.
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
Don’t fear identity theft ... fear identity heft At last count, my list of passwords for access into various programs ran to three pages. Single spaced. We wasted decades fearing the Russians were going to overrun us. Now it turns out all this time we should have been afraid of Bill Gates. In the early days, it was easy. You needed a simple password to look at your email. Once that password was typed in, the innocent, willing world of the Internet was at your feet. There were no hackers, no phishers, no evil personages trying to steal your identity. Then “for our convenience” it became possible to do business online. Stepped-up security was necessary and thus was born the issue of trying to remember The Password For All Seasons. It was too good to last. Computer experts began to warn us not to use passwords that were easy to guess or too simple or, for heaven’s sake, the same one for every application. We’re not supposed to use our birth date or our street address or any other number too closely associated with our lives. Above all, we’re not supposed to write these passwords down. Who do they think they’re kidding? There isn’t
Marla Boone Troy Daily News Columnist a normal adult around (and by normal adult I mean one who doesn’t make a living giving seminars on improving memory skills) who doesn’t harbor a secret cheat sheet filled to the edges with notations like “ 57 Chevy” and “Teacher 1.” And now it’s nearly impossible to get by with just simple numerals. Most places require some incredibly complex combination of letters and numbers and upper case and lower case with the threat of the dreaded “access denied” when we fail to remember it all in three tries or less. One of the few places left where I can use a four digit access code is for my gasoline rewards card ... the one that gives me a free beverage for every $90 worth of gas I
— John P. Kronour, PhD Tipp City Schools Superintendent
buy. Apparently even computer hackers have standards and they draw the line at violating my records for a 12-ounce cappuccino. “Access denied” is a whole other can of words, as it were. If you fail to input your password correctly, you are challenged to answer security questions. They’re secure, all right. We tried to pay off the loan on Steve’s truck last week. Naturally, we could not remember the password to the account even though we successfully entered the ninezillion-character VIN, which serves as the account number. He has, of course, only one maternal grandmother and we faithfully entered her name in answer to the prompt. This went on for several tries until the awful “access denied” was replaced by the insurmountable “account lockout.” Seems we were spelling it wrong. I recently started using a system that requires three different passwords at three separate portals for access. Three. This, you understand, is a no-hoper. I have that exact number of sisters and I can barely keep their names straight. Now I’m required to remember three unique pass-
words, IN THE CORRECT ORDER to use this system. The first password is all numbers. That is the good news. The bad news is there are 10 of them. The second password requires a seven letter word beginning with a capital letter followed by a single digit. The third password is a nine character mix of letters and numbers and sacred incantations and, for all I know, voodoo. It’s taking up way too much of my own personal memory board to deal with it. By the time I get into the system, I’ve forgotten why I wanted to go there. If hackers can get into the Pentagon database with all those professionally installed layers of security, it’s obvious us poor amateurs don’t stand a chance. We should just abandon any hope for online security right now and erect billboards offering our passwords to anyone who wants them. That’s just what I’d do if only I could remember them.
Troy Troy Daily News
Miami Valley Sunday News
FRANK BEESON Group Publisher
DAVID FONG Executive Editor
LEIANN STEWART Retail Advertising Manager
CHERYL HALL Circulation Manager
BETTY BROWNLEE Business Manager
SCARLETT SMITH Graphics Manager
AN OHIO COMMUNITY MEDIA NEWSPAPER 224 S. Market St. Troy, Ohio 45373
Marla Boone appears every other Monday in the Troy Daily News
www.TDN-NET.com 335-5634
6
Monday, November 14, 2011
LOCAL & STATE
TROY DAILY NEWS • WWW.TDN-NET.COM
Man missing after explosion found dead Others still in hospital FAIRBORN — Authorities searched Sunday for a 75-year-old man thought missing after a house exploded in western Ohio, injuring six others, including four children, and damaging neighbors’ homes. The explosion sent debris and the victims into the yard, and a neighbor reported seeing a baby burned, bloodied and covered in glass. Fairborn Fire Marshal Carl Day said the man had been found Sunday afternoon but didn’t say whether he’d died. He was expected to release that information and other details later Sunday. The 1-year-old baby was in fair condition and a 5year-old was in good condition Sunday morning, a spokesman for Dayton Children’s Medical Center said. A third child, whose age wasn’t available, was treated and released Saturday. A 13-year-old was transferred in critical condition to Shriner’s Hospital for Children, one of about four hospitals in the country specializing in pediatric burns, said spokeswoman Louise Holker. Two men also were injured. Their conditions were not given. Work was being done on the duplex’s water line
AP PHOTO
A Fairborn firefighter carries a dog that was found in the area of a house explosion on Wayne Drive on Saturday in Fairborn. when the gas line was struck, causing the explosion, Day said. The blast was one of three in the Midwest over the weekend. Another in Benton Township in southwestern Michigan killed two people late Saturday and seriously injured another. Its cause wasn’t immediately known, but relatives say several oxygen tanks were inside. And an explosion in Chicago on Sunday morning flattened one home, scorched others and sent two people to the hospital with serious burns. Fire officials and utilities were investigating. A woman who lived about 100 yards from the Ohio home that exploded, Cybil Poole, told the Dayton Daily News that the blast
felt like a car hitting it. She said she saw the infant lying in the yard and that some of the other victims were still on fire. “It was horrible. It was like a movie scene. You see this huge fireball and you see people come out of it on fire,” she said. Another neighbor, Paula Corelli, told the newspaper that she was almost hit by a flying piece of wood from the explosion. When she saw two adults running down the sidewalk carrying three bloodied children, she offered to take them while the adults returned to the scene. “Medics told me to keep them awake because they had head injuries, so we sang to them, me and another woman,” Corelli
said. “And we didn’t let them look back. It was still on fire and there was a lot of blood.” Some of the victims were airlifted to hospitals. Windows shattered on homes on both sides of the destroyed house. Debris could be seen a block away. The gas was turned off to the house that exploded, Day said. Several others in the neighborhood were evacuated as a precaution, but some residents were allowed to return hours later. Chase Kelley, a spokeswoman for Vectren Corp., said it hasn’t been confirmed that there was a gas leak and the company would likely conduct its own investigation into the cause of the explosion.
OBITUARIES
Kenneth E. Earick Sr. Community College for PIQUA — Kenneth E. one year. Earick Sr., 74, of Piqua, Ohio, passed away at 8:19 He loved children. One of Ken’s p.m. Saturday Nov. favorite times of 12, 2011, at Upper year was Valley Medical Halloween. He Center, surrounded always gave out by his loving family. candy and called He was born each of the chilApril 8, 1937, in dren George or Dawson, to the Martha. late Elmer and Ken proudly Ethel (Ford) served his counEarick. EARICK try as a member He married of the U.S. Navy Roberta Ellis July during the Vietnam 15, 1965, in War as a mine Coronado, Calif; and sweeper. He she survives. retired from the Also surviving are U.S. Navy after 20 two sons and one years. daughter-in-law, Ken then retired from Kevin and Kristy Earick of Labor Local 1410 after 14 Piqua; Kenneth E. Earick years as a material hanJr. of Greenville; two dler. daughters and sons-inFuneral services will be law, Tina and Kemm Kendall of Murray, Ky., and at 10 a.m. Thursday, Nov. Teresa and Marshall Hollis 17, at Melcher-Sowers of Piqua; one daughter-in- Funeral Home, Piqua, with the Rev. Ed Ellis officiatlaw, Missy Herrman of ing. Burial will follow in Troy; one brother, Glen Earick of Piqua; 15 grand- Miami Memorial Park, children, Kendra, Jennifer, Covington. Full military honors will Tabitha, Kaleb, Allia, Selena, Camron, Brianna, be presented by The Veterans Elite Tribute Kelsey, Kaden, Conner, Squad. Friends may call Ryan and Nolan Earick from 5-8 p.m. Wednesday and Marshal and at the funeral home. Kellidawn Hollis. Memorial contributions He was preceded in death by one son, Howard may be made to Wounded Earick in 2002; five broth- Warrior Project, 4899 ers, Carl, Arthur, Herman, Belfort Road, Suite 300, Jacksonville, FL 32256. Howard and Bernard Condolences may be Earick; and one sister, expressed to the family Bernice Parker. www.melcher-sowers.com. Ken attended Edison
Harriet M. Mahan
(Amy) Mahan of Troy and TROY — Harriet M. Bradden Mahan of Troy; Mahan, 87, of Troy, two great-grandsons, passed away 5:30 a.m. Keagan and Nathaniel. Saturday, Nov. 12, 2011, Harriet was preceded in at Troy Care and death by her son, Steve. Rehabilitation Center. A graveside service will She was born April 12, be at 11 a.m. 1924, in Decatur, Ill., to the late Orville and Helen Wednesday, Nov. 16, at Casstown Cemetery with (Gustin) Stukins. the Rev Dr, Keith Wagner She was married to Charles S. Mahan; and he officiating. Arrangements are preceded her in death on entrusted to FisherDec. 14, 1977. Survivors include her son Cheney Funeral Home, and daughter-in-law, Jerry Troy. Condolences may be and Christina Mahan of expressed to the family at Troy; daughter-in-law, Jacquelyn Mahan of Troy; www.fisher-cheneyfuneraluse her again not because two grandchildren, James home.com of her troubles, but because FUNERAL DIRECTORY he’s already tapped her fan base. His interns wanted to know if comedian Will • Eugene H. Kimmel dence at 11:12 a.m. Ferrell is available. Said SEBRING, Fla. — Sunday, Nov. 13, 2011. Smith: “That would be a Eugene H. Kimmel, 72, Arrangements are cool one to get.” of Sebring, Fla., and for- pending at FisherFor the record, Ferrell merly of Mercer County, Cheney Funeral Home, isn’t on Twitter, says his passed away at his resi- Troy. spokesman, Matt Labov, who adds that the Twitter handles sporting his name are “imposters.” For her part, Lohan on her own time tweets about topics like fulfilling her community service sentence. But she has also posted comments for Izea ROCHESTER, N.Y. (AP) acquired in 2002 from A.C. on a few occasions, the company says. Her tweets — Is Linus jumping for joy? Gilbert’s Discovery Village The blanket, an all-pur- in Salem, Ore. Each toy about wind energy (“While saving the world … save pose plaything as well as a must be widely recognized, money! I love it!”) and comfort for generations of foster learning, creativity or about a gold mining compa- thumb-suckers like Charlie discovery through play, and ny (“R ur savings safe? Brown’s best friend in the endure in popularity over Think again!”) were paid “Peanuts” comic strip, land- generations. Trying to create a toy endorsements, according to ed Thursday in the National Toy Hall of Fame that would be as big a sucIzea’s website. Those posts, along with along with Hot Wheels and cess with boys as Barbie was with girls, Elliot the CampusLIVE tweet, the dollhouse. The trio take their Handler hit upon an idea included the characters “(hash)ad” at the end, places at The Strong, a chil- for miniature die-cast vehiwhich indicates that a post dren’s and cultural history cles with sleek designs. Hot museum in upstate New Wheels were introduced in is a paid endorsement. But Lohan’s publicist, York, alongside 46 classics 1968 and the brand became Steve Honig, says that ranging from the bicycle, a big hit. Handler, who died in Lohan does not “sell” her kite and teddy bear to Jack-in-the-Box July at age 95, grew Mattel tweets: “She uses Twitter Barbie, Inc. into the nation’s largest to communicate with her and Mr. Potato Head. Curators said the blan- toy maker along with his fans and let them know ket was a special addition wife, Ruth, who created the what she’s up to.” Like any endorsement, in the spirit of two earlier Barbie doll in 1959. The dollhouse evolved celeb tweets come with the inductees, the cardboard risk that a star’s behavior box and the stick. They from 16th-century “baby will not coincide with the praised its ability to serve houses,” wooden cabinets in company’s image. And of either as recreational raw which wealthy European course, there’s a science to material or an accessory women displayed their colpicking the right one: Will transformed in myriad lections of miniature furconsumers buy that their ways by a child’s day- nishings. German toy makers profavorite rapper drives a dreams. “Every now and again duced variations for youngminivan? Twitter generally allows we like to shake things up, sters to furnish with tiny the paid tweets, as long as remind folks there’s play chairs, tables, beds, tapesthey’re posted manually experiences that happen tries and floor coverings and not automated by a purely creatively … rather and, by the 19th century, than coming with rules, a mass-production methods computer program. The Federal Trade path, a backstory you feel enabled dollhouses to grow Commission suggests constrained into,” said in popularity. “The dollhouse has gone endorsers end their tweets Christopher Bensch, the with the (hash) symbol, Rochester museum’s chief on to hold a special place in the hearts of children called a hash tag, and the curator. Longevity is a key crite- everywhere,” said Patricia letters “ad” or “spon,” short for “sponsored by,” to clarify rion for getting into the 13- Hogan, the museum’s curayear-old hall, which was tor of toys and dolls. that they’re ads.
Twitter changes business of celebrity endorsements
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NEW YORK (AP) — Rapper Snoop Dogg gave props on Twitter to an ad for the Toyota Sienna minivan. Actress Tori Spelling linked to a website for rental cars. And reality TV star Khloe Kardashian soliloquized aTwitter changes business of celebrity endorsementsbout the brand of jeans that accentuates the famous Kardashian derriere. “Want to know how Old Navy makes your butt look scary good? Ask a Kardashian,” the reality TV star wrote, or tweeted, on the social media website. Of course, she capped off the reflection with a smiley face. These celebs aren’t just writing about family cars and fashion choices for the heck of it. Stars can get paid big bucks sometimes $10,000 or more per post to pontificate about clothes, cars and movies in the 140 characters or less allowed per tweet. Twitter, which in its five-year existence has reshaped how people shop, vote and start revolutions, is now changing the business of celebrity endorsements. Just as Match.com and eHarmony pair up singles for dates, a growing number of startup firms are hooking up companies with stars who get paid to praise products to their thousands sometimes millions of Twitter followers. The list of celebs and the things they hawk is
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long and getting longer all the time. The endorsements range from subtle to blatant; the celeb pairings from sensible to downright odd. Singer Ray J urged his 600,000-plus Twitter followers to see the horror movie “Saw 3D.” Football star Terrell Owens gave a shout-out in front of his more than 1 million followers to a hotel chain giving away sports tickets: “Comfort Inn is hooking up 3 days of it!” Lamar Odom, L.A. Lakers forward, tweeted to his nearly 2 million followers about hip-hop artist and entrepreneur Jay-Z’s book “Decoded”: “My man Jay-Z … only rapper to rewrite history without a pen. Until now.” Of course, anything on Twitter is short-lived and reaches only a small, selfselecting audience: Research firm eMarketer estimates that only 11 percent of U.S. adult Internet users are on the microblogging site. And even though some celebs have faithful groups of followers, it can be hard to measure whether their tweets lead people to spend. Still, celeb tweets can be a way to grab a captive audience at a time when many people are skipping TV commercials with their digital video recorders. And paying a celeb to tweet is much cheaper than a traditional advertising campaign. Want a tweet from Khloe Kardashian? That will cost about $8,000,
according to prices listed by social media marketer Izea. Looking for a cheaper option? Ray J is about $2,300. Companies like Izea, Ad.ly and twtMob usually pair products with celebs through a combination of software algorithms and Hollywood instinct. The companies say they use many metrics to gauge the effectiveness of a paid tweet, such as the number of times it gets reposted by others. When Ad.ly got Charlie Sheen to tweet for Interships.com in March, the actor was in the midst of getting fired from his sitcom “Two and a Half Men” over accusations of hard partying and drug use. Within an hour of Sheen’s first post, Internships.com got more than 95,000 clicks. “I’m looking to hire a (hash)winning INTERN with (hash)TigerBlood,” tweeted Sheen, who had just recently signed up for Twitter and now has more than 5 million followers. Dan Smith, vice president of marketing for the website CampusLIVE, which helps advertisers connect with college students, hired Izea to help him get a celebrity to tweet about his company. Izea gave him a short list, which included names like “Jersey Shore” reality TV star JWOWW, comedian Michael Ian Black and rapper Bow Wow. Smith polled his interns and they picked Lindsay Lohan, the actress most famous for her run-ins with the law. According to Smith, CampusLIVE paid Lohan about $3,500 for one tweet: “These challenges college kids on * Your 1st choice for complete Home for (hash)CampusLIVE are SO Medical Equipment addicting!” The post to Lohan’s 2.6 Lift Chairs million fans drove about 1990 W. Stanfield, Troy, OH 4,500 clicks to the website, 45373 • 937-335-9199 Smith said. But he also www.legacymedical.net said he wasn’t sure if he’d 2229918
Toy Hall of Famers: Dollhouse, Hot Wheels, blanket
NATION
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Supreme Court not always last word
Bishops prepare liberty fight
AP PHOTO
Hundreds of protesters and supporters gather hours before a mandate from the city to vacate the Occupy Portland Camp in Portland, Ore., Saturday.
Police move in on Portland park PORTLAND, Ore. (AP) — In a tense escalation of the Occupy Portland protest, police in riot gear Sunday surrounded demonstrators in a downtown park area after hundreds of people defied the mayor’s order to leave the park by midnight. By early afternoon, officers had mostly surrounded the camp where the protesters were holding a “general assembly” meeting to discuss their next moves following the eviction order. Some officers used nightsticks to push people away from the encampment and used loudspeakers to warn that anyone who resisted risked arrest and “may also be subject to chemical agents and impact weapons.” Demonstrators chanted “we are a peaceful protest.” Police could be seen carrying at least one protester away from the park. Another man was taken away on a stretcher; he was alert and talking to paramedics, and raised a peace sign to fellow protesters, who responded with cheers. There was no immediate word on arrests. “We were talking about what we were going to do and then they just started hitting people. Seems like a waste of resources to me,” protester Mike Swain, 27, told The Associated Press. Choya Adkison, 30, said police moved in after giving demonstrators a false sense of calm. They thought they had time to rest, relax and regroup, she said
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— In Salt Lake City, police arrested 19 people Saturday when protesters refused to leave a park a day after a man as found dead inside his tent at the encampment. The arrests came after police moved into the park early in the evening where protesters had been ordered to leave by the end of the day. About 150 people had been living in the camp there for weeks. — In Albany, N.Y., police arrested 24 Occupy Albany protesters after they defied an 11 p.m. curfew in a state-owned park. State police officials hauled away the protesters after warning them with mega“Camp was completely vulnerable, completely defenseless” when police moved in, she said. “I’m disappointed that they created a sense of trust by walking away and then completely trampled it.” Mayor Sam Adams had ordered the camp shut down Saturday at midnight, citing unhealthy conditions and the encampment’s attraction of drug users and thieves. The anti-Wall Street protesters and their supporters had flooded the park area even as authorities in other cities stepped up pressure against demonstrators, arresting
phones that they were breaking the law in Lafayette Park. They were charged with trespassing. — In Denver, authorities forced protesters to leave a downtown encampment and arrested four people for interfering with officers who removed illegally pitched tents, said police spokesman Sonny Jackson. — In San Francisco, violence marked the protest Saturday where police said two demonstrators attacked two police officers in separate incidents during a march. Police spokesman Carlos Manfredi said a protester slashed an officer’s hand with a pen knife while another protester shoved an officer, causing facial cuts. He said neither officer was seriously hurt, and the assailants couldn’t be located. dozens of people. At one point overnight, the Portland crowd swelled to thousands. As dawn arrived, riot police had retreated and most of the crowds had gone home, but protesters who have been at the two parks since Oct. 6 were still there. One of the organizers, Jim Oliver, said the night had been a victory for Occupy Portland. “We stood up to state power,” Oliver told the AP, standing on a corner opposite the camp. Still, the camp was a shadow of what it was before Saturday.
SIDNEY DAILY NEWS ISSUE Wednesday, 11/23 Thursday, 11/24 Friday, 11/25 Saturday, 11/26 Monday, 11/28
DISPLAY DEADLINE Friday, 11/18, 5pm Friday, 11/18, 5pm Monday, 11/21, 5pm Tuesday, 11/22, Noon Tuesday, 11/22, Noon
LINER Tuesday, 11/22, 3pm Tuesday, 11/22, 3pm Wed., 11/23, Noon Wed., 11/23, 3pm Wed., 11/23, 5pm
COMMUNITY MERCHANT ISSUE Monday, 11/28
DISPLAY DEADLINE Tuesday, 11/22, 5pm
LINER DEADLINE Wed., 11/23, 3pm
TROY DAILY NEWS / PIQUA DAILY CALL ISSUE Wednesday, 11/23 Thursday, 11/24 Friday, 11/25 Saturday, 11/26 Sunday, 11/27 Monday, 11/28
DISPLAY DEADLINE
LINER DEADLINE
Friday, 11/18, 5pm Friday, 11/18, 5pm Monday, 11/21, 5pm Tuesday, 11/22, Noon Tuesday, 11/22, Noon Tuesday, 11/22, Noon
Tuesday, 11/22, 3pm Tuesday, 11/22, 3pm Wed., 11/23, Noon Wed., 11/23, 3pm Wed., 11/23, 4pm Wed., 11/23, 5pm
MIAMI COUNTY ADVOCATE ISSUE DISPLAY DEADLINE LINER DEADLINE Tuesday, 11/22, 5pm Wed., 11/23, 4pm Monday, 11/28 Please be advised our offices will be closed in observance of the Thanksgiving holiday on Thursday, November 24 and Friday, November 25. We will re-open on Monday, November 28 at 8am.
(AP) — The mood among many U.S. Roman Catholic bishops was captured in a recent speech by Archbishop Charles Chaput of Philadelphia. His talk, called “Catholics in the Next America,” painted a bleak picture of a nation increasingly intolerant of Christianity. “The America emerging in the next several decades is likely to be much less friendly to Christian faith than anything in our country’s past,” Chaput told students last week at Assumption College, an Augustinian school in Worcester, Massachusetts. “It’s not a question of when or if it might happen. It’s happening today.” The U.S. Conference of Catholic Bishops meets Monday in Baltimore for its national meeting feeling under siege: from a broader culture moving toward accepting gay marriage; a White House they often condemn as hostile to Catholic teaching; and state legislatures that church leaders say are chipping away at religious liberty. Many Catholic academics, activists and parishioners say the bishops are overreacting. John Gehring of Faith in Public Life, an advocacy network for more liberal religious voters, has argued that in a pluralistic society, government officials can choose policies that differ from church teaching without prejudice being a factor. “Some perspective is needed here,” Gehring, a Catholic, wrote on his organization’s blog. Still, the bishops see themselves as more and more on the losing side of these disagreements, and they are taking steps they hope will protect the church.
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WASHINGTON (AP) — Nothing about the Supreme Court — not its magnificent building atop Capitol Hill nor its very title — suggests that its word is anything other than final. Yet federal appellate judges and even state court judges sometimes find ways to insist on an outcome the Supreme Court has rejected. Just last week, the justices rebuked judges on the federal appeals court in San Francisco in the tragic case of a Los Angeles-area grandmother who was convicted of shaking her 7-week-old grandson to death. The appeals court overturned the conviction three times and twice, the justices ordered the appellate judges to try again. The third time around, the justices ended the case, pointedly upholding the conviction. “Each time, the panel persisted in its course, reinstating its judgment without seriously confronting the significance of the cases called to its attention,” the high court said in an unsigned opinion. “Its refusal to do so necessitates this court’s action today.” But the nation’s court of last resort does not always get the last word. The appeals court in Washington where four Supreme Court justices trained, the Oregon Supreme Court, and occasionally even the San Francisco-based federal appeals court given its come-uppance last week, have in recent years won battles with the justices. The lower court judges have managed to limit the rights of terrorism suspects detained at Guantanamo, uphold awards of large punitive damages against companies and rule in favor of criminal defendants, despite the Supreme Court’s disapproval. The efforts bring complaints from lawyers on the losing end of these cases and from some scholars that the judges are “thumbing their noses” at the Supreme Court, although those complaints usually are expressed in the more polite legalese of the courtroom.
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3,000 Brazilian police seize Rio’s biggest slum RIO DE JANEIRO (AP) — More than 3,000 police and soldiers backed by armored personnel carriers raced into Brazil’s biggest slum before dawn Sunday, quickly gaining control of a shantytown ruled for decades by a heavily armed drug gang. The takeover of the Rocinha neighborhood was the most ambitious operation yet in an effort to increase security before Rio hosts the final matches of the 2014 World Cup and the 2016 Olympics. Officials are counting on those events to signal Brazil’s arrival as a global economic, political and cultural power. The head of state security and chief architect of Rio’s shantytown pacification program, Jose Mariano Beltrame, called the operation a major success and a big step toward breaking drug traffickers’ hold on key parts of Rio. “We have taken over areas that for 30 or 40 years were in the hands of … a parallel power,” he said. “This is a very large area. It’s one of the biggest shantytowns in the Americas if not the world. We’re returning dignity and territory to people.” The action in Rocinha is part of a campaign to drive the drug gangs out of the city’s slums, where traffickers often ruled unchallenged. The city of Rio de Janeiro has more than 1,000 shantytowns where about onethird of its 6 million people live.
Authorities said it took just 90 minutes to seize control of Rocinha. Police simultaneously overran the neighboring Vidigal slum, also previously dominated by the Friends of Friends drug gang. Both slums sit between two of Rio’s richest neighborhoods, and Rocinha’s ramshackle homes climb a mountainside covered in Atlantic rain forest. Police methodically cleared alleys and streets on their way up steep, winding roads. Huey helicopters swarmed over the slum, crisscrossing the hill and flying low over the jungle surrounding the slum, as police hunted down suspects who might have fled into the forest. By evening, police said they made just four arrests. People peeked from their windows and stared as armored personnel carriers roared up streets. Rifle-toting officers from the BOPE police unit, made famous by two “Elite Squad” films, trained their weapons down narrow corridors. Down a side alleyway, police discovered a house they said belonged to the No. 2 gang leader, Sandro Luiz de Paula Amorim, known as “Peixe,” who was captured by police a few days earlier when they encircled Rocinha with roadblocks. In stark contrast to the impoverished shacks around it, Amorim’s three-story home was outfitted with a large whirlpool bath, swimming pool, huge
AP PHOTO
A Brazilian police officer pats a boy on the head while on patrol in the Rocinha slum in Rio de Janeiro, Brazil, Sunday. aquarium, high definition TV and just one book: the ancient Chinese military text “Art of War.” One resident applauded the police invasion. “Tell the world we’re not all drug traffickers! We’re working people and now they’re coming to liberate us,” a man yelled as police rolled by. Marisa Costa da Silva, 54, who runs a small candy shop at
the base of the slum, was less sure. “Lord knows if there will be war or peace, or even if things will be better if police take this slum,” she said. “We’ve heard they’ve been abusive to slum residents in other places they’ve taken. I have no idea what to expect.” Rocinha’s location has made it one of the most lucrative and largest drug distribution points in the city.
“Rocinha is one of the most strategically important points for police to control in Rio de Janeiro,” said Paulo Storani, a security consultant and former captain in the elite BOPE police unit leading the invasion. “The pacification of Rocinha means that authorities have closed a security loop around the areas that will host most of the Olympic and World Cup activities.”
Thailand flooding damages its ancient capital, Ayutthaya Historical buildings damaged AYUTTHAYA, Thailand (AP) — Water fowl, monitor lizards and stray dogs have replaced the throngs of tourists at one of Thailand’s greatest historical sites. Record flooding has turned Ayutthaya’s ancient temples into islands, and a giant statue of the reclining Buddha appears to float miraculously on the lapping water. Experts fear that at least half of the more than 200 waterlogged monasteries, fortresses and other monuments in the one-time royal capital have been damaged. “Imagine a thousand tons of brick and stone resting on soft foundations, with no modern-style pilings. We are very worried,” said Chaiyanand Busayarat, director of the
Ayutthaya Historic Park. And as flood waters recede, some experts are proposing a radical change to prevent similar disasters in the future: Turn back the clock about four centuries to emulate the city’s urban planners and engineers of that time. “We can’t prevent flooding so we have to learn to live with water again, like those who created Ayutthaya. Let’s take out the old city maps,” said Anek Sihamat, deputy director-general of the Thai government’s Fine Arts Department. He recommended digging up old canals that have been paved over for roads and curbing the urban sprawl and industrial parks that block the natural runoff of water.
Capital of a powerful state for 417 years, seat of 33 kings, Ayutthaya has been described as one of the greatest cities on water ever, with a canal network that measured more than 85 miles (140 kilometers). Built on the flood plain of central Thailand at the confluence of three rivers, it was inundated annually, but its citizens lived in stilt-raised houses and used boats for transport. Water also defended Ayutthaya, which once held as many as 1 million residents, until a brutal sacking by the Burmese in 1767 forced relocation of the capital to Bangkok, 50 miles (80 kilometers) to the south — where the same floodwaters that inundated Ayutthaya are now nearing the inner city.
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AP PHOTO
In this photo taken Nov. 8, residents travel on boat through floodwaters at an ancient temple in Ayutthaya province, central Thailand. Record flooding has turned Ayutthaya’s ancient temples into islands, and a giant statue of the reclining Buddha appears to float miraculously on the lapping water. “Clearly what we hope The surge of water from added to the UNESCO the northern highlands, World Heritage list in 1991. for from this experience Advisers from Venice will be a more solid, more which began in late July and has killed more than and the Netherlands, two thorough flood mitigation 520 people, is the worst places that have grappled plan,” said Tim Curtis, head since the 1940s, although with the challenges of of the culture unit at experiences watery environments, are UNESCO’s regional office Ayutthaya flooding almost every mon- prepared to come, while in Bangkok. He said that several countries, including Amsterdam’s 19th-century soon season. In coming weeks, Germany and Japan, have water-based defense line — experts will assess damage provided or promised funds. another World Heritage and determine what will be Anek, the Fine Arts official, site — and Venice may be needed to revive and pro- estimated that some $20 used as models. Witthaya Pewpong, the tect the city, which was million will be needed. Ayutthaya provincial governor, said a dam has been proposed to shield the historic area while flooding would be eased by setting aside a large, constructionfree area of the nearby Pain Phlebitis countryside to absorb Heaviness/Tiredness Blood Clots excess water. Ankle Sores Burning/Tingling Nevertheless, authori/Ulcers Swelling/Throbbing ties “know that they will Bleeding Tender Veins have to learn to live with If you have any of the above, water because it will there are effective treatment options, always be there,” said covered by insurances. UNESCO cultural expert Midwest Dermatology, Montira Horayangura Unakul. Laser & Vein Clinic As such, urban planning Springboro, OH Tel: 937-619-0222 should be consistent with Troy, OH Tel: 937-335-2075 Ayutthaya’s design as a city Call Today For A Visit With a Vein Specialist of water, she said. Physician. No Referral Needed
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Monday, November 14, 2011
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Historical society to celebrate Civil War anniversary before they departed for the war front. Throughout Troy, there are An historical marker on the men enlisting to become Union reminders of that long ago time. outside of the Coleman-Allensoldiers. An old photograph In honor of the observance of the Saidleman Building on the northeast side of the Troy Public taken on the morning of Feb. 10, 150th anniversary of the Civil 1862, shows men of the 71st War (1861-1865), the Troy Square says that during the Historical Society has planned Civil War, the building served as Ohio Volunteer Infantry standseveral events to commemorate a military recruitment center for ing next to the building just For the Troy Daily News
TROY
the anniversary. On the evening of Nov. 17, local author Martin Stewart will tell the story of the 71st Ohio Volunteer Infantry in a talk titled “Miami County’s Regiment: The 71st OVI.” Stewart is the author of the book, ‘REDEMPTION, a story of
the 71st OVI.’ The program will be at 7 p.m. at the Troy-Hayner Cultural Center, 301 W. Main St., Troy. It is free and open to the public. For more information, call 339-5900, or email: tths@frontier.com.
Thursday — Chili with crackers, peanut butter bread, french fries, fruit, milk. Friday — Bosco breadsticks with sauce, broccoli, mixed fruit, milk. • NEWTON SCHOOLS Monday — Popcorn chicken, whole wheat dinner roll, corn, sidekick, milk. Tuesday — Soft pretzel with cheese, green beans, diced pears, yogurt, milk. Wednesday — Wrap with meat, cheese and lettuce, diced peaches, pretzels, milk. Thursday — Hot dog on a bun, coney sauce, baked beans, mixed fruit, milk. Friday — Bosco sticks, pizza dipping sauce, carrots, applesauce, milk. • ST. PATRICK Monday — Cheese ravioli, salad, bread stick, pears, milk. Tuesday — Popcorn chicken, mixed vegetables, yogurt, peanut butter chews, apple slices, milk. Wednesday — Grilled cheese, tomato soup, crackers, mixed fruit, milk. Thursday — Hamburger with cheese, french fries, Jello-O, peaches, milk. Friday — Spaghetti with
meatballs, salad, breadstick, applesauce, milk. • TROY CITY SCHOOLS Monday — Corn dog, hash brown stick, fruit, Teddy Grahams, milk. Tuesday — Grilled mozzarella sticks, cheese sticks, Dino pasta, fruit, milk. Wednesday — Yogurt, soft pretzels, string cheese, green beans, fruit, milk. Thursday — Walking taco with meat and cheese, bread stick, lettuce salad, fruit, milk. Friday — Chicken nuggets, corn bread, California medley, fruit, milk. • TIPP CITY HIGH SCHOOL Monday — Chicken nuggets, corn, choice of fruit, wheat roll with butter, milk. Tuesday — Cheeseburger on a bun, baked tater tots, choice of fruit, milk. Wednesday — Pizza, green beans, choice of fruit, milk. Thursday — Turkey and noodles, mashed potatoes and gravy, choice of fruit, wheat roll and butter, milk. Friday — Toasted cheese, tomato soup, choice of fruit, milk.
MENUS • SENIOR RESOURCE CONNECTION OF DAYTON MEALS ON WHEELS Lunch is served Monday through Friday at 11 a.m. to seniors 60-plus at Trinity Episcopal Church, 60 S. Dorset Road, Troy. To reserve a meal, call (888) 5803663. A suggested donation of $2 is asked for meals. • BETHEL Monday — Chicken patty sandwich on whole wheat bun, California blend, choice of fruit, milk. Tuesday — Elem. only: Nacho chips w/cheese and meat, Mexican corn, choice of fruit, milk H.S. only: Domino’s Pizza. Wednesday — Thanksgiving Dinner!! Turkey, w/gravy, mashed potatoes, green beans, choice of fruit, wheat dinner roll, milk. Thursday — Pulled pork sandwich on wheat bun, sweet potatoe fries, choice of fruit, milk. Friday — Spaghetti, salad, choice of fruit, milk. • BRADFORD SCHOOLS Monday — Chicken and mashed potato bowl or chef salad, corn, fruit cup, dinner roll, milk. Tuesday — Meatball sub or peanut butter and jelly, tater tots, fruit cup, milk.
Wednesday — Breakfast pizza or chef salad, hash browns, fruit cup, milk. Thursday — Thanksgiving dinner: Turkey gravy manhattan or peanut butter and jelly, mashed potatoes, grean beans, fruit salad, pumpkin pie, milk. Friday — Chicken fajitas or chef salad, toss salad dressing, fruit cup, milk. • COVINGTON SCHOOLS Monday — Ravioli, cheese cup, green beans, applesauce, breadstick, milk. Tuesday — Chicken nuggets, corn, pears, Yummy Cake, milk. Wednesday — Nachos grande, meat and cheese, refried beans, peaches, milk. Thursday — Pepperoni pizza, peas, baked apples, graham cracker, milk. Friday — Salisbury steak sandwich, cheesy potatoes, mandarin oranges, milk. • MIAMI EAST SCHOOLS Monday — Sausage sandwich, potatoes, cocoa bar, applesauce, milk. Tuesday — Cheese cup, Tostitos chips, carrots and dip, nutrition bar/pears, milk. Wednesday — Soft taco with cheese, lettuce, tomatoes, Teddy
Grahams, peaches, milk. Thursday — Scalloped potatoes and ham, peas, dinner roll, applesauce, milk. Friday — Pizza and cheese, cottage cheese, chips, mixed fruit, milk. • MILTON-UNION ELEMENTARY AND MIDDLE SCHOOLS Monday — Rockin cheeseburger on a bun with pickles, Starz hashbrowns, fruit, milk. Tuesday — Chicken tenders with sauce, dinner roll, broccoli, fruit, milk. Wednesday — Spaghetti with meat sauce, Texas toast, tossed salad with ranch dressing, fruit, milk. Thursday — M.S. — Chicken quesadilla with salsa. E.S. — Mini corn dogs, corn, fruit, milk. Friday — Pepperoni pizza, green beans, fruit, milk. • MILTON-UNION HIGH SCHOOL Monday — Cheeseburger, french fries, fruit, milk. Tuesday — Taco salad with meat, cheese and sauce, Doritos, fruit, milk. Wednesday — Peppered chicken strip wrap with lettuce, cheese and sauce, fuit, milk.
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Monday, November 14, 2011
ANNIE’S MAILBOX
Age range could be an issue for a date Dear Annie: I am a 44-year-old single guy with no kids, never married. I look younger than my age and could probably pass for 34. I recently met this beautiful girl who is a senior in college. She seemed very nice and is probably 21 or 22 years old. I thought that maybe the next time I see her, I would ask her out on a date. Is this a crazy idea? Am I way too old for this woman? If so, what would be the right age range for me? I must say again, this woman is stunning. — R.J. Dear R.J.: Yes, 22-year-olds often are stunning. That loud sigh you hear is from all the 40-yearold women who wonder why a 44year-old man isn't looking at them. But to answer your questions, anyone over 18 is fair game, although your age gap adds a certain creepiness factor. A 44-yearold man is more likely to find an appropriate mate if he looks for women over 30. If you want to ask this girl out, go right ahead, but don't lie about your age, and don't be surprised if she says no. Dear Annie: My fiance and I have been together for three years and plan to be married next year. My problem is that he still communicates with one of his ex-girlfriends. This would not be such a big deal, but she is someone with whom he has cheated in the past. I've told him that the friendship bothers me, and he says he is also friends with her husband, and that is why they keep in contact. Her husband knows nothing about his wife's previous affair with my fiance. Should I just let this friendship continue, or am I right to want it to end? Am I being careful or just insecure? — Confused Dear Confused: We understand why this particular woman would bother you. If your fiance is being honest about the nature of the relationship, his contact should be primarily through the husband, and he shouldn't mind if you are part of every conversation, email or text involving the ex. If he refuses or if you notice anything amiss, tell him the friendship is over. If he wants to cheat, he will find a way, but you don't have to make it easy for him. Dear Annie: I read the letter from "A Formerly Trusting Wife," who has been married to "Bill" for 43 years. She failed to listen to her friends who tried to warn her that Bill was having a relationship with a co-worker. I was once there, but not as the wife. I was the cheating husband. I was the one who fell from grace. I led a charmed life, graduated with honors, made the dean's list, became an Air Force officer and the president of a local civic organization and the town's Little League. I was respected at my church and often counseled young men who were about to dishonor their marriage vows. And then quite suddenly, I became a liar and a cheat. I lost my family, the respect of my children, my honor and my dignity. My pastor asked me to resign from the church, I was shunned by church members, and worst of all, I saw my son and my daughter cry over the heartache I caused. The woman who was my partner in this love affair has long since moved on to another man. I live a lonely life 100 miles away from my former family and seldom see my kids or grandchildren. I wish there were a way to restart my life. My message to Bill is to stay with your family, learn to love your wife again, make it her birthday each and every day, and your reward will be evident in the coming years. — Frank Dear Frank: Thank you for sharing your sad story. Hopefully, it will help someone else before he or she makes the same mistake. 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. To find out more about Annie's Mailbox and read features by other Creators Syndicate writers and cartoonists, visit the Creators Syndicate Web page at www.creators.com.
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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
Cooking advice from the 1960s Dear Heloise: I am your newest fan! I am 42 and have never really cooked. My husband is an amazing housecleaner, so I don’t have to worry about that much, either. But I have recently started COOKING and was going through old cookbooks. I found two old Heloise books, “Kitchen Hints” and “All Around the House,” from the ’60s! (Heloise here: These were my mother’s books.) I received these 13 years ago from my mother-in-law when she moved from Austin, Texas, to Denver and was downsizing every-
Hints from Heloise Columnist thing. It has been such a delight to read these books for the first time. I really appreciate everything our mothers and grandmothers did with nostick cooking spray, zipper-lock bags and all the rest! I can’t
wait to devour your website as well. I have been sharing the fun tips and stories with my mother and my friends. — Melanie S. in San Antonio Melanie, thanks for being a “new” fan! My mother’s old books are a fun read, and many of the hints are still valid today. However, some of the hints may no longer work or are no longer safe. How about picking up my latest book, “Handy Household Hints From Heloise”? You should be able to find it in your local bookstore (call first), order it
online or visit www.Heloise.com to obtain a copy. — Heloise FAST FACTS Dear Readers: Here are some other uses for your old baby bathtubs: * Take with you on a camping trip and use to wash dishes. * When bringing outside plants in from the cold, place them inside one. * Fill with water and use to soak your feet. * Use to soak clothes. * Use outside to bathe pets. — Heloise
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FAMILY CIRCUS BEETLE BAILEY
ARLO AND JANIS
HOROSCOPE Monday, Nov. 14, 2011 There are numerous ways for you to achieve success in the year ahead, but perhaps your best possibilities will come through undertakings where you are free to call all the shots yourself. Partnerships could limit your possibilities. SCORPIO (Oct. 24-Nov. 22) — The interests of your listeners should be considered before bringing up a subject that could easily bore them to death. If you want to be popular, keep conversations focused on them. SAGITTARIUS (Nov. 23-Dec. 21) — If you’re smart, you’ll take care of all of your obligations first thing in the morning. CAPRICORN (Dec. 22-Jan. 19) — Don’t let one small negative thought block all of your positive alternatives today. Generally speaking, there are two sides to every issue. Choose well. AQUARIUS (Jan. 20-Feb. 19) — Unless you are completely honest about your limitations, there is a strong likelihood you will take on far more than you can handle today and end up with a total meltdown. PISCES (Feb. 20-March 20) — Don’t allow someone whose views oppose yours to coerce you into a debate today. This person wants to do so in hopes that you’ll make a fool of yourself. Don’t bite. ARIES (March 21-April 19) — Early successes might spur you on, but take care not to overdo. You could run out of steam right in the middle of a huge undertaking. TAURUS (April 20-May 20) — Rarely do you hesitate to express your opinions, but if what you’re thinking becomes emotional, you had better keep your thoughts to yourself. GEMINI (May 21-June 20) — Unless you handle commercial involvements in a sound manner today, you could quickly lose control of good business practices and get in way over your head. CANCER (June 21-July 22) — Be careful not to put yourself in a position of being at the mercy of individuals who have caused you discomfort in the past. You could be asking for a repeat performance. LEO (July 23-Aug. 22) — Owing to certain responsibilities you failed to take care of when you should have, you may be faced with severe limitations today on handling a critical situation that now needs tending. VIRGO (Aug. 23-Sept. 22) — If there is someone in a social get-together with whom you have a bone to pick, keep your discomfort to yourself. Any comments you make would put a damper on the entire group. LIBRA (Sept. 23-Oct. 23) — The only way you will achieve all of your objectives today is to roll up your sleeves and keep your nose to the grindstone. COPYRIGHT 2011 UNITED FEATURE SYNDICATE, INC.
CROSSWORD
SNUFFY SMITH
GARFIELD
BABY BLUES
FUNKY WINKERBEAN
CRYPTOQUIP
CRANKSHAFT
Monday, November 14, 2011
11
12
WEATHER
Monday, November 14, 2011
Today
Tonight
Tuesday
Rain
Showers
Showers
High: 63°
Low: 55°
High: 60° Low: 48°
SUN AND MOON
Wednesday
Thursday
Partly cloudy High: 47° Low: 38°
Mostly sunny High: 45° Low: 30°
TROY DAILY NEWS • WWW.TROYDAILYNEWS.COM
Friday
Mostly sunny High: 52° Low: 29°
TODAY’S STATEWIDE FORECAST Monday, November 14, 2011 AccuWeather.com forecast for daytime conditions, low/high temperatures
MICH.
NATIONAL FORECAST
Sunrise Tuesday 6:40 a.m. ........................... Sunset tonight 4:26 p.m. ........................... Moonrise today 7:28 p.m. ........................... Moonset today 9:58 a.m. ........................... New
First
Full
Last
TROY • 55° 63° Nov. 25
Dec. 2
Dec. 10
1
Fronts Cold
0 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10+ Moderate
High
Very High
Air Quality Index Moderate
Harmful
Main Pollutant: Particulate
Pollen Summary 0
0
250
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
Lo 48 51 31 50 41 55 51 34 32 66 55
-10s
-0s
0s
10s
20s 30s 40s
50s 60s
Yesterday’s Extremes: High: 91 at Kingsville, Texas
39
Good
Mansfield 50° | 61°
PA.
Hi Otlk 53 Pc 82 Pc 37 Pc 79 Clr 62 Clr 84 Clr 71 Pc 47 Rn 33 Sn 77 Pc 66 Rn
Columbus 54° | 63°
Dayton 52° | 61°
Today’s UV factor.
Low
Youngstown 49° | 61°
Nov. 18
ENVIRONMENT
Minimal
Cleveland 52° | 61°
Toledo 49° | 58°
Warm Stationary
70s
80s
Pressure Low
High
Cincinnati 56° | 67°
90s 100s 110s
Portsmouth 54° | 67°
Low: 10 at Big Piney, Wyo.
Temperatures indicate Sunday’s high and overnight low to 8 p.m. Eastern Time. Hi Lo Prc Otlk Albany,N.Y. 57 41 Cldy Albuquerque 55 44 PCldy Austin 87 63 Cldy 76 56 Cldy Birmingham Bismarck 51 32 Clr Boise 52 34 .04 Cldy Charleston,W.Va. 68 51 Cldy Charlotte,N.C. 60 38 Cldy Cheyenne 48 28 Clr Chicago 70 54 Cldy Cincinnati 68 54 Rain 64 52 Rain Cleveland Columbia,S.C. 72 36 PCldy Columbus,Ohio 65 52 Rain Concord,N.H. 59 25 Cldy Dallas-Ft Worth 84 59 Cldy Dayton 65 53 Rain Detroit 63 51 Rain Fairbanks 09 06 .10Snow Fargo 45 34 PCldy Helena 46 31 .01Snow 85 68 Clr Honolulu Houston 83 67 Cldy Jacksonville 77 43 PCldy Key West 81 71 Cldy Las Vegas 64 49 PCldy
W.VA.
KY.
NATIONAL CITIES Little Rock Los Angeles Louisville Memphis Nashville New Orleans New York City Oklahoma City Omaha Philadelphia Phoenix Portland,Ore. Providence Raleigh-Durham Richmond Sacramento St Louis St Petersburg Salt Lake City San Antonio San Diego Shreveport Sioux Falls Tampa Topeka Tucson Tulsa Washington,D.C.
Hi Lo Prc Otlk 79 63 Cldy 72 53 PCldy 72 56 Rain 75 61 Cldy 73 55 Cldy 80 58 Cldy 61 47 Cldy 80 56 Cldy 55 37 PCldy 62 41 Cldy 71 59 .08PCldy 53 47 .14Rain 62 36 Cldy 67 40 Cldy 68 41 Cldy 68 47 PCldy 77 60 Cldy 77 63 PCldy 51 34 .12 Cldy 85 61 Cldy 72 53 .17PCldy 83 63 Cldy 51 40 PCldy 80 57 PCldy 67 53 PCldy 61 56 .46 Cldy 77 63 Cldy 64 44 Cldy
© 2011 Wunderground.com
SOURCE: ASSOCIATED PRESS
REGIONAL ALMANAC Temperature High Yesterday .............................64 at 4:29 p.m. Low Yesterday..............................53 at 6:00 a.m. Normal High .....................................................53 Normal Low ......................................................36 Record High ........................................75 in 1909 Record Low.........................................13 in 1986
Precipitation 24 hours ending at 5 p.m..............................0.00 Month to date ................................................0.51 Normal month to date ...................................1.37 Year to date .................................................46.08 Normal year to date ....................................35.91 Snowfall yesterday ........................................0.00
TODAY IN HISTORY (AP) — Today is Monday, Nov. 14, the 318th day of 2011. There are 47 days left in the year. Today’s Highlight in History: On Nov. 14, 1851, Herman Melville’s novel “Moby-Dick Or, The Whale” was first published in the United States. On this date: • In 1881, Charles J. Guiteau went on trial for assassinating President James A. Garfield. (Guiteau was convicted and
hanged the following year.) • In 1889, inspired by Jules Verne, New York World reporter Nellie Bly (Elizabeth Cochrane) set out to travel around the world in less than 80 days. (She made the trip in 72 days.) Jawarharlal Nehru (juh-wah-hahr-LAHL’ NAY’roo), the first prime minister of independent India, was born. • In 1910, Eugene B. Ely became the first aviator to take off from a ship as his Curtiss pusher rolled off a sloping platform on the deck of the scout
cruiser USS Birmingham off Hampton Roads, Va. • In 1922, the British Broadcasting Corporation began its domestic radio service. • In 1940, during World War II, German planes destroyed most of the English town of Coventry. • Today’s Birthdays: Former U.N. Secretary-General Boutros Boutros-Ghali is 89. Actress Kathleen Hughes is 83. Former NASA astronaut Fred Haise is 78.
Audit faults Air Force’s Alaska wind turbines ANCHORAGE, Alaska (AP) — The Defense Department’s attempt to go green at remote radar locations in Alaska by replacing diesel generators with wind turbines was poorly planned and delays could cost millions, according to an audit by the department’s inspector general. A test wind turbine constructed in 2008 at remote Tin City northwest of Nome was built without the benefit of a 12-month wind study. As of July it was producing “sporadic, unusable power,” according to the audit, which focuses on three projects that followed. The Air Force in 2009, flush with economic stimulus money, awarded contracts for wind turbines at three other remote Alaska locations — Cape Newenham and Cape Romanzof in southwest Alaska and Cape Lisburne in northwest Alaska — at a cost of $4.7 million each. They have not been constructed. Stimulus money was supposed to go for “shovel ready” projects and the wind turbines were not, the audit said.
The contracts were signed without data from the Tin City turbine and before adequate wind studies were performed, the audit said. They lacked documentation that they would be more cost effective than diesel power, according to the audit, and the Defense Department did not ensure that the projects were selected appropriately for stimulus funding. Auditors concluded each would rack up an estimated $1 million in cost overruns based on 2012 construction costs. The audit faults the 611th Civil Engineering Squadron based at Joint Base Elmendorf Richardson in Anchorage. Elmendorf engineers told auditors that multiple turnovers in project managers and lost project files contributed to mistakes. Air Force officials elaborated on that Thursday in an e-mail response to questions. Deployments overseas affected the engineering workload of those who remained, as did unexpected turnover in project management. Alaska’s short construction sea-
“
The projects still show a life-cycle cost savings — payback which will result in lower energy costs and dollar savings in the future. — Lt. Col. Eric Hoversten
son added to the challenge. “These projects are complex and challenging, both technically and in terms of aligning construction seasons and complex supplychain constraints,” said Lt. Col. Eric Hoversten, former commander 611th CES and current deputy commander 611th Air Support Group. He said the Air Force continues to learn vital lessons that will benefit future initiatives and the Alaska projects will diversify its energy portfolio to sustainable sources. “The projects still show a lifecycle cost savings — payback which will result in lower energy costs and dollar savings in the future,” he said.
AMERICA RECYCLES DAY IS NOVEMBER 15 th Two events that you can participate in to make a difference... PIONEER ELECTRIC BULB EXCHANGE: On November 15th, the first 95 people that bring in three incandescent bulbs to either the Recycling Center or Administration Building at 2200 N. County Road 25-A, Troy will receive 3 CFL bulbs donated from Pioneer Electric.
http://americarecyclesday.org
PULL TAB CONTEST HAPPENING AT MANY LOCAL SCHOOLS:
2225222
If you’d like to donate your pull tabs, just take them to one of these schools before November 15th... Jackson Center Schools, Van Cleve in Troy, Bethel Elementary, Covington Middle School, Bradford Schools, St. Patricks in Troy and Longfellow Elementary in Sidney
For more information, call 440-3488 or email cbach@miamicountysed.com
”
The Tin City wind turbine was completed in October 2008 by the Air Force as a test to determine energy savings. Completing a wind study, the audit said, would have provided Elmendorf engineers with information necessary to determine the best location for the Tin City wind turbine. However, no wind test was done and it was built in an area with turbulent winds and produces sporadic, unusable power, engineers told auditors. Contracting personnel at Elmendorf in August 2009 awarded a $485,000 contract modification at Tin City to correct power integration issues. The Air Force installed an uninterrupted power supply system to aid in sustaining
continuous power to critical components and upgrades to the digital controls system. The Air Force said in its e-mail response the system still is not operating and continues to experience electrical problems believed to be caused by moisture in critical controls circuitry. The Air Force is working to make repairs. The three additional wind turbines were selected for Recovery Act funding in 2009. The economic stimulus money was aimed at creating new jobs, preserving existing ones and encouraging economic development. The law, auditors noted, required prudent management but included an expectation that appropriated funds would be spent quickly. The Defense Department received about $7.16 billion in stimulus money, auditors said, including $120 million directed toward military energy conservation. Most of the Air Force share for energy conservation was designated for the Alaska radar sites.
Japan’s economy rises out of earthquake slump TOKYO (AP) — Japan’s economy surged 6 percent in the latest quarter in a bounce back from the earthquake and tsunami disaster that is unlikely to be sustained amid headwinds from Europe’s debt crisis. The Cabinet Office’s real gross domestic product report Monday marks the first expansion for the world’s No. 3 economy in four quarters. The result was in line with market forecasts, including Kyodo News agency’s projection of 6.2 percent annualized growth for the JulySeptember quarter. The March 11 earthquake and tsunami killed thousands of people and wiped out large swathes of Japan’s northeastern coast. The disasters damaged many factories in the region, causing severe shortages of parts and components for manufacturers across the country, including automakers. The tsunami also crippled a nuclear power plant, adding to the difficulties faced by businesses and households. Since then, the country has steadily restored its factories, helping the econo-
my rebound despite the threats of a financial crisis in Europe, slowing global economy and a strong yen. The Cabinet Office said the annualized figure translates to GDP growth of 1.5 percent from the previous quarter. GDP is a measure of the value of all goods and services produced domestically. Consumer spending, which accounts for some 60 percent of the economy, climbed 1 percent from the previous quarter. Capital investment by companies rose 1.1 percent. Analysts, however, say that the strong third quarter numbers are unlikely to last. Credit Suisse economist Hiromichi Shirakawa said Japan had benefited from a sharp increase in exports and industrial production into the early summer. But the economy has “already lost upward momentum since August,” he said in a report last week. He expects Japan’s economy to weaken in coming months and forecasts GDP to contract in the fourth quarter.
To Advertise In The Classifieds That Work Call 877-844-8385
Troy Daily News • Classifieds That Work • Monday, November 14, 2011 • 13
that work .com JobSourceOhio.com
www.tdnpublishing.com B2B ACCOUNT
LOCATION/ SALES MANAGER OPPORTUNITY
MANAGER Motivated to be successful?
Join a Superior Team!
WE WANT TO HEAR FROM YOU! B2B Account Manager responsible for driving sales and delivering exceptional customer service to corporate and government customers.
555 Garage Sales/Yard Sales
TROY, 815 East Franklin St. Friday 9am-4pm. Saturday 9am-2pm. Charming 1904 house full of primitive, antiques and goodies. Garage is full too! (2) Nice butcher blocks, pie safe, cast iron heating stove, vintage Christmas, furniture, rope youth bed, rugs, exterior wood shutters, garden items, lawn mower, leaf blower, washer/ dryer, portable dishwasher. Sale by: Estates2go. Numbers given 7am Friday, garage opens 8am Friday.
100 - Announcement
DUTIES: -Maintain/ grow/ monitor account base, progress/ development -Renew/ build relationships with past buyers and new clients -Achieve up-sell/ crosssell targets -Maintain daily outbound call average -Achieve bi-weekly and quarterly goals -Participate in 3 week training QUALIFICATIONS: *HS Diploma required, Bachelor's Degree preferred. *2-3 Years sales experience *Enjoy fast-paced environment *Excellent written, verbal and presentation skills critical Systemax Manufacturing Email resume: hr1@ systemaxmfg.com
Our Sales/Location Managers are trained and responsible for: customer relations, underwriting, sales, leadership, coaching and development, and branch management. We provide:
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
MPA Services provides Supported Living services to individuals with MRDD. We are accepting applications for employees to perform in home care in Troy FT 3rd shift. You will assist with daily living skills, transportation, money management, medication supervision.
program
• • • •
potential competitive base performance incentives car demo great benefit package.
Individuals with a high level of integrity, ability to follow through, and strong communication as well as being resultsfocused, are invited to apply @
LINER Tuesday, 11/22, 3pm Tuesday, 11/22, 3pm Wed., 11/23, Noon Wed., 11/23, 3pm Wed., 11/23, 5pm
COMMUNITY MERCHANT ISSUE Monday, 11/28
DISPLAY DEADLINE Tuesday, 11/22, 5pm
LINER DEADLINE Wed., 11/23, 3pm
Our employees must have some flexibility in work hours, be highly self motivated and have superb ethics. We offer a great salary/ benefits package plus paid training.
TROY DAILY NEWS / PIQUA DAILY CALL ISSUE Wednesday, 11/23 Thursday, 11/24 Friday, 11/25 Saturday, 11/26 Sunday, 11/27 Monday, 11/28
DISPLAY DEADLINE
LINER DEADLINE
Friday, 11/18, 5pm Friday, 11/18, 5pm Monday, 11/21, 5pm Tuesday, 11/22, Noon Tuesday, 11/22, Noon Tuesday, 11/22, Noon
Tuesday, 11/22, 3pm Tuesday, 11/22, 3pm Wed., 11/23, Noon Wed., 11/23, 3pm Wed., 11/23, 4pm Wed., 11/23, 5pm
If interested in an employer that genuinely cares for its employees, please call (937)492-0886
MIAMI COUNTY ADVOCATE ISSUE DISPLAY DEADLINE LINER DEADLINE Tuesday, 11/22, 5pm Wed., 11/23, 4pm Monday, 11/28 Please be advised our offices will be closed in observance of the Thanksgiving holiday on Thursday, November 24 and Friday, November 25. We will re-open on Monday, November 28 at 8am.
250 Office/Clerical Help Wanted-
Bookkeeper with
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THANKSGIVING 2011 DISPLAY & CLASSIFIED DEADLINES DISPLAY DEADLINE Friday, 11/18, 5pm Friday, 11/18, 5pm Monday, 11/21, 5pm Tuesday, 11/22, Noon Tuesday, 11/22, Noon
www.superior-auto.com
Get it
for business in Piqua Experience a plus
Holiday Cash
Send resume to: Help Wanted 161 E. Main Versailles, OH 45380
Now h throug0 3 v No
240 Healthcare
Opportunity Knocks... • •
HOLIDAY OPEN HOUSE: 17 East Water Street, Troy. November 25th, 5PM-8PM. Thirty One * Mary Kay * Party Lite * Pampered Chef * Avon * Creative Memories * Scentsy * HerbaLife. Non perishable food items are being collected to benefit St. Patrick's Soup Kitchen. A portion of are proceeds are being donated to our local Toys For Tots Organization.
125 Lost and Found FOUND: in Union, medium sized Poodle with collar. Seen often at Concord Meadows. (937)901-3702 for information. LOST: Female Golden Retriever. Dark red. Named Maggie. Casstown area. REWARD! (937)371-5647 leave message
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 EARN COLLEGE DEGREE ONLINE. *Medical, *Business, *Criminal Justice. Job placement assistance. Computer available. Financial Aid if qualified. SCHEV certified. Call 877-295-1667 www.CenturaOnline.com
• Live-In Non-Medical Caregiver for Miami County Area Must be able to perform live-in caregiving services. 1 yr experience or STNA certification. Duties include: • Meal preparation • Housekeeping • Bathing/Hygiene Assistance • Errands & shopping • Companionship Qualified applicant can complete application at: Brethren Home Community Services 750 Chestnut Street Greenville, Oh 45331 or 937-547-7600 EOE
205 Business Opportunities
NOTICE Investigate in full before sending money as an advance fee. For further information, call or write:
Better Business Bureau 15 West Fourth St. Suite 300 Dayton, OH 45402 www.dayton.bbb.org 937.222.5825 This notice is provided as a public service by
2231146
200 - Employment 235 General
MicroSoft skills req’d Strong customer service skills Healthcare exp. preff'd
s in ily N 10 Day s in Troy Da ly Call i 10 Day in Piqua Da Herald s y r 10 Da eekly Reecrtisoemdent les, kW er adv 1 Wee *1 itemclilumditesp: Garatugree SItaSold
Send resumes to: humanresources@phcsday.com
Premier Health Care Services (on UVMC campus)
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LORD Corporation
CNC Machinist Dayton, Ohio LORD, a privately held corporation with over $720 million in sales and a leader in the development, manufacture, and marketing of innovative adhesive, coating and motion management products, has an immediate opening for a CNC Machinist in its Dayton, OH facility. We are looking for a team oriented candidate with CNC Milling and/or Lathe experience. The successful candidate must be able to set up and machine aerospace components to close tolerances and have CNC control and machine code knowledge. Must excel in a team environment. Ideal candidates will possess a High School Diploma or equivalent, with 3-5 years experience in a manufacturing environment. Must be profi cient at shop math required for complex machining operations. Must be fl uent in GD&T; be able to interpret process sheets and blueprints, and complete inspections and spot checks. ISO/AS quality system and CMM knowledge a plus. Firm understanding of turning and milling technology along with effective set-up and inspection techniques. LORD Corporation offers a competitive salary and benefits package, as well as opportunities for career growth. To Apply Qualified candidates must apply at www.lord.com, and click on “Careers/Find a Job.” Please reference job # 311166. A DIVERSE WORKFORCE EMPLOYER 2234883
235 General
235 General
WANTED WANTED We are looking for drivers to deliver the Troy Daily News on Daily, Sundays, holidays and on a varied as needed basis.
Drivers must have: Piqua
Valid drivers license Reliable transportation State minimum insurance
▼▼▼▼▼▼▼▼▼▼▼▼ WE HAVE JOBS AVAILABLE!!!
Please call 937-440-5263 or 937-440-5260
HR Associates
Available ONLY by calling
240 Healthcare
s a m t s i r h C t s r i F s ’ Baby e Memory of Your
Capture th irst Christmas! F s ’ aily e n O e Sidney D e th l t in d e Lit h s ubli as will be p on
ll t Christm ua Daily ca iq P Baby’s Firs d n a s w Daily Ne News, Troy r 19, 2011 Merry Christmas e b m e c e D 011 Monday, ember 9, 2 c e D , y a d ri F Deadline is
Full Color 1col. x 3” block
Only 21 $
00
Bailey Louise Hamblin November 11, 2010
Twins are handled as two (2) separate photos
INDEPENDENT CONTRACTORS 235 General
*
y Item n A e s i 5 Advert ** - Only $1s LE ney Daily New A S R O F Sid ews
ADMIN ASST. PT ~24 hrs/wk
105 Announcements
877-844-8385 We Accept
SIDNEY DAILY NEWS ISSUE Wednesday, 11/23 Thursday, 11/24 Friday, 11/25 Saturday, 11/26 Monday, 11/28
• excellent training • career growth
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
2235186
PLACE YOUR CLASSIFIED AD ONLINE-24/7
DEADLINES/CORRECTIONS:
Love, Daddy, Mommy, Grandpa and Grandma
2221942
Sidney Daily News Attn: Baby’s First Christmas PO Box 4099, Sidney, Ohio 45365
PLEASE PRINT!*
Name of Baby: ________________________________________________________ Birth Date: ____________________________________________________________ From:________________________________________________________________ Your Name: __________________________________________________________ Address: ____________________________________________________________ City:_____________________ State:_____ Zip:________ Phone:_________________
Troy ● Piqua ● Sidney Greenville ▲▲▲▲▲▲▲▲▲▲▲▲
and leave a message with your name, address and phone number.
CALL TODAY! (937)778.8563
Your phone call will be returned in the order in which it is received. 2231509
J Please mail my photo back to me in the SASE provided. We cannot be responsible for photos lost in the mail. J I will pick up my photo after December 20, 2010. We only hold pictures for 6 months after publication. J Payment Enclosed J Check J Visa/MC J Discover J Cash J Am Express
Credit Card #:__________________________________ Exp. Date:_____________________________________ Your Signature:_________________________________
* There is limited space available for wording in these ads, please choose wording carefully, we reserve the right to cut wording if necessary, ad shown actual size (1x3) above.
14 • Troy Daily News • Classifieds That Work • Monday, November 14, 2011
To Advertise In The Classifieds That Work Call 877-844-8385 250 Office/Clerical
Service&Business DIRECTORY
To advertise in the Classifieds That Work Service & Business Directory please call: 877-844-8385 Ready for a career change?
655 Home Repair & Remodel
660 Home Services
660 Home Services
CHORE BUSTER
JobSourceOhio.com
Handyman Services
620 Childcare
(937) 339-7222 Complete Projects or Helper
KIDZ TOWN
2464 Peters Road, Troy, Ohio 45373 1st and 2nd shifts weeks 12 ayears We•Provide care for children 6 weeks• to6 12 years andtooffer Super • Preschool andprogram Pre-K 3’s, and 4/5’s preschool andprograms a Pre-K and Kindergarten • Before and after school care program. We offer before and after school care, •Enrichment Transportation to Troy schools Kindergarten and school age transportation to Troy schools.
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625 Construction
• Roofing • Windows • Kitchens • Sunrooms
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655 Home Repair & Remodel
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660 Home Services
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Pohl Transportation
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• Painting • Drywall • Decks • Carpentry • Home Repair • Kitchen/Bath
HALL(S) FOR RENT!
• 2225241
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We will work with your insurance.
OFFICE 937-773-3669
classifieds
665 Lawn, Garden, Landscaping
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COOPER’S BLACKTOP
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655 Home Repair & Remodel
PAVING, REPAIR & SEALCOATING DRIVEWAYS PARKING LOTS
VENDORS WELCOME
655 Home Repair & Remodel
Hours: Fri. 9-8 Sat. & Sun. 9-5
I am a debt relief agency. I help people file for bankruptcy relief under the Bankruptcy Code. 2214304
2230785
Continental Contractors
675 Pet Care
Roofing • Siding • Windows
Apply at www.continentalexpressinc.com
or call 800/497-2100
For Rent
305 Apartment 1, 2 & 3 Bedroom, Houses & Apts. SEIPEL PROPERTIES Piqua Area Only Metro Approved (937)773-9941 9am-5pm Monday-Friday
2227451
Voted #1 in Shelby County by Sidney Daily News Readers
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Mobile Veterinary Service Treating Dogs, Cats & Exotics
IN PIQUA, 5 rooms & bath, first floor, washer/ dryer hookup, $400, (937)773-2829 after 2pm. LOVELY 2 BEDROOM, 1.5 baths, laundry, appliances, great location, private parking, patio. $575 month. (937)335-5440 NEWLY DECORATED 2 bedroom apartment, Troy. Water, sewage, trash paid. (937)778-1993 or (937)238-2560. PIQUA, Parkridge Place. Roomy 2 bedroom, 1.5 baths, central air, washer/ dryer hook-up. $500. (419)629-3569.
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1 & 2 Bedroom apts. $410 to $450 NO PETS Park Regency Apartments 1211 West Main (937)216-0398 TIPP CITY 2 bedroom, deluxe duplex, 11/2 car garage, C/air, gas heat, 2 full baths, all appliances, $705 month + dep. 937-216-0918 TIPP CITY/ Huber Heights, 1 bedroom, country, $450 monthly includes water & trash, no pets (937)778-0524 TIPP/ TROY: NEW everything: carpet, appliances, paint, ceiling fans, lighting. 2 bedroom, 1.5 bath townhouse, super clean, quiet neighbors. NO dogs, NO prior evictions. $525 (937)545-4513. TROY: SPECIAL DEALS 3 bedroom townhome, furnished & unfurnished. Call (937)367-6217 or (937)524-4896.
ELDER/CHILD CARE Troy or Tipp City Area. Will provide personal care for elderly or children in clients home. Light housekeeping, cooking and running errands. yvonne1reed@yahoo.com (330)324-2712.
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
TROY, 1 & 2 Bedrooms, appliances, CA, water, trash paid, $425 & $525 month. $200 Deposit Special! (937)673-1821 TROY, Westbrook, 1/2 double, 3 bedroom. $675 month plus deposit. ALSO 1/2 double, 2 bedroom, $575 month + deposit. Non-smoking. No pets! Call for appointment, (513)478-9913 WEST MILTON, 1 story brick duplex, 3 bedroom, fireplace, 1 car attached, Metro accepted, (937)698-6179, (937)477-2177.
Published: December 15 • Deadline: December 6
“Sami Sue”
* Limit of one pet per advertisement
Santa s Paw
Amy E. Walker, D.V.M. 937-418-5992 2231211
937-492-5150
937-875-0153 937-698-6135
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
725 Eldercare
Gutters • Doors • Remodel 2232192
DODD RENTALS Tipp-Troy: 2 bedroom AC, appliances $500/$450 plus deposit No pets (937)667-4349 for appt.
Sidney
Flea Market
335-6321
Remember your 4-legged or fine-feathered friend in full color this Holiday Season in all three I-75 Newspapers (Sidney Daily News, Troy Daily News and Piqua Daily Call)!
1-937-492-8897 1-866-700-8897 TOLL FREE
715 Blacktop/Cement
Free Estimates / Insured
FREE ES AT T ES IM
1002 N. Main St. Sidney, Ohio 45365
$10 OFF Service Call
BILL’S HOME REMODELING & REPAIR
CDLA & 1 year recent OTR experience for solo or run team for 12 weeks if less than 1 year. Terminal located in Sidney, OH.
300 - Real Estate
Gutter & Service
•Refrigerators •Stoves •Washers & Dryers •Dishwashers • Repair & Install Air Conditioning
(937) 339-1902
*Start at $.40/mile *Annual Raises *Home Weekly *4 wks vacation/yr *Mainly Midwest & Southeast lanes *Health Insurance
937-335-4425 937-287-0517
DC SEAMLESS
2232188
2232266
2229388
Ask about our Friends & Neighbors discounts
COOPER’S GRAVEL
•
710 Roofing/Gutters/Siding
2231881
Horseback Riding Lessons
(937)339-7333
Small #Basements #Siding #Doors #Barns
2224449
“A CUT ABOVE THE REST”
645 Hauling
•
Up to 39 cpm with Performance Bonus $1500 Sign On Bonus 1 year OTR CDL-A
700 Painting
CURTIS PAINTING & HOME REPAIR
Licensed & Insured
Find it, Buy it or Sell it in that work .com
2229488
2227824
2235395
Here’s an idea...
everybody’s talking about what’s in our
CERAMIC TILE AND HOME REPAIRS RON PIATT Owner/Installer
2224461
We do... Pole Barns • New Homes Roofs • Garages • Add Ons Cement Work • Remodeling Etc.
937-620-4579
CLEAN, QUIET, safe 1 bedroom. Senior approved. No pets. $450 (937)778-0524
DRIVERS $.40/MILE
Call Walt for a FREE Estimate Today
• Specializing in Chapter 7 • Affordable rates • Free Initial Consultation
BUCKEYE COMMUNITY APTS. 580 Staunton Commons Apt. C8, Troy (937)335-7562
Transportation-
Call for a free damage inspection.
2234398
A&E Construction
Emily Greer
2 & 3 BEDROOM APARTMENTS
SPECIAL 1ST MONTH FREE
DO YOU HAVE MISSING SHINGLES OR STORM DAMAGE?
635 Farm Services
Bankruptcy Attorney
1/2 OFF 1ST MONTHS RENT & DEPOSIT
BBB Accredted
(937)454-6970
Holiday Special Buy 4 lessons & GET 1 FREE • No experience required. • Adults & Children ages 5 & up • Gift Certificates Available • Major Credit Cards Accepted Flexible Schedule Nights & Weekends 937-778-1660 www.sullenbergerstables.com
(937)216-5806 EversRealty.net
www.pohltransportation.com
LOCALLY OWNED AND OPERATED
260-740-7639 260-410-6454 260-623-3263
3 bedroom, 1 bath, $650
Call 1-800-672-8498 or visit
Since 1977
2229661
Booking now for 2011 and 2012
MINIMUM CHARGES APPLY
There are many things that make a trucking company successfulOur drivers are the biggest part.
For your home improvement needs
(937) 473-2847 Pat Kaiser (937) 216-9332
2230701
Too much stuff?
Flatbed Drivers New Pay Scale Start at .37cpm. Up to .04cpm Mileage Bonus. Home Weekends. Insurance & 401K. Apply at Boydandsons.com 800-648-9915
2228188
All Types of Interior/Exterior Construction & Maintenance
875-0153 698-6135
280 Transportation
TROY, 2 bedroom townhomes, 1.5 baths, 1 car garage, ca, w/d hook up, all appliances, $685
2231206
Sell it in the
2234091
AK Construction
Gravel Hauled, Laid & Leveled Driveways & Parking Lots
• Baths • Awnings • Concrete • Additions
CALL TODAY FOR FREE ESTIMATE
2234570 945476
Center hours 6am 11:55pm Center hoursnow 6 a.m. to 6top.m.
Send resume (include email address) to: Trupointe Cooperative 215 Looney Road Piqua, OH 45356
www.buckeyehomeservices.com
2232212
LEARNING CENTER
Trupointe Cooperative is now taking applications for the position of Administrative Assistant at the Piqua location. The ideal candidate would have strong organizational, problem-solving, and analytical skills, as well as constantly strive to do accurate work. Flexibility, communication and interpersonal skills are also necessary. Required qualifications include: an associates degree, five years of related experience, and technology skills.
937-573-4702
Decks, Drywall, Cement, Paint, Fences, Repairs, Cleanup, Hauling, Roofing, Siding, Etc. Insured/References
EVERS REALTY
SENIOR ADMINISTRATIVE ASSISTANT
Your Name:______________________________________ Address: ________________________________________ _______________________________________________ Phone: _________________________________________ Payment: K Cash K Check K CC CC#___________________ Exp:____/____
Brad & Emily
Your Pet’s Name: _________________________________ Message: _______________________________________ From: __________________________________________
Ad size 1col x 3”
Mail form, photo and payment to: Sidney Daily News, Attn: Santa Paws, PO Box 4099, Sidney, OH 45365
We love our Sami Sue!
(1.556”x3”)
2221948
600 - Services
305 Apartment
To Advertise In The Classifieds That Work Call 877-844-8385 320 Houses for Rent
320 Houses for Rent
2 BEDROOM trailer at Stillwater Beach Campground. $350. (937)473-5563 2500 SQ ft split level. New appliances, natural gas heat, CA, quiet country home. 3 bedroom, 2 bath, split level, brick/ siding. $850, (937)335-1302 jdelcamp@woh.rr.com. 802 SOUTH Clay Street, 3 bedroom, 1 bath, 2 car garage, no pets. Metro accepted. $650 month, deposit, application required. (937)335-2877. PIQUA, 2935 Delaware Circle, 3 Bedroom, 2 bath, 2 car garage, all appliances, No pets, $880 monthly, 1 year lease, (937)778-0524 PIQUA, 9 rooms, 2 full baths. Full basement. Outside city limits, remodeled, $1150 month plus deposit. Hardwood floors, wrought iron fixtures, quartz countertops! Very well insulated, LOW HEAT BILLS! Central air, fenced yard, heated floors. Discount if rent paid on time. (937)524-2061 PIQUA, newer spacious 3 bedroom, garage. Close to interstate. Appliances, bonus room. NO PETS! $950. (937)266-4421 TROY 3 Bedroom. 460 Robert Court. (near Troy Christian school). $650 monthly. (937)335-4301
Troy, Rent-to-own, 4 bedroom, 2.5 bath, 2100sq.ft, remodeled, living room, dining room, family room. Excellent neighborhood, $1100 monthly, equity deposit, (937)469-5301
TROY, Troy-Sidney Rd, 3 bedrooms, $700 monthly plus electric, newly remodeled, hardwood/ carpet floors, heated tile, oak trim, central air (937)524-2061
400 - Real Estate For Sale 410 Commercial 4 UNIT Apartment Building on Wayne Street, Troy. Single bedroom, non-smoking, no pets. 5 car detached garage. Clearing 8% plus priced to sell. (937)603-7529, 8am-5pm
420 Farms for Sale FARM for sale: 7125 Brown Road, Covington. 41.61 acres. Brochures available at location.
500 - Merchandise
Troy Daily News • Classifieds That Work • Monday, November 14, 2011 • 15
577 Miscellaneous
583 Pets and Supplies
586 Sports and Recreation
BATHTUB BENCH, Guardian. Guardian commode, InMotion II Treadmill, Rollator, ped bike. All previously used items. (937)492-0606
GOLDEN RETRIEVER Pups, AKC, vet checked and first shots at 6 weeks. 5 females, 5 males. Parents on premises. $250 stephkoble76@winds t r e a m . n e t . (937)473-5698.
SHOT GUN, Browning 20 gauge BPS pump, fully riffled cantilever barrel. All camo with illuminated scope. Brand new. Never fired. Paid $850. $700 firm. (937)726-4291 after 4pm.
KITTENS, Free to a good home, adorable. Litter trained. (937)440-0995
593 Good Things to Eat
COOKWARE, Original Wagner cast iron. Excellent condition! Price negotiable. (937)492-9434 CRIB, cradle, changing table, Pack-N-Play, basinet, Porta-Crib, saucer, playpen, car seat, blankets, clothes, gate, potty, tub, ty buddies, more. (937)339-4233 GARAGE/ STORAGE 10' x 20'. $60 monthly. (937)778-0524 MOTORIZED WHEELCHAIR Safari motorized scooter. Used less than 5 years. $200. Very good condition. (937)394-2923
FIREWOOD, All hardwood, $150 per cord delivered or $120 you pick up. (937)596-6622 or (937)726-2780
560 Home Furnishings
that work .com
DINETTE TABLE with 3 chairs. Maple wood, pedestal type. BISTRO TABLE with 2 chairs. Inlaid tiles on table and chairs. (937)492-0357
Pursuant to the requirement of Section 4.12 of the West Milton Charter, and council Rule 30.07, the Council for the Village of West Milton, hereby provides this public notice that Special Meetings of Council shall be held throughout the month of November 2011 for the purpose of interviewing candidates for the position of Village Manager. The exclusive purpose of said meetings shall be to adjourn into executive session and conduct the interview process. The first two said meetings shall be held Saturday, November 12, 2011 at 8:30 a.m. and Tuesday, November 15, 2011 at 6:00 p.m. Further meetings shall be scheduled as necessary to conclude the interview process.
1983 SUZUKI, GS850L, 15,000 Miles, dual front brakes, new tires, battery, shaft drive, new plugs, valve shims, $1900 (419)628-3202
Linda L. Cantrell CPS/CAP Clerk of Council 11/14/2011 2235683
1985 HONDA Nighthawk, CB450, 21,000 miles, 6 speed, new plugs, battery, Fork seals, good tires, fresh paint, $1400, (419)628-3202
583 Pets and Supplies
Jack Russell, full blooded, tails docked. 7 weeks old. $150 (937)308-4867
11/14,21-2011 2234188
1983 HONDA Shadow VT500C, 16,000 miles, shaft drive, water cooled, gel battery, new plugs, great condition, good tires, $1300 (419)628-3202
ORGAN, Church Serenade Con and bench, walnut. $800. (937)667-1659
BICHON FRISE, male, CKC, $100, Shi-Chon, male, $100, Ready soon, Yorkie-Poos & Malti-Poos, (419)925-4339
Sealed proposals will be accepted from pre-qualified bidders at the ODOT Office of Contracts until 10:00 a.m. on December 15, 2011. Project 110632 is located in Miami County, US-36-10.77 and is a MISCELLANEOUS project. The date set for completion of this work shall be as set forth in the bidding proposal. Plans and Specifications are on file in the Department of Transportation.
850 Motorcycles/Mopeds
580 Musical Instruments
545 Firewood/Fuel
Legal Copy Number: 110632
PUBLIC NOTICE
BUY $ELL SEEK
WOOD STOVE, freestanding style, good condition, $200 OBO, (937)493-4633
Columbus, Ohio Office of Contracts
800 - Transportation
POMERANIAN PUPPIES, 4 months old, 2 males left. One had 2 different colored eyes, one long hair, one short hair. (937)710-2908
925 Legal Notices
NOTICE TO BIDDERS STATE OF OHIO DEPARTMENT OF TRANSPORTATION
HOLIDAY TURKEYS, Home grown, free range, and fresh. Call (937)526-4934 ask for Beth. If no answer leave message.
KITTENS, gorgeous! Tabbies, long haired and short haired. Charcoal and silver stripes. Also, black & white and white & orange, 11 weeks old, friendly and litter trained, $10 each, (937)473-2122
WALKER, tub/shower benches, commode chair, toilet riser, glider rocker, canes, tub/wall grabbers, end table, microwave & toaster ovens, more. (937)339-4233
925 Legal Notices
885 Trailers 2006 TRAILER, 6' x 10' single axle. 7 Way electrical plug, mounted spare, weight 700 lbs., hauling capacity 2990 lbs. $1175. (937)335-5731
WEIMARANER PUPPY AKC, Vet checked, 19 weeks old. 1st and 2nd shots, wormed, tails and claws done. $350. (937)658-0045
Classifieds that work
MIAMI VALLEY
AUTO DEALER
1982 FOURWINNS BOAT
18 ft., 165 OMC Inboard Outboard, runs great. $3000 OBO. (937)524-2724 (513)509-3861
D I R E C T O R Y In The Market For A New Or Used Vehicle?
1986 WILDERNESS FLEETWOOD
Come Let Us Take You For A Ride! Visit One Of These Area New Or Pre-Owned Auto Dealers Today!
29', stored inside, 4 new tires, everything works great! Large awning, excellent condition, like new! A must see!! Asking $3500. Call (937)418-3516
8
BMW 10 7124 Poe Ave. Exit 59 off I-75 Dayton, Ohio 937-890-6200 www.evansmotorworks.com
2001 HARLEY DAVIDSON ULTRA CLASSIC
Car N Credit
Erwin Chrysler Dodge Jeep 2775 S. County Rd 25-A Exit 69 off I-75 N. Troy, OH 45373 937-335-5696 www.erwinchrysler.com
9
Boose Chevrolet
Independent Auto Sales
11
575 Arlington Road, I-70W to Exit 21, 3/10ths of mi. south Brookville, OH 45309 1-800-947-1413 www.boosechevrolet.com
1280 South Market St. (CR 25A) Troy, OH 45373 (866)816-7555 or (937)335-4878 www.independentautosales.com
Quick Credit Auto Sales
Wagner Subaru
1099 N. Co. Rd. 25-A Troy, Ohio 45373 937-339-6000 www.QuickCreditOhio.com
217 N. Broad St. Fairborn, OH 45324 937-878-2171 www.wagner.subaru.com
PRE-OWNED
5
22
CHRYSLER
One Stop Auto Sales
8645 N. Co. Rd. 25-A Piqua, Ohio 45356 I-75 North to Exit 83 www.paulsherry.com 1-800-678-4188
20
Erwin Chrysler Dodge Jeep
Buckeye Ford Lincoln Mercury
2775 S. County Rd 25-A Exit 69 off I-75 N. Troy, OH 45373 937-335-5696 www.erwinchrysler.com
2343 W. Michigan Ave. Sidney, Ohio 45365 866-470-9610 www.buckeyeford.com
FORD
Minster
Jim Taylor’s Troy Ford 20
15
2
21
4
22
2001 PONTIAC SUNFIRE
11 9
8 14
Exit 69 Off I-75 Troy, OH 45373 339-2687 www.troyford.com www.fordaccessories.com
10 Volvo of Dayton
2343 W. Michigan Ave. Sidney, Ohio 45365 866-470-9610 www.buckeyeford.com
7124 Poe Ave. Exit 59 off I-75 Dayton, Ohio 937-890-6200 www.evansmotorworks.com
INFINITI Infiniti of Dayton 866-504-0972 Remember...Customer pick-up and delivery with FREE loaner. www.infinitiofdayton.com
2004 EZ GO GOLF CART 5
10
VOLVO
Buckeye Ford Lincoln Mercury
16 Richmond, Indiana
2343 W. Michigan Ave. Sidney, Ohio 45365 866-470-9610 www.buckeyeford.com
15
2 door coupe, good student car. 4 cycle, automatic, air. 157,000 miles. Best offer. Email jeannejames123@ msn.com No call after 9pm (937)335-8860
MERCURY 21 Buckeye Ford Lincoln Mercury
14
Loaded with accessories. Very good condition. Only 75,300 miles. $5400 (937)339-8352
LINCOLN
8
New Breman
2001 MERCURY GRAND MARQUIS LS
SUBARU 19
DODGE
8750 N. Co. Rd. 25A Piqua, OH 45356 937-606-2400 www.1stopautonow.com
2 Sherry Chrysler Jeep Dodge
Full dresser, Vance & Hines pipes, new battery, new tires, very good condition. 64,000 miles Price reduced! $10,000 OBO Call anytime (937)726-4175
4
JEEP 8
8675 N. Co. Rd. 25-A Piqua, Ohio 45356 I-75 North to Exit 83 www.carncredit.com 1-800-866-3995
CHEVROLET AWESOME DEAL!!! Only 110,500 miles. 3100 motor. All electric. A/C. Runs great! Very clean inside and out. Good gas mileage. NICE CAR!! $4500. (937)726-5605
RE-ESTABLISHMENT
2775 S. County Rd. 25-A Exit 69 off I-75 N. Troy, OH 45373 937-335-5696 www.erwinchrysler.com
BMW of Dayton
1999 BUICK CENTURY
CREDIT
Erwin Chrysler Dodge Jeep
VOLKSWAGEN 10 Evans Volkswagen 7124 Poe Ave. Exit 59 off I-75 Dayton, Ohio 937-890-6200 www.evansmotorworks.com
19
Silver/black with chrome package, 12" aluminum wheels, high lift kit, electric / charger. $4200. (937)935-1472 16
2007 HARLEY DAVIDSON SPORTSTER
XL1200C Custom, white pearl/gold, 2400 miles, detachable windshield, excellent condition. $6800. (937)332-1461 or (937)271-9639
Hit The Road To Big Savings! 2230734
16
NIE
Monday, November 14, 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
HeALthy Is Cool!
Graphic Designer: Scarlett Smith
Fitness Pledge As a family, create a weekly exercise plan by brainstorming and making a list of physical activities that everyone will enjoy. Coordinate your schedules to block out an hour each day and track your progress throughout the week.
Part I - Continued Hey Kids! We want you to take part in our “Healthy Is Cool” program this year. Fill out the pledge and mail to: Dana Wolfe (NIE Coordinator), 224 S. Market St., Troy, OH 45373. You’ll be entered to win great prizes in our fitness pledge program! Deadline for entry forms is May 2, 2012.
Family discussion: Once you’ve completed the first week of your new fitness plan, have a family meeting. How did things go? What worked? What didn’t? What changes need to be made, and what should stay the same for the next week? What new activities should be added?
As a family, we promise to take care of our bodies by working together to: • Get 60 minutes of daily exercise • Limit our sugar intake and avoid products that include high-fructose corn syrup (drinks, candy, snacks) • Drink more water (8-10 glasses each day) • Eat more fresh vegetables and fruits • Limit screen time by turning off the TV, computer and gaming systems • Praise one another for a job well done • Track out progress Being active is good for the entire family! To help you and your family commit to being healthy and fit, complete and sign the health pledge below. Once it’s complete, send to: Dana Wolfe (NIE Coordinator), 224 S. Market St., Troy, OH 45373.
Exercise To Win You’ll be entered to win our fitness pledge grand prize! My family and I pledge to spend ____ minutes ____ times per week exercising together. We will do this through the following activities:
X __________________________ X __________________________ child signature
parent or guardian signature
Child’s name:___________________________________________ Parent or guardian name:_______________________________ Address:________________________________________________ State:______ Zip:_______________ Phone:__________________ Answers from the color NIE page Publisher Scramble: cardiovascular Ronald Wants To Know: less than 60 seconds
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
Sell us your Gold and Diamonds!
2343 W Main St, Troy bonnie@harrisjeweler.com when you bring in this ad!
Earn 10% more
The Newest Place to Hang Out! Monday - Trivia Wednesday - Whiskey Wednesday, Ladies Night, & karaoke Thursday - Bike Night/Live Music
Call (937) 339-2911 or visit www.hobartarena.com
Miami Soil & Water Conservation District 1330 N.Cty Rd. 25A; Ste C; Troy, Ohio 45373 335-7645 or 335-7666 Fax 335-7465 www.miamiswcd.org
UnityNationalBk.com
(937) 335-6418 (Ohio) 1-800-237-5296 Fax (937) 339-7952
STOP SMOKING in just ONE sesson! Before your session learn about hypnosis: • How it lowers stress • How hypnosis is 100% safe • How you are always in control • How you feel under hypnosis • Weight Control included in session! • www.miamivalleyhypnosis.com
1012 Lincoln Avenue, Troy, Ohio 45373 Gift Shoppe Hours Tuesday-Saturday 12PM - 5PM TO SCHEDULE A HIGH TEA PLEASE CALL (937) 542-9576
The North Central Ohio Solid Waste District $ 25 OFF "Promoting Greater Participation reg. price single private in Recycling" session Present this coupon for
769 W. Market St., Troy
937-875-2134
(on SR 55 in the Kroger Plaza) Hours: MON-FRI 9 to 7 • SAT 9 to 5 • SUN 12-5
615-1042 778-4617 773-9000
Whole Health G OP EN IN SOON ! for the Whole Family
339-6626 332-6820
Hours: Mon-Fri 10-6 ~ Sat 9-2 ~ Closed Sun 22 S. Weston Rd., Troy, OH 45373 937-552-9137
MIAMI COUNTY SANITARY ENGINEERING DEPT.
Tipp City: W. Main St
Lawncare Manager
Present this ad and receive 10% www.thefillingstationsportsbar.com OFF your bill! A Division of Dayton Outpatient Center
www.alloccballoon.com
Troy: W. Main St. W. Main St.-Wal-Mart
RANDY HARVEY
2331 W. Market St., Troy 937.339.4800 Visit us online to learn more.
www.ncowaste.org
Piqua: N. Wayne St. Covington Ave E. Ash St.-Wal-Mart
625 Olympic Dr. Troy, Ohio 45373
Friday - Live Music Saturday - Live Music Sunday - Blues jam
937-335-0055
"Your Diamond Jeweler Since 1946"
667-4888 MEMBER FDIC
Local Leaders, Local Lenders
MIAMI VALLEY HYPNOSIS 332-8700
Whole line of gluten free, health, and organic food. Vitamins, herbs, and homeopathic remedies.
WATER-WASTEWATER SOLID WASTE
937-440-5653 Fax 937-335-4208 N. Co. Rd 25A, Troy, OH 45373-1342
NIE
TROY DAILY NEWS • WWW.TROYDAILYNEWS.COM
Monday, November 14, 2011
17
Visit NIE online at www.sidneydailynews.com, www.troydailynews.com or www.dailycall.com NIE Coordinator: Dana Wolfe
Graphic Designer: Scarlett E. Smith
HeALthy Is Cool! The Heart, Circulatory & Cardiovascular Systems The heart, veins and blood vessels are the main parts of the cardiovascular system. Your heart is a strong muscular pump that works day and night to send blood around your entire body. The circulatory system is a group of organs that carries nutrients, oxygen and other important materials to all the cells in your body. Your blood circulates throughout your body, like a river, through blood vessels attached to your heart. Those that carry blood away from your heart are called arteries, and the ones that carry blood back to your heart are call veins.
Your heart is divided into two halves, call chambers. The top chamber, called the atrium, collects blood from the veins. The bottom chamber, called the ventricle, pumps blood into the arteries, helping to refuel your body. When you take a deep breath, the air travels directly to your lungs. Blood is pumped from your heart to your lungs, and the oxygen (from the breath you just took) mixes with it. The blood then travels to your heart, where it is pumped back through your body, delivering oxygen and nutrients to your cells while fighting germs and removing carbon dioxide and waste.
Receives the “re-engergized” blood from your lungs.
Receives the “used” blood from your body.
Part I Sponsored by Tammy Shellhaass A.C.E. Personal Trainer & Yoga Instructor / LaBella Viagio
Each time your heart beats, it heart fills with blood. It tightens and releases, pushing the blood out. When your heart makes this movement, it’s called a contraction. Make a fist with your hand and squeeze it, release and squeeze again. This is a similar motion to the one your heart makes. Just like any other machine, the heart can become broken or need to be fixed. That’s why it’s important to know how your heart works; so you can do your part to keep it healthy and strong. Do you ever feel your heart racing or feel out of breath? This is your body signaling that it needs more oxygen. The heart pumps faster to supply your body with what it needs. Kids ages 6-15 have a normal resting heart rate of 70-100 beats per minute.
DID YOU KNOW? Pumps the oxygenrich blood back out to your body
Pumps blood to your lungs to get more oxygen
fitness — the genetic contribution of an individual to the next generation’s gene pool relative to the average for the population, measured by the number of offspring or close kin that survive to reproductive age
LARCARVASCUDIO Yoga Poses for Kids
Downward Facing Dog Cat Pose
Savasana
It takes less than 60 seconds for your heart to pump blood to every cell in the body. Doctors say that kids should be physically active for at least 60 minutes a day In order to get the full benefits of exercise, move until you break a sweat.
Tammy Shellhaas is a personal trainer and yoga instructor at La Bella Viaggio, Troy Q: What types of food fuel your body? A: I fuel my body with whole grains, fruits, vegetables, nuts, and seeds. I have learned that my body digests whole foods easier than processed foods, giving me the energy and endurance to train, run, and practice yoga. Q: How did running and yoga shape the person you are today? A: Running has increased my heart and lung capacity giving me the confidence to try other activities that challenge my body. Yoga has strengthened my body, while helping me to balance stresses in my life and connect with my true self as wife, mother, friend, and trainer. Q: How does your family instill health and fitness into daily life? A: When our children were in school they were involved in sports, but also enjoyed swimming, biking, etc. with friends. My husband and I walk our dogs, swim, and bike regularly. It is a great time for us to connect after a busy day. We also plan day trips and vacations that have include hiking, ziplining, swimming, and canoeing to continue trying new experiences. Q: How often do you work out each week? A: I workout daily for one hour, either running or yoga. When teaching a class, I will work out with the clients to perform the strength and cardio exercises for them and join in the fun!
Child Pose
Q: What is your practice philosophy? A: Consistency is key to a healthy body. I eat healthy and schedule my workouts like I would school or a doctor’s appointment. Quote: Yoga helps me to live a balanced life in mind, body, and spirit. Cow Pose Standing Triangle Pose
Tree Pose
Healthy Quote: Imagine you are the person you want to be and act like that person. You will become that person.
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■ Sports Editor Josh Brown (937) 440-5231, (937) 440-5232 jbrown@tdnpublishing.com
JOSH BROWN
TROY DAILY NEWS • WWW.TROYDAILYNEWS.COM
TODAY’S TIPS
■ National Football League
• HOCKEY: The Troy Trojans ice hockey team wraps up their four-game preseason by hosting Elder at 5:45 p.m. on Nov. 20 at Hobart Arena. Admission to the preseason game is free. • BASEBALL: The Troy High School Baseball Parents Boosters will be holding an organizational meeting for parents of any one interested in trying out for high school baseball in the spring. The meeting will take place at 7 p.m. Nov. 17 in the THS cafeteria. For more information, email coach Ty Welker at welker-t@troy.k12.oh.us. • BASKETBALL: The Varsity M Club will be collecting canned food items for the West Milton Community Food Bank. The can and dollar total will be announced at the OHSAA Foundation Game at 6 p.m. Nov. 18. The Bulldog girls and boys basketball teams will host Bradford, and proceeds from the contest will benefit the local food bank. For more information, send an email to kooglert@miltonunion.k12.oh.us, or look up MiltonUnion Athletics on Facebook. • VOLLEYBALL: Team Atlantis volleyball is holding tryouts at Minster Junior High School in October and November. The times are as follows: today and Nov. 20, 15s division 8:3010 a.m.; 16s division 10:30a.m.-noon; 17s and 18s division 12:30-2 p.m. For more information, go to www.teamatlantisvbc.com. • SOCCER: Registration is underway for Troy Rec indoor soccer. Sixweek sessions will be held for 5 and 6 year-old teams and first and second grade teams. The cost is $35 per player. Practices and games are at the Rec in downtown Troy. Registration forms are available at www.troyrec.com or at the Rec. For more information, call 339-1923. Deadline to register is Dec. 9. • SUBMIT-A-TIP: To submit an item to the Troy Daily News sports section, please contact Josh Brown at jbrown@tdnpublishing.com.
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November 14, 2011
Bad snap allows Rams to top Browns, 13-12 CLEVELAND (AP) — When Phil Dawson trotted onto the field, the Cleveland Browns seemed moments from victory. In a snap, they were seconds from despair. Dawson’s 22-yard field goal attempt sailed wide left following a bounced snap from Ryan Pontbriand with just over two minutes left, giving the St. Louis Rams a 13-12 win over the bungling Browns, who again failed to score a touchdown at home and couldn’t count on their steady kicker to bail them out. “You leave with a helpless feeling. It’s tough,” Browns quarterback Colt McCoy said. “We should have won more than once. You kind of scratch your head and wonder, ‘Where is all
this bad luck coming from? Why?’” Dawson made four field goals in blustery conditions, but his attempt with 2:13 remaining fluttered left of the upright, capping a series of late gaffes by the Browns (3-6), who were booed by their fans as they left the field. “That’s the maddening part,” said Dawson. “It’s not about how many you made. It’s about how many you missed.” Pontbriand, a Pro Bowler considered the NFL’s best long snapper, accidentally hiked the ball off the right foot of center Alex Mack, who AP PHOTO lines up at left guard for field-goal Cleveland’s Brad Maynard (7) reacts after kicker Phil attempts. The ball skipped back to holder Brad Maynard, who did a Dawson (4) missed a 22-yard field goal in the fourth
quarter of a game against the St. Louis Rams in ■ See BROWNS on 19 Cleveland on Sunday.
■ Golf
■ National Football League
AP PHOTO
Australia’s Greg Chalmers plays a shot on the 17th hole during the fourth round of the Australian Open golf tournament in Sydney, Australia on Sunday.
Chalmers wins in Sydney
SPORTS CALENDAR TODAY No events scheduled TUESDAY No events scheduled WEDNESDAY No events scheduled AP PHOTO
THURSDAY No events scheduled
Cincinnati Bengals wide receiver A.J. Green catches a 36-yard touchdown pass against the Pittsburgh Steelers in the first half Sunday in Cincinnati.
WHAT’S INSIDE National Football League .....19 Golf.......................................19 Scoreboard ............................20 Television Schedule..............20
18
Green said. “They have a great defense, but we belong in that league.” The Bengals came into the game with a five-game winning streak. They were facing a defense that had only two interceptions and two fumble recoveries all season, a stunningly small statistic for a defense that prides itself on getting the ball. They got it twice when it mattered most. Rashard Mendenhall’s 9yard run put the Steelers’ up 24-17 late in the third quarter, leaving it to the defense to it
SYDNEY (AP) — From about 250 yards away, thousands of fans perched on the dunes behind the 17th hole could make out the guy in a red shirt posing over his shot, then the ball appearing on the green and racing down a ridge to 12 feet behind the pin. This is what they wanted to see Sunday at the Australian Open. Tiger Woods, gone for the most of the year and rarely on the leaderboard even when he was playing, faced an eagle putt late in the final round at The Lakes that would have given him a share of the lead. Woods missed. Moments later, three groups behind him, Greg Chalmers hit 7-iron to 18 inches on the par-3 15th for a birdie that put him back in control, and ultimately led to a one-shot victory over John Senden. With a par save
■ See BENGALS on 19
■ See AUSSIE OPEN on 19
Battle for the north Gay’s late interception helps Steelers past Bengals, 24-17 CINCINNATI (AP) — Andy Dalton saw all of it coming, except for that final throw. Cornerback William Gay anticipated the rookie quarterback’s last pass and stepped in front for a game-clinching interception Sunday as the Pittsburgh Steelers held on for a 24-17 victory over the Cincinnati Bengals, who will remember that last play for a long time. “They take chances,” Dalton said. “They bite on things and try to jump routes. On that play they did, and it worked for them.”
It was a big moment for the surprising Bengals (6-3), who had their first sellout at Paul Brown Stadium in a year albeit with thousands of Steelers fans filling out the crowd. It was a chance to see how they measure up against the AFC North’s best after half a season of playing a lot of non-division also-rans. They were right there with the defending AFC champion Steelers (7-3) until the fourth quarter, when Pittsburgh closed it out with a pair of interceptions. “We went toe-to-toe with them,” rookie receiver A.J.
Woods takes third at the event
■ Auto Racing
Cardinals shock Eagles, win 21-17 The Arizona Cardinals may have a quarterback controversy. John Skelton threw a 5-yard TD pass to Early Doucet with 1:53 left and the Cardinals rallied for a 21-17 victory over the Philadelphia Eagles on Sunday, snapping an 11-game road losing streak. Michael Vick had another so-so performance and the Eagles (3-6) blew a fourth-quarter lead for the fifth time this season. See Page 19.
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Kahne bests Edwards, Stewart; wins Phoenix AVONDALE, Ariz. (AP) — While Carl Edwards and Tony Stewart have gone round-forround in their race for the Sprint Cup title, Kasey Kahne has quietly turned his performance up a notch outside of the championship spotlight. Kahne’s performance the last nine weeks has trailed only the two title contenders, and on Sunday, he finally got a win to show for his efforts. Kahne snapped an 81-race
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winless streak with his victory at Phoenix International Raceway, where Edwards and Stewart finished second and third to keep the title race tight headed into next weekend’s season finale. “If I’m in a racecar, I want to do the best that I can,” Kahne said, crediting crew chief Kenny Francis for giving him strong Toyotas that have allowed him “to perform with and run with Carl and Tony, who have been
probably the two best.” They’ve been the only two drivers better than Kahne, and one of them will officially unseat five-time defending NASCAR champion Jimmie Johnson next Sunday at Homestead. Edwards will take a threepoint lead over Stewart into the 36th and final race of the season, marking the closest championship battle since the Chase for the Sprint Cup championship format made its debut in 2004.
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The two were nearly giddy discussing the title race as they sat side-by-side in the post-race news conference. “As far as I’m concerned, it’s a dead heat going in there,” said Stewart. “I want to go to Homestead tomorrow and start. I want tomorrow to be Friday. I’m pumped up, I’m excited about it and ready to go.” So was Edwards.
■ See NASCAR on 19
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Monday, November 14, 2011
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■ Auto Racing
■ National Football League
Nascar
Bengals
■ CONTINUED FROM 18 “This is going to be a battle. I truly believe it’s going to be a good race,” Edwards said. “That place is magical for us. I really enjoy going there. I hope it comes down to the fastest guy winning the race.” Stewart, winner of four Chase races this season, dominated Sunday at Phoenix and led 160 of the 312 laps. But he had to pit for gas with 18 laps remaining, and was forced to work his way back to the front. He needed a late pass of Jeff Burton to finish third, right behind Edwards. “I wasn’t going to give him the spot. He earned it and he got it,” Burton said. It was a critical pass, as it picked up another point for Stewart and kept his deficit at three points. “We had an awesome day. We came up two spots shy. I don’t know how you could have asked for a better day,” he said. “We led the most laps, we were on the same pace we were last week, just to have a perfect day. Just fought as hard as we could all day.” Edwards did, too,
despite having to chase Stewart most of the race. He’s not faltered once with the two-time champion bearing down on him, and he’ll go to Homestead with his first Cup championship in reach. Edwards is a two-time Homestead winner and drives for Roush Fenway Racing, which has won seven of the last nine races at Homestead. Stewart, trying to become the first owner/driver since Alan Kulwicki in 1992 to win the championship, won the first two Cup races at Homestead in 1999 and 2000. “It’s the best points battle I’ve been a part of at this level, so it’s fun for me,” Edwards said. “I still don’t understand why we’re both running so good. It’s pretty neat. Seems like subconsciously we’re both able to dig down and our teams are able to give us what we need and everybody has been performing at a high level. “It’s been neat that this battle has brought out the best in us.” officially Sunday marked the end of Johnson’s reign: He finished 14th and was math-
AP PHOTO
Kasey Kahne, front, drives on the front straight after taking the checkered flag to win the NASCAR Sprint Cup Series auto race at Phoenix International Raceway Sunday in Avondale, Ariz. ematically eliminated from title contention. “It’s been one hell of a run,” he posted on Twitter shortly after the race. Kahne, meanwhile, won for the first time since Atlanta in 2009, and it comes in his next-tolast race with Red Bull Racing. He’s moving to Hendrick Motorsports next season, and Red Bull is pulling out of NASCAR. His win was only the second for Red Bull, came into which NASCAR in 2007 amid much fanfare but never delivered. Kahne, who won in a brand new car, said it’s a shame Red Bull is leav-
ing. “I wouldn’t say there’s anyone out there that’s building better cars at this time. The Red Bull guys are doing an awesome job and they haven’t given up,” he said. “It’s tough to hear it’s shutting down in eight days. Over the last three months, you have one of the top five cars in NASCAR shutting down and that’s crazy.” Burton finished fourth and was followed by Ryan Newman. AJ Allmendinger was sixth, and David Reutimann, told two weeks ago he was losing his job at Michael Waltrip Racing, was seventh.
■ CONTINUED FROM 18 finish it off. First, linebacker Lawrence Timmons picked off a deflected pass, ending a drive at the Pittsburgh 33. Gay pulled off the clincher, stepping in front of Jerome Simpson for an interception at the 19yard line with 2:27 left. Gay had allowed Baltimore’s Torrey Smith to get behind him for a 26yard touchdown catch with 8 seconds left in the Ravens’ 23-20 win at Pittsburgh last Sunday. It wasn’t going to happen again. Dalton handled most of what Steelers defensive coordinator Dick LeBeau threw at him until the end. He had two more touchdown passes, giving him 14 overall the most by a rookie quarterback in his first nine games since the AFLNFL merger in 1970. He wasn’t sacked even though the Steelers blitzed him every way they could. “I felt like we had a really good grasp on what they were doing,” said Dalton, who was 15 of 30 for 170 yards with two touchdowns. “Even with all the movements and shifts that they were doing, I still thought we had a good feel. They did throw some things at us, but I thought we adjusted well and handled it.”
Until the fourth quarter. Dalton didn’t have top receiver A.J. Green on the field for those pivotal moments. Green, who leads all rookie NFL receivers, jarred his right knee when he landed awkwardly on a 36-yard touchdown in the second quarter. Green returned on the next series, but was held out as a precaution after his knee tightened at halftime. “I just came down straight-legged and my knee buckled,” Green said. “At halftime when I came in and sat down, it got real stiff. I couldn’t really get any movement.” Ben Roethlisberger was 21 of 33 for 245 yards with one touchdown and a deflected interception. He was sacked five times, matching his season high. Roethlisberger found Jerricho Cotchery uncovered in the end zone for a 16-yard score that got thousands of Terrible Towels waving. It was the fifth time in the last six games that the Steelers reached the end zone on their opening possession. Mendenhall ran 2 yards for a 14-0 lead on the Steelers’ next possession. At that point, Pittsburgh had a 132-8 advantage in yards.
■ National Football League
■ National Football League
Browns
Cardinals shock Eagles
■ CONTINUED FROM 18 great job of placing it for Dawson. However, the 13year veteran’s timing was thrown off and Dawson missed the chip shot. “It’s on me,” Pontbriand said. “My fault. It’s my job to get the ball back there and it didn’t get there. On those plays, I’m always upside down and never see a thing. From my point of view, everything was normal. But as soon as it came out, I knew something was wrong. It looked like a snap I had never snapped before.” It was an especially painful loss for first-year Browns coach Pat Shurmur, who spent the previous two seasons as the Rams offensive coordinator. Following the game, Shurmur was noticeably upset, mostly because of his young team’s costly mistakes. “What can I say?” Shurmur said. “We were in position to win. I’m disappointed we lost. It hasn’t sunk in enough to go
through my head yet. I’ve got a thick head.” Stephen Jackson rushed for 128 yards for St. Louis (2-7), which got a TD pass from quarterback Sam Bradford and two field goals by Josh Brown. As Dawson lined up for his final kick, the Rams, who had five players sustain game-ending injuries, were already planning their strategy for a last drive. They didn’t realize they were in Cleveland, where the beleaguered Browns have a habit of horrid losses. “I thought this stuff only happened to the Rams,” Jackson joked. “I didn’t think it happened to other teams.” Brown’s 34-yard field goal gave the Rams a 13-12 lead with 7:42 remaining. That score was set up by a fumble by Browns return specialist Josh Cribbs, who was stripped trying to get extra yards on a punt return by Rams linebacker David Nixon.
■ Golf
Aussie Open ■ CONTINUED FROM 18 from the bunker on the final hole, Chalmers closed with a 3-under 69 to put his name on the Stonehaven Cup trophy for the second time. Woods now has gone two full years since his last win at the Australian Masters, yet he headed south to Royal Melbourne for the Presidents Cup with reason for optimism. Two bad tee shots slowed his charge, one of them a questionable decision. Yet there also was a birdie on the second-toughest hole to keep alive his hopes, a chipin for eagle on the 14th hole when nothing less would suffice, and three solid rounds that gave him his first real chance of winning in nearly a year. Woods closed with a 5under 67 and finished alone in third. It was his highest finish since a playoff loss last December to Graeme McDowell at the Chevron World Challenge, and his best result against a full field since his last win in Melbourne. “I felt great,” Woods said. “It’s nice to finally be healthy again.” He has talked about his health a lot the last year, though it cannot be written off as an excuse. Woods missed most of the summer while letting injuries to his
left leg fully heal, which made him ineligible to play once he was feeling strong. This was only his second tournament in the last three months, and he showed plenty of progress. For the first time since the Masters, when he was tied for the lead at the turn on Sunday until he stalled and tied for fourth, his name on the leaderboard meant something. “It’s been since Augusta, I had the lead at Augusta on Sunday, that’s the last time I’ve been in that spot,” Woods said. “It’s been a long time. Unfortunately I haven’t played a lot of tournaments in between. But it was great to be out there. I had a chance. Unfortunately, I didn’t post the number I wanted to post.” Chalmers kept his wits about him. He could hear the massive cheer when Woods chipped in for eagle from about 15 feet off the green, loud enough to rattle him. But he realized that he still had the short 13th the one Woods bungled and two par 5s. “I was aware of what Tiger was doing, but I was also aware that I had some birdie holes coming up,” Chalmers said. “I thought the advantage was with someone still out on the golf course.”
Kasay’s 26-yard field goal gives Saints win over Falcons PHILADELPHIA (AP) — John Skelton threw a 5yard TD pass to Early Doucet with 1:53 left to lift Arizona. Michael Vick had another so-so performance and the Eagles (3-6) blew a fourth-quarter lead for the fifth time this season. Starting for the injured Kevin Kolb, Skelton threw three touchdown passes to lead the Cardinals (3-6). Larry Fitzgerald had two TD catches and made a sensational, over-theshoulder diving catch to set up the go-ahead score. The defending NFC East champion Eagles were expected to be Super Bowl contenders after a slew of big-name acquisitions in the offseason. Instead, they’ve lost seven of their past eight home games. BRONCOS 17, CHIEFS 10 KANSAS CITY, Mo. — Tim Tebow hit Eric Decker on a 56-yard touchdown pass, one of his two completions in the game, to lift Denver. Denver (4-5) played almost the entire game without leading rushers Willis McGahee and Knowshon Moreno. McGahee hurt his hamstring and Moreno went down with a knee injury in the first quarter. Lance Ball ran for 96 yards and Tebow added 44 yards and a touchdown on the ground, helping the Broncos win for the third time in four games with the former Heisman Trophy winner under center. Matt Cassel was 13 of 28 for 93 yards and a touchdown for Kansas City (4-5), which followed up a 31-3 loss to previously winless Miami with another miserable showing at home. SAINTS 26, FALCONS 23 ATLANTA — John Kasay kicked a 26-yard field goal in overtime to give the New Orleans Saints a 26-23 victory over Atlanta after Falcons coach Mike Smith decided to go for it on fourth down deep in his own territory Sunday. The Falcons (5-4) rallied from a 10-point deficit in the fourth quarter, tying it on Matt Bryant’s 27-yard field goal on the final play of regulation. In overtime, Atlanta appeared to pick up a first down on a pass to Mike Cox, but he was ruled just short after referee Terry
AP PHOTO
Arizona Cardinals’ Larry Fitzgerald, center, pulls in a pass as Philadelphia Eagles’ Asante Samuel, left, and Jaiquawn Jarrett defend in the second half Sunday in Philadelphia. McAuley looked at the replay. Then, stunningly, Smith decided to go for it on fourth down from his own 29. Michael Turner was stuffed, and Kasay kicked the winning field goal for the Saints (7-3). 49ERS 27, GIANTS 20 SAN FRANCISCO — Smith batted down Eli Manning’s pass in the closing seconds of a comeback try and San Francisco won its seventh straight game. Manning completed a pair of long fourth-down passes and got the Giants (6-3) down to the 10, but on fourth-and-2 with 1:51 left, Smith made a leaping right-handed smack of the ball. In a game between division leaders, the 49ers (8-1) didn’t rely on Frank Gore, whose franchise-record streak of five straight games with 100 yards rushing ended with a knee injury. BEARS 37, LIONS 13 CHICAGO — Charles Tillman and Major Wright returned interceptions for touchdowns early in the third quarter, and Chicago picked off Matthew Stafford four times. The four interceptions by Stafford matched his season total entering the game and helped knock the Lions (6-3) into a secondplace tie with Chicago in the NFC North. He was also involved in a skirmish that led to an ejection of Chicago’s D.J. Moore early
in the fourth quarter. SEAHAWKS 22, RAVENS 17 SEATTLE — Steven Hauschka matched a franchise record with five field goals, Marshawn Lynch scored on a 1-yard plunge and Seattle forced three turnovers. A week after staking claim to the lead of the AFC North with a thrilling lastsecond win at Pittsburgh, the Ravens flopped on the West Coast in an all too similar fashion to letdowns twice already this season. After routing Pittsburgh in its opener, the Ravens (63) were dominated in a loss at Tennessee. Just a few weeks ago, after an impressive win over AFC Southleading Houston, the Ravens lost to Jacksonville. JAGUARS 17, COLTS 3 INDIANAPOLIS — Blaine Gabbert threw for a touchdown and Maurice Jones-Drew ran for another score to keep Indianapolis winless. Jones-Drew carried 25 times for 114 yards and became the second player in franchise history to top 6,000 yards rushing. It was the first road win of the season for Jacksonville (36). Indianapolis remained the NFL’s last winless team, dropping to 0-10 for the first time since 1997. TEXANS 37, BUCCANEERS 9 TAMPA, Fla. — Matt Schaub threw for two long touchdowns, while Arian Foster, Ben Tate and
Derrick Ward each ran for scores to help AFC Southleading Houston. The Texans (7-3) extended their winning streak while playing without star receiver Andre Johnson to four consecutive games and head into their bye week with their best record through 10 games. TITANS 30, PANTHERS 3 CHARLOTTE, N.C. — Chris Johnson ran for a season-high 130 yards and a touchdown, and Tennessee used a stifling defense to frustrate rookie Cam Newton. The Titans (5-4) sacked Newton five times and took away Carolina’s long passing game. Carolina (2-7) came in ranked fifth in the league on offense and first in plays of 20-plus yards, but the Titans limited Newton to 209 yards passing and held Steve Smith, the NFC’s leading receiver, to 33 yards. Johnson had 174 yards from scrimmage and eclipsed 100 yards rushing for the first time since Oct. 2. Marc Mariani returned a punt 79 yards for a touchdown, and Matt Hasselbeck threw a 43-yard touchdown pass to Damian Williams. COWBOYS 44, BILLS 7 ARLINGTON, Texas — Tony Romo guided touchdown drives on his first four possessions, throwing for the score on three of them, and Terence Newman returned one of his two interceptions for a touchdown.
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FOOTBALL National Football League All Times EDT AMERICAN CONFERENCE East W L T Pct PF PA New England 5 3 0 .625 222 184 N.Y. Jets 5 3 0 .625 199 163 5 4 0 .556 229 218 Buffalo 2 7 0 .222 158 178 Miami South W L T Pct PF PA Houston 7 3 0 .700 273 166 5 4 0 .556 186 172 Tennessee Jacksonville 3 6 0 .333 115 166 Indianapolis 0 10 0 .000 131 300 North W L T Pct PF PA 7 3 0 .700 220 179 Pittsburgh 6 3 0 .667 225 152 Baltimore 6 3 0 .667 212 164 Cincinnati Cleveland 3 6 0 .333 131 183 West W L T Pct PF PA 5 4 0 .556 208 233 Oakland 4 5 0 .444 216 228 San Diego Denver 4 5 0 .444 188 234 Kansas City 4 5 0 .444 141 218 NATIONAL CONFERENCE East W L T Pct PF PA N.Y. Giants 6 3 0 .667 218 211 Dallas 5 4 0 .556 223 182 Philadelphia 3 6 0 .333 220 203 Washington 3 6 0 .333 136 178 South W L T Pct PF PA New Orleans 7 3 0 .700 313 228 5 4 0 .556 212 196 Atlanta 4 5 0 .444 156 233 Tampa Bay Carolina 2 7 0 .222 190 237 North W L T Pct PF PA 8 0 01.000 275 179 Green Bay 6 3 0 .667 252 184 Detroit Chicago 6 3 0 .667 237 187 Minnesota 2 6 0 .250 172 199 West W L T Pct PF PA San Francisco 8 1 0 .889 233 138 Seattle 3 6 0 .333 144 202 Arizona 3 6 0 .333 183 213 2 7 0 .222 113 223 St. Louis Thursday, Nov. 10 Oakland 24, San Diego 17 Sunday's Games Dallas 44, Buffalo 7 Denver 17, Kansas City 10 Miami 20, Washington 9 St. Louis 13, Cleveland 12 Arizona 21, Philadelphia 17 Tennessee 30, Carolina 3 Pittsburgh 24, Cincinnati 17 Houston 37, Tampa Bay 9 New Orleans 26, Atlanta 23, OT Jacksonville 17, Indianapolis 3 Seattle 22, Baltimore 17 San Francisco 27, N.Y. Giants 20 Chicago 37, Detroit 13 New England at N.Y. Jets, 8:20 p.m. Monday's Game Minnesota at Green Bay, 8:30 p.m. Thursday, Nov. 17 N.Y. Jets at Denver, 8:20 p.m. Sunday, Nov. 20 Tampa Bay at Green Bay, 1 p.m. Oakland at Minnesota, 1 p.m. Carolina at Detroit, 1 p.m. Dallas at Washington, 1 p.m. Jacksonville at Cleveland, 1 p.m. Cincinnati at Baltimore, 1 p.m. Buffalo at Miami, 1 p.m. Arizona at San Francisco, 4:05 p.m. Seattle at St. Louis, 4:05 p.m. San Diego at Chicago, 4:15 p.m. Tennessee at Atlanta, 4:15 p.m. Philadelphia at N.Y. Giants, 8:20 p.m. Open: Houston, Indianapolis, New Orleans, Pittsburgh Monday, Nov. 21 Kansas City at New England, 8:30 p.m. OHSAA Football Regional Semifinal Pairings/ Scores COLUMBUS – The Ohio High School Athletic Association released the football regional semifinal pairings and sites Sunday. The pairings below include the seeds, schools and updated records. Division I Regional Semifinal Pairings All games Sat., Nov. 12 at 7 p.m., unless noted. Region 1 Mentor 42, Solon 40 Cle. St. Ignatius 20, Lakewood St. Edward 17 Region 2 Tol. Whitmer 37, Can. McKinley 6 Wadsworth 42, Hudson 21 Region 3 Hilliard Davidson 15, Cols. Upper Arlington 6 Pickerington Cent. 41, Gahanna Lincoln 10 Region 4 Cin. Moeller 42, Middletown 30 Cin. St. Xavier 28, Cin. Colerain 15 Division II Regional Semifinal Pairings All games Fri., Nov. 11 at 7:30 p.m., unless noted. Region 5 Cuyahoga Falls Walsh Jesuit 49, Kent Roosevelt 14 Aurora 34, Tallmadge 14 Region 6 Avon 49, Tol. Cent. Cath. 28 Tiffin Columbian 37, E. Cle. Shaw 12 Region 7 Cols. Marion-Franklin 44, Sunbury Big Walnut 17 Dresden Tri-Valley 24, New Albany 7 Region 8 Trotwood-Madison 27, Wapakoneta 6 Kings Mills Kings 24, Cin. Turpin 0 Division III Regional Semifinal Pairings All games Fri., Nov. 11 at 7:30 p.m., unless noted. Region 9 Chagrin Falls 24, Ravenna 6 Akr. SVSM 31, Mentor Lake Cath. 14 Region 10 Elida 24, Cols. DeSales 21 Cols. Eastmoor 14, Clyde 12 Region 11 Youngs. Mooney 24, Steubenville 22 Dover 41, Minerva 35 Region 12 Spring. Shawnee 20, Day. Thurgood Marshall 13 Plain City Jonathan Alder 28, Jackson 7 Division IV Regional Semifinal Pairings All games Sat., Nov. 12 at 7 p.m., unless noted. Region 13 Girard 56, Sullivan Black River 14 Creston Norwayne 34, Orrville 19 Region 14 Kenton 32, Genoa Area 22 Cols. Hartley 21, Pemberville Eastwood 7 Region 15 Coshocton 47, St. Clairsville 21 Johnstown-Monroe 34, Ironton 7
Region 16 Day. Chaminade-Julienne 30, Waynesville 17 Clarksville Clinton-Massie 24, Cin. Hills Christian Academy 10 Division V Regional Semifinal Pairings All games Fri., Nov. 11 at 7:30 p.m. unless noted. Region 17 Kirtland 52, Sugarcreek Garaway 7 Columbiana Crestview 41, Louisville Aquinas 20 Region 18 Hamler Patrick Henry 21, Liberty Center 7 Hicksville 20, Findlay Liberty-Benton 13 Region 19 Bucyrus Wynford 14, Portsmouth W. 9 Lucasville Valley 42, Ashland Crestview 12 Region 20 Coldwater 43, Versailles 0 W. Jefferson 49, Marion Pleasant 42 Division VI Regional Semifinal Pairings All games Sat., Nov. 12 at 7 p.m., unless noted. Region 21 Berlin Center Western Reserve 29, Malvern 20 Shadyside 27, Youngs. Christian 24 Region 22 Leipsic 34, McComb 28 Delphos St. John's 35, Tiffin Calvert 0 Region 23 Beallsville 35, Willow Wood Symmes Valley 34 New Washington Buckeye Cent. 37, Zanesville Rosecrans 7 Region 24 Maria Stein Marion Local 41, Ada 14 Minster 30, Ft. Loramie 7
SOCCER Major League Soccer Playoff Glance All Times EDT WILD CARDS Wednesday, Oct. 26: New York 2, FC Dallas 0 Thursday, Oct. 27: Colorado 1, Columbus 0 WILD CARD SEEDS: 2. Colorado; 3. Columbus. EASTERN CONFERENCE Semifinals Sporting Kansas City vs. Colorado, Sporting City advances 4-0 Sunday, Oct. 30: Sporting Kansas City 2, Colorado 0 Wednesday, Nov. 2: Sporting Kansas City 2, Colorado 0 Houston vs. Philadelphia, Houston advances 3-1 Sunday, Oct. 30: Houston 2, Philadelphia 1 Thursday, Nov. 3: Philadelphia 0, Houston 1 Championship Sunday, Nov. 6: Houston 2, Sporting Kansas City 0 WESTERN CONFERENCE Semifinals Los Angeles vs. New York Sunday, Oct. 30: Los Angeles 1, New York 0 Thursday, Nov. 3: Los Angeles 2, New York 1 Seattle vs. Real Salt Lake, Real Salt Lake advances on aggregate 3-2 Saturday, Oct. 29: Seattle 0, Real Salt Lake 3 Wednesday, Nov. 2: Seattle 2, Real Salt Lake 0 Championship Sunday, Nov. 6: Los Angeles 3, Real Salt Lake 1 MLS CUP Sunday, Nov. 20: Houston vs. Los Angeles at Carson, Calif., 9 p.m.
AUTO RACING NASCAR-Sprint Cup-Kobalt Tools Results Sunday At Phoenix International Raceway Avondale, Ariz. Lap length: 1 miles (Start position in parentheses) 1. (10) Kasey Kahne, Toyota, 312 laps, 112.3 rating, 47 points, $202,233. 2. (9) Carl Edwards, Ford, 312, 123.6, 43, $210,141. 3. (8) Tony Stewart, Chevrolet, 312, 136.2, 43, $188,033. 4. (14) Jeff Burton, Chevrolet, 312, 107.7, 40, $126,350. 5. (30) Ryan Newman, Chevrolet, 312, 95.6, 39, $155,850. 6. (2) A J Allmendinger, Ford, 312, 114.3, 38, $136,836. 7. (7) David Reutimann, Toyota, 312, 103.7, 37, $115,458. 8. (3) Marcos Ambrose, Ford, 312, 104.3, 36, $114,166. 9. (11) Paul Menard, Chevrolet, 312, 87.7, 35, $90,275. 10. (28) Clint Bowyer, Chevrolet, 312, 80.8, 34, $123,058. 11. (25) Joey Logano, Toyota, 312, 81.7, 33, $87,150. 12. (33) Denny Hamlin, Toyota, 312, 72.9, 32, $121,375. 13. (29) Greg Biffle, Ford, 311, 70.8, 31, $92,075. 14. (16) Jimmie Johnson, Chevrolet, 311, 71.5, 30, $124,761. 15. (26) Juan Pablo Montoya, Chevrolet, 311, 77.5, 29, $111,683. 16. (4) Mark Martin, Chevrolet, 311, 78.6, 28, $81,150. 17. (6) Jamie McMurray, Chevrolet, 311, 84.3, 27, $107,364. 18. (12) Brad Keselowski, Dodge, 311, 89.1, 27, $97,208. 19. (27) Kevin Harvick, Chevrolet, 311, 80.9, 25, $117,036. 20. (5) Martin Truex Jr., Toyota, 311, 84.7, 24, $80,375. 21. (31) Bobby Labonte, Toyota, 311, 61.1, 23, $98,645. 22. (17) Kurt Busch, Dodge, 311, 102.3, 23, $112,975. 23. (18) Brian Vickers, Toyota, 311, 67.5, 21, $98,439. 24. (22) Dale Earnhardt Jr., Chevrolet, 310, 57.9, 20, $79,925. 25. (19) Cole Whitt, Toyota, 310, 58.1, 0, $67,175. 26. (38) Casey Mears, Toyota, 309, 56, 18, $70,875. 27. (43) Dave Blaney, Chevrolet, 309, 45.8, 17, $67,925. 28. (41) J.J. Yeley, Ford, 309, 45, 17, $84,483. 29. (21) Landon Cassill, Chevrolet, 309, 50.9, 0, $81,758. 30. (39) Mike Bliss, Ford, 308, 42.2, 0, $80,572. 31. (42) David Gilliland, Ford, 307, 38.4, 13, $69,400. 32. (23) Jeff Gordon, Chevrolet, 306, 54.8, 12, $105,936. 33. (13) David Ragan, Ford, 298, 32.8, 11, $75,325.
Monday, November 14, 2011
Scores AND SCHEDULES
SPORTS ON TV TODAY MEN'S COLLEGE BASKETBALL 12 Mid. ESPN — Washington St. at Gonzaga 2 a.m. ESPN — N. Iowa at Saint Mary's (Cal) 4 a.m. ESPN — CS Northridge at Hawaii NFL FOOTBALL 8:30 p.m. ESPN — Minnesota at Green Bay NHL HOCKEY 7 p.m. VERSUS — Buffalo at Montreal
TUESDAY MEN'S COLLEGE BASKETBALL 6 a.m. ESPN — Drexel at Rider 8 a.m. ESPN — Morehead St. at Coll. of Charleston 10 a.m. ESPN — Kent St. at West Virginia Noon ESPN — Belmont at Memphis 2 p.m. ESPN — San Diego St. at Baylor 4 p.m. ESPN — Rhode Island at Texas 7 p.m. ESPN — Duke vs. Michigan St., at New York 8 p.m. ESPN2 — Florida at Ohio St. 9 p.m. ESPN — Kentucky vs. Kansas, at New York 10 p.m. ESPN2 — Austin Peay at California NHL HOCKEY 7:30 p.m. VERSUS — Colorado at Pittsburgh SOCCER Noon ESPN2 — Men's national teams, exhibition, Slovenia vs. United States, at Ljubljana, Slovenia WOMEN'S COLLEGE BASKETBALL 6 p.m. ESPN2 — Miami at Tennessee
WEDNESDAY
GOLF
COLLEGE FOOTBALL 8 p.m. ESPN — Ohio at Bowling Green ESPN2 — Western Michigan at Miami (Ohio) GOLF 9 p.m. TGC — PGA Tour, Presidents Cup, first round, at Melbourne, Australia 4 a.m. TGC — European PGA Tour, Johor Open, first round, at Johor, Malaysia (delayed tape) NHL HOCKEY 7:30 p.m. VERSUS — New Jersey at Buffalo
THURSDAY COLLEGE FOOTBALL 8 p.m. ESPN — North Carolina at Virginia Tech FSN — Marshall at Memphis GOLF 1:30 p.m. TGC — LPGA, Titleholders, first round, at Orlando, Fla. 7:30 p.m. TGC — PGA Tour, Presidents Cup, second round, at Melbourne, Australia 4 a.m. TGC — European PGA Tour, Johor Open, second round, at Johor, Malaysia (delayed tape) MEN'S COLLEGE BASKETBALL 5 p.m. ESPN2 — Puerto Rico Tip-Off, first round, Maryland vs. Alabama, at San Juan, Puerto Rico 7 p.m. ESPN2 — 2K Sports Classic, first round, Texas A&M vs. Mississippi St., at New York 9 p.m. ESPN2 — 2K Sports Classic, first round, Arizona at St. John's NFL FOOTBALL 8 p.m. NFL — N.Y. Jets at Denver
THE BCS RANKINGS As of Nov. 13 Rk 1 1. LSU 2. Oklahoma St. 2 3. Alabama 3 4 4. Oregon 5 5. Oklahoma 6. Arkansas 6 7. Clemson 8 8. Virginia Tech 9 7 9. Stanford 10. Boise St. 11 11. Houston 10 12. South Carolina15 13. Kansas St. 17 14. Georgia 14 15. Michigan St. 12 16 16. Nebraska 17. Wisconsin 13 18. Michigan 18 19. TCU 21 20. Southern Miss20 21. Penn St. 19 22. Baylor 25 23. Texas 28 24. Auburn 32 25. Florida St. 23
Harris Pts Pct 2875 1.0000 2750 0.9565 2620 0.9113 2545 0.8852 2379 0.8275 2297 0.7990 2024 0.7040 1949 0.6779 2041 0.7099 1766 0.6143 1792 0.6233 1324 0.4605 1092 0.3798 1366 0.4751 1471 0.5117 1260 0.4383 1390 0.4835 896 0.3117 692 0.2407 699 0.2431 765 0.2661 145 0.0504 88 0.0306 16 0.0056 261 0.0908
34. (1) Matt Kenseth, Ford, accident, 238, 88.1, 11, $108,986. 35. (20) Robby Gordon, Dodge, accident, 218, 44.5, 9, $65,850. 36. (34) Kyle Busch, Toyota, engine, 188, 61.4, 8, $113,816. 37. (40) Geoffrey Bodine, Chevrolet, accident, 153, 33.1, 7, $65,575. 38. (15) Regan Smith, Chevrolet, accident, 62, 28.5, 6, $92,070. 39. (24) Scott Speed, Ford, electrical, 60, 32.4, 0, $65,325. 40. (35) Michael McDowell, Toyota, transmission, 46, 38.9, 4, $65,175. 41. (32) Joe Nemechek, Toyota, brakes, 30, 34.1, 0, $65,020. 42. (36) Mike Skinner, Ford, brakes, 25, 31.5, 0, $64,895. 43. (37) Travis Kvapil, Ford, brakes, 20, 30.3, 0, $65,274. Race Statistics Average Speed of Race Winner: 112.918 mph. Time of Race: 2 hours, 45 minutes, 47 seconds. Margin of Victory: 0.802 seconds. Caution Flags: 8 for 30 laps. Lead Changes: 14 among 7 drivers. Lap Leaders: M.Kenseth 1-35; T.Stewart 36-42; J.Yeley 43; M.Kenseth 44-45; T.Stewart 46-94; M.Kenseth 9597; T.Stewart 98-157; M.Kenseth 158166; C.Edwards 167-181; T.Stewart 182-221; Ku.Busch 222-278; C.Edwards 279-290; T.Stewart 291294; B.Keselowski 295-298; K.Kahne 299-312. Leaders Summary (Driver, Times Led, Laps Led): T.Stewart, 5 times for 160 laps; Ku.Busch, 1 time for 57 laps; M.Kenseth, 4 times for 49 laps; C.Edwards, 2 times for 27 laps; K.Kahne, 1 time for 14 laps; B.Keselowski, 1 time for 4 laps; J.Yeley, 1 time for 1 lap. Top 12 in Points: 1. C.Edwards,
Rk 1 2 3 4 5 6 8 7 9 11 10 14 17 15 12 16 13 18 19 20 21 27 28 39 22
USA Today Pts Pct 1475 1.0000 1410 0.9559 1340 0.9085 1300 0.8814 1228 0.8325 1170 0.7932 1042 0.7064 1045 0.7085 1024 0.6942 831 0.5634 927 0.6285 727 0.4929 501 0.3397 698 0.4732 791 0.5363 615 0.4169 745 0.5051 477 0.3234 392 0.2658 386 0.2617 361 0.2447 56 0.0380 27 0.0183 0 0.0000 189 0.1281
18 11 4 3 25 62 52 Chicago Detroit 15 9 5 1 19 42 33 16 8 5 3 19 43 42 Nashville 16 8 7 1 17 40 38 St. Louis Columbus 16 3 12 1 7 36 60 Northwest Division GP W L OT Pts GF GA Minnesota 17 9 5 3 21 39 36 Edmonton 17 9 6 2 20 39 38 Vancouver 17 8 8 1 17 51 50 17 8 8 1 17 49 54 Colorado 16 7 8 1 15 35 42 Calgary Pacific Division GP W L OT Pts GF GA Dallas 16 11 5 0 22 48 41 15 8 4 3 19 43 39 Phoenix San Jose 15 9 5 1 19 44 39 Los Angeles 17 8 6 3 19 41 40 17 6 8 3 15 35 50 Anaheim NOTE: Two points for a win, one point for overtime loss. Saturday's Games New Jersey 3, Washington 2, SO Boston 6, Buffalo 2 Ottawa 5, Toronto 2 Carolina 5, Pittsburgh 3 Detroit 5, Dallas 2 Columbus 2, Winnipeg 1 Montreal 2, Nashville 1, OT St. Louis 3, Tampa Bay 0 Calgary 4, Colorado 3 Los Angeles 5, Minnesota 2 Phoenix 3, San Jose 0 Sunday's Games Philadelphia 3, Florida 2 Chicago 6, Edmonton 3 Minnesota 3, Anaheim 2 N.Y. Islanders at Vancouver, 9 p.m. Monday's Games Philadelphia at Carolina, 7 p.m. Buffalo at Montreal, 7 p.m. Tampa Bay at Winnipeg, 8:30 p.m. Tuesday's Games New Jersey at Boston, 7 p.m. Phoenix at Toronto, 7 p.m. N.Y. Rangers at N.Y. Islanders, 7 p.m. Minnesota at Columbus, 7 p.m. Colorado at Pittsburgh, 7:30 p.m. Detroit at St. Louis, 8 p.m. Washington at Nashville, 8 p.m. Florida at Dallas, 8:30 p.m. Ottawa at Calgary, 9 p.m.
Rk t1 t1 3 t4 t4 6 8 9 11 12 13 10 7 14 18 17 28 t19 t19 21 23 15 16 21 29
Computer BCS Pct Avg Pv .980 0.9933 1 .980 0.9642 2 .910 0.9099 3 .860 0.8755 7 .860 0.8400 6 .800 0.7974 8 .670 0.6935 9 .640 0.6755 10 .620 0.6747 4 .610 0.5959 5 .450 0.5673 11 .630 0.5278 13 .770 0.4965 14 .410 0.4528 15 .270 0.4393 17 .290 0.3817 19 .010 0.3329 18 .250 0.2950 24 .250 0.2522 NR .230 0.2449 22 .180 0.2303 12 .320 0.1361 25 .310 0.1196 16 .230 0.0785 20 .000 0.0730 NR
2,359; 2. T.Stewart, 2,356; 3. K.Harvick, 2,308; 4. Bra.Keselowski, 2,294; 5. J.Johnson, 2,291; 6. M.Kenseth, 2,289; 7. D.Earnhardt Jr., 2,257; 8. Ku.Busch, 2,252; 9. R.Newman, 2,252; 10. D.Hamlin, 2,249; 11. J.Gordon, 2,247; 12. Ky.Busch, 2,224. NASCAR Driver Rating Formula A maximum of 150 points can be attained in a race. The formula combines the following categories: Wins, Finishes, Top-15 Finishes, Average Running Position While on Lead Lap, Average Speed Under Green, Fastest Lap, Led Most Laps, Lead-Lap Finish.
HOCKEY National Hockey League All Times EDT EASTERN CONFERENCE Atlantic Division GP W L OT Pts GF GA Pittsburgh 17 10 4 3 23 51 40 N.Y. Rangers15 9 3 3 21 43 32 Philadelphia 16 9 4 3 21 60 48 New Jersey 15 8 6 1 17 37 41 N.Y. Islanders13 4 6 3 11 28 39 Northeast Division GP W L OT Pts GF GA Toronto 17 10 6 1 21 51 58 Buffalo 16 10 6 0 20 49 40 Ottawa 18 8 9 1 17 53 65 Boston 15 8 7 0 16 52 35 Montreal 16 7 7 2 16 40 42 Southeast Division GP W L OT Pts GF GA Washington 15 10 4 1 21 55 42 Florida 16 8 5 3 19 46 42 Tampa Bay 16 8 6 2 18 46 50 Carolina 17 6 8 3 15 43 58 Winnipeg 17 5 9 3 13 43 58 WESTERN CONFERENCE Central Division GP W L OT Pts GF GA
Emirates Australian Open Scores Sunday At The Lakes Golf Club Sydney Purse: $1.55 million Yardage: 6,879; Par: 72 Final a-amateur Greg Chalmers, Australia ....67-72-67-69—275 John Senden, Australia........70-71-63-72—276 Tiger Woods, United States.68-67-75-67—277 Geoff Ogilvy, Australia..........70-74-70-65—279 Adam Scott, Australia...........69-71-71-68—279 Nick Watney, United States..66-73-68-72—279 Nick O'Hern, Australia..........69-72-66-72—279 Jason Day, Australia.............69-68-68-74—279 Aaron Baddeley, Australia....73-71-67-69—280 Ryan Haller, Australia...........70-73-65-72—280 Kyle Stanley, United States..72-72-67-70—281 Scott Arnold, Australia..........71-71-72-68—282 Matthew Jones, Australia.....69-70-74-69—282 B.Watson, United States.....68-70-72-72—282 Matthew Millar, Australia......68-73-73-69—283 Terry Pilkadaris, Australia.....71-74-69-69—283 Fred Couples, United States67-74-71-71—283 Jarrod Lyle, Australia............65-74-69-75—283 David McKenzie, Australia...73-69-76-67—285 Craig Hasthorpe, Australia...69-75-70-71—285 Marcus Cain, Australia.........73-71-69-72—285 a-Kelly Kraft, United States..71-74-68-72—285 Craig Hancock, Australia .....70-73-74-69—286 Anthony Summers, Australia70-72-73-71—286 a-Ryan McCarthy, Australia.74-71-70-71—286 John Cook, United States....69-74-71-72—286 Stephen Allan, Australia.......69-74-70-73—286 Peter O'Malley, Australia ......70-66-75-75—286 Anthony Brown, Australia.....70-76-73-68—287 James Nitties, Australia........67-76-75-69—287 Andrew Tschudin, Australia.68-78-70-71—287 Bill Haas, United States.......72-71-72-72—287 Matthew Griffin, Australia.....71-75-69-72—287 Choi Joon-woo, South Korea73-67-74-73—287 Rohan Blizard, Australia ......69-70-74-74—287 Jamie Arnold, Australia........70-76-72-70—288 Nicholas Cullen, Australia....72-70-69-77—288 Adam Bland, Australia .........74-72-72-71—289 Scott Laycock, Australia.......72-74-72-71—289 Adam Crawford, Australia....73-72-72-72—289 Damon Welsford, Australia ..69-76-72-72—289 D. Johnson, United States ...66-75-75-73—289 David Toms, United States...72-73-70-74—289 a-J. Higginbottom, Australia.68-77-77-68—290 Steven Conran, Australia.....72-74-76-68—290 Aaron Townsend, Australia ..74-70-74-72—290 Richard Green, Australia .....72-71-74-73—290 David Bransdon, Australia ...71-74-72-73—290 Michael Wright, Australia .....71-73-71-75—290 Steven Jones, Australia........67-76-70-77—290 Daniel Fox, Australia ............74-71-71-75—291 Paul Sheehan, Australia ......69-72-71-79—291 Steven Bowditch, Australia ..75-71-74-73—293 Leigh McKechnie, Australia .69-76-74-74—293 Greg Norman, Australia.......71-74-73-75—293 Chris Gaunt, Australia..........70-71-76-76—293 Henry Epstein, Australia ......70-75-76-73—294 G. Paddison, New Zealand..71-74-77-73—295 Jason Norris, Australia.........70-76-75-74—295 Stephen Leaney, Australia...73-73-77-74—297 Paul Spargo, Australia..........73-73-75-76—297 Kurt Carlson, Australia.........70-75-73-79—297 Peter Shaw, Australia...........73-73-78-74—298 James McLean, Australia ....74-70-75-79—298 Lee Won-joon, Australia.......74-72-75-78—299 Singapore Open Scores Sunday At Sentosa Golf Club Singapore Purse: $6 million Serapong Course: yardage: 7,357; par: 71 Third Round (x-playoff to be held Monday) Final Round x-G. Fernandez-Castano, Spain66-61-72—199 x-Juvic Pagunsan, Philippines ..66-66-67—199 Louis Oosthuizen, South Africa72-63-65—200 Anthony Kim, United States......70-66-64—200 Edoardo Molinari, Italy...............62-68-71—201 Joost Luiten, Netherlands .........69-65-67—201 Danny Lee, New Zealand .........68-65-68—201 James Morrison, England.........62-68-72—202 Justin Rose, England ................69-65-69—203 T.Van Der Walt, South Africa....71-65-67—203 Anders Hansen, Denmark........69-64-71—204 Steve Webster, England............66-69-66—204 Richie Ramsay, Scotland ..........69-65-71—205 Rikard Karlberg, Sweden..........67-69-69—205 G. McDowell, Northern Ireland .68-71-66—205 Shane Lowry, Ireland.................67-70-68—205 Jbe Kruger, South Africa...........65-72-68—205 Himmat Rai, India......................70-69-66—205 Miguel Angel Jimenez, Spain...73-65-68—206 Thaworn Wiratchant, Thailand..75-63-68—206 David Horsey, England..............69-69-68—206 Angelo Que, Philippines............71-68-67—206 Michael Hoey, Nothern Ireland .67-66-74—207 Y.E.Yang, South Korea..............63-71-73—207 Fredrik Anderson Hed, Sweden68-66-73—207 Kiradech Aphibarnrat, Thailand 72-64-71—207 N.Tantipokhakul, Thailand.........69-70-68—207 Ernie Els, South Africa ..............72-66-69—207 Chapchai Nirat, Thailand...........70-68-69—207 Scott Barr, Australia...................68-71-68—207 Rick Kulacz, Australia................70-69-68—207 Mo Joong-kyung, South Korea.70-67-70—207 Phil Mickelson, United States ...71-67-70—208
20
LPGA- Lorena Ochoa Invitational Sunday At Guadalajara Country Club Guadalajara, Mexico Purse: $1 million Yardage: 6,626; Par: 72 Final Round a-amateur C. Matthew ....................69-68-68-71 — 276 I.K. Kim ..........................72-67-70-71 — 280 Anna Nordqvist .............71-65-73-71 — 280 Hee Kyung Seo ............74-69-71-69 — 283 Ai Miyazato ...................72-71-69-69 — 283 Juli Inkster..................... 67-69-75-72 — 283 S. Pettersen ...................67-70-71-76 — 284 M. Hjorth ........................70-72-71-72 — 285 Brittany Lang .................71-74-70-71 — 286 Michelle Wie...................70-71-74-71 — 286 P. Creamer .....................70-71-72-73 — 286 Karen Stupples .............75-69-74-69 — 287 Cristie Kerr ....................70-75-71-72 — 288 Meena Lee ....................68-69-76-75 — 288 B. Linciome ....................72-75-69-73 — 289 Azahara Munoz ............74-71-73-72 — 290
BASKETBALL College Basketball Top 25 Fared Sunday 1. North Carolina (2-0) beat UNC Asheville 91-75. Next: vs. MVSU, Sunday. 2. Kentucky (1-0) did not play. Next: vs. No. 13 Kansas, Tuesday. 3. Ohio State (1-0) did not play. Next: vs. No. 8 Florida, Tuesday. 4. UConn (1-0) did not play. Next: vs. Wagner, Monday. 5. Syracuse (1-0) did not play. Next: vs. Manhattan, Monday. 6. Duke (2-0) did not play. Next: vs. Michigan State, Tuesday. 7. Vanderbilt (1-1) lost to Cleveland State 71-58. Next: vs. Bucknell, Tuesday. 8. Florida (1-0) did not play. Next: at No. 3 Ohio State, Tuesday. 9. Louisville (2-0) beat Lamar 68-48. Next: at Butler, Saturday. 10. Pittsburgh (2-0) beat Rider 86-78. Next: vs. Long Beach State, Wednesday. 11. Memphis (0-0) did not play. Next: vs. Belmont, Tuesday. 12. Baylor (2-0) beat Jackson State 92-59. Next: vs. San Diego State, Tuesday. 13. Kansas (1-0) did not play. Next: vs. No. 2 Kentucky, Tuesday. 14. Xavier (1-0) did not play. Next: vs. IPFW, Tuesday. 15. Wisconsin (1-0) did not play. Next: vs. Colgate, Wednesday. 16. Arizona (3-0) beat Ball State 7363. Next: at St. John's, Thursday. 17. UCLA (0-1) did not play. Next: vs. Middle Tennessee, Tuesday. 18. Michigan (1-0) did not play. Next: vs. Towson, Monday. 19. Alabama (1-0) did not play. Next: vs. Oakland, Monday. 20. Texas A&M (2-0) beat Southern U. 83-58. Next: vs. Mississippi State, Thursday. 21. Cincinnati (1-0) beat Alabama State 65-40. Next: vs. Jacksonville State, Tuesday. 22. Marquette (1-0) did not play. Next: vs. Norfolk State, Monday. 23. Gonzaga (1-0) did not play. Next: vs. Washington State, Monday. 24. California (1-0) vs. George Washington. Next: vs. Austin Peay, Tuesday. 25. Missouri (1-0) did not play. Next: vs. Mercer, Monday. College Basketball Scores Sunday FAR WEST Arizona 73, Ball St. 63 Middle Tennessee 58, Loyola Marymount 51 N. Dakota St. 70, N. Arizona 58 Portland 66, Georgia St. 61 S. Utah 95, Bryant 78 Sacramento St. 75, Cent. Arkansas 54 San Diego St. 89, UC Davis 74 San Francisco 71, LouisianaLafayette 70 Washington 77, FAU 71 SOUTHWEST Prairie View 63, Schreiner 48 Texas A&M 83, Southern U. 58 Tulsa 67, SE Louisiana 52 UALR 72, Northwestern St. 66 UTEP 52, UC Riverside 41 MIDWEST Bradley 68, UMKC 58 Cincinnati 65, Alabama St. 40 Creighton 95, Chicago St. 61 Indiana 78, Chattanooga 53 Northwestern 60, Texas-Pan American 36 Ohio 74, UT-Martin 65 Wichita St. 85, Charleston Southern 57 Wright St. 80, Kenyon 56 SOUTH Gardner-Webb 74, Lipscomb 71 Georgia 63, Bowling Green 54 Cleveland St. 71, Vanderbilt 58 James Madison 82, Canisius 73 Lindsey Wilson 100, Mansfield 54 Longwood 91, Va. Intermont 73 Louisiana Tech 92, Mississippi College 70 Louisville 68, Lamar 48 Marshall 58, Jacksonville St. 44 Maryland 71, UNC Wilmington 62 NC Central 115, Johnson & Wales (NC) 41 North Carolina 91, UNC Asheville 75 St. Catharine 87, Cumberland (Tenn.) 74 Troy 116, LaGrange 63 Virginia 75, SC State 38 Wofford 70, Emory & Henry 55 NC State 91, Morehead St. 61 EAST Duquesne 84, Green Bay 66 Navy 88, Penn St.-Altoona 54 St. John's 82, UMBC 59 Stony Brook 93, Mount Ida 39
TRANSACTIONS Sunday’s Sports Transactions BASEBALL National League HOUSTON ASTROS_Agreed to terms with OF Brad Snyder on a minor league contract. HOCKEY National Hockey League BOSTON BRUINS_Assigned F Zach Hamill to Providence (AHL). COLUMBUS BLUE JACKETS_Activated G Curtis Sanford off injured reserve. Assigned G Allen York to Springfield (AHL). WINNIPEG JETS_Recalled F Jason Jaffray and D Arturs Kulda from the St. John's (AHL). Reassigned D Paul Postma to St. John's. American Hockey League SAN ANTONIO RAMPAGE_Recalled F David Marshall from Rio Grand Valley (CHL).