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West Virginia man held after string of vehicle break-ins at New Phila

Keith Ross, 30, of Page, W.Va., is being held on open felony charges in the New Philadelphia City Jail for a string of thefts that occurred Friday night during the Licking Valley-Northwest football game in Woody Hayes Quaker Stadium at New Philadelphia.

According to New Philadelphia police reports, the department received seven phone calls on Friday at about 10 from out-of-town residents whose vehicles were broken into during the game. Six of the

break-ins occurred at Countryside and Lakeview Rds. NW and one in the 900 block of N. Broadway. All of them had one thing in common � purses, containing various amounts of cash, checkbooks, and ATM and credit cards, were stolen.

The biggest theft reported came from a Newark woman who said someone had broken the left, rear window of her Hummer and stole her purse.


iPO Review - The iPhone Book

Apple's iPhone isn't a difficult device to use, but there are lots of treats hiding under its hood. So many, in fact, that without a little help you'll likely miss some especially useful feature that's going to make your life so much easier. That's exactly what Scott Kelby and Terry White are hoping to help you find with The iPhone Book.

Don't think of The iPhone Book as another manual. Instead, think of it as all of the cool iPhone tips you wish you could remember. Each page covers a single tip or iPhone feature, which is something I appreciated right away. You can read the book manual-style, or randomly flip to a page. Either way, there's a good chance you'll find something new to try out.

The book is divided up in logical chapters just as you would expect: getting started, using the phone features, using the iPod features, working with email, and so on.


Lighting a Kindle: Amazon.com introduces new electronic reading device for e-books

Amazon.com Inc., the world's largest Internet retailer, introduced an electronic reading device Monday, seeking to do for books what Apple Inc.'s iPod did for music.

The portable device, called Kindle, sells for $399 and is about the size of a paperback. More than 90,000 books are available electronically, including best sellers and new releases, many of which cost $9.99 each, Seattle-based Amazon.com said in a statement.

Amazon.com boosted technology spending to add Unbox, a video-download service and a music-download store to reduce its reliance on sales of books, CDs and DVDs. The stock has doubled this year, topping $100 last month, as shareholders have expressed optimism the investments will pay off.

"It's a bold move by Amazon, it's a very promising start," said Jeffrey Lindsay, an analyst at Sanford C.


 
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